Santa Fe New Mexican, July 6, 2014

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N.M. vintners seek to impress at Santa Fe Wine Festival Page C-1

Heart of the art scene: Canyon Road house/gallery on the market Home, inside July 2014

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Blogger claims she’s solved Fenn mystery

Suspected mugger arrested Santa Fe police say a man with a lengthy criminal record has admitted to four recent armed robberies, including last week’s mugging of a teenage girl downtown. PAGE C-1

North Carolina woman says riddle is about faith By Bruce Krasnow The New Mexican

Gov. seeks mayors’ help

Kvitova wins Wimbledon

Susana Martinez asks local Hispanic leaders to assist in her bid for re-election. PAGE C-1

Czech crushes opponent from Canada in women’s singles final in London. SPORTS, D-1

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Forrest Fenn’s hidden treasure sends searchers on a spiritual journey that should renew their faith and open their hearts to a larger life, according to a North Carolina woman who claims to have solved the local writer’s famous poem. Pam Shetron, who has published her interpretation of Fenn’s poem on a website,

said Fenn is a hero and has cleverly taught people about faith and what’s important in life — that the search, the friendships and the path are more important than money and physical riches. She said the poem leads to the Pam Shetron Christ of the Mines Shrine in Silverton, Colo., but there is no treasure box at that location — just silent, peaceful spirituality. “This is a spiritual journey Mr. Fenn is taking us on. It’s about faith,” she wrote on

Proposal for grassy concert space at historic Madrid ballpark divides residents

A waste of water?

her blog June 23. “You can’t see faith, but you may have it. You have faith the chest you never saw is out there somewhere north of Santa Fe. Seeing is not always believing. Have faith in all you can not see, but choose to believe in it anyway.” Fenn is not one to dismiss or confirm anyone’s hints into the hidden treasure chest. In regard to her interpretation of the poem, he said, “that’s her opinion, she’s entitled to it.” The former business owner and artifacts dealer went even further in an email to The New Mexican: “I had not heard

Please see MYSTERY, Page A-7

N.M. leads nation in deaths tied to alcohol Excessive drinking takes years off the lives of state’s residents, CDC reports By Patrick Malone The New Mexican

A view from the outfield of the Oscar Huber Memorial Ballpark in Madrid, which was built in 1920. CLYDE MUELLER/THE NEW MEXICAN

By Phaedra Haywood The New Mexican

local nonprofit’s offer to plant and maintain grass at the Oscar Huber Memorial Ballpark in Madrid in exchange for being allowed to host concerts there is drawing mixed reviews from residents of the community, which has long been plagued by water scarcity. While some say they would welcome a cool, green place where children can play and sporting events and concerts can be enjoyed, others say it doesn’t make sense to grow grass in the desert, especially when the water to care for it will have to be trucked in from somewhere else. The historic ballpark and its refurbished grandstand, where local coal miners once watched minor league baseball teams play, has been used in recent decades as a venue for music festivals, often with the audience seated on lawn chairs and blankets on the dirt playing field.

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Tracy Ragan, a member of the Madrid Landowners Association’s ballpark committee, says she supports a plan for improvements — and a grassy field — at the historic ballpark, where coal miners watched minor league teams play in the 1920s and 1930s. The plan has drawn mixed reviews from the community, where water is scarce. JANE PHILLIPS/THE NEW MEXICAN

The offer — to level the infield, install an irrigation system and water storage tank, as well as plant sod in the outfield and then maintain the grass by mowing and watering it with trucked-in

supplies from elsewhere — came from Jim Heath of the Heath Foundation. Heath, who has lived in the Santa Fe area for more than 20 years, said he became inter-

ested in the ballpark after moving to the Galisteo Basin last fall. “I looked at it and said, ‘You know, this would make a great music venue,” said Heath, whose foundation owns Heath Concerts, which sponsors free movies and concerts in the Santa Fe Railyard Park and other events at venues such as The Downs at Santa Fe. Heath said he later met Tracy Ragan, head of the Madrid Landowners Association’s ballpark committee, and learned that the association and Santa Fe County had been collaborating over the years to secure hundreds of thousands of dollars from the state to restore the ballpark, which is thought to have been the first fully illuminated ballpark west of the Mississippi, thanks to coal-fired electrical power. Over the past decade or so, about $600,000 worth of state money has been spent restoring the historic grandstand and bleachers. And Ragan hopes to

Peter and Laura Lafond had plans. Their marriage of 22 years had produced a son and a daughter, and Peter and Laura had begun to relish their future together. In the short term, that meant seeing their daughter off to her senior prom and watching her graduate high school. In a few years, they looked forward to celebrating their 25th anniversary. Ultimately, they had their sights set on retiring and traveling around the country in a recreational vehicle. “We were going to grow old together,” said Laura Lafond, 52. “A lot of times, when we would see an old couple running errands or taking a walk, we’d say, ‘That’s going to be us someday.’ We could see ourselves sitting under a tree in the park, taking it easy together.” At 4:08 p.m. March 15, 2013, as Peter Lafond, 51, was riding his motorcycle to a friend’s house to help with a remodel project, he was struck and killed by a drunken driver, whose level of intoxication was more than twice the legal limit for driving. The Lafonds would never realize their dream of quietly living out their days, enjoying each other’s company. “In the first six months after he died, there was just so much stuff that he missed,” Laura Lafond said. “He missed our 23rd anniversary in April; Easter; his sister’s birthday; our daughter’s prom and graduation. He missed his mom turning 90 in July.” Peter Lafond’s life cut short demonstrates a tragic reality: New Mexico is drinking itself to death faster than any other state. But it’s not just on the highways that booze is shortening the lives of New Mexicans at a pace that outstrips the rest of the United States.

Please see ALCOHOL, Page A-5

Obituaries Otis Lee Beaty Jr. (Toro), July 2 William Duncan Greaves, June 27 Robert Mash, June 30

Please see BALLPARK, Page A-5

Today

Sheriffs balk at idea of holding noncitizens longer Fearful of lawsuits, local agencies prefer to release those who’ve served time for crimes By Jennifer Medina The New York Times

LOS ANGELES — Sheriffs around the nation are openly rejecting the Obama administration policy of holding noncitizens who are accused or convicted of crimes for extra time, which for years has enabled the

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federal government to begin deportation proceedings for thousands of immigrants. The local decisions are limiting the Obama administration’s ability to enforce immigration laws and could significantly decrease the number of immigrants deported each year.

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The phenomenon started this spring, after a federal judge in Oregon ruled that a sheriff there had violated one immigrant woman’s civil rights by holding her in the county jail solely at the request of federal agents. Almost immediately, sheriffs across the state started refusing to honor the policy, which asks them to hold undocumented inmates without probable cause for a criminal violation, a process known as a detainer.

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Now, dozens of sheriffs are doing the same: releasing noncitizen offenders who have served their time rather than holding them longer on behalf of the Department of Homeland Security. For years, the administration has asked them to hold such people for up to 48 hours after they were scheduled for release, giving Immigration and Customs Enforcement extra

Partly sunny. High 87, low 59. PAGE D-6

Tommy L. Maxwell, 73, July 1 Herbert Mayer Schon, June 30 Isabel Standard, Santa Fe, June 29 PAGE C-2

Pasapick

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Native portrait studio at the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture A photo booth will be on the premises from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. today through Monday. Take your photos with you, but leave one print for the Community Gallery, 710 Camino Lejo, Museum Hill, indianartsandculture.org.

Please see HOLDING, Page A-6

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Six sections, 48 pages 165th year, No. 187 Publication No. 596-440


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

NATION&WORLD 5 factors for robust economy in the U.S. The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — How does the U.S. economy do it? Europe is floundering. China faces slower growth. Japan is struggling to sustain tentative gains. Yet the U.S. job market is humming, and the pace of economic growth is steadily rising. Five years after a devastating recession officially ended, the economy is finally showing the vigor that Americans have long awaited. Last month, employers added 288,000 jobs and helped reduce the unemployment rate to 6.1 percent, the lowest since September 2008. June capped a five-month stretch of 200,000plus job gains. The economy is expected to grow at a 3 percent pace the rest of the year. Five reasons the United States is outpacing others: Aggressive central bank: In December 2008, the Federal Reserve slashed short-term interest rates to near zero and has kept them there. Ultra-low loan rates have made it easier for individuals and businesses to borrow and spend. The Fed also launched bond-buying programs meant to reduce long-term rates. By contrast, the European Central Bank has been slower to respond to signs of economic distress among the 18 nations that share the euro currency. Stronger banks: The United States moved faster than Europe to restore its banks’ health after the financial crisis of 2008-09. The U.S. government bailed out the financial system and subjected big banks to stress tests in 2009 to reveal their financial strength. European banks are only now undergoing stress tests, and the results won’t be out until fall. In the meantime, Europe’s banks lack confidence. A more flexible economy: Economists say Japan and Europe need to undertake reforms to make their economies more flexible — more, in other words, like America’s. China is struggling to manage a transition from an economy based on exports. Less budget-cutting: Weighed down by debt, many European countries took an ax to swelling budget deficits. The United States has done some budget cutting, too, and raised taxes. But U.S. austerity hasn’t been anywhere near as harsh. Roaring stock market: The Fed’s easy-money policies ignited a world-beating U.S. stock market rally. Over the past five years, U.S. stocks have easily outpaced shares in Europe, Japan and Hong Kong.

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Catherine Hubbard hugs family dog Sammy in April 2012 in Newtown, Conn. Despite her death in the mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School on Dec. 14, 2012, Catherine’s dream of helping animals is close to becoming a reality. COURTESY JENNY HUBBARD

Shooting victim’s shelter dream becoming reality Newtown girl, 6, raised funds for pretend animal care center By Susan Haigh The Associated Press

HARTFORD, Conn. — Before she was killed in the Newtown school massacre, 6-year-old Catherine Violet Hubbard raised money from returnable bottles and cans to buy bones for dogs at the pound and designed business cards for an imaginary animal shelter, listing herself as “caretaker.” Her pretend animal shelter is now on track to become a reality as the state prepares to transfer 34 acres of a former psychiatric facility to a foundation raising money to build an animal sanctuary to honor the life of the little girl who was one of 20 first-graders killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting. “It was just in her soul,” said Jenny Hubbard, describing her late daughter’s love of animals. “She didn’t care if it was fuzzy or slimy.” Plans for the sanctuary in her name include a shelter and adoption center for cats and dogs, a refuge for farm and work animals, and a rescue and release program for injured, native wildlife. Plans also include a state-of-the-art veterinarian clinic and a welcome center where educational programs will be held. The goal is to open the main building in Newtown in 2016. Gov. Dannel P. Malloy recently signed legislation instructing the Department of Agriculture to convey the state land to the private Catherine Violet Hubbard Foundation set up by her parents. Several steps remain before Attorney General George Jepsen can sign off on the final transfer. For Jenny Hubbard and her husband, Matt, who each have business backgrounds and wrote the sanctuary’s business plan, the project has been both a healing and humbling experience. They’ve been amazed by the outpouring of support. To date, $800,000 has been donated, even though formal fundraising efforts have not yet

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begun. Various professionals, from veterinarians to a Newtown architectural firm PH Architects, have donated their services. “We remind ourselves every day there are kids murdered across the country and not everybody has the opportunity to do this for their child’s life,” Jenny Hubbard said. A mistaken Google search ultimately led to the idea for the sanctuary. Tasked with the unimaginable job of writing their 6-year-old’s obituary, the Hubbards decided to ask people to donate money in lieu of flowers to the local animal control center. But as a friend looked up the address, they instead discovered The Animal Center, a small, nonprofit group of volunteers who provide foster homes to stray cats and dogs until permanent homes can be found. Harmony Verna, the group’s vice president, remembers getting a call from the Hubbards, asking if the center would mind being listed in Catherine’s obituary. Within two weeks, $150,000 had been donated in the little girl’s name. Given the large sum, Verna said she felt the Hubbards needed to have a say in how the money was spent. Verna shared with the couple The Animal Center’s dream of someday opening an animal sanctuary, a place where all kinds of animals could find a healing place and have nothing to fear. “I’ll tell you, like this energy entered the room and they looked at us and said, ‘That’s it,’” Verna said. “This would have been her dream.” Word then spread about the sanctuary and Catherine’s dream. Last November, the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals posthumously honored Catherine with its Kid of the Year award, saying the girl “had a natural ability to connect and care for animals.” Jenny Hubbard says the sanctuary project has brought the family hope. “We know that what we’re doing is honoring Catherine and it’s about Catherine. And that alone has helped us stay connected to her memory and honoring her life,” she said. “We have said from the very onset of this, we were not going to be defined by the two minutes of evil that took her life.”

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PHILADELPHIA — Fire raced through a row of two-story homes in southwest Philadelphia early Saturday, killing 4-year-old twin girls, a 4-year-old boy and a baby and engulfing at least 10 houses, officials said. A mother and three of her children escaped through a second-floor window. The blaze began shortly before 3 a.m. and was brought under control in about an hour, fire officials said. At least eight row homes were gutted, leaving behind only charred frames. The cause of the fire remains under investigation, but witnesses said it may have begun on a couch on a porch. The twins’ mother, 41-year-old Dewen Bowah, told police she was in the home with seven children and managed to get three of her other daughters out before jumping from second-floor window. But she couldn’t save the twins, Maria and Marialla Bowah, or 1-month-old Taj Jacque and 4-year-old Patrick Sanyeah. The boys’ mother wasn’t in the home.

COLLINSVILLE, Calif. — A fire tore through a Northern California community, destroying eight homes and damaging three more. Chief Joe Rosewall of the Montezuma Fire District in Solano County said that nobody was injured in the Friday afternoon blaze in the small community of Collinsville, about 60 miles east of San Francisco. Rosewall says the fire is out, but 25 residents have been displaced and it caused an estimated $2.5 million in damage. State fire officials say they are battling several fires throughout California and expect the dry conditions and the July 4 holiday weekend to keep them busy. Officials say a Yolo County fire that started Friday night has consumed more than 4 square miles and is 15 percent contained. Firefighters have a Napa County fire that’s burned nearly 7 square miles since Tuesday 70 percent contained.

4 dead in Fla. boat collision MIAMI — Three boats collided near a Miami marina around the end of a fireworks display, killing four and injuring a dozen others in a chaotic scene that left bodies and survivors tossed overboard. Multiple law enforcement agencies responded to the crash Friday night near the Dinner Key Marina in Miami, with officers plucking several people out of the water. The boaters are believed to have been out celebrating the Fourth of July holiday. Rescuers were alerted by one of the boaters at about 10:45 p.m. He said he’d been hit by another vessel and that his 36-foot pleasure craft was taking on water, authorities said.

Clinton donates speaking fee WASHINGTON — Hillary Rodham Clinton says she’s donated to her family’s foundation the huge sums she has earned in speaking fees at colleges for the last year and half. Some students at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, have called for Clinton to return the $225,000 she is receiving for speaking at the university’s foundation dinner this fall. In an interview last week with ABC News, Clinton responded to criticism about such fees by saying the money had gone to the Clinton Foundation for what she called its “life-changing and life-saving work.” Clinton’s wealth has been under scrutiny since an interview last month in which she described her family as “dead broke” and in debt when husband Bill Clinton left the White House in January 2001. She later called that description “inartful.”

11 killed in Poland plane crash WARSAW, Poland — Eleven people were killed and one was injured when a small plane carrying parachutists crashed and burst into flames shortly after takeoff in southern Poland, firefighters said Saturday. Experts said it was the worst passenger plane crash in Poland in many years. National spokesman for the firefighters, Pawel Fratczak, said that eleven parachutists and a pilot were on board of the twin engine aircraft when it took off for a training flight. The Associated Press

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Philadelphia fire kills 4 kids

Calif. fire destroys 8 homes

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Sunday, July 6 WATERCOLORS AND GLASS ART by Laura Fram Cowan, reception 3 to 5 p.m., El Gancho Fitness Swim & Racquet Club, 104 Old Las Vegas Highway. BETWEEN TWO WORLDS: Folk Artists Reflect on the Immigrant Experience, 1 to 4 p.m., by museum admission. Museum of International Folk Art, 706 Camino Lejo, Museum Hill. FLUTISTS BART FELLER, SUSAN LEVITIN, AND LINDA MARIANIELLO, AND PIANIST BILL EPSTEIN perform music of Bach, Mozart and Piazzolla, 5:30 p.m., no charge, nmperformingartssociety.org. Immaculate Heart of Mary Retreat and Conference Center Chapel, 50 Mount Carmel Road. NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF ART FAMILY FUN DAY: Explore the museum with guided activities and participate in an art project Outside the Frame, 1 to 4 p.m., no charge. 107 W. Palace Ave. SANTA FE WINE FESTIVAL: Sample New Mexico wines, buy directly from the vintners; food food, music and arts, $13, noon to 6 p.m., El Rancho de las Golondrinas, 334 Los Pinos Road in La Cienega.

Lotteries Monday, July 7 CASA: Corazones Heridos, fume-fired ceramics by Susan Ohori. 1098 ½ S. St. Francis Drive. FOLK/ROCK BAND: Little Tybee, 8 p.m., $20 at the door, gigsantafe.com. Gig Performance Space, 1808-H Second St. MUSIC SERIES: Santa Fe Bandstand on The Plaza. Balladeer J. Michael Combs and Eaglestar, noon to 1 p.m.; cumbias/rancheras duo Sorela, 6 to 7 p.m.; Tex-Mex/honky-tonk band Tejas Brothers, 7:15 to 8:45 p.m.; santafebandstand. org, no charge. BREAKFAST WITH O’KEEFFE: Gallery talk on the David H. Arrington Ansel Adams collection, 8:30 a.m., by museum admission. Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, 217 Johnson St. 946-1000. SANTA FE PHOTOGRAPHIC WORKSHOPS: Instructor presentations by Paul Mobley, Arthur Meyerson, and Bobbi Lane, 8 to 9:30 p.m., no charge. Santa Fe Prep auditorium, 1101 Camino de Cruz Blanca. 983-1400, Ext. 111 SOUTHWEST CONQUEST OF THE SOUTHERN CONE OF SOUTH AMERICA: by Thomas Dalton Dillehay, 6 p.m., $12 at the door, southwestseminars.org. Hotel Santa Fe, 1501 Paseo de Peralta.

466-2775. SWING DANCE: Weekly allages informal swing dance, lessons 7 to 8 p.m., dance 8 to 10 p.m., , dance $3, lesson and dance $8, 4730955. Odd Fellows Hall, 1125 Cerrillos Road.

NIGHTLIFE Sunday, July 6 COWGIRL BBQ: Santa Fe Revue, all-star Americana, noon to 3 p.m.; Alex Culbreth, Americana and alternative country, 8 p.m.; no cover. 19 S. Guadalupe St. DUEL BREWING: Railyard Reunion Band, country and bluegrass, 5 p.m., no cover. 1228 Parkway Drive. EL FAROL: Chanteuse Nacha Mendez and Company, 7:30 p.m., call for cover. 808 Canyon Road. EVANGELO’S: Tone and Company jam band, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m., call for cover. SECOND STREET BREWERY AT THE RAILYARD: Bluesman Alex Maryol, 1 to 4 p.m., no cover. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery, 6:30 p.m., call for cover. Monday, July 7 COWGIRL BBQ: Karaoke with Michele Leidig, 8 p.m., no cover. LA FIESTA LOUNGE at La

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Corrections The New Mexican will correct factual errors in its news stories. Errors should be brought to the attention of the city editor at 9863035. Fonda. Bill Hearne Trio, 7:30 to 11 p.m., no cover. UPPER CRUST PIZZA: Troubadour Gerry Carthy, 6 to 9 p.m., no cover. VANESSIE: Pianist Doug Montgomery, 6:30 p.m., call for cover.


WORLD

Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Ukraine claims victory in rebel stronghold As rebels fled from Slovyansk, vowing to regroup elsewhere and fight on, President Petro Poroshenko hailed the recapture of the city as “the start By Dmitry Lovetsky of a turning point” in a battle that has The Associated Press claimed more than 400 lives since April. SLOVYANSK, Ukraine — Ukrainian After a night of heavy fighting that troops forced pro-Russian insurgents saw heavy artillery fire from Ukraine’s out of a key stronghold in the country’s troops, government soldiers were embattled east on Saturday, a signifiin full control of rebel headquarters cant success that suggested the govern- in Slovyansk, a city of about 100,000 ment may finally be making gains in a that has been a center of the fighting months-long battle against a spreading between Kiev’s troops and the proRussian insurgents. separatist insurgency.

Poroshenko hails city’s capture as ‘turning point’

Soldiers raised the Ukrainian flag over the city council building, while troops carried stockpiles of weapons out of the city’s administrative and police buildings, which have been under rebel control since early April. “It’s not a total victory. But the purging of Slovyansk of these bands, made up of people armed to the teeth, has incredible symbolic importance,” Poroshenko said in a statement posted on his official website. Artillery fire on rebel forces began late on Friday and lasted into the night. On Saturday, fighting could still be

Palestinian teen was burned to death, autopsy reveals

heard on the northern outskirts of the city. Ukraine’s newly appointed Minister of Defense, Valery Heletey, was milling around with troops in the city center. He said that three planes with food and other supplies will soon arrive in Slovyansk. A spokesman for the National Security and Defense Council said earlier that mopping-up operations were continuing. “Slovyansk is under siege. Now an operation is going on to neutralize small groups hiding in buildings where

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Dozens of rockets fired at Israeli towns By Mohammad Daraghmeh The Associated Press

RAMALLAH, West Bank — An autopsy showed an Arab teenager who Palestinians say was killed in a revenge attack was burned to death, officials said Saturday, while Palestinian militants fired two rockets toward a major southern city deeper into Israel than any other attack in the current round of violence. The Israeli military said its “Iron Dome” defense system intercepted the rockets that were aimed at Beersheba. The military also said at least 29 other rockets and mortars were fired from the Gaza Strip at Israel over the weekend. It said it had retaliated with airstrikes on militant sites in Gaza. Clashes between Israeli police and Palestinian protesters spread early Saturday from Jerusalem to Arab towns in northern Israel as hundreds of people took to the streets and threw rocks and fire bombs at officers who responded with tear gas and stun grenades, police said. Palestinian Attorney General Abdelghani al-Owaiwi said he received initial autopsy results from a Palestinian doctor who was present at the autopsy in Tel Aviv. He said it shows that 16-yearold Palestinian Mohammed Abu Khdeir, whose death has sparked large protests in his east Jerusalem neighborhood, suffered burns on “90 percent of his body.” “The results show he was breathing while on fire and died from burns and their consequences,” al-Owaiwi said. His account provided the first details of the preliminary findings to be made public. The Israeli Health Ministry could not be reached for comment. The autopsy found evidence that Abu Khdeir had breathed in the flames as burns were found inside his body, in his lungs, bronchial tubes and his throat, al-Owaiwi said. He also said the young man had suffered wounds on the right side of his head apparently from impact with a rock or another hard object. Abu Khdeir’s charred body was found in a forest Wednesday after he was seized near his home. Palestinians immediately accused Israeli extremists of killing him to avenge the deaths of three Israeli teens who had been abducted and killed in the West Bank. Israeli police said an investigation is still underway and they have not yet determined who killed the boy or why. Israeli leaders have widely condemned the killing of the Palestinian youth, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed those responsible would be brought to justice. Palestinians took to the streets in protests after news of the boy’s death on Wednesday and clashed with police in east Jerusalem. Riots erupted in east Jerusalem Friday as thousands of Palestinians massed for the boy’s burial. Near the town of Qalansawe, protesters also pulled over a car driven by an Israeli Jew on Saturday, pulled him out and set the vehicle on fire, police spokeswoman Luba Samri said. The driver was not injured. Several other Israeli cars were also torched, she said. Dozens of protesters were arrested across the country

peaceful citizens are living,” Andriy Lysenko told journalists in Kiev. Andrei Purgin of the separatist Donetsk People’s Republic told The Associated Press that rebels were evacuating, but claimed the army’s campaign had left the city “in ruins.” The capture of Slovyansk represented the government’s biggest victory since it abandoned a shaky cease-fire last week and launched an offensive against the separatists. Until now, the Ukrainian army had often appeared feckless in the monthslong campaign against the rebels.

Israeli soldiers gather near the Israel and Gaza Strip border Saturday. TSAFRIR ABAYOV/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

throughout the day. violent demonstrations in sevProtests subsided by noon eral Arab towns in the north of but resumed in the evening with the country, police said.

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WORLD

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

Sunni extremist leader emerges in Iraqi video Shiite shrines shown destroyed in images By Ryan Lucas and Diaa Hadid The Associated Press

BAGHDAD — A man purporting to be the leader of the Sunni extremist group that has declared an Islamic state in territory it controls in Iraq and Syria has made what would be his first public appearance, delivering a sermon at a mosque in Iraq’s second-largest city, according to a video posted online Saturday. The 21-minute video that is said to show Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the head of the Islamic State group, was reportedly filmed on Friday at the Great Mosque in the northern city of

Mosul. It was released on at least two websites known to be used by the organization and bore the logo of its media arm, Abu Bakr but it was not al-Baghdadi possible to independently verify whether the person shown was indeed al-Baghdadi. There are only a few known photographs of al-Baghdadi, an ambitious Iraqi militant believed to be in his early 40s with a $10 million U.S. bounty on his head. Since taking the reins of the group in 2010, he has transformed it from a local branch of al-Qaida into an independent transnational military

force, positioning himself as perhaps the pre-eminent figure in the global jihadi community. Al-Baghdadi’s purported appearance in Mosul, a city of some 2 million that the militants seized last month, came five days after his group declared the establishment of an Islamic state, or caliphate, in the territories it seized in Iraq and Syria. The group proclaimed alBaghdadi the leader of its state and demanded that all Muslims pledge allegiance to him. In the video, the man said to be al-Baghdadi says that “the mujahedeen have been rewarded victory by God after years of jihad, and they were able to achieve their aim and hurried to announce the caliphate and choose the Imam,” referring to the leader.

“It is a burden to accept this responsibility to be in charge of you,” he adds. “I am not better than you or more virtuous than you. If you see me on the right path, help me. If you see me on the wrong path, advise me and halt me. And obey me as far as I obey God.” Speaking in classical Arabic with little emotion, he outlines a vision that emphasizes holy war, the implementation of a strict interpretation of Islamic law, and the philosophy that the establishment of an Islamic caliphate is a duty incumbent on all Muslims. He is dressed in black robes and a black turban — a sign that he claims descent from the Prophet Muhammad. He has dark eyes, thick eyebrows and a full black beard with streaks of

In this photo posted on a militant website, Shiite’s Al-Qubba Husseiniya mosque explodes in Mosul, Iraq. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

gray on the sides. Another aspect of the rule al-Baghdadi envisions was made clear in a series of images that emerged online late Saturday showing the destruction of at least 10 ancient shrines and Shiite mosques in territory his group controls. The 21 photographs posted

on a website that frequently carries official statements from the Islamic State extremist group document the destruction in Mosul and the town of Tal Afar. Some of the photos show bulldozers plowing through walls, while others show explosives demolishing the buildings in a cloud of smoke and rubble.

Egypt premier defends nearly 80% rise in energy prices By Mariam Rizk The Associated Press

CAIRO — Egypt’s prime minister on Saturday defended a steep rise in fuel prices as necessary move to shore up the treasury, as outraged commuters bickered with public transport drivers over fare hikes and some rushed to gas stations over fears of shortages. The price increases of up to 80 percent came into force early on Saturday in a swift announcement made just hours earlier, following promises to cut subsidies that eat up nearly a quarter of the state budget. They also come after an increase in electricity prices that were put in effect at the start of July.

Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab, addressing a televised news conference, said energy subsidies have over the past decade cost the treasury a staggering nearly $100 billion that could have been used to bolster essential services. He said it would be a “crime” if his government did not move to start lifting subsidies. He argued that 26.3 percent of Egypt’s estimated 86 million people live in poverty and that overall unemployment stands at 13.6 percent, reaching above 50 percent for Egyptians aged between 20 and 30. “There will have to be political, social and economic

reforms,” vowed Mahlab. “Debts are mounting and the question we must ask ourselves is whether we want to leave this legacy for future generations.” Mahlab said the partial lifting of energy subsidies would free 51 billion pounds (about $7 billion) to be spent on education, health care, pensions and raising wages. Newly elected President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi has said he would need to tackle the tough issue of subsidies and asked every Egyptian to be ready to sacrifice to help the country’s battered economy after three years of turmoil. The former military chief also

asked the government to amend the largest budget in Egypt’s history — at $115 billion — to reduce its deficit from 12 to 10 percent. The fuel price rise was highest for 80 octane gasoline, used mostly by old vehicles that still fill Egyptian streets, with the price jumping 78 percent to 22 cents per liter. Diesel fuel, used by most of Egypt’s public transport and trucks, increased 64 percent to 25 cents a liter. Gasoline that is

92 octane increased by 40 percent to 37 cents a liter. Successive Egyptian leaders have balked at reducing energy subsidies, fearing unrest. In some areas, the decision spurred a rush on gas stations, with long lines forming and many motorists frustrated. Some drivers of Egypt’s popular microbuses had raised their fares before the government announced exact increases. Mahlab warned that authorities would intervene to make sure

fare increases are limited to around 10 percent. Taxi meters will also be changed to allow for higher fares, he added. In the Canal city of Suez, microbus and taxi drivers refused to take on passengers until the government announces a detailed new fare structure. Some employees had to walk to work. Drivers have forced other public transportation vehicles to stop working until the fares are increased.

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Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-5

Ballpark: Heath seeks residents’ OK Continued from Page A-1 get another $300,000 or so in grants to pay for the restoration of stone walls surrounding the park — which were built as Works Progress Administration projects during the New Deal era. The association also is holding private fundraisers to raise funds to build a back fence for the baseball field and complete some landscaping. Heath said his interest in the park was triggered by the fact that the ballpark would make a good concert venue, and he also saw it is as a good community project. “It needed help,” he said. “I’m willing to help, and there are plenty of local people who are known in town to spearhead it. I’m not known in Madrid,” he added, and “it can take a long time for people there to accept you, especially if you are coming from Santa Fe and people think you have an agenda.” Heath estimates his initial outlay for the grass, tank and sprinkler system would be about $50,000 and he thinks it would cost another $15,000 to $20,000 a year to pay someone to mow the grass and purchase and haul water to keep the grass alive. Heat said the water — about 1 acrefoot a year — would likely be purchased from Santa Fe County. Heath said he sees the deal as a “repayable grant” in the sense that in exchange for paying for the grass, Heath Concerts would not have to pay venue fees to hold events there, and that whatever fee he might have been charged would be subtracted from his investment in the space. Heath proposes getting a credit for an $800 venue fee every time he uses the ballpark. He said venues like The Downs racetrack property and the Lensic Performing Arts Center in downtown Santa Fe cost about $5,000 to $10,000 per event. He said the proposed agreement doesn’t specify how often he would host events at the Madrid ballpark. Once he had held enough shows at the park to draw down his investment, Heath said, Heath Concerts would pay to use the space like any other user.

Heath acknowledged Madrid likely might never make money off Heath Concerts, but he said making the park an attractive and viable venue for other users would benefit the village because the town could charge others to hold events there. If he doesn’t make his money back, Heath said, he would consider his investment a charitable contribution, something his foundation does anyway. But, he said, he’s only interested in going forward with project if the idea is supported by the majority of Madrid residents. Ragan said upgrading the park with grass has multiple benefits. “The ballpark in it’s current condition, even with the newly built grandstands, is not a ‘rentable’ venue,” she said in an email. “The field is problematic, as it can be a bit windy and the dust factor is almost intolerable. … Completing the ballpark … will substantially improve our chances of making some money off the ballpark so it can pay for itself.” Ragan said having grass in the park also would be a benefit to what she says is a growing community of children in Madrid who must travel about 22 miles to play soccer or baseball — or just simply play — on grass. And, she said, improving the ballpark would improve the economy of Madrid by encouraging tourism and increasing property values. Ragan said she feels about 80 percent of the approximately 300 people who live in the historic mining town support the idea of putting grass in the park and holding more events there, but there is opposition among some older residents and those more concerned about water conservation. Ragan said she sees two main hurdles to getting the community to accept the Heath Foundation’s grant offer. One, she said, is getting people to agree to the grass and to using imported water to keep it alive; the other she said, is tweaking existing rules that say events at the ballpark must end at 7 p.m. The ballpark is controlled by the Madrid Landowners Association, which is made up of 200 landowners in Madrid

and governed by a nine-person board. The association previously owned the entire 5-acre park but agreed to sell g about 1 acre containing the grandstand and bleachers to Santa Fe County in 2008 so that public funds could be used to restore the historic structure. No money changed hands in that deal. Ragan said the association hasn’t decided yet if the board members will vote on the Heath Foundation grant offer or if the entire membership willl be asked to vote on it. But she said it was likely the association would send all members a paper ballot in September asking them to vote on the grass and extending the hours at the park until 10 p.m. Madrid residents interviewed by The New Mexican had mixed feelings on the proposals. “I think it would be a waste of water,” said Catey Peterson, 24, who has lived in Madrid for nine years. “Some people here don’t even have water in their own homes. It sounds nice, but the water could be put to better use, like growing food.” Nancy Duncan, 45, who has lived in Madrid for 21 years and is co-owner of the Java Junction coffee shop, says she supports the grass idea, “first and foremost as a community member.” “It’s one of our very few community spaces,” she said. “I know there is controversy, but we are so conservative about the water we use in our homes, to splurge like to improve the spaces where we spend time together is OK.” Duncan said she’s also excited about the prospect of having more music

ABOVE: The Madrid Miners play a game at the Oscar Huber Memorial Ballpark in Madrid in 1930. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS, NEGATIVE NO. HP.2012.20.11

LEFT: The AA minor league baseball team from 1927 to 1936 is shown in front of the ballpark’s grandstand. PHOTO COURTESY OF THE PALACE OF THE GOVERNORS, NEGATIVE NO. 152667

events in town, where residents “throw a parade a the drop of a hat. We’re all ready to have some fun outside,” she said. “Business-wise, it can only improve our exposure to day tripdistance people in a positive way, and that’s good for my business and all the businesses out here.” Kathleen Kasey, 38, who owns Range West gallery a few doors down from Duncan’s coffee shop, said she also supports the grass idea. “It’s not a golf course or an excessive amount of grass,” she said. “It’s a chance for the community to enjoy the ballpark.” Kasey, who has lived and worked in the town for about 12 years, said she had friends on both sides of the issue and thinks there are valid arguments on both sides. Gerald Godbey, 65, a retired nurse who has lived in Madrid for 20 years, said “grass would sure be pretty and nice to sit on,” but he said the idea of importing water to grow grass in the desert “doesn’t make ecological or economical sense” to him.

Beth Lee-Herbert, 33, who moved to Madrid six months ago, said trucking in water sounds “insane,” but, she added, perhaps there is another way to improve the ballpark. “There must be something between dust and grass,” she said. Ragan said she’s confident the association members will make the best decision for the community, regardless of what that is. If they reject the grass idea, she said, the association will try to mitigate dust and drainage problems at the park by leveling the ballfield and bringing in sand and clay. She recently launched an online fundraising campaign — at www.indie gogo.com/projects/show-your-lovefor-the-historic-madrid-ballpark — in an attempt to raise $20,000 to pay for landscaping, a back fence and some improvements to the infield that would help combat the blowing dust in case the community decides not to accept the Heath Foundation grant. Contact Phaedra Haywood at 986-3068 or phaywood@sfnewmexican.com.

Alcohol: Study recommends N.M. raise booze taxes, enforce laws Continued from Page A-1

Deaths attributable to alcohol

51.2 1,500

Per 100,000 population, from 2006-2010

Years of potential life lost attributable to alcohol

1,570.1

Average per 100,000 population, from 2006-2010

41.1 1,250

40

37.2 37.5 37.7 National average:

National average:

27.9 percent

831.6 years

1,000

30

51

1

2

3

4

5

tain age groups. The deaths, and the consequences of it, we see across the life span.” Unlike tobacco use or obesity, which tend to kill later in life, deaths in which alcohol played a role struck a wide age range, from the very young to the very old, and were concentrated somewhere in between. Deaths attributable to alcohol accounted for nearly 1 in 10 deaths nationally among working-age adults, ages 20 to 64, between 2006 and 2010, the study found. In New Mexico, alcohol-related deaths among working-age people accounted for 16.4 percent of all deaths, again the highest proportion in the nation, according to the study. The national study took into account a wide range of underlying alcohol-related causes of death, everything from liver disease to falls and auto accidents. It determined that deaths from immediate causes, such as crashes, only minimally outnumbered deaths from chronic alcohol-related conditions. “People assume when we’re talking about alcohol-related deaths that we’re talking about people who are alcoholics, when in fact most of the deaths we’re talking about involve people who aren’t dependent,” Tomedi said. More often in New Mexico, binge drinking turns deadly. “In New Mexico, where we really stand out isn’t the habitual side, percentage of problem drinking,” Tomedi said. “Where we stand out is that among people who drink, they drink a lot.”

47

48

49

50

51

Rankings include District Columbia RANKINGS INCLUDE DISTRICT OFofCOLUMBIA

Peter Lafond, pictured with his wife and children in 2009, was killed last year by a drunken driver. The number of alcohol-related deaths in New Mexico, on the road and elsewhere, far surpasses that of other states, according to a new CDC study. COURTESY PHOTO

She identified McKinley County in northwestern New Mexico and Rio Arriba County in the north-central part of the state as particular trouble spots for alcohol-related deaths, but for very different reasons. “McKinley County has a very polarized alcohol consumption pattern,” Tomedi said. A high percentage of people surveyed there report no alcohol consumption in a given month, but those who do drink reported the highest number of drinks consumed on average compared with the rest of the state. McKinley County also is home to a large Native American population, one of four groups — along with men, pregnant women and minors — that the Department of Health has identified as particularly vulnerable to alcohol-related health problems. In Rio Arriba County, alcohol has a hand in the prevalence of

New Mexico

50

Alaska

49

Source: Centers for Disease ControlCONTROL and Prevention SOURCE: CENTERS FOR DISEASE AND PREVENTION

Wyoming

48

250

Montana

New Mexico

47

500

Mississippi

Alaska

5

Minnesota

Montana

4

Massachusetts

Wyoming

3

New Jersey

Arizona

2

Hawaii

Connecticut

1

New York

Massachusetts

Rank:

564.5

Hawaii

10

750

21.8 22.1

New York

20

20.8 19.1 19.6

New Jersey

A study released June 26 by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, titled “Contribution of Excessive Alcohol Consumption to Death and Years of Potential Life Lost in the United States,” paints a grim national picture in which New Mexico stands out as a state in unparalleled crisis. “New Mexico has very much struggled with alcohol,” said Laura Tomedi, an alcohol epidemiologist for the New Mexico Department of Health. “We’ve led the nation since 1997. We have the highest alcohol-related death rate, and we lead the pack by a pretty fair margin.” Excessive use of alcohol robbed New Mexicans of 1,570.1 years of life annually, per 100,000 of population, between 2006 and 2010 — more than any other state, according to the study. Researchers derived the annual years of potential life lost by comparing the ages of people who died due to alcohol-related causes with their life expectancy. New York as lowest, at 564.5l; the national average was 831.6. New Mexico also experienced more deaths per capita that were attributable to alcohol, 51.2 per 100,000 population, than anywhere else in the country, the study said. Alaska was a distant second at 41.1 per 100,000 population. New Jersey fared best in that category, at 19.1, and the national average was 27.9. “The power behind the years of potential life lost, when we look at preventable causes of death — alcohol, smoking, obesity — where alcohol stands out is that people die very young, especially of injury,” Tomedi said. “Here in New Mexico, it’s the largest percentage in the nation of young people that we’re losing to alcohol. So that, at least to me, is very moving. When we talk about alcoholrelated deaths, there’s this blasé attitude that we’re all going to die of something, but these are young and working-age people that are dying unnecessarily.” That was the stark picture that the national data painted as well, according to Mandy Stahre, an epidemiologist at the Washington state Department of Health and the report’s lead author. “It’s the third-leading preventable cause of death, and it’s most prevalent among working-age adults,” Stahre said. “It’s a behavior that is not just limited to cer-

50

heroin overdoses as a cause of death, Tomedi said. “There’s a strong association between drug overdose and alcohol consumption,” she said. “If someone is using opioids and drinking alcohol at the same time, then their risk of dying is exponentially higher.” Stahre said access to health care, both primary and acute, as well as public policies affect the rate of alcohol deaths in a particular area. “States that are rural tend to have more alcohol-related deaths, and that has a lot to do with access to health care,” she said, citing New Jersey, the state the study found had the fewest per-capita alcohol deaths, as an example because of its relatively abundant access to care. The study recommended the state work to reduce alcohol deaths through practices such as increasing alcohol prices by rais-

ing booze taxes, strictly enforcing laws against serving minors and overserving intoxicated customers, and regulating the density of alcohol sellers. These practices have been shown to curtail aggressive drinking and violent crimes driven by intoxication. In New Mexico, Gov. Susana Martinez’s administration is reviewing ways to regulate concentrated pockets of alcohol sales. It also is encouraging physicians to ask at least a few questions about alcohol consumption during regular visits with patients, Tomedi said. As an arm of the Martinez administration, however, the Department of Health will not support increasing the alcohol excise tax, she said. “The Department of Health is an executive agency, and the governor’s statement is that we are not to promote taxes, so the Department of Health doesn’t promote increasing taxes” as a way to help curb alcohol consumption, Tomedi said. But she said the practice can be effective. “On the list of evidence-based practices that have a real effect on alcohol rates, then yes, increasing alcohol taxes is on that list,” she said. Michael Lonergan, a spokesman for the governor, said the administration’s efforts to promote education about DWI have been effective, and it remains committed to promoting discussions about alcohol use during doctor visits and limiting the density of establishments that market alcohol. However, he

said, raising taxes are not on the agenda. “Gov. Martinez made a promise to voters not to raise taxes,” Lonergan said. Ben Lewinger, New Mexico state director for Mothers Against Drunk Driving, said he favors an increased excise tax on alcohol, not only to reduce consumption, but also because the funds currently generated by the tax combat DWI. A measure to raise excise taxes on alcohol failed last year. MADD’s frustrations come from both sides of the aisle, Lewinger said. He said the Democrat-controlled Senate has blocked proposals in recent years to impose harsher penalties for DWI. “It’s going to take some changes, putting aside personal and political differences and figuring out where the rubber meets the road and how we can make a difference by better protecting people in New Mexico,” he said. Yolanda Briscoe, executive director of the Santa Fe Recovery Center, said solutions could be found closer to home, with families accepting that their loved ones with alcoholism have a disease and need to be steered into treatment. “If someone has diabetes and doesn’t take their insulin, for instance, there’s a lot of support around that,” she said. “Families, EMTs, everybody recognizes that’s someone who needs care. Alcoholism as a disease needs to overcome that stigma with the people who can make a difference.” For Laura Lafond, her 22-yearold son and her 19-year-old daughter, the empty chair at the dinner table, not the public policy debate, is at the forefront of their attention, even after 25-year-old Amanda Casaus last month received a 4½-year prison term — too little, in Laura’s eyes — for causing Peter Lafond’s death. “I have trouble calling this an accident,” Laura Lafond said. “An accident is something that’s not avoidable. She could have prevented the whole thing by not getting in that car, or never drinking that day. Making that decision to drink, it’s not an accident.” Contact Patrick Malone at 986-3017 or pmalone@ sfnewmexican.com. Follow him on Twitter @pmalonenm.


A-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

Holding: Sheriffs say Children of deported find help in Florida feds can’t rely on them Legal guardian for more than 800 kids serves as safety net in ‘broken system’ By Eli Saslow The Washington Post

KENDALL, Fla. — The first emergency phone call of the morning is the one that wakes her up, and Nora Sandigo, 48, answers one of the three phones she keeps within reach of her bed. “Hello. How can I help?” she says, because someone is always asking for her help. She gets up, pours herself coffee and takes down notes as she listens. “Sebastian. 12. U.S. citizen,” she writes. “Father deported. Mother detained. Drs appointment today, 2:45.” “OK, yes. I can do this,” she says, and soon she is in her minivan, sorting through a notebook that contains the day’s to-do list. She has to make lunch for 120 children, deliver school supplies to 13 others, drop five off at schools across Miami, help find housing for three, take two to the doctor, one to a psychologist and one to visit a parent detained for immigration violations. “Dios mío,” she says, my God, because these are not just things she hopes to get done but things she needs to get done — things she is in fact legally responsible for doing. Sandigo is Miami’s most popular solution to a growing problem in immigration enforcement affecting what the government refers to as “mixed-status families.” A quarter of people deported from the United States now say they are parents of U.S.citizen minors, which means more than 100,000 American children lose a parent to deportation each year. A few thousand of those children lose both parents. “Immigration orphans,” is how the government refers to this group. Many of them leave the country with their parents. Seventeen each day are referred to the U.S. foster-care system. Others seek out new guardians, American citizens such as Sandigo, to protect their legal interests in the United States. For these children, the arrangement means they can stay in the country where they were born and continue to live with relatives or friends who are in the country illegally, without fear of being taken into state custody. For Sandigo, it means the file cabinets in her small office are now stuffed with birth certificates, baby pictures, social security cards, passports and notarized forms for 812 children living in 14 states, ranging in age from 9 months to 17 years. Only two of the children live with her, and with Sandigo covering some of the

“C. To make health care decisions … ” “D. To generally do and perform all matters and things … ” On this day, that last point requires driving to Sam’s Club to pick up a few hundred boxes of juice to distribute to children’s homes; and then on to Home Depot to buy an air conditioner for a sweltering, two-bedroom house where three children are living with a 24-year-old cousin; and then to Party City to get a piñata so she can host a birthday celebration for a 9-year-old whose father was just sent back to Honduras. She raises money through a small charity, American Fraternity, to buy the supplies but ends up paying for most things out of her own savings. She took over guardianship for the first two children in 2009 as a favor for a Peruvian friend

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costs, the rest stay with friends or relatives. She does this as a volunteer and often at her own expense, not because she considers herself capable of providing a safety net for 812 children but because no one else does it. The federal government doesn’t track what happens to the children of deported parents, and no state or federal officials monitor how many children Sandigo has or how many guardians like her exist in immigrant communities around the country. Sandigo sees some of the children every week, and others she has met only once, on the day their parents signed the paperwork detailing her duties: “A. To participate in decisions regarding the child’s education … ” “B. To grant permission and consent to the child participating in any activity … ”

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Nora Sandigo holds 5-month-old Carlos Hernandez at a luncheon last month in Miami with children for whom she holds guardianship. Sandigo is the legal guardian for more than 800 children of immigrants. RICKY CARIOTI/THE WASHINGTON POST

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time to investigate whether they could be deported for immigration violations. But these sheriffs — many of them in California, and some in Minnesota, Kansas and Washington — say the court decision in Oregon forces their hand, because they cannot risk doing something that a U.S. magistrate judge has found unconstitutional. “When a judge says something is in violation of the Fourth Amendment, I am not going to just keep doing it,” said Sheriff William Gore of San Diego. “If they want to take someone into federal custody, they can decide to do that, but I am not going to keep holding somebody because they ask me to, and nothing more than that.” The decision, said Gore, echoing the sentiments of other sheriffs, has nothing to do with his own position on immigration, but rather with the predicament that Washington seems to have left him with. “We need them to figure this out,” he said. “They can’t just rely on us to do it for them.” The Obama administration expanded the detainer program as a way to strengthen immigration enforcement and create a uniform policy for local police and sheriffs’ departments. Now, the backlash is creating the kind of patchwork system the policy was meant to avoid. Last month, California’s attorney general, Kamala D. Harris, published an advisory memo telling local law enforcement officials that departments that abide by the detainer requests could be vulnerable to lawsuits. The local changes are likely to increase pressure on President Barack Obama, who is already facing criticism from both sides of the immigration debate. Amid the influx of Central American immigrants along the Texas border, Republicans in Congress are increasingly lashing out against what they see as lax enforcement, even as immigration reform advocates intensify their efforts to persuade the administration to ease deportations. Federal officials request detainers on many noncitizens in jails, including people who have been arrested merely for driving without a license as well as those convicted of serious crimes, such as armed robbery. Under the program, jails are supposed to send fingerprints of everyone arrested to the Department of Homeland Security, where they can be checked against databases tracking immigration violations, and to hold people in custody while they are investigated. Federal officials initially described the program as voluntary, then later implied that all local law enforcement agencies were required to comply. But more and more local leaders have pushed back — the mayor of Boston recently joined the fray, and the sheriff in Orange County, Calif., widely considered a conservative pocket in the state, has also decided not to abide by the holds. In recent months, federal officials have told local agencies that it is more a request than a requirement, but confusion has only added to frustrations. “We’ve always tried to pin down whether this is a ‘shall’ or ‘will’ or ‘may’ — is it a request or an order?” Gore said. “There’s never been a real answer to that.” When California lawmakers passed legislation in 2012 to essentially eliminate the program statewide, federal officials lobbied Gov. Jerry Brown to veto it, as he eventually did. But when a similar measure, known as the Trust Act, passed last year, Brown signed it into law, and federal officials said they would do nothing to stop it.

Not all sheriffs appear eager to curb their efforts to help the federal authorities. Donny Youngblood, the sheriff of Kern County in inland California, has criticized the Trust Act and continues to hold immigrants past their release dates. “If you’re in this country illegally and you commit a crime, you should be deported — that seems so simple to me,” Youngblood said. “If you show not once but multiple times you have no respect for the laws of this country, that’s disturbing. We have an obligation to public safety, and if someone is charged with a serious criminal act and immigration officials want him, I reserve the right to hold that person so that can happen.” Immigration reform advocates regard the flood of local responses as a major victory, potentially crushing what they see as a driver of inhumane decisions that have forced immigrants back over the border for minor infractions like traffic violations. “This is a problem with basic civil rights — we do not hold people without due process in this country,” said Jennie Pasquarella, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California, which has sent letters warning county sheriffs here to stop honoring the federal immigration detainers. “You cannot deprive someone of liberty without having probable cause to know they could be deported. The local sheriffs all over the state are really recognizing that reality.” The immigration detainers were introduced nearly a decade ago, but the use of them increased when Obama took office, in large part to emphasize the kind of enforcement efforts the administration called its priority: capturing criminals who were living here illegally and likely to commit more crimes. In some places, like Massachusetts and Illinois, state officials resisted almost immediately, seeing the policy as a too-wide dragnet that would encourage racial profiling. But the most recent wave of resistance is not driven by ideology or a philosophical belief that the detainers are a wrongheaded policy. Instead, most sheriffs are simply wary of being sued and are imploring the federal government to come up with clearer policies that will withstand legal scrutiny. In San Bernardino County, Calif., where undocumented immigrants make up roughly 6 percent of the population, the Sheriff’s Department decided to stop abiding by federal detainer requests within weeks of the ruling in Oregon. Last year, an average of 110 inmates a month were turned over to federal immigration agents. Now, that number is zero. “Until there is a clearly legally binding decision that outlines the legality of the detainers and what is needed to honor them, we really do not see any reason we should open ourselves up to potential lawsuits,” said Cpl. Lolita Harper, the department’s Hispanic community liaison. “Our decision has certainly been embraced by the immigration activists, but that really wasn’t what this was about at all.”

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whose American-born daughters were referred to foster care when she was detained during an immigration raid. Who better to care for them, the friend asked, than Sandigo, who had been separated from her own parents at 17 while fleeing war in Nicaragua and then become an activist for immigration reform? “I’m sorry, but I’m not sure I can,” Sandigo told her, thinking first about her own responsibilities: two biological daughters entering their teens, a husband, a business of small nursing homes, a working farm on the border of the Everglades. But then Sandigo went to see the two girls in a group home, where one had started seeing a counselor for depression and the other had begun skipping school. “How can we not help?” she asked her husband, and so they signed the paperwork for their first two children, and five years later it has become 810 more. “La gran madre,” is what some of those children call her. The great mother. “A hidden anomaly in the system,” is what a spokeswoman for the Florida Department of Children and Families calls her, explaining that federal and state authorities usually leave guardianship decisions to parents and don’t monitor guardians unless there is a complaint of abuse. “A Band-Aid,” is what Sandigo calls herself. “All I can do is hold back some of the bleeding. There is no way I can give 812 children the love and attention they need, but it has to be me. The system is broken. Nobody else is taking responsibility for them.”

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Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

A-7

Sheriff, feds say Nevada rancher must be held accountable By Martin Griffith The Associated Press

RENO, Nev. — U.S. Bureau of Land Management officials say they agree with a Nevada sheriff’s position that rancher Cliven Bundy must be held accountable for his role in an April standoff between his supporters and the federal agency. Clark County Sheriff Doug Gillespie said Bundy crossed the line when he allowed states’ rights supporters, including self-proclaimed militia members, onto his property to aim guns at police. “If you step over that line, there are consequences to those actions,” Gillespie told the Las Vegas Review-Journal. “And I believe they stepped over

that line. No doubt about it. They need to be held accountable for it.” Bureau spokeswoman Celia Boddington, in a statement released Saturday to The Associated Press, said the agency continues to pursue the matter “aggressively through the legal system.” “There is an ongoing investigation and we are working diligently to ensure that those who broke the law are held accountable,” she said, declining to elaborate. The FBI declined comment Saturday on its investigation. Bundy did not respond to a request for comment. The Bureau of Land Management says Bundy owes over $1 million in fees and penalties for trespassing on federal property without a permit over

20 years. Bundy, whose ancestors settled in the area in the late 1800s, refuses to acknowledge federal authority on public lands. A federal judge in Las Vegas first ordered Bundy in 1998 to remove “trespass cattle” from land the bureau declared a refuge for the endangered desert tortoise. Bureau officials obtained court orders last year allowing the roundup. Boddington disputed Gillespie’s contention the agency mishandled the roundup of Bundy’s cattle 80 miles northeast of Las Vegas. The bureau backed down during the showdown with Bundy and his armed supporters, citing safety concerns, and released some 380 Bundy cattle col-

lected during a weeklong operation from a vast arid range half the size of the state of Delaware. Gillespie blamed the bureau for escalating the conflict and ignoring his advice to delay the roundup after he had a confrontational meeting with Bundy’s children a few weeks before it began. “I came back from that saying, ‘This is not the time to do this,’ ” the sheriff told the Review-Journal. “They said, ‘We do this all the time. We know what we’re doing. We hear what you’re saying, but we’re moving forward.’” Tensions further escalated early in the roundup after a video showed one of Bundy’s sons being stunned with a Taser. The video drew militia members

and others to Bundy’s ranch. Bundy was not a hardened criminal, Gillespie told the newspaper. He was a rancher who stopped paying his fees, the sheriff said, and that was not worth risking violence. But Boddington said the bureau planned and conducted the roundup in “full coordination” with Gillespie and his office. “It is unfortunate that the sheriff is now attempting to rewrite the details of what occurred, including his claims that the BLM did not share accurate information,” she said. “The sheriff encouraged the operation and promised to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with us as we enforced two recent federal court orders.”

Mystery: Fenn says he had not heard of shrine until he read blog Continued from Page A-1 of the shrine until I read about it on Pam’s blog a few weeks ago.” But that will probably not end the debate over what Shetron says is her solution to the poem, which Fenn published in his autobiography, Thrill of the Chase, after surviving a diagnosis of cancer. The controversy has been lighting up blogs and websites of gold hunters and Fenn loyalists for several weeks. Shetron said there is nothing in this for her, except providing information on what she has gained from her research and trips to Silverton — as well as her personal visit with Fenn. “He could hand me the treasure chest tomorrow, and I’d hand it right back,” she said. “I don’t want to write a book, I don’t want the money. I just want to write the story. I have worked on this every day since the poem was handed to me. I couldn’t walk away from it if I tried.” A native of Texas and an Air Force veteran, Fenn is a former art and antiquities dealer who owned a Santa Fe business for 17 years and developed relationships around the world. His 42-pound hidden treasure chest was first revealed in Thrill of the Chase, published in October 2010. He claims the chest includes his favorite bracelet as well as a 2,000-year-old fetish necklace, gold, jewelry and artifacts. He has tossed out the value as $1 million, but that is just a guess, he said. Some dismiss Shetron as a religious zealot or as just another searcher who seemed sure of a solution but is now frustrated and offering up an alternative explanation. But that doesn’t explain the fact that after almost four years since the search began, with thousands of people exploring millions of acres of land, no one has found Fenn’s hidden chest. Last week, Fenn said he was certain the treasure chest was still out there — and the speculation intensified. One blogger who supports Shetron wrote, “Anybody who knows the story would have a hard time denying this FITS! I was looking at the pictures of the shrine. I saw that the walls surrounding it are curved. I matched that with the curved writing in his book.” “Everything else matches up. I’m just sad it’s over,” said another comment. “My buddy told me to check this site out. He said it is all over for me and my ‘Fenn Friends.’ Looks like I lost a bet. Beer is on me tonight! Congratulations to this little lady from NC. Many cowboys are crying tonight,” a searcher wrote last week. Is there an actual treasure chest? The New Mexican asked Fenn during a June 26 interview at Collected Works Bookstore in Santa Fe. Fenn said, “Of course, and I’ve said that over and over and over again.” Shetron doesn’t doubt the existence of the chest, overflowing with gold coins, as it is photographed in the back of the autobiography. She argues, however, that it is close to Fenn’s home, in a place that will be revealed after he dies. Once made public, it should be placed in a Santa Fe museum that can properly tell the Thrill of the Chase story, she said. But the poem is a separate journey, she said, and one she believes Fenn didn’t think would be solved so quickly.

A hunt for something more than gold Shetron was not one of those searchers out in the Rocky Mountains, climbing hillsides and scouring topographic maps. A self-described stay-at-home mom, she was born in Philadelphia and now lives in Charlotte, N.C., with her son and husband. She said she has a reputation for insight and spirituality, and it was her husband’s co-worker who handed her the poem in March 2013, asking half-jokingly if she could get a GPS on its location. When she started researching the Rocky Mountains north of Santa Fe, where Fenn said he alone walked in and hid the booty, Shetron kept coming across the town of Silverton, and the Old Hundred Gold Mine, near the ghost town of Howardsville. That is where

Forrest Fenn at his Santa Fe home Friday. One blogger with an increasing number of followers thinks she knows the location of Fenn’s hidden trove. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

ON THE WEB A MYSTERY SOLVED? Pam Shetron’s interpretation of Forrest Fenn’s Thrill of the Chase poem: Begin it where warm waters halt Board the Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railway in Durango, Colo. Warm waters halt when the steam engine stops at the end of the day. The warm water refers to the heated water produced from the coal-fired engines. (Warm water is defined as any water that has a tempurature above freezing but below its boiling point.) And take it in the canyon down, Ride the train down the canyon along the Animas River to Silverton, Colo. From Durango, Silverton is at a higher elevation. However, “take it in the canyon down” refers to a direction, not a lower altitude. Not far, but too far to walk The trip from Durango to the shrine in Silverton is 50 miles. This is too far to walk. Put in below the home of Brown The “put in” is where the train stops at 12th street in Silverton. “Put in” is a military term for halt/stop. Below the “home of Brown” This line refers to Cement Creek, which is naturally polluted and often referred to by locals as “Brown Gravy.” The creek flows through Silverton above (north of) where the Animas River and Cement Creek meet the “put in.”

brings you to 10th Street. “Ever drawing” is a “drawing” or painting by Eric Sloane, “ever” referring to his birth name, Everad. “Nigh” means on the left when facing north. There’ll be no paddle up your creek Going up 10th Street, there is no creek. You are, however, traveling between two creeks: the Cement on your right and Mineral on your left. There’s no need for a paddle. Just heavy loads and water high. “Heavy loads” refers to Snowden Street, as in heavy loads of snow, and “water high” refers to Bluff Street, as in river bluffs. If you’ve been wise “Wise” is referring to Keystone Street. “Keystone” was King Solomon’s word for the wise. This is the last street before you approach the shrine. The shrine is 500 feet from the access road. And found the blaze The “blaze” is referring to a Blazon, which is a coat of arms. The Sacred Heart of Jesus is surrounded by the Lord’s eternal light and is commonly referred to as Christ’s coat of arms. This would be the coat of arms on the marble statue of Jesus at the Christ of the Mines Shrine. Look quickly down Bow your head. Your quest to cease

From there it’s no place for the meek

Your journey has come to an end.

Upon exiting the train, you will be on Notorious Blair Street, which is no place for the meek. Back in the day, Blair Street (a red-light district) was filled with gamblers, prostitutes, brothels, saloons and gun fights. Most of the original establishments have been preserved and are still operating today as bed and breakfasts or restaurants.

“Tarry” — to wait around or delay

The end is ever drawing nigh Going to the “end” of Blair Street

she initially thought the physical treasure was hidden. The family visited the area over Memorial Day weekend in 2013 and took the public tour of the mine site three times in one day, looking for anything unusual in the shafts. On the last tour, they asked for permission to crawl around and lift rocks, but they failed to find anything out of the ordinary. They also visited the Christ of the Mines Shrine, a 16-foot-tall statue of Jesus that was erected in 1959 on the north slope of Silverton. In the meantime, she talked with

But tarry scant with marvel gaze “Scant” — a short period of time “With marvel gaze” — “marvel” is to be wowed; gaze is to admire the beauty Just take the chest and go in Peace To take the chest, metaphorically, is to take the Sacred Heart (eternal love of Christ). And go in peace to love and serve the Lord.

locals, which is where she learned that the Cement Creek, which is naturally polluted, is referred to as Brown Gravy. One of Fenn’s hints is: “Put in below the home of Brown.” Also on that trip, the family detoured to meet Fenn at his home on Santa Fe’s historic east side. She said there was an immediate connection, and she knew she was on the right track. But she didn’t plow through the rest of Fenn’s writings and biographical material until she returned to North Carolina. And even after the poem led her back

u Pam Shetron’s blog, The Whisperer: www.awhisperer.com u Dal Neitzel’s blog: dalneitzel.com u Collected Works bookstore: www. collectedworksbookstore.com u Old Santa Fe Trading Co. Fenn blog: www.oldsantafetradingco.com

to Silverton and back to the shrine, it didn’t all click until after her husband got permission from the church to open up a wall at the base of the shrine and explore its inside. A local mason who came with them recovered the area after the investigation this spring, she said. Only then did it become clear to Shetron that her solution was correct, and that the poem was taking visitors on a hunt for something other than gold. Again, she went back to Fenn’s writings to learn more about his friendship with Eric Sloane, as mentioned in the book Seventeen Dollars a Square Inch, a personal tribute to Eric Sloane. The book “is almost a recorded conversation between two friends who shared a common interest and the love of simple things and simpler times,” according to the description on one website. In the preface, Fenn writes: “The purpose of this book is to publish the last written words of a man who was a mentor to me late in my life, and whose memory occupies a special spot in a warm corner of my mind where only the fondest of recollections are allowed.” Then, Shetron said, she got it. “I said, this thing is not about getting rich and it’s not about the gold and notoriety, it’s about a man and his life and a friendship that will live forever.” Shetron is not the first who claims to have solved the poem, but she is one of the only searchers so far who has made her findings so public and who answers questions about conclusions that might be amiss. Her blog has more than 27,000 visitors, and she gets hundreds of emails a day. Raised Catholic, she claims to be more spiritual than religious. “My life experiences have made me more connected,” she said. “I’ve put everything together,” she said. “If you have a question, I’ll have an answer for you, not just the poem but things that are in the book. If you do the research, everything is there for you.”

Inspiring others to venture outdoors The official Thrill of the Chase blog is managed by Dal Neitzel, a Seattle-area man who used to deep-water dive and help recover shipwrecks. Now a videographer, Neitzel met Fenn through a family connection and is writing a

biography of the Air Force pilot who settled in Santa Fe to trade artifacts, sell artwork, excavate an ancient pueblo — and inspire searchers to get outside and hunt for gold. Neitzel has gone in search of the treasure almost 40 times himself, and his blog has photos and narratives from dozens of other searchers — hardy travelers from the upper reaches of Montana to Wyoming and Colorado, and to Ojo Caliente and New Mexico’s national forests. Neitzel is not surprised the treasure has eluded himself and others. “It’s not supposed to be simple. He encouraged people to look for it, He wants to encourage people to go in the outdoors,” Neitzel said. Fenn said he knows the chest is still out there, although won’t say how he knows that — and that has helped fuel the speculation that he is referring to life as the real chase, or that the chest is someplace close, where he can see it. “I know today that the treasure chest is still out there,” he said June 26. “I can’t tell you how I know, so don’t ask.” He suspects the chest will be found by the kind of person who wants notoriety, but there is nothing to stop someone from taking it quietly and keeping the wealth a secret, he said. Fenn, who turns 84 next month, also has taken a personal involvement in the quest by answering questions and visits from searchers — as he did with Shetron and her family in 2013. “This really occupies his mind. It’s fun for him. How many treasure hunts are there of this caliber where the person who hid it is still around and answers questions?” Neitzel said. “I believe the reason he knows it hasn’t been found is that it’s so incredibly well hidden,” he said. But if it is so well hidden, doubters wonder, then how does Fenn know it is still there? Fenn is always the first to point out that the Thrill of the Chase and the poem are accomplishing what he intended: getting people to engage with the outdoors. He points out the story of Renelle Jacobson, who has a rare bone disease but still came to search for the treasure. In his blog post “Salute to a Warrior,” posted on Neitzel’s site, Fenn writes about Jacobson’s visit to his home. “I’m sick 3 to 4 days a week, have low energy the rest of the time and my sleep schedule is often turned upside down,” she told Fenn, according to the post. “Working on this treasure hunt has given me a way to occupy my time when I’m awake after midnight. When I work on your puzzle for an hour, I can say that I worked toward a goal.” Fenn continues in his own words, “Imagination is her pleasure and faith is her nourishment.” In an interview with Australian television last month, Fenn said, “I love the fact that I’ve started a fire in a lot of people and if nobody finds the treasure, I promise you a thousand years from now people will still be looking.” Is Fenn religious? “I am not very religious, but I am spiritual. My church is in the mountains and along the riverbank,” he told The New Mexican.

‘I know it’s real’ Does any of this mean there is no treasure? Does it mean that Fenn’s “thrill of the chase” is really a pursuit of adventure and friendship, and is that passion the path to a richly filled life, rather than money or gold? Douglas Preston, a Santa Fe writer who shares Fenn’s love of mystery, adventure and, of course, fiction, sides with the searchers. “I think Forrest hid it very well and that the clues in the letter are subtle and difficult to understand. I still think it’s out there. I did see the treasure chest and handle the treasure, so I know it’s real. And I know it’s no longer in his vault. And finally, Forrest is just not the type of person to mislead others and send them on a wild goose chase,” Preston said. “He’s a straight shooter.” Contact Bruce Krasnow at brucek@sfnewmexican.com.


A-8

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

NATION

Foreigners come to U.S. for baby, womb to carry it Surrogacy is only legal in few countries By Tamar Lewin The New York Times

At home in Lisbon, a gay couple invited friends over to a birthday celebration, and at the end of the evening shared a surprise — an ultrasound image of their baby, moving around in the belly of a woman in Pennsylvania being paid to carry their child. “Everyone was shocked, and asked everything about how we do this,” said Paulo, who spoke on the condition that neither his last name nor that of his husband, João, be used since what they were doing is a crime in Portugal. While babies through surrogacy have become increasingly common in the United States, the situation is quite different in Portugal — as it is in most of the world where the hiring of a woman to carry a child is forbidden. And as Paulo and João have discovered, even bringing home a baby born abroad through surrogacy can be complicated. In an era of globalization, the market for children crosses national borders; witness the longtime flow of Americans

who have gone overseas to adopt babies from South Korea, China, Russia and Guatemala. Other than the United States, only a few countries — among them India, Thailand, Ukraine and Mexico — allow paid surrogacy. As a result, there is an increasing flow in the opposite direction, with the United States drawing affluent couples from Europe, Asia and Australia. Indeed, many large surrogacy agencies in the United States say international clients — gay, straight, married or single — provide the bulk of their business. The traffic highlights a divide between the United States and much of the world over fundamental questions about what constitutes a family, who is considered a legal parent, who is eligible for citizenship and whether paid childbirth is a service or exploitation. But while many states, including New York, ban surrogacy, others, like California, welcome it as a legitimate business. Together, domestic and international couples will have more than 2,000 babies through gestational surrogacy in the United States this year, almost three times as many as a decade ago. Many surrogates and intended parents find each other on the Internet and make their

Thomas Reuss, foreground, and Dennis Reuther, both of Dusseldorf, Germany, where surrogacy is illegal, found a surrogate in Pennsylvania two years ago for their son, Nico. Foreign citizens now make up most of the clients at large U.S. surrogacy agencies. GORDON WELTERS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

arrangements independently, sometimes without a lawyer or a formal contract. Surrogacy began in the United States more than 30 years ago, soon after the first baby was born through in vitro fertilization in England. At the time, most surrogates were also the genetic mothers, becoming pregnant through artificial insemination with the sperm of the intended father. But that changed after the Baby M case in 1986, in which the surrogate, Mary Beth Whitehead, refused

to give the baby to the biological father and his wife. In the wake of the spectacle of two families fighting over a baby who belonged to both of them, traditional surrogacy gave way to gestational surrogacy, in which an embryo is created in the laboratory — sometimes using eggs and sperm from the parents, sometimes from donors — and transferred to a surrogate who has no genetic link to the baby. But thorny questions remain: How much extra will the sur-

rogate be paid for a cesarean section, multiple births — or loss of her uterus? If she needs bed rest, how much will the intended parents pay to replace her paycheck, and cover child care and housekeeping? “The gestational carrier has to agree to follow medical advice, but there has to be some level of trust,” said Andrew W. Vorzimer, a Los Angeles surrogacy lawyer who advises on many arrangements that have gone awry. “Once everyone goes home and the doors are closed, there’s no way to really monitor what’s going on.” Surrogacy remains controversial, even in the United States, despite the rapid proliferation of clinics, doctors and agencies. When all goes well, supporters say, the arrival of a baby to parents with no other path to a biological child is an unparalleled joy. The restrictions in many countries have been a boost for U.S. surrogacy. For overseas couples, the big draw is the knowledge that many states have sophisticated fertility clinics, experienced lawyers, a large pool of egg donors and surrogates, and, especially, established legal precedent. “We chose the United States because of the certainty of the legal process,” Paulo said. “Sur-

rogacy is very secretive in Portugal. People don’t talk about surrogacy, and it’s hard to get any information. In the United States it is all clear.” But it is not cheap. International would-be parents often pay $150,000 or more, an amount that rises rapidly for those who do not get a viable pregnancy on their first try. Prices vary by region, but surrogates usually receive $20,000 to $30,000, egg donors $5,000 to $10,000 (more for the Ivy League student-athlete, or model), the fertility clinic and doctor $30,000, the surrogacy agency $20,000 and the lawyers $10,000. In addition, the intended parents pay for insurance, fertility medication, and incidentals like the surrogate’s travel and maternity clothes. Because surrogacy is so expensive in the United States, many couples travel to India, Thailand or Mexico, where the total process costs half or less. For those from abroad, getting a U.S.-born baby home can involve tangled immigration problems. Some countries require a new birth certificate, a parental order or an adoption. Some will not accept a U.S. birth certificate with two fathers listed as the parents. Occasionally, a baby can be denied entry into the parents’ home country.

Nonprofits help the dying make farewell videos Woman with cancer recalled her mother’s death and wanted to do more for her kids By Jim Fitzgerald The Associated Press

SCARSDALE, N.Y. — Carolyn Ngbokoli doesn’t remember the sound of her mother’s voice. She was just 19 when her mom died, and no recordings were left. Now Ngbokoli, 37, faces the possibility of her own early death, from breast cancer. But she has made sure that her sons, 4 and 6 years old, can see how she loved them, hear how she spoke to them and be reminded of her advice to them long after she’s gone. With the no-cost help of an organization called Thru My Eyes, Ngbokoli, of White Plains, N.Y., recorded a video of memories and guidance. “I want to be able to tell my boys as much as I can and leave them something to look back on,” she said. Leaving a farewell video isn’t new — Michael Keaton did it in a 1993 movie called My Life — but it is evolving beyond the version in which a dying person talks to an unmanned camera or spends hundreds of dollars for a videographer who also records weddings and bar mitzvahs. Thru My Eyes, based in Scarsdale, and Memories Live, of Milburn, N.J., are among the nonprofits filling a niche in which people with terminal diagnoses — usually cancer-stricken parents with young children — get emotional as well as technical support, for free. E. Angela Heller, a social worker for cancer patients at New York’s Presbyterian Hospital, has sent half a dozen patients to Thru My Eyes, which was founded by a cancer survivor. “Every single one has said it’s a wonderful experience,” she said. “What makes this different is the deep support from the videographers. These people know illness, they know cancer. They know how to schedule around chemotherapy weeks.” Ngbokoli found the production to be an emotional process. “There were times when I was laughing about funny things that happened to us,” Ngbokoli said. “But then there were times when it was torturous, where I had to look in the camera and say, ‘If you’re watching this and I’m not here.’” Carri Rubenstein, 61, is the cofounder and president of Thru My Eyes, which has completed more than 40 videos. A can-

cer survivor, she was inspired when she heard a friend with a bad diagnosis wish aloud a few years ago that she could find someone to help her make a video for her family. Rubenstein wanted to make it a free service, so with the help of her lawyer husband, she formed the notfor-profit. She accepts donations and holds fundraisers. At first, Rubenstein went to hospitals “looking for business,” she said. Now she’s getting calls from across the country. Kathy Yeatman-Stock, a social worker in the cancer center at the Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center in Pomona, Calif., contacted Thru My Eyes in hopes of getting patients at Pomona to make videos via Skype. “People in the past have left letters and birthday cards for their children, but there is so much more impact with seeing the parent on film,” she said. Heller said patients are “facing their mortality in probably the most profound way” and want to give advice for their children at various life stages. “They say, ‘I won’t be at the wedding’ but they want to give advice.” She said one mother read Goodnight Moon on the video so her children could hear it forever. Such videos convey “a very personal touch, going beyond the stiff words you might have in your will, let’s say,” said Sally Hurme, a project adviser at AARP and author of Checklist for Family Survivors. Patients who want to make a video are given an interviewer, usually a volunteer health care professional, who tries to take subjects through their lives. One prompt that always brings joy, Rubenstein said, is to talk about the day patients found out they’d be parents. “Then we get into the first step, the first words, all the fun moments.” The videos run between an hour and 90 minutes and include photos, documents, music and interaction with the family. Kerry Glass, 41, a former nursing home art therapist who runs Memories Live, says she prompts patients to talk about the overview of their lives as well as details: “the house you grew up in, your favorite game, your first job, your first car.” In one video, a man talks about growing up in a family of 10 in which the boys could never get into the bathroom and “would have to go outside to take care of whatever we had to take care of.” Another talks about spaghetti and meatballs and says, “Marrying into an Italian family was probably the best move I ever made.”

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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

OPINIONS

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Readers weigh in on the crisis in Iraq. Page B-5

For Natives, a split in opinion on Obama

The details behind the child-support ad on King

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hen I first asked Gary King about that ad in which Gov. Susana Martinez practically skins him alive for voting against a childsupport bill back when he was a legislator, King did not recall that particular bill. Remember, the bill in question, Senate Bill 693, was introduced in 1993 — 21 years ago. Yes, this bill is old enough to drink. King, who currently is attorney general, served in the House of Representatives from 1987 through 1998. Anyone who saw Martinez’s ad on TV heard all about SB 693: “Gary King cast the only no vote against cracking down on Steve Terrell deadbeat parents,” a Roundhouse female narrator says Roundup in the ad. “King was the only politician voting against withholding income from deadbeat parents, against helping kids get the child support they deserve.” King indeed was the only House member to vote against the bill, which later was signed into law by his father, then Gov. Bruce King. And it’s still on the books today. When I called him about the ad, King told me he’d have to look up the bill. So he did. On Wednesday, he called me back. “It had nothing to do with deadbeat parents,” he said. “There already was a law on the books dealing with deadbeat parents. “There already was a law in place providing for withholding child support,” King explained. “What this bill did was make it automatic for everybody, whether or not they were delinquent in their child-support payments.” SB 693, he said, shifted the burden of proof from the person receiving child support to the person who owed child support. Or as the bill said, “The income of the support obligor shall be subject to immediate income withholding regardless of the existence of any child support arrearage or delinquency.” In other words, the legislation was not “cracking down” on deadbeat parents. In effect, it was cracking down on parents who were up-to-date on their child-support payments. Under the bill, any custodial parent who requested one could get an automatic garnishing of the ex-spouse’s wages, even if there was no delinquency. The parent paying the support — the “obligor” in the language of the bill — can stop his wages from being garnished only by going to court and convincing a judge “why income withholding would not be in the best interest of the child.” In any good-cause finding, the judge would have to find that the paying parent “has timely paid support in the past.” “I voted against that bill because I believe the state should not treat nondelinquent parents the same as we treat those who are delinquent in child-support payments,” King said. Of course, arguments about “shifting the burden of proof” and equity for nondelinquent parents are no match against emotional ads with sad-eyed children alone on a swing set. A history-making campaign ad: But no matter what the legislation actually said, Martinez’s ad is groundbreaking in one respect: SB 693 was sponsored by Michael Sanchez, then a freshman senator, now the majority leader in the Senate. I’m pretty sure that this ad is the first time that Gov. Martinez ever has criticized anyone for not voting for a Michael Sanchez bill. Could this be the harbinger of better relations between the Fourth Floor and the Senate? A tribute to the Fab Four: Neither King nor the Legislative Counsel Services library could find a copy of the actual fiscal impact statement for SB 693. But one document, a bill analysis by the state Tax and Revenue Department, was found last week. Whoever wrote this unsigned document apparently was amused by some of the legal language in the legislation, specifically words like obligor and obligee (which is the parent receiving child support). Also, this unknown tax analyst apparently was a Beatles fan. Under the “Bill Short Title” section, the analyst wrote “None,” then added, ” ‘obligee, obligor, life goes on … HA! ’ (McCartney?)” Something tells me that the document’s author never suspected this addition might be published two decades later in connection with a governor’s race.

hree weeks ago, President Barack Obama made his first visit to an Indian reservation as the sitting president when he and first lady Michelle Obama dropped in on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation in Cannonball, N.D. Many of us remember when, on the campaign trail before his first term, Obama made a trip to the Crow Rez in Montana, where he was adopted by the Black Eagle family and given a Crow Indian name. Barack and Michelle arrived in Dakota and Lakota country on the day of StandHarlan ing Rock’s annual McKosato Flag Day PowCommentary wow (which happened to be Friday the 13th). They met with a group of young Native Americans for a roundtable discussion before heading over to the powwow. They were greeted with cheers, drums, dancers, tepees and a song to honor Mr. President. They sat next to Standing Rock Chairman David Archambault, who proudly wore an eagle-feather headdress. Archambault, in his welcoming remarks, said that the great Lakota Chief Sitting Bull once asked the U.S. government to send an honest man to his reservation. “If Sitting Bull were sitting here today, he’d be honored,” said the chairman. “The best thing that’s happened to Indian Country has been President Obama being elected. I know [his visit] is not going to undo all the wrongs that have been done to Native Americans or to Indian Country, but it’s going to inspire a lot of people.” The president, in his 12-minute speech, touted his administration’s record in dealing with Native Americans. He pointed to settling two key court cases, the Keepseagle and Cobell litigation. He commended the White House Tribal Nations Conference and the establishment of the White House Council on Native American Affairs, as well as the passage of the Violence Against Women Act. But not everyone was quick to praise the president, including Tex Hall, chairman of the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation of North Dakota. He was quoted in The Washington Post: “There’s been a bad track record. Our fathers and grandfathers and great-grandfathers have gone to Washington, and there have been … no promises kept. That’s why we’ve not trusted the federal government.” I recently spoke with the acclaimed Native activist and poet John Trudell and asked him about his opinion of the Obama administration. “I don’t trust them. I think the whole entire political system is corrupt, whether it’s the Republicans and George W. Bush, or the Democrats and Obama. I think they all serve the corporate fate. In general, the system is filled with lies and tokenism. As Native people, we’re so far down the list because we don’t have the numbers, and the politicians just show up for photo ops. “When you look at the sovereignty, the economics, the cultural wellbeing of the Native people [Obama] hasn’t done one thing,” said Trudell. “He’s just like every other U.S. president. I think a lot of Native people are just glad to finally be acknowledged. You look at the time Obama has been in office, and the teen suicide rates on reservations are [still] out of control, the poverty is out of control. When you’re surrounded by these statistical dynamics, how can you have self-esteem? Being acknowledged is an illusion. It might make you feel good for a little while, but it doesn’t change the overall quality of life for our children.” In his speech, the president referenced Sitting Bull’s famous quote, “Let us put our minds together to see what we can build for our children.” Obama added, “There’s no denying that for some Americans the deck has been stacked against them, sometimes for generations. And that’s been the case for many Native Americans. But if we’re working together, we can make things better. We’ve got a long way to go, but if we do our part, I believe that we can turn the corner. We can break old cycles. We can give our children a better future.” Only time will tell. Harlan McKosato is Sauk/Ioway and Director of NDN Productions.

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

State needs a miracle to improve conditions

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oohoo! According to news reports, New Mexico is No. 1 in the nation as a place “where the most Americans drink themselves to death.” Go team. Also, Gov. Susana Martinez was voted No. 5 in the “Clown Category: Conduct raises serious questions about their leadership” by the Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington. We need to pursue Gov. Martinez’s re-election with greater alacrity in order for her to, daring to dream, achieve the No. 1 “Clown” position. Go team! Perhaps it is time for New Mexicans to embrace our continuing chronic social and political mediocrity in that nothing, short of a miracle, will ever improve our situation. How sad. Richard Sanchez

Santa Fe

False attacks It’s unfortunate that The Santa Fe New Mexican chooses to publish Milan Simonich’s attacks on Gov. Susana Martinez. The attacks are not only vicious — they’re simply not true. Simonich’s favorite line of attack is denying that Gov. Martinez didn’t have to deal with a $450 million budget deficit when she took office. He is wrong. The Santa Fe New Mexican itself published stories on the massive shortfall in late 2010 and early 2011. Gov. Martinez did a brilliant job closing that deficit, cutting waste and avoiding any job-killing tax increases. Samuel LeDoux

vice chairman, Republican Party Santa Fe County Santa Fe

With the institutional memory of regulators measured in nanoseconds, there is a real possibility that this story will end poorly, again, if these trends persist. So, who would carry the shovels at the back end of this parade? U.S. taxpayers as usual. Tom O’Brien

Santa Fe

Leading the way Thank you for the story about the New Mexico Leadership Institute (“Program aims to keep graduates in state,” June 28). The Santa Fe Community Foundation is pleased to announce that we have recently become the home of a fund to support the institute — a unique scholarship program founded by local entrepreneur and business leader Daniel Burrell. The institute recently selected its first cohort of 29 students who plan to attend The University of New Mexico or New Mexico State University and who are passionate about building their leadership skills, addressing national/global issues and becoming agents of change. Scholars who complete the program receive a $25,000 grant toward the cost of their education. The program, supported by donations from the community, will provide students with the training, financial resources, global awareness and professional networks needed to succeed in a competitive and knowledge-based world. To learn more about how to support this initiative, contact me at 988-9715. Christa Coggins

vice president for community philanthropy Santa Fe Community Foundation Santa Fe

Judging from the right

Lousy choices Will there be a “none of the above” option on the ballot for governor this year? If so, “none of the above” has my vote! Otherwise, New Mexico is set for four more years of mediocrity, poor leadership, partisan loyalty to the detriment of New Mexicans, and our continuation to be ranked 48th, 49th or 50th worst in survey after survey and study after study. I openly supported Alan Webber in the Democratic primary because he was not an entrenched, generational, entitlement politician who could actually look at the issues with a perspective and track record for problem-solving, accountability and innovation. The 2014 ballot is a sad day for all New Mexicans. A sad four more years, actually. Robert Shilling

Santa Fe

Bad business — again Just when we thought that financial and other organizations had cleaned up their acts on highly leveraged lending, creative financial products and suspect financial offering standards, think again. Some recent trends — Fannie and Freddie are now offering “synthetic” (i.e., slice and dice) bonds based on home mortgages. Banks have increased significantly their positions on highly leveraged (i.e., zero down) auto loans. Cash-strapped municipalities, with low disclosure threshold requirements, are offering fraudulent bonds.

My Views We are happy to consider publication of My Views, commentaries of up to 600 words, from writers who live within our reporting area. Provide verification information: full name,

Regarding the article (“Hobby Lobby wins case on birth control,” July 1): There are several essential elements of democracy: 1) The people (not money) should rule; 2) universal suffrage; 3) strong labor unions (one of the few counterweights to antidemocratic corporate domination); and 4) women’s rights — not just men’s rights — because, globally, the more women have been marginalized, the less democracy there has been. It is no accident that all four have been subjected to fierce attacks by the rightist Roberts Supreme Court. That’s because it does not believe in democracy and, instead, champions the rule of money (oligarchy). The two cases decided last Monday — Burwell v. Hobby Lobby and Harris v. Quinn — diminish, respectively, the rights of women and those of labor unions. Of course, the rightist Roberts court cleverly disguises its attack on democracy as “free speech” (Harris v. Quinn and many others, including Citizens United) and freedom of religion (Hobby Lobby case, among others). Before we shrug this off, it would be good to remember that, during the Weimar Republic, the German judges were sympathetic to rightists: None of the Kapp Putsch leaders (1920) were punished, and in the Munich Putsch of 1923, Gen. Erich Ludendorff was not even imprisoned, while Hitler received the minimum sentence allowable for high treason: five years (he actually served only eight or nine pampered months). Roger Carasso

Santa Fe

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OPINIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

The West’s oldest newspaper, founded 1849 Robin M. Martin Owner Robert M. McKinney Owner, 1949-2001 Inez Russell Gomez Editorial Page Editor

Ray Rivera Editor

OUR VIEW

The Black Place: Worth preserving

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alancing the need for energy and the necessity of preserving what makes New Mexico unique is an ongoing process in our state. The latest threat showcases how hard it can be to maintain landscape while allowing oil and gas drilling. After all, does it matter if one of the landscapes made famous by painter Georgia O’Keeffe — in this case, the rounded, gray formations she called the “Black Place” — will survive? Located in the San Juan Basin east of Nageezi, the Black Place was a landscape O’Keeffe returned to often, despite the 100-mile trip from her home in Abiquiú. That was not an easy trip, either. Remember, she first came upon the stark hills back in the 1930s, when the roads were narrow and camping primitive. Yet that vista drew her, again and again, and she made dozens of drawings, pastels and oil paintings. Her last visit was made as her eyesight was failing, in her 90s. Those hills today are ringed by wells and the equipment that accompanies exploration, everything from trucks to pipelines to flares. Fracking and oil chemicals are but 500 yards from where O’Keeffe worked. This encroachment must be mitigated so that the place O’Keeffe loved remains, if not pristine, at least intact. Progress, after all, isn’t progress when what speaks to our humanity vanishes under the wheels of big rigs. Credit goes to photographer Walter Nelson, whose recent book — The Black Place: Two Seasons — features the landscape. He is sounding the alarm with the alacrity of a Paul Revere. Nelson is no purist; he believes that 75 or 100 acres surrounding the Black Place could be set aside while drilling continues elsewhere. With no more new roads, limits on drilling and mining, and reduced access, the hills would survive. Preserving these hills is about more than just O’Keeffe and her essential paintings — it’s about New Mexico. We are a state that understands the importance of place and history and whose citizens value the Earth. Should we abandon this legacy of preservation, New Mexico would become a lesser place. Environmental groups, preservation groups, perhaps O’Keeffe supporters (both of the artist and her namesake museum) can collaborate on how best to balance interests so that the Black Place isn’t damaged. An initial discussion about the area has taken place among officials from the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum and the state Historic Preservation Office. Another meeting is planned. The museum is treading cautiously, with its director pointing out its mission is to protect O’Keeffe’s artistic legacy. Still, he is considering what the museum could, and should, do. That’s a welcome beginning. There are many paths to preservation. We could envision some sort of land swap. The Bureau of Land Management, which is responsible for area leases, could trade federal land for state acreage, for example, allowing New Mexico to declare a historic site or monument. Or, federal officers could work to create a buffer zone — not every acre has to be leased to the highest bidder. In the 1980s, we recall that the Nature Conservancy worked with Carson National Forest representatives. They set aside exceptional ecological areas in the Valle Vidal to be preserved from the “multiple uses” required of U.S. Forest Service land. Collectively, New Mexicans have banded together to prevent development — whether oil drilling or overbuilding — from careening out of control. Saving the Black Place is another such time when the voices of citizens must prevent profit from ruining the irreplaceable.

The past 100 years From The Santa Fe New Mexican: July 6, 1914: State Engineer James A. French is at work today on the plans for the Sapello bridge at Watrous. This is a steel bridge of four 50-foot spans, with concrete floor, and will be built by the county commissioners under approval of Mr. French. A heavy snow or hail was visible this afternoon on the crest of the Lake Peak and along the top of the range, extending well down into the head of Tesuque canyon. A fierce hail and snowstorm was visible raging along the top of the range from 10 this morning until midafternoon. July 6, 1989: A Flagstaff, Ariz., family kidnapped and terrorized by Penitentiary of New Mexico escapee Jimmy Kinslow two years ago is seeking $11.5 million in damages from those who were responsible for keeping the inmate behind bars. The lawsuit, filed in state District Court, said David Owen and other correctional officers conspired with inmates including Kinslow in a scheme that resulted in their escape and that of three other maximumsecurity inmates two years ago. The escape touched off a statewide manhunt and revived criticisms of the prison’s security system, which had not worked for two years.

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COMMENTARY: CRISTINA RODRIGUEZ

States should take on immigration NEW HAVEN, Conn. t’s official: Congress won’t take up immigration reform this year. This week, President Barack Obama said he’ll use executive actions to change policies unilaterally. It’s a disappointing, if unsurprising, outcome. But advocates for reform have reason to hope. States and cities long have shaped the country’s immigration policy, and can continue to do so. Take New York. Just last week, the New York City Council made a splash in the immigration world by allocating $4.9 million to free legal assistance for non-citizens in deportation proceedings. It also created a municipal identification card available to everyone, regardless of immigration status. In Albany, advocates introduced a bill that goes further, granting unauthorized immigrants the right to vote and sit on juries. Although that measure is probably aspiration more than reality, it provides a counterpoint to the Arizona-style enforcement crackdowns. Such immigration federalism necessarily will entail ideological battle, between pro-enforcement and pro-integration strategies. But partisans on both sides should be willing to let states and localities take immigration policy in different directions. State and local authority in this domain is limited, but it exists. When it comes to enforcement, state and local police historically have played a role alongside the federal government. In 2012, the Supreme Court trimmed this role by striking down most of Arizona’s notorious Senate Bill 1070. But the court also left space open for local immigration policing. As the administration emphasized throughout the litigation, the federal government

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depends on cooperation from state and local police. Nothing in the court’s decision precludes Congress from authorizing greater state and local involvement. And the court recognized police authority to inquire into immigration status, subject to civil rights constraints. States also have considerable authority to define the parameters of their own political communities, as well as significant freedom to use their resources to benefit immigrants, regardless of status. Given these parameters, what should immigration federalism look like today? On the enforcement end, where enthusiasm for enforcement remains, states should focus on combating racial profiling and curbing distrust of police in immigrant communities. This should be complemented by training for police in the details of immigration law and in how to interact with immigrant communities. At the same time, some jurisdictions have rejected enforcement cooperation altogether. States such as California and Connecticut, and cities such as Chicago and Washington, D.C., actively resist federal requests for assistance. State and local ordinances constraining police cooperation continue to proliferate, especially as controversy over federal enforcement builds. Enforcement enthusiast should acknowledge these moves as legitimate, too. Today, numerous states and localities practice an affirmative integrative federalism. Republican and Democratic states alike make available in-state tuition to unauthorized college students. Municipal identification cards such as the one recently adopted in New York enable even unauthorized immigrants to open bank accounts, sign leases, get library

cards and access other services. State and local bureaucracies are also interested in and capable of implementing the immigration laws, and they could be enlisted productively not just in enforcement, but also in future legalization and integration programs, and even in the process of selecting and admitting immigrants. For example, the Republican governor of Michigan and Utah’s state legislature have floated the idea of recruiting immigrants to help revitalize local communities. Though this idea would require federal authorization and may prove to be misguided, it reflects the possibilities for reform that open up when we recognize states and localities as legitimate players, rather than label them as out of their league. Immigration federalism will ultimately be a limited tool and cannot substitute for a federal policy. Only Congress (not the states, or even the president) can provide today’s unauthorized population with the ultimate security of legal status (or adopt direct means of restricting immigration). And in some cases a uniform immigration policy will be necessary. But because the United States consists of overlapping political communities with varied views on immigration, federalism offers a framework for productive debate, as well as a set of institutional mechanisms for working toward compromise. When imagining a better system, we should take advantage of these alternative forms of lawmaking to channel the complexity of the immigration question, even if it means embracing contradictions. This essay is adapted from “Law and Borders,” published in the summer 2014 issue of Democracy: A Journal of Ideas. This first appeared in The Washington Post.

COMMENTARY: SHERYLL CASHIN

Civil Rights Act has lessons for today WASHINGTON he Civil Rights Act of 1964, which banned discrimination in public accommodations, employment and federally funded activities like education, would not have passed without the support of House and Senate Republicans who were competing for black votes. And Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson would not have advocated for the bill without being pressured to do so by a multiracial grass-roots movement. The act became law on July 2, 1964. As we celebrate its 50th anniversary, we should pay close attention to the strange bedfellows behind its passage. Progressives today need to be just as overt at creating bipartisan, cross-racial coalitions that can win policy battles. President Kennedy had been reluctant to press for a comprehensive civil rights bill. But when Bull Connor turned fire hoses and attack dogs on the children of Birmingham in the spring of 1963 and nearly 1,000 nonviolent protests erupted in over 100 Southern cities, suddenly doing nothing seemed more disastrous than alienating Southern Democrats. Kennedy began to work with moderate Republicans who wanted to give their party a pro-civil-rights slant. Although the protests may have seemed spontaneous, they were a result of years of organizing by some 85 local affiliates of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. This grass-roots mobilization was multiracial, from the integrated legion of Freedom Riders, to the young activists in the Freedom Summer in Mississippi, to the more than 250,000 demonstrators in the March on Washington, a quarter of whom were white. There are important lessons here for

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Editorial page editor: Inez Russell Gomez, 986-3053, igomez@sfnewmexican.com, Twitter @inezrussell

progressives. Today most civil rights advocates focus on racial disparities, comparing the struggles of blacks and Latinos to those of whites without acknowledging that plenty of whites are harmed by the same structural barriers. Many whites shut down in the face of these arguments, rationalizing that minorities themselves are to blame and resenting the fact that their own economic pain is not being acknowledged. Only 42 percent of Americans live in a middle-class neighborhood, down from 65 percent in 1970, a trend that limits access to quality schools and jobs for struggling people of all races. As awful and racially disparate as mass incarceration is, incarceration rates for black men have decreased since 2000 while they have risen for white men. A focus solely on black-white disparities masks the over-representation of high school dropouts of all colors in our prisons. Instead, a civil-rights discourse that focuses on common challenges and values is needed to bridge the gaps between whites and nonwhites that contribute to toxic, partisan gridlock. One example of the kind of policy that can be championed by cross-racial coalitions is the Texas 10 percent plan. It guarantees admission to a public college to graduates in the top 10 percent of every high school in the state. It was enacted in 1997, after a ruling against race-based affirmative action, with the support of blacks, Latinos and a Republican senator from rural West Texas, where some counties had never sent a student to the prestigious University of Texas at Austin. In New Jersey, a similar coalition made up of local officials, faith leaders and engaged citizens, known as Building One

New Jersey, has successfully backed state laws that stopped wealthy suburbs from buying their way out of affordable housing obligations and that mandated a more equitable allocation of school funding. (Disclosure: The group is affiliated with Building One America, on whose board I serve.) Republican mayors from workingclass towns allied with urban legislators from Camden, Trenton and Newark by having a forthright dialogue about how growing concentrations of minority poverty were destabilizing their neighborhoods and schools. Another example is the Mississippi Immigrants Rights Alliance — a coalition of African Americans, Latinos, unions and religious groups. In 2012, it helped create a swell of opposition to anti-immigrant legislation that made it easier for the conservative lieutenant governor, Tate Reeves, to buck tea party orthodoxy and assign the bill to a State Senate committee led by a Democrat he had appointed. As a result the bill was never brought up for a vote. Last week in Mississippi, Sen. Thad Cochran defeated the tea party-backed candidate, Chris McDaniel, in a Republican primary runoff by openly courting black Democrats — another rewrite of tired scripts on race and politics. The only way for advocates of racial and economic equality to overcome partisan gridlock is through alliances with reachable whites, who often hew Republican. Such reconciliation could create a true politics of fairness, one that is worthy of the Civil Rights Act and the movement that made it possible. Sheryll Cashin, a law professor at Georgetown, is the author of Place, Not Race: A New Vision of Opportunity in America. She wrote this for The New York Times.

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OPINIONS MY VIEW: DEBBIE RODELLA

No one was left to help Victor

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wo weeks ago, 16 yearold Victor Villalpando was fatally shot by police in Española. Victor was a talented gymnast and dancer. He had overcome many challenges not of his own making during his brief journey through life and, at 16, served as an instructor for others. He had just graduated from Moving Arts Española and been accepted into the prestigious New Mexico School for the Arts. Prior to the shooting, Victor called the police several times, possibly seeking help. His cries went unheeded. Last year, Gov. Susana Martinez shut down more than 90 percent of youth behavioral health services in Rep. Debbie Rio Arriba Rodella County, claiming Medicaid fraud. Victor’s cry for help was never heard because nobody was left to hear it. State officials assured our community that services wouldn’t be interrupted. Only top management would be replaced. The move was deemed necessary because of New Mexico’s culture of “egregious fraud.” Subsequent investigations have failed to uncover any evidence supporting Medicaid fraud. In fact, Martinez’s audit was declared faulty by our state auditor. Behavioral health providers were laid off and only some rehired. Client files were closed. All outreach ceased. The new providers from Arizona have taken a year to become partially operational. They still are not integrated into our community. The state of New Mexico operates a 24/7 crisis line staffed by master’slevel professional counselors (855-NMCrisis). At the time of the shooting, my community was unaware of its existence. Had Victor known, he might have called this number instead of summoning police. This winter, I teamed up with officials from Rio Arriba County who had repeatedly expressed concern about the lack of resources. We worked with the other members of Rio Arriba’s legislative delegation and successfully passed an allocation of $100,000 to SB 313, the state budget. The appropriation had been intended for intensive case management by Rio Arriba County for those at highest risk for overdose, and for preventive training, including crisis intervention and mental health first aid for law enforcement personnel. Unfortunately, while the governor left the appropriation in her budget, she lineitem-vetoed the earmark to Rio Arriba, despite the fact that its overdose death rates far exceed other counties. Four years ago, there was a state fund for crisis intervention training for police. This fund was zeroed out. While law enforcement personnel now receive active shooter training and other training designed to curb terrorism, nobody teaches police how to de-escalate individuals in crisis. And Gov. Martinez’s behavioral health debacle has shut off the flow of services for those who need them. My community has banded together. I am grateful that the state Behavioral Health Services Division has acted speedily to award an emergency grant of $12,000 to Rio Arriba County for mental health firstaid workshops for our police. I now encourage behavioral health services officials and the governor to find a way to reallocate the $100,000 award that my colleagues and I passed, and to work with Rio Arriba County and my community to prevent new tragedies from befalling our youth. State Rep. Debbie Rodella represents District 41.

Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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MY VIEW: ARDETH BAXTER

Who was here first? It doesn’t matter W

e are a nation of immigrants. I read John F. Kennedy’s book of the same name long ago in high school, and its message has stuck with me. No matter how early in the game your particular ancestors got here, the reality is that all of them started out as newbies who came from somewhere else. We are also a nation of racists, and that racism takes many forms, from subtle to overt. When I moved to New Mexico for the second time in 1996, I was already aware of the “we were here first” cultural game that the Hispanics and the Indians play with each other and against the later-arriving “Anglos,” who, oddly, can be anyone from white to yellow to black. The idea that your family has been present for generations, and that makes you better than everybody else, is a powerful social notion in New Mexico. But natural-born New Mexicans are not unique in their distaste for new blood. I also encountered this attitude in Hawaii, where I lived for a couple of

years. I was considered a haole (white outsider) by native Hawaiians and always would have been no matter how long I remained. Cultural snobbism is fearbased. It’s something Ardeth you can find in many Baxter parts of America. We’re still an adolescent country with lots of youthful insecurities. My immediate ancestors on both sides didn’t arrive in this country until the early 1900s. My father’s parents were from Italy; my mother’s and three of her siblings were born in Hungary. They settled on the East Coast along with millions of other immigrants of many ethnicities who arrived via Ellis Island. Then as now, those who had lived here longer feared, distrusted and discriminated against the newcomers who brought with them their own ways of living. It’s taken many years

and multiple generations for immigrants to be blended into the unique melting pot that the United States continues to be to this day. In any evolving society, somebody has to be first, somebody else second and right on down the line. But it’s really nothing more than meaningless mathematics. Being first shouldn’t mean that you’ve closed your mind to fresh ideas from those so-called “outside agitators” in favor of the same old, same old. Being first shouldn’t mean that you’re afraid to live anywhere else but on that safe, womb-like family homestead. Being first shouldn’t be an excuse for not exploring the rest of the world and opening your eyes and ears to the unknown. Being first shouldn’t allow your particular traditions to blindly rule, unless those traditions don’t harm other humans or any creatures great and small. Traditions can be good and bad — compassionate as well as cruel. Perhaps because my particular immigrant family hadn’t lived in

THE DRAWING BOARD THE WEEK IN CARTOONS

America for very long, I found it easy as a young adult to pull up my shallow roots and transplant myself to other places foreign and domestic. I have never felt that I belong anywhere in particular. But I believe that’s a good thing. I’m first and foremost a citizen of Earth, as we all are. New Mexico is only a small splotch on the map — it’s not the world. Except for my more settled years here, my life has been quite nomadic, and I like to think I’m a more reasonable, well-rounded person because of that. That’s also why I find it so perplexing when people blindly and self-righteously slam shut their minds and try to make a virtue of attitudes that reflect nothing more than cultural obstinacy. So who’s on first? Who cares? Ardeth Baxter is a retired occasional writer and full-time animal lover who enjoys life in the Land of Enchantment along with her five cats, two dogs and partner.

COMMENTARY: THOM ALLENA

Taos, Carson and the need to turn and face history

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n his June 22 commentary, “Carson: A messy, violent and fascinating man,” Hampton Sides wants to know what all the historical fuss over Kit Carson is about in Taos. Real history is messy, he says, and why can’t people just get over the fact that history is violent. Sides would prefer that we passively accept historical interpretation given to us by mainstream historians, such as himself, that are replete with biases, distortions and narratives that often seem to reflect a dominant perspective. The voices of the “other” usually remain lost. Here’s another idea: Why don’t we turn and face history rather than turning away from it, and where appropriate, challenge it. By the way, this is precisely what elected officials and the Taos community are doing right now. The Town Council and the citizens of Taos decided to take history into their own hands. They are choosing to turn and face history rather than passively accept what conventional historians insist they continue to swallow. And Taos is not alone these days. We are seeing similar challenges of received historical accounts at sites of conscience, national monuments and national parks across the country and around the world. For example, just up the road from Taos, outside of Eads, Colo., sits the Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site, managed by the National Park Service. It wasn’t always called that. In fact, in the preceding decades, the site remembered the battle of Sand Creek. Former Colorado Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell, the political driver of the historic site’s recognition in 2007, pointed out that, in fact, there had been no battle at all. Instead, Sand Creek was a massacre that involved the ruthless slaughter by cavalrymen of Northern Cheyenne and Arapaho people, two-thirds of whom were elderly, women and children. Native oral histories of these events have now been corroborated by recent archaeological research. One of historic epicenters of the Taos controversy is the Bosque Redondo Memorial, the final destination for the Navajo Long Walk overseen by Carson. That is, a destination for those Navajo people who actually made it there. Along the way, many perished, shot by soldiers for failing to keep pace. Others drowned when crossing the Rio Grande. Women were raped and children kidnapped. Once at the camp, starvation, disease and dysentery added to the fatalities. In all, it was estimated that

somewhere between a fifth and third of the Navajo people perished. Like at Sand Creek, most of them were elderly, women and children. The fact that history is written by the victors (and their descendants) is more than simply a well-worn cliché. It is a time-honored method for deflecting the shame associated with violence and war. And despite their diligent efforts, Western historians, whose work is based exclusively on written texts and official documents, are missing at least half the story. Consequently, we know little from the perspective of those who suffer the consequences associated with losing. The Long Walk and the Bosque Redondo incarceration remain a case in point as how and why communities need to turn and face history and then challenge it. Here is perhaps the most important perspective as to why people may be pushing back on historical accounts and the making of folk heroes and legends. Historical trauma researchers, many of whom are Native American, remind us that trauma that remains unacknowledged and unreconciled tends to repeat itself and often across generations. New Mexico is notorious for its extraordinary rates of epidemiological data in areas of poverty, violence, drug overdoses, DWI fatalities, suicides, etc. Could those numbers have historical roots? One thing the Taos Town Council did succeed in doing was to call into question the incomplete narrative associated with Carson. Renaming Kit Carson Park challenges the ways in which we remember our heroic figures. It also opens up the possibility for a community dialogue that examines the “messiness” of history in New Mexico, a legacy that continues to impact us today, especially our most vulnerable populations. This pertains also to the future that our children and grandchildren will one day inherit from us. Thom Allena teaches in the Peace Studies Program at The University of New Mexico and works with communities, justice systems and universities across the country in addressing contemporary and historical conflict and violations. His doctoral dissertation, Remembering and Forgetting Colonization in New Mexico: A Portrait of the Bosque Redondo Memorial, highlights the long-standing and seemingly unbroken history of conflict and violence in New Mexico over the past four centuries as well as its transgenerational patterns that continue to have reverberations for New Mexicans today.


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OPINIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

MY VIEW: MARY KAY PAPEN

Martinez administration isn’t following law O

n June 29, The Santa Fe New Mexican broke a story detailing how the Human Services Department has “subsidized” Arizona behavioral health providers welcomed into the state last summer by the Martinez administration. According to reporter Patrick Malone’s article, Human Services paid the expenses of at least one Arizona provider months before completion of an audit that we now Sen. Mary know was used as Kay Papen a pretext to replace local businesses with those from Arizona. In case it’s not already clear, these payments to the Arizona companies were not for services provided to New Mexico’s behavioral health consumers, they were for overhead and startup expenses. According to the article, Huiman Services continued to pay operational expenses for the Arizona companies

through the end of 2013. After suspending payments to them last June, Human Services chose to deny most of the audited New Mexico providers what is called a “good cause exception not to suspend payments.” The granting of an exception would have enabled a local audited provider to stay in business while an investigation of the provider was pending, with measures in place to protect public funds. Each of the audited New Mexico providers would have met the criteria for a good-cause exception; each requested one. According to Elizabeth Jeffreys, a former Human Services attorney, the only plausible explanation for the department’s refusal to grant an audited provider a good cause exception was because there was already an Arizona company chosen to take its place. Human Services not only subsidized the Arizona companies, it eliminated any potential competitors. Last September, Diana McWilliams, the former director of Human Services ’s Behavioral Health Services Division, told legislators that the Arizona provid-

Whatever unique expertise the Arizona providers were supposed to have, it didn’t include the financial wherewithal and savvy to enter into the New Mexico market on their own and compete fairly with New Mexico businesses. ers were selected for their “operational expertise during a transition” and knowledge of “everything a business would need” to hit the ground running. Whatever unique expertise the Arizona providers were supposed to have, it didn’t include the financial wherewithal and savvy to enter into the New Mexico market on their own and compete fairly with New Mexico businesses. According to Jeffreys, standard procedure after an attorney general’s investigation finds no evidence of fraud is for Human Services to reach an agreement with the provider on any amounts that the state claims are still

owed and promptly release the balance of suspended payments. Under federal law, Human Services has no regulatory authority to continue its suspension of payments after the office of the attorney general concludes its investigation. Months after two providers were cleared of fraud by the attorney general, hundreds of thousands of dollars due to them still have not been released, despite requests to do so. According to a June 2014 survey conducted by New Mexico Rising Up for Community Mental Health, 83 percent of respondents think New Mexico’s behavioral health system is

worse than it was one year ago. Under the anti-donation clause of the New Mexico Constitution, the state may not donate or lend public funds to a private enterprise, regardless of whether it is for a public purpose. For example, a county may not pay relocation expenses to induce physicians to locate in the county or pay for the operation and maintenance of a private hospital, according to attorney general opinions interpreting the anti-donation clause. Clearly, the Arizona providers haven’t delivered on promises made after what appears to be an unconstitutional investment of more than $24 million in taxpayer funds and continuing special treatment and protection from the Martinez administration. I call upon Human Services Secretary Sidonie Squier to immediately release suspended funds, less any overpayments as determined by the attorney general, to New Mexico providers who have been investigated and cleared of fraud. Senate President Pro Tem Mary Kay Papen is a Democratic state senator from Las Cruces, representing District 38.

MY VIEW: BARBARA LENSSEN

Technology not the answer in education

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et’s re-examine the Santa Fe school board plan to provide iPads, etc. to all children. Research says that young children learn best when they are read to or read themselves and participate in conversations in complete sentences. Children today are reading less, watching hours of television and using tech tools more. In 1950, the average 14-yearold in the U.S. had 25,000 words in his vocabulary. By 1999, the number of words in the vocabulary of the average 14-year-old was 10,000 words.

MY VIEW: DONALD J. DUDZIAK

Renewable standards need to include nuclear energy

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he sure-fire effect of state mandates requiring the use of renewable energy sources in electricity production hasn’t received the attention it deserves. For proof, look no further than New Mexico’s renewable portfolio standard. New Mexico’s standard — adopted in 2007 — requires that 20 percent of all electricity sold by investorowned utilities, and 10 percent by cooperatives, come from renewable energy sources by 2020. New Mexico utilities are barreling ahead to meet the standard, but the effort might push up electricity prices and crimp supplies. More to the point, it distracts our attention from the more important target set forth in a United Nations accord in 2009, when President Barack Obama pledged that the United States would cut its greenhouse emissions 83 percent from 2005 levels by 2050. In the long run, the effort to reduce carbon pollution will be workable only if New Mexico and other states with renewable portfolio standards modify their rules to include nuclear power. Of the 30 states with standards, none include nuclear power among the energy sources eligible for guaranteed electricity production. In fact, New Mexico’s standard actually states that nuclear power is not eligible. Yet, nuclear power currently accounts for roughly 20 percent of the nation’s electricity generation — and nearly two-thirds of the carbon-free power. That’s more than wind, solar, hydro and other renewable energy sources combined. Today, wind and solar provide less than 4 percent of the nation’s electricity. Without nuclear power, there is no way America can meet its target for greenhouse-gas reduction. That realization has motivated several atmospheric scientists, including James Hansen, longtime head of NASA’s Goddard Space Institute, and environmental activists such as Stewart Brand, Carol Browner and Michael Shellenberger to warn that the United States needs to obtain much more of its energy from nuclear power. If we refuse to take strong action against climate change,

America can’t expect other countries like China, India and Brazil to reduce emissions. Here in the U.S., where the wholesale price of electricity is set by auction, states and regional grid operators need to ensure there is a level playing field for nuclear power. Right now, nuclear power is being whipsawed between low prices for natural gas and the renewable energy mandates. As a result, two safe and efficient nuclear plants — Kewaunee in Wisconsin and Vermont Yankee — are slated to close at the end of this year, and as many as 30 more nuclear plants are at risk, according to the Department of Energy. Unless states act soon, a third of the U.S. fleet of 100 nuclear plants may shut down prematurely — at a loss of hundreds of billions of dollars. And carbon pollution will increase significantly, since fossil fuels are likely to provide most of the replacement generating capacity. A more sensible course is for people to urge their state repre-

The number is no doubt lower now. The predominant reason for this disastrous change is the overuse of tech tools and time spent watching television by young children, teenagers and their parents. If schools provide tech tools to every child, how can anyone supervise what a child does with the tech tool? Will they be allowed to take the tools home? Can they access violent video games, pornography, etc.? What will schools do if an iPad is lost, stolen, sold or ruined? Technology is important. However,

vocabulary enhances the way we comprehend, express ourselves orally and in writing. I recommend that the Santa Fe Board of Education rethink the plan of providing tech tools to all children. Are the advantages of this program greater than the disadvantages? There are better ways to spend $11 million each year for five years. Barbara G. Lenssen, Ph.D., is a former elementary school teacher and child psychologist in Santa Fe for more than 30 years.

In 1950, the average 14-year-old in the U.S. had 25,000 words in his vocabulary. By 1999, the number of words in the vocabulary of the average 14-year-old was 10,000 words. The number is no doubt lower now.

sentatives to modify renewable energy requirements to include zero-carbon nuclear power. That would help protect operating nuclear plants and spur construction of a new generation of advanced power plants, both large conventional reactors and small modular reactors like the 25-megawatt system of Hyperion, a New Mexico-based company that is using a uraniumnitride design from the Los Alamos National Laboratory. At the very least, New Mexico should invest in a diverse mix of carbon-free energy sources, but especially nuclear power, that would give our state and nation a fighting chance to reduce greenhouse emissions to safe and acceptable levels by midcentury. Donald J. Dudziak, Ph.D., PE, is a co-editor of Progress in Nuclear Energy Journal. A professor emeritus, nuclear engineering, from North Carolina State University, Dudziak is a fellow at Los Alamos National Laboratory.

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OPINIONS

Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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MY VIEW: JOHN MCPHEE

Historic board’s rejection of cell tower is democracy at work

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hank you, citizens of Santa Fe, for demonstrating your genuine concern for our schoolchildren and residents in general, as well as the historic district and city itself, by voicing your objections to the AT&T proposal for erecting a 64-foot cell tower next to the Burger King at the corner of Alameda Street and St. Francis Drive. Thank you, Arthur Firstenberg, for reminding all concerned that approval of this application for this gigantic tower could eventually allow for as much as a 20-foot increase to eight stories in height to accommodate even more antennas and discs, in addition to a virtually unlimited number of antennas and discs that would be allowed already under the current application. Thank you also to Nolan Hall, our courageous fourth-grader, for reminding everyone that he, and his classmates at Gonzales Community School, certainly have enough to worry about already without also being compelled to worry about the hazards of cell towers. Then, of course, thank you, Historic Districts Review Board members, for understanding the true nature of this unsightly concept, for hearing the displeasure of our citizenry regarding it and rejecting it accordingly. As of last week, 545,642 cell towers have been erected nationwide since the 1996 Telecommunications Act specifically exempted them from all land use and zoning laws. Of course, this was the preference of industry lobbyists, not the public, as everyone agrees that cell towers are among the most ugly, as well as most dangerous, additions to the American landscape ever invented. Cell towers certainly have no business in, or even near, our beautiful historic district, let alone in proximity to our schools and residences. There is too much alarming research about the health effects of electromagnetic radiation emissions from cell towers that is completely ignored in the construction application process in the United States, unlike in many other modern countries worldwide. Visiting www.antennasearch.com and entering my personal address, which is near the center of the city, 31 towers and 260 antennas have already been

installed in the past 18 years within a 4-mile radius of my home. The Environmental Protection Agency was officially tasked with developing radio frequency standards to protect the public from overexposure to electromagnetic radiation in 1970. However, agency recommendations were repeatedly rejected by Congress, from 1979 until 1995, and the research laboratory entirely defunded, despite the subsequent ubiquitous implementation of wireless technology. The FCC website clearly states that “there is no federally developed national standard for safe levels of exposure to radio frequency (RF) energy. …” I am also completely befuddled by the support for the tower by the Santa Fe Chamber of Commerce. The greatest commercial attraction of Santa Fe has always been the unique and historic architecture in combination with the scenic views uninterrupted by tall buildings and development. For technology upgrades, private commerce, government agencies and the public would be far more satisfied with replicating the infrastructure modernization currently taking place in Kansas City and Chattanooga. Their entire communities are converting to underground shielded wire fiber optics, allowing for Internet that is three to five times as fast, as well as far more reliable television, land lines and utilities on one single cable entering all residential, private and public buildings. This conversion would dramatically reduce the incidence of electromagnetic radiation emissions from all sources, as well as helping to reduce public and utility demand for Wi-Fi technology, which is as slow and insecure as it is dangerous. The health, as well as the wealth, of our community depends on the commitment to protecting the world-famous aesthetic appeal of our city while simultaneously embracing 21st-century technology that is both safer and far more cost effective. John McPhee is affiliated with the Santa Fe Alliance for Public Health and Safety and Doctors WARN (wireless and radiation network).

MY VIEW: CRAIG O’HARE

Iraq War? Not again T

he current situation in Iraq has made one thing perfectly clear. As much as we might want to, we cannot make other parts of the world be the way we want them to be. It’s both naïve and unrealistic to think that we can. Yes, we have the mightiest military in the world. We can win virtually any battle or war we engage in. But that’s a far cry from being able to ensure that other countries and other cultures become the sort of society that we desire. It’s understandable that we are concerned about our “strategic interests” around the globe and admirable that we’d like to see democracy flourish. But it’s a waste of taxpayer dollars and military and civilian lives to think that invading and occupying another country ultimately will result in a stable country to our liking once our troops have left. That reality is probably truer in the Middle East than in any other part of the world. The current destabilized situation in Iraq was destined to happen regardless of when we withdrew our troops after President George W. Bush declared that we had won the war. Whether it was one year, five years or 10 years after “Mission Accomplished” wouldn’t have really mattered. The conflicts between

Craig O’Hare has lived and worked in Santa Fe for two decades. He loves our country but believes that we need a whole new approach to international affairs in order to have a positive influence in the world.

For one family, two sons lost to war

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LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO THE NEW MEXICAN

the war; money that could have gone to worthy causes here at home and reduced the federal deficit. To be clear, let me emphasize that I totally admire and respect the men and women in uniform who put their lives on the line for our country. Truly “supporting our troops” means only putting their lives in jeopardy when absolutely necessary. In his last speech in office, five-star general and Republican President Dwight D. Eisenhower warned us about not letting the military-industrial complex dictate our international affairs. It’s time we listen to that wise man. The bumper sticker “Freedom isn’t Free” is certainly true. We need a strong defense to protect our citizens from foreign threats. But we can’t and shouldn’t try to use our military to make certain countries around the globe the way we want them to be. Military-driven “nation building” didn’t work in Iraq, and it won’t work in other parts of the world.

MY VIEW: LARRY DAVIS

e are watching as a new group of radical Islamist insurgents, calling themselves the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, among other names, races across northern Iraq, taking cities whose names we know only because not long ago, young Americans fought and died there to rid them of another group of insurgents. The Iraqi security forces, which were trained by Americans and outnumber the ISIS rebels perhaps 50 to 1, are dissolving in disarray or worse, joining the ISIS rebels. After more than $2 trillion spent, almost 4,500 dead and 32,000 wounded Americans sacrificed for Iraq, we ask how can it be that all our efforts seem to have been for naught. And it is hard not to wonder if the U.S. experience in Iraq is the worst episode of squandered American valor in our nation’s history. Historians will have to decide that but, since I heard that Fallujah had fallen, I just keep thinking of a family in Lubbock, Texas, and how terrible it must be for them to watch the news from Iraq. José “Freddy” Velez was a son, who like so many other young American sons, joined up to serve his country and protect it from enemies. It was in Fal-

Arthur Firstenberg speaks last month at the Historic Districts Review Board meeting about a proposed cell tower at the intersection of Alameda Street and St. Francis Drive.

Shiites and Sunnis are deep-seated and have existed for hundreds of years. No amount of American military involvement would change that. Diplomatic involvement, however, is certainly worth the effort. It doesn’t involve the costs, in both lives and tax dollars, associated with a military approach. It’s pathetic that the same warobsessed neo-conservatives (Cheney, McCain, Wolfowitz, etc.) that conned us into invading Iraq are blaming President Barack Obama for the current mess — which he essentially inherited from President Bush. True to form, the neo-cons also are suggesting that the United States, once again, pursue a military strategy to resolve the crisis. In terms of lives lost and tax dollars wasted, the Iraq War was a huge mistake that should never, ever be repeated. The rationale for the war was predicated on a series of lies and pure speculation about how great everything would turn out. As a result, nearly 5,000 U.S. soldiers lost their lives, and tens of thousands were wounded. The lives of more than 100,000 innocent men, women and children in Iraq were taken — a tragedy barely even acknowledged in our country. Some $2 trillion of taxpayers’ hard-earned income was spent on

lujah, a city in northern Iraq, which saw the uncommon valor of Freddy Velez and tragically, where he fought his last fight. In one of the many battles for that city, Freddy’s platoon was ambushed and, in the ensuing deadly firefight, a soldier was hit and went down. As a couple of fellow soldiers exposed themselves to deadly fire to gather their wounded buddy and move him to safety, Freddy Velez did not hesitate to expose himself to provide covering fire for his friends. Just as they moved the wounded to safety, Freddy was hit in the throat by enemy fire. He died in the dirt there on a forgotten street in Fallujah. Freddy’s younger brother was in Afghanistan that awful day, fighting his own battles for his country. The military allowed him leave so that he could accompany and escort Freddy’s body home to Lubbock for a funeral with full military honors. I remember the photos in the local newspaper, the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal, of Freddy’s mother and father, and of his young soldier brother. Such a handsome family and somehow so strong and brave as they dealt with a heartbreak too many American families have experienced when their sons and daughters have given,

what President Abraham Lincoln called, “the last full measure of devotion.” Tragically, it was not to be the last time the community would turn out for a Velez family funeral. Freddy’s brother, Andrew, had signed up shortly after his big brother and just before he deployed to Afghanistan, he had married his high school sweetheart. The separation must have been tough for both of them, as it must be for all young married military couples. But it was to prove especially tough for this young couple. All too soon, Andrew had to return to his unit and his war in Afghanistan. Tragically, not long after arriving back with his unit, he hung up the phone and took his own life. When I heard that Fallujah had fallen, I could not stop thinking about the Velez family of Lubbock. I wonder how a family deals with the terrible price they have paid for our wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Velez family gave their two sons in the service of our nation, one to the wounds he suffered while saving his friends at Fallujah, and another in Afghanistan, suffering from the wounds of a broken heart. Larry Davis is a former Texan who now lives in Santa Fe.

MY VIEW: RUSSELL ALLEN

Gov. Martinez helps New Mexico’s small businesses — like mine

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ov. Susana Martinez has demonstrated strong leadership through tough times, and that is the very reason she should have another four years in office. As a small-business owner, I can say with confidence that Martinez’s leadership is helping mom-and-pop stores like mine. It’s because Martinez has seen the struggles of owning and running a business up-close. Growing up, she helped her parents run their small business, so she understands that higher taxes and more regulations hurt companies. That’s why she has cut taxes and slashed red tape — to help businessmen like me hire more people or expand operations.

We’ve come a long way since she took office. When the recession came about, New Mexico was hit particularly hard. Not only did we have to deal with the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression, but the federal dollars that our economy had relied on for decades began to dry up. As a result, New Mexico’s jobs were disproportionately either in the public sector or dependent on government contracts. Because of our reliance on Washington, D.C., and the recent federal budget cuts caused by dysfunction in the nation’s capital, New Mexico was hammered. Martinez has made it clear that we must protect ourselves from this ever happening again. That’s why

she has created a long-term economic plan to diversify the economy, grow the private sector and end our dependence on the erratic spending habits of Washington politicians. To accomplish this, we needed to level the playing field with neighboring low-tax states. Martinez understood that the high taxes in our state were making it hard for small businesses to compete with companies in Texas and Arizona, where taxes were lower. That is why she worked with a Democratic Legislature and cut taxes an incredible 24 times. She even formed the New Mexico Small Business-Friendly Task Force. I think her biggest achievement, however, was

passing bipartisan historic tax reform that cut the business tax by 22 percent. No wonder the Democratic Senate Finance Chairman praised her for the astounding achievement. Gov. Martinez’s efforts are already beginning to take hold. Manufacturing is on the rise, with Ernst & Young ranking New Mexico No. 1 in the West because of her tax reforms. Last month, the Union Pacific Railroad created up to 600 jobs near Las Cruces with its newly opened rail yard. Exports to Mexico are at an all-time high. There is still much work to be done, and that’s why Martinez needs four more years to finish the job. Her opponent, Gary King, would take us back

to the days of Bill Richardson, destabilizing our economy with the same tax-and-spend policies that failed our state so miserably in the past. In fact, King backed the largest tax increase in state history, hiking taxes on food, medicine and gas. His vote hit middleclass families where it hurts. We cannot go back now. Gov. Martinez is taking us forward into a brighter economic future where more New Mexican families will have the chance to achieve the American Dream. Let’s give our governor another term so she can continue to move our state forward. Russell Allen is a small-business owner from Las Cruces.


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SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Obituaries C-2 Police notes C-2 Celebrations C-6 Neighbors C-7

LOCAL NEWS Leading the race for campaign cash Democrat Hector Balderas raises twice as much as Republican Susan Riedel this quarter in the race for state attorney general, fundraising disclosures show. PAGE C-3

Study outs drilling Wastewater wells are being blamed for hundreds of earthquakes in Oklahoma. PAGE C-4

Helping hand: Santa Fe group tries to bring decency to crisis at the border. Neighbors, C-7

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Police arrest mugging suspect Man with lengthy record allegedly admits to four S.F. armed robberies The New Mexican

Santa Fe police arrested a suspect Saturday who they say admitted to four recent armed robberies in the city, including the mugging of a teenage girl who was leaving her volunteer job Monday at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum downtown.

Andrew Valencia, 42, was arrested just before 2 p.m. in the 3200 block of Cerrillos Road, according to a police department news release. During the arrest, the news release Andrew says, officers found Valencia a BB gun in Valencia’s backpack that has been altered to look like a real handgun. The victims in all four cases told

police they had been threatened with a handgun. According to the news release, an officer recognized Valencia from surveillance photos. When the officer questioned the suspect, the release says, Valencia allegedly said he had stolen a woman’s purse in the parking lot of the Courtyard Marriott Hotel on June 28, and that on the same day, he reached into a room through a sliding glass door at the Double Tree Hotel and stole a purse. Both hotels are on Cerrillos Road. Earlier police reports said a woman

Reporter learns firsthand the joys, doldrums of being an extra

at the Courtyard Marriott on Cerrillos Road reported that an armed man demanded her cash in a back hotel parking lot, but the man did not want her credit cards or wallet. Valencia also admitted to officers that he robbed the 17-year-old volunteer near the O’Keeffe Museum and stole a 68-year-old woman’s purse Wednesday near San Francisco Street and Park Avenue. The city’s new police chief, Eric Garcia, said in a statement that offi-

Please see SUSPECT, Page C-5

Martinez taps mayors to lure Dems, swing voters Campaign strategy similar to other winning GOP incumbents By Steve Terrell The New Mexican

star Galactica — was the first to tell me that working as an extra isn’t for everyone. The 34-year-old said she tried doing the work once when she was 14, but she quit halfway through the day. I didn’t quit, but a fellow extra and my guide for the day, Pablo Quintana, told me I had gotten off easy with a mere three-hour shoot at the Garson Studios on the campus of the Santa Fe University of Art and Design. The local studio also has been used for flicks such as Bless Me, Ultima, All the Pretty Horses and Wyatt Earp. Quintana said he has been in many shoots that have lasted 12 hours or more, sometimes through scorching heat, as was the case when he had a role in Seth MacFarlane’s A Million Ways to Die in the West. But the actor said those long shoots come with overtime pay.

It’s no secret that part of Republican Gov. Susana Martinez’s re-election strategy is to peel off the normally high vote for Democratic candidates among predominantly Hispanic communities in Northern New Mexico. And one way her campaign has tried to do that is by enlisting the help of local Hispanic leaders who happen to be registered Democrats. Before the primary election, the Martinez campaign ran a 30-second spot featuring Las Vegas Mayor Alphonso Ortiz and former Taos Mayor Darren Cordova. “It’s very reassuring that we have a governor who cares for all the people of New Mexico,” Ortiz tells viewers of the ad. “It was tough, but Gov. Martinez was there every day to Darren Cordova ensure our community was safe,” Cordova said to the camera in the same spot. “She’s one of us, especially in time of need.” Not only does this message carry an appeal along ethnic lines, it also goes along with the narrative Martinez has promoted that she’s willing to reach across the aisle and work with Democrats, even though these municipal officials technically were elected in nonpartisan elections. While many Democrats who have battled with the governor the past three years might scoff at that notion, such a theme could be well received among independent voters and more conservative Democrats. And winning over swing voters is crucial in statewide races in New Mexico, especially for Republicans running in a state where registered Democrats outnumber Republicans. Martinez’s friend and fellow Republican Chris Christie followed a similar strategy in his re-election as governor of New Jersey last year, soliciting Democratic mayors to endorse him. (Some allege the controversial bridge closing incident that has haunted Christie all year was done in retaliation against a Democratic mayor who refused to endorse him.) It also borrows a page from the old Pete Domenici playbook. In summer 2002, the Republican, seeking his sixth six-year term in the U.S. Senate, held a news conference in the state Capitol Rotunda in which several New Mexico mayors, including Santa Fe’s then-Mayor Larry Delgado and Española’s then-Mayor Richard Lucero, endorsed keeping Domenici in his position of power. Their praise for the senator was similar to what Martinez’s Democratic mayors are saying now:

Please see DREAM, Page C-5

Please see LURE, Page C-5

Background extras prepare and wait for their upcoming scene in The Red Pony Saloon on the set of Longmire. New Mexican reporter Chris Quintana, center right, and Albuquerque resident Kat Compton fake a conversation. PHOTOS BY LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN

A chance to chase the dream By Chris Quintana The New Mexican

A

s the number of film and TV productions grows in New Mexico, so does the number of casting calls for extras. The work is simple, the pay decent, and the job comes with the allure of a chance to be seen on screen. But being an extra comes with its own challenges, as I discovered during an opportunity offered by Robert Baxter Casting and the producers of the Santa Fe-filmed Longmire, a madefor-cable TV series. The hours on set can be lengthy, and the work can be dull and enervating. And there’s always the possibility that your scenes will fail to make the cut. Still, people always seem to chase the opportunity for screen time, cash and connections.

Director Michael Offer, center, assesses a scene in The Red Pony Saloon on the set of Longmire.

The expectation A&E’s Longmire is about the adventures of fictional rural Wyoming sheriff Walt Longmire, played by Robert Taylor. It’s been a successful show, now in its

third season. It averages between 3 million and 4 million viewers, according to the website TV by the Numbers. Katee Sackhoff, who plays a principal character in Longmire — and also played Starbuck in Battle-

Santa Fe wine fest showcases vintages from across the state New Mexico vintners seek to impress at 21st annual event By Staci Matlock The New Mexican

“The cab is good,” announced Brian Watson as he joined his wife, Lisa, wine glass in hand, during the 21st annual Santa Fe Wine Festival on Saturday at El Rancho de las Golondrinas. His wife joked that with the stamp of approval from her personal wine taster, she would now try the deep red cabernet from

Ponderosa Valley Winery’s booth nearby. “If I like it, she’ll like it,” Brian Watson said. The couple moved from Georgia to Santa Fe last year after falling in love with the City Different during a visit. The first thing the wine aficionados did was set up a wine cellar in the basement of their South Capitol home. This was their first time at the Santa Fe Wine Festival, which continues through Sunday. They think it compares favorably with others they’ve been to. Watson said it is always good to know where the spit bucket resides, for wine tasters who want to stretch out the sampling all afternoon and still be

Section editor: Howard Houghton, 986-3015, hhoughton@sfnewmexican.com

standing. The trick is not to swallow every sip. “I spit by commentary,” Watson said. “When I spit, it means the wine is bad. I swallow if it is good.” A total of 17 New Mexico vintners are pulling out corks and pouring wine samples for this year’s festivalgoers. “We average 16 to 19 vintners each year, so this is about average,” said Joseph Maes, curator of historical interpretation at Las Golondrinas, a Spanish Colonial living history museum southwest of Santa Fe. Sitting at a table under a large, shady tent at the wine festival as a

Please see FEST, Page C-5

IF YOU GO

Michael Waddy of Albuquerque, left, offers Bob Wisehart of Santa Fe, a taste of wine from the Matheson Winery during Saturday’s Santa Fe Wine Festival at El Rancho de las Golondrinas. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

What: Santa Fe Wine Festival When: Noon to 6 p.m. Sunday. Glass sales and tasting end at 5:30 p.m. Bottle sales end at 6 p.m. Where: El Rancho de Las Golondrinas, 334 Los Pinos Road, 15 miles south of Santa Fe. Adult admission: $13 Includes festival wine glass. Youth admission: $5 (ages 13-20); anyone under the age of 21 must be accompanied be a legal age guardian.

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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LOCAL & REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

Funeral services and memorials

Police notes OTIS LEE BEATY JR. (TORO)

HERBERT MAYER SCHON 1931~2014 Herb Schon, avid cyclist, skier and baker of rugelach, died on June 30 after a massive stroke. Herb was born in Newark, NJ, and lived for many years in New York City, where after a career in advertising he founded Grandma’s Recipe Rugelach, a specialty bakery. He retired to Santa Fe, NM, in 1997, and within a few years had revived the Grandma’s brand. At age 75, Herb indulged his passion for cycling by riding from California to New Hampshire, and from Oregon to Southern California at 80. At 77 he was struck by a car while cycling in Albuquerque, and a year later he suffered multiple broken bones and skull fractures after a high-speed bike crash in Los Alamos. But nothing could stop Herb, and in both cases he was back in the saddle within months, even riding a century with the helicopter crew who had saved his life. When he wasn’t on his bike he could be found skiing, working out at the gym or making rugelach deliveries to his many customers. Herb was known for his integrity and humor, but it was his fierce tenacity and love for life that will continue to serve as an inspiration to his friends. He is survived by his wife, Irene; his son, Peter; daughter-in-law, Amanda, and granddaughter, Greta.

Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com

Otis Lee Beaty Jr. (Toro)entered the presence of God, July 2, 2014. Otis was born in Pampa, Texas on November 11, 1926 to Otis Lee Beaty Sr. and Audrey Mae Gilcrease. After his father’s death in 1934 Otis and his mom moved to Santa Fe. He attended Santa Fe Schools until his enrollment in the U.S. Navy at the age of 17, where he served in the Asia Pacific region during WWII. Otis married Nina Farmer, December 12, 1948 and was employed by Reynolds Electric Company until 1964 at which time he opened "Beaty Electric Co.". He Served on various boards including: "New Mexico Construction Industries Commission", "Century Federal Bank" and a New Mexico Governor of the "National Electric Contractor’s Association". His greatest delight was his relationship with Jesus Christ, Nina his wife of 65-yrs, his family and his service in the Gideons of Santa Fe, of which he was a founding member. He was preceded in death by: his parents; stepfather; Bill Bindel, brother; John Bindel and grandson; Patrick Catanach. Otis is survived by his wife Nina (whom he lovingly referred to as "Miss Joyce"), sons: David (Deslee), Tom (Michelle), daughters: Cheryl Bonino (Vince), Paula Beaty, Gail Flowers and good friends, Carl (his coffee drinking buddy) and wife Ruby Lea. Grandchildren: Shiloh Pennington (Jesse), Chandler Huston (Becca), Brandon Beaty, Bryant Beaty, Christipher Catanach, Desiree Catanach, Taylor Bonio, Austin Bonino and Kyle Bonino. Great Grandchildren: Paige and Baylor Pennington, Bryce and Grayson Huston. A memorial service will be held, Monday July 7th at 11:00 a.m. at Rodeo Road Baptist Church, (Rodeo Road and Richards Ave.). Memorial Contributions can be made to: "Gideons International", P.O. Box 4496, Santa Fe, NM 87502 Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhome.com

TOMMY L. MAXWELL July 21, 1940 in Salado, TX July 1, 2014 in Santa Fe, NM Tommy L. Maxwell, 73, a star athlete at Santa Fe High School in the 1960’s, died Tuesday, July 1, 2014, with family at his side. Husband, father, brother, uncle, Elder in the Santa Fe South Congregation of Jehovah’s Witnesses, and minister, he was a man of his word. He was born July 21, 1940, to Walter Maxwell and Daisy (Felder) Maxwell. He was preceded in death by his parents and eight of his twelve siblings. Tommy is survived by his wife, Charlotte; his daughters: Michele Maxwell, Karen (Daniel C de Baca) and Shannon Maxwell. His siblings: Charles Maxwell (Loretta) Santa Fe, NM; Lilly Cooke (Phoenix, AZ); Ruth Ann Taylor (Las Vegas, NV); and numerous nieces, nephews, and cousins. Over the course of his life, Tommy lived in Roswell, NM where he and his family worked as farmers. Eventually, he and his family relocated to Santa Fe, NM. As a teen he was well-known as an athlete at Santa Fe High School where he was a halfback on the football team, and a member of the track team, which were activities that his future wife, Charlotte enjoyed watching and supporting him; years later he was employed by Colony Materials, which became Western Mobile, and ultimately became LaFarge North America, for 40+ years as a cement truck driver, Batch Plant Operator, and in sales. After retiring, he went to work for Santa Fe Classic Rock (Eker Brothers Landscaping). He loved helping people and got along with everyone he came in contact with. People frequently commented about how well-dressed he always was and how shiny his dress shoes were. He was a very kind-hearted person, a loving father and husband. He was always happy and had a great smile no matter what. He generously gave of his time, energy, and resources. He was very hospitable. He enjoyed spending time gardening and working on his yard’s landscape. He was a member of the Regional Building Committee for the construction of Kingdom Halls throughout New Mexico. He will be deeply missed. Special thanks to all the numerous loving friends Dad made over the years. Our family thanks Gentiva Hospice; Medicap Pharmacy; New Mexico Heart Institute (Albuquerque, NM); and Lovelace Hospital (Albuquerque, NM). We look forward to seeing our loved one again very soon in the New World Jehovah God has promised, when no resident will say, "I am sick." - Isaiah 33:24. A Memorial Service will be held at noon, July 26, 2014, at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah’s Witnesses; 4 Mutt Nelson Road, Santa Fe, NM 87507. Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com

Celebrate thememoryofyour lovedonewith amemorialin TheSanta FeNewMexican

Call 986-3000

WILLIAM DUNCAN GREAVES 1931 - 2014

The Santa Fe Police Department took the following reports: u Jeremiah V. Schultz, no age given, 520 S. St. Francis Drive, was arrested Friday on charges alleging false imprisonment and aggravated assault against a household member. Schultz was booked into the county jail without bond. u Monica Rael, no age given, 825 Calle Mejia, was arrested Friday on an outstanding Santa Fe County Magistrate Court warrant issued for failure to appear on charges of driving with a revoked license, no evidence of registration and no insurance. u Joseph Phillipovich, 33, 1022 Tierra Drive, was arrested Saturday on an outstanding Santa Fe County Magistrate Court warrant charging failure to appear on a probation violation. u Sigifredo Quintana-Ponce, no age given, 2284 Henry Lynch Road, was arrested Saturday on an outstanding bench warrant from Santa Fe County Magistrate Court. u Jesse Gallegos, no age given, 1250 Atrisco Road SW in Albuquerque, was arrested Saturday on an outstanding bench warrant from Sandoval County Magistrate Court. u Dwayne E. Bird, no age given, of Santa Fe was arrested Saturday on an outstanding Santa Fe Municipal Court warrant and released on $452 cash-only bond. Santa Fe County Sheriff’s Office took the following reports: u Documents were stolen

from a vehicle parked in the Aldea area of Richards Avenue sometime between 6 and 8 p.m. Friday. u A total of $1,000 in cash was reported stolen from a home between 2 and 7 p.m. Friday in the Aldea subdivision on Avenida de Frijoles. An unknown person broke into the home.

DWI arrests u Orlando P. Gallegos, 48, 1604 Holly Berry Drive NE in Rio Rancho, was arrested Saturday on a charge of aggravated DWI, a second offense. u Chester Tenorio, 40, no address given, was arrested Saturday in Cerrillos on Waldo Canyon Road after he allegedly admitted to drinking six Bud Light beers and showed signs of being impaired. His breath-alcohol content measured 0.12. Tenorio’s vehicle was impounded, and he was booked into the county jail.

Help lines Esperanza Shelter for Battered Families hotline: 800-473-5220 St. Elizabeth Shelter for men, women and children: 982-6611 Interfaith Community Shelter: 795-7494 New Mexico suicide prevention hotline: 866-435-7166 Solace Crisis Treatment Center: 986-9111, 800-721-7273 or TTY 471-1624 Youth Emergency Shelter/ Youth Shelters: 438-0502 Police and fire emergency: 911 Graffiti hotline: 955-2255

Former Union Pacific contractor could face fines ROBERT MASH DECEMBER 13, 1953

Passed away on June 30, 2014. Funeral Services Pending with Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations; 305 Calle Salazar; Espanola, NM 87532; 505-753-2288.

William Greaves, formerly of Santa Fe, went to heaven on June 27. A lovable, funny, charismatic man, he brought joy to all who knew him. Happy on the tennis courts, helping others, singing, entertaining, or just being with friends and family, Bill lived life fully. He will be greatly missed by his wife, Ginny, his six children, a multitude of grandchildren and great-grandchildren, and by all those who had the privilege to know him.

A memorial service in memory of Christine Seubert Bourque will be held on Saturday, July 12, 2014 from 4:00 - 8:00 p.m. at the Cerillos Hills State Park Building. Bring pot luck and music. Details: email seuberta@mac.com.

PAULINE D. LOPEZ 1st Year Anniversary July 5, 2013

ISABEL STANDARD Isabel Standard beloved mother and lifelong resident of Santa Fe passed away June 29, 2014. She worked for the State of New Mexico for over 40 years. She is preceded in death by her husband of over 30 years Jerry Standard, Daughter, Lorraine and Son, Louie and granddaughter, Lorie. She is survived by her daughter, and son-in-law, Anna and Anthony Reveles of Phoenix AZ. Grandchildren: Ron, Anthony, Yvette, Maxine, Valerie, Marty and A Special Cousin Gracie Olivas. Services will be held on July 9, 2014 at 9 a.m. at Cristo Rey Church. Interment will be at Santa Fe National Cemetery at 12:45 p.m.

Rivera Family Funerals and Cremations 417 East Rodeo Rd. Santa Fe, NM 87505 Phone: (505) 989-7032 Fax: (505) 820-0435 santafefuneraloption.com

amount of about $178 million, Attorney General spokesman ALBUQUERQUE — A forPhil Sisneros said. State law mer contractor on a allows for fines equal to about $400 million Union Pacific 10 percent of the value of the railroad hub in Santa Teresa contract, he said. along the state’s southern Attorneys for the contracborder with Mexico has been tors — Ames Sundt JV is a accused of bidding for the job joint venture between Minnewithout a legal New Mexico sota-based Ames Construclicense. tion and Arizona-based Sundt Potential fines levied against Construction — declined to the company, Ames Sundt JV, discuss the case, citing the could reach into the millions pending legal matters. But the of dollars, the Albuquerque Journal reported that state Journal reported Saturday. records indicate the compaThe state Construction nies deny wrongdoing. Industries Division began an The initial investigation investigation into the company began after an Albuquerque about two years ago. Formal businessman who lost out on complaints were filed in March, his bid for a portion of the railthe newspaper reported. way project filed a complaint The Union Pacific facility with the state, according to opened in April. emails obtained by the Journal. Closed-door mediation over Kevin Yearout, of Yearout the complaints lodged against Mechanical in Albuquerque, Ames Sundt JV begin Tuesday complained that Ames Sundt in Albuquerque with the state JV wasn’t legally licensed Construction Industries Com- under New Mexico law at the mission and the Attorney Gen- time it bid on the project, and eral’s Office. it only obtained the proper The case involves a contract licensing about 75 days later. The Associated Press

One year has passed since the loss of our beloved Mom Nana. We have missed your presence throughout this year but have many wonderful memories of you to hold on to. We would like to thank our family and friends for the kind and generous gifts and prayers at the time of her death and throughout this year. God Bless You Mom We Love and Miss You

Berardinelli Family Funeral Service 1399 Luisa Street Santa Fe, NM 87505 (505) 984-8600 Please sign our guestbook for the family at: www.berardinellifuneralhom e.com

Ground Breaking | July 10, 2014 • 3:00 p.m. Santa Fe’s Largest Funeral Chapel for Life Celebrations

Chapel of Light (Capílla de Luz) 417 RODEO ROAD, SANTA FE

505.989.7032

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LOCAL & REGION

Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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In brief Balderas outraises challenger in AG race Berino woman held in stabbing BERINO — Authorities say a 24-year-old Berino woman has been arrested after she stabbed her younger sister during an altercation. Officials with the Doña Ana County Sheriff’s Office say the woman had been arguing Saturday morning with her 20-yearold sister when the confrontation escalated. Another relative told investigators the suspect was assaulting the victim. When authorities arrived, they say they found the victim suffering from a stab wound to the abdomen. She was reported to be hospitalized in stable condition after surgery to remove her spleen and repair a kidney. Deputies say the suspect fled the scene but was arrested a short time later. She is held on suspicion of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon, aggravated battery causing great bodily harm and tampering.

Latest filings show Democrat raises twice as much cash By Barry Massey The Associated Press

Democrat Hector Balderas holds a big edge in campaign cash in the race for attorney general, according to the latest fundraising disclosures. Balderas, a two-term state auditor, reported a balance of $787,046 in his campaign account as of last week. Republican Susan Riedel, a former prosecutor, had cash-on-hand of $94,382. Balderas collected $131,329 in contributions in the past month compared with $59,266 by Riedel. Candidates and political committees filed campaign finance reports Thursday showing fundraising from May 28 through June 28.

ing $10,000 was Albuquerque developer Paul Blanchard, a part owner of the Downs at Albuquerque racetrack and casino. Riedel received $5,200 from Martinez’s political action committee, Susana PAC, Roswell auto dealer Thomas Krumland Hector Susan and Strategic Property Group, Balderas Riedel a Hobbs real estate company affiliated with former GOP Balderas and Riedel ran state party chairman Monty unopposed in the June 3 priNewman. Riedel also loaned mary election. her campaign $1,956. Riedel was chief deputy disRiedel spent $23,393 comtrict attorney when Gov. Susana pared with $2,441 by Balderas. Martinez served as district Following are fundraising attorney in Dona Ana County. summaries for other offices: She later became a district judge but lost her election bid Secretary of state: Incumin 2012. bent Republican Dianna Duran Top contributors to Balderas reported a campaign balance of $111,060. Democratic challenger included a political committee Maggie Toulouse Oliver had of the New Mexico Trial Law$123,878. Duran raised $15,150, yers Association and Ruidoso and Oliver collected $31,541. Horse Sales Inc. Both gave $10,400 — the maximum under Duran received $2,700 from the governor’s PAC and $10,200 state law for the primary and from two oil companies owned general elections. Contribut-

by members of the Yates family in southeastern New Mexico. Oliver received $5,200 from labor unions. Duran spent $10,151, while Oliver’s expenditures were $14,532. Lieutenant governor: Republican incumbent John Sanchez had cash-on-hand of $126,248. Democrat Debra Haaland had $4,719. Sanchez raised $2,570 and spent $7,426. Haaland collected $11,218 and spent $14,158. Occidental Petroleum contributed $1,000 to Sanchez. Haaland received $1,480 from Albuquerque retiree James Collie. The candidates are the running mates of their party’s gubernatorial nominees. Land commissioner: Republican Aubrey Dunn had a balance of $132,277. Incumbent Democrat Ray Powell had $86,030. Dunn raised $18,375, including $2,575 from governor’s PAC. Powell collected $34,998, including $5,000 from International Potash Corp.,

which leases state land for potash mining. Powell spent $2,089; Dunn, $20,901. State treasurer: Democrat Tim Eichenberg had cash-onhand of $12,108. Republican Rick Lopez had $2,553. Eichenberg raised $20,574, including $18,244 in personal loans. Lopez, who was unopposed in the primary, collected $1,389 in contributions. Eichenberg spent nearly $200,000 in winning a hotly contested primary race, and the largest share of his financing came from personal money. State auditor: Democrat Tim Keller had cash-on-hand of $232,650. Republican Robert Aragon had $5,187. Keller raised $31,319, including $1,000 from the Isleta Pueblo. He spent $12,491. Aragon received $5,000 in contributions, all of it from Albuquerque business owners James and Antoinette Greenlee. He reported no expenditures.

Fewer fireworks calls in Duke city

Lottery chief seeks change in funding scholarships

ALBUQUERQUE — The Albuquerque Fire Department says the agency received about 1,233 calls related to illegal fireworks activities on the Fourth of July. That led to 17 citations being issued. While that’s 10 more citations issued than in 2013, last year the department received 1,371 complaint calls.

The Associated Press

Pedestrian killed crossing I-40 ALBUQUERQUE — Authorities say a pedestrian has died following a fatal crash Saturday on Interstate 40 in Albuquerque. The Albuquerque Police Department said a pedestrian was attempting to cross the westbound lanes of I-40 when the person was hit by a vehicle. The victim’s identity had not yet been released pending notification of their family. The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQUE — The head of New Mexico’s lottery system wants the state Legislature to cut the 30 percent minimum it is required to provide in revenues to the college scholarship program, noting such a move could increase lottery sales and create an even larger revenue stream for the program. However, the director of a Santa-Fe based think tank, whose 2006 study led state lawmakers to set the 30 percent minimum, said the move would only put more money in the pockets of lottery vendors and administrators and won’t enrich the scholarship program with additional funds, the Albuquerque Journal reported Saturday. The Legislative Lottery Scholarship program provides tuition money for students at state-funded institutions.

The 30 percent mandate prevents the lottery from offering higher payouts on its instant-win scratcher tickets, lottery CEO David Barden said. Higher payouts would attract more players and increase sales, he said. But Fred Nathan, founder and executive director of Think New Mexico, noted that of the 12 states that mandated minimum contributions from their lottery systems in 2007, including New Mexico, only North Carolina and California have eliminated the benchmarks. Since then, “the percentage of revenues delivered to beneficiaries in California has fallen from 34 percent in 2010 to 28 percent in 2013,” Nathan said. “The proponents of this change point out that it resulted in more absolute dollars going to beneficiaries, which is true,” he said. “But only 20 percent of the increase went to ben-

eficiaries, with the remaining 80 percent going to prizes and overhead.” He noted that part of that increased overheard could go to Barden, who earns an annual salary of $145,000 but stands to make thousands more in bonuses if sales increase. The New Mexico lottery system has raised more than $610 million for education, helping pay for the scholarships of more than 90,000 students, lottery officials said. Barden said that by reducing the mandated contribution amount and increasing sales, the lottery likely could provide even more toward education. “Unfortunately, the 30 percent

requirement makes it impossible for the New Mexico Lottery to provide scratcher prize levels that have driven success in other states,” Barden said. Nathan suggested the lottery should simply reduce its overheard to keep pace with the growing demand for lottery scholarships and increase sales. “While their argument that

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SANTA FE OPERA APPRENTIC- SAVVY SOCIAL SECURITY PLAN- SANTA FE SPIRITUALITY INSTIES at United Church all summer! Through NING WORKSHOP Presented by Peter TUTE announces its Outstanding Summer 2014 Program. Join us for all or part of our

August, United Church of Santa Fe welcomes SF Opera Apprentices as soloists in 10:00 Sunday Worship. Tenor Adrian Kramer featured this Sunday, July 6. Grand Prize Winner in Louis Quilico Opera Competition, he is a graduate of Julliard and Curtis School of Music. Children’s Ministry (“Praying in the Dirt”) also during 10:00 service. Outdoor 8:30 Communion Service for all ages. Child care all morning. “Prisoners of Hope” is Rev. Talitha Arnold’s message in both services. “Love God, Neighbor and Creation!” All welcome! 1804 Arroyo Chamiso (at St. Michael’s Drive). 505-988-3295. unitedchurchofsantafe.org. Facebook, too.

Murphy, Retirement & Estate Planning Specialist. This FREE two hour seminar is offered at Garrett’s Desert Inn, 311 Old Santa Fe Trail, on Wednesday, July 9th, from 6pm to 8pm. You will learn the following and much more: Five factors to consider in deciding when to apply for benefits; Innovative strategies for coordinating spousal benefits; How to coordinate benefits with other income sources; How to minimize taxes on Social Security benefits; and Special rules on divorced spouses and survivor benefits. RSVP is required. Call 505216-0838 or email Register.SantaFe@1APG. com to register.

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CALLING ALL DRUMMERS! July 8, 1 p.m. Free Multicultural Performance & Drum Circle, Main Courtyard, Santa Fe Community College, 6401 Richards Ave. Free concert: national premiere of Afro-Colombian master drummers Las Alegres Ambulancias; Nigerian dancers, drummers Agalu; local groups Living Spirit Drummers and the Ohkay Owingeh Singers. Following the concert, everyone is invited to participate in a drum circle jam session. Presented by the SFCC Foundation & the International Folk Art Market. Contact Janet Berry, 505-428-1266 or janet.berry@sfcc. edu or go to sfcc.edu.

JULY

10 SANTA FE DOORWAYS Dying: A Natural Passage. Presenter: Denys Cope RN, BSN. Thursday July 10. Denys Cope, RN, BSN, over her 30 years as a hospice RN, has identified the predictable stages of the process of dying. She will present on how to identify these stages and how to best support our loved ones in the last months, weeks and days of their lives . Ponce de Leon, 640 Alta Vista. All welcome. Brown bag lunch. 4748383.

higher prizes equal higher sales may well be valid, our question is: ‘Why do they need to take that additional prize money from the students?’ ” Nathan said. “Why not cut the lottery’s overhead and administrative costs and reallocate more of those dollars to prizes?” Lottery officials said that’s just not an option.

events at St. Michael’s High School, beginning on Saturday July 12th. Rev. Bob Patterson will speak on Nazi-dissident Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Starting on July 13th, Bro. Brian Dybowski, FSC, PhD will conduct 11 classes on St. Francis of Assisi. July 20th-22nd Brother Joseph Schmidt returns to us for three presentations on his 6th book on St. Therese of Lisieux. For information, dates, and times go to www.sfis.org.

TUESDAY, July 22, 2014 at 12:00 NOON HISTORIC PRESERVATION DIVISION, 2nd FLOOR CITY HALL HISTORIC DISTRICTS REVIEW BOARD HEARING TUESDAY, July 22, 2014 at 5:30 P.M. CITY COUNCIL CHAMBERS A.

CALL TO ORDER

B.

ROLL CALL

C.

APPROVAL OF AGENDA

D.

APPROVAL OF MINUTES: July 8, 2014

E.

FINDINGS OF FACT & CONCLUSIONS OF LAW Case #H-09-005 Case #H-14-032 Case #H-11-105 Case #H-14-047 Case #H-14-051 Case #H-14-053

F.

BUSINESS FROM THE FLOOR

G.

ACTION ITEMS

3. Case #H-14-034. 511 Paseo de Peralta. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Architecture Alliance, agent for 511 PDP LLC, owner, proposes to construct four residential units in two structures totaling 11,476 sq. ft. and a 4,340 sq. ft. sub-grade parking structure to the maximum allowable height of 23’ and to reduce the height of the street stone wall to 3’ on a vacant property. (David Rasch).

OPEN AUDITIONS Sunday, July 13th

4. Case #H-14-047. 241 Rodriguez Street. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Architectural Alliance, agent for Peter J. and Victoire T. Gardener, owners, proposes to remodel a non-contributing property. (David Rasch).

1:00- 4:00pm. Males and females ages 1199, all types at the Musical Theatre Works Studio at 4001 Office Court Dr. Suite 206. Auditions are for the Santa Fe Musical Theatre Festival presented by Musical Theatre Works! Come see staged readings of 4 new musicals written by a new generation of musical theatre writers, and directed by internationally recognized artists, including Pat Birch (Fred Astaire Award winner and choreographer of Grease the movie), Ernest Thompson (Academy Award Winner for On A Golden Pond), AND MORE! Performances and Intensive Workshops available August 2nd- 9th at the Greer Garson Theatre at SFUAD. Intensive workshops include acting, dancing, singing and writing taught by guest artists! Contact us at sfmusicaltheatreworks@gmail.com ~ 505-946-2468 ~ www.sfmtf.org.

NOW INCLUDES FREE CALENDAR LISTING ON EXPLORESANTAFE.COM

797 Camino del Monte Sol 321, 325, 329 W. San Francisco St 653 Don Gaspar Avenue 436 West San Francisco Street 125 West Palace Avenue 206 Anita Place

2. Case #H-13-100. 603 Garcia Street. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Tom Easterson-Bond, agent for Joe Nero, owner, proposes to amend a previous approval to remodel a non-contributing property. (David Rasch).

13

FOR A COMPLETE CALENDAR OF UPCOMING EVENTS, VISIT:

Case #H-13-056 Case #H-13-095 Case #H-14-027 Case #H-14-048 Case #H-14-052 Case #H-14-050

1. Case #H-11-081. 449 Camino Monte Vista. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Sommer, Karns & Associates, agent for Theodora Portago, owner, proposes to construct a 6’ high coyote fence along the west lotline of a contributing residential property. (David Rasch).

JULY

Promote your event here: call 986-3000 or email events@sfnewmexican.com

211 Old Santa Fe Trail 929 Canyon Road 237/239 East de Vargas Street 241 Rodriguez Street 120 Quintana Street 309 West San Francisco Street

5. Case #H-08-096. 1150 Canyon Road. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Architectural Alliance, agent for Santa Fe Public Schools, owner, proposes to amend a previous approval to remodel a contributing property by removing historic material. An exception is requested (Section 14-5.2(C)(1)(c) and (D)(1)(a) and (D)(5)(a)(1)). (David Rasch). 6. Case #H-14-024. 350 Delgado Street. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Eric Montoya, agent for Elizabeth Travis ETM Inc., owner, proposes to remodel a non-contributing residential structure and a contributing yardwall. An exception is requested to alter the character of a primary façade (Section 14-5.2(C)(1)(a) and (c) and (D)(1)(a) and (5)(b). (David Rasch). 7. Case #H-14-054. 1025 Canyon Road. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Jay Jay Shapiro, agent for Joyce Martinez, owner, proposes to remodel a contributing residential property. (David Rasch). 8. Case #H-14-055. 616-B East Alameda Street. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Kevin Patrick, agent for Kevin Patrick and Linda Kochan-Patrick, owners, proposes to construct a 2,324 sq. ft. single-family residence on a vacant lot. (David Rasch). 9. Case #H-14-056. 258 Las Colinas Drive. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Piedra Partners, LLC, agent/ owner, proposes to construct a 2,873 sq. ft. single-family residence on a vacant lot. (David Rasch). 10.Case #H-14-057. 505 Apodaca Hill. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. Praxis Inc., agent for Iscah Carey, owner, proposes to remodel a non-contributing guest house. (David Rasch). 11.Case #H-14-058. 1231 Paseo de Peralta. Downtown & Eastside Historic District. O. Michael Duty, agent for New Mexico Municipal League, owner, proposes to remodel a significant commercial structure. An exception is requested (Section 14-5.2(D)(2)(c)). (David Rasch).

H.

COMMUNICATIONS

I.

MATTERS FROM THE BOARD

J.

ADJOURNMENT

Cases on this agenda may be postponed to a later date by the Historic Districts Review Board at the noticed meeting. Please contact the Historic Preservation Division at 955-6605 for more information regarding cases on this agenda.


C-4

REGION

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

Study: Drilling shakes up Oklahoma Wastewater wells blamed for more than 100 quakes By Seth Borenstein The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A new study explains how just four wells forcing massive amounts of drilling wastewater into the ground are probably shaking up Oklahoma. Those wells seem to have triggered more than 100 smallto-medium earthquakes in the past five years, according to a study published recently by the journal Science. Many of the quakes were much farther away from the wells than expected. Combined, those wells daily pour more than 5 million gallons of water a mile or two underground into rock formations, the study found. That buildup of fluid creates more pressure that “has to go somewhere,” said study lead author Cornell University seismologist Katie Keranen. Researchers originally figured the water diffused through underground rocks slowly. But instead, it is moving faster and farther and triggers quake fault lines that already were likely ready to move, she said. “You really don’t need to raise the pressure a great deal,” she added.

Chad Devereaux examines bricks in 2011 that fell from three sides of his in-laws’ home in Sparks, Okla. A new study shows drilling wastewater into the ground is probably causing quakes in Oklahoma. ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO

The study shows the likely way in which the pressure can trigger fault lines — which already existed yet were not too active— but researchers need more detail on the liquid injections themselves to absolutely prove the case, Keranen said. The wastewater is leftover from unconventional wells that drill for oil and gas with help of high pressure liquids — nicknamed fracking — and from the removal of water from diluted oil. These new methods mean much more wastewater has to be discarded. While there are about 8,000 deep injection wells in the region, the amount of water injected at

the four wells — named Chambers, Deep Throat, Flower Power and Sweetheart — has more than doubled since the drilling boom started about a decade ago. From 1976 to 2007, Oklahoma each year averaged about one quake of magnitude 3 or more — strong enough to feel locally but too weak to cause damage. But from 2008 to 2013, the state averaged 44 earthquakes of that size every year. So far this year, there have been another 233, Keranen said, getting her earthquake figures from the U.S. Geological Survey database. The rattling has led some Oklahomans to push for

restrictions on the use of injection wells. While past research has shown more quakes in Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas and Kansas and correlated it statistically to injection wells, this study used computer simulations to identify the mechanism of how massive amounts of water travel as much as 20 miles from the well. The pressure then triggers existing small faults — or previously unknown ones. In the past, scientists thought wells could only jump-start quakes within 3 miles or so. Austin Holland, a seismologist at the Oklahoma Geological Survey said Keranen’s study confirms what he is seeing in the field and will help better understand what’s happening in Oklahoma. “It’s a study that needed to be done,” said U.S. Geological Survey seismologist Elizabeth Cochran. “That changes how we might look at the hazard for a particular well.”

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person to have training and meet other requirements to obtain a permit. Other Colorado laws, including universal background checks for gun sales, a 15-round limit on firearm magazines and a ban on online-only concealedcarry training, continue to be topics of intense debate.

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RIFLE, Colo. — Many stores and restaurants are telling people not to bring their guns inside, but one western Colorado restaurant not only embraces the practice of packing heat, it encourages its customers to carry openly — and its waitresses do, too. As she takes your order at Shooters Grill in the town of Rifle — yes, Rifle — waitress Ashlee Saenz carries a pad, pen and a loaded Ruger .357 Blackhawk revolver holstered on her leg, Old West style. It’s loaded, and she knows how to use it. Colorado is among the states where openly carrying a gun in public is legal. The issue has made headlines after gun rights activists carrying loaded rifles gathered in Target stores in Texas, Alabama and North Carolina to demonstrate their support of “open carry” laws. On Wednesday, Target Corp. asked its customers “respectfully” to not bring firearms into stores, even where allowed by law. But in Rifle, Saenz, her coworkers and her customers at Shooters Grill are encouraged to bring their holstered guns in the restaurant, The Glenwood Springs Post Independent reports. State law allows local governments and businesses to prohibit guns in their buildings, but a sign on Shooters’ front door reads: “Guns are welcome on premises. Please keep all weapons holstered, unless the need arises. In such cases, judicious marksmanship is appreciated.” Shooters also hosts training that qualifies customers for Colorado and Utah concealed weapon permits. The $75 price tag includes dinner. Shooters owner Lauren Boebert said she’s simply allowing customers and employees to exercise their constitutional right to bear arms. “We encourage it, and the customers love that they can come here and express their rights,” Boebert said. She chose the restaurant’s name last year as a nod to its gun policy. “I consulted with my Christian friends and everyone said ‘Shooters’ sounded like a bar or a strip joint,” Lauren Boebert said with a laugh. “But I thought, this is Rifle — it was founded around guns and the Old West. We called it Shooters and started throwing guns and Jesus all over the place.” The restaurant offers American and Mexican fare, and it doesn’t serve alcohol. Customers on a recent morning had no problem with the presence of firearms. Wayne and Martha Greenwald, visiting from Grand Marais, Mich., welcomed the restaurant’s policy. “We think it’s just fine. We’re very positive about it,” Wayne

Greenwald said. “We carry guns ourselves and own a rifle, shotgun and handguns. We live in a very small town and we take care of our own crime problems.” A group that supporters gun restrictions told the newspaper it favors concealed carry over open carry because that requires the

of Latter-day Saints, which teaches members to abstain SALT LAKE CITY — A from alcohol. Church officials new state law puts Utah liquor this year stressed the state’s licenses on the free market. liquor policy should stay put, For the first time, would-be saying it keeps residents safe. bar owners can legally buy the Utah liquor laws are considright to pour and serve alcoered among the strictest nationholic drinks directly from other wide, but have relaxed in recent business owners, instead of the years: Until 2009, bars operated state. Approved in 2011, the law as members-only social clubs. went into effect Tuesday. Under the new law, the state Some bar operators are toast- will still help to handle the ing the move, welcoming the transfer. Buyers must qualify state’s decision to give up some under current guidelines and control when it comes to liquor pay $300 in state fees, and regulations. sellers must pay off any debts “I think it’s a good move for the business took on. There’s us because we’ve been in the another catch: The new bar Dark Ages for such a long time must stay in the same county. for liquor laws,” said Bridget It could elevate nightlife in Gordon, owner of the Green Pig some parts of the state, estiPub & Grill in Salt Lake City. mates Dave Morris, president of Others say it could spur bidthe Utah Hospitality Association ding wars up to a few hundred and owner of Piper Down Pub. thousand dollars, smothering “These little dive bars not new entrepreneurs. making money, maybe they’ll be In Utah, an estimated twomotivated to sell their license thirds of the population belongs and get rid of their business,” to The Church of Jesus Christ he said. The Associated Press

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Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Suspect: Hotel robberies remain unsolved Continued from Page C-1

From left, set background production assistant Michael Chochol of Albuquerque speaks with extras Sharron Lutheran of Albuquerque and John Hickey of Rio Rancho about their placement in a scene on the set of Longmire. LUKE E. MONTAVON/THE NEW MEXICAN

Dream: Extras earn S.F. minimum wage Continued from Page C-1 At Longmire, extras make the Santa Fe minimum wage, $10.66 per hour, but the pay tends to vary by production.

The shoot My three-hour shoot at Garson Studios begins at 9 p.m. On the set is a slew of thick, black wires and giant, hanging lamps. Red lights blink on archaic-looking machines. Harried crew members dash from one studio to the next, carrying hefty equipment and props. The thought of breaking expensive equipment or running into someone fills me with dread. The set falls quiet while the camera rolls, then bursts back to life when it stops. In between shots, there is a lot of standing around, flipping through phones and chatting in hushed whispers with fellow extras. Waiting is common. Most extras advise bringing a book. Production assistant Michael Chochol guides the two dozen or so extras — ranging in age from early 20s to late 50s — to the backstage, where we are placed on set. I am paired with fellow extra Kat Compton, who graciously tolerates my attempts to strike up a conversation. Compton, who lives in Albuquerque, is the sort you might expect to do well in films: petite, svelte, with blond, wavy hair and large, green eyes. She has worked as an extra a few times this season for Longmire, and she is hoping to leverage herself into an acting career. My scene takes place in a bar called The Red Pony Saloon, adorned with dozens of trophy animals including deer, mountain lions and birds. There are plenty of rifles and American flags to complete the saloon’s Western feel. The scene is set during the day, though we are shooting after dark. Bright lights create artificial daylight. The transition from faux day to real night, Compton says, can be jarring. (Later, it startled me, too, when I left the brightness of the studio for the dark night outside.) Producers requested that I avoid divulging plot details — most people have to sign nondisclosure agreements — but I can reveal the details of my role: During my limited time on screen, I engage in conversation with Compton, leave the bar to smoke a cigarette just as Taylor and Sackhoff enter; I return when Taylor exits, choose a song on the jukebox, then sit back down and mime more conversation with Compton. In the first take, I tremble. I keep thinking about the eyes of the director on me, and about the camera lens. My arms and mouth move as if they’re made of wood. The distance to the door seems like miles. My mind is running laps around itself as I wait for my cues. But when the take finishes, I breathe. Compton gives me a high five. I settle into my seat, ready to do it again. In the second take, I add little flourishes — I pull my index and middle fingers to my mouth, gesturing to Compton that I’m heading out for a smoke. By the sixth and seventh take, my adrenaline rush is gone. My mind is numb from performing the same actions repeatedly. I start stewing about acts that might be distracting — am I holding the swinging doors too long for my date?

Am I selecting the wrong track on the jukebox? Am doing a decent job of faking conversation? I have no sense of how much time has gone by. I have no idea if the camera is even on me. Compton says that sense of displacement comes with the territory. She often doesn’t know if her presence will make the final cut.

The woes All throughout the night, I pestered other extras for advice. Compton said the best practice is to relax, and she recommended mouthing “pea and carrots” to mimic the appearance of conversation. She warned against drinking the liquid in the prop beer bottles. Quintana said to follow any and all directions. Another challenge of being an extra is adapting to the production schedule, which can change without warning. In my case, the producers changed the date I would be allowed to visit the set with less than a day’s notice. Details of the shoot, on a Friday night, weren’t hammered out until late Thursday. Thankfully, my day job allowed me some time off for the experience, but other extras, like Compton, weren’t so lucky. She had worked a full day at the PaaKo Ridge Resort in Albuquerque before driving an hour to Santa Fe for a night’s worth of work. Casting calls often are issued with little notice, so serious extras need to be ready to adjust their schedules — or potentially miss an opportunity. That was the case for Quintana when the blockbuster The Avengers came to Albuquerque. He was working as a security officer at the time and had to get to his regular job while juggling long hours in his role as a guard in the film. “I had to do it. I did whatever I could,” he said. That involved swapping shifts and giving up a regular sleep schedule. He once worked 36 hours straight between the two jobs. It was exhausting, Quintana said, but he would do it again. My greatest challenge was finding the right clothes. I was told to dress Western, but I don’t own cowboy boots, a hat or other Western attire. I tried to draw on the wardrobes of friends and family, but the clothes they had to offer either cut off the circulation to my extremities or made me look like a kid playing dress-up. I eventually turned to a costume rental shop, Costumes Ltd., where I was outfitted with a cowboy hat and an authentic pair of scuffed black boots for a paltry $15. My worry was for naught: The wardrobe manager gave me a pass after looking at my getup for less than a minute.

Worth the effort I went into this project with the expectation of encountering mostly people with only a cursory interest of working in film, or those with the hope of making a quick buck. Some of those people were around, but more were like Compton and Quintana, people hoping to find a foothold in the film world, no matter what the cost. “Anytime I can get on set,” Quintana said, “it’s worth it.” Contact Chris Quintana at 986-3093 or cquintana@ sfnewmexican.com.

cers “worked continuously, collaboratively and quickly to apprehend this suspect. … Having Valencia behind bars shows the community’s efforts payed off.” According to police, Valencia allegedly took one of the stolen purses to a business, where he rifled through it and then left it at the business. He was captured on the business’ surveillance tape. Valencia, who’s birthday is listed on the jail website as April 1, 1972, faces charges including armed robbery and aggravated burglary. The jail website lists his address as Pecos. He has a long criminal history with Santa Fe police. Online records show he has been arrested 33 times on drug, DWI, battery,

burglary and shoplifting charges dating back to 2001, according to the police department news release and court records. Many of those charges were dismissed for various reasons, court records show. “He was a known shoplifter to us,” said Celina Espinoza, a spokeswoman for the police department. “From shoplifting escalating to armed robbery is not what we want to see.” Before Saturday’s arrest, Valencia most recently was arrested in June in Santa Fe on suspicion of shoplifting, concealing identity and use or possession of drug paraphernalia. He pleaded not guilty to those charges in Santa Fe County Magistrate Court and was released on a $2,500 bond. On Wednesday, the teenage volunteer at the O’Keeffe Museum said a man held

a gun to her throat around 3 p.m. in a downtown parking lot and demanded her money. She gave him $20 and he ran off, leaving her unharmed. Valencia did not admit to being involved in four other recent robberies, including three at hotels. “We’re still investigating if this is related to a string of hotel desk robberies, three from June 16 to 18,” Espinoza said. “They were the Comfort Suites, Best Western, Motel 8 and one at Latinos Unidos, a grocery store next to those hotels. The suspect was covering his face, which was a little different from Valencia.” Contact Staci Matlock at 86-3055 or smatlock@sfnewmexican.com. Follow her on Twitter @stacimatlock.

Fest: New Mexico oldest wine-making state Continued from Page C-1 band made ready to play nearby, Richard and Sophia Apodaca complimented the festival organizers. The Santa Fe couple have gone to the festival almost every year since it began. “It is a lot better organized this year, it seems like,” said Sophia Apodaca, sipping a Riesling. “It was really fast getting in. It was nice.” A line had formed half an hour before the event opened at noon, and volunteers were able to get the first wave carded, wrists banded and eager wine tasters through the entrance in short order. Wine samplers, their designated drivers and those too young to drink also can enjoy 46 arts, crafts and agricultural products and food from 11 vendors. “We do feel like it is a very civilized wine festival,” said Amanda Crocker, program and marketing director at Las Golondrinas. “Once you get inside, you don’t have the huge lines that you do at other wine festivals. It is smaller scale. We don’t have 40,000 people. We like to think it is more relaxed and people actually have time to talk to the vintners, to really learn more about the wines.” In addition, Crocker said, “what makes us unique is our location. We’re on a gorgeous 200-acre living history museum, with creeks and acequias and a schoolhouse, and sheep and goats and beautiful, 300-year-old cottonwoods.” Last year, more than 4,800 people attended the wine festival, and organizers expect at least as many to attend this year during the two-day event. The New Mexico Wine Growers Association works with Las Golondrinas to put on the event. It is one of more than half a dozen wine festivals in New Mexico every year and the third oldest in the state, Crocker said. According to Crocker and Maes, New Mexico is the oldest wine-making state in the nation. Yes, California, that’s right. The Land of Enchantment began making wine a few years after Don Juan de Oñate brought grape vine cuttings with him in 1598. The Franciscan priests cultivated grapes and wine. “Because in order to be a good Catholic, you had to have a sacramental wine,” Maes said. New Mexico had a healthy wine-grow-

Matthew Mark Halberg of Henderson, Nev., sniffs some wine from Matheson Winery on Saturday at the Santa Fe Wine Festival. LUIS SÁNCHEZ SATURNO/THE NEW MEXICAN

FESTIVAL VINTNERS u Acequia Vineyards and Winery u Amaro Winery u Anasazi Fields Winery u Black Mesa Winery u Casa Abril Vineyards u Corrales Winery u Don Quixote Winery & Distillery u Estrella del Norte Vineyard u Gruet Winery u La Chiripada u Luna Rossa u Matheson Winery u Ponderosa Valley Wineyards u St. Clair Winery/DH Lescombes u Tierra Encantada Wineyards and Winery u Tularosa Vineyards u Wines of the San Juan

ing industry until Prohibition in the 1930s shut it down. But the industry has been making a comeback in the last couple of decades. “New Mexico wine is an oddity because we aren’t thought of as a winemaking state,” Crocker said. “But the grapes coming out of Deming, for example, are world-class grapes. I think New Mexico wine is surprising to people.” During a brief lull in a crowd of wine tasters at Ponderosa Valley Winery, Cary

Staeden chatted about the vineyard his brother-in-law and sister own in Ponderosa. The vineyard is 30 years old and now makes 30 varieties of wine. The vineyard only sells its wine in New Mexico. “It is difficult to get the licensing to sell out of state,” Staeden said. He also said the state Alcohol and Gaming Division is cracking down on wine festivals. Organizers card festivalgoers at the entrance, and people who want to sample wine have to be wearing a colored arm band. But Staeden said vintners are starting to card anyone who looks young at the sampling booths, even if they are wearing an arm band. “We’re the ones the state cites, not the festival organizers, if someone is underage,” he said. So far in carding entrants, Crocker has seen people from Colorado, Texas and South Dakota. “I don’t know how many of these people are driving out here to Santa Fe for the wine festival, but we hope a lot of them are,” she said. “This event and the Santa Fe Renaissance Fair are our two biggest fundraisers,” Joseph Maes said. “We make a few bucks off of this to put on some of our smaller events. Some of our other events are paid for through this event.” Contact Staci Matlock at 986-3055 or smatlock@sfnewmexican.com.

Lure: Former Taos mayor praises Martinez Continued from Page C-1 basically that the incumbent officeholder had helped their communities get money and other assistance. Delgado at the time said Domenici had “been a leader in our community in issues including the water crisis. He helped get us $3 million for emergency wells. He’s gotten us millions of dollars for the bypass and for [renovating] the Palace of the Governors.” Ortiz, in a recent interview, said despite his appearance in a Martinez campaign ad — and the fact that he knew the footage was going to be used to promote the governor’s bid for another four-year term — that doesn’t mean he has endorsed Martinez’s re-election. “That’s a personal choice,” he said when asked if he’ll vote for Martinez in November. But Ortiz said he stands by his words in the TV spot. “She’s done a lot for Las Vegas,” he said. “She’s very approachable. … I’m just very appreciative and I hope people realize that she’s done a good job.” Ortiz said he was asked to make a statement on camera praising the governor in March, when Martinez went to Las Vegas to sign the capital outlay bill, a major source of state funding for brick-and-mortar projects. That bill included $10 million to improve Bradner Dam, which, according to a

news release from the Governor’s Office, is expected to quadruple Las Vegas’ capacity to store water. A crew was on hand to film Martinez’s bill-signing ceremony, Ortiz said. “Someone from the Governor’s Office asked if they could film my remarks.” He agreed. Not all Las Vegas Democrats have warm thoughts about Martinez. After Martinez was named as grand marshal of this weekend’s Las Vegas Fiesta parade, San Miguel County Democratic Chairman Martin Suazo told The New Mexican on Thursday that this was “a slap in the face to a strong Democratic community.” Suazo argued that in spite of the money for the dam, about $20 million in other capital outlay requests for San Miguel County didn’t make it into the budget Martinez signed. He said the county’s capital outlay requests totaled $34.5 million. The county ended up with about $14 million of that, he said. “These are Gary Johnsonlike numbers,” he said, referring to the notoriously frugal former Republican governor. Cordova, the former Taos mayor, said in a recent interview that he was happy to do the advertisement for Martinez. “I was born and raised Democrat in Taos,” he said. “I openly supported Diane Denish for governor [in 2010].”

Cordova, who served five years as mayor, lost his own re-election bid in March to current Mayor Daniel Barrone by a more than 2-1 margin. He said the loss had nothing to do with his coziness with Martinez. Very early in Martinez’s administration, Cordova said, the governor was very helpful to him — and to Taos — in a time of crisis. In early February 2011, an Arctic cold front hit the Southwest, and a shortage of natural gas supplies left part of Northern New Mexico without fuel for gas heaters and stoves. By Friday, Feb. 4, 2011, more than 25,000 utility customers had no heat, including some in highelevation enclaves like Taos. New Mexico Gas Co. officials said it would take two days to relight the pilot lights of those homes without heat. But after two days had passed with thousands of homes still without heat, Martinez ordered 56 National Guard soldiers and airmen to help with the relighting. Later, she dispatched 300 more troops, plus 44 officers from the Albuquerque Police Department and 15 state police officers. Later that month, Cordova told The New Mexican, “I am so impressed with the governor’s administration on the timeliness and the open communication they established. There was never once where I

had to wait for a call or couldn’t get through to anybody.” Cordova last week reiterated his praise for the administration’s actions during the 2011 gas crisis. “Gov. Martinez gave me her cell number and said to call anytime,” Cordova said. “She didn’t care that I’d supported Diane Denish.” He said there was no comparison between the way he was treated by Martinez and the way he was treated by the Richardson administration. “I could never get a meeting with Richardson’s chief of staff or Cabinet members,” Cordova said. The layers of bureaucracy was terrible. With Martinez, I’d usually get a return call that day, and usually by the end of the day the problem would be solved.” Whenever Martinez came to Taos, Cordova said, he’d introduce her at public events. And then one day, Cordova got a call from the governor’s chief of staff, Keith Gardner, asking how he would feel about appearing in a political ad. “He said, ‘I don’t want you to feel uncomfortable,’ ” Cordova recalled. “They’d understand if I couldn’t do it. He said they just wanted me to say some of the things I’d said in public about her.” Contact Steve Terrell at 986-3037 or sterrell@ sfnewmexican.com.


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CELEBRATIONS

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

Faces & places

Education standouts

Margaret Wood, a speech therapist at Presbyterian Medical Services — Community Home Health Care and The Hospice Center, marked her 20th employment anniversary. Wood obtained her master’s degree in speech language pathology from The Margaret University of Wood New Mexico. She started with Presbyterian as a part-time employee June 24, 1994, and transitioned to a full-time position the next year. Before beginning a career as a speech therapist, Wood worked as a companion for the artist Georgia O’Keeffe from 1977 to 1982. She spent five years with O’Keeffe at her homes in Abiquiú and Ghost Ranch. In 2012, she wrote a book about her experiences, titled Remembering Miss O’Keeffe. That same year, Wood and her publisher released 110 hand-bound editions titled O’Keeffe Stories. Wood’s collection of O’Keeffe’s recipes, The Painter’s Kitchen, was published in 1991.

Samantha Franco, a Santa Fe resident and a student at Pratt Institute in New York, was among more than 1,000 students who made the dean’s list in the spring 2014 semester.

Tamara Johnson of Santa Fe earned a Bachelor of Arts in corporate communication from Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wis., at the school’s May 18 graduation ceremony.

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USTA Serves, the national charitable foundation of the United States Tennis Association, awarded a $10,000 grant to the Santa Fe program First Serve-NM. Founded in 2003, First Serve—NM provides a free, structured after-school program in tennis instruction. It serves 105 students, ages 8 through 18, in grades three through 12, in seven Santa Fe public schools and one Pojoaque public school. For more information, visit www.firstservenewmexico.org.

Krystl DeBruyn of Santa Fe was New Mexico’s recipient of the $4,000 Western Petroleum Marketers Association Scholarship. DeBruyn, a graduate of Santa Fe High School, was one of eight students honored in the association’s Western region, including Hawaii, Idaho, Montano, Washington, Nevada, Utah and New Mexico. The scholarship recipients are chosen based on academics, ACT or SAT scores, community service, extracurricular activities and statement of goals. DeBruyn plans to attend The University of New Mexico in the fall.

OPERA CONTEST WINNERS The Española Valley Opera Guild has announced the winners of the annual youth essay contest. The winners wrote on the topic: ‘Why I Want to Attend The Santa Fe Opera.’ Contestants were from Rio Arriba County, the Española Valley or the Pojoaque Valley Schools. From left are Divara Harper, Noelia Topete, Baleigh Williams, Jerick Martinez, Victoria Williams, Alyanna Mercedes Cuevas and Destiny Martinez. COURTESY PHOTO

A native of Nashville, Tenn., Halpern is a 1958 graduate of Vanderbilt University, a former member of the Visual Communications faculty of Oklahoma uuu State University Institute of Technology and a member and For the first time since 1983, former chairman of the Visual Bandelier National Monument Communications Advisory will have an artist in residence, Committee of the institute. In photographer David Halpern of October 2004, he was inducted Santa Fe. into the Tulsa Historical SociHalpern is an experienced ety’s Hall of Fame. He is a life teacher of photography, in the member of the American Sociclassroom and in workshops; ety of Media Photographers a prolific writer; and a photoand a vice president of the New graphic consultant. Prior to this Mexico Chapter of ASMP. appointment, he has served 11 uuu times as a National Park artist in residence Positive Energy Solar has — four times been recognized for excelat Rocky lence in preservation with the Mountain Mayor’s Award for designing a National Park solar array in one of Santa Fe’s in Colorado, historic districts a way that pretwice each at serves the historic integrity of Bryce Canyon the building. National Park The Historic Districts Review in Utah, Black Board of the city of Santa Fe David Canyon of the Halpern honored Positive Energy Solar Gunnison, for a number of high-profile Colo., and Glacier National Park solar installations projects that in Montana, and once in Acadia included Verve Gallery, the National Park in Maine. Santa Fe Community ConvenSince 1973, his photographs tion Center and numerous resihave been exhibited in musedences. Receiving the award on ums and galleries across Amer- behalf of Positive Energy Solar ica, and he has been the recipiwere designer Ramon Ventura ent of numerous awards. and CEO Regina Wheeler. One of Halpern’s recent projuuu ects is the publication of his book Pilgrim Eye, a collection of Ten New Mexico businesses landscape photography. — headquartered in Abiquiú,

Albuquerque, Alcalde, Santa Fe and Taos — have been named winners of the 2014 Venture Acceleration Fund awards. VAF was initiated in 2006 by Los Alamos National Security, the company that manages Los Alamos National Laboratory, to stimulate the economy by supporting growth oriented companies. The grant awards are administered by the Regional Development Corp.’s Los Alamos Connect program in coordination with LANL. The 2014 Venture Acceleration Fund recipients are: Flow Science of Santa Fe Heavy Oil Solutions of Santa Fe Keystone Restoration Ecology of Santa Fe Milk+Honey of Santa Fe Xpress of Santa Fe FLUTe of Alcalde. Purple Adobe Lavender Farm of Abiquiú Private Label Select of Taos Taos Mountain Energy Bars Seed Worthy of Albuquerque uuu

Gov. Susana Martinez and the New Mexico Arts Commission have announced the seven artists and art supporters who will be recipients of the 2014 Annual Governor’s Awards for Excellence in the Arts. The 2014 Governor’s Arts Awards recipients are: Robert Mirabal of Taos, for music;

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Jean Anaya Moya of Galisteo, straw spplique; Donald Redman of Santa Fe, sculpture; Robert “Shoofly” Shufelt of Hillsboro, graphite/cowboy art; Dr. Kent Jacobs and Sallie Ritter of Las Cruces, major contributors to the arts; George R.R. Martin of Santa Fe, major contributor to the arts; and Dr. Dave Warren of Santa Clara Pueblo, major contributor to the arts. The 2014 Governor’s Arts Awards ceremonies will be held Sept. 19 at the St. Francis Auditorium in the New Mexico Museum of Art in Santa Fe.

Daniel Chavez of Santa Fe, a student at Santa Fe High School, was awarded a Skill Point Certificate in Automotive Refinishing in late June at the SkillsUSA National Leadership and Skills Conference in Kansas City, Mo.

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Two area students graduated in May from Grinnell College in Grinnell, Iowa. Eleanor Stevens earned a Bachelor of Arts in Spanish. She was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. She is the daugter of David A. Stevens of Santa Fe. Brent Soloway earned a Bachelor of Arts in political science. He is the son of Mahlon R. Soloway and Leslie A. Carlson of Santa Fe. uuu Julia DeBella of Santa Fe earned a Bachelor of Science in business economics, and

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Santa Fe resident Augusta “Gussie” Gronquist was appointed to the board of trustees of Smith College in Northampton, Mass. Gronquist, a 2014 graduate of Smith College, will serve a two-year term on the board. While at Smith, she was a philosophy major and president of Smith’s Student Government Association for her senior year. uuu Cedric Page, executive director of The University of New Mexico-Los Alamos branch campus, left his position at the end of June and returned to the UNM-Los Alamos faculty as professor of deography, the university said. Page has been the branch’s director since July 2007.

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Steven C. Hansen, President and CEO of Presbyterian Medical Services, announced Marc Welch the appointment of Marc Welch, CPA, as vice president of finance. Welch started in his new role on June 16.

©2014 Raymond James & Associates, Inc. member New York Stock Exchange/SIPC

GROUND BREAKING July 10, 2014 • 3:00 p.m. 417 RODEO ROAD, SANTA FE 87505 989-7032

Santa Fe’s Largest Funeral Chapel for Life Celebrations

Chapel of Light (Capílla de Luz)


Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

NEIGHBORS

El mitote Spare Parts, a New Mexico-filmed flick, released its first trailer, reports blog Oneheadlightink. The movie, which stars Hollywood big hitters Jamie Lee Curtis, George Lopez and Marisa Tomei, is based on the true story of four undocumented Mexican American teens who team up to compete in a robotics competition. The trailer features plenty of inspirational music and shots filled with sunlight, in case you weren’t picking up on the positive tone. The flick is set in Phoenix, but you may be able to spot some New Mexico landmarks. The flick also stars local Albuquerque actor Steven Michael Quezada, but El Mitotero didn’t spot the Breaking Bad actor anywhere in the trailer. The movie opens in January 2015.

Morgan Smith and a Santa Fe delegation including Betty and Raymond Kersting, Barbara Medina, Liz Hinds, Frank Shuck, Jane Hanna, Charles Ortiz and Cipriana Jurado are shown with the Rev. Rodolfo Ángel Navarette and his wife, Elena, of the Lily of the Valley church in Agua Prieta, Mexico, and their daughter.

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COURTESY PHOTO

Santa Feans committed to social justice help improve life in Mexico

Cross-border solutions to curbing migration

Egyptian period piece/fantasy drama Hieroglyph, which was filming in New Mexico, already has been canceled. The A.V. Club reported that the show shot just one episode before Fox executives pulled the plug on what surely was an expensive undertaking. It’s unclear if the show’s pilot will ever air. Read the full story here: http://avc. lu/1z5y8fn. uuu Bill Gates, the founder and former-CEO of Microsoft, briefly visited the Los Alamos National Laboratory on Monday, where he spoke about health and education issues. Gates, according to Forbes magazine’s list of the world’s top billionaires, is worth $72 billion, and he currently works as a fulltime philanthropist.

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By Morgan Smith For The New Mexican

Hollywood director Ti West seems to be making himself at home in Santa Fe. The director of horror cult classic The House of the Devil recently tweeted that he found himself a “great karaoke place” in town, and that he might even become a regular. West is in town filming a Western flick, In a Valley of Violence.

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t’s late afternoon, and we’re standing next to the border wall that separates Douglas, Ariz., from Agua Prieta, Mexico. It’s enormous — far bigger than those at Santa Teresa, Palomas or Naco. There are nine of us from Santa Fe — along with me are Betty and Raymond Kersting, Barbara Medina, Liz Hinds, Frank Shuck, Jane Hanna, Charles Ortiz and Cipriana Jurado from the First and Westminster Presbyterian churches. We are joined by former Santa Fe resident Marianne O’Shaughnessy, as well as the U.S. and the Mexican coordinators of a Presbyterian border ministry — Frontera de Cristo, Mark Adams and Jocabed “Joca” Gallegos. These Santa Feans, all deeply committed to social justice, are part of a small, loosely knit but dedicated mix of local residents who have committed themselves to improving the lives of our Mexican neighbors. Others in the group are Jim and Pat Noble, who maintain La Casa de Amor Para Niños, a place of refuge in Chihuahua for abandoned and abused children; Carlos and Hector Garcia, who maintain Amigo Fiel, a program for children at risk in Juárez, and Operation Christmas Child’s Mexico program, which distributes more than 700,000 gift packages to needy children each year; Lydia Pendley and the members of St. Bede’s Episcopal Church, who have been building houses in Juárez for more than a decade; and Joe Gonzales, who also has been building houses in Juárez. Mark and Joca give us a briefing as we follow the well-packed dirt road that flanks the north side of the wall. It’s more verdant here than the desert I know west of Juárez but very hilly; walking it would be exhausting, especially in the summer heat. The area also has seen bloodshed. On Jan. 12, 2007, Border Patrol Officer Nicholas Corbett shot 22-year-old Francisco Javier Dominguez. Corbett was tried twice for murder in federal court, but both trials ended with hung juries. In May 2011, a 19-year U.S. citizen named Carlos Lamadrid was shot to death while attempting to cross the wall and return to Mexico. In 2003, 20 people died of dehydration attempting to cross. Although the wall is enormous, it’s largely a futile attempt to prevent people from crossing, like so much of the border security I’ve seen. Traffickers can easily catapult drugs across the wall. And it isn’t hard to scale. On an earlier visit, one member of our group watched a young man scramble quickly over it. Farther east, this “pedestrian” wall — designed to keep people from crossing — gives way to a “vehicle” wall, one that will stop vehicles but will allow walkers to pass through easily. As a result, border crossings aren’t stopped; they’re simply shifted away from Douglas to an area that is more dangerous for crossers. That evening, we cross the border to Agua Prieta, a city that has ballooned from about 30,000 in 1980 to more than 100,000 now, much larger than Douglas, and visit the Migrant Resource Center, a program maintained by Frontera de Cristo, the group No More Deaths and La Sagrada Familia, a Catholic parish in Agua Prieta. When migrants are deported, they are met at the border by a representative of the Mexican Consulate and then are turned loose. This center provides them with food, water, first aid if it’s needed, clothing and part of the cost of a ticket to the migrant’s hometown. The Red Cross also assists with phone service, so that migrants can try to call their families. The goal is to give migrants temporary aid but also encourage them to return to their homes and stay there. Afterward, we have dinner at the La Sagrada Familia church with four migrants

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Daniel Cifuentes, a native of Chiapas and the founder of Café Justo, has only seven employees in Agua Prieta, but the coffee he buys from farmers in Chiapas and Nayarit (and then roasts, packages and sells) provides a market for more than 100 farm families, or as many as 600 people. PHOTOS COURTESY MORGAN SMITH

El Mitotero has been saying for ages that John Travolta, of Saturday Night Fever and Pulp Fiction fame, was coming to Santa Fe for West’s film, and someone finally spotted the Hollywood star in town. One source saw Travolta taking a tennis lesson Monday at the Rosemarie Shellaberger Tennis Center on the campus of the Santa Fe University of Art and Design, 1600 St. Michael’s Drive. Sadly, there was no word on what kind of player Travolta is. John Travolta Travolta also was spotted outside an Anytime Fitness center in Santa Fe. From the picture, it’s hard to tell which Anytime Fitness he was near, but it could be the location off St. Michael’s Drive. uuu

Crosses, above, and abandoned shoes, left, at a shrine near Byrd Camp, a collection of trailers and tents south of Tucson, Ariz., that is named for Byrd Baylor, a well-known author of children’s books who is a longtime supporter of immigrants.

who have just been deported. They receive dinner and breakfast, a bed for one night, and some money for transportation to their homes. Then they have to move on. We have breakfast Friday morning at Lily of the Valley church, where the pastor, the Rev. Rodolfo Ángel Navarette and his wife, Elena, explain their plans to create programs for youth that will help them develop skills so they can find work, avoid drugs and resist the temptation to cross the border. Above us, the church’s ceiling seems ready to collapse. The challenge for Rodolfo and Elena is to raise money for essential improvements to the building while also funding the day-to-day emergencies. With only 50 church members, this is a slow process. It will cost $5,000 just to upgrade the electrical systems to meet the city’s requirements — a staggering sum for the tiny church. Across the street is Café Justo (Just Coffee, www.justcoffee.org), a business started by Daniel Cifuentes, a native of Chiapas. He has only seven employees in Agua Prieta, but the coffee he buys from farmers in Chiapas and Nayarit (and then roasts, packages and sells) provides a market for more than 100 farm families, or as many as 600 people. He pays $2.40 to 2.60 per pound, compared to 60 cents to 90 cents on the open market, and about $1 via Fair Trade. This is another example of people helping to develop the local economies rather than crossing the border into the U.S. We then visit a community garden — fresh vegetables and fruit are expensive in Agua Prieta — and a training center where people can learn skills such as carpentry and sewing. These small endeavors are all linked via a cross-border program called Dougla-Priet.

Section editor: Cynthia Miller, 986-3095, cmiller@sfnewmexican.com

Mark Adams and Joca Gallegos are its leaders. The strategy is obvious — find alternatives to migration. The programs can be effective, but they struggle for donations. Saturday morning, we are in the tiny town of Arivaca, Ariz., (population 1,000) about an hour south of Tucson by car (three to four days on foot for an immigrant) and 11 miles north of the Mexican border. Here we meet with representatives of No More Deaths, a ministry of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Tucson that has been providing food, water and basic medical care for the last 10 years. Our delegation brings 100 blister packets containing bandages, mole skin, gauze, new socks and other basic supplies. We then ride south through the steep hills to Byrd Camp, a collection of trailers and tents named for Byrd Baylor, a well-known author of children’s books who is a longtime supporter of immigrants here. A team of volunteers from all over the U.S., and some from around the world, maintain a medical clinic here and also distribute water along the trails that migrants use. The wind is howling, and it’s a chilly day, but you can imagine struggling across these steep, rolling hills in the blazing heat of summer. This is what you see all along the border — small, religious-based organizations trying to bring human decency to a brutal physical environment and a tragic human situation. It’s an honor to see more and more Santa Feans become a part of this. Morgan Smith is a Santa Fe resident who travels to the border at least once a month to document and assist a variety of humanitarian programs there. He can be reached at Morgansmith@comcast.net.

A tipster told El Mitotero last week that he spotted Ethan Hawke and a “lady friend” Tuesday evening at The Matador, a popular underground dive bar at 116 W. San Francisco St. The tipster said Hawke and his guest were at the lounge “for several hours.” Hawke also is starring inValley, which began filming in Santa Fe at the end of June. uuu

In A Valley of Violence also stars Karen Gillan of Doctor Who and Taissa Farmiga of American Horror Story, both of whom recently sent out tweets announcing that they’re in the Santa Fe area. If you spot a star, be sure to send your sighting to elmitote@sfnewmexican.com.

ON OUR WEBSITE u Follow the El Mitote blog at www.santa

fenewmexican.com/news/blogs/neighbors.

Watch for changes Beginning next Sunday, July 13, “Your Neighbors” profiles of people from the community will appear as a weekly feature on the front page of the Local section, Page C-1. Other Neighbors section features, such as the “El mitote” column, the bi-monthly “Etiquette Rules!” column by manners maven Bizia Greene, Faces & places and Celebrations will appear as part of the Family section, which will move from Saturdays to Sundays. The weekly Family section also features stories on parenting trends — from health tips to new tech to recent research — as well as commentary by parenting expert John Rosemond, a calendar of familyfriendly events in the community, movie reviews written for kids, by kids, and the weekly Kid Scoop educational puzzles for children and parents to enjoy together. Please continue to send your announcements of weddings, engagements, births and milestone anniversaries, as well as graduations, awards and other notable news and achievements — along with a photo — to service@sfnewmexican.com. The New Mexcian

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

International Folk Art Market Santa Fe

Community Celebration at the Santa Fe Railyard Thursday, July 10 • FREE • 5:00 – 9:00 pm • Open to the public MEET THE ARTISTS | INTERNATIONAL FOODS | LIVE MUSIC | CHILDREN’S ACTIVITIES

5-6:30 PM

Artist Demonstrations Khin Maung Htwe | Wood marionettes | Myanmar Edmond Rivo Randrianarisoa | Malagasy musical instruments | Madagascar Serge Jolimeau | Recycled oil drum sculptures | Haiti Rafael Cilau Valadez | Huichol yarn paintings | Mexico Bongukufa Alfred Ntuli | Qire Zulu basket weavings | South Africa Bertha Medina Aquino | Hand carved gourds | Peru

5:10 PM

Music & Entertainment Andrea Serrano & Carlos Contreras | Poetry readings Ida Bagus Anom Suryawan | Topeng masked dance | Indonesia Akeem Ayanniyi | Talking drum demonstration | Nigeria Edmond Rivo Randrianarisoa | Valiha music | Madagascar Alba Sepúlveda Tapia & Wilfredo Arriagada Sepúlveda | Cueca dance | Chile SAMY | Folklore music of the Andean Highlands | Ecuador

7:30 PM

Artist Procession

8:00 PM

Meet & Greet Market Artists

8:15 PM

Dance music with Las Alegres Ambulancias | Colombia

Come early and stay all day! Saturday and Sunday tickets include admission to the Museum of International Folk Art, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, and the Santa Fe Botanical Garden. Enjoy a selection of delicious foods at the International Food Bazaar. For more detailed information, visit folkartalliance.org

MARKET SCHEDULE Thursday, July 10 Community Celebration at the Santa Fe Railyard 5 – 9 pm, Free

ld out soFriday, July 11 Market Opening Party This event is sold out. Tickets are no longer available.

A program of

ld out soSaturday, July 12 Early Bird Market This event is sold out. Tickets are no longer available.

Saturday, July 12 Saturday Market 9am – 5pm $15 in advance

Sunday, July 13 Family Day 9am – 5 pm $10 in advance (no ticket sales after 4:00 pm on Sunday) Children 16 & Under FREE Saturday & Sunday

New this year! Tickets for the International Folk Art Market | Santa Fe are limited to ensure that we provide the best Market experience possible. Buy now to secure your tickets for Saturday and Sunday. Buy Online: folkartalliance.org Tickets: 505.886.1251 Info: 505.992.7600 Also available at all Los Alamos National Bank locations, at all Museum of New Mexico Shops, or by phone.

Santa Fe Trails

The International Folk Art Market | Santa Fe is a program of the International Folk Art Alliance, a tax-exempt, 501(c)3 nonprofit organization in partnership with the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, Museum of International Folk Art, Museum of New Mexico Foundation, and City of Santa Fe. Partially funded by the City of Santa Fe Arts Commission and the 1% Lodgers’Tax and the County of Santa Fe Lodgers’Tax. Connect with us:

#FolkArtFan

Photo credits: David Moore, Bob Smith, Carlien van Viegen, Kelly Waller

The Las Alegres Ambulancias tour is funded by Southern Exposure, a partnership of the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts and the Robert Sterling Clark Foundation.


Scoreboard D-2 Fuegp schedule D-3 Baseball D-4 Weather D-6

SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

SPORTS

NBA: Knicks reportedly offer Carmelo Anthony max contract. Page D-3

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WORLD CUP NETHERLANDS 4, COSTA RICA 3

Dutch prevail on penalties, avert an exit Netherlands defeats Costa Rica in overtime

Tour de France kicks into gear Germany’s Marcel Kittel, above, thrills during the first leg of cycling’s greatest race as Britian’s Mark Cavendish stumbles. PAGE D-2

Billy Hurley stays in lead at Greenbrier Former U.S. Navy officer extends his advantage to two strokes over Angel Cabrera. PAGE D-5

By Jeré Longman The New York Times

SALVADOR, Brazil — This was supposed to be the day the last of the outsiders was shown the door at the World Cup, leaving the tournament to be decided by the clubby and the familiar. Eventually it happened that way in Saturday’s quarterfinal, but only after the Netherlands was taken dramatically and nervously to penalty kicks against Costa Rica and won for the first time in five attempts in a World Cup match that had strayed beyond regulation. After growing frustrated and failing to finish several inviting chances in the run of play, the Dutch were

calm, bold and clinical in the shootout, winning, 4-3, after the game had remained 0-0 through overtime. The Netherlands will face Argentina in a semifinal on Wednesday, and Brazil will face Germany in the other on Tuesday. While the other three semifinalists have 10 World Cup titles among them, the Dutch have played in the final three times and never won. The runner-up in 1974, 1978 and 2010, the Netherlands is considered the finest soccer nation not to win a World Cup. It is small consolation, though, and the Oranje will seek another chance to find liberation and escape heartache. With Costa Rica’s exit, after equally excruciating defeats for the United States and Mexico in the second round, North America,

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Netherlands’ goalkeeper Tim Krul, center left, celebrates after making the final save in a penalty shootout during Saturday’s quarterfinal match against Costa Rica in Salvador, Brazil. MATT DUNHAM/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

TENNIS WIMBLEDON

Jeff Samardzija

Jason Hammel

Victory in a flash

BASEBALL

Athletics ink trade deal with Chicago Samardzija, Hammel move to Oakland The Associated Press

OAKLAND, Calif. — The beginning of July’s first blockbuster trade occurred about a month ago, when Oakland Athletics general manager Billy Beane called Chicago Cubs executive Theo Epstein to ask about Jeff Samardzija and Jason Hammel. Beane told Epstein he liked the starting pitchers, and he was going to be aggressive in an attempt to improve the AL West leaders. Fast forward to this weekend, when Beane proved just how serious he was during that initial call. Oakland and Chicago announced a big trade on Saturday, with Samardzija and Hammel heading to the West Coast for a package of prospects that included the A’s firstround selections in each of the past two drafts. The Athletics began the day with the best record in baseball, but Beane felt he needed to add depth to a rotation that responded well to seasonending injuries for Jarrod Parker and A.J. Griffin. Drew Pomeranz also is on the disabled list with a broken right hand. Samardzija and Hammel join Scott Kazmir, Sonny Gray and Tommy Milone in one of the majors’ best group of starting pitchers. “We had to dig into our depth

Please see DEAL, Page D-3

INSIDE

FIFAWorldCup

u Roundups from Saturday’s Major League Baseball games. PAGE D-4

Petra Kvitova of the Czech Republic kisses the Venus Rosewater Dish on Saturday after winning the women’s singles final against Eugenie Bouchard of Canada at the All England Lawn Tennis Championships in London. SANG TAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Kvitova crushes Bouchard in 55-minute final By John Branch The New York Times

LONDON ugenie Bouchard arrived at Centre Court with cool confidence and a ruthless tennis game to match. Bouchard, a 20-year-old Canadian, had captured the affection of her country and of the British tabloids, her looks, play and marketability drawing gawking comparisons to Maria Sharapova. Bouchard now has something else in common with Sharapova. She, too, has been dominated by Petra Kvitova in a Wimbledon final. Kvitova won her second Wimbledon cham-

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pionship with a near-perfect deconstruction of Bouchard on Saturday. The 6-3, 6-0 victory took only 55 minutes, the quickest women’s singles final in 31 years. In 2011, Kvitova beat Sharapova in the final, 6-3, 6-4. Other than Venus and Serena Williams, Kvitova is the only two-time winner in women’s singles since 1996, when Steffi Graf won the last of her championships. “It means everything,” Kvitova said, calling the victory one of the best matches she had played. “It’s Wimbledon — the tennis history, and Centre Court is great to play on, and I feel at home.” Kvitova, seeded sixth, surprised Bouchard with her ability to cover the court, extending points that

Argentina 1, Belgium 0 Netherlands 4, Costa Rica 3

TUESDAY TUE

WEDNESDAY WED 1:30 p.m. on ESPN — Netherlands vs. Argentina, Nethe in Sã São Paulo

Please see FLASH, Page D-3

Lionel Messi guides Argentina into the semifinals

SATURDAY’S GAMES

1:30 p.m. on ESPN — Brazil vs. Germany, Brazi in Be Belo Horizonte, Brazil

would have long been lost by Bouchard’s previous opponents. Kvitova’s powerful strokes were directed at all the proper angles, as if drawn by a protractor. Her two-handed, cross-court backhand, in particular, was routinely out of reach for the quick-footed Bouchard. “A few shots were incredible, and I couldn’t believe I made it, actually,” Kvitova said. Kvitova also mixed speeds and spins, her array of first serves ranging from 85 mph gyroscopes to 113 mph lasers. Bouchard’s strategy of standing inside the baseline, shortening the court and quickening the pace was no match for Kvitova.

NEYMAR BREAKS SILENCE Brazilian soccer star speaks for the first time after fracturing a vertebra on Friday during Brazil’s 2-1 win over Colombia in the quarterfinals. PAGE D-5

RIO DE JANEIRO — The Argentines didn’t need a late winner from Lionel Messi this time, settling in to protect a 1-0 margin against Belgium that earned them a first trip to the World Cup semifinals in 24 years. With victory over Belgium on Saturday thanks to a goal by Gonzalo Higuaín, Argentina joined Brazil, which beat Colombia on Friday, in the final four. The possibility exists that the two teams, South American giants and bitter rivals, could face off in the final in Rio de Janeiro, which many feel would provide the most fitting conclusion to this World Cup. PAGE D-5

Sports editor: James Barron, 986-3045, jbarron@sfnewmexican.com Design and headlines: Carlos A. Lopez, clopez@sfnewmexican.com

BREAKING NEWS AT WWW.SANTAFENEWMEXICAN.COM


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NATIONAL SCOREBOARD

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

SOCCER

GOLF

SOCCER

2014 FIFA WORLD CUP QUARTERFINALS Saturday’s Games At Brasilia, Brazil Argentina 1, Belgium 0 At Salvador, Brazil Netherlands 0, Costa Rica 0, Netherlands advanced 4-3 on penalty kicks Friday’s Games At Rio de Janeiro Germany 1, France 0 At Fortaleza, Brazil Brazil 2, Colombia 1 SEMIFINALS Tuesday, July 8 At Belo Horizonte, Brazil Brazil vs. Germany, 2 p.m. Wednesday, July 9 At Sao Paulo Netherlands-Costa Rica winner vs. Argentina, 2 p.m. THIRD PLACE Saturday, July 12 At Brasilia, Brazil Semifinal losers, 2 p.m. CHAMPIONSHIP Sunday, July 13 At Rio de Janeiro Semifinal winners, 1 p.m.

WORLD CUP SUMMARIES Saturday Argentina 1, Belgium 0 At Brasilia, Brazil Argentina 1 0—1 Belgium 0 0—0 First half—1, Argentina, Gonzalo Higuain 1, 8th minute. Second half—None. Shots—Argentina 10, Belgium 10. Shots On Goal—Argentina 7, Belgium 4. Yellow Cards—Argentina, Lucas Biglia, 75th. Belgium, Eden Hazard, 53rd; Toby Alderweireld, 68th. Offsides—Argentina 1, Belgium 6. Fouls Committed—Argentina 11, Belgium 14. Fouls Against—Argentina 13, Belgium 10. Corner Kicks—Argentina 3, Belgium 4. Referee—Nicola Rizzoli, Italy. Linesmen—Renato Faverani, Italy; Andrea Stefani, Italy. A—68,551. Lineups Argentina: Sergio Romero; Pablo Zabaleta, Martin Demichelis, Ezequiel Garay, Jose Maria Basanta; Angel Di Maria (Enzo Perez, 33rd), Javier Mascherano, Lucas Biglia; Lionel Messi, Gonzalo Higuain (Fernando Gago, 81st), Ezequiel Lavezzi (Rodrigo Palacio, 71st). Belgium: Thibaut Courtois; Toby Alderweireld, Daniel Van Buyten, Vincent Kompany, Jan Vertonghen; Kevin De Bruyne, Axel Witsel, Marouane Fellaini, Eden Hazard (Nacer Chadli, 75th); Kevin Mirallas (Dries Mertens, 60th), Divock Origi (Romelu Lukaku, 59th).

Netherlands 0, Costa Rica 0 At Salvador, Brazil Netherlands 0 0 0 0—0 Costa Rica 0 0 0 0—0 Netherlands won 4-3 on penalty kicks First half—None. Second half—None. Extra time—None. Extra time—None. Shootout—Netherlands 4 (Robin Van Persie G, Arjen Robben G, Wesley Sneijder G, Dirk Kuyt G); Costa Rica 3 (Celso Borges G, Bryan Ruiz NG, Giancarlo Gonzalez G, Christian Bolanos G, Michael Umana NG). Shots—Netherlands 20, Costa Rica 6. Shots On Goal—Netherlands 15, Costa Rica 3. Yellow Cards—Netherlands, Bruno Martins Indi, 64th minute; Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, 111th. Costa Rica, Junior Diaz, 37th; Michael Umana, 52nd; Giancarlo Gonzalez, 81st; Johnny Acosta, 107th. Offsides—Netherlands 13, Costa Rica 2. Fouls Committed—Netherlands 15, Costa Rica 13. Fouls Against—Netherlands 11, Costa Rica 14. Corner Kicks—Netherlands 11, Costa Rica 1. Referee—Ravshan Irmatov, Uzbekistan. Linesmen—Abdukhamidullo Rasulov, Uzbekistan; Bahadyr Kochkarov, Kyrgyzstan. A—51,179. Lineups Netherlands: Jasper Cillessen (Tim Krul, 120th, injury time); Stefan De Vrij, Ron Vlaar, Bruno Martins Indi (Klaas-Jan Huntelaar, 106th), Daley Blind; Georginio Wijnaldum, Wesley Sneijder; Dirk Kuyt, Arjen Robben, Robin Van Persie, Memphis Depay (Jeremain Lens, 76th). Costa Rica: Keylor Navas; Cristian Gamboa (Dave Myrie, 79th), Johnny Acosta, Giancarlo Gonzalez, Michael Umana, Junior Diaz; Celso Borges, Yeltsin Tejeda (Jose Cubero, 97th), Christian Bolanos; Bryan Ruiz, Joel Campbell (Marco Urena, 66th).

AUTO RACING AUTO RACING

GOLF

TRANSACTIONS TRANSACTIONS

NORTH AMERICA Major League Soccer

PGA TOUR The Greenbrier Classic

EUROPEAN TOUR Alstom Open de France

FORMULA 1 British Grand Prix Lineup

BASEBALL American League

East W L T Pts GF GA D.C. United 8 5 4 28 24 18 Kansas City 7 5 4 25 22 14 New England 7 7 2 23 23 23 Toronto 6 5 3 21 19 18 New York 4 5 8 20 26 26 Columbus 4 5 8 20 19 19 Houston 5 10 3 18 18 34 Philadelphia 4 8 6 18 26 30 Chicago 2 4 9 15 23 26 Montreal 3 7 5 14 16 26 West W L T Pts GF GA Seattle 11 3 2 35 33 23 Salt Lake 7 3 7 28 27 23 Colorado 7 5 5 26 24 19 Dallas 7 7 5 26 30 29 Vancouver 5 3 7 22 25 22 Los Angeles 5 3 6 21 19 13 Portland 4 5 9 21 30 30 Chivas USA 4 7 5 17 16 26 San Jose 4 7 4 16 15 16 Note: Three points for win and one for a tie. Saturday’s Games D.C. United 2, Toronto 1 Seattle at Vancouver Montreal at Chivas USA

Saturday At The Old White TPC White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. Purse: $6.5 million Yardage: 7,287; Par 70 Third Round Billy Hurley III 68-63-67—198 Angel Cabrera 68-68-64—200 Kevin Chappell 67-65-69—201 Michael Thompson 66-72-64—202 Cameron Tringale 72-66-64—202 Will Wilcox 68-69-65—202 Joe Durant 65-71-66—202 Camilo Villegas 68-67-67—202 Steve Stricker 66-68-68—202 Chris Stroud 66-66-70—202 Jim Renner 65-70-68—203 Bill Haas 69-70-65—204 Hudson Swafford 72-67-65—204 David Hearn 68-68-68—204 Luke Guthrie 67-69-68—204 Bubba Watson 68-67-69—204 David Lingmerth 67-68-69—204 Troy Matteson 72-61-71—204 Davis Love III 67-73-65—205 Steve Marino 69-70-66—205 Kyle Stanley 71-68-66—205 Andrew Loupe 69-69-67—205 Brendon Todd 71-67-67—205 Jason Bohn 65-72-68—205 Jonas Blixt 64-73-68—205 Robert Allenby 67-70-68—205 George McNeill 70-67-68—205 Keegan Bradley 67-69-69—205 J.B. Holmes 68-68-69—205 Sang-Moon Bae 66-74-66—206 Trevor Immelman 69-70-67—206 Scott Langley 68-71-67—206 Michael Putnam 67-72-67—206 Richard H. Lee 71-68-67—206 Troy Merritt 66-72-68—206 Charles Howell III 67-71-68—206 David Toms 69-69-68—206 Oliver Goss 70-68-68—206 Matt Bettencourt 70-68-68—206 Patrick Cantlay 69-68-69—206 Bronson La’Cassie 70-66-70—206 Brice Garnett 68-66-72—206 Shawn Stefani 73-67-67—207 Webb Simpson 71-69-67—207 Andres Romero 72-68-67—207 Heath Slocum 70-69-68—207 Brendon de Jonge 70-69-68—207 Tom Watson 71-68-68—207 Justin Leonard 71-67-69—207 Bud Cauley 69-68-70—207 Kevin Na 66-70-71—207 Charlie Beljan 67-69-71—207 Patrick Reed 67-69-71—207 Danny Lee 65-71-71—207 Johnson Wagner 68-68-71—207 Patrick Rodgers 65-75-68—208 Ted Potter, Jr. 70-70-68—208 Gary Woodland 69-70-69—208 Josh Teater 69-69-70—208 Stephen Ames 69-68-71—208 Andrew Svoboda 72-68-69—209 Robert Streb 68-72-69—209 J.J. Henry 70-70-69—209 Wes Roach 69-71-69—209 Roberto Castro 72-68-69—209 Jason Gore 70-70-69—209 Scott Stallings 70-69-70—209 Gonzalo Fdez-Castano 68-71-70—209 Carl Pettersson 71-68-70—209 Ken Duke 72-67-70—209 Tim Wilkinson 68-71-70—209 Chad Collins 66-73-70—209 Tyrone Van Aswegen 67-70-72—209 Chris Kirk 65-69-75—209 Made cut did not finish Woody Austin 68-72-70—210 Scott Brown 72-68-70—210 Martin Flores 70-70-70—210 Pat Perez 66-69-75—210 John Daly 68-72-71—211 Jeff Maggert 69-70-72—211 Steven Bowditch 68-70-73—211 Derek Ernst 71-69-72—212 Greg Chalmers 69-69-74—212 Scott Gardiner 70-67-75—212 Jamie Lovemark 68-72-73—213 D.A. Points 65-75-74—214 Mark Wilson 68-72-74—214 Brendan Steele 70-68-77—215 James Hahn 65-74-78—217

Saturday At Le Golf National (Albatross Course) Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines, France Purse: $4.1 million Yardage: 7,331; Par: 71 Third Round Kevin Stadler, USA 64-68-72—204 Thongchai Jaidee, Tha 70-69-69—208 Victor Riu, Fra 68-67-73—208 Martin Kaymer, Ger 72-68-70—210 Matthew Baldwin, Eng 70-71-70—211 Bernd Wiesberger, Aut 70-70-71—211 Michael Hoey, NIr 73-66-73—212 Robert Karlsson, Swe 73-69-70—212 Graeme McDowell, NIr 70-69-73—212 Damien McGrane, Irl 71-69-72—212 K Aphibarnrat, Tha 77-66-70—213 Jamie Donaldson, Wal 67-72-74—213 S Gallacher, Sco 66-73-74—213 Scott Jamieson, Sco 69-70-74—213 Alexander Levy, Fra 69-72-72—213 Matthew Nixon, Eng 71-72-70—213 Julien Quesne, Fra 74-71-68—213

After Saturday qualifying; race Sunday At Silverstone Circuit Silverstone, England Lap length: 3.66 miles Third Session 1. (2) Juan Pablo Montoya, DallaraChevrolet, 223.871 mph. 2. (12) Will Power, Dallara-Chevrolet, 223.725. 3. (34) Carlos Munoz, Dallara-Honda, 223.083. 4. (14) Takuma Sato, Dallara-Honda, 222.798. 5. (25) Marco Andretti, Dallara-Honda, 222.715. 6. (27) James Hinchcliffe, DallaraHonda, 222.544. 7. (3) Helio Castroneves, DallaraChevrolet, 222.517. 8. (10) Tony Kanaan, Dallara-Chevrolet, 221.97. 9. (28) Ryan Hunter-Reay, DallaraHonda, 221.95. 10. (8) Ryan Briscoe, Dallara-Chevrolet, 221.565. 11. (77) Simon Pagenaud, DallaraHonda, 221.547. 12. (7) Mikhail Aleshin, DallaraHonda, 221.221. 13. (20) Ed Carpenter, Dallara-Chevrolet, 221.019. 14. (15) Graham Rahal, DallaraHonda, 220.747. 15. (9) Scott Dixon, Dallara-Chevrolet, 220.604. 16. (19) Justin Wilson, Dallara-Honda, 220.439. 17. (83) Charlie Kimball, DallaraChevrolet, 220.377. 18. (11) Sebastien Bourdais, DallaraChevrolet, 219.741. 19. (17) Sebastian Saavedra, DallaraChevrolet, 218.502. 20. (18) Carlos Huertas, DallaraHonda, 216.261. 21. (67) Josef Newgarden, DallaraHonda. 22. (98) Jack Hawksworth, DallaraHonda.

BOSTON RED SOX — Recalled LHP Tommy Layne from Pawtucket (IL). LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Acquired LHP Joe Thatcher and OF Tony Campana from Arizona for OF Zach Borenstein and RHP Joey Krehbiel. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Optioned LHP Tommy Milone to Sacramento (PCL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Claimed OF Cole Gillespie off waivers from Seattle. Designated OF Kenny Wilson for assignment.

TENNIS TENNIS ATP-WTA TOUR Wimbledon Saturday

At The All England Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club London Purse: $42.5 million (Grand Slam) Surface: Grass-Outdoor Singles Women Championship Petra Kvitova (6), Czech Republic, def. Eugenie Bouchard (13), Canada, 6-3, 6-0. Doubles Men Championship Vasek Pospisil, Canada, and Jack Sock, United States, def. Bob and Mike Bryan (1), United States, 7-6 (5), 6-7 (3), 6-4, 3-6, 7-5. Women Championship Sara Errani and Roberta Vinci (2), Italy, def. Timea Babos, Hungary, and Kristina Mladenovic (14), France, 6-1, 6-3. Mixed Semifinals Nenad Zimonjic, Serbia, and Sam Stosur (15), Australia, def. Aisamul-Haq Qureshi, Pakistan, and Vera Dushevina (16), Russia, 7-5, 6-2. Max Mirnyi, Belarus, and Chan Haoching (14), Taiwan, def. Daniel Nestor, Canada, and Kristina Mladenovic (5), France, 7-6 (4), 7-5. Invitation Doubles Gentlemen Round Robin Thomas Enqvist, Sweden, and Mark Philippoussis, Australia, def. Goran Ivanisevic and Ivan Ljubicic, Croatia, 6-4, 6-7 (6), 10-5. Albert Costa, Spain, and Thomas Johansson, Sweden, def. Wayne Ferreira, South Africa, and Mark Petchey, Britain, 7-5, 5-7, 10-8. Senior Gentlemen Round Robin Andrew Castle, Britain, and Mikael Pernfors, Sweden, def. Sergio Casal, Spain, and Joakim Nystrom, Sweden, 5-2, retired. Ladies Round Robin Iva Majoli, Croatia, and Magdalena Maleeva, Bulgaria, def. Anne Keothavong, Britain, and Conchita Martinez, Spain, walkover. Championship Jana Novotna, Czech Republic, and Barbara Schett, Austria, def. Martina Navratilova, United States, and Selima Sfar, Tunisia, 6-0, 7-6 (1). Junior Singles Boys Semifinals Stefan Kozlov (6), United States, def. Johan Sebastien Tatlot (8), France, 6-3, 7-6 (7). Noah Rubin, United States, def. Taylor Harry Fritz, United States, 6-4, 6-2. Girls Semifinals Jelena Ostapenko, Latvia, def. Marketa Vondrousova (12), Czech Republic, 6-1, 6-2. Kristina Schmiedlova (8), Slovakia, def. Elena Gabriela Ruse, Romania, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4. Junior Doubles Boys Semifinals Stefan Kozlov, United States, and Andrey Rublev (1), Russia, def. Petros Chrysochos, Cyprus, and Nino Serdarusic (7), Croatia, 6-2, 7-5. Orlando Luz and Marcelo Zormann (3), Brazil, def. Naoki Nakagawa, Japan, and Tim van Rijthoven, Netherlands, 6-3, 5-7, 6-2. Girls Semifinals Tami Grende, Indonesia, and Ye Qiu Yu, China, def. Usue Maitane Arconada, United States, and Fanny Stollar, Hungary, 5-7, 6-3, 6-4. Marie Bouzkova, Czech Republic, and Dalma Galfi, Hungary, def. Priscilla Hon, Australia, and Jil Belen Teichmann (2), Switzerland, 6-1, 4-6, 9-7.

Schedule-Winners July 3-6 — The Greenbrier Classic, The Greenbrier (The Old White TPC), White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. July 10-13 — John Deere Classic, TPC Deere Run, Silvis, Ill. July 17-20 — The Open Championship, Royal Liverpool, Hoylake, England. July 24-27 — RBC Canadian Open, Royal Montreal GC, Ile-Bizard, Quebec. July 31-Aug. 3 — WGC-Bridgestone Invitational, Firestone CC (South Course),Akron, Ohio July 31-Aug. 3 — Reno-Tahoe Open, Montreaux Golf & CC, Reno, Nev. Aug. 7-10 — PGA Championship, Valhalla GC, Louisville, Ky. Aug. 14-17 — Wyndham Championship, Sedgefield CC, Greensboro, N.C. Aug. 21-24 — The Barclays, Ridgewood CC, Paramus, N.J. Aug. 29-Sept. 1 — Deutsche Bank Championship, TPC Boston, Norton, Mass. Sept. 4-7 — BMW Championship, Cherry Hills CC, Cherry Hills Village, Colo. Sept. 11-14 — Tour Championship, East Lake GC, Atlanta. Sept. 26-28 — Ryder Cup, Glenagles Hotel, Perthshire, Scotland.

THIS DATE ONON THIS DATE July 6 1887 — Lottie Dod of Britain, 15, becomes the youngest woman to win the women’s singles championship at Wimbledon, defeating Blanch Bingley 6-2, 6-0. 1933 — The first major league All-Star game is played at Comiskey Park, Chicago. The American League beats the National League 4-2 on Babe Ruth’s two-run homer. 1957 — Althea Gibson becomes the first black to win a title at the All England Lawn Tennis Club by beating Darlene Hard 6-3, 6-2 in the women’s singles title match. 1968 — Billie Jean King wins her third consecutive women’s singles title at Wimbledon by beating Australia’s Judy Tegart 9-7, 7-5. 1975 — Ruffian, an undefeated filly, and Kentucky Derby winner Foolish Pleasure compete in a match race. Ruffian, racing on the lead, sustains a severe leg injury and is pulled up by jockey Jacinto Vasquez. She is humanely destroyed the following day. 1994 — Leroy Burrell breaks the world record in the 100 meters in Lausanne, Switzerland. Burrell’s time of 9.85 seconds betters Carl Lewis’ 9.86 clocking set in the 1991 World Championships. 1995 — Eric Lindros of the Philadelphia Flyers wins the Hart Trophy as the NHL’s most valuable player. 1996 — Steffi Graf beats Spain’s Arantxa Sanchez Vicario 6-3, 7-5 in the Wimbledon final for the German star’s 20th Grand Slam title and 100th tournament victory. 1997 — Pete Sampras wins the fourth Wimbledon title and 10th Grand Slam title of his career, easily defeating Frenchmen Cedric Pioline 6-4, 6-2, 6-4. 1998 — Twenty-year-old Se Ri Pak becomes the youngest U.S. Women’s Open champion after hitting an 18foot birdie on the 20th extra hole to beat amateur Jenny Chuasiriporn in the longest Women’s Open in history. 2000 — Venus Williams beats her younger sister Serena 6-2, 7-6 (3) to reach the Wimbledon final. Their singles match is the first between sisters in a Grand Slam semifinal. 2008 — Rafael Nadal ends Roger Federer’s bid to become the first man since the 1880s to win a sixth consecutive championship at the All England Club. Two points from victory, the No. 1-ranked Federer succumbs to No. 2 Nadal 6-4, 6-4, 6-7 (5), 6-7 (8), 9-7 in a 4-hour, 48-minute test of wills that’s the longest men’s final in Wimbledon history — and quite possibly the greatest. 2011 — Caster Semenya is cleared to return to track by the sport’s governing body, ending an 11-month layoff while she underwent gender tests after becoming the 800-meter world champion. Semenya is allowed to keep running as a woman, although it is unclear if she has had any medical procedure or treatment during her time away. 2012 — Andy Murray reaches the Wimbledon final for the first time, beating Jo-Wilfried Tsonga 6-3, 6-4, 3-6, 7-5. Murray becomes the first British man to play in the Wimbledon final since Bunny Austin in 1938. 2013 — Marion Bartoli wins her first major title, defeating Sabine Lisicki 6-1, 6-4 in the Wimbledon final. Twin brothers Mike and Bob Bryan capture their fourth straight major with a 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, 6-4 victory over Ivan Dodig and Marcelo Melo. The Americans become the first men’s team in Openera tennis to hold all four Grand Slam titles at the same time. 2013 — Jimmie Johnson becomes the first driver in 31 years to sweep Daytona International Speedway. The Daytona 500 winner is the first driver since Bobby Allison in 1982, and the fifth overall, to win both races in a season at Daytona.

WNBA Eastern Conference W 12 9 8 8 7 6

L 5 10 9 10 12 11

Pct .706 .474 .471 .444 .368 .353

GB — 4 4 4½ 6 6 GB — ½ 4 5½ 6½ 7

T 0 0 0 T 0 0 0

Pct .933 .214 .071 Pct .714 .533 .286

ATLANTA FALCONS — Placed WR Drew Davis on the training camp PUP list.

Canadian Football League EDMONTON ESKIMOS — Named Joe Nixon offensive assistant coach.

HOCKEY National Hockey League COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Signed D David Savard to a two-year contract. NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Signed D Joe Piskula to a one-year contract.

MINOR BASEBALL Pacific Coast League

ARENA LEAGUE National Conference W L 14 1 3 11 1 13 W L 10 4 8 7 4 10

FOOTBALL National Football League

BASEBALL BASEBALL

FOOTBALL FOOTBALL West z-Arizona Los Angeles San Antonio Pacific x-San Jose x-Spokane Portland

Frontier League EVANSVILLE OTTERS — Signed LHP Zach Fowler. FRONTIER GREYS — Signed RHP John Kovalik and LHP Eric Perrault. JOLIET SLAMMERS — Signed RHP Travis Bradshaw and RHP Colin Gotzon. Released RHP Greg Billo.

OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER — Signed F Mitch McGary.

Western Conference W L Pct Phoenix 12 3 .800 Minnesota 13 5 .722 San Antonio 10 9 .526 Los Angeles 7 9 .438 Tulsa 7 11 .389 Seattle 7 12 .368 Saturday’s Games San Antonio 71, Indiana 70 Atlanta 86, Washington 73 Connecticut 78, Tulsa 76 Chicago at Seattle Friday’s Games No games scheduled. Sunday’s Games Minnesota at New York, 12 p.m. Phoenix at Los Angeles, 2 p.m.

American Association AMARILLO SOX — Signed INF Travis Weaver. GARY SOUTHSHORE RAILCATS — Traded RHP Coleman Stephens to Amarillo for RHP Ian Kadish. KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Signed C Jeff Lusardi. Released RHP Matt E. Smith and C Danny Masiello. SIOUX FALLS CANARIES — Released RHP Erick Gonzalez.

BASKETBALL National Basketball Association

BASEKETBALL BASKETBALL Atlanta Connecticut Chicago Indiana Washington New York

National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Recalled LHP Eury De la Rosa from Reno (PCL). CHICAGO CUBS — Acquired INF Addison Russell, OF Billy McKinney, RHP Dan Straily and a player to be named from the Oakland for RHPs Jeff Samardzija and Jason Hammel. COLORADO ROCKIES — Activated LHP Boone Logan from the 15-day DL. Optioned INF Ryan Wheeler to Colorado Springs (PCL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Claimed INF Dean Anna off waivers from the New York Yankees and optioned him to Indianapolis (IL). WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Agreed to terms with RHP Tomas Alastre, RHP Pedro Avila, LHP Gilberto Chu and RHP Christian Flores on minor league contracts.

PF PA 970 721 533 766 590 840 PF PA 780 561 784 685 637 763

American Conference South W L T Pct PF PA Orlando 8 6 0 .571 778 768 Tampa Bay 8 7 0 .533 760 790 Jacksonville 5 9 0 .357 709 694 New Orleans 2 12 0 .143 592 820 East W L T Pct PF PA x-Cleveland 13 1 0 .929 762 626 x-Pittsburgh 12 3 0 .800 844 645 Philadelphia 7 8 0 .467 903 830 Iowa 6 9 0 .400 716 849 x-clinched playoff spot z-clinched conference Saturday’s Games Pittsburgh 64, Jacksonville 48 Philadelphia 84, Iowa 48 Spokane 64, Los Angeles 46 Friday’s Games Cleveland 48, Tampa Bay 41 San Jose 62, Arizona 33 Saturday, July 5 Portland at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Sunday, July 6 Jacksonville at San Antonio, 2 p.m. San Jose at Los Angeles, 6 p.m. Monday, July 7 Orlando at Philadelphia, 6 p.m. Pittsburgh at New Orleans, 6:30 p.m.

American North W L Pct. GB Iowa (Cubs) 47 41 .534 — Ok. City (Astros) 47 43 .522 1 Omaha (Royals) 45 44 .506 2½ C.Springs(Rockies) 40 49 .449 7½ American South W L Pct. GB Nashville (Brewers) 47 43 .522 — R. Rock (Rangers) 45 42 .517 ½ N. Orleans (MIA) 44 45 .494 2½ Memphis (Cards)41 46 .471 4½ Pacific North W L Pct. GB Sacramento (A’s) 51 37 .580 — Reno (D’backs) 48 41 .539 3½ Fresno (Giants) 43 46 .483 8½ Tacoma (Mariners) 41 46 .471 9½ Pacific South W L Pct. GB Las Vegas (Mets) 51 38 .573 — El Paso (Padres) 43 47 .478 8½ Albuq’rque (LAD) 41 48 .461 10 Salt Lake (Angels) 36 54 .400 15½ Saturday’s Games Albuquerque 11, Las Vegas 3, G1 Memphis 6, New Orleans 3 Colorado Springs 5, Omaha 2 Round Rock 4, Nashville 3 Oklahoma City 3, Iowa 2 Salt Lake 5, El Paso 3 Las Vegas at Albuquerque, 2nd game Sacramento at Reno Tacoma at Fresno Sunday’s Games Colorado Springs at Omaha, 1:05 p.m. El Paso at Salt Lake, 1:05 p.m. New Orleans at Memphis, 5:05 p.m. Iowa at Oklahoma City, 5:05 p.m. Nashville at Round Rock, 6:05 p.m. Las Vegas at Albuquerque, 6:05 p.m. Sacramento at Reno, 7:05 p.m. Tacoma at Fresno, 7:05 p.m. Monday’s Games Iowa at Omaha, 6:05 p.m. Colorado Springs at Round Rock, 6:05 p.m. Nashville at Memphis, 6:05 p.m. New Orleans at Oklahoma City, 6:05 p.m. Tacoma at Salt Lake, 7:05 p.m. El Paso at Albuquerque, 7:05 p.m. Las Vegas at Reno, 8:05 p.m. Sacramento at Fresno, 8:05 p.m.

Kittel thrills, Cavendish spills in 1st Tour de France stage By Jamey Keaten The Associated Press

HARROGATE, England — Mark Cavendish went down in a late crash. Marcel Kittel’s hands went up in victory. And British royals who turned out for the Tour de France debut in England witnessed new signs of a changing of the guard among two of the world’s top sprinters. For many British fans, with cycling’s greatest race making a rare start in England on Saturday, Stage 1 wasn’t supposed to end this way: They wanted British speedster Cavendish to get his first race leader’s yellow jersey and 26th career Tour stage win after the 118-mile ride through Yorkshire countryside. But with the pack swelling in inten-

sity and his rivals up front as the finish neared, Cavendish leaned his head to his left into Australia’s Simon Gerrans, and their bikes tumbled to the ground — with Marcel Kittel the Briton coming down hard. Germany’s Kittel then made it look easy by dusting three other rivals at the finish. Cavendish got up gingerly and cruised across, cradling his right arm, and got into an ambulance. Tests showed a separated right shoulder. His team said it’ll be decided Sunday morning if Cavendish rides in Stage 2 from York to Sheffield. Contrite despite the pain, Cavendish said he was “gutted” about the crash.

“It was my fault. I’ll personally apologize to Simon Gerrans as soon as I get the chance. In reality, I tried to find a gap that wasn’t really there. I wanted to win today,” he said in a statement. “Sorry to all the fans that came out to support — it was truly incredible.” The sprint specialist from the Isle of Man had a lot riding on this stage: His mother is from Harrogate. He had said winning Saturday was one of his key goals this year. And he had a bit to prove: Kittel, a 26-year-old rising star in sprinting, won four Tour stages last year, to Cavendish’s two. Many Britons wanted him to win gold in the road race at the London Olympics, but that quest also ended in disappointment. Cavendish surely would have wanted to be in Kittel’s pedal-clip shoes when Kate, the Duchess of

Cambridge, handed the yellow jersey to the German, and she, husband Prince William and Prince Harry flanked him, clapping, on the winner’s podium in Harrogate. “Before the stage, I said it was one goal, maybe, to be with Kate on the podium — and also, of course, Harry and William,” said Kittel, who also won Stage 1 at last year’s Tour. “It was not a goal for me to beat Mark Cavendish … in his home country.” “It’s not nice to have Mark crash. Nobody wants that,” he added. Early signs that Britain’s sprint king may be losing his crown came at last year’s Tour, when Kittel beat him in similar circumstances. Doing it at two Tours in a row suggests that he really does have Cavendish’s number — although there are

still plenty of chances at this Tour for the 28-year-old Briton to come back, if healthy. Cavendish still has 116 total career victories, to 60 for Kittel, according to the Tour’s website. As the sprinters battled it out Saturday, the two favorites for victory in the three-week race, Alberto Contador and Chris Froome, finished safely in the trailing pack that clocked the same time as Kittel. A second German excelled too: Veteran Jens Voigt took the polkadot jersey as the race’s best climber, after getting out early on a three-man breakaway that first cleared three lowgrade hills, including Buttertubs pass. At 42, the Trek rider is the oldest competitor this year: This is his 17th Tour, equaling the record.


SPORTS

Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Knicks reportedly offer Anthony max contract The Associated Press

NEW YORK — The Knicks went coast to coast to let Carmelo Anthony know they want him to stay in New York. Team officials traveled to Los Angeles on Thursday night to meet with the free agent and offered him the maximum contract allowable, a person with knowledge of the details said. Team President Phil Jackson and general manager Steve Mills were part of the meeting but not Madison Square Garden chairman James Dolan, an official with knowledge of the plans told The Associated Press on

condition of anonymity because details of the meeting were to remain private. The meeting was first reported by ESPN. Anthony was in Los Angeles to meet with the Lakers, who are among Carmelo the teams hoping to Anthony convince the All-Star forward to leave New York. Anthony already visited Chicago, Houston and Dallas this week. The Knicks can offer him the largest

contract, nearly $130 million over five years, though Jackson has said he hopes Anthony would take less than a maximum deal. Anthony had previously said he would be willing to do so if it would help build a winning team, but the Knicks have made it clear the money won’t be an object. Other teams can offer Anthony slightly less than $100 million in a four-year deal, according to NBA rules. Contracts can’t be signed until July 10, so Anthony is under no rush to make a decision. But the Knicks apparently wanted to make sure they got to make a final pitch after his free agency tour.

Deal: Cubs lost 91 games in three years Continued from Page D-1 really early, and we felt like we needed two [starting pitchers],” Beane said. Minor leaguers Addison Russell, Billy McKinney and Dan Straily went to Chicago in another painful deal for the lowly Cubs, who have played better of late, but are still last in the NL Central. Chicago also gets a player to be named in its latest July sell-off. The Cubs lost at least 91 games in each of the previous three years. They traded away starting pitchers Ryan Dempster and Paul Maholm in July 2012, and Matt Garza and Scott Feldman last July. “We certainly hope that this is the last year that we’re obvious sellers at the trade deadline,” Epstein said. The key piece for Chicago in the deal with Oakland was Russell, a 20-year-old shortstop headed for Double-A Tennessee. A torn right hamstring sidelined the No. 11 overall selection in the 2012 draft earlier this season, but he was batting .333 in 13 games for Double-A Midland at the time of the trade. Chicago and Oakland talked about a Samardzija for Russell deal, but Epstein said the one-for-one framework didn’t work. He spoke with Beane on Thursday night, and that’s when the trade grew into the larger package. “We felt like Russell was a key for us in

any deal with Oakland,” Epstein said. The hard-throwing Samardzija had a 2-7 record for the Cubs, but he also had a 2.83 ERA and 103 strikeouts in 108 innings, making him one of the most coveted pitchers on the market. The former Notre Dame receiver was selected by Chicago in the fifth round in 2006. Samardzija was slated to start Sunday’s game at Washington, but Carlos Villanueva got the ball instead and Chicago recalled left-hander Chris Rusin from Triple-A Iowa. Epstein said they were still discussing their options when it came to the major league rotation moving forward. The Cubs talked to the 29-year-old Samardzija about a contract extension, but were unable to come to an agreement. He is set to become a free agent for the first time after the 2015 season. “Jeff has been a bit of workhorse,” Beane said. “He’s got a perfect health record. He’s a guy that continues to develop. He’s gotten better and better each year he goes out. There’s a certain amount of self-confidence to take the career path that he did, and I’ve always sort of admired that from afar.” Hammel signed a $6 million, one-year contract with Chicago in February and went 8-5 with a 2.98 ERA and 104 strikeouts in 108 2/3 innings with the Cubs. He pitched six-plus innings in a 7-2 victory over Washington on Friday.

Hammel, who turns 32 in September, also has three career postseason starts. “He’s gotten better and better and we think now is a great time to have him,” Beane said. The 19-year-old McKinney, who was selected in the first round a year ago, hit .241 with 10 homers for Class A Stockton this season. He is headed for Chicago’s Class A affiliate in Daytona, Florida, where he will share the outfield with another top prospect in Albert Almora. Straily finished 10-8 with a 3.96 ERA in 27 starts for the A’s last year. He was sent down to Triple-A Sacramento after struggling earlier this season, and Epstein said he likely would be up with the Cubs after a short stay at Triple-A Iowa. Even before the deal, Chicago had one of the richest minor league systems in baseball. The addition of Russell and McKinney just enhances the Cubs’ impressive group of prospects. They have a surplus of shortstops that could force a position change at some point, but the players at that spot are athletic enough for a smooth transition. They also could use one of their prospects to acquire the young pitching that they are missing. “We think we have a real outstanding stable of good young position players that is a stable base to build off,” Epstein said.

Northern New Mexico

SCOREBOARD Local results and schedules ON THE AIR

Today on TV Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. All times local. AUTO RACING 10 a.m. on NBCSN — IndyCar, Pocono 500, in Long Pond, Pa. 3 p.m. on NBCSN — Formula One, British Grand Prix, in Silverstone, England (same-day tape) 7 p.m. on ESPN2 — NHRA, Summit Racing Equipment Nationals, in Norwalk, Ohio (same-day tape) 9 p.m. on NBCSN — GP2, in Silverstone, England (same-day tape) CYCLING 4 a.m. on NBCSN — Tour de France, Stage 2, York to Sheffield, England 2 p.m. on NBC — Tour de France, Stage 2, York to Sheffield, England (same-day tape) GOLF 5:30 a.m. on TGC — European PGA Tour, Open de France, final round, in Paris 11 a.m. on TGC — PGA Tour, The Greenbrier Classic, final round, in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. 1 p.m. on CBS — PGA Tour, The Greenbrier Classic, final round, in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. 1 p.m. on TGC — Web.com Tour, Nova Scotia Open, final round, in Halifax, Nova Scotia HORSE RACING 3 p.m. on FS1 — Thoroughbreds, United Nations Stakes, in Oceanport, N.J. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 11:30 a.m. on WGN — Chicago Cubs at Washington Noon on TBS — N.Y. Yankees at Minnesota 5 p.m. on ESPN — All-Star Game Selection Show, in Bristol, Conn. 6 p.m. on ESPN — Tampa Bay at Detroit SOCCER 1 p.m. on ESPN — MLS, Chicago at Kansas City TENNIS 7 a.m. on ESPN — Wimbledon, men’s championship, in London WNBA BASKETBALL Noon on ESPN2 — Minnesota at New York 2 p.m. on ESPN2 — Phoenix at Los Angeles

SANTA FE FUEGO SCHEDULE Team record: (30-19)

Upcoming schedule:

Flash: Tournament filled with upsets “She didn’t give me many opportunities to stay in the rallies or do what I do,” Bouchard said. Kvitova broke Bouchard in her second service game, then won the best point of the match to take a 3-1 first-set lead. Bouchard had Kvitova on the run, pushing the point to Kvitova’s side of the court, before Kvitova rushed to reach a ball and send it for a rousing cross-court winner. The victory represents a small comeback for Kvitova, who struggled to maintain her form amid injuries and expectations after her victory three years ago. But she rediscovered her confidence over the past two weeks, never more than when she faced down a rejuvenated Venus Williams in a three-set, third-round match on Centre Court. “It’s my second title, so I hope that now it is going to be a little easier for me,” Kvitova said during an on-court interview, holding the Venus Rosewater Dish that now has her named etched on it twice. Bouchard, in a somewhat cruel twist, was an accidental witness to the etching. Centre Court’s retractable roof, open during the match, was closed as rain began to fall before the awards ceremony. Bouchard was ushered into a room to wait for about 10 minutes. The engraver was there, adding Kvitova’s name to the trophy. Though the outcome was swift, it was in doubt at the start. In a tournament filled with upsets — No. 1 Serena Williams and No. 2 Li Na failed to reach the quarterfinals — Kvitova advanced to the final without playing a higher-ranked player. And in Bouchard, seeded 13th, she faced the latest

darling of the tennis world, the youngest female Grand Slam finalist since Caroline Wozniacki at the 2009 U.S. Open. Bouchard also was the first Canadian player, male or female, to reach a Grand Slam final. She grew up in Westmount, a primarily English-speaking neighborhood of Montreal, and throughout Canada, she has become a lead story and an instant treasure, a transcendent star. The British were quick to adopt her. Bouchard and her twin sister, Beatrice, were named for the daughters of Prince Andrew and Sarah, Duchess of York. Bouchard had expressed several times that she hoped to meet Princess Eugenie, saying Friday: “It would be crazy to meet someone you’re named after. That’s just the craziest thing.” As if by royal edict, Princess Eugenie appeared, sitting in the royal box on Saturday. With the Scotsman Andy Murray dismissed from the men’s side of the tournament in the quarterfinals, Bouchard assumed the role of Britain’s primary Wimbledon story. The Times of London splashed a photo of her practicing on the front page of Saturday’s newspaper. The demise of her long friendship with the British player Laura Robson became gossip material. The French news media, too, have become enamored, in part because, being from Quebec, Bouchard speaks the language, if with a French Canadian accent. Bouchard had treated every victory in the tournament with a subdued smile, explaining her coolness by suggesting that her ambition was winning the tournament, not steppingstone matches along the way. She had been a semifinalist this year at

In brief

Isotopes, Las Vegas 51s Rain postpones Coke Zero 400 at Daytona split doubleheader

Continued from Page D-1

Fuego’s win streak comes to an end The Santa Fe Fuego’s four-game win streak was snapped Saturday with a 16-8 loss to Taos at Fort Marcy Ballpark. The Fuego (30-19) led 5-4 after four innings, but the Blizzard (17-30) gained control of the game during the fifth inning. Four runs came from a grand slam by Taos pitcher Richie Anderson. He also pitched seven innings with three strikeouts and five earned runs. Santa Fe catcher Eric Kozel led the offense by going 3-for-5 at the plate and added a solo home run in the bottom of the sixth for his seventh long ball of the season. The Fuego host Taos again Sunday before traveling to Raton for two games with the Osos.

The Albuquerque Isotopes split a Pacific Coast League doubleheader with the Las Vegas 51s at Isotopes Park on Saturday by winning the first game 11-3 and losing the second 6-3. Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Carl Crawford, who is in Albuquerque on rehab assignment, scored the first Isotopes run of the second game when he was brought in on a double to left field by first baseman Brock Peterson during the bottom of the first inning. Crawford finished the game 1-for-2 with one run scored. After a 1-hour, 14-minute rain delay with the game tied 2-2 in the bottom of the fourth, Las Vegas went on to outscore Albuquerque 4-1. The Isotopes (41-48) will host Las Vegas for one more game on Sunday before hosting four games with El Paso starting Monday.

the Australian Open and the French Open and will head toward the U.S. Open as a favorite. But she has dreamed of winning Wimbledon since she was 9, she said. Reaching the final was less a surprise than a plan come to fruition. Bouchard won the Wimbledon junior doubles title in 2011 and the junior doubles and girls’ singles titles in 2012. A year ago, when she lost in the third round of the main draw, she was ranked 66th in the world. Despite her loss, she is projected to leap to No. 7. “I feel like it’s a step in the right direction,” Bouchard said on the court with a pursed smile. “I don’t know if I deserve all your love today, but I certainly appreciate it.” Kvitova will move to fourth, and may now, at 24, have the game and the comportment to rack up more major titles, particularly on the friendly grass at Wimbledon. As Kvitova grew up in the Czech Republic, she played tennis for fun, mostly against her father, Jiri. Left-handed like her idol, the Czech-born champion Martina Navratilova, Kvitova did not think until deep into her teens that she might have the talent to make a career of the game. She is popular on tour, seen as a shy and friendly presence. Only her game is intimidating. When her final point crossed the net — a cross-court backhand that Bouchard helplessly watched go by — she raised her arms and dropped to her back. Wimbledon had seen this once before and might just see it again.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Steady rain forced NASCAR to postpone the Sprint Cup race at Daytona International Speedway. The Coke Zero 400 will start at 9 a.m. MST Sunday. The race was supposed to start at 7:57 p.m. Saturday, but showers soaked the 2½ mile superspeedway and forced officials to delay the green flag and eventually postpone the race. This is the fourth Cup race affected by rain this season and the second to be postponed a day. The Daytona 500 at Daytona was delayed more than six hours. Bristol also was affected, and Texas was delayed a day. Sprint Cup rookies Alex Bowman and Ryan Truex entertained fellow drivers and rain-soaked fans Saturday by turning the introduction stage into a slip and slide. Staff and wire reports

D-3

Today’s game — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. Monday — at Raton, 6 p.m. Tuesday — at Raton, 6 p.m. July 9 — at Taos, 7 p.m. July 10 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 11 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m.

July 12 — vs. Taos, 6 p.m. July 13 — at Taos, 7 p.m. July 14 — at Taos, 7 p.m. July 15 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 16 — vs. Raton, 6 p.m. July 17 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. July 18 — at Trinidad, 6 p.m. July 19 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m. July 20 — vs. Trinidad, 6 p.m.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Basketball u The Capital boys basketball program will hold a camp this week, from 8 a.m. to noon Monday through Friday, in Edward A. Ortiz Memorial Gymnasium. The camp is for kids from grades 4-8. For more information, call 316-1847. u A St. Michael’s Horsemen fundamental camp is scheduled July 14-17 in Perez Shelley Gymnasium. The camp, which runs from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., is open to boys and girls in grades 1-9. Cost is $40 for students in grades 1-2 and $75 for students in grades 3-9. For more information, visit www.stmichaelssf.org or call head coach Ron Geyer at 983-7353.

Miscellaneous u Fort Marcy Complex is holding a summer camp for boys and girls ages 8-12 from July 28 to Aug. 1. The camp will focus on various sports (tennis, basketball, volleyball, track and field, swimming, etc.) and runs from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday and from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Friday. Cost is $75 per participant and registration can be done at the Fort Marcy Sports Section Office. For more information, call Greg Fernandez at 955-2509 or Phil Montano at 955-2508.

Running u The third annual Gonzales Community School Lobos River Run will be Sept. 28 at the school. The event includes a 5-kilometer run and a 1-mile community fun run/walk. Proceeds benefit related PTA-sponsored enrichment activities. To register, email gonzalespta@gmail.com visit to www.gcspta.org.

Soccer u St. Michael’s will hold a camp July 21-24 at Christian Brothers Athletic Complex. Cost is $120 per camper. The camp will be done in two segments. Camp for boys and girls ages 5-10 will be from 9 a.m. to noon, and camp for girls ages 11-17 is from 1 to 4 p.m. For more information, visit www.stmichaelssf.org/activities_&_ athletics/camps/.

Swimming u The Santa Fe Seals are offering a summer special for practices from Mondays through Thursdays at the Genoveva Chavez Community Center. Practices for the novice group is from 3:30-5 p.m. and the advanced group goes from 9 to 11 a.m. For more information, call coach Theresa Hamilton at 660-9818.

Volleyball u The St. Michael’s volleyball program is conducting a clinic for grades 1-8 from July 8-11 in Perez-Shelley Gymnasium. Registration will be held at 9 a.m. July 8, and cost is $50 per participant. Groups will be determined based on skill level. For more information, visit www.stmichaelssf.org/activities_&_athletics/camps/ or call coach Steve Long at 471-0863. u Fort Marcy Complex is holding a camp from July 14-18 for children ages 8-16. There will be two sessions. The first is for kids ages 8-12 and from 8 a.m. to noon. The second is for the 13-16 age bracket and goes from 1 to 5 p.m. Cost is $45 per participant, and registration can be done at the Fort Marcy Sports Section office. For more information, call Greg Fernandez at 955-2509 or Phil Montano at 955-2508.

Submit your announcement u To get your announcement into The New Mexican, fax information to 986-3067, or email it to sports@sfnewmexican. com. Please include a contact number. Phone calls will not be accepted.

NEW MEXICAN SPORTS

Office hours 2:30 to 10 p.m.

James Barron, 986-3045 Will Webber, 986-3060 Edmundo Carrillo, 986-3060 FAX, 986-3067 Email, sports@sfnewmexican.com


D-4

BASEBALL

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Mariners rally over White Sox The Associated Press

CHICAGO — Brad Miller hit an RBI double in the 14th inning, and Seattle beat the White Sox Mariners 3 3-2 for their White Sox 2 fifth win in the last six games on Saturday. Michael Saunders reached on an infield single against Ronald Belisario (3-5) and swiped second before Miller hit a drive into the gap in left-center for a ground-rule double. Tom Wilhelmsen (1-1) pitched two scoreless innings for the win, and Fernando Rodney got three outs for his 25th save in 27 chances. Logan Morrison and Michael Saunders had three hits apiece for Seattle, which has won 11 of 14 overall. Felix Hernandez pitched eight sharp innings for the Mariners. RAYS 7, TIGERS 2

In Detroit, Tampa Bay’s Chris Archer came within two outs of a complete game, holding the Tigers to six hits. The Rays broke the game open with three runs in the fifth inning and four in the sixth, and the Tigers never mounted much of a rally against Archer (5-5). The 25-year-old right-hander allowed solo homers to Alex Avila in the seventh and J.D. Martinez in the ninth. Anibal Sanchez (5-3) took a no-hitter into the fifth, but things unraveled quickly for the Detroit right-hander. He allowed seven runs and six hits in 5⅔ innings, with four walks and a strikeout. Logan Forsythe homered for Tampa Bay. TWINS 2, YANKEES 1 (11 INNINGS)

In Minneapolis, Yankees catcher Francisco Cervelli made a throwing error in the 11th inning that allowed Josh Willingham to score from second base, giving the Twins a victory over New York. With the bases loaded, Trevor Plouffe hit a dribbler to reliever Matt Thornton (1-1). The lefthander flipped it to Cervelli for the forceout at home. Cervelli then tried for the double play but his throw sailed way over the head of first baseman Mark Teixeira. The victory snapped a seven-game home skid against the Yankees and was just Minnesota’s fourth win against New York in 17 games at Target Field. Brian Duensing (2-2) pitched around a Carlos Beltran single in the 11th. RED SOX 3, ORIOLES 2 (1ST GAME) ORIOLES 7, RED SOX 4 (2ND GAME)

In Boston, Nelson Cruz went a career-best 5 for 5, including a solo home run and a bad-hop single that scored the go-ahead run in the sixth inning, and Baltimore beat Boston to split a day-night doubleheader. The Red Sox won the opener on Jonathan Herrera’s one-out, broken-bat RBI single off T.J. McFarland (1-2) in the bottom of the ninth inning. Boston closer Koji Uehara (4-2) pitched a perfect ninth to keep it 2-2, In the second game, Cruz had two doubles and was thrown at third in an attempt for the cycle in the eighth. Nick Hundley added a tworun homer in the second game as Baltimore overcame Boston starter John Lackey’s 11 strikeouts over 5⅔ innings. INDIANS 7, ROYALS 3

In Cleveland, T.J. House allowed three runs over 6⅔ innings for his first major league win to help Cleveland top Kansas City. House (1-2) scattered nine hits, struck out three and didn’t walk a batter. The rookie left-hander made his eighth appearance, and seventh start, of his career. Michael Bourn’s leadoff homer sparked a three-run third inning, and Nick Swisher’s bases-loaded single scored two runs in the fifth and finished Jeremy Guthrie (5-7).

American League East

W

L

Pct

GB

WCGB

L10

Str

Home

Away

Baltimore Toronto New York Boston Tampa Bay

47 47 43 39 40

40 41 43 48 50

.540 .534 .500 .448 .444

— ½ 3½ 8 8½

— 1½ 4½ 9 9½

6-4 4-6 4-6 4-6 8-2

W-1 L-2 L-1 L-1 W-2

23-21 25-21 18-23 21-23 19-25

24-19 22-20 25-20 18-25 21-25

Central

W

L

Pct

GB

WCGB

L10

Str

Home

Away

Detroit Kansas City Cleveland Chicago Minnesota

48 45 42 41 39

36 41 44 47 47

.571 .523 .488 .466 .453

— 4 7 9 10

— 2½ 5½ 7½ 8½

6-4 5-5 5-5 5-5 3-7

L-2 L-1 W-1 L-1 W-1

23-21 21-22 24-16 23-21 21-21

25-15 24-19 18-28 18-26 18-26

West

W

L

Pct

GB

WCGB

L10

Str

Home

Away

Oakland Los Angeles Seattle Texas Houston

53 49 48 38 36

33 36 39 49 52

.616 .576 .552 .437 .409

— 3½ 5½ 15½ 18

— — — 10 12½

6-4 7-3 7-3 3-7 3-7

W-2 W-2 W-1 W-1 L-5

26-15 28-14 21-22 18-23 20-26

27-18 21-22 27-17 20-26 16-26

Saturday’s Games Boston 3, Baltimore 2, 1st game Minnesota 2, N.Y. Yankees 1, 11 innings Seattle 3, Chicago WSox 2, 14 innings Tampa Bay 7, Detroit 2 Kansas City at Cleveland Baltimore at Boston, 2nd game Houston at L.A. Angels Toronto at Oakland

Friday’s Games Baltimore at Boston, ppd., rain N.Y. Yankees 6, Minnesota 5 Oakland 1, Toronto 0, 12 innings Kansas City 7, Cleveland 1 Tampa Bay 6, Detroit 3 Chicago White Sox 7, Seattle 1 L.A. Angels 7, Houston 6

Monday’s Games N.Y. Yankees at Cleveland, 5:05 p.m; Chicago White Sox at Boston, 5:10 p.m; Kansas City at Tampa Bay, 5:10 p.m; Houston at Texas, 6:05 p.m; San Francisco at Oakland, 8:05 p.m; Toronto at L.A. Angels, 8:05 p.m; Minnesota at Seattle, 8:10 p.m.

National League East

W

L

Pct

GB

WCGB

L10

Str

Home

Away

Atlanta Washington Miami New York Philadelphia

49 47 42 38 37

38 39 45 49 50

.563 .547 .483 .437 .425

— 1½ 7 11 12

— — 5½ 9½ 10½

9-1 6-4 4-6 2-8 2-8

W-9 W-1 W-1 L-1 L-2

25-18 27-18 27-22 18-22 18-27

24-20 20-21 15-23 20-27 19-23

Central

W

L

Pct

GB

WCGB

L10

Str

Home

Away

Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Cincinnati Chicago

52 47 46 44 38

36 41 41 42 47

.591 .534 .529 .512 .447

— 5 5½ 7 12½

— 1 1½ 3 8½

5-5 5-5 7-3 6-4 6-4

W-1 L-1 W-2 L-1 L-1

24-18 24-18 28-20 20-19 19-20

28-18 23-23 18-21 24-23 19-27

West

W

L

Pct

GB

WCGB

L10

Str

Home

Away

Los Angeles San Francisco San Diego Colorado Arizona

50 48 39 37 36

40 39 48 51 53

.556 .552 .448 .420 .404

— ½ 9½ 12 13½

— — 8½ 11 12½

6-4 3-7 6-4 2-8 4-6

L-1 W-1 L-1 W-1 L-2

22-23 25-23 24-24 21-21 15-30

28-17 23-16 15-24 16-30 21-23

Friday’s Games Saturday’s Games Chicago Cubs 7, Washington 2 Miami 6, St. Louis 5 Pittsburgh 8, Philadelphia 2 Washington 13, Chicago Cubs 0 San Diego 2, San Francisco 0 Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 2 Cincinnati 4, Milwaukee 2 Atlanta 10, Arizona 4 N.Y. Mets 6, Texas 5 Milwaukee 1, Cincinnati 0 St. Louis 3, Miami 2 L.A. Dodgers at Colorado Atlanta 5, Arizona 2 San Francisco at San Diego L.A. Dodgers 9, Colorado 0 Texas at N.Y. Mets Monday’s Games Baltimore at Washington, 5:05 p.m; Atlanta at N.Y. Mets, 5:10 p.m; Chicago Cubs at Cincinnati, 5:10 p.m; Philadelphia at Milwaukee, 6:10 p.m; Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 6:15 p.m; San Diego at Colorado, 6:40 p.m; Miami at Arizona, 7:40 p.m.

TODAY’S PITCHING COMPARISON Subject to change. National League TEAM PITCHERS ERA Milwaukee Gallardo (R) Cincinnati Latos (R)

LINE

W-L

2014 Team ERA REC

2014 vs. Opp W-L IP

11:10a

5-5 1-1

3.51 2.45

9-8 1-3

Chicago Arrieta (R) Washington Zmmermann (R)

11:35a

5-1 6-4

1.81 2.95

8-3 10-7

Arizona Atlanta

11:35a

3-6 6-6

4.61 3.19

8-10 4-5

Philadelphia Burnett (R) Pittsburgh Locke (L)

1:35p

5-7 1-1

3.92 3.46

9-9 4-2

No Record No Record

Miami St. Louis

12:15p

5-3 0-1

2.33 9.64

12-5 1-1

No Record No Record

2:10p

7-5 4-1

4.06 1.95

11-6 4-1

2-0 1-0

5-5 0-1

2.37 6.10

7-9 0-2

0-0 8.0 2.25 No Record

Miley (L) Wood (L)

Alvarez (R) Gonzales (L)

San Francisco Lincecum (R) San Diego Hahn (R) Los Angeles Beckett (R) Colorado Flande (L)

2:10p

American League TEAM PITCHERS ERA Kansas City Duffy (L) Cleveland Kluber (R)

LINE

W-L

2014 Team ERA REC

0-1 13.0 0-0 6.0

3.46 0.00

No Record No Record 0-0 0-0

7.0 1.1

15.0 6.0

1.29 0.00

1.80 3.00

2014 vs. Opp W-L IP

11:05a

5-7 7-6

2.60 2.99

5-6 10-8

0-0 2.0 1-1 14.0

0.00 1.93

11:35a

3-2 1-7

3.86 4.82

3-2 5-12

No Record 0-1 12.2 6.39

Baltimore Boston

Gausman (R) Peavy (R)

New York Minnesota

Kuroda (R) Nolasco (R)

12:10p

5-6 5-6

4.08 5.49

7-10 8-9

No Record 1-0 6.0 1.50

Seattle Chicago

Walker (R) Noesi (R)

12:10p

1-0 2-6

4.50 5.33

1-0 5-7

No Record 0-0 4.1 0.00 1-1 12.0 2-1 20.0

Houston McHugh (R) Los Angeles Richards (R)

1:35p

4-7 9-2

3.22 2.81

5-8 13-4

Toronto Oakland

2:05p

6-6 2-7

3.81 2.83

9-8 3-14

No Record No Record

7-7 11-4

3.50 3.12

10-8 12-4

No Record No Record

Hutchison (R) Smardzija (R)

Tampa Bay Price (L) Detroit Porcello (R)

6:00p

1.50 2.70

InterLeague 2014 Team 2014 vs. Opp TEAM PITCHERS LINE W-L ERA REC W-L IP ERA Texas Tepesch (R) 11:10a 3-3 3.65 4-4 No Record New York (NL) Wheeler (R) 3-8 4.25 6-11 No Record KEY TEAM REC-Team’s record in games started by today’s pitcher. AHWG-Average hits and walks allowed per 9 innings. VS OPP-Pitcher’s record versus this opponent, 2014 statistics. Copyright 2014 World Features Syndicate, Inc.

THIS DATE IN BASEBALL July 6 1929 — The St. Louis Cardinals scored 10 runs in the first and fifth innings in beating the Philadelphia Phillies, 28-6, in the second game of a doubleheader. The Cardinals had 28 hits and set an NL record with the 28 runs. 1933 — The first major league All-Star game was played at Comiskey Park in Chicago. The AL, managed by Connie Mack, defeated the NL, managed by John McGraw, 4-2 on Babe Ruth’s two-run homer. 1938 — Johnny Vander Meer, Bill Lee and Mace Brown combined to limit the AL to one run and seven hits as the NL won the All-Star game 4-1 at Cincinnati’s Crosley Field. Lefty Gomez of the New York Yankees suffered his first defeat in four All-Star starts. 1942 — The AL beat the NL 3-1 in the All-Star game at the Polo Grounds on first-inning home runs by Lou Boudreau of the Cleveland Indians and Rudy York of the Detroit Tigers. York’s shot came with a man on base. 1949 — Walker Cooper of Cincinnati went 6-for-7, including three home runs and drove in 10 runs, against Chicago at Crosley Field. Cooper also had three singles and scored five times to lead the Reds to a 23-4 rout of the Cubs. 1966 — Boog Powell of the Baltimore Orioles knocked in 11 runs in a doubleheader against the Kansas City A’s to tie an AL record. In the first game, Powell hit two home runs, including a grand slam, two doubles and a sacrifice fly to drive in seven runs as the Orioles won 11-0. Powell had four RBIs in the nightcap. 1983 — On the 50th anniversary of the All-Star game, Fred Lynn’s grand slam off Atlee Hammaker, the first in All-Star competition, capped a record sevenrun third inning. The AL also set a one-game record for runs scored in a 13-3 victory that ended an 11-game NL winning streak. Chicago’s Comiskey Park was the site, as it was for the first All-Star game in 1933. 1986 — Atlanta’s Bob Horner became the 11th player in major league history to hit four home runs in a game and it still wasn’t enough to win the game. The Montreal Expos pounded the Braves’ pitching staff for an 11-8 victory. 2000 — Keith McDonald of the St. Louis Cardinals became the second player in major league history to homer in his first two at-bats, connecting in the second inning of a 12-6 loss to Cincinnati. 2005 — Florida pitchers retired 28 consecutive batters from the third inning on and set a team record with 22 strikeouts in a 12-inning, 5-4 victory over Milwaukee. A.J. Burnett matched his career high and the individual club record with 14 strikeouts in six innings.

Red Sox 3, Orioles 2 First Game Baltimore ab r Markks rf 4 0 Pearce 1b 4 0 N.Cruz dh 4 0 A.Jones cf 4 0 C.Davis 3b 4 0 JHardy ss 4 0 DYong lf 3 1 CJosph c 3 1 Schoop 2b 3 0

Boston ab r h bi Holt rf 4 0 1 0 Nava lf 3 0 2 0 Pedroia 2b 3 0 1 0 Napoli 1b 3 0 0 0 Przyns dh 4 0 0 0 Bgarts 3b 4 0 0 0 Drew ss 3 1 1 1 JGoms ph 1 1 1 0 D.Ross c 3 0 0 0 BrdlyJr cf 3 1 2 0 JHerrr ph 1 0 1 1 Totals 33 2 5 0 Totals 32 3 9 2 Baltimore 002 000 000—2 Boston 020 000 001—3 One out when winning run scored. E—Pearce (1), Lester (2), Pedroia (2), Bogaerts (12). DP—Baltimore 1, Boston 2. LOB—Baltimore 4, Boston 8. 2B—Bradley Jr. (16). HR—Drew (1). S—D.Ross. IP H R ER BB SO Baltimore M.Gonzalez 8 7 2 1 2 6 McFarland L,1-2 1-3 2 1 1 0 0 Boston Lester 8 5 2 0 0 7 Uehara W,4-2 1 0 0 0 0 2 HBP—by M.Gonzalez (Pedroia). WP—M.Gonzalez. T—2:40. A—35,714 (37,071). h bi 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0

Orioles 7, Red Sox 4 Second Game Baltimore Boston ab r h bi ab r h bi Markks rf 4 1 1 0 Holt 3b 4 1 1 1 Pearce dh 5 1 2 1 Nava rf 3 0 1 1 A.Jones cf 5 1 2 0 Pedroia 2b 3 0 0 0 N.Cruz lf 5 1 5 2 D.Ortiz dh 3 0 1 0 C.Davis 1b 4 0 0 0 Napoli 1b 3 1 0 0 JHardy ss 5 0 1 1 Drew ss 4 1 1 2 Machd 3b 5 1 2 0 JGoms lf 3 0 0 0 Hundly c 5 1 1 2 Przyns c 4 1 1 0 Schoop 2b 5 1 2 0 Betts cf 4 0 1 0 Totals 43 7 16 6 Totals 31 4 6 4 Baltimore 000 214 000—7 Boston 000 400 000—4 E—Napoli (3), Nava (4). DP—Baltimore 1. LOB—Baltimore 11, Boston 6. 2B— Markakis (18), N.Cruz 2 (16), Machado (8), Holt (16), D.Ortiz (14). HR—N.Cruz (27), Hundley (2), Drew (2). SB—N. Cruz (3). IP H R ER BB SO Baltimore U.Jimenez 3 2-3 5 4 4 6 4 Brach W,3-0 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 Tom.Hunter H,2 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 Matusz H,11 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 O’Day H,13 1 0 0 0 0 2 Z.Britton S,13-15 1 0 0 0 0 0 Boston Lackey L,9-6 5 1-3 10 5 5 1 11 Badenhop BS,2-3 0 3 2 2 0 0 Layne 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 Mujica 1 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 Breslow 1 1-3 1 0 0 0 1 Badenhop pitched to 3 batters in the 6th. T—3:36. A—36,468 (37,499).

Miami IP H R ER BB SO Heaney 3 2-3 8 5 5 3 1 Ja.Turner 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 S.Dyson 2 0 0 0 0 3 M.Dunn W,6-4 1 1 0 0 0 0 Cishek S,19-21 1 1 0 0 0 0 St. Louis S.Miller 5 1-3 9 3 3 1 2 Maness H,2 1 2-3 2 1 1 0 2 Neshek H,13 1 0 0 0 0 1 Choate H,5 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Rsnthl L,0-4 BS,4-301-32 2 2 0 1 S.Freeman 1-3 1 0 0 0 0 HBP—by S.Dyson (Jay), by Heaney (Holliday). T—3:31. A—45,445 (45,399).

Mariners 3, White Sox 2, 14 innings Seattle

Chicago

ab r J.Jones cf 6 0 Blmqst lf 3 0 ECvz ph-lf 4 0 Cano 2b 5 1 Hart dh 4 0 Ackly pr-dh 2 1 Seager 3b 5 0 Zunino c 5 0 Morrsn 1b 6 0 MSndrs rf 5 1 BMiller ss 6 0

h bi 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 0 3 1 1 1

ab r h bi Eaton cf 6 0 1 0 GBckh 2b 6 0 0 0 JAreu 1b 4 0 0 0 LGrc pr-rf 2 0 1 0 A.Dunn dh 5 0 0 0 AlRmrz ss 6 0 0 0 Gillaspi 3b 4 1 1 0 Viciedo rf 3 0 1 1 Srra pr-rf 0 1 0 0 Knrk ph-1b 2 0 0 0 De Aza lf 5 0 0 0 Flowrs c 4 0 0 1 Totals 51 3 11 3 Totals 47 2 4 2 Seattle 000 000 002 000 01—3 Chicago 000 000 020 000 00—2 E—B.Miller (12). DP—Chicago 1. LOB— Seattle 11, Chicago 6. 2B—B.Miller (7), Viciedo (19). 3B—Gillaspie (3). SB— Cano (6), M.Saunders (3). SF—Zunino, Flowers. Seattle IP H R ER BB SO F.Hernandez 8 3 2 2 1 8 Medina 1 0 0 0 1 1 Furbush 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Farquhar 1 2-3 1 0 0 0 3 Wilhelmsen W,1-1 2 0 0 0 0 2 Rodney S,25-27 1 0 0 0 0 1 Chicago Quintana 7 2-3 4 0 0 1 10 Petricka 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Surkamp 0 0 1 1 1 0 Putnam BS,1-2 1 3 1 1 0 0 Guerra 2 1 0 0 2 2 Belisario L,3-5 3 3 1 1 0 1 Surkamp pitched to 1 batter in the 9th. WP—F.Hernandez, Medina. T—4:38. A—23,113 (40,615).

Pirates 3, Phillies 2

Philadelphia Pittsburgh ab r h bi ab r h bi Revere cf 3 0 0 0 GPolnc rf 4 1 1 0 Rollins ss 3 0 0 0 SMarte lf 4 0 0 0 Utley 2b 3 0 1 0 AMcCt cf 4 1 1 2 Howard 1b3 0 0 0 I.Davis 1b 3 0 0 0 Byrdrf 4 1 1 1 GSnchzph-1b 1 0 0 0 Asche 3b 4 1 1 1 JHrsn 2b-3b 4 0 1 0 DBrwn lf 4 0 1 0 PAlvrz 3b 3 1 1 0 Rupp c 3 0 0 0 NWalkr 2b 0 0 0 0 Rays 7, Tigers 2 CHrndz ph 1 0 0 0 Mercer ss 2 0 2 0 Tampa Bay Detroit DBchn p 2 0 0 0 CStwrt c 2 0 0 0 ab r h bi ab r h bi Mayrry ph 1 0 1 0 Volquez p 2 0 0 1 DJnngs cf 5 0 1 1 AJcksn cf 4 0 1 0 Giles p 0 0 0 0 Snider ph 1 0 0 0 Zobrist ss 5 0 2 0 Kinsler 2b 4 0 1 0 Totals 31 2 5 2 Totals 30 3 6 3 Joyce dh 4 1 1 0 MiCarr 1b 3 0 0 0 000 100 001—2 SRdrgz dh 1 0 1 0 JMrtnz rf 4 1 1 1 Philadelphia 210 000 00x—3 Longori 3b 3 1 1 0 TrHntr dh 4 0 2 0 Pittsburgh DP—Pittsburgh 1. LOB—Philadelphia 6, Loney 1b 4 1 0 0 Cstllns 3b 4 0 0 0 Guyer lf 3 0 0 1 Avila c 2 1 1 1 Pittsburgh 5. 2B—Mercer 2 (14). HR— Forsyth 2b 3 2 2 2 AnRmn ss 3 0 0 0 Byrd (17), Asche (6), A.McCutchen Hanign c 2 1 0 0 RDavis lf 4 0 0 0 (13). SB—J.Harrison (9). Kiermr rf 4 1 3 3 Philadelphia IP H R ER BB SO Totals 34 7 11 7 Totals 32 2 6 2 D.Buchanan L,4-5 6 6 3 3 1 3 Tampa Bay 000 034 000—7 Giles 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 Detroit 000 000 101—2 Bastardo 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 DP—Tampa Bay 1, Detroit 3. LOB—TamPittsburgh pa Bay 7, Detroit 7. 2B—Kinsler (26). 7 4 1 1 4 5 3B—Kiermaier 2 (4). HR—Forsythe (3), Volquez W,7-6 1 0 0 0 0 1 J.Martinez (11), Avila (6). SB—Longoria Watson H,22 Melancon S,16-19 1 1 1 1 0 2 (4). SF—Guyer. Tampa Bay IP H R ER BB SO HBP—by D.Buchanan (C.Stewart). Archer W,5-5 8 1-3 6 2 2 4 4 PB—C.Stewart. Balfour 2-3 0 0 0 0 2 T—2:40. A—37,821 (38,362). Detroit Brewers 1, Reds 0 A.Sanchez L,5-3 5 2-3 6 7 7 4 1 Cincinnati Coke 1 1-3 2 0 0 0 1 Milwaukee ab r h bi ab r h bi Chamberlain 1 0 0 0 1 0 McCoy 2-3 2 0 0 0 0 Gennett 2b4 0 1 0 BHmltn cf 4 0 0 0 B.Hardy 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 Braun rf 1 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 4 0 0 0 WP—A.Sanchez. LSchfr rf 3 0 0 0 Votto 1b 4 0 0 0 T—3:05. A—38,087 (41,681). Lucroy c 3 1 1 0 Phillips 2b 2 0 1 0 Twins 2, Yankees 1, 11 innings CGomz cf 3 0 1 0 Bruce rf 3 0 0 0 ArRmr 3b 4 0 2 1 Mesorc c 3 0 0 0 New York Minnesota ab r h bi ab r h bi KDavis lf 3 0 1 0 Schmkr lf 2 0 0 0 Jeter ss 5 0 1 0 Dozier 2b 5 0 1 0 MrRynl 1b 3 0 0 0 Cozart ss 3 0 1 0 BRorts 2b 5 0 1 0 KSuzuk c 4 0 2 0 Segura ss 4 0 0 0 Bailey p 2 0 0 0 Ellsury cf 5 0 1 0 Parmel 1b 4 0 0 0 Garza p 3 0 1 0 B.Pena ph 1 0 0 0 Teixeir 1b 4 0 0 0 Colaell ph 1 0 1 0 Totals 31 1 7 1 Totals 28 0 2 0 Beltran dh 4 0 1 0 KMorls dh 5 0 0 0 Milwaukee 100 000 000—1 ISuzuki rf 5 1 1 0 Wlngh lf 4 2 1 1 Cincinnati 000 000 000—0 ASorin lf 4 0 0 0 Arcia rf 3 0 0 0 Gardnr lf 0 0 0 0 Plouffe 3b 4 0 0 0 DP—Milwaukee 1, Cincinnati 1. LOB— Milwaukee 7, Cincinnati 3. 2B—GenCervelli c 4 0 2 1 EEscor ss 4 0 0 0 ZeWhlr 3b 3 0 0 0 Fuld cf 4 0 2 0 nett (21), Lucroy (30), C.Gomez (21), K.Davis (22), Cozart (14). KJnsn ph-3b 1 0 0 0 IP H R ER BB SO Totals 40 1 7 1 Totals 38 2 7 1 Milwaukee 9 2 0 0 2 9 New York 000 010 000 00—1 Garza W,6-5 Minnesota 000 000 100 01—2 Cincinnati Two outs when winning run scored. Bailey L,8-5 8 7 1 1 4 8 E—Cervelli (1), Plouffe (7). DP—MinJu.Diaz 1 0 0 0 0 2 nesota 1. LOB—New York 8, Minnesota T—2:47. A—38,754 (42,319). 9. 2B—Colabello (11). HR—Willingham Braves 10, Diamondbacks 4 (8). SB—Jeter (6), I.Suzuki (6). CS— Arizona Atlanta Fuld (1). ab r h bi ab r h bi New York IP H R ER BB SO Phelps 7 3 1 1 2 3 Inciart cf 4 1 1 1 BUpton cf 5 2 2 1 Kelley 2 2 0 0 0 4 DPerlt lf 4 1 1 0 ASmns ss 5 1 2 4 Thornton L,0-2 1 2-3 2 1 0 1 1 Gldsch 1b 4 1 1 1 FFrmn 1b 5 3 2 1 Minnesota MMntr c 4 1 3 1 J.Upton lf 3 1 2 3 Pino 6 3 1 1 2 3 Prado 3b 4 0 1 0 Heywrd rf 4 0 1 1 Guerrier 1 1 0 0 0 0 A.Hill 2b 4 0 0 0 CJhnsn 3b 4 0 0 0 Fien 1 1 0 0 0 1 GParra rf 3 0 2 1 LaStell 2b 3 2 2 0 Perkins 1 0 0 0 0 2 Burton 1 1 0 0 0 1 Gregrs ss 3 0 0 0 Bthncrt c 5 1 3 0 Duensing W,2-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Bolsngr p 2 0 0 0 Harang p 3 0 0 0 Delgad p 0 0 0 0 Smmns p 0 0 0 0 HBP—by Thornton (Arcia), by Phelps Stites p 0 0 0 0 (Arcia). WP—Kelley, Pino. C.Ross ph 1 0 0 0 T—3:41. A—36,514 (39,021). EDLRs p 0 0 0 0 Marlins 6, Cardinals 5 Totals 33 4 9 4 Totals 37101410 Miami St. Louis 300 010 000—4 ab r h bi ab r h bi Arizona 101 502 10x—10 Yelich lf 5 2 2 3 MCrpnt 3b 4 0 0 0 Atlanta Solano 2b 5 1 3 0 Hollidy lf 2 2 1 1 E—Gregorius (4), Goldschmidt (7), Stanton rf 5 0 1 0 SRonsn lf 1 0 0 0 A.Simmons 2 (8). DP—Atlanta 4. LOB— McGeh 3b 5 1 3 2 Craig 1b 4 1 1 2 Arizona 4, Atlanta 10. 2B—Goldschmidt GJones 1b 4 0 0 0 JhPerlt ss 5 1 2 1 (32), A.Simmons (9), F.Freeman (25), JBkr ph-1b 1 0 1 1 Descals pr 0 0 0 0 La Stella (7), Bethancourt (1). 3B—B. Ozuna cf 5 0 1 0 YMolin c 5 0 2 1 Upton (5), F.Freeman (3). HR—Inciarte Lucas ss 4 1 1 0 Jay rf 3 0 1 0 (1), J.Upton (17). CS—Heyward (4). Mathis c 3 1 2 0 Bourjos cf 4 0 1 0 S—Harang. SF—J.Upton. IP H R ER BB SO Heaney p 2 0 0 0 M.Ellis 2b 4 1 1 0 Arizona JaTrnr p 0 0 0 0 SMiller p 1 0 0 0 Bolsinger L,1-5 3 2-3 10 7 5 2 5 RJhnsn ph 1 0 0 0 Maness p 0 0 0 0 Delgado 1 1-3 0 0 0 1 2 SDyson p 0 0 0 0 Neshek p 0 0 0 0 Stites 1 1 2 1 0 1 Bour ph 1 0 0 0 MAdms ph 1 0 1 0 E.De La Rosa 2 3 1 1 2 2 Totals 41 6 14 6 Totals 34 5 10 5 Atlanta Miami 100 003 002—6 Harang W,8-6 8 9 4 3 1 1 St. Louis 100 400 000—5 S.Simmons 1 0 0 0 1 0 DP—Miami 1. LOB—Miami 9, St. Louis WP—Delgado. PB—Bethancourt. 9. 2B—Ozuna (11), Jay (11). HR—Yelich Balk—Bolsinger. (7), Craig (7), Jh.Peralta (13). SB—Jay T—3:00. A—30,405 (49,586). (3). S—S.Miller 2.

Nationals 13, Cubs 0 Chicago

Washington ab r h bi ab r h bi Lake cf 4 0 0 0 Span cf 4 1 1 0 Ruggin rf 4 0 2 0 Hairstn lf 2 0 0 0 Rizzo 1b 3 0 0 0 Rendon 2b 4 3 3 2 Grimm p 0 0 0 0 Werth rf 4 2 3 2 Sweeny lf 1 0 0 0 McLoth rf 1 0 0 0 SCstro ss 3 0 1 0 LaRoch 1b 4 1 1 1 Castillo c 3 0 1 0 Frndsn 3b 1 1 1 1 Olt 3b-1b 3 0 0 0 Zmrmn 1b 5 2 4 3 Coghln lf 3 0 1 0 Hrper lf-cf 3 0 1 0 aluen 3b 1 0 0 0 Dsmnd ss 4 1 2 2 Barney 2b 3 0 0 0 WRams c 5 1 2 1 Villanv p 1 0 0 0 GGnzlz p 3 1 1 0 Rusin p 1 0 0 0 Espinos ph 1 0 0 0 Totals 30 0 5 0 Totals 41131912 Chicago 000 000 000—0 Washington 016 002 40x—13 DP—Chicago 1, Washington 1. LOB— Chicago 4, Washington 9. 2B—Rendon 3 (21), Werth 2 (19), Zimmerman 2 (15), W.Ramos (8). SB—Rendon (8). CS—S.Castro (2). S—Harper, G.Gonzalez. Chicago IP H R ER BB SO Villanueva L,4-6 2 5 4 4 1 2 Rusin 3 2-3 9 5 5 1 4 Grimm 1 5 4 4 1 3 W.Wright 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 2 Washington G.Gonzalez W,6-4 8 4 0 0 1 7 Stammen 1 1 0 0 0 0 Villanueva pitched to 3 batters in the 3rd. WP—Villanueva, Rusin. T—3:10. A—38,473 (41,408).

Indians 7, Royals 3 Kansas City ab r L.Cain rf 5 1 Hosmer 1b5 1 S.Perez c 4 0 AGordn lf 3 0 Infante 2b 4 0 BButler dh 4 0 Valenci 3b 4 1 AEscor ss 4 0 JDyson cf 3 0

Cleveland h bi 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 2 1 2 0 3 1 1 0 0 0

ab r h bi Bourn cf 3 2 1 1 Aviles lf 0 0 0 0 ACarer ss 5 0 2 0 Brntly lf-cf 5 1 3 1 CSantn 1b 5 1 2 0 Kipnis 2b 4 2 2 1 Chsnhll 3b 3 1 2 1 Swshr dh 4 0 1 2 DvMrp rf 4 0 1 1 Kottars c 4 0 0 0 Totals 36 3 12 3 Totals 37 7 14 7 Kansas City 100 001 100—3 Cleveland 003 030 01x—7 DP—Cleveland 2. LOB—Kansas City 8, Cleveland 9. 2B—L.Cain (16), Kipnis (14). HR—Valencia (2), Bourn (3). SB—L.Cain (8), A.Escobar (21). IP H R ER BB SO Kansas City Guthrie L,5-7 4 11 6 6 2 5 Bueno 3 1 0 0 0 2 C.Coleman 1 2 1 1 1 0 Cleveland House W,1-2 6 2-3 9 3 3 0 3 Shaw H,11 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 Allen 1 2 0 0 1 1 Guthrie pitched to 4 batters in the 5th. WP—Allen. T—2:48. A—24,481 (42,487).

Indians 7, Royals 3 Kansas City ab r L.Cain rf 5 1 Hosmer 1b5 1 S.Perez c 4 0 AGordn lf 3 0 Infante 2b 4 0 BButler dh 4 0 Valenci 3b 4 1 AEscor ss 4 0 JDyson cf 3 0

Cleveland ab r h bi Bourn cf 3 2 1 1 Aviles lf 0 0 0 0 ACarer ss 5 0 2 0 Brntly lf-cf 5 1 3 1 CSantn 1b 5 1 2 0 Kipnis 2b 4 2 2 1 Chsnhll 3b 3 1 2 1 Swshr dh 4 0 1 2 DvMrp rf 4 0 1 1 Kottars c 4 0 0 0 Totals 36 3 12 3 Totals 37 7 14 7 Kansas City 100 001 100—3 Cleveland 003 030 01x—7 DP—Cleveland 2. LOB—Kansas City 8, Cleveland 9. 2B—L.Cain (16), Kipnis (14). HR—Valencia (2), Bourn (3). SB—L.Cain (8), A.Escobar (21). IP H R ER BB SO Kansas City Guthrie L,5-7 4 11 6 6 2 5 Bueno 3 1 0 0 0 2 C.Coleman 1 2 1 1 1 0 Cleveland House W,1-2 6 2-3 9 3 3 0 3 Shaw H,11 1 1-3 1 0 0 1 0 Allen 1 2 0 0 1 1 Guthrie pitched to 4 batters in the 5th. WP—Allen. T—2:48. A—24,481 (42,487). h bi 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 2 1 2 0 3 1 1 0 0 0

Rangers 5, Mets 3 Texas

New York ab r h bi Grndrs rf 5 0 2 1 DnMrp 2b 5 0 1 0 DWrght 3b 4 0 1 0 BAreu lf 3 0 1 1 CYng ph-lf 0 0 0 0 Duda 1b 3 0 1 0 Cmpl ph-1b0 0 0 0 Lagars cf 4 0 0 0 dArnad c 4 1 1 1 Tejada ss 4 1 1 0 B.Colon p 3 1 0 0 Germn p 0 0 0 0 Niwnhs ph 1 0 1 0 Totals 36 5 11 5 Totals 36 3 9 3 Texas 401 000 000—5 New York 002 100 000—3 E—A.Beltre (9). DP—Texas 1, New York 1. LOB—Texas 6, New York 8. 2B—Andrus (20), Rios (17), C.Pena (1), Granderson (15), D.Wright (21), Nieuwenhuis (5). HR—A.Beltre (11), Chirinos (8), d’Arnaud (5). SB—Rios (14). IP H R ER BB SO Texas Lewis W,6-5 6 8 3 2 0 7 Cotts H,9 1 0 0 0 1 2 Sh.Tolleson H,4 1 0 0 0 1 0 Soria S,16-17 1 1 0 0 0 1 New York B.Colon L,8-7 7 8 5 5 2 3 Edgin 1 2-3 3 0 0 0 1 Germen 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Cotts pitched to 1 batter in the 8th. T—3:10. A—24,418 (41,922). ab r Choo lf 5 0 Soria p 0 0 Andrus ss 5 1 Rios rf 4 1 ABeltre 3b 4 1 LMartn cf 3 1 Chirins c 4 1 C.Pena 1b 3 0 Odor 2b 4 0 Lewis p 3 0 Cotts p 0 0 DRrsn ph-lf 1 0

h bi 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 1 1 1 0 0 2 3 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0

Giants 5, Padres 3, 10 innings, San Francisco San Diego ab r h bi ab r h bi Pence rf 4 1 2 0 S.Smith lf 4 0 0 1 Belt 1b 4 1 1 2 Venale rf 5 0 0 0 Posey c 4 0 1 0 Headly 3b 4 0 1 0 Sandovl 3b0 0 0 0 Grandl c 4 1 2 0 Arias 3b 5 0 0 0 Goeert 1b 3 1 1 1 Morse lf 5 1 1 1 Maybin cf 3 0 0 1 Casilla p 0 0 0 0 Conrad 2b 2 1 1 0 GBlanc cf 4 2 1 1 Benoit p 0 0 0 0 BCrwfr ss 3 0 0 0 Street p 0 0 0 0 Panik 2b 2 0 1 1 Quentin ph1 0 0 0 THudsn p 1 0 0 0 Thayer p 0 0 0 0 Colvin ph 1 0 0 0 Amarst ss 3 0 1 0 Machi p 0 0 0 0 Despgn p 1 0 0 0 Affeldt p 0 0 0 0 Medica ph 1 0 0 0 B.Hicks ph 1 0 0 0 ATorrs p 0 0 0 0 J.Perez lf 0 0 0 0 Falu 2b 2 0 0 0 Totals 34 5 7 5 Totals 33 3 6 3 San Francisco 010 000 101 2—5 San Diego 000 001 200 0—3 E—Despaigne (1). DP—San Francisco 1, San Diego 1. LOB—San Francisco 7, San Diego 5. 2B—Pence (18), Posey (15), Headley (9), Grandal (9). 3B— Goebbert (1). HR—Belt (10), Morse (14), G.Blanco (1). CS—Belt (1). S—T. Hudson. SF—Panik, S.Smith, Maybin.

IP H R ER BB SO San Francisco T.Hudson 6 3 1 1 0 4 Machi BS,1-3 2-3 2 2 2 1 1 Affeldt 1 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Romo W,4-3 1 1 0 0 1 1 Casilla S,2-5 1 0 0 0 1 2 San Diego Despaigne 6 2 1 1 4 2 A.Torres 0 0 1 1 2 0 Quackenbush 1 0 0 0 0 0 Benoit H,15 1 0 0 0 0 1 Street BS,1-24 1 2 1 1 0 1 Thayer L,3-3 1 3 2 2 0 2 A.Torres pitched to 2 batters in the 7th. WP—A.Torres. PB—Grandal. Balk— Quackenbush. T—3:44. A—36,127 (42,302).

AL Leaders BATTING — Altuve, Houston, .342; Beltre, Texas, .335; VMartinez, Detroit, .328; Cano, Seattle, .323; Brantley, Cleveland, .319; Trout, Los Angeles, .313; MiCabrera, Detroit, .311. RUNS — Dozier, Minnesota, 62; Kinsler, Detroit, 60; Brantley, Cleveland, 58; Donaldson, Oakland, 57; Encarnacion, Toronto, 57; Trout, Los Angeles, 57; Bautista, Toronto, 56. RBI — NCruz, Baltimore, 70; JAbreu, Chicago, 69; Encarnacion, Toronto, 69; MiCabrera, Detroit, 67; Trout, Los Angeles, 63; Moss, Oakland, 62; Donaldson, Oakland, 61. HITS — Altuve, Houston, 121; AJones, Baltimore, 110; MeCabrera, Toronto, 107; Kinsler, Detroit, 107; Markakis, Baltimore, 106; Cano, Seattle, 104; Brantley, Cleveland, 101; Rios, Texas, 101. DOUBLES — MiCabrera, Detroit, 32; Altuve, Houston, 26; Kinsler, Detroit, 26; AEscobar, Kansas City, 24; Pedroia, Boston, 24; Plouffe, Minnesota, 24; EEscobar, Minnesota, 23; AGordon, Kansas City, 23; Trout, Los Angeles, 23. TRIPLES — Rios, Texas, 8; Bourn, Cleveland, 7; Eaton, Chicago, 6; Gardner, New York, 6; Trout, Los Angeles, 5; JJones, Seattle, 4; Kiermaier, Tampa Bay, 4; Reddick, Oakland, 4; BRoberts, New York, 4. HOME RUNS — JAbreu, Chicago, 27; NCruz, Baltimore, 27; Encarnacion, Toronto, 26; VMartinez, Detroit, 21; Trout, Los Angeles, 20; Moss, Oakland, 19; Ortiz, Boston, 19. STOLEN BASES — Altuve, Houston, 37; Ellsbury, New York, 23; RDavis, Detroit, 22; AEscobar, Kansas City, 21; Andrus, Texas, 19; JJones, Seattle, 17; LMartin, Texas, 17; Reyes, Toronto, 17. PITCHING — Tanaka, New York, 12-3; Porcello, Detroit, 11-4; FHernandez, Seattle, 10-2; Scherzer, Detroit, 10-3; Buehrle, Toronto, 10-5; Richards, Los Angeles, 9-2; Kazmir, Oakland, 9-3; Lackey, Boston, 9-6; Weaver, Los Angeles, 9-6; Lester, Boston, 9-7. ERA — FHernandez, Seattle, 2.11; Tanaka, New York, 2.27; Buehrle, Toronto, 2.50; Kazmir, Oakland, 2.61; Darvish, Texas, 2.63; Lester, Boston, 2.73; Richards, Los Angeles, 2.81. STRIKEOUTS — Price, Tampa Bay, 153; FHernandez, Seattle, 145; Scherzer, Detroit, 139; Darvish, Texas, 134; Tanaka, New York, 130; Kluber, Cleveland, 127; Lester, Boston, 122. SAVES — Rodney, Seattle, 25; Holland, Kansas City, 23; Perkins, Minnesota, 20; DavRobertson, New York, 20; Uehara, Boston, 18; Nathan, Detroit, 17; Soria, Texas, 16.

NL Leaders BATTING — Tulowitzki, Colorado, .350; Lucroy, Milwaukee, .333; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, .322; MaAdams, St. Louis, .320; McGehee, Miami, .317; Morneau, Colorado, .314; Gennett, Milwaukee, .310. RUNS — Tulowitzki, Colorado, 66; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 63; Pence, San Francisco, 61; FFreeman, Atlanta, 60; Rendon, Washington, 60; Stanton, Miami, 60; Rizzo, Chicago, 56. RBI — Stanton, Miami, 62; Morneau, Colorado, 59; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 56; Desmond, Washington, 53; AdGonzalez, Los Angeles, 53; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 53; McGehee, Miami, 52. HITS — McGehee, Miami, 106; DanMurphy, New York, 105; Lucroy, Milwaukee, 104; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 104; Pence, San Francisco, 103; Goldschmidt, Arizona, 102; Stanton, Miami, 101. DOUBLES — Goldschmidt, Arizona, 32; Lucroy, Milwaukee, 30; SCastro, Chicago, 26; AMcCutchen, Pittsburgh, 26; Span, Washington, 26; FFreeman, Atlanta, 25; Utley, Philadelphia, 24. TRIPLES — DGordon, Los Angeles, 9; BCrawford, San Francisco, 8; Yelich, Miami, 6; Braun, Milwaukee, 5; Owings, Arizona, 5; Rendon, Washington, 5; Revere, Philadelphia, 5; Span, Washington, 5; BUpton, Atlanta, 5. HOME RUNS — Stanton, Miami, 21; Tulowitzki, Colorado, 18; Byrd, Philadelphia, 17; Frazier, Cincinnati, 17; Rizzo, Chicago, 17; JUpton, Atlanta, 17; Gattis, Atlanta, 16. STOLEN BASES — DGordon, Los Angeles, 42; BHamilton, Cincinnati, 35; Revere, Philadelphia, 25; EYoung, New York, 22; SMarte, Pittsburgh, 21; Rollins, Philadelphia, 16; Blackmon, Colorado, 15; Segura, Milwaukee, 15. PITCHING — Simon, Cincinnati, 11-3; Wainwright, St. Louis, 11-4; Greinke, Los Angeles, 11-4; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 10-2; Lohse, Milwaukee, 9-3; Ryu, Los Angeles, 9-4; WPeralta, Milwaukee, 9-5; JDe La Rosa, Colorado, 9-6; Lynn, St. Louis, 9-6; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 9-6. ERA — Wainwright, St. Louis, 1.89; Cueto, Cincinnati, 1.99; Teheran, Atlanta, 2.29; HAlvarez, Miami, 2.33; Beckett, Los Angeles, 2.37; Hudson, San Francisco, 2.53; Greinke, Los Angeles, 2.66. STRIKEOUTS — Strasburg, Washington, 131; Cueto, Cincinnati, 130; Bumgarner, San Francisco, 120; Greinke, Los Angeles, 119; Kennedy, San Diego, 116; Kershaw, Los Angeles, 115; TRoss, San Diego, 111. SAVES — Kimbrel, Atlanta, 27; FrRodriguez, Milwaukee, 27; Rosenthal, St. Louis, 26; Jansen, Los Angeles, 26; Street, San Diego, 23; Romo, San Francisco, 22; RSoriano, Washington, 20.

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Nationals get 19 hits, win over Chicago The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Gio Gonzalez pitched eight sparkling innings, and Ryan Zimmerman tied a career high with four hits and drove in three runs Nationals 13 as the Nationals Cubs 0 roughed up Chicago without recently traded Jeff Samardzija for a 13-0 victory Saturday. Jayson Werth and Anthony Rendon added three hits and two RBIs for the Nationals on a day the Cubs were forced to start Carlos Villanueva (4-6) following the trade of Samardzija, the scheduled starter, and Jason Hammel to the Oakland Athletics. Washington posted a season high in runs and hits (19), including eight doubles but no home runs. BREWERS 1, REDS 0 In Cincinnati, Matt Garza threw a two-hitter for his fourth career shutout, and the Brewers ended their four-game losing streak by beating the Reds. Aramis Ramirez singled home a run in the first inning off Homer Bailey (8-5), who gave up seven hits through eight

innings. Two Brewers were thrown out at the plate. Garza (6-5) has been one of the Brewers’ best starters lately, going 4-1 in his last seven games. He retired the first 12 batters in order before Brandon Phillips led off the fifth with a single for Cincinnati’s first hit. He allowed two walks and fanned nine while going the distance for the first time this season. Right fielder Ryan Braun struck out swinging in the first inning, and then left the game in the second with spasms in his lower back. MARLINS 6, CARDINALS 5 In St. Louis, pinch-hitter Jeff Baker’s RBI hit with two outs in the ninth inning helped Miami rally to beat the Cardinals. Casey McGehee fouled off five fullcount pitches from Cardinals closer Trevor Rosenthal (0-4) before getting the tying hit. Christian Yelich’s three-run homer off Seth Maness in the sixth began Miami’s comeback from a four-run deficit that snapped the Cardinals’ three-game winning streak. Mike Dunn (6-4) worked a scoreless eighth and Steve Cishek finished for his 19th save in 21 chances.

ROCKIES 8, DODGERS 7 In Denver, Drew Stubbs hit a two-run homer, Jorge De La Rosa pitched six strong innings before giving way to a shaky bullpen, and the Rockies snapped a five-game skid by holding off the Dodgers. The Rockies are 3-16 since June 16 — with De La Rosa (9-6) accounting for each win. The lefty allowed two runs and three hits, all in the first inning. He then watched the bullpen almost completely unravel. The Dodgers turned this into a game with a five-run seventh, but Adam Ottavino put the brakes on the rally. Dan Haren (8-5) gave up a seasonhigh eight runs in 5⅓ innings. PIRATES 3, PHILLIES 2 In Pittsburgh, Edinson Volquez allowed one run in seven sharp innings, and Andrew McCutchen hit a two-run homer in the first to lead the Pirates to a victory over Philadelphia. Volquez (7-6) had an RBI groundout with the bases loaded in the second inning. David Buchanan (4-5) found his stride after the second and kept the Pirates at bay until he was lifted in the sixth. Philadelphia’s starter was charged with three runs and six hits and a walk.

Marlon Byrd stranded five men on base in his first two at-bats but homered in the ninth. Cody Asche homered in the fourth for Philadelphia. BRAVES 10, DIAMONDBACKS 4 In Atlanta, Andrelton Simmons drove in four runs, Aaron Harang won his third straight start, and the Braves beat Arizona for their season-high ninth straight victory. Justin Upton added a two-run homer and a third RBI for the Braves, who have won 11 of 12 and are 11 games over .500 for the first time this season. Harang (8-6) has a 3.00 ERA over his last three starts after allowing nine hits and four runs with one walk and one strikeout in eight innings. Arizona, which has dropped eight of 12, lost its 53rd game, most in the majors. GIANTS 5, PADRES 3 (10 INNINGS) In San Diego, Brandon Belt hit a tworun homer in the 10th inning to give San Francisco a win over San Diego. Belt, in his second game back from the disabled list, homered off Dale Thayer (3-3) after Hunter Pence led off with a double. Belt, who missed 50 games with a broken thumb, hit his 10th homer of the season into the rightfield stands.


SPORTS Neymar fractured a vertebra on Friday during Brazil’s 2-1 win over Colombia in the quarterfinals.

Brazil’s Neymar: ‘Dream is not over’ Star speaks publicly for first time since fracturing vertebra By Tales Azzoni The Associated Press

BELO HORIZONTE, Brazil — Brazil star Neymar says his World Cup may be over because of a fractured vertebra, but his World Cup dream of celebrating the title with his teammates at the Maracana Stadium next Sunday is still alive. In a video released by the Brazilian football confederation on Saturday, Neymar thanked fans and everyone else for the support in this “very difficult moment.” “I don’t have words to describe what has been going through my head and my heart,” said Neymar, trying to stay upbeat but still sporting a subdued look on his face. “I just want to say that I will be back as soon as possible. When you least expect, I’ll be back.” Wearing a black T-shirt and a black hat turned backward, he spoke in a low tone of voice, his eyes still heavy. “My dream is not over yet,” he said. “It was interrupted by one move, but it will continue, and I’m certain that my teammates will do whatever possible so I can fulfill my dream of being a champion. I won’t be able to fulfill the dream of playing in a World Cup final, but I’m sure they will win this one, they will become champions, and I will be there with them, and all of Brazil will be celebrating together.” It was the first time Neymar had spoken publicly since fracturing a vertebra late in Brazil’s 2-1 win over Colombia in the quarterfinals on Friday. The video was made just before the striker was airlifted from Brazil’s training camp in a medical helicopter to be treated at home for the back injury that ruled him out of the last two games of the World Cup. Brazil doctor Jose Luiz Runco guaranteed the injury will not have long-term effects on Neymar’s career and said the player could even travel to Belo Horizonte to watch the semifinal against Germany on Tuesday if he is not feeling a lot of pain. Runco said he believes Neymar can return to action in about 45 days, and that Barcelona doctors were informed of the player’s conditions from the beginning. “He was extremely moved when I gave him the news that he was out of the World Cup,” Runco said. “He cried a lot, which was a natural reaction at that moment. But I told him that although his dream was being cut short, he was still a 22-yearold with a lot in front of him. It was still a ‘good’ type of injury.”

Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

D-5

After World Cup, MLS looks to steady growth By Ronald Blum and Janie McCauley The Associated Press

ven before millions of people packed into outdoor fan parties, ran out to bars for long lunches and sneaked peeks of games at their offices during the Americans’ World Cup run, Major League Soccer began thinking about how to convert some of those fans into supporters for its own teams. Playing its 19th season and preparing for an expansion to 24 teams in its post-David Beckham era, MLS has grown in support and interest but remains a feeder league — with most young star players it produces leaving for more lucrative contracts in Europe. MLS Commissioner Don Garber wants to change that quickly, and it only helps his cause when stars such as Clint Dempsey and Michael Bradley come home to play on U.S. soil. “We want to be thought of the way the Premier League is thought of, Serie A is thought of, La Liga is thought of, the Bundesliga is thought of,” Garber said. “When people think about the best leagues in the world, everybody knows who they are, and we want to be one of those leagues.” Dempsey and Bradley each returned to MLS from Europe in the past year. Jermain Defoe joined Thierry Henry and Tim Cahill as the league’s top international attractions. David Villa and Kaka already are signed for 2015 and Frank Lampard may be on the way, too. Garber has set 2022 as the year for MLS to achieve his goal and says that while the league has come a long way, it still has a lot further to go. To attract top players, MLS must pay top prices. Part of the funds will come from new eight-year broadcasting deals by MLS and the U.S. Soccer Federation with ESPN, Fox and Univision that start next season and will average more than $90 million annually.

E

MLS says sponsorship revenue has nearly doubled since 2010 for the league and its marketing arm, Soccer United Marketing. Among the corporate partners investing in soccer are Adidas, Allstate, AT&T, General Motors’ Chevrolet division and Continental Tire. From Seattle to Salt Lake City, the California cities of Los Angeles and San Jose, from Kansas City to Houston and up to Toronto, general sports fans watched their local MLS players along with the die-hards during the World Cup. Now, MLS’ tallest task is to get those same supporters — and more — to attend league games each weekend. MLS was much more central to this year’s tournament, sending 22 players for an increase from six in 2010. “Any time there’s a World Cup, it’s going to put a focus on soccer for this country, and if there are guys playing in MLS, it can only help boost the sport in general and also our league,” said Real Salt Lake midfielder Kyle Beckerman, who started three games in Brazil. People now in decision-making positions got there in the era after the 1994 World Cup in the U.S., which drew a record 3.6 million fans. They’ve viewed shifts in the taste of American sports fans and the population as a whole, where there has been a growing Hispanic population. In addition to 16.5 million who watched the United States’ World Cup loss to Belgium on ESPN, there were 5.1 million tuned in on Spanish-language Univision. The 24.7 million total watching the U.S. draw against Portugal topped the averages of the most recent World Series and NBA Finals. “We have been dealing with a generation of soccer moms and a massive youth participation,” Garber said. “They now have gone through a generational turn. They are now influencers. They grew up with the game. It’s certainly not foreign to them. They care about it in ways that their parents did not and now they are becoming MLS fans and becoming soccer fans overall.”

Dutch: Face Argentina next Continued from Page D-1 Central America and the Caribbean were again left without a semifinalist in a drought that extends to 1930. As widely predicted, the World Cup has distilled itself to powers from South America and Europe. On Saturday, in the waning moments of overtime, Netherlands coach Louis Van Gaal replaced his starting goalkeeper, Jasper Cillessen, with Tim Krul, who had yet to play in the tournament. It was an inspired move. Krul was assured, perhaps even haughty. He kissed the ball and walked near the Costa Ricans as they prepared to shoot, staring at them. He also seemed to gesture as if he knew where they intended to place the ball. At least twice, he did. In its previous match, against Greece, Costa Rica had made all five of its attempts in the shootout. This time, a left-footed shot by captain Bryan Ruiz lacked speed and conviction and Krul pushed it wide. Robin van Persie, Arjen Robben, Wesley Sneijder and Dirk Kuyt all shot assuredly for the Netherlands. Then it was left to Costa Rican defender Michael Umana to take what became the decisive kick. Krul guessed correctly, or detected some giveaway look or movement, and dived to his left to save the shot and the game. The Dutch players raced to mob him. The breathless finish was in stark contrast to the drowsy start of the game, in which the Netherlands kicked the ball around its back line patiently or aimlessly, depending on one’s view. Beforehand, Robben juggled the ball with his head, letting it bounce lower and lower until it essentially came to rest like a baby being rocked to sleep. The first half was equally somnolent. The game came alive in the second half. All night, Robben stabbed down the right flank, luring the Ticos into four yellow cards for fouling him, sometimes embellishing his falls by throw-

ing his arms out as if jumping from a plane. Jorge Luis Pinto, Costa Rica’s coach, had urged referee Ravshan Irmatov to officiate with proper skepticism, saying he was “really worried about Robben diving.” The Costa Ricans will not have changed their opinion after Saturday’s quarterfinal. Still, even with Robben’s tireless running, his insistent threatening, the Netherlands could not get a ball past Costa Rica’s superb goalie, Keylor Navas, or the goal posts until penalty kicks. The Dutch were called for offsides 13 times. Van Persie seemed particularly anxious. He was far from the exceptional form he displayed here during the Netherlands’ opener when his stunning header led a 5-1 rout of Spain, the defending champion. At that moment, van Persie’s body seemed a human punctuation mark, parallel to the ground, as wavy as a tilde. On Saturday, though, he was often flat. Twice, he was rebuffed by Navas at close range and he seldom appeared sharp until the game went to penalty kicks. In the 82nd minute, Sneijder hit the left post on a free kick. Six minutes later, van Persie somehow whiffed on a cross from Sneijder at the back post. In the final moments of regulation, a cross by Daley Blind rolled past two teammates to van Persie, whose shot struck Costa Rica’s Yeltsin Tejeda on the goal line and hit the underside of the crossbar. In the 119th minute, Sneijder hit off the crossbar. When the match reached penalty kicks, Pinto punched the air as if his team had played all night for this moment. It was not supposed to be this difficult for the Netherlands. But Krul was up to the challenge. He plays in England for Newcastle United, but had saved only 2 of 20 penalty kicks in the Premier League. “That is not normal,” Krul said of sitting the entire match and then entering with the pressure of advancing his team to the World Cup semifinals. “It’s a dream,” he said. “It’s unbelievable.”

Argentina’s Lionel Messi, center, and teammates celebrate Saturday after defeating Belgium 1-0 in Brasília, Brazil. THANASSIS STAVRAKIS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Argentina blanks Belgium, advances to the semifinals By David Waldstein The New York Times

BRASÍLIA — As unlikely as it may seem given the résumés of the two nations involved, including seven combined world championships, Argentina and Brazil had never reached the semifinals in the same World Cup until this year. With a 1-0 victory over Belgium on Saturday thanks to a goal by Gonzalo Higuaín, Argentina joined Brazil, which beat Colombia on Friday, in the final four. The possibility exists that the two teams, South American giants and bitter rivals, could face off in the final in Rio de Janeiro, which many feel would provide the most fitting conclusion to this World Cup. Argentina, the winner in 1978 and 1986, is back in the semifinals for the first time since 1990, when a rough group coming off a title heavily relied on the skills of Diego Maradona and Claudio Caniggia before losing to Germany in a desultory final. Twenty-four years later, Argentina still relies heavily on two stars — these days, they are Lionel Messi and Ángel di María — but di María’s status for the team’s next game is uncertain; he left Saturday’s game with a right thigh injury. Messi has been indispensable to Argentina, bailing the team out of several precarious situations either by scoring himself or by sending passes that have led directly to goals. “He is water in the desert,” said Alejandro Sabella, Argentina’s coach. The players surrounding Messi, with less skill and less of an ability to dictate the flow of play, make Argentina look rather pedestrian, at least in the eyes of one vanquished opponent. “We are not impressed by Argentina,” said Marc Wilmots, Belgium’s coach. “Definitely not. It is just an ordinary team.” But Argentina found production from sources other than Messi on Saturday. Higuaín, who has been under pressure for his lack of goals, silenced his critics with a decisive strike in the eighth minute, and Argentina’s stout defense made it difficult for Belgium to create scoring chances. With thousands of fans singing and chanting for Argentina, the team rode the wave of support in what felt like a home

game. The Belgians, who had required extra time to beat the United States in the previous round, had a flurry of attempts on goal in the closing minutes but were unable to convert. Argentina will play the winner of the game between the Netherlands and Costa Rica, played later Saturday afternoon. With Brazil playing Germany in the other semifinal, the final four will feature international soccer powerhouses, with 10 World Cup championships among them, regardless of that result. The primary concern for Argentina, though, is the status of di María, who left the game midway through the first half. If di María is sidelined, Argentina may have to rely even more on Messi. Belgium, meanwhile, got very little production from its star playmaker Eden Hazard, who was taken off in the second half. Higuaín scored the game’s lone goal with a perfect onetime strike from 17 yards out in the eighth minute. The play started when Vincent Kompany, Belgium’s normally reliable central defender, lost the ball in his own half. Messi made a few slick moves, spinning free from three defenders in the middle of the field, before distributing the ball wide to di María. Di María’s pass into the box was deflected by Jan Vertonghen and went straight to Higuaín, as if on a tee. He struck the ball perfectly with the laces of his cleat, a clean power shot to the far corner of the net that gave Belgium’s goalkeeper, Thibaut Courtois, no chance. Despite the mounting pressure back home, Higuaín said that he was not anxious about scoring and that he knew his time would come. “The striker wants a goal,” he said, “and what is better than doing it today?” Argentina secured the slim lead by playing behind the ball and closing down any chances. Even when Belgium brought on Romelu Lukaku, who proved so effective against the United States, it could not find a way to tie the score. “After 24 years, this is a good tribute for this squad,” Sabella said, adding that his team would “go down in history as one of the best four in the world.” “Maybe we can take it further,” he said.

GOLF

Billy Hurley III extends lead to 2 at Greenbrier Classic By John Raby The Associated Press

WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.Va. — Billy Hurley III doesn’t plan to lose much rest sitting on a third-round lead for the first time on the PGA Tour. The former U.S. Navy officer shot a 3-under 67 on Saturday to extend his advantage to two strokes over Angel Cabrera entering the final round of the Greenbrier Classic. “I’ve been working for a long time to win on the PGA Tour,” Hurley said. “I figure if I shoot the lowest score tomorrow, I can’t lose.” Hurley never relinquished the lead he has held since midway through the second round at Old White TPC. He birdied

Billy Hurley III tees off on the 14th hole Saturday during the third round of the Greenbrier Classic at the Greenbrier Resort in White Sulphur Springs, W.Va. CHRIS TILLEY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

the par-5 12th and par-4 13th before dropping a stroke on the par-3 15th. He had a 12-under 198 total.

No third-round leader has won the Greenbrier Classic, now in its fifth year. Playoffs have decided the tournament twice.

Cabrera shot 64. He’s looking for his first non-major win on the PGA Tour. Kevin Chappell was third at 9 under after a 69. Steve Stricker had a 68 to top the group at 8 under. There will be more than a trophy to raise and a $1.2 million winner’s check available Sunday. The four best finishers not previously eligible for the British Open among the top 12 on the final leaderboard will earn spots in the July 17-20 tournament at Royal Liverpool. Hurley finished his fiveyear Navy service in 2009 and would still be a naval officer if golf wasn’t keeping him busy. He returned to the PGA Tour this year after playing on the Web.com Tour in 2013. He said nerves won’t play a

part in how he gets ready for what could be a memorable Sunday. “I’m going to keep doing what I’m doing,” he said. “I just want to put my mind in position so that I can play well. I slept fine last night. The benefit of the Navy if you learn how to sleep anywhere. I think I’ll sleep fine tonight, too.” Cabrera wore an Argentine blue shirt in the third round and is riding his country’s momentum in the World Cup, including Saturday’s 1-0 win over Belgium to advance to the semifinal round. “I was very happy when I found out they won,” Cabrera said, adding that he was equally as giddy when he started his round with four birdies on the first six holes.

Old White sets up nicely for Cabrera’s long drives and he made four birdie putts of 19 feet or longer. “I was able to get the speed of the greens, and that was the big difference,” Cabrera said. At the Wells Fargo Championship in May, Cabrera was the second-round leader but closed with a pair of 75s. Another under-par round Sunday would mark the first time that he has had four rounds in the 60s since the 2010 Deutsche Bank Championship. Chappell barely got anything going until making a 12-foot putt for birdie on the par-5 17th. “I don’t think I’ve had my best ball-striking day yet,” he said. “Hopefully, my putter gets hot, and [it] should be fun.”


D-6

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

The weather

For current, detailed weather conditions in downtown Santa Fe, visit our online weather stations at www.santafenewmexican.com/weather/

7-day forecast for Santa Fe Tonight

Today

Partly sunny

Monday

A t-storm in spots this evening

87

Tuesday

Partly sunny

59

Wednesday

Partly sunny

88/62

Humidity (Noon) Humidity (Midnight) Humidity (Noon)

Thursday

A couple of showers and a t-storm

Friday

Saturday

An afternoon t-storm A couple of showers in the area and a t-storm

86/59

82/58

86/58

87/59

90/57

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

Humidity (Noon)

31%

49%

29%

34%

52%

40%

61%

36%

wind: E 4-8 mph

wind: SSW 6-12 mph

wind: SW 6-12 mph

wind: SSE 7-14 mph

wind: WNW 4-8 mph

wind: SSW 6-12 mph

wind: WNW 3-6 mph

Almanac

New Mexico weather

Air quality index

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows. 64

285

64

Farmington 92/58

40

Santa Fe 87/59 Pecos 82/56

25

Albuquerque 90/67

Area rainfall

25

87

56 412

Clayton 94/65

Pollen index

54

40

40

The following water statistics of July 3 are the most recent supplied by the City Water Division (in millions of gallons). Total water produced from: Canyon Water Treatment Plant: 5.111 Buckman Water Treatment Plant: 6.260 City Wells: 0.000 Buckman Wells: 1.143 Total water produced by water system: 12.514 Amount delivered to Las Campanas: Golf course: 0.000, domestic: 0.361 Santa Fe Canyon reservoir storage: 23.4 percent of capacity; daily inflow 1.49 million gallons. A partial list of the City of Santa Fe’s Comprehensive Water Conservation Requirements currently in effect: • No watering between 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. from May 1st to October 31st. • Irrigation water leaving the intended area is not permitted. Wasting water is not allowed. • Using water to clean hard surfaces with a hose or power washer is prohibited. • Hoses used in manual car washing MUST be equipped with a positive shut-off nozzle. • Swimming pools and spas must be covered when not in use. For a complete list of requirements call: 955-4225 http://www.santafenm.gov/waterconservation

Source:

60

25

Today’s UV index

54 285 380

180

Roswell 90/66

Ruidoso 75/57

25

Truth or Consequences 90/68

70

70

70

Hobbs 93/67

285

0-2, Low; 3-5, Moderate; 6-7, High; 8-10, Very High; 11+, Extreme The higher the AccuWeather.com UV Index™ number, the greater the need for eye and skin protection.

70

Las Cruces 91/70

Carlsbad 95/70

54

285

10

Sun and moon Sunrise today ............................... 5:55 a.m. Sunset tonight .............................. 8:23 p.m. Moonrise today ............................ 2:32 p.m. Moonset today ............................. 1:06 a.m. Sunrise Monday ............................ 5:55 a.m. Sunset Monday ............................. 8:23 p.m. Moonrise Monday ......................... 3:33 p.m. Moonset Monday .......................... 1:44 a.m. Sunrise Tuesday ........................... 5:56 a.m. Sunset Tuesday ............................ 8:23 p.m. Moonrise Tuesday ........................ 4:35 p.m. Moonset Tuesday ......................... 2:26 a.m.

State extremes Sat. High 98 .................................. Carlsbad Sat. Low 39 ................................. Angel Fire

State cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Cimarron Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Crownpoint Deming Española Farmington Fort Sumner Gallup Grants Hobbs Las Cruces

Hi/Lo W 95/64 pc 90/63 pc 76/39 t 95/66 s 98/71 s 78/47 t 83/48 t 94/65 pc 72/47 pc 89/61 s 77/55 pc 96/73 pc 89/62 pc 90/66 pc 92/67 r 81/59 t 83/55 pc 91/63 s 96/70 pc

Hi/Lo W 93/70 t 90/67 t 78/47 t 91/67 pc 95/70 pc 82/50 t 88/54 pc 94/65 pc 72/50 t 88/63 pc 83/58 t 91/67 t 89/66 t 92/58 t 95/67 pc 85/55 t 84/50 t 93/67 pc 91/70 t

Hi/Lo W 95/71 pc 91/68 s 77/46 t 93/68 pc 97/70 pc 82/51 t 88/53 t 94/66 s 74/49 pc 89/63 s 84/60 t 91/64 pc 90/67 s 94/60 t 95/68 pc 89/55 t 86/51 t 93/68 s 91/69 pc

Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Las Vegas Lordsburg Los Alamos Los Lunas Portales Raton Red River Rio Rancho Roswell Ruidoso Santa Rosa Silver City Socorro Taos T or C Tucumcari University Park White Rock Zuni

Hi/Lo 81/55 93/68 80/57 92/67 97/66 87/55 68/43 90/66 97/66 79/55 91/66 86/66 90/69 82/48 91/71 95/69 94/71 79/61 79/59

W t pc pc t pc pc t pc t t pc pc r pc t t pc t t

Hi/Lo W 84/54 pc 92/69 t 83/61 t 92/64 t 93/64 pc 90/55 pc 76/50 t 91/63 t 90/66 pc 75/57 t 93/63 pc 84/62 t 93/67 t 86/50 t 90/68 t 94/67 pc 95/71 t 86/62 pc 82/59 t

Hi/Lo W 84/56 t 93/69 t 84/60 pc 93/64 s 93/65 s 91/57 pc 76/49 t 92/63 s 94/68 pc 79/59 pc 93/65 pc 82/60 t 93/69 pc 86/50 t 91/69 pc 95/69 s 95/71 pc 87/61 pc 84/60 t

Full

Last

New

First

July 12

July 18

July 26

Aug 3

The planets Rise 4:45 a.m. 3:56 a.m. 1:45 p.m. 6:59 a.m. 3:49 p.m. 12:48 a.m.

Mercury Venus Mars Jupiter Saturn Uranus

Set 6:48 p.m. 6:13 p.m. 1:01 a.m. 9:12 p.m. 2:29 a.m. 1:28 p.m.

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

Weather (w): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sfsnow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice.

National cities

Weather for July 6

Yesterday Today Tomorrow City Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Billings Bismarck Boise Boston Charleston, SC Charlotte Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit Fairbanks Flagstaff Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles

Hi/Lo 73/58 86/68 82/55 97/60 96/61 98/64 80/59 87/74 84/60 77/60 82/56 78/52 93/73 96/58 78/54 82/56 79/52 89/74 90/73 79/59 84/69 99/81 86/64

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W s 66/57 c 67/55 sh pc 86/70 t 88/70 s s 87/67 s 93/74 pc pc 90/63 s 81/59 s t 86/59 pc 78/56 t pc 98/66 s 96/67 s pc 85/67 s 86/73 pc c 86/73 t 91/77 pc pc 87/67 pc 91/71 s c 87/71 t 88/70 pc pc 86/67 pc 87/72 t pc 81/68 pc 83/70 t pc 95/75 pc 96/76 s pc 95/63 s 95/59 t pc 83/71 pc 86/70 pc s 82/62 sh 70/57 c c 77/52 t 78/51 t s 88/74 s 88/74 s t 91/72 t 90/74 t pc 84/68 pc 87/71 t c 97/74 pc 95/71 t pc 103/86 t 105/89 t s 82/66 pc 81/65 pc

City Louisville Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis New Orleans New York City Oklahoma City Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Richmond St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco Seattle Sioux Falls Trenton Washington, DC

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 83/57 s 90/70 pc 92/74 t 86/64 s 90/69 pc 91/73 s 89/76 t 88/78 t 90/77 t 78/56 c 84/68 t 84/65 pc 84/65 pc 88/66 t 82/63 pc 88/76 pc 92/73 pc 90/73 t 81/63 s 85/69 s 90/76 pc 92/71 pc 95/72 pc 96/75 s 92/73 t 88/73 t 89/74 t 83/64 s 88/69 s 94/76 pc 102/84 t 105/87 t 105/86 t 78/50 pc 83/66 pc 84/69 t 83/61 pc 87/63 s 87/64 s 86/61 s 88/68 s 96/75 s 82/63 c 92/76 t 97/75 t 97/75 pc 98/66 s 96/64 s 91/71 c 92/74 pc 94/74 s 83/70 s 78/70 pc 75/68 pc 71/53 pc 73/57 pc 75/59 s 76/56 c 81/61 pc 81/59 s 90/67 pc 91/62 pc 84/62 pc 81/60 s 86/66 s 92/74 pc 86/64 s 88/72 s 96/78 pc

World cities Yesterday Today Tomorrow

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.

-10s -0s 0s 10s 20s 30s 40s 50s 60s 70s 80s 90s 100s 110s Stationary front

Cold front Showers Rain T-storms Snow Flurries

Warm front

Ice

National extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states) Sat. High: 107 ........................ Thermal, CA Sat. Low: 33 ................. Boca Reservoir, CA

Weather history

Weather trivia™

On July 6, 1829, in Buffalo, N.Y., during a summer thunderstorm, a 13-inch-long herring fell on Main Street. The fish weighed more than a half of a pound.

is the record-high temperature Q: What for the world?

City Amsterdam Athens Baghdad Bangkok Barcelona Beijing Berlin Bogota Buenos Aires Cairo Caracas Ciudad Juarez Copenhagen Dublin Geneva Guatemala City Havana Hong Kong Jerusalem Lima

Yesterday Today Tomorrow

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 72/64 sh 73/57 t 70/57 sh 88/72 s 91/72 s 93/74 s 117/93 pc 117/83 s 113/80 s 97/82 c 95/80 t 95/80 t 82/68 s 81/68 s 73/66 sh 87/73 t 91/73 pc 88/73 c 84/66 pc 84/67 c 85/64 t 66/50 sh 66/49 c 65/48 c 55/52 r 50/40 c 59/41 s 91/73 s 94/74 s 96/73 s 90/77 s 88/77 t 88/77 pc 99/77 pc 95/72 pc 94/72 pc 75/63 pc 74/65 c 75/63 sh 63/43 sh 64/46 sh 63/48 sh 79/61 c 83/59 t 70/56 t 77/62 pc 75/59 t 78/58 t 93/72 pc 89/71 t 91/72 t 92/84 t 93/84 pc 94/83 sh 82/66 s 81/62 s 82/63 s 69/62 c 68/59 c 70/60 pc

City Lisbon London Madrid Mexico City Montreal Moscow New Delhi Paris Prague Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Seoul Singapore Stockholm Sydney Tokyo Vancouver Vienna Zurich

Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W Hi/Lo W 75/63 pc 74/59 sh 74/62 s 70/62 r 71/54 sh 71/54 c 90/59 s 80/58 t 80/55 pc 69/54 t 67/57 t 68/55 t 81/59 pc 81/66 pc 79/66 t 75/55 pc 74/54 pc 76/57 pc 102/85 t 101/81 t 103/84 pc 75/63 sh 69/52 t 70/56 sh 79/63 pc 81/61 c 84/62 t 88/68 s 85/69 s 85/69 pc 81/73 pc 85/66 s 85/67 pc 54/43 pc 58/36 s 65/39 s 82/68 pc 86/69 pc 90/74 s 86/79 t 88/77 r 87/78 r 79/54 s 75/58 pc 79/60 pc 62/40 s 64/43 s 64/42 s 73/68 sh 80/72 pc 80/74 r 66/57 sh 72/58 sh 76/58 s 77/64 c 84/67 pc 87/66 t 72/61 t 85/59 t 71/57 t

A: 136(F) in Libya on Sept. 13, 1922

Family maintains hold on pit-spitting contest The Associated Press

EAU CLAIRE, Mich. — When it comes to pit-spitting in southwestern Michigan, it’s tough to beat the Krause family, who on Saturday maintained their dominance in the 41st International Cherry Pit-Spit-

ting Championship. Brian Krause took top honors with a distance of 80 feet, 8 inches, said Monica Teichman, who runs the market at Tree-Mendus Fruit Farm in Eau Claire, just north of the Indiana state line. Coming in second this year was Brian’s father,

Travel Bug

Share your travel shot: Got a travel photograph you’d like to see in The New Mexican? Email your pictures to bbarker@ sfnewmexican.com. All submitted photos should be at least 4 inches wide at 220 dpi. Submissions will be printed twice a week as space is available. No money will be paid for published photographs. Images must be original and submitted by the copyright owner. Please include a descriptive caption. The New Mexican reserves the right to reject any photo without notice or stated reason.

380

380

Alamogordo 93/70

180 10

Water statistics

Clovis 88/63

54 60 60

As of 7/2/2014 Pine ..................................................... 9 Low Chenopods........................................... 1 Low Other ................................................... 1 Low ...................................................................... Total...........................................................16

25

Las Vegas 84/54

285

Albuquerque 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.08” Month/year to date .................. 0.60”/1.72” Las Vegas 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ Trace Month/year to date .................. 0.78”/3.13” Los Alamos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.01” Month/year to date .................. 0.10”/1.90” Chama 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.00”/4.85” Taos 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.01” Month/year to date .................. 0.22”/2.13”

Saturday’s rating ................................ Good Today’s forecast ................................. Good 0-50, Good; 51-100, Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very Unhealthy, 301500, Hazardous Source: EPA

64

Taos 86/50

84

Española 89/66 Los Alamos 83/61 Gallup 85/55

Raton 90/55

64

666

Jane Brickner shot this image of a white Siberian tiger napping in a Tampa, Fla., wildlife rescue facility.

Thunderstorms

wind: NE 6-12 mph

Santa Fe Airport through 6 p.m. Saturday Santa Fe Airport Temperatures High/low ......................................... 87°/60° Normal high/low ............................ 90°/56° Record high ............................... 94° in 2008 Record low ................................. 46° in 1921 Santa Fe Airport Precipitation 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.22”/2.33” Normal month/year to date ..... 0.21”/4.92” Santa Fe Farmers Market 24 hours through 6 p.m. yest. ............ 0.00” Month/year to date .................. 0.23”/3.57”

LASTING IMAGES NAPPING

Rick, with a spitting distance of 77 feet, 7½ inches. Kevin Bartz took third with 64 feet, 8 inches. Last year’s big winner was Matt “BB Gun” Krause with a distance of 41 feet, 6½ inches. The Krause family has won 26 of 41 of the contests since farm owner Herb Teichman

(505) 992-0418 839 Paseo de Peralta Santa Fe, NM 87501 Saturday, Ju Julyy 12th t 5p 5pm

Slideshow:

NEW ZEALAND Saturday, July 12th at 5 pm

“It turns out you don ‘t have to share crowed bedrooms with strangers to enjoy the scenic grandeur of New Zealand ‘s South Island. The Great Walks are nice, but the island offers a feast of day hikes as well, of varying lengths and degrees of difficulty and within easy reach the island ‘s incredible scenic and cultural sites. Join us for a tour of the South Island and a sampling of the outings available to the independent traveler.” Travel presentations most Saturdays at 5pm. Google ‘Travel Bug Events’ for full ll schedule.

launched the tournament in 1974 as a lark — but also to mark the region’s tart cherry harvest. Brian Krause holds the record spit of 93 feet, 6½ inches, set in 2003. More than 100 people tried to qualify Saturday for the championship round.

An independent locally owned travel specialty store. International & local maps, guides, travel accessories, globes, flags, GPS and a full espresso bar.

Baltimore is Poe, painted screens, vintage treasures By Beth J. Harpaz The Associated Press

BALTIMORE — It’s not the TV shows Homicide and The Wire that come to mind when I think of Baltimore, though both offered an intense look at an American city’s poverty, drugs and gangs. Baltimore’s glitzy Inner Harbor didn’t draw me there either. Instead, I went looking for old things connected to the city’s history and quirky local culture — everything from Edgar Allan Poe to row houses and painted window screens, a utilitarian folk art that’s being revived. Here’s what I found.

Hampden This is where kitsch and hipsters converge — amid the boutiques, eateries and antique shops of West 36th Street in Hampden. The neighborhood’s epicenter might well be the giant pink flamingo at 1002 W. 36th St. outside Cafe Hon — short for honey, but not the edible kind. Elsewhere, you’d be called sir or ma’am, but here you’re “hon.” For more details — including the local penchant for beehive hairdos — watch movies by Baltimore native John Waters. Artful displays at Trohv Baltimore, 921 W. 36th St., highlight the beauty of everyday objects like old jars or wooden spools of thread. Bryan’s Finds & Designs, 845 W. 36th St., is a fabulous jumble of jewelry, hats, lamps and other vintage accessories. Razzo, 911 W. 36th St., sells crab shells painted with beehive hairdos. And Golden West Cafe, 1105 W. 36th St., offers funky but scrumptious goodies like tater tots, polenta, house-made doughnuts, and a bloody mary garnished with delectable pickled green beans from Tanner’s Pickles, 2724 Remington Ave.

Fells Point Fells Point is on one side of Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, where pubs, souvenir shops and water taxis attract hordes of tourists. But a block from the water, Fells Point’s historic district — bounded by Aliceanna, Dallas and Wolfe streets — offers quiet, narrow streetscapes dating to the 18th century. Many of the tiny brick and wood-framed homes, some with gabled roofs and dormer windows, are on the National Register of Historic Places. Of note: Robert Long House, Baltimore’s oldest home, built in 1765, at 812 S. Ann St., and the Fell Family Cemetery, 1607 Shakespeare St. The Admiral Fell Inn, 888 S. Broadway, a boutique hotel that was once a seamen’s boardinghouse, offers bird’s eye views from its balconies of the area’s tidy old buildings and rooftops.

Edgar Allan Poe Many cities claim Poe: He was born in Boston and lived in Virginia, New York and Philadelphia. “But this is the place he really considered home,” said Lisa Lewenz, administrator of the Poe House and Museum, a national landmark at 203 N. Amity St. Poe lived in the tiny brick house, just 13 feet wide, in the 1830s with his grandmother, aunt and two cousins. (Poe married his cousin Virginia when she was 13.) Exhibits tell the story of Poe’s life and death; artifacts include his portable writing desk — the laptop of its day — and his telescope; www.poeinbaltimore.org, Saturday-Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m., $5. Poe died in Baltimore in 1849 after being found delirious on the street in circumstances as mysterious as his haunting tales and poems. His death has been attributed to everything from alcohol to rabies. His birthday was marked for decades by a visitor who left roses and cognac at the Westminster Hall and Burying Ground, 519 W. Fayette St., where he’s buried. A monument there bears Poe’s likeness; another marker bears a raven.

Painted screens Baltimore is famous for row houses — adjacent brick homes, two to three stories tall. Folks walking by on narrow sidewalks could see right inside, so beginning in the early 20th century, window screens were sometimes painted with designs to increase privacy. Air conditioners helped kill the tradition, but you can still find a few painted screens — both vintage and newly painted by artists trying to revive them — along Elliot Street in Canton between Conkling and Linwood, or Eastern Avenue in Highlandtown. The American Visionary Art Museum www.avam.org (800 Key Highway, TuesdaySunday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., $16) has a permanent exhibit on painted screens that includes a documentary and re-creation of a row house. The gift shop sells a map of painted screen locations, or order maps for $5 from the Painted Screen Society, paintedscreens.org.

Et cetera History buffs may also want to see the Babe Ruth Birthplace, honoring the baseball legend; Fort McHenry, where a flag raised during the War of 1812 inspired the writing of The Star-Spangled Banner; and the Bromo Seltzer Tower, 21 S. Eutaw St., erected in 1911 with a castlelike turret and a clock face bearing the letters B-R-OM-O S-E-L-T-Z-E-R instead of numbers.


Open houses E-8 Classifieds E-10 Jobs E-12 Time Out E-16

REAL ESTATE

SUNDAY, JULY 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN sifieds.com

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EMPLOYMENT ES OPPORTUNITI S COUNCIL, INC. RN INDIAN PUEBLO ENCE EIGHT NORTHE ER OF EXCELL - A LOCAL EMPLOY

and compliance – MAIN OFFICE Head Start Program supervision of HEAD START and nt of the ENIPC’s DIRECTOR OFoverall administration and manageme to-day administration, management, for all other Head

the Carry out dayResponsible for staff. Provide support in accordance delegate agencies. any administrative to Head Start familiesand fosters monitoring of ENIPC’s Supervise Lead Teachers and and social services Council Program. of family assistance the Head Start Head Start Policy assessment, the implementation Coordinate the activities of the Provide screening, Start staff. Oversee Program Standards. the Head Start Performance standards. program governance with with the Head Start and maintain the grant the Head Start making in accordance disabilities. Oversee shared decision with suspected funding. .Establish diagnosis of children and budget, search for additional the all application. Bachelor’s Degree evaluation and serded approval of the current grant Human and Disability structure. Maintain the review and recommen Administration, in supervisory/ Work oversee and Social experience Education, (5) years of application process in Early Childhood Minimum of five Administration. nt with Master’s preferred Education, or Business programs or business manageme Elementary vices, services position in human administration provided nt and services manageme cal OR – TAOS appropriate clinical will provide direct psychologi Director will assure CLINICAL DIRECT , and training to The Clinical Director Center Clinical Healing Center. leadership, supervision Health, D.O.J. The Butterfly Healing Butterfly clinical Inc.’s settings, Optum of ENIPC, to the residents inpatient and outpatient in order to maintain C.Y.F.D., also management in ts thereof. Position and all compliance services, clinical and requiremen shall assure program of Life funding sources representing Circle all BHC staff. IncumbentServices and any additional and outreach services Health experience. Minimum as well as Indian in areas of marketing prior successful management n and direction Mexico as an LISW, have New Must of participatio n. State requires in the organizatio Work. Licensed delivered by the network services Psychology or Social in Counseling, a Master’s Degree in the State of NM Must be licensed LPCC, or Ph.D. health/subESPANOLA ERQUE AND substance abuse counseling, mental apy, IST – ALBUQU Mus FAMILY THERAP and family therapy, group, psychother or social work. nseling psychology Will provide individual

s Director of Athletic u.edu/jobs n see: www.nmh Athletics. The Director of Athletjob descriptio a Director of For a complete personnel activities application for s. l, financial and the operationa University is accepting policies and procedure directing and evaluating al, RMAC, and NCAA New Mexico Highlands the NCAA e for planning, n and supports of institution ics is responsibl t within the context classroom as well as in competitio and the University expects in the of the athletic departmen a long tradition : Master’s to student success at Highlands is MENTS: Education experiNMHU is committed initiative. Athletic success JOB REOUIRE ative Balance . Preferred: Administr experience. that it offers. MINIMUM DII Life in the coaching e in those sports coaching experience to be competitiv e: Five (5) years fund raising. Collegiate Sports Science. field. Experienc ated success with al Leadership, or Exercise and Degree in any Demonstr University 3) athletics. Education iate 2) resume; ation, Business, ence in intercolleg a letter of interest; e numbers of 3 in Sports Administr must submit 1) Names/address/phon official Master’s degree PROCEDURE: Candidates transcripts; 5) s interviews and advanced degree with on-campu APPLICATION n; 4) Copies of in conjunction s interview. Employment Applicatio References will be contacted acceptance of the on-campu professional references. should be requested upon transcripts University New Mexico Highlands Human Resources Search Athletic Director Box 9000 87701 Las Vegas, NM jobs@nmhu.edu ns will be accepted: 242 or TDD 505-454-3003. Email applicatio R 505-454-3 or services call IS AN EEO EMPLOYE UNIVERSITY For disabled access HIGHLANDS NEW MEXICO

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A sampling of the sights on this year’s ‘Behind Adobe Walls’ Home and Garden Tours on July 22 and July 29. COURTESY PHOTOS

Hop flowers are both ornamental and edible. Hops are an easy-togrow perennial that greatly enhance a beer’s flavor when picked fresh. DEAN FOSDICK/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

For 75 years, a peek at the gardens

GARDENING

Grow what you need for home brewing

‘Behind Adobe Walls’ E By Paul Weideman The New Mexican

uly 2014

H O M E & G A R D EN

TO U R |

MORE HOME This article is from the July issue of Home, Santa Fe Real Estate Guide inside today’s New Mexican. Look for more stories inside Home every first Sunday of the month and at www.santafe newmexican. com/life/home.

ight lovely Santa Fe homes and gardens are featured in this year’s “Behind Adobe Walls” Home and Garden Tours. This is the 75th anniversary of the annual tours sponsored by the Santa Fe Garden Club. The tours highlight four properties on each of two consecutive Tuesday afternoons, July 22 and July 29. “The tour used to only be for the club members, and people walked from house to house,” said Barbara Templeman, who chairs the tour events with Enid Tidwell. “It was mostly on the east side. They wanted to raise money to help subsidize the spring and fall flower shows. We still have the flower shows.” “We are a member of Garden Club of America, and as a member of GCA, you must have flower shows,” said Sue-Ellen deBeer, the Santa Fe club’s publicity chairwoman. Half of the club members — about 35 of 70 — participate in the flower shows; the group also stages a horticulture show annually. This year’s tourgoers visit homes while being transported on four, 55-seat luxury buses. The tour begins at Hotel Santa Fe, where participants meet for lunch and shopping: The Santa Fe Garden Club staffs an orchid shop (showing flowers from New Earth Orchids) and sells photo cards by members. This year, there is also a raffle; prizes include an orchid in a vase, a family membership to the Santa Fe Botanical Garden and a Pam Duncan flower arrangement in an antique French coal scuttle. The homes on the 2014 tours run the gamut of styles, from Santa Fe Style to contemporary to Mexican. Locations include Wilderness Gate, the

Please see WALLS, Page E-7

By Dean Fosdick The Associated Press

You don’t need a garden to succeed as a home brewer, but growing your own ingredients is a flavorful step up. Much of the creativity involved in crafting a custom-made beer starts with the plants you select. “The modern palate pretty much demands some hops in beer, but beyond that, there’s a lot of choices available,” says Dennis Fisher, an organic farmer from Winterport, Maine. Fisher, who with his brother, Joe, wrote a popular reference book for beginners, The Homebrewer’s Garden (Storey Publishing, 1998), says one of the most satisfying aspects of home brewing is producing some or all of your own ingredients from scratch. “Scratch brewing,” the brothers wrote, “refers to the cultivation, preparation and use of hops, barley, malts and other non-barley grains, and adjuncts ranging from fruits to herbs to vegetables.” Growing your own ingredients ensures that the products are as organic, fresh and unique as possible. Homegrown also is cheaper than store-bought, the Fishers say. The four basic ingredients needed for brewing are malt (malting provides the fermented sugar that yeast feeds on to produce alcohol), hops (reduces spoilage and balances the sugar’s sweetness with a bitter flavor), brewer’s yeast and water (about 90 percent of beer’s content). “Hops are a particularly good [garden] choice because they thrive almost anywhere,” says Dennis Fisher. “They are also a great addition to a landscape — big, attractive columns of greenery.” If the water from your tap tastes good, then it also should taste good in the beer you make, Fisher says. “But if it’s chlorinated, then you need to let it stand overnight to allow the chemicals to outgas before brewing with it.” Adjuncts, in homebrew speak, are plants used to replace or complement hops to give beers distinctive flavors, odors and colors. “Just about any flower you can eat can be made into a beer,” says Rebecca Kneen, an organic farmer and writer from Sorrento, British Columbia, who wrote about backyard brewing in the new Groundbreaking Food Gardens, By Niki Jabbour (Storey Publishing). “It’s useful to experiment with them all though to determine how much should be used and when they should be added,” Kneen says. Some common and not so com-

Please see BREWING, Page E-7

VIEWS IN TESUQUE

sothebyshomes.com/santafe 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 505.988.8088

54 CALLE ENCANTO | $849,000 Modern 3BR home plus freestanding guest house in a quiet gated Tesuque community. #201401138 Ricky Allen | 505.470.8233

Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc. Equal Housing Opportunity.

For more information on this page, contact: Brian Barker, bbarker@sfnewmexican.com

OP EN SU N DAY 1 : 30 - 4: 30

SUPERB LOCATION

5 CHOCOLATE FLOWER | $1,095,000 Mountain views and a chef’s kitchen are highlights of this four-bedroom Las Campanas home. #201401632 Tim & Paula Galvin | 505.795.5990

755-1/2 ACEQUIA MADRE | $1,575,000 An unparalleled in-town retreat walking distance to shops, galleries, and restaurants. #201401617 Abigail Davidson | 505.570.0335

to see more extraordinary homes, turn to page E-3

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SANTA FE

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LOCALLY OWNED! INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED! ® LO

HISTORIC EASTSIDE 2:00 to 4:00 4

THE FRANK APPLEGATE ESTATE

CHARMING HISTORIC EASTSIDE COMPOUND

MAGNIFICENT, GRACIOUS, SOPHISTICATED

HISTORIC PROPERTY DATING FROM THe 1920’S

831 El Caminito - One of Santa Fe's oldest historic estates built in the 1700's, this home is restored and upgraded to modern standards. This beautiful and historic home features glorious outdoor spaces and a traditional Placita enclosed courtyard. 6 br, 7 ba, 10,180 sq.ft., 4-car garage, 1.74 acres. Directions: Camino De Monte Sol, turn on El Caminito. SantaFeProperties.com/201204218 D b rah B d ls n 505.660.4442 $3,300,000 Car Spi r 505.690.2856

347 Hillsid Av nu - Exuding Old Santa Fe charm, the core of the house is believed to have been Ft. Marcy officer quarters, possibly from the 1800's. The remodeled adobe home, a studio, sunroom and basement, and a 2-bedroom guesthouse, a private well, irrigated gardens, verdant lawns, mature trees and a stable. 5 br, 5 ba, 5,312 sq.ft., 2- or 3-car garage, 1 acre. Private listing. Gavin Sa rs 505.690.3070 $2,300,000

651 East Alameda - This northern New Mexican home is located on a tree-lined street in the heart of the famed Historic Eastside, adjacent to the Santa Fe Riverwalk, close to Patrick Smith Park, the Dale Ball Trails, and Canyon Road! The beautiful main house is complemented by a separate guesthouse. 4 br, 5 ba, 4,493 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 0.35 acre. SantaFeProperties.com/201402218 Linda Murphy 505.780.7711 $1,995,000

334 Garcia Street - Quintessential and authentic, this eastside historic home is on a double lot. It includes a house on half-an-acre, and one-third-acre of vacant land. There are hardwood floors, three fireplaces, vigas and handmade detailing. This is a landmark property, just half-a-block from Canyon Road. 3 br, 3 ba, 2622 sq.ft., double-car garage, 0.82 acre. SantaFeProperties.com/201306095 Marilyn Foss 505.231.2500 $1,900,000

OPEN 1:00 TO 3:00

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A RARE HISTORIC GEM, CLOSE TO THE PLAZA

HISTORIC PRESERVATION AWARD WINNER

SANTA FE ELEGANCE WITH SWEEPING VIEWS

A GORGEOUS HOME ON CANYON ROAD

523 E. Alameda - This elegant restored historic New Mexico Territorial home offers graceful, beautifully-landscaped grounds with Bocce court and a fabulous guesthouse. The main house offers single-level living all with original hardwood floors, and the guesthouse has two bedrooms and two baths. 5 br, 4 ba, 2,356 sq.ft., 0.36 acre. SantaFeProperties.com/201300081 Suzy Eskridg 505.310.4116 $1,795,000

318 Delgado Street - Originally built in the 1930's, this traditional Santa Fe adobe is re-visioned and recreated incorporating two modern aesthetics. Located adjacent to the pulse of Santa Fe's art beat, Canyon Road, where a parade of art and galleries feature a gamut of mediums and styles. 3 br, 3 ba, 2,590 sq.ft., 1-car garage. Directions: East on Canyon Road Right on Delgado. SantaFeProperties.com/201403317 Mik P rragli 505.660.9999 $1,395,000 H s : B b Williams 505.690.3104

153 Cantera Circle - This exceptional home is in a community just blocks from Canyon Road. There are sweeping, unobstructed views mountain and city light views, and the home is loaded with Santa Fe style, high ceilings and doors, and three portals. 3 br, 4 ba, 3,260 sq.ft., 2-car garage. Directions: Gonzales to Cantera. Second on left. There is no sign, gate code needed. SantaFeProperties.com/201400804 Gavin Sa rs 505.690.3070 $1,100,000

644 Canyon Road - This newly-priced property is one of the most magical, gracious and sophisticated homes on the market today, located right in the Heart of the Historic Eastside in the Atwill Compound. Sequestered behind adobe walls, you will experience serenity you might not expect being so close to the excitement of Canyon Road. 2 br, 2 ba, 2,052 sq.ft. SantaFeProperties.com/201401156 Linda Murphy 505.780.7711 $949,000

OPEN 1:00 TO 3:00

NEW LISTING

–––

NEW LISTING

THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS

TREY JORDAN DESIGNED CONTEMPORARY CONDO

DESIGNER ADOBE IN THE HEART OF SANTA FE

AN EASTSIDE HISTORIC JEWEL

558 E. Coronado - Located in a hidden corner of Santa Fe's eastside just off of the Santa Fe Trail, this serene, partial adobe Cutting Compound home affords privacy and seclusion with open country views of the Sun and Moon Mountains. So close to the Plaza you can hear church bells. 3 br, 3 ba, 2,845 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 0.26 acre. Directions: Old Pecos Trail left on E. Coronado. SantaFeProperties.com/201402802 Philip Vander Wolk 505.660.7506 $899,000 H s : Susan L mis 505.470.2001

806 E Palace Ave #C - This contemporary condo is sleek and elegant with upscale finishes, gorgeous concrete and wood floors, stainless counters and marble baths, beamed ceilings, a fireplace, a master with terrace, a private yard and gardens. A cozy loft separating the bedrooms has been used as a TV room and/or office. 2 br, 3 ba, 1,621 sq.ft. SantaFeProperties.com/201403057 Marilyn Foss 505.231.2500 $679,000

200 E. Barcelona Road - This is the ultimate, refurbished and mostly-adobe cottage, believed to be from the 1930's. Light and bright on one acre, it is super handy to shopping and restaurants. A tasteful remodel with traditional elements but a modern feel, with a new 625 sq.ft. garage/studio and a stone wall for privacy. 3 br, 2 ba, 1,650 sq.ft., 2-car garage. SantaFeProperties.com/201403274 Gavin Sa rs 505.690.3070 $675,000

441-443 Camino Monte Vista - Looking for authentic character and charm? This property has it in abundance! A pueblo-style adobe with vigas in every room, this home has three hand-sculpted fireplaces, wood floors and richly colored hand carved wood doors, and the bathrooms and kitchen have been sensitively updated. 4 br, 2 ba, 1,718 sq.ft. SantaFeProperties.com/201401855 Marilyn Foss 505.231.2500 $670,000

OPEN HOUSES AND OTHER HOMES OPEN 1:00 TO 3:00

OPEN 12:00 TO 3:00

OPEN 1:00 to 4:00

A GUADALUPE HISTORIC SITE

TESUQUE RIVERSIDE HOUSE WITH POOL

MOUNTAIN VIEWS, SUNSETS & CITY LIGHTS

LUXURY HOME IN RIDGE CANYON ESTATES

601-605 Alto Street - This extraordinary property overlooks the Santa Fe River on an outstanding riverfront tract with luxury compound or gallery potential. Three rental casitas along Alto Street total 2,138 sq.ft.; two lots total 12,237 sq.ft. Zoning is RAC with up to 70% lot coverage. 0.28 acre. This is where you want to be! SantaFeProperties.com/201203218 Ed R id 505.577.6259 $1,050,000

Big Tesuque Canyon Road - This truly wonderful, bucolic setting has the Rio Tesuque running right through it on one side, and an acequia running through the other. There is a full-size pool and guesthouse, perfect for entertaining. 3 br, 4 ba, 3937 sq.ft., 3-car garage 3.77 acres. Directions: Bishop's Lodge Road to Big Tesuque, 2nd house on the right. SantaFeProperties.com/20140318 Paul G ffr 505.660.6009 $895,000

215 Camino Encantado - Rock away! The front porch of this happy home faces south and west to give you magnificent big sky views, sunsets and city lights… so rock away! Just north of the Governor's Mansion in the community of the North Hills, just two miles to the Plaza, on paved roads. 3 br, 2 ba, 3,600 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 2 acres. Directions: Bishops Lodge, left on Camino Encantado. SantaFeProperties.com/201400814 Julia G lbar 505. 699.2507 $895,000

799 Camino Francisca - Located on the northside, this home is freshly painted. It is a gorgeous residence, all on one level, with a split bedroom floor plan and over-sized master bath with lots of natural window light, and a walled backyard. 3 br, 3 ba, 2,230 sq.ft., 2-car garage 0.52 acre. Directions: 599 to Ridgetop exit, left to Camino Francisca. SantaFeProperties.com/201402231 Johnny Chac n 505.690.1226 $639,000

OPEN 2:30 to 4:30

OPEN SATURDAY 12:00 TO 3:00, SUNDAy 1:00 to 4:00

OPEN 12:00 TO 2:00

A BEAUTIFUL BACKE HOME

CHARMING ELDORADO WITH LARGE STUDIO

CONVENIENT TO SHOPPING, SCHOOLS AND I-25

ON AN AGUA FRIA CORNER LOT

21 Puerto Road - Eldorado - One of the most beautiful homes Leif Backe built. A gallery hallway with brick floors welcomes you into the great room with 18-foot ceilings and large kiva. This one-of-a-kind home is designed for entertaining. 4 br, 3 ba, 3,200 sq.ft., 2-car garage 1.46 acres. Directions: Avenida Vista Grande, right on Chusco Rd. first right is Puerto Rd. Property is first on left. SantaFeProperties.com/201402844 Lisa Smith 505.570.5770 $548,000

32 Juego Road - A charming Eldorado home with big windows and big views, this listing has saltillo tile, vigas, and a kiva fireplace. There is a 400 sq.ft. studio/media room with sink, storage and cooling, and radiant heat, a covered portal and a fully-fenced yard. 3 br, 2 ba, 2350 sq.ft., 1-car garage 1.78 acres. Directions: Ave. Vista Grande, left on Torreon. Left on Juego, house is first on left. SantaFeProperties.com/201402841 Lisa Smith 505.570.5770 $379,500

49 Caballo Vi j , L 174 - La Pradera Model Home - The Sunflower, with its 13-foot living room ceiling, is aptly named for its bright sunny and open design with formal dining, gourmet kitchen and kiva fireplace. Three builders to choose from. 3 br, 2 ba, 1,856 sq.ft., 3-car garage. Directions: Richards to Dinosaur Trail, right into La Pradera Subdivision (3 entrances). SantaFeProperties.com/201304129 Bob Lee Trujill 505.470.0002 $369,900 Host: Ernie Zapa a 505.470.7314

1340 Alam Road - Here is a rare opportunity in Santa Fe to have an old world style partial adobe home with a strong private well on a lush corner lot. The private fully irrigated lot is a gardener’s delight with an abundant of well-established fruit trees, grapes, flowers and a beautiful green lawn. 3 br, 2 ba, 1,500 sq.ft., 0.2 acre. SantaFeProperties.com/201402793 Dani ll Burg ss 505.908.0566 $199,000

1000 Pas d P ral a . 216 Washing n Av . San a F , NM 87501 • 505.982.4466 SantaFeProperties.com . FaceBook.com/SantaFeProperties . LuxuryPortfolio.com All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair HousingAct and Equal OpportunitiesAct. Santa Fe Properties (“SFP”) strives to confirm as reasonably practical all advertising information herein is correct but assumes no legal responsibility for accuracy and should be verified by Purchaser. SFP is not responsible for misinformation provided by its clients, misprints, or typographical errors. Prices herein are subject to change. Square footage amounts and lot sizes are approximates.

BE•THINK•BUY

LOCAL


Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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SANTAFEstyle

Summer/Fall 2014 Edition

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SANTAFEstyle The New Summer/Fall Issue is Here! Look for copies on racks all around town and at all 3 of our offices. SantaFestyle, our premier publication, highlights some of the most beautiful properties in Santa Fe and Northern New Mexico.

NEW LISTING

37 CIRCLE DRIVE COMPOUND $2,385,000 This is one the best Sangre de Cristo Mountain view homes in Santa Fe and features the best of indoor and outdoor experiences with big art rooms, high ceilings, extensive landscaping, and a brilliant entertaining portal. Mike Baker 505.955.7993 #201403092

NEW LISTING

62 LEAPING POWDER $1,350,000 Perched on a hillside, this serene five-acre Arroyo Hondo retreat features fruit trees, a garden, mature landscaping,water-catchmentsystems,a3,870-squarefoot home,and a light-filled guesthouse.#201403007 Susan Kline & Lynden Galloway 505.501.1111 NEW L ISTING

13 VISTA VALLE GRANDE $775,000 Don’t miss the huge entertaining spaces with dropdead-gorgeous 180-degree sunset views. Home features a well equipped, open kitchen with plenty of space. Gorgeous custom travertine tilework. 2.5 acres. Janice Cox 505.954.5536 #201403015

• Outstanding Residences

• Spectacular Settings

• Architectural Triumphs

• Vanishing Land

OP EN SU N DAY 1 - 4

52 WEST GOLDEN EAGLE $1,599,000 Stately, elegant yet flowing and comfortable. This home is the epitome of lofty country living. Every room has been carefully designed to maximize majestic views of all 5 surrounding mountain ranges. Ann Brunson 505.946.2850 #201305698

N EW LIST IN G

COUNTYR WONDERLAND COMPOUND $1,295,000 This 30-acre Abiquiú compound bordering the Chama River includes a 2,800-square-foot home, barns, a studio, a workshop, cottages, corrals, two wells, 15.06 acre-feet of water rights, and gardens. Cindy Volper 505.901.1436 #201402833 OP EN SU N DAY 1 2 - 2

6 SENDERO DE LA VIDA $739,000 Beautiful custom home on 3 acres with a lovely entry courtyard and an inviting portal. The 3BR interior includes large glass doors, a chef’s kitchen and open dining area, a spacious living room, and a 2-car garage. David & Bonnie Sorenson 505.954.0735 #201302794 N EW LIST IN G

OPEN SUNDAY 2 - 4

OP EN SU NDAY 1 1 - 3

15 RABBITBRUSH ROAD $1,595,000 Located on one of only 5 estate lots in La Serena (larger acreage and equestrian), this contemporary masterpiece features broad sweeping views and guarded privacy. Conceived with a daring open floor plan. Paul McDonald 505.984.5111 #201400026

OP EN SU NDAY 1 1 - 1

1122 EAST ALAMEDA $1,150,000 NEW LISTING. A magical oasis on the historic Eastside, bordered by the Santa Fe River and the Acequia Madre. Spectacular gardens surround a hacienda-style main house with studio and separate office/casita. Stedman/Kehoe/Hirsch 505.501.8002 #201403120 N EW LISTING

125 APACHE CANYON $559,000 Tall trees and abundant wildlife surround this immaculate log home on almost 25 acres bordering Santa Fe National Forest. Two bedrooms and an enclosed loft (office/bedroom), great views. #201402859 Elayne Patton & Kendra Henington 505.660.8865 N EW LISTING

NEW LISTING

1007 SIERRA DEL NORTE $1,575,000 This stunning single-level residence and guesthouse features an open-concept floor plan, large study, five fireplaces, chef’s kitchen and beautiful perennial gardens all on a view-filled lot. Ray Rush & Tim Van Camp 505.984.5117 #201403272

NEW P RICE

54 VEREDA SERENA $950,000 Asophisticated natural sanctuary,this 3,400-squarefoot oasis on 2.5 acres has three bedroom suites, a great room, a family room, a gourmet kitchen, a deck with a hot tub, and a four-car garage. Emily Garcia 505.955.7963 #201402116 O P E N SUNDAY 1 - 4

132 MEJOR LADO $535,000 NEW LISTING. Wonderful Adobeworks model home. Views of Cerrillos Hills and the Sangre de Cristo, Jemez and Sandia mountains. Open plan design with a great room and dining room looking out to mountain sunsets. Darlene Streit 505.920.8001 #201403191

“All Things Real Estate” 12 - 2 pm on 1260-AM & 101.5-FM Streaming on ATREradio.com Associate Broker Rey Post and guests discuss real estate issues and offer an open house interview. O P E N SUNDAY 3 - 5

34 CRESENCIO LANE $489,000 Private and secluded near the end of a lush lane with easy access to Santa Fe and Los Alamos, this 4.4-acre property features a main house, architectdesigned guest house, and studio. MaryJoy Ford 505.946.4043 #201303618

456B ACEQUIA MADRE $475,000 Historic Eastside haven. A refuge from the hustle and bustle of today’s world. Step inside the courtyard and leave your cares behind. Adobe walls surround and protect this charming, 2-level, 1-bedroom retreat. Penelope Vasquez 505.954.5551 #201403198

SANTA FE BROKERAGES 231 Washington Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.8088 326 Grant Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.988.2533 417 East Palace Avenue | Santa Fe, NM 87501 | 505.982.6207 Sotheby’s International Realty and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered (or unregistered) service marks used with permission. Operated by Sotheby’s International Realty, Inc., Equal Housing Opportunity

PUEBLO ENCANTADO $399,000 A dazzling jewel in the crest of a Tesuque hillside wrapped in garden walls and with views of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains,this remarkable free-standing 2BR,2BA,1,367 sq. ft. condominium residence offers wonderful privacy. DavidRosen&ChristopherRocca505.954.0789 #201403044

62 EAST WILDFLOWER $499,000 Enchanting two-bedroom home on 2.87 acres. Katherine Blagden 505.955.7980 #201401983

Visit onlywithus.com to discover the benefits available through us alone.


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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

Featured Homes Listings in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate

ANAS LAS CAMP -4:30 0 3 : 1 N E P O

OPEN 1-4 RENO E S E T N O M

ANAS LAS CAMP -4:30 0 3 : 1 N E P O

Renowned builder Kim Dressel designed this home to capture the Sangre de Cristo Mountain views. This gracious residence includes 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 2 den/offices, family room and wine cellar. Directions: Las Campanas Drive, right at Sierra Rosa Loop. Dial 0–5–5–5 for access. Stay on Sierra Rosa Loop then left at Starlight Circle. $1,499,000

Monte Sereno Luxury Home 3012 Monte Sereno was built in 2007. Stunning Sangre Views and wonderful floor plan featuring 3 Bedrooms + Den/Media, 4 Baths, and 3237 SF. Great room design with soaring ceiling plus multiple, interconnected outdoor portals are perfect for entertaining. Come and tour your new home and fall in love! Property website: http://MonteSerenoLuxuryHome.CanBYours.com/

5 Chocolate Flower - Sangre And Sandia Mountain Views 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths plus office and media in Las Campanas.

MLS# 201402979

$1,250,000 MLS# 201401935

201401632

8 Starlight Circle-Kim Dressel Masterpiece With Views

Chef’s kitchen has 2 refrigerators, 2 dishwashers, 2 ovens, ice-maker and wine cooler. Directions: 599, right at Camino la Tierra, left at West Wildflower, left at Sunflower gate into Las Campanas. Dial 0–5–5–5 for access. Through the gate, left at Chocolate Flower. $1,095,000 MLS#

TIM GALVIN (505) 795-5990 • tim.galvin@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

COLEEN DEARING (505) 930-9102 • coleen@coleendearing.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com

,000 0 3 $ D E C REDU IEWS V E L B I D E INCR

CBTWR :00PM 4 M P 0 0 : OPEN 1

OPEN 2-4P

16A Camino Calabasas Perched on 2.5 acres, this light-filled 4,000-square-foot home was designed to capture dramatic Jemez and Ortiz views. Its open multilevel floor plan features living and dining rooms, gourmet kitchen with high-end appliances, a luxurious master suite, two private guest rooms, two studies, and a three-car garage with a workshop that could easily be converted into a media or game room. $819,000

1043 Camino Real Unique and Exquisite 2,750 SF, 3bdr, 2.5bth,

MLS# 201402316

$775,000 MLS# 201402956

90 Double Arrow Road With mountain views and city lights, this 3,035 square foot home is a quick drive to El Gancho, schools and downtown. With an open floor plan, the living room enjoys a high ceiling which takes advantage of solar gain and views of serene forest and mountains beyond. Many upgrades and renovations have been recently completed. $759,000 MLS# 201305053

NANCY LEHRER (505) 490-9565 • nancy.lehrer@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 982-6207 417 East Palace Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

OPEN 1-4 L SFE CLASSICA

1843 Arroyo Chamiso 3300 sq ft Classic Territorial on .750 of an acre .. Close to Hospital and St.Michaels High... lush landscaping with views of the Sangre de Christo Mnts.. Beautifully renewed master bath, with huge master bedroom and nice separation of guest rooms, fantastic outdoor entertaining areas. The house of light welcomes you to preview today... $752,000 MLS# 201403219

CONNIE YOUNG (505) 470-3826 • youngconnieyoung@yahoo.com Connie Youngs Real Estate Co. • (505) 820-3525 1574 Wilderness Gate Rd., Santa Fe, NM http://santafegalleryofhomes.com

OPEN 12-2 US! O E G R O G I’M

21 Puerto Road One of the most beautiful homes Leif Backe built. Gallery hallway with brick floors welcomes you into the greatroom with 18-foot ceilings and large kiva. A one-of-a-kind home designed for entertaining. 4 br, 3 ba, 3.200 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 1.46 acres. Directions: Avenida Vista Grande, right on Chusco Road. First right is Puerto Road. Property is first on left. $548,000 MLS# 201402844 LISA SMITH (505) 577-5770 • LisaSmithSantaFe@gmail.com Santa Fe Properties • (505) 982-4466 1000 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, NM 87501 SantaFeProperties.com

2car garage home on .773 acres lush with Aspen and Pinon trees. Mountain views, lovingly landscaped. Refrigerated AC, GFA and radiant heat. This home is light and bright with skylights, large windows uniquely placed for views of pleasant surroundings. Enjoy the quiet serenity of the rear courtyard and peaceful location of the home.

JOHN E. GROVER (505) 690-8100 • johngroversf@gmail.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://cbsantafe.com

NG

NEW LISTI OPEN 1-3

11 McGregor Lane Pitched roof, northern New Mexico style home has a spacious feel with soaring ceilings in the two living rooms and large picture windows framing the Sangres. Fully fenced grounds designed for outdoor enjoyment including a west-facing view deck. Four car garage/workshop, private well. Two adjacent .75 acre lots with additional water rights are offered separately for purchase. $653,000 MLS# 201403059 JENNIFER H. TOMES (505) 690-6477 • jentomes@me.com Dougherty Real Estate Co., LLC • (505) 989-7741 433 W. San Francisco Street, Santa Fe, NM 87501 http://dresf.com

CBTWR :00PM 3 0 0 : 2 1 OPEN:

300 Camino De Los Marquez Villeros Compound, a small community of nine condos in the Cordova Corridor. Literally a four minute walk, 1 minute car drive to 8 cafes, two pharmacies, Trader Joes, two bank branches and more. Spacious 3 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 2 car garage. Evaporative cooling. HOA fees pay for all exterior maintenance. Great primary or second home opportunity. $529,000 MLS# 201400679

MARTIN WRIGHT (505) 473-0698 • martin@santafesfar.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com

PAULA GALVIN (505) 795-5980 • paula.galvin@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

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MOO THORPE (505) 780-0310 • moo.thorpe@sothebyshomes.com Sotheby’s International Realty • (505) 988-2533 326 Grant Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87501 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

SE

OPEN HOU 1-5PM

Old Pecos Trail Estates - 83 Calimo Circle Graceful arches, 3,100sqft, gated NM Ranch, 3 brd, 2 ba, formal dining, breakfast nook, office, exercise, walk-in master closet, built-in bookcases, viga ceilings, fireplaces, patio, petrified wood fountain, drip system zen gardens; new stucco, nicho’s, skylights , western sunset views on 4 acres. 12 minutes to plaza, 2 miles south of El Gancho Fitness. $649,000 For Sale by Owner STERLING (505) 919-8001

OPEN 1-4

2814 Calle De Oriente Lovely two story Pueblo style home with tile and wood floors, corner fireplace, and backs up to dog park. House is 1,831 square foot, 4 bedroom, and 2.5 bathroom. $219,000 MLS# 201401347

SILVIA BOBADILLA (505) 470-9344 • silvia.nmre@yahoo.com Logic Real Estate • (505) 820-7000 228 S St. Francis Dr., Bldg. A-1, Santa Fe, NM www.SantaFeLogic.com


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Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

Featured Homes Listings in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate

VIEW LOT WED O L L A S E S HOR

Feature d

To feature your listing please call Wendy Ortega at 995-3892

Online:

OPEN 2-4

www.san tafenew mexican .com

/life/rea l_

LAS CAMPANAS LA

realestate@sfnewmexican.com by Wednesday at 3 pm

$214,000 MLS# 201400444

, April 27,

in the S anta Fe Area.

OPEN HOUSE OPE 1PM-3PM

ny

303944 Sotheb 216- 6106 • jef HA RA K AL y’s Inter f.hara 326 Gr national Re kal@sothebysh ant Av alt y omes sothebys e., Sant a Fe• (505) 988- .com 2533 , NM 87 homes.c 501 om/san ta fe

OPEN 1-4

5 Choc

olate

Flower Sangre de Las Camp home in Cristo and San anas “Te dia gat for entert ed Las Campana Mountain views e-Off Tour” – Sw ain eeping from this (4-way sto ing. Direction s. Fabulous che s: Ca f’s kitchen 4 + office/4.5 bat p), left at Chocolate h the Sunflow mino la Tierra, and but ler’ left Flower. $1,095,00 er gate. Dial 055 at West Wildflo s pantry 0 MLS# wer 5 for acc 201401 ess . Lef 632 t at TI

35 Kosh

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PART OF home and THE TEE one-bedro OFF TO UR! A lov om casita sweeping ely threein Las Ca views, gra bedroom mpanas. nd por tal, and a lav Features spacious ish maste include living/dinin r suite. $899,000 g, gourme MLS# 201 t kitchen 401262 ,

(505 M Sotheb ) 795-5990 GA LV IN y’s In • tim 326 Gr ter national Re @galv insantafe.c ant Aven alt y • (5 om sothebys ue, Sant a Fe 05) 988-25 33 , NM 87 homes.c 501 om/san ta fe

OPEN 1-4: 1-4:00 REDUCED $50,000

NEIL LY (505) 66 ON 0-8600 Sotheb y’s Inter • neil@ neillyon nationa .com 326 Gr ant Aven l Realt y • (505 ue , Sa ) 988-25 nt a Fe, sothebys 33 NM 87 homes.c 501 om/san ta fe

LAS CA CAMPANAS OPEN 1:30-4:30

41 Sunfl

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er “Teein in Las Ca g Off Op mpanas en House with cas beamed Tour” – ita! Gorge Adobe ma ceilings, ous views plastered sterpiece and doo in 3 dire walls, 5 rs. $895,0 ctions, hig fireplaces 00 MLS# h , large roo 201303 ms, great 174 floors AS

CANYON ROAD C OPEN 1-3

53 HO

mountainLLYHOCK CIR suite sep views in Las Cam CLE Close-in custom and dishwaration. Eat-in kitc panas’ rolling hills hilltop hom e with covered asher. Six-burne hen with granite . 4BR/3BA wit h vie Por tal wit w por tal. Diningr range, double countertops, newexcellent maste ove walled couh pond and firepla room shares cor n. Kitchen ope refrigerator r ns to wis ner rtyard pro ce teria vides priv provides for out fireplace with livin door ent acy. $85 g room. ert 0,000 ML S# 201304 aining. Another LE SL IE (505) 905

660-99 City 21 • M UT H 1709 PaDifferent RealtLeslie@LeslieM seo de uth.com Peraltay • (505) 983-1 ht tp://ww 557 w.CityD , Sant a Fe, NM ifferentR ealty.co 87501 m

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Las Ca from this 3+den/3.5 mpanas “Tee-O with isla ff Tour” bath hom nd, – Panora e in gat Drive, righ breakfast noo mic Jem k and wa ed Las Campana ez view lk-i Loop, left t at Sierra Rosa gate 7. Dia n pantry. Direct s. Gourmet kitc at Ridget hen ions: Las MLS# 201 l op, righ Campana t at Bluesk 0555 for access 401260 . Rig s y. Hoste d by Pau ht at Sierra Ros la Galvin a . $849,0

TIM (505 Sotheb ) 795-5990 GA LV IN y’s In • tim 326 Gr ter national Re @galv insantafe.c ant Aven alt y • (5 om sothebys ue , Sant a Fe 05) 988-25 33 , NM 87 homes.c 501 om/san ta fe

NEW LISTING

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2014 TH E NEW

602A Ca

on Road home (su three bedblime idea), this Used as a gal lery casita fea rooms and thr exquisite, light-fil (current use ee ) conditionetures a bedroo bathrooms. Theled proper ty feaor as a m, and kitc d. In the Doug bathroom and historic attach tures hen hav e also bee Atwill-designe kitchen--all upd ed studio fixtures, d ma appliances ate n ele and mater gantly update in structure, the d and air d with top bathroom ials. $1, 795,000 -of s (505) MLS# 201 -the-line JEFF

HL EY (505) 92 M ARGE 0-2300 TSON • ashley Sotheb .margets y’s Inter on@soth nationa 231 Wa ebyshom l Realt y shingto es.com • (505 n Aven ) 988-80 ue , Sant a sothebys 88 Fe, NM homes.c 87501 om/san ta fe

COLEEN DEARING (505) 930-9102 • coleen@coleendearing.com Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty • (505) 988-7285 2000 Old Pecos Trail, Santa Fe, NM http://www.cbsantafe.com

Listings

estate

OPEN 1:30-4

12.5 Acres to Build Your Dream Home Fabulous View lot with on site well, electric, and natural gas ready for you to build your dream home. Located adjacent to Eldorado Community and bordering Galisteo Recreation Preservation lands. 360 Views FOREVER! Bring your horses! Property website: http://CieloTranquiloLot.view24hours.com/

Homes

Sunday

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

Showcase Properties Specialties in the Santa Fe Area. Online: www.santafenewmexican.com/life/real_estate O T 0

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ROCK AWAY! MOUNTAIN VIEWS, SUNSETS, CITY LIGHTS 215 Camino Encantado The front porch of this happy home faces south and west to give you magnificent big sky views, sunsets and city lights… so rock away! Just north of the Governor’s Mansion and located in the community of the North Hills, this property is just two miles to the Plaza, on paved roads. A must-see home; a charming combination of cozy and elegant, the sellers have worked hard to hand over a 21st century updated property with the individuality and quality construction of the past century. All the up-grades you could want in a home to make for easy living. 3 br, 2 ba, 3,600 sq.ft., 2-car garage, 2 acres. Directions: Bishops Lodge Road, left on Camino Encantado, property is just past Camino Del Norte. MLS #201400814. Offered At $895,000 JULIA GELBART · 505. 699.2507 JuliaGelbart@gmail.com SANTA FE PROPERTIES · 505.982.4466 SantaFeProperties.com

AS 0 N 3 PA O 4: M T A S C 1:30 A L N E OP

KIM DRESSELL MASTERPIECE WITH SANGRE VIEWS 8 Starlight Circle, Las Campanas Renowned builder Kim Dressel designed this home to capture the Sangre de Cristo Mountain views. This gracious residence includes 3 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, 2 den/ offices, family room and downstairs wine cellar. The third bay of the garage is walled off for a separate workshop/ art studio space. There are relaxing view portales off the living, kitchen, master and guest bedrooms. Directions: Las Campanas Drive past Clubhouse Drive, right at Sierra Rosa Loop. Dial 0–5–5–5 for access. Stay on Sierra Rosa Loop, then left at Starlight Circle. MLS# 201402979 Offered at $1,499,000 TIM GALVIN 505.795.5990 tim.galvin@sothebyshomes.com SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY 505.988.2533 sothebyshomes.com/santafe

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Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Walls: Proceeds benefit many groups Continued from Page E-1 east side, downtown and the La Tierra area. “Besides the gardens, tour participants get to see a lot of interesting collections,” Tidwell said. “We have one house this year with a stellar collection of Native American beadwork, rugs and sculpture. Another house has wonderful flea market items and things from South America — textiles, pottery, tchotchkes. “Another house is full of pictorial Mexican rugs. It is a riot of color.” The tours introduce visitors and residents to New Mexico’s greatest horticultural challenge: creating beautiful gardens and landscapes in an area that receives less than 12 inches of rainfall a year. Club members point out that once plants such as roses, lavender, rosemary and lilacs are established during their initial growing season, they thrive with very little water. “We have one house this year that started out with an English garden,” she said, “but after they got their first water bill, they redid the whole thing with xeric plants, and it’s quite lovely.” One house on the tour has a pair of planted pig troughs from China. In the garden spaces of another is a pond, a relatively unusual feature in Northern New Mexico residences. Plant identification is also provided during the tours, deBeer said. “We have plant lists by common names and genus and species that we hand out to anyone who is interested.” Meeting minutes of the Santa Fe Garden Club tell the story of the organization’s inception. “In October 1939, at the beginning of World War II, 11 intrepid Santa Fe women met at a member’s home to found the Santa Fe Garden Club. Roll call was taken (using the member’s husband’s name — a tradition that endured until the 1980s, when Ann Zinn announced that she was Ann Quarles Zinn, not Mrs. Dale Zinn), annual membership dues were established at $2, and thus began the legacy of the Santa Fe Garden Club.” In the spring of 1940, club members determined that they needed to raise funds to finance their annual autumn chrysanthemum shows and springtime bulb shows. The Behind Adobe Walls Home and Garden Tours, begun in the summer of 1940, answered that need. In the early years of the tour, members would drive their cars or walk to each featured house and enjoy tea and cookies in the gardens. The ticket price in 1949 was $1.50. Reservations were made at the Indian Detours desk at La Fonda on the Plaza. In 1972, buses were arranged for transportation. During the 1980s, the tours attracted 900 visitors each summer. In the 2000s,

Leo’s handmade home

One of the sights on this year’s ‘Behind Adobe Walls’ Home and Garden Tours on July 22 and July 29.

Melissa Leo’s homestead in Stone Ridge, N.Y., includes a fantastical stone-and-brick tower that the actress had dreamt of building for decades. PHOTOS BY RANDY HARRIS/THE NEW YORK TIMES

COURTESY PHOTOS

heart that was living with me for about 10 years decided to put it up.” Heard said he loved their falling-apart STONE RIDGE, N.Y. house, with its ornate copper ceiling that rom the road, Melissa Leo’s he could reach up and touch because it 200-year-old farmhouse would was so low. He described with fondness seem to be standard issue for Ulster the old deck in the back, which had a railCounty, with all the usual trappings: ing so decrepit it would drop off in chunks on the porch, a hammock, some wind at odd intervals, and the front door, which chimes, a few director’s chairs, an armless “was never locked, though if it was, the keys mannequin wearing a flowery dress and a lying on a wicker stool next to it were not baseball cap, her arms strewed about her enough to open it — it required a deft hand, feet; up above, an enormous peace sign and some tricks with your foot.” (Woodstock is less than 20 miles away). He added, “It was things like this that made But something is growing — erupting — me love that house, and as my mother takes out the back, a stone-and-brick-encrusted down more walls and puts new ones up, she turret sprouting with mosaic tile, niches has managed to find a way to invent new peopled with animalistic boulders, a stone eccentricities as she repairs the old ones.” hand brandishing a torch. This side of the Five years ago, Leo said, “when being on house is clad in boards shaped like waves. my own and realizing the fantasy of havOver the kitchen door, a swoopy extrusion ing a partner doesn’t really work,” Jason covered in swirls of tiles and river rocks is a Downs, an actor and musician with a young little bit Gaudí, a little bit Morris Lapidus. family who was then living in the area, Leo’s recent fame came at the unlikely, and called and asked if she needed some help therefore thrilling, age of 51, when she won an with the house, one of many friends who Oscar for her role as the monster mother to have cycled through to lend a hand. Leo stands before the stone-and-brick Mark Wahlberg in The Fighter, and she does This is when things got really interesting. tower that she built by hand. have a reputation for iconoclastic behavior. The rough plan, as far as this reporter can We have seen, in these past few years, that make out, was to extend the kitchen back she is very much her own bear. and out, topping one corner with a tower. In 2011, in the weeks preceding the AcadThe stairwell would be widened. And emy Awards ceremony, Leo, now 53, took there would be all manner of idiosyncratic out full-page ads in the Hollywood trade embellishments twining and climbing magazines, showing herself in glamorous around all of the above. attire, captioned with the word “Consider Although she is a fair-to-middling car…,” an act of self-promotion for which she penter, a better plasterer and a fine mosaic was widely criticized. When she won, artist, she is not able to hand-build every and accepted her Best Supporting Actress part of her house herself. (And she is lucky award with a profanity, the approbation that enough — and tough enough — to be workfollowed — for the swearing, as much as ing as an actor seemingly nonstop at an age for the win — washed away all the sniping. when her contemporaries are getting the And last year, she won an Emmy for her brushoff from Hollywood.) Leo needs colguest appearance on Louie, the comedian laborators. A bedroom in Leo’s home. Leo’s son Louis C.K.’s FX show, as a woman who Constant van Hoeven, 35, a Dutch artist remembers his mother constantly teardemands service in kind for oral sex. and filmmaker who also works as a carpening down rooms since buying the propBut this house is something else, an utterly erty in the 1990s. ter, is one of her most adept conspirators. unique kind of performance. And although Five years ago, Downs asked him to come Leo has lived here since 1990, when she was paint the house. One job turned into many, with four rooms inside — it came with 11 30 and a single mother with a young son, it as van Hoeven found himself able to execute has only lately metamorphosed. On a recent acres, a barn and a shed. In their first winLeo’s ideas with uncanny accuracy, although ters there, she and her son slept downstairs Thursday, Leo, a slight, animated figure in a their exchanges baffled co-workers. in front of the wood-burning stove. baggy T-shirt and frayed jeans cut off below Time to see the tower. Up the newly The other day, her son, Jack Heard, now her knees, her Titian hair caught in a ponywidened stairwell, the second floor held in 27 and an artist living in California, recalled place with polished maple branches from tail, explained that for much of her first two being small and frail as a child, and often decades in the house, she was working too a tree downed in a recent storm, past the hard, and making too little, to do much more sick. He remembers his mother constantly landing veneered with windfall oak in an tearing down rooms, he said, “to get out than dream about altering the place. elaborate star pattern laid last week by van from the walls whatever 200-year-old cat Hoeven, and into the turret, which is empty In 1993, Leo joined the edgy new police dander, newspapers or old sweaters were of furniture but full of details. ensemble Homicide: Life on the Street, and between them, making me sick. She did it There are diamond-paned windows, spent five years traveling back and forth to slowly, one room at a time, for most of my windows with stained glass and a curious Baltimore. Her grandfather had given her life, which meant that some rooms had to be round window 5 feet up lined in bark cloth a small loan for a portion of the down paydone over again.” and fitted with a perch. Leo designed this ment on this house, which cost $140,000. Other small improvements happened, a part like a climbing wall, with strategically When Homicide took off, she tried to pay bit of painting, a new plywood ceiling in the placed hand and foot holds. him back (he refused). But the success of the series allowed her to buy the house out- living room that would be supplanted by a Leo said that when the house is finished, rather dazzling copper number Leo ordered she will start work on the barn and the right. Barely more than 1,000 square feet, and shaped like a child’s drawing of a house from a company in Indiana, which sat in shed, which she is planning to turn into an pieces for years until, she said, “a sweet— a front door flanked by two windows, actors’ retreat.

By Penelope Green

the tour was cut back to two days and the club added its Pequeño Tours for 40 or fewer guests. Proceeds from the annual tours now yield nearly $20,000. “The money we raise from these tours goes back to the community in various ways: conservation projects, education and riverbank maintenance,” Templeman said. The club’s first charity projects were during World War II and included victory gardens, a milk depot, providing flowers for patients at Bruns Army Hospital and sending clothing to Holland. The club planted the courtyard garden at the Museum of Fine Arts (today’s New Mexico Museum of Art) in 1951 and has maintained it ever since; and likewise the Amelia White Rose Garden. Proceeds from the tours help pay for the Museum of Spanish Colonial Art Garden, which features herb, flower and vegetable types that were grown during the Colonial New Mexico era. “A lot of our money now goes to the Santa Fe Botanical Garden. We have a dedicated plot there,” Templeman said. Proceeds also benefit programs in the grade schools; an endowed scholarship for a student at the Santa Fe Community College; and funding for a variety of environmental and conservation groups. Other recent beneficiaries of tour revenues are Los Amigos de Valles Caldera, an education/ science center for which the garden club donated a microscope; Lighthawk, which uses volunteer pilots to provide aerial photographs of areas of environmental concern to community and business leaders, scientists and conservationists; and the Museum of Indian Arts & Culture, where club members landscaped the sculpture garden. The Santa Fe Garden Club is proud to still be providing a glimpse of the secret gardens “behind adobe walls.” The cost per person per tour is $75. For reservations and tickets, call West Wind Travel, 984-0022.

The New York Times

F

Brewing: Recycle ingredients Continued from Page E-1 mon home brewer’s garden adjuncts include: Herbs: (Bittering) Sage, horehound, gentian, yarrow. (Flavoring) Juniper, rosemary, ginger, oregano, mint, thyme. (Aromatic) Lavender, lemon balm, chamomile. Flowers: Nasturtiums, wild roses, scented geranium leaves, daylilies and marigolds. Vegetables and fruits: Rhubarb, blackberries and elderberries, pumpkin, chile peppers, sorghum, apples. “We like to add spruce tips to some beers,” Fisher says. “It’s more of a wildgathered than homegrown adjunct that in Colo-

nial times was a hops substitute.” For even “greener” beer, recycle the brewing ingredients and their byproducts, Kneen says. “You can compost them, feed them to pigs and sheep, put some into your chicken feed,” she says. “We use them heavily as mulch. … The gray water [relatively clean wastewater] is used for irrigation on our pastures. That’s the bulk of what comes out of our brewery.”

ON THE WEB u For more about growing hops in home gardens, see: www.oregonhops.org/culture2.html

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THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

Open Houses

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Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

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Open Houses NORTH WEST

A-38 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 34 Cresencio Lane - Private and secluded near the end of a lush lane with easy access to Santa Fe and Los Alamos, this 4.4 acres property features a main house, architect-designed guest house and studio. $489,000. MLS 201303618. (Hwy 285 N; at 503 intersection. Turn left (CR103), follow to Cresencio Lane.) MaryJoy Ford 505-577-0177 Sotheby’s International Realty.

G-36 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 3012 Monte Sereno Drive - Luxury Home Near Santa Fe Opera. Soaring Ceilings, Sangre Views, Wonderful Floor Plan for Entertaining. 3 Bedrooms + Den/Media/Bonus room, 4 Baths, 2 Car heated garage. Just gorgeous! $1,250,000. MLS 201401935. (285 N, Tesuque/Opera Exit, Left under highway and straight ahead into Monte Sereno, Left on Monte Sereno Drive to top.) Coleen Dearing 505-930-9102 Coldwell Banker Trails West Realty.

O-16 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 21 Painted Horse - One of the truly great contemporary homes in all of Las Campanas, this dramatic and refined home features staggering Jemez views through the living room’s 25-foot wall of glass. $1,875,000. MLS 201402296. (Estates V. Second Wildhorse entrance, then take a left on Painted Horse to end of culde-sac.) Evelyn Spiker 505-930-0999 Sotheby’s International Realty.

O-18 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 52 West Golden Eagle - Stately, Elegant yet Flowing and Comfortable! This home is the epitome of lofty country living. Every room has been carefully designed to maximize majestic views of all 5 surrounding mountain ranges. $1,599,000. MLS 201305698. (599 to Camino la Tierra, follow signs toward Club House. Right on Pojoaque Ridge, left on West Golden Eagle, house last on left.) Ann Brunson 505-690-7885 Sotheby’s International Realty.

P-17 2:00p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 100 Amberwood Loop - Located on the Sunrise Golf Course in Las Campanas, this one-level home offers great outdoor living with a spacious portal, a barbeque center, a rooftop view deck and a walled, landscaped yard. $1,000,000. MLS 201402082. (4 br, 4 ba, 599 to Cam La Tierra to Las Campanas Drive to Pojoaque Ridge to Amberwood.) Suzy Eskridge 505-310-4116 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

Q-15 1:30p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 8 Starlight Circle - Designed and constructed by Kim Dressel, this magnificent 4,650square-foot home enjoys mountain views from its living and dining rooms, master suite kitchen, two dens or offices, and guest bedroom. $1,499,000. MLS 201402979. (St. Francis or Guadalupe North to 599. Right at Camino la Tierra to Las Campanas Dr, to Sierra Rosa Loop Gate on right. Dial 0–5–5–5 for access. Once through gate, stay on Sierra Rosa, then left to #8) Tim Galvin 505-795-5990 Sotheby’s International Realty.

Q-18 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 14 Shaman - This brand new home is on 2.49 private acres in the highly desirable community of Las Campanas. The 2,589 square foot home is lightfilled and has spectacular southerly views of the Ortiz Mountains. $849,000. MLS 201403217. (West on Camino la Tierra to Las Campanas Drive, left on Koshari, left on Shaman) Stephanie Yoder 505-412-9911 Sotheby’s International Realty.

Q-22 11:00a.m. - 3:00p.m. — 15 Rabbitbrush Road - Located on one of only 5 estate lots in La Serena (larger acreage and equestrian), this contemporary masterpiece features broad sweeping views and guarded privacy. Conceived with a daring open floor. $1,595,000. MLS 201400026. (Camino La Tierra to Los Suenos Trail to La Serena Trail to Rabbitbrush.) Doug Kaye/Owner 575-7702797 Sotheby’s International Realty.

Q-23 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 16-A Camino Calabasas - Perched on 2.5 acres, this light-filled 4,000-square-foot home was designed with an open multilevel floor plan that captures dramatic views of sunsets and the Jemez and Ortiz mountains. $819,000. MLS 201402316. (Camino La Tierra, left on Arroyo Calabasas, left on Camino Calabasas, 16-A on left.) Nancy Lehrer 505-490-9565 Sotheby’s International Realty.

R-28

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1:30p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 5 Chocolate Flower - Mountain views and a chef’s kitchen are highlights of this threebedroom home conveniently located in Estates II of Las Campanas. The private attached casita includes a kitchenette and full bath. $1,095,000. MLS 201401632. (Hiway 599, Right @ Camino la Tierra, Left @ West Wildflower (the 4-way Stop). Left at the Sunflower gate into Las Campanas – Call 0-5-5-5 for access. Thru gate, left at Chocolate Flower to #5 on left.) Paula Galvin 505-7955980 Sotheby’s International Realty.

1:00p.m. - 3:30p.m. — 309 Armijo/Rodriguez D - Nestled into a view-filled ridge above Palace Avenue is a beautiful Zachery designed home. Fine detailing and superior finishes, wood cabinets, granite surfaces, and elegant fireplaces. $695,000. MLS 201301510. (3 br, 3 ba, Follow Armijo North from Palace, past Hillside and follow my signs to top of hill past where Rodriguez and Armijo join.) David Woodard 505-920-2000 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 586 Camino Del Monte Sol - This quintessential Eastside adobe compound, built by Freemont Ellis in 1922, is near Canyon Road and features a 3-bedroom main residence, a freestanding guesthouse, and numerous amenities. $1,499,000. MLS 201401071. (Acequia Madre to Camino Del Monte Sol. Go right; house is on the right just before Camino Santander.) Francesca Stedman 505-670-5566 Sotheby’s International Realty.

T-20

3:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 606 E Palace Avenue - Casa Palacio: Casual, elegant living. Impeccably restored c. 1905 Victorian treasure w/beautiful natural light, hardwood floors, rock & brick construction. In the heart of Santa Fe’s historic eastsid $865,000. MLS 201200798. (4 br, 2 ba, Historic Plaza to East Palace Avenue. Call The Efrain Prieto Group at 505.470.6909.The Efrain Prieto Group) The Efrain Prieto Group 505-470-6909 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

12:00p.m. - 2:00p.m. — 6 Sendero De La Vida - Beautiful custom home on 3 acres with a lovely entry courtyard and an inviting portal. The 3BR interior includes large glass doors, a chef’s kitchen and open dining area, and spacious living room. $739,000. MLS 201302794. (Avenida Aldea, right on La Vida Trail, left on Tierra grande, left on Sendero de la Vida.) David Sorenson 505-670-5515 Sotheby’s International Realty.

U-21 2:30p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 22 Camino de Vecinos - This bright 1,912-square-foot Aldea townhome offers an openconcept living space, a charming kitchen, a lovely patio and garden, and three bedrooms, including a master suite with mountain views. $368,000. MLS 201401552. (599 to Frontage Road to Avenida Aldea, left on Botanica, then right on Camino de Vecinos.) Katherine Blagden 505-490-2400 Sotheby’s International Realty.

U-36 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 137 Camino De Las Crucitas - This inviting, light downtown home is on an oversized irrigated and landscaped corner lot, and is ready to move into! $414,000. MLS 201402639. (3 br, 2 ba, St. Francis to Camino del las Crucitas) Elaine Rivera 505-6607291 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

V-21 12:00p.m. - 2:00p.m. — 8 Camino Serpiente - Beautiful 3,000 sq ft, single-level home on 2.5 acres with a great design, an open living area, a chef’s kitchen, two master suites plus a guest room and office, high-end finishes, views and patio. $698,000. MLS 201301002. (599 to Camino La Tierra, Frontage Rd to Sierra Azul, left on Bosque Azul to Camino Serpiente) Bonnie Sorenson 505-954-0736 Sotheby’s International Realty.

V-36 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 222 Fiesta ST - A complete remodel has made this 1950’s adobe home brand new! Hard Plastered Walls, new flooring, new insulated windows, new wiring, new Bri roof!, Air Conditioning, off street parking, and more!! $375,000. MLS 201401314. (St. Francis DR North to Sabino St Turn Right then right on Fiesta ST. Home is on Right) Bernadette Parnell 505-629-5126 Keller Williams Realty.

NORTH EAST

C-41 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 11 McGregor Lane - Northern New Mexico style home featuring 3B/2B, 4-car garage, soaring ceilings and large windows framing the Sangres. Open floor plan with two living areas. Fully fenced grounds. Private well. $653,000. MLS 201403059. (Tesuque Village Road to McGregor Lane at the junction of Old Coach Road. Look for Dougherty Real Estate Co., LLC signs!) Jennifer H. Tomes - Broker Associate 505690-6477 Dougherty Real Estate Co.,LLC.

W-48 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1567 Cerro Gordo - Heaven on Cerro Gordo. Exquisite home on 1.385 tree covered acres in the foothills above the Historic Eastside 5 minutes from the Plaza. Located at the end of a private lane for privacy. Special!!! $650,000. MLS 201305248. (Gonzales to Cerro Gordo. Property is on the left quite far up Cerro Gordo. Open House sign at entrance to lane.) 505-6701420 Claire Lange Real Estate.

SOUTH WEST

FF-30 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 2814 Calle De Oriente - Lovely two story Pueblo style home with tile and wood floors, corner fireplace, and backs up to dog park. House is 1,831 square foot, 4 bedroom, and 2.5 bathroom. $219,000. MLS 201401347. (Cerrillos Road to Clark Road then turn left onto Calle De Oriente. House will be on the right.) Silvia Bobadilla 505-470-3344 Logic Real Estate.

HH-35 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 2321 Calle Luminoso - New Price! Open floor plan single-level townhouse w/fireplace, sliding doors to patio allowing the outdoors to come in. The master has an expansive closet and a sliding door to patio and backyard. $199,000. MLS 201402443. (2 br, 2 ba, From St. Francis Dr turn on to West Zia and then left on to Galisteo and right on to Calle Luminoso.) Danielle Burgess 505-908-0566 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

KK-30 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 2852 Plaza Amarilla - Single level, free-standing home in lovely Park Plazas. Established landscaping, tall trees, adjacent to outdoor path and close to southside amenities including the Community College. $359,000. MLS 201402964. (3 br, 2 ba, Rodeo Road, south on Camino Carlos Rey, right into Park Plazas, second right, home on left.) Nancy Lewis 505231-5337 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

V-48

3:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 62 East Wildflower - Wonderful seclusion can be enjoyed in this enchanting two-bedroom home on 2.87 acres minutes from town. A wrap-around porch offers sweeping mountain views. A separate furniture package is available. $499,000. MLS 201401983. (599 to Camino La Tierra, right at 4-way stop onto E. Wildflower.) Katherine Blagden 505-490-2400 Sotheby’s International Realty.

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 930 Paseo De Andres - Only five minutes from downtown in the secure El Cañon subdivision, Los Arboles offers privacy, views, beautiful gardens, an orchard, and an amazing three-bedroom house sited on five acres. $1,295,000. MLS 201402276. Judith Ivey 505-577-5157 Sotheby’s International Realty.

R-38

W-40

1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 799 Camino Francisca - Located on the northside, this home is freshly painted. A gorgeous home all on one level with a split bedroom floor plan and over-sized master bath with lots of natural window light. Walled backyard. $639,000. MLS 201402231. (3 br, 3 ba, 599 to Ridgetop exit, left to Camino Francisca.) Johnny Chacon 505-690-1226 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 831 El Caminito - One of SF’s oldest historic estate properties originally built in the 1700s, with glorious outdoor spaces on 1.74 acres, including a landscaped traditional Placita courtyard & clay tennis court. $3,300,000. MLS 201204218. (6 br, 7 ba, Camino De Monte Sol, Turn on El Caminito.) Deborah Bodelson & Cary Spier 505-660-4442 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

FF-40 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 208 Plaza Montana - This ideal intown home features a formal dining room, a great room, a library or office, a kitchen with a large island, master and guest suites, a portal, and professionally landscaped gardens. $700,000. MLS 201401794. (Old Pecos Trail and St. Michael’s corner on southside, The Plazas At Pecos Trail. Enter, then first left, then left again.) Ed Schroeder 505-690-1007 Sotheby’s International Realty.

FF-41 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 696 E. Zia Road - Wonderful Contemporary Stamm - Completely renovated, high end finishes, wood floors, open gourmet kitchen, large and comfortable main living area with fireplace, family room, 0.7 ace lot. Wood Gormley $720,000. MLS 201401726. (Old Pecos Trail east on Zia follow the open house signs.) Mary Guzman 505-570-1463 Keller Williams Realty.

II-40 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 2329 Santa Barbara - This beautiful home in Sol y Lomas is sited on an outstanding lot on a quiet cul-de sac offering mountain and sunset views. Recently remodeled kitchen. Large flat yard. Oversized garage. $595,000. MLS 201402617. (4 br, 3 ba, Old Pecos Trail to Santa Barbara Drive. West on Santa Barbara Drive past Enlace. House is on the right.) Sam Escobedo 505-946-8310 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 90 Double Arrow Road - This 3,035 sq. ft. home offers mountain views, an open floorplan an upgraded kitchen, and an upgraded master bath. Two lovely water features complement several outdoor patios and decks. $759,000. MLS 201305053. (Old Santa Fe Trail to Double Arrow Road. Continue on Double Arrow until #90 on right.) Moo Thorpe 505-780-0310 Sotheby’s International Realty.

12:00p.m. - 5:00p.m. — 7326 Avenida El Nido - Come see what everyone is talking about. From $194,900, Homewise Homes are designed to fit your lifestyle and built to save you 45% on utility costs. Energy saving features at a price you can afford. $194,900. (From Airport Rd, turn onto Paseo del Sol WEST. Turn right onto Jaguar Rd to dead end, then turn right on Avenida El Nido.) Patrice Von Eschen 505-690-1811 Homewise, Inc.

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 624 Paseo de la Cuma - Downtown Adobe Condominium - 2 Bedrooms, 2 1/2 baths, Charming with lots of light, walk to the plaza, wonderful outdoor spaces and a wonderful deck to just while away the day. $470,000. MLS 201401726. (Old Taos Highway to Paseo de La Cuma - follow the open house signs.) Loni Tolk 505-570-9768 Keller Williams Realty.

1:00PM-3:00PM - 102 Victoria Street - On the Historic Eastside, this 3B/3B adobe has been lovingly renovated. Vigas & beams, hand-troweled walls, 3 fireplaces, walled flagstone gardens & more.Quintessentially charming home near Canyon Rd. $899,000. MLS 201400060. (Acequia Madre to Cam. don Miguel to Cam. San Acacio to Victoria St.or Cam. del Monte Sol to Camino Santander. Left on Cam. San Acacio and left on Victoria St. Look for Dougherty RE Co.,LLC signs!) Clara L. Dougherty - Broker Associate 505-690-0471 Dougherty Real Estate Co., LLC.

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 29 Calle Debra - Absolutely adorable horse property with views. Backs up to Santa Fe River! Quiet and Private! $399,000. MLS 201401378. (Airport Road west. Cross 599. Airport Road becomes Paseo Real. Left on Calle Debra (across from polo grounds). 2nd house on right.) Lise Knouse 505-501-3385 Keller Williams Realty.

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 1229 S. Summit - Striking one of a kind modern design with top of the world views in prestigious High Summit. Unique yet truly open-concept floorplan with 2 masters. $1,645,000. MLS 201402376. (Hyde Park Rd east to High Summit to Summit Dr to #1229.) Robin Zollinger 505-660-5170 Barker Realty LLC.

U-41

AA-45

KK-40

OO-13

2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 1024 Mansion Ridge Road - This beautiful estate celebrates sweeping Sangre de Cristo vistas and city lights, from its expansive three acre hilltop setting. It includes lovely gardens and multiple outdoor living areas. $2,800,000. MLS 201301903. (Bishops Lodge Road, left on Mansion Drive, right on Mansion Ridge Road.) Mary Kehoe 505-310-1422 Sotheby’s International Realty.

1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 328 Camino Cerrito - Off Canyon Road, this beautiful Pueblo-style Eastside estate — a 2,298-square-foot residence and a 579-square-foot guesthouse — has the expansive feel of a private compound minutes from the Plaza. $1,200,000. MLS 201402662. (East on Canyon Road to Camino Cerrito.) Owner/Ray Thuman 505-780-1008 Sotheby’s International Realty.

NN-6

M-48

S-42

Z-45

WW-27 1:00p.m. - 3:00p.m. — 21 E. Saddleback Mesa - Beautifully kept 2 BD, 2 1/2 BA w/ vigas, gas FP, finished garage, a/c, tankless H2O, new roof 10/13, 2 TREX decks, quiet, huge views, near walking trails. Landscaped, drip system, absolutely turnkey. $227,000. MLS 201400937. (South on Richards past the community college, into the Windmill Ridge part of Rancho Viejo, E. on Saddleback Mesa to #21) Barbara Graham 505-474-0970 Barker Realty LLC.

SOUTH EAST

X-39 2:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 604-1/2 Galisteo Street - Walk to everywhere from this 2BR, 2BA, 1,465 sq ft adobe on Galisteo Street. Updated with plaster walls, wood doors, radiant heat, double pane windows, and maple floors. Quiet, Wood Gormley. $338,500. MLS 201204802. (West side of Galisteo Street at W. Santa Fe Avneue/Paseo de Peralta.) Katherine Blagden 505-490-2400 Sotheby’s International Realty.

Y-44 11:00a.m. - 1:00p.m. — 1122 East Alameda - A magical oasis on the historic Eastside, bordered by the Santa Fe River and the Acequia Madre. Spectacular gardens surround an hacienda-style main house with studio and separate office/casita. $1,150,000. MLS 201403120. (East Alameda, use entrance to Patrick Smith Park. First house on the left.) Mary Kehoe 505-310-1422 Sotheby’s International Realty.

ELDORADO WEST

M-61 1:00p.m. - 4:00p.m. — 132 Mejor Lado - Wonderful Adobeworks model home. Views of Cerrillos Hills and the Sangre de Cristo, Jemez and Sandia mountains. Open plan design with a great room and dining room looking out to mountain sunset views. $535,000. MLS 201403191. (W on Avenida Eldorado, L on Ave de Compadres, R on Mejor Lado, right on cul-de-sac) Suzanne Olian 505-469-7007 Sotheby’s International Realty.

ELDORADO EAST

H-69 2:30p.m. - 4:30p.m. — 32 Juego Road - Charming Eldorado home w/big windows and big views. Saltillo tile, vigas, kiva fireplace. A 400 sq.ft. studio/media room w/sink, storage and cooling. Radiant heat, covered portal & fully-fenced yard. $379,500. MLS 201402841. (3 br, 2 ba, Avenida Vista Grande, left on Torreon. Left on Juego Rd., house is first on left.) Lisa Smith 505-570-5770 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

K-70 12:00p.m. - 2:00p.m. — 21 Puerto Road - One of the most beautiful homes Leif Backe built. Gallery hallway with brick floors welcomes you into the greatroom with 18 ft. ceilings and large kiva. A one-of-a-kind home designed for entertaining. $548,000. MLS 201402844. (4 br, 3 ba, Avenida Vista Grande, right on Chusco Road. First right is Puerto Road. Property is first on left.) Lisa Smith 505577-5770 Santa Fe Properties, Inc.

N-67 12:30p.m. - 2:30p.m. — 4 Cagua Road - First time open: 3 BR, 2 BA plus studio, 2,704 sq. ft., 1.53 acres. Beautiful finishes, split floor plan, clean turn key ready, mountain views, walled yard. One of the most desired areas of Eldorado. $485,000. MLS 201403187. (Avenida Eldorado to Cagua Road) Bob Burbic 505-670-9399 Sotheby’s International Realty.


E-10

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

to place an ad email: classad@sfnewmexican.com online: sfnmclassifieds.com

sfnm«classifieds call 986-3000 or toll free (800) 873-3362 »announcements«

»real estate«

SANTA FE

DOWTOWN CONDOMINUM, Short walk to Plaza. 2 bedrooms, 1.5 baths. Carport. Gated community. Private fenced patio. $315,000. Jay, 505-4700351.

Cozy Cottage

In Pecos area, 3 beds, 1 bath on 6 treed acres. Panoramic views of Pecos Wilderness. Horses ok. Shared well. $199,000. JEFFERSON WELCH, 505-577-7001

ELDORADO OPEN HOUSE, SUNDAY 1-4, 41 CARRISA ROAD Under market price FSBO. 1820 sq.ft. 1.64 acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 bath. Updated kitchen, beautiful views. $357,000. 505-577-0100

OPEN HOUSE

FOUND BLACK PUPPY found on Jacona Road in Pojaque 7/1/14. 505-455-7295 DENTAL WORK, Bridge or Partial Plate. Found 7/2 by El Castillo on the path by the Santa Fe River. 505-8274138. DOG FOUND along Rabbit Road, 6/30 evening. Medium size, tan, female, mix. No collar or tags. 505-662-7941.

SANTA FE County Animal Control seeking the owner of a Horse found on June 6. Call 505-992-1626 with description and location.

SELL IT FOR $100 OR LESS AND PAY $10.

OPEN HOUSE 1-4 PM 2348 CAMINO PINTORES

3 Bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage. 1550 sq.ft, 1.4 acres. Metal roof, huge fenced yard, large wood deck, mountain views, oasis. RV parking, much more. $12K down, assume $272K at 2.75%. P&I, $1,170 monthly. 505-466-1922

GREAT BUY

This Rancho Viejo 2 story townhome at $242,000 is a steal. 3 bedroom, 2 ½ baths, TV area, 2 car garage. Add vigas – fireplace – tiled floors as just a few of the many extras. Act fast it won’t last!

ARCHITECT DESIGNED HOME & GUESTHOUSE

It’s that easy!

Total 3600 sq.ft. 1345 Bishops Lodge Road RE Contract or Lease Option Possible. $936,900 Call Veronica, 505-316-2000 SUNDAY OPEN HOUSE, 1-3

986-3000 SCHOOLS - CAMPS ST. MICHAEL’S Soccer Camp. July 2124. Cost $120.00. Boys and Girls ages 5-10 9 a.m.-12 p.m. Girls ages 11-17 1 p.m.-4 p.m. www.stmichaelssf.org /activities_ _athletics/camps/

GREAT VALUE! 4 Bedrooms, 3 baths, huge master suite. 1,850 sq.ft. $127,000. SANTA FE REALTY ULTD. 505-467-8829.

CHARMING 2 BEDROOM, plus den. 1869 Adobe on Palace Avenue. Also includes detached casita with full kitchen, washer, dryer. 2 separate private courtyards. Lots of Santa Fe style! $689,000. 505-795-3734 GORGEOUS STAMM with many upgrades. Fully enclosed yard, office space and detached casita. 2600 sq.ft. $475,000. Liz 505-989-1113.

LOTS & ACREAGE

VISTA PRIMERA BEAUTY

All utilities ready to build on (horse property). $190,000 (owner financing). Russ, 505-470-3227.

ELDORADO TERRITORIALNo Qualifying

988-5585

for activists rally Immigrants,

Locally owned

and independent

to task Gas Co. taken New Mexico lack of alert system over shortage,

rights at Capitol

Tuesday,

February

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Local news,

www.santafenew

A-8

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mexican.com

for rs waiting 16,000 customeservice, heat crews to restore

l makers gril State law r gas crisis utility ove

out 300 has sent by the city’s Traffic systems fines. people ticketed Redflex paid their alerting haven’t notices notices that they of those speed SUV say 20 percent FILE PHOTO MEXICAN Officials error. NEW were in

City flubs accounting of fees for speed SUV citations paid people who Dozens of default notices were sent By Julie Ann

Grimm

SUBSCRIBE TO THE NEW MEXICAN CALL 986-3010

TESUQUE LAND .75 acre 5 minute walk to Village Market. Land fronts Tesuque River, arroyo. Private, secluded, great views. Welll water, utilities to site. $228,000. By appointment, 970-946-5864.

HOME FOR SALE: 809 OLD HOSPITAL ROAD, ESPANOLA. 5 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 3,500 sq.ft. on .37 acres. THE MAEZ GROUP: 505-469-0546. Keller Williams Realty office: 505-8971100.

12.5 Acre Tract on Avenida de Compadres & Spur Ranch Rd

SANTA FE

LOTS & ACREAGE

ESPANOLA

Great family home, centrally located. 3 Bedroom, 2.5 bath. Family room, living room, fireplace. Split level. 1600 sq.ft. Lots of storage. Parking for RV. Garage. Price slashed, $265,000 firm. The Brokerage Realty, 930-3848

5,600 SQ.FT. WAREHOUSE in mostly residential area. 3 rental areas with month-to-month tenants, paying 2100 plus utilities. 1 acre. $295,000. 505-470-5877

CONDO

SANTA FE

3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. Many upgrades: new Pergo type flooring thru-out, paint, tile in master bath. Stainless appliances, 2 car garage, covered patio. $219,900.

TAYLOR PROPERTIES 505-470-0818

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY

TWO LARGE LOTS IN THE MIDDLE OF TOWN

.75 and 1.10 acres directly off the Arroyo Chamisa Trail. $85,000 each, utilities. Taylor Properties 505-470-0818.

25 acres, 5 ACRE LOTS. Behind St. John’s College, hidden valley. With Utilities. $30,000 per acre, Terms. Jim, 505-310-8574, 505-470-2923. 2.5 ACRES at Rabbit Road on Camino Cantando. Water well plus all utilities. Good Views! $270,000. 505-6034429 3.3 ACRES with shared well in place. Utilities to lot line, 121 Fin Del Sendero. Beautiful neighborhood with covenance. $165,000. 505-4705877

50 ACRE TRACT on ROWE MESA with power & phone ready to come in. Beautiful trees & meadows. Surrounded by National Forest. $198,000 ($5,000 down, $600 monthly, ten year balloon). A must see. Call Russ, 505-470-3227.

MANUFACTURED HOMES RE BEAUTIFUL 2012 MOBILE HOME! 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, laundry room, lots of kitchen cabinets, porch, wood siding. $33,500. Call 505470-7083.

FOR SALE 14x56 2 bed, 1 bath 1983 Champion. Must be moved. $3,500 OBO.

CALL TIM FOR APPOINTMENT 505-699-2955 MOBILE HOME, 1972. Model Mark V. 3 bedroom, 2 bath. 14x70, $1,500. 505316-2555, 505-204-4118.

OUT OF TOWN NEWLY REMODELED ADOBE HOME FOR SALE! 10 MILES North of Santa Fe on US285. 4.5 Acres, 6,850 sq.ft. Building and more. 3 acre ft. Well with 3 homes possible. Jerry 263-1476. TWO OFFICES plus deck w/mtn views. Shared reception/kitchen/bath. Near new Courthouse and Railyard. Great parking . $900 incl utilities

Mexican Fe by the Santa got nailed SUV” doing about Joseph Sovcik “speed Street of Galisteo on Police Department’s mph stretcht ry School early h n a 25

The New

5 Acre Lot, 11 Roy Crawford at Old Santa Fe Trail, $195,000. (2) 2.5 acre lots, Senda Artemisia at Old Galisteo, $119-124,000. Rural setting near town. Equity RE. 505-690-8503 TAOS, 40 acres. Fronts Highway 64 and Montoya Road. Power, Views. 1 mile west of Gorge Bridge. $4,000 per acre. 830-370--8605.

Sits on one acre of land next to the Rio Grand. 505-995-0318 DETAILS: www.northernnewmexicohome.com

OLD STORE & RESIDENCE ADOBE, 2 STORY 2,700 sq. ft on 1.048 acres. Ideal for B&B. Cleveland, N.M. 87715. Owner financed $86,000 at 3%. 575-387-2490. Leave message, repeat phone number.

business & service exploresantafe•com

Your business in print and online for as little as $89 per month!

ACCOUNTING

CLEANING

HANDYMAN

ACCOUNTANT: 20+ years experience. Available for GL accounting & analysis, special projects, interim staff coverage & more. Judy, 575-6407952; almazazz@yahoo.com

HOUSE & OFFICE CLEANING. 18 years experience cleaning Santa Fe’s finest homes and offices. Quality work excellent references. Carmen, 505920-4537.

REPAIRS, MAINTENANCE; PRO-PANEL & FLAT ROOF REPAIR, PAINTING, FENCING, YARDWORK. MINOR PLUMBING & ELECTRICAL. 25 years experience. Licensed. References. Free estimates. 505-470-5877

DUTCH LADY, reliable, educated, looking for live-in job with elderly person, 6 days, 6 nights. 505-877-5585

CHIMNEY SWEEPING

CONCRETE

CASEY’S TOP HAT CHIMNEY SWEEPS is committed to protecting your home. Creosote build-up in a fireplace or lint build-up in a dryer vent reduces efficiency and can pose a fire hazard. Call 505989-5775. Get prepared!

CLEANING

CONSTRUCTION BATHROOM & KITCHEN REMODELING EXPERTS

Also new additions, concrete, plastering, walls, flagstone, heating, cooling, and electrical. Free estimates. 505-310-7552.

HANDYMAN

DEPENDABLE & RESPONSIBLE. Will clean your home and small office with TLC. Excellent references. 20 years experience. Nancy, 505-9861338.

TRINO’S AFFORDABLE Construction all phases of construction, and home repairs. Licensed. 505-9207583.

HAULING OR YARD WORK FREE PICK-UP of all appliances and metal, junk cars and parts. Trash runs. 505-385-0898

TRASH & BRUSH HAULING. Also other hauling available. Call 505-316-2936.

HEALTH & FITNESS SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER! 4 Sessions- 4 Weeks- $99! Santa Fe Spa gym or Fort Marcy gym. santafepersonaltrainer.com. 505-5778777 Ceon.

LANDSCAPING Victor Yanez Full Landscape Design

Yard care. 20 years experience, Chez Renee. 30 years experience: Alice & Bill Jennison, T e c o l o t e . Licensed. Gerald Swartz, 505288-8180.

AFFORDABLE HOME REPAIR

Housecleaning, garage cleaning, hauling trash. Cutting Trees, Flagstone Patios, Driveways, Fencing, Yard Work, Stucco, Tile, Roofing. Greg, Nina, 920-0493.

PAINTING ANDY ORTIZ PAINTING

Professional with over 30 years experience. Licensed, insured, bonded Please call for free estimate, 505-6709867, 505-473-2119.

ROOFING ROOF LEAKING REPAIR & PLASTERING SPECIALIST with 15 years of experience. For assistance, call Josue at 505-490-1601.

STORAGE

HOMECRAFT PAINTING

Office and Home Cleaning. Janitorial, Handyman, Home Repairs, Garden, Irrigation, Windows. Licensed, bonded, insured. References available. 505-795-9062.

EXPERIENCED SPECIALIZED IN CONCRETE REPAIR, OVERLAYMENTS, INTERIORS, EXTERIORS. DRIVEWAYS, SIDEWALKS, BASKETBALL COURTS. WE USE SPECIAL FLOOR ADHESIVE TREATMENT. $6 PER SQ.FT. LICENSED, BONDED. 505-470-2636

Get The Job Done Right the First Time! Commercial- Residential.

LANDSCAPING

MENDOZA’S & FLORES’ PROFESSIONAL MAINTENANCE

CARETAKING

directory«

Rock, Trees, Boulders, Brick, Flagstone. FREE ESTIMATES! 20% off 4th of July Only! 505-907-2600, 505-289-9398.

WE GET RESULTS! CALL 986-3000

ARTIFICIAL TURF. High quality, remnants at a fraction of the cost. Ideal for large or small areas. Call, 505-471-8931 for more information.

CALDERON’S LANDSCAPING FULL LANDSCAPING SERVICES: Irrigation, Flagstone Patios, Coyote Fencing, Tree Service. Fully Licensed. Free Estimates. Fair Prices. Call 505-216-4051. GREENCARD LANDSCAPING Irrigation- New, Repairs Rock Work, Retaining Walls Total Landscape Design & Installs 505-310-0045, 505-995-0318 Santa Fe, Los Alamos, White Rock www.greencardlandscaping.com

INTERIOR, EXTERIOR, SMALL JOBS OK & DRYWALL REPAIRS. LICENSED. JIM, 505-350-7887.

A VALLEY U STOR IT Now renting 10x10, 10x20, Outdoor RV Spaces. Uhaul Trucks, Boxes, Movers. In Pojoaque. Call 505-455-2815.

PLASTERING

G & G SELF STORAGE. Near I-25 and 599 bypass. 5x10, $45. 10x10, $70. Boat, trailer, RV spaces available. 505-424-7121

40 YEARS EXPERIENCE. Professional Plastering Specialist: Interior & Exterior. Also Re-Stuccos. Patching a specialty. Call Felix, 505-920-3853.

PLASTERING RESTORATIONS Re-Stuccos, Parapet Repairs, Patching Interior & Exterior. Call for estimates, 505-310-7552.

STUCCO, DRYWALL & REPAIRS Full Synthetic Systems, Ornamental, Venetian Veneer. Faux Plaster and Paint. Locally owned and operated. Licensed, Bonded, and Insured. 505316-3702

JUAN’S LANDSCAPING Coyote fences, Yard cleaning, Pruning, Tree cutting, Painting (outside), Flagstone & Gravel. References. Free Estimates. 505-231-9112.

ROOFING

TREE SERVICE DALE’S TREE SERVICE. Tree pruning, removal, stumps, hauling. Yard work also available. 473-4129

YARD MAINTENANCE HOW ’BOUT A ROSE FOR YOUR GARDEN... to clean-up, maintain, & improve. Just a call away! Rose, 4700162. Free estimates. YARD CLEAN UP & More! Gravel, trenches, trash hauling. Any work you need done I can do! Call George 505-316-1599.

YARD MAINTENANCE

Seasonal planting. Lawn care. Weed Removal. Dump runs. Painting (interior, exterior). Honest & Dependable. Free estimates. References.

TREE AND LANDSCAPING SERVICES. Plants, Flagstone, Rock, Gravel, Coyote Fences, Painting, Tile Work. Beautiful Work for Beautiful Homes! Ernesto, 505-570-0329.

Berry Clean - 505-501-3395

PAINTING A BETTER PAINT JOB. A REASONABLE PRICE. PROFESSIONAL, INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR. 30 YEARS EXPERIENCE. RELIABLE. FREE ESTIMATES. 505-9821207

ROOFING- ALL TYPES . Metal, Shingles, Composite torch down, Hot Mop, Stucco, Plaster. Maintenance. Free Estimates! Call Ismael Lopez at 505-670-0760.

Have a product or service to offer? Let our small business experts help you grow your business.

CALL 986-3000

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Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds »rentals«

APARTMENTS FURNISHED 2 BEDROOM, $800 1 BEDROOM, $700

Private estate. Walled yard, kiva fireplace. Safe, quiet. Utilities paid. Sorry, No Pets. 505-471-0839

APARTMENTS PART FURNISHED 1 BEDROOM. GREAT LOCATION. WALK TO TRADER JOE’S. Clean, safe, private. Laundry, parking. $800 includes utilties. $800 deposit. 602-481-2979

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED 1 BEDROOM, 1 Bath, 595 sq.ft. 3108 Jemez Road #D. Rent $800. Deposit $750. Utilities included. Call 505-5771574 or 505-913-0371. 1 BEDROOM, 1 BATH on Rufina L a n e , balcony, fireplace, laundry facility on-site. $629 monthly. 2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH- R a n c h o S i r i n g o , Fenced yard, fireplace, Laundry facility on-site. $729 monthly.

GUESTHOUSES

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

STUDIO. 350 squ.ft., Carport, hardwood floors, fireplace, A/C. Nonsmoking. Pets negotiable. $575 monthly plus electric. mbhuberman@gmail.com, 505-9888038.

EASTSIDE, WALK TO CANYON ROAD! Furnished, short-term vacation home. Walled .5 acre, mountain views, fireplace, 2 bedroom, washer, dryer. Private. Pets okay. Large yard. 970-626-5936.

CHARMING 2 BEDROOM, plus den. 1869 Adobe on Palace Avenue. Also includes detached casita with full kitchen, washer, dryer. 2 separate private courtyards. Lots of Santa Fe style! $2895. Year lease. 505-7953734

STUDIO, $675. 1 BEDROOM, $700. Utilities paid, clean, fireplace, wood floors. 5 minute walk to Railyard. Sorry, No Pets. 505-4710839

HOUSES FURNISHED

Vista Linda VISIT TODAY! ✓ 2-3 Bdrm Apts ✓ Private Patios ✓ Cable & W/D Hook Up ✓ Laundry Room ✓ Se Habla Español ✓ Mon-Fri 8-5

CALL 424-7590

LARGE, SUNNY 2 BEDROOMS AND STUDIOS . Let us show you how relaxing summer can be with pools and AC! Call 888-482-8216 or stop by Las Palomas Apartments on Hopewell Street for a tour! Pet-friendly. Hablamos Espanol

1760 SQ.FT. in ELDORADO three and two. Double car garage, portals, fireplace. Very clean and nice; must see. $1350 monthly. No pets. Russ, 505-470-3227.

2 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, 2 Car Garage, kiva fireplace, sunroom, washerdryer, No Smokers, No Pets. $1,100 month, $1,100 deposit, year lease. 505-231-4492

FOR RENT MOBILE HOME SPACE in Pecos. Fenced-in yard. $225 monthly plus utilities. Call 505-455-2654, 505660-0541.

2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH in Pueblos del Sol subdivision. 2 car garage, fenced yard. Great neighborhood. $1300 monthly plus utilities. 505-577-7643

On 1 acre, Museum Hill. 2.5 bath, A/C, fireplace, hardwood floors, laundry. 2 car garage, portal to private courtyard. $2625 monthly. 505-6297619

2 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. Southside. Views. Yard, fireplace, washer, dryer. 2 car garage. Near shopping. Pets negotiable. Non-smoking. $1200 monthly. 505-473-2102

3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH. $1,200 plus utilities. Open Floor Plan, brick Floors, sunny, passive solar, fenced, wood stove, 2 car garage, pets OK. Lone Butte Area, Steve 505-470-3238.

2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH BEAUTIFUL CONDO. Near Plaza. Washer, dryer. Patio, kiva fireplace. Pet okay. $1500 monthly. $1000 deposit. 505-982-5795

WASHER$420 / DRYER IN

2 BEDROOM, 2 bath, fenced yard, storage shed, 15 minutes North of Santa Fe. On private road. $800 monthly. 505-455-7750. 2 BEDROOM, 2 bath on 2 1/2 acres, 2 car garage. Off of Highway 14, $800 monthly, First, Last, Damage Deposit. Electric, propane, garbage not included. Must pass background check. 505-920-2572

$700, 2 BEDROOM mobile home parked on quiet, private land off of Agua Fria. Has gas heating, AC, all utilities paid, no pets. 505-473-0278.

505-992-1205 valdezandassociates.com

#7 RANCHO ZIA $1000 monthly #79 RANCHO ZIA $1000 monthly

Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos

This live & work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $995 plus utilities

Newly Remodeled

2 story, 4 bedroom, 3 bath, gas fireplace, pergo & tile flooring, new kitchen appliances, washer, dryer hook-up, A/C, 2 car garage, fenced backyard. 1548 sq.ft. $1500 plus utilities.

1 bath, full kitchen with beautiful tile counters, tile flooring, and gas burning stove. $550 plus utilities.

FOR SALE:

#26 RANCHO ZIA 2014 Karsten $57,700 plus tax * All Homes 3 Bedrooms, 2 bath, 16x80 Singlewides * All Appliances & Washer, Dryer included * Section 8 accepted * Interest Rates as low as 4.5% SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY CALL TIM: 505-699-2955 FOR SALE 1979 2 bedroom, 1.5 bath 14x70 $1,500. Must be moved. Call Tim, 505-699-2955.

OFFICES

ADOBE 1 BEDROOM Open Floor Plan. Light & Bright, 2 bedroom, 2 bath. 2nd floor unit. Two balconies, one car garage. Community amenities include Clubhouse, Pool, Fitness Center. $1600 monthly includes water, sewer, trash. 505-699-7940.

2029 CALLE LORCA required for special )

SELL YOUR PROPERTY!

505471-8325 505-471-8325

CALL 986-3000

with a classified ad. Get Results!

55 YEAR old male seeks housing to share. Quiet. 505-670-8287

WAREHOUSES INDUSTRIAL UNITS RANGING FROM 750 SQUARE FEET FOR $600 TO 1500 SQUARE FEET FOR $1050. OVERHEAD DOORS, SKYLIGHTS, HALF BATH, PARKING. 505-438-8166.

»jobs«

candidates

for

Assistant Director in Student Support Services,

a Title IV (TRIO) program funded through the U.S. Department of Education and serving college students who are U.S. citizens (or permanent residents) and who are low-income individuals, firstgeneration college students, or individuals with disabilities. This is a full-time, twelve-month professional staff position, reporting to the Director in Student Support Services. This position will begin on September 1, 2014. The assistant director will have a counseling caseload and will oversee mentoring, and Summer Scholar activities. Adams State University is the Regional Education Provider for southern Colorado, as well as a federally designated Hispanic Serving Institution. We are located in a high mountain valley approximately 1 ½ hours from Taos, NM and 2 ½ hours from Santa Fe, NM. For more information, please go to http://www.adams.edu/adm ini stration/hr/sssjobannouncem e nt2.pdf

HOSPITALITY

ACCOUNTING STAFF ACCOUNTANT for major Santa Fe non-profit. A comprehensive understanding of accounting transactions related to revenues and receipts, expenses and disbursements, and monthly closings is highly desirable. Duties include: maintaining general ledger, accounts payable, invoicing, compliance. Reports to Finance Manager. Fund accounting experience preferred. Competitive pay and benefits. For full job description or to submit a resume and cover letter, please send email to: sweiner@awcpc.net WELL-ESTABLISHED NONPROFIT SEEKS A HALF-TIME BOOKKEEPER. Responsibilities: bank reconciliations, payroll, accounts payable, monthly financial statements. Requires 3-5 years bookkeeping experience and proficiency with Quickbooks and Excel. Send resume by July 15, 2014 to: officewerk2014@gmail.com

ADMINISTRATIVE SANTA FE law firm seeks an Executive Assistant who is an exceptional individual with top level skills and is proficient in QuickBooks, Excel and Word. Retirement plan, health insurance, paid vacation and sick leave. Salary and bonuses are commensurate with experience. Please email resume to santafelaw56@gmail.com .

BON APPETIT hiring for July- Fall Semester. Institute of America Indian Arts and Santa Fe University of Art and Design. Full Time- Part Time cooks, bakery assistant, dishwashers, servers. Email resume: mlambelet@cafebonappetit.com. 505-577-1923. Benefits, vacation. EOE

Café Workers and Café Managers

Please apply online www.sfps.info . SFPS is an EOE

at

DOMINO’S PIZZA Hiring ALL Positions! Applicants must be at least 18. DRIVERS need good driving record with 2 years history, your own vehicle and insurance. CSR’s need great people skills. Apply at 3530 Zafarano Drive.

MANAGEMENT LANL FOUNDATION CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER See lanlfoundation.org for complete job description. EOE Application deadline: July 15. Email resume to: ceosearch@lanlfoundation.org

on quiet Railyard dead-end street. Recently remodeled. Water paid. Year lease. $925 monthly. 505-2318272 ALL UTILITIES PAID! 2 B E D R O O M , $1100 MONTHLY. Fireplace, private backyard, 2 baths, bus service close. 3 BEDROOM, $1350 MONTHLY. Large living room, kitchen. Ample parking. No pets. 505-204-6319

CASITA FOR RENT Nice, clean, and quiet place. Private driveway. All utilities paid. No pets, non-smoking. $700 monthly, $350 deposit. 505-471-5749.

500 SQUARE FOOT OFFICE STUDIO. Gated area, with security system. Available immediately. Water included. Contact Eddie, 505-4703148.

ROOMMATE WANTED

Sell Your Stuff!

Call and talk to one of our friendly Consultants today!

986-3000

Santa Fe Habitat for Humanity is accepting applications for a Director of Family and Volunteer Services. Good communication skills, computer skills, and competency in Spanish and English is required. Send resume to ted@sfhfh.org.

CLERICAL ASSISTANT OPHTHALMIC LAB TECHNICIAN TRAINEE TECHNICIAN TRAINEE Santa Fe Clinic

OPERATING ROOM TECHNICIAN Santa Fe Surgery Center Casual/prn

Eye Associates of New Mexico is the largest ophthalmology and optometry practice in the Southwest. We currently have the above-listed positions open at our Santa Fe Clinic and Surgery Center. Some positions require travel between our Northern New Mexico clinics, please check the listing. To learn more about these positions and our organization, see the expanded information on www.jobing.com. Please send resume and cover letter stating the specific POSITION and LOCATION for which you are applying to: Eye Associates of New Mexico, 8801 Horizon Blvd. NE #360, Albuquerque, NM 87113 Attn: Human Resources; fax to (800) 548-5213 or email to employment@eyenm.com. No phone calls please. Equal Opportunity Employer and Drug-FreeWorkplace.

FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to share house, 5 minutes from Road Runner and NM 599. Non-smoker, no pets. $500 month. 505-967-3412

JANRIC CLASSIC SUDOKU Fill in the blank cells using numbers 1 to 9. Each number can appear only once in each row, column and 3x3 block. Use logic and process elimination to solve the puzzle. The difficulty level ranges from Bronze (easiest) to Silver to Gold (hardest). Rating: BRONZE

© 2014 Janric Enterprises Dist. by creators.com

Solution

7/6/14

the

FOR RENT:

Studio Conveniently Located

ZOCOLO CONDO FOR RENT

WANTED TO RENT

Adams State University

is seeking position of;

#11 SANTA FE HACIENDA $900 monthly

MOVES YOU IN Every Apt. Home

SANAPARTMENTS MIGUEL COURT 2029 CALLE LORCA APARTMENTS ( 12 Mo. Lease,

MANUFACTURED HOMES

OFFICE SPACE WITH HIGH VISIBILITY, HIGH EXPOSURE

CHECKFREE THIS OUT!! A 1, 2 &1 3Bedroom bedroom Apts. Apt. plus $0Available Security Deposit Fordeposit Qualified Applicants No required for & Utilities No deposit required for Utilities, How!! Ask Ask me me how! Call Today!COURT SAN MIGUEL

LONG TERM RV SPACE FOR RENT in Santa Fe West Mobile Home Park. $295 deposit, $295 monthly plus utilities. Holds up to 40 foot RV. Call Tony at 505-471-2411.

Professional Office or Arts & Crafts Generous Parking $3000 monthly + utilities & grounds maintenance 670-2909

2 BEDROOM, 2 BATH, 900 sq.ft. Gated community. All appliances included. $950 plus utilities. No pets. Contact Eddie, 505-470-3148.

10x30 Move-in-Special, $180 monthly. Airport Cerrillos Storage. Wide, Rollup doors. U-haul Cargo Van. Professional, Resident Manager. 505-4744330. www.airportcerrillos.com

2 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. Townhome off Old Taos Highway. Patios off breakfast room & living room. Overlooking city. Library, fireplaces, swamp cooler. $1900 monthly. Barker Management, 505-983-2400.

2 BEDROOM MID-CENTURY SANTA FE CLASSIC

LEASE EASTSIDE ADOBE

CONDOSTOWNHOMES

EDUCATION

NORTHSIDE

COMMERCIAL SPACE

on Cerrillos Road. Retail space. Central location in Kiva Center. 505438-8166

STORAGE SPACE

Furnished. AC. No pets, nonsmoking. 6 month lease minimum. $6500 monthly plus utilities. $14500 deposit. 203-481-5271

LOT FOR RENT

This live-work studio offers high ceilings, kitchenette, and bathroom with shower, 2 separate entrances, ground, and corner unit with lots of natural lighting. $995 plus utilities

Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today!

LAS CAMPANAS 3 BEDROOM, 2.5 BATH

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH. $975 plus utilities. $600 deposit. Washer hook-up. 2259 Rumbo al Sur, Agua Fria Village. 505-473-2988, 505-221-9395

Located On the North Side of Town, Brick floors, High ceilings large vigas, fireplaces, private bathroom, ample parking. 1300 sq.ft. can be rented separately for $1320 plus water and CAM or combined with the adjoining unit; total of 2100 square for $2100. Plus water and CAM

EASTSIDE LARGE 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath. Large yard. Off-street parking. Hardwood floors. Fireplace. $1100 monthly, utilities paid. No pets. References a must. 505-982-5232

HOUSES UNFURNISHED

ESPANOLA- EL LLANO AREA Recently built one bedroom casita. Quiet neighborhood, full kitchen, large bedroom, A/C. Laundry hookups. Utilities included. $725. 505-6925616

WALK TO PLAZA. Nice, small 1 bedroom NE duplex. Gas heat, off street parking, no smokers, no pets. 1 year lease. $700 plus utilities. 505-9829508.

Old Adobe Office

DOWNTOWN: 1425 Paseo De Peralta, 1 bedroom, 1 full bath and kitchen, free laundry, $765 with all utilities paid. 104 Faithway, Live-in Studio, full bath and kitchen, $775 with all utilities paid. NO PETS! 471-4405

LARGE 2 Story Home, 3,600 squ.ft. in Sunlit Hills. $2,300 monthly plus utilities. Located on 6 acres. 505470-6297.

EASTSIDE NEW CASITAS, EAST ALAMEDA. Walk to Plaza. Pueblo-style. Washer, dryer. Kiva, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 1500 sq.ft. Garage. Nonsmoking, no pets. $1800 monthly. 505-982-3907

1 BEDROOM, living room, full kitchen with dining area, skylights, stainglass windows, dishwasher, washer, dryer, fenced yard, adobe. 505-984-3117, 505-412-7005.

Located at the Lofts on Cerrillos

450 sq.ft. Skylights, saltillo. Washer, dryer. Non-smoking. No pets. Lease required. $775 includes utilities. 505670-7216

HOUSES PART FURNISHED

Cozy House, 2 bedroom, 1 bath. Tiled floors, fireplace, gas heat, washer, dryer hookups. Fenced yard. Close to walking trail. No pets. $900. 505-310-5363

6332 Entrada De Milagro Monarch Properties, Inc.

A ROMERO STREET DUPLEX CONDO.

CHARMING 1 BEDROOM APARTMENT

PRIVATE, QUIET, 1,300 sq.ft. Guesthouse on 1.5 acres. Plaza 8 minutes, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, skylights, 2 patios, hiking, gardening, Wifi. $2,100 month plus. 505-992-0412

A PA RT M E N TS

Chamisa Management Corp. 988-5299

2 bedroom, 1 bath, 2 car parking. Private courtyard. Excellent location behind REI. $1200. 505629-6161.

986-3000

APARTMENTS UNFURNISHED

A-Poco Self Storage 2235 Henry Lynch Rd Santa Fe, NM 87507 505-471-1122

Si Habla Espanol

to place your ad, call

E-11

LAMC is currently seeking qualified applicants dedicated to great patient care for the following positions: Director of ED Director of Medical Staff Services Director of HIM Clinical Business Informatics RN FT & PRN ER RN, Nights FT, PT, PRN RN positions OB FT OR Circulator RN ICU, OB, PACU, OR RN PRN PRN Scrub Techs FT RN Case Manager,/CDI FT Inpatient Coder, HIM PRN Speech Therapist PRN Cook ——— Los Alamos Physician Services, LLC FT & PRN Medical Assistants

——— To apply please go to l os al amo s med ic al c ent er. co m E qu al O ppo rtu nit y Emp lo yer


E-12

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

www.sfnmclassifieds.com

INSTITUTE OF AMERICAN INDIAN ARTS

You turn to us. AREA COORDINATOR – STUDENT HOUSING (10 month position) IAIA’s Student Housing Department is seeking to fill this ENTRY-LEVEL position with a conscientious, responsible and reliable Area Coordinator to assist with overall supervision of students residing in campus housing (dorms) during his/her assigned shift. The successful applicant must have:  Background of enforcing compliance with health and safety regulations.  Background of responding to emergency situations quickly and professionally.  Proven people skills to address and resolve a wide range of interpersonal issues effectively and professionally.  Occasionally driving of IAIA vehicles.  Ability to work in a NON-SMOKING environment. REQUIRED EXPERIENCE AND EDUCATION Must have an equivalent combination of a High School Diploma or GED; AND 3 years of directly-related work experience as a team lead, youth supervisor. Must be able and available to work the midnight shift or weekends. Must have a satisfactory criminal background and driving record in order to be bondable to drive an IAIA vehicle. For more information about IAIA, as well as a full job description and application instructions please go to: http://www.iaia.edu/jobs/ APPLY:      

Email cover letter and resume: humanresources@iaia.edu Mail: IAIA HR, 83 Avan Nu Po Rd, SF, NM 87508; FAX: (505) 424-0505 Native Preference applies. Please send CIB/Tribal Enrollment if claiming preference. COMPENSATION: $ 15/Hour DEADLINE: Friday, July 18, 2014

12

95

$

MO

Total access

PRINT + DIGITAL

Unlimited digital plus your choice of 7-day, weekend or Sunday-only home delivery.

9

$

95 MO

Online access DIGITAL ONLY

Unlimited digital.

santafenewmexican .com/SUBSCRIBE

986-3010 Automated monthly payments. Total access subscribers must reside in home delivery area.

Business Manager Job Functions include but are not limited to: • Plan and oversee the day-to-day functions of the Business Office; • Possess knowledge of all phases of budget preparation and maintenance; school bonds; Public Education Department/OBMS • Work collaboratively with district personnel; auditors and financial advisors; • Serve on executive team and play a pivotal role in the leadership of Pojoaque Valley School District.

Essential Qualifications/Requirements include but are not limited to: • Possess or be able to obtain a New Mexico School business Official license; • Knowledge of the following software systems: Visions, Excel and Microsoft Word

Preference: • Certified Public Accountant • Master’s Degree or Bachelor’s Degree in accounting or related field • Verified experience as a School Business Official

Best Consideration Date: July 18, 2014 Deadline: Until Filled Salary: Commensurate with Experience and Salary Schedule (Anticipated Range: $65,000 to $85,000) Applicants must submit the following to the district’s Human Resource Office: 1. Letter of Interest (addressed to Superintendent Adan Delgado) 2. Current Resume, copy of transcripts (unofficial acceptable for application process), copy of licenses (PED and/or others that are applicable to the position)

Chief Executive Officer The Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) Foundation located in Española, NM seeks a CEO to serve as catalyst and leader for education-related programs in Northern New Mexico. LANL Foundation has assets of $70 million, an annual budget of $6 million and 16 full-time, four part-time and four contract employees. The CEO maintains key relationships with Los Alamos National Security, LLC (LANS); Department of Energy (DOE); Congressional and New Mexico state legislative delegations and regional and national foundations to ensure the Foundation’s long-term success. Preferred candidate will have at least seven years fundraising experience in a foundation setting, five years in management and familiarity with Northern New Mexico. LANL Foundation, in its 17th year, focuses on systemic public/private investment strategies and investing in learning and human potential. See lanlfoundation.org for complete job description. EOE Application deadline: July 15. Email resume & vision for LANL Foundation to ceosearch@lanlfoundation.org or mail to LANL Foundation 1112 Plaza del Norte, Española, NM 87532. No phone calls please.

YOUR JOB LISTING DESERVES NEW MEXICAN EXPOSURE.

60K+

Daily Print Readers

300K+

Monthly Online Users

santafenewmexican.com Visit with our recruitment specialist:

986-3000


Sunday, July 6, 2014 THE NEW MEXICAN

sfnm«classifieds MEDICAL DENTAL

»merchandise«

to place your ad, call FURNITURE

Opportunities for Motivated Heath Care Professionals

MERRY FOSS Latin American ETHNOGRAPHIC & ANTIQUE DEALER moving. Selling her COLLECTION, Household FURNITURE & EVERYTHING! By appointment: 505-699-9222.

12 CUP Coffee Pot, new. $10 505-9891167

Works 30 hours per week with Community Home Health, the only non-profit home care program in Santa Fe. Excellent benefits. Apply on-line at www.pms-inc.org Click on Jobs@PMS. Tollfree hotline 1-866-661-5491. EOE, M, F, D, V, AA Follow us on Facebook.

ART EMERGENCY- HELP! Cliff Fragua marble sculpture. Valued by the Artist at $10,000. Emergency- must sell fast! $2,500. This is an amazing sculpture. 505-471-4316, colavs19@comcast.net

ARTS CRAFTS SUPPLIES

Have a product or service to offer? Call our small business experts today! CLASSIC CARS

GREAT PYRENEES puppies for sale. Great with children and animals. $300. Call 575-587-2014.

ANTIQUES

APPLIANCES

PHYSICAL THERAPIST

PETS SUPPLIES EXTREME SUMMER PUPPY SALE!!!! $250 plus. T-CUP & TOY pups ON SALE! Some HALF price. If you have checked with me before, try again. EVERYTHING ON SALE. Make Offer. 575-910-1818 or txt4more pics. Hypoallergenic, non-shed. Registered, shots, guarantee, POTTY PAD trained. PAYMENT PLAN. MC-VisaDisc-AmEx accepted. Debit-CreditPAYPAL. YORKIES, YORKIE-POOS, CHIHUAHUAS, POMERANIANS, SHIHTZUS, MORKIES, WIREHAIR RAT TERRIERS, WHITE LONGHAIRED FLUFFY CHIHUAHUAS, and POODLES. All Quality Puppies.

Front Desk Position

Needed for busy dental practice. Dental Experience A Must! Some Saturday’s and later hours. Excellent pay. Fax resume to 505424-8535.

The Santa Fe Indian Hospital is recruiting for: Staff Nurse, Nurse Manager, Nursing Assistant, FNP, Clinical Laboratory Scientist, plus billers & patient registration clerks. Competitive salary, federal benefits and retirement offered. Contact Bonnie, 505-946-9210 or at Bonnie.Bowekaty@ihs.gov. EOE with preferred hiring for AI/NA.

986-3000

ERNEST THOMPSON Trastero. Valued at over of $10,000. Yours for $4,000. Reasonable offers considered. 505699-2885 (Voice or Text)

E-13

4X4s

Toy Box Too Full? CAR STORAGE FACILITY

Airport Road and 599 505-660-3039 www.collectorcarssantafe.com

2014 JEEP Grand Cherokee Overland 4x4. Fresh Lexus trade, LIKE NEW FOR LESS! Every option, clean CarFax. $41,871. 505-216-3800.

DOMESTIC

HAND PAINTED SOLID WOOD CABINET. Beautiful exotic floral decoration. Drawer, shelves. NEW! 24"x32"x14". $300 OBO. MUST SELL ASAP. 518-763-2401 HAND-PAINTED SOLID WOOD CABINET. Beautiful exotic floral decoration. Drawer, shelves. NEW! 24"x32"x14". $300 OBO. MUST SELL ASAP. Picture online. (518)763-2401

LARGE LAMP with Southwest Deisgn, $15. 505-989-1167 MATTRESS SET: King Simmons BeautyRest. Vibrance Plush Firm Mattress, Low Profile Box Spring. Immaculate. $450, OBO. 505-992-1667 OAK TABLE: 36 inch round top oak table with solid oak leg base. $150. Call 505-710-1135.

LAB PUPPIES, BORN 5/14/2014. Available 7/9/2014. Will have six weeks shots, vet check and AKC papers. $600. Call 505-469-7530, 505-469-0055. Taking deposits. TO GOOD HOME, Male Rotweiler, 2 years old. Great dog! Very friendly. All shots current, microchipped. $50 adoption fee. 505-579-4504

2013 CHEVY CRUZE, GREAT VALUE, LOW MILES.VACATION READY! $16,488. CALL 505-473-1234.

2012 RAM MEGA CAB, 4X4 LARMIE. LOW, LOW MILES! ONE OWNER. $48,995. CALL 505-4731234.

YORKIE PUPPIES: Male $750; Females, $800. Registered. First shots. Ready 6/14.

12 MULTI-COLORED storage boxes with labels for photos or supplies. $1 each. 505-989-1167

1995 CROWN VICTORIA. 119,000 miles. White. Second owner. Like new condition, mechanically sound. Great car! No regrets! $3,000. 505690-9235

LARGE LEATHER Portfolio with multipages for display of artwork. $10 505989-1167

BUILDING MATERIALS

WILL NOT FIT IN OUR DOWNSIZED DIGS. THIS SOLID OAK TRESTLE DINING TABLE SEATS EIGHT FOR ELEGANT DINNING. YOU MAY ADOPT THIS PIECE FOR $4,000. GARY AT 505699-2885 (VOICE OR TEXT).

RN

Direct patient care in fast-paced clinic. NM license, BLS, bilingual Spanish-English and good computer skills required. Send resume to La Familia Medical Center by fax to 505982-8440, or email to mpopp@lfmctr.org

CLOTHING

MISCELLANEOUS JOBS CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE, Part-Time, or Full-time, a t SPEEDY LOAN in Santa Fe. Customer skills are a must, apply in person only: 4350 Airport Road, Suite 7.

TREE EXPERTS

Looking for self-motivated, dependable hard working tree trimmers, to prune, trim, shape, and remove ornamental trees and shrubs. Must be willing to follow safety procedures. Wages DOE Coates Tree Service 505-983-8019. Application online at www.coatestree.com submit to jobs@coatestree.com

Add a pic and sell it quick!

BIG COLLECTION OF GIRLS CLOTHING, size Medium, $20 for set. 505-9541144

JUSTIN BOOTS, Grey, size 4, $20. 505954-1144.

LAWN & GARDEN 2 FOLDING Chairs, $5 each. 505-9891167

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

HAND-WOVEN ORIENTAL RUG, Balouch, pictorial, finely woven. Second half twentieth century. 2’5"x 2’2". Must sell. $200 OBO. Call Santa Fe. 518-763-2401. Photo online. HAND-WOVEN ORIENTAL RUG. BALOUCH. Second half of twentieth century. 6’x3’5". Must sell. $495 OBO. Call Santa Fe, 518-763-2401. Photo online.

ORIENTAL RUG: Balouch (Iran) pictorial rug. Second half of twentieth century. 2’5"x2’2". Finely woven. $225, OBO. 518-763-2401

FURNITURE BEAUTIFUL CONTEMPORARY SWIVEL CHAIR. Sage green, sueded fabric. Excellent condition. 31"x28"x27". $250 OBO. MUST SELL ASAP. See photo online. (518)763-2401

MAGNI-SIGHT VIDEO Magnifier (CCTV) for the visually impaired. 19" Color auto focus with line markings. Fairly NEW. $1000 OBO. 505-288-8180

MISCELLANEOUS

RETAIL

SHOPOHOLICS SALE!!! SUNDAY, JULY 6TH ONLY, 9-4! 217 MCKENZIE, DOWNTOWN. Years of retail adventures, including Designer Clothing, Shoes, Purses, Vintage, Luggage, Collectables, Bedding, Office, Small Appliances, TV, New Fixtures, Miscellaneous. Nothing over $100, FREE BOX. Don’t Miss It!! No Earlies.

»cars & trucks«

FORD MUSTANG 1968 Convertible, 302 V8, Automatic, PS. Estate sale, Price Reduced $24,500 OBO. Call Mike, 505-672-3844 for photos & information.

2011 TOYOTA RAV4 4x4. Merely 25k miles! Off lease, single owner clean CarFax. Absolutely pristine! $19,471. Call 505-216-3800.

4X4s

GUNTER VON AUT full-size CELLO. Hard case, bow, and stand. $3300. extras! 505-474-6267 PIANO STEINWAY, Baby Grand, Model M Ebony. Excellent condition. $19,000, 505-881-2711.

SPORTS EQUIPMENT

TOOLS: Drill Press, Sander, Scroll Saw, Tool Chest, Toolboxes. 505-4380679

2007 TOYOTA FJ-CRUISER 4WD

AUTO PARTS ACCESSORIES TRUE CLASSIC 13" SPOKE RIMS (5), 10 adapaters, 5 caps. $500. 505-690-9235

CLASSIC CARS 1992 DODGE Shadow Convertible, 2.5 L Engine, 5 speed Manual, Air Condition, one owner, 70,000 miles, inside perfect, outside near perfect. $6,500. 505-672-3718, Los Alamos.

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2005 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE LIMITED-4x4 Another Local Owner, Records, Garaged, Manuals, Non-Smoker, 80,698 Miles, Moonroof, Leather, New Tires, Loaded, Pristine, Soooo DESIRABLE, $13,950.

Local Owner, Records, Manuals, XKeys, Garaged, Non-Smoker, Pristine, Soooo Desirable $15,650

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! View vehicle, Carfax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

505-983-4945

VIEW VEHICLE & Carfax: santafeautoshowcase.com 505-983-4945

»animals« WE GET RESULTS!

DESIGN WAREHOUSE seeks warm extrovert for full-time Sales, Marketing Position. Apply in person with resume. 101 West Marcy St.

So can you with a classified ad

CALL 986-3000 1972 LINCOLN Continental. Needs only minor work to be perfect. $4,500, OBO, 505-490-2286.

PART TIME SALES ASSOCIATE wanted for Santa Fe Animal Shelter’s resale store. Must be able to lift 50 pounds. Visit sfhumanesociety.org under About Us/Work Here for details.

CLASSIFIEDS

RETAIL POSITION Uniform & equipment store serving police, fire, medical, and industrial needs full-time employee for sales counter, shipping, ordering, invoicing. Experienced have first priority. Please apply at store. Neves Uniforms, 2538 Suite 200, Camino Entrada, 505-474-3828.

FEED EQUIPMENT SERVICES

Where treasures are found daily Place an ad Today!

CALL 986-3000

SALES MARKETING BRADY INDUSTRIES seeking outside sales representative for Santa Fe. Please email mark.stanger@bradyindustries.com for more info or see online posting.

2011 Ford Fiesta SE recent trade-in, single owner clean CarFax, low miles, auto, great MPG! immaculate $12,971. Call 505-216-3800.

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

TOOLS MACHINERY

BEAUTIFUL MISSION STYLE DINING ROOM SET: Table with leaf, 6 Chairs, China Cabinet. $980. Like new. 505438-0570

GARAGE SALE NORTH

WESTON MANDOLINE VEGETABLE SLICER. Stainless. NEW! Never used. $50. 505-466-6205

THULE BIKE RACKS & PARTS, including: crossbars, clamps, ski rack and front wheel carriers. Fits Subaru nicely. Call for pricing & details. Bill, 505-466-2976.

986-3000

2011 TOYOTA RAV4 4x4. Low miles, single owner, clean CarFax. Immaculate inside and out! $18,971. Call 505216-3800.

LARGE MOVING, GARAGE SALE! ! Furniture, artwork, jewelry, kitchen and household items, bike. 8 0 5 FALDAS DE LA SIERRA. July 11 & 12. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

COLLECTIBLES

DEF LEPPARD 77 logo button-down BASEBALL JERSEY. NEW! Men’s large. Embroidered. $50. 505-466-6205

2014 FORD Fiesta ST. Just 5k miles! Turbo with factory performance tuning. Fun, economical, and fast. Single adult owner, clean CarFax. $21,871. Call 505-216-3800.

BOX OF Sand Toys, $5. 505-989-1167

LADIE’S GOLF Shoes, FootJoy, 7M. $20, 505-954-1144.

BEAUTIFUL CONTEMPORARY SWIVEL CHAIR. Sage green, sueded fabric. Excellent condition. 31"x28"x27". $250 OBO. MUST SELL ASAP. 518-7632401 photo online.

2013 TOYOTA RAV4 LE 4x4. Low miles, single owner clean CarFax. LIKE NEW FOR LESS! $22,831. Call 505-216-3800.

»garage sale«

KIDS STUFF ART BARN Plans by Prickett-Ansaldi, Design. Awesome 2-story, open concept Live- Loft and studio. $2500. (Paid $5000). 505-690-6528

We’re a non-medical company with a need for caring, compassionate and honest people to provide homecare services to seniors. Make a difference by helping us keep our elderly happy and at home! We have immediate shifts available that range from 3 hours up to 24 hour care and are in Santa Fe, Espanola, and Los Alamos areas. For more information call our 24-hour info line at 505-6615889 HomeInsteadJobsSF@yahoo.com

POODLE PUPPIES: White Males, $400; Cream Female, $450. 505-901-2094, 505-753-0000.

Donate Used Cars, Trucks, Boats, RVs, & Motorcycles in any condition to help support Santa Fe Habitat. Call: 1-877-277-4344 or www.carsforhomes.org Local: 505986-5880.

Barn Stored Grass Hay For Sale! $13 per Bale Call, 505-455-2562 in Nambe.

Solution

Hi, my name is: ChaCha is such a smart little lady! She’ll sit with you on your lap and relax as long as you want her to be there! She is a senior dog, 10yrs plus that gets along well with other dogs.

BROODER LAMP for warming baby chicks, $20. 505-954-1144

TRADES HORSES TAILOR, SEAMSTRESS Pay based on experience. Good communication skills a must! No nights, evening work. Apply in person: Express Alterations, 1091 St. Francis.

MINIATURE HORSES for sale. Foals, Mares, Gelding, and Stallion. Wagon and two chariots. Call evenings 505438-2063 or mini@dawghouseranch.com

For more information contact the Espanola Valley Humane Society at 108 Hamm Pkwy, Española or call (505) 753-8662. More animals are available on the website at evalleyshelter.org.


E-14

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

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»recreational«

IMPORTS

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PICKUP TRUCKS

2009 ACURA TSX Tech ONLY 14k miles, loaded with NAV and leather, pristine, one owner clean CarFax $23,951. Call 505-216-3800.

2007 Honda Element EX. Another Lexus Trade! Low miles, well maintained, wonderful condition, clean CarFax. $12,871. Call 505-216-3800.

2011 NISSAN Maxima S. Local trade! New tires, single owner clean CarFax. NICE! $17,821. Call 505-2163800.

2012 Volkswagen Jetta TDI DIESEL. Single owner, clean CarFax, excellent condition $18,981. Call 505-216-3800.

2004 FORD F150, with 80k miles and 4x4. New battery, excellent condition, $14,500 . 505-424-3932

2004 AUDI-A6S QUATTRO AWD

2012 HYUNDAI Veloster. Low miles, panoramic roof, automatic, well equipped, clean CarFax. HOT! $18,471. Call 505-216-3800.

2011 NISSAN Rogue SV AWD. Merely 26,000 miles! EVERY OPTION, leather, NAV, moonroof. Single owner, clean CarFax. $19,871. CALL 505-216-3800.

BICYCLES

2006 VW JETTA TDI. One owner, leather, sunroof. Manual. Looks good, runs great. Graphite grey. $8,750. 505-231-7924

Another Local Owner, All Services Done, non-Smoker, Garaged, Manuals, X-Tires, Pristine, Soooo WELL KEPT $9,950.

SELL IT, BUY IT, OR FIND IT...

EV GLOBAL ELECTRIC BIKES (Lee Iacocca’s Bike Company)- Vintage bikes reconditioned with new batteries, tires, etc. Great for cruising around Santa Fe. $1295-$1595. 505820-0222

Only in the the SFNM Classifieds!

BOATS & MOTORS

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE!

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View vehicle, Carfax:

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505-983-4945

1987 JAGUAR XJ6. WOW! Only 48k miles! A TRUE classic, try to find a nicer one, accident free, amazing condition, drives great. $10,931. Call 505-216-3800.

2010 PRIUS, silver-grey, one owner, 30,201 miles. Always garaged and dealer serviced. $17,500. South Capital area. Dave 505-660-8868 or nmkabir@hotmail.com

WE PAY TOP DOLLAR FOR YOUR VEHICLE! 2010 SUBARU IMPREZA 2.5-GT PREMIUM

SPORTS CARS

Another One Owner, Local, Records, Factory Warranty, 10,129 Miles, Soooo PRISTINE, $ 19,450

2006 MARIAH SX18 BOAT. 3.0 liter Mercury motor. 18’ length. With trailer. Excellent condition. $11,500. Call 505-927-4946.

View vehicle, CarFax:

santafeautoshowcase.com

CAMPERS & RVs

505-983-4945

2003 BMW 330Xi. Just traded! AMAZING 53k original miles, AWD, loaded, clean CarFax, absolutely pristine, $13,871. CALL 505-216-3800.

2011 Lexus GS350 AWD. Recent single owner trade, Lexus CERTIFIED 3 year warranty, LOADED, and absolutely pristine! $34,921. Call 505-216-3800.

2013 Subaru XV Crosstrek, ANOTHER Lexus trade! AWD, Sunroof, Just 14k miles, Single owner, Clean CarFax. Why buy new? Buy Pre-owned for $22,981. 505-216-3800.

PICKUP TRUCKS

2001 PORSCHE 911 CARRERA 4 CABRIOLET. Silver-Black with black top, 6 speed manual, 18" turbo alloy wheels, Porsche Communication Management with 6-CD changer and navigation, hard top, 48,000 miles. $31,000 OBO. 505-690-2497

SUVs

1994 TIOGA MONTARO, 30’. Like new, 30k original miles. New Goodyear tires. Super clean. $5,950. Was $7950. Cash only. 505-577-4209

MOTORCYCLES

2012 FIAT 500 Sport merely 15k miles. One owner. Clean CarFax. Fun and immaculate. $14,371. Call 505-2163800.

2007 DODGE DAKOTA, V8, POWER SEATS. ONLY 52,000 MILES! AWESOME SHELL. $ 15,995. CALL 505473-1234. MERCEDES-BENZ 300E 1993 SEDAN. Black with blonde leather interior. Automatic. Many upgrades. Good condition. Two sets of tires. $4700. 505-471-2272, 505-699-0150.

2003 Toyota MR2 Spyder. DON’T WAIT! Economical, fun, fast, reliable, cute! Super clean with good CarFax. $9,721. Call 505-216-3800.

Support Santa Fe Animal Shelter

WE’RE SO DOG GONE GOOD! 2011 HONDA ACCORD, ALL THE GOODS! LEATHER, NAV. LUXURY AND FUN! $20,899. Call 505-4731234.

2013 JEEP GRAND CHEROKEE. 33K, HARD LOADED. THOUSANDS IN SAVINGS! MUST SEE! $34,588 CALL 505-473-1234.

2009 VESPA PIAGGIO GRANTURISMO 200 for sale. In excellent condition, perfect for zipping around town, but highway worthy too. Rich sapphire blue color with chrome details. A classic. 2,082 miles, 200cc engine, metal frame. Priced to sell at $2,850. Contact David at 484-459-5076 to view.

TRUCKS & TRAILERS

when you buy a

We always get results!

2011 MINI COOPER Countryman-S. WOW- Just 24k miles! Turbocharged,, single owner, clean CarFax. Perfect! Don’t miss it! $23,871. Call 505-2163800. 2000 TOYOTA 4-Runner recent tradein, just serviced, well maintained, super tight, runs and drives AWESOME! $7,991. Call 505-216-3800. 2007 SILVER HONDA ACCORD. Under 67,000 miles! One owner. Excellent condition. All Honda service records available. $13,300. Call 505-490-0034.

2014 Pet Calendar for $5!

986-3000

100% of sales donated to SFAS. 2001 FORD F350 Dually, V-10, Auto. Fiberglass Utility Bed, Generator, Compressor. Good tires. Fleet Maintained. $7,500. Great condition. 505 927-7364

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E-15


E-16

THE NEW MEXICAN Sunday, July 6, 2014

TIME OUT

Award winner Note: This column is excerpted and adapted from Gene Weingarten’s speech on June 28 at Howard University, accepting the Ernie Pyle Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Society of Newspaper Columnists.

Horoscope HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Sunday, July 6, 2014: This year you often feel as if you need to make a decision for the group. Pressure to deal with the outside world often conflicts with your personal life. A physical move is a strong possibility. If you are single, you will have an opportunity to stop thinking about a former love. Get to know this new love interest well before getting too involved. If you are attached, the two of you might make a major change on the homefront. Often you have different opinions from each other. Learn how to compromise. Scorpio absolutely adores you! The stars show the kind of day you’ll have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult

ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Allow a loved one to steal the stage. You have a strong personality that easily could outshine many people. Be more responsive to a special request without asking too many questions. Just go with the flow for a change. Tonight: Cater to someone else’s needs. This Week: You work well on a one-on-one level.

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You could be more practical and direct if you were not so worried about others’ responses. Allow someone else to take the lead for a change, and all you’ll have to do is simply respond. You could gain a sudden insight into a close loved one. Tonight: So many invitations. This Week: Keep communication flowing. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You might want to start working on a project that you have been putting off for way too long. Loosen up, and enjoy some downtime. A friend easily could surprise you with an offer you can’t say “no” to. Verbalize what is on your mind. Tonight: Know when to call it a night. This Week: Dive into work Monday. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You have a tendency to overindulge. A loved one might entice you into going on what he or she deems a fun adventure. Don’t make a judgment — just be willing to revise your plans. Spontaneity can add a delightful element to your day. Tonight: Forget tomorrow; live now.

Last week’s answers

This Week: Your creativity allows greater give-and-take. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH You’ll make your point easily, especially if you are relaxed. Others won’t be too reactive. Zero in on what is important for friends when choosing plans. Someone might let you know exactly what he or she wants from you. Tonight: Make it a quiet night at home. This Week: Consider staying close to home, at least until Wednesday. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH You’ll perk up by midafternoon. Return calls, and you might be surprised by some of the news you hear. You could feel pressured by someone who wants to feel more secure. A loved one is likely to react in his or her normally quirky way. Tonight: Think about tomorrow. This Week: Be careful how you tell someone that you do not agree with him or her. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH You might wake up feeling as if you are unstoppable. By midafternoon, some of that exuberance might no longer be present. Relax and enjoy a more easygoing pace. Your sensitivity and openness could make all the difference in an interaction. Tonight: Be spontaneous. This Week: You could see a problem arise after you have committed to a purchase. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You could feel energized in

Chess quiz

BLACK TO PLAY Hint: Force checkmate. Solution: 1. ... Qh3ch! 2. Kxh3 ... Bf1 mate!

New York Times Sunday Crossword

the afternoon, which will bring you out of a funk that has been plaguing you for a while. Reach out to someone at a distance who you care about. Catching up on news and gossip could be fun. Tonight: You are the lead actor. This Week: Go for what you want, especially on Monday and Tuesday. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You might have a problem when dealing with someone who wants to control others. You can try to explain that one cannot control others, but if this person is set on using manipulation, then your words are likely to be powerless. Tonight: Where your friends are. This Week: You might want to lie low until Wednesday. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH Now that some of the weekend craziness has died down, reach out to a pal you go out with often. Catch up on each other’s news. A parent or older relative might be irritated or angry. Return this person’s calls as soon as possible. Tonight: Among the crowds. This Week: You get what you want early on in the week. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Reach out to someone who you weren’t able to spend time with this weekend. You tend to enjoy this person more than you do others. Your conversation could involve an unexpected twist, so be sure to listen carefully. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. This Week: Stay on top of your work. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Catch up on someone else’s news, and make plans to get together very soon. Be willing to indulge a loved one, but be careful, as you could pull the wild card financially. Anything can happen when it comes to money. Tonight: Paint the town red. This Week: Take an overview, and do some research.

Scratch pad

I

’m going to talk today about one of the least acknowledged but most important tools of the successful columnist, namely, a crippling neurosis bordering on mental illness. I will give you examples of this from my own illustrious career, beginning with this very honor. When I was told I had won, I did not think, “Oh, my, how humbling yet also gratifying to be recognized by my younger colleagues.” What I thought was, “Well, duh. Of course you gave it to me. I live in Washington. Your convention is in Washington. By giving it to me as opposed to someone actually deserving, like Paul Krugman, you won’t have to pay travel expenses.” As I often do when I am insecure, I sought reassurance from my friend and editor, Tom the Butcher. I explained that I feared I don’t deserve this honor, and Tom said, “Wait, is it a lifetime achieveGene ment award?” When I confirmed that Weingarten it was, he said: “It’s fine. Those are usuThe Washington ally given out at the point in someone’s Post career when his greatest continuing achievement is a solid bowel movement in the morning.” So, yeah, I’m insecure. As you can see, I am also not a very good public speaker. Like many shy people, I tried to conquer my fear of public speaking through the age-old trick of imagining the audience in their underwear. The idea is that by making you seem vulnerable, even ridiculous, I feel masterful by comparison. But every time I imagine that, for some reason, I also imagine myself in my underwear. With a big hole in the crotch. (OK, a little aside. This speech is going to be excerpted in my next column, so it’s already been edited by Tom the Butcher. And Tom read that underpants joke and didn’t like it, but he told me diplomatically, using a tactic employed for generations by editors and dads, appealing to my selfrespect while affirming his confidence in me. He said, “You Can Do Better.” And I said, “No, I Can’t.” And that was that.) Speaking of dads, today would have been my father’s 100th birthday. I wish he could be here to see this. My dad lived through World War II. He read Ernie Pyle’s moving dispatches about ordinary heroes defeating the forces of evil, and he grieved when Ernie died on the battlefield, and here I am, winning an award with Ernie’s name on it, me, a writer of columns about pooping and farting. OK, maybe I don’t wish my father could see this. If he weren’t dead already, this might have done it. See, insecurity. After winning the Pulitzer Prize in 2010, my reaction was not elation, or even gratitude. My reaction was similar to the reaction of Janet Cooke in 1981, when she was told she got the Pulitzer for a story she had completely invented. We both secretly reacted the same way: “Oh, s—-.” In my case, it was because I had recently reread my story, and I saw that in the 82nd paragraph I had written that someone had “a history of prior neglect.” As opposed to what — a history of future neglect? This little nugget of redundancy throbbed in my brain like the piece of Nipponized shrapnel that Ernie Pyle caught at Okinawa. I knew in that moment that my obit would begin, “Gene Weingarten, who once was briefly awarded the Pulitzer Prize, an honor immediately withdrawn when it was revealed that his story contained the idiot formulation ‘prior history.’ ... “ OK, now I’m worried about that shrapnel line. Was it tasteless? It was tasteless, wasn’t it? I knew it. I mean, it wasn’t beneath me, nothing’s beneath me, but it was tasteless. OK, you want to take this award back? Fine. I don’t deserve it anyway. My advice is, Paul Krugman. Thank you.


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