Roswell Daily Record
INSIDE NEWS
DALEY NAMED CHIEF OF STAFF Overhauling his team at the top, President Barack Obama on Thursday named banker and seasoned political fighter William Daley as his new chief of staff ...
- PAGE A6
THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY
Ex-astronaut Schmitt gets energy post
Vol. 120, No. 6 50¢ Daily / $1 Sunday
SANTA FE (AP) — Former astronaut Harrison “Jack” Schmitt, who walked on the moon and served in the U.S. Senate, was nominated Thursday by Gov. Susana Martinez to run a state agency that oversees energy production in New Mexico. Schmitt was selected as Cabinet secretary of the Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department. The Republican governor also named Dr. Catherine Torres, a Las Cruces pediatrician, as secretary of the Health Department. Schmitt, 75, was one of the last men to walk on the moon as part of the Apollo 17 mission in 1972. He won election to the Senate in 1976, but lost his re-elec-
January 7, 2011
FRIDAY
www.rdrnews.com
tion bid in 1982 to Democrat Jeff Bingaman, who remains in the Senate. Schmitt, who lives in Albuquerque but grew up in Silver City, has been working as an aerospace consultant. Martinez said one of Schmitt’s first assignments is to review the energy agency’s regulations, including rules adopted by former Gov. Bill Richardson’s administration in 2008 that restrict the use of pits for onsite waste disposal at drilling sites. The oil industry has objected to the regulations, saying they are partly to blame for a slowdown in drilling in New Mexico. Taxes and royalties from
energy production account for about 15 percent of the revenues that flow into the state’s main budget account. Martinez said that Schmitt’s task is to make sure “we are developing the resources responsibly without killing jobs.” Schmitt said New Mexico has been “ill served” by reg-
Attack of the tumbleweeds
See SCHMITT Page A2 AP Photo
RIGHT: Harrison Schmitt talks to the media after New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez nominates him to run a state agency that oversees energy production in New Mexico during a news conference on Thursday.
Lyons named chairman
TOP 5 WEB
For The Last 24 Hours
• Pearce sworn in • Al Solis named RPD Chief • Incumbent VP of School Board running for re-election • Private-payroll report lifts hopes for more jobs • Laura Bush speaking
INSIDE SPORTS
Mark Wilson Photo
Massive amounts of tumbleweeds are cleared away along the fence separating Y O Road from the Roswell International Air Center Wednesday afternoon.
New info on December fire
LIONS TOP WARRIORS When Roswell’s two parochial schools — Valley Christian and Gateway Christian — do battle, it’s almost always an entertaining affair, no matter the sport... - PAGE B1
TODAY’S OBITUARIES Connie Ozbun
- PAGE A6
HIGH ...69˚ LOW ....28˚
TODAY’S FORECAST
INDEX
CLASSIFIEDS..........B5 COMICS.................B4 FINANCIAL .............B3 GENERAL........A2, A3 HOROSCOPES ........B5 LOTTERIES ............A2 OPINION ................A4 SPORTS ................B1 WEATHER ..............A8 WORLD .................A3
State Fire Marshal’s Office investigators announced Thursday they may have some information on the possible cause of a midDecember blaze in the heart of Cloudcroft, but said that the official cause is still yet to be determined. An investigator spokesman announced that inquiry into the blaze immediately following the fire, which destroyed several businesses in the village’s Burro Street area, “yielded clues about numerous potential ignition sources,” stated Gerald Garner, spokesman for the Fire Marchal’s Office. “Investigators continue to
gather information, conduct reviews and test evidence in an effort to pinpoint the fire’s origin and cause,” he said. “To date, however, the cause of the fire remains undetermined.” Investigators determined that the early-morning Dec. 13 blaze started within the Pine Stump Mall building, which was owned by the village’s mayor, Dave Venable. Officials say they could not estimate when the investigation will conclude, but asked anyone who has information, photographs or video of the fire that could be useful in the investigation to contact 505-476-0066.
EMILY RUSSO MILLER RECORD STAFF WRITER
school district’s human resources department. If elected, Ponce, now a first-grade teacher at Sunset Elementary School, promises to work for excellence in student achievement by developing curricu-
Former lawmaker running for school board seat
A former legislator in the state House of Representatives is running for a seat on the Roswell Independent School District School Board. Pauline Ponce will be up against sitting City Councilor Barry Foster and the incumbent Vice President of the Board George Peterson. Ponce, 60, who served in the House from 2001 to 2004, said her experience developing the state budget while on the House Appropriations Committee well qualifies her for a seat on the board, especially in hard economic times. “With my expertise in budgeting, I hope to add a high degree of knowledge in that area,” Ponce said. Ponce also dealt with budgetary decisions while she served as Assistant Superintendent for the
The state’s Public Regulation Commission’s representative for District 2, which encompasses Roswell and Chaves County, was elected as chairman of the board that regulates the utilities, telecommunications, motor carriers and insurance industries in the state. Commissioner Pat Lyons was appointed to the position by a 3-2 vote during the commission’s first regular meeting of the new year, Tuesday. He replaced former Commissioner David King. Lyons was elected to the PRC in November. “I’m looking forward to serving the people of New Mexico, especially in District 2,” said Lyons, adding See LYONS Page A2
Pentagon plans to rein in spending WASHINGTON (AP) — For the first time in more than a decade defined by costly wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Pentagon announced plans Thursday to freeze its ballooning budget, forcing the services to shrink the Army and Marines and increase health care premiums for military retirees and their families. The Pentagon says it can stop asking for annual budget increases in 2015, adjusting its spending only for inflation. The last time the Pentagon’s
budget went down was in 1998. The plan is aimed at helping the nation whittle away at its massive deficit. But the proposal, which requires $78 billion in spending cuts and relies on another $100 billion in cost-saving moves to cover urgent requirements, is tied to two assumptions: that the war in Afghanistan will end on time and that Congress will agree to plans to cancel popular job-making programs and charge retired military
families more for health care. Defense Secretary Robert Gates acknowledged that projections about what the world will look like so far in the future have a troubled track record. But the Defense Department is “not exempt” from belt-tightening just because of its charge to defend the nation, he said. “Looking five years into the future is through a
See PENTAGON Page A6
King of the roof
See PONCE Page A6
Emily Russo Miller Photo
Pauline Ponce is running for the school board, District 4, against a city councilor and the incumbent vice president.
Mark Wilson Photo
A worker is silhouetted as he works atop a roof of a house under construction on W. Karabella just off of N. Montana Wednesday.
A2 Friday, January 7, 2011
GENERAL
Schmitt
Continued from Page A1
ulations during the Richardson administration, contending that jobs in the energy industry have moved to other states. “Nature endowed New Mexico with an extraordinary abundance of natural resources ... and we do have an obligation, not only to the state but to its citizens, to make sure that those resources are properly employed not only for
the creation of jobs but for the preservation of the legacy that they provide us for the future,” Schmitt said. He will receive a salary of $105,000, down $3,000 from what the department secretary made during the Richardson administration. The agency also manages state parks and administers forestry, mining reclamation and renewable energy programs. Schmitt, who has a doctorate in geology from Harvard University, disagrees
Roswell Daily Record
with scientists who contend humans are causing global warming. In resigning from The Planetary Society in 2008, Schmitt wrote “the ’global warming scare’ is being used as a political tool to increase government control over American lives, incomes and decision making.” Scott Forrester, executive director of the state Democratic Party, said, “Martinez promised bold change and she’s bringing it in the form of an appointee at odds with the
basic tenets of science and reason. This appointment is a clear signal to Martinez’s big-oil backers that the days of basic protections for New Mexicans’ air and drinking water are over.” Torres, 48, earned her undergraduate and medical degrees from the University of New Mexico. As a practicing physician, Torres “knows firsthand the health needs of New Mexico’s children and families,” Martinez said. Torres will receive a yearly salary of $122,500,
12-week exercise program is based on a scientific research study and a series of exercise programs conducted by Tufts University. The classes are specifically designed for middleaged and older adults. “These exercises will increase their strength, muscle mass and density, which will help prevent osteoporosis,” she said. “It also helps reduce a number of chronic diseases such as diabetes, heart disease, arthritis. It helps
reduce depression, improve their sleep, and the [exercises are] realistic and safe for their age group. And with the strength training, it helps them perform their daily tasks, like getting up out of the chair ... it helps them improve their balance and flexibility. I will also cover some things on osteoporosis, calcium.” In aging bodies, inactivity can lead to several health problems, including muscle wear and tear and a decrease in bone density
and strength. However, exercise and healthy eating can curtail these problems. “It’s very important for the middle-aged or older adults to remain active and stay active,” Woodin said. “As we all know the saying ‘If you don’t use it, you lose it.’ [If they don’t exercise] they’ll lose their strength and ability to perform daily tasks.” According to Woodin, the program, which first began in Feb. 2009, will continue through April 1 and may
J.ENTZMINGER@ROSWELL-RECORD.COM
The New Mexico National G u ar d an n ou n ced it plans to host a yellow ribbon ceremony in Roswell to bid farewell to local and statewide soldiers prepari ng for dep lo ym e nt t o Kosovo. The ceremony is slated for Jan. 13 at the Roswell C on ven tion a nd Ci vi c Center at 10 a.m. Roswell’s 717th Brigade Support Battalion is one of five units in the state preparing for deployment later this month. About
1 0 0 gu a r d sm en an d women from Roswell will b e t ak in g p ar t i n t h e K osovo p eace k eep in g mission. T h e N at ion al G u ar d an n ou n ced ear ly last m o nt h t h at ab ou t 4 5 0 New Mexico soldiers are expected to be sent overseas. The news came about six months after all of the state’s deployed units had returned to the U.S. from missions for the first time since Sept. 11, 2001.
The other units deploying to Kosovo include the 111th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade of Rio Ranch o, 1/2 0 0 t h In fan tr y Battalion of Las Cruces, 1 2 6 th M ili tar y P olice Company of Albuquerque an d t he 20 0 t h P u b lic A f f air s Dep ar t m en t of Santa Fe. Similar yellow ribbon ceremonies are planned for Las Cr u ces an d R io Rancho.
down from the nearly $184,400 paid to Richardson’s health secretary. The department runs public health clinics across the state, manages programs for the developmentally disabled and operates several state health facilities, including a mental hospital and long-term care nursing homes. The agency also administers New Mexico’s medical marijuana program, which Martinez opposes. The governor will release her budget recommendations to the Legislature
next week. Martinez said there may be a slight budget increase next year for Medicaid, which provides health care for about a fourth of the state’s population, mainly uninsured children and the poor. Federal economic stimulus money has been used to protect Medicaid from cutbacks when state revenues dropped. Martinez said she’s committed in her budget proposals to replacing the federal dollars with state money to preserve Medicaid services.
Osteoporosis exercise classes to be offered at Senior Circle JONATHAN ENTZMINGER RECORD STAFF WRITER
Beginning next week, the Chaves County Extension Office, in partnership with Comfort Keepers and Senior Circle, will offer seniors osteoporosis exercise classes at Senior Circle, 2801 N. Maint St. The classes will take place on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 10 a.m. The classes are part of the Strong Women, Strong
• Police responded to Hispanic Baptist Church on the 1200 block of South Kentucky Avenue, night. Wednesday Accor ding to police r eports, an unknown suspect hurled a rock through a window above the church’s entrance sometime between Sunday and Wednesday nights. Estimated damage is $350, and the investigation is pending further leads.
Found Property
• Police responded to an alley on the 300 block of East Church Street, Wednesday night, after an officer witnessed two kids shooting BB guns at
Lyons
Continued from Page A1
that he intends to focus on bringing jobs and business to the state. “I want to put together a task force ... to look at relaxing some of the regulations on businesses so we can be pro-business and bring forward jobs to the state,” he said. “We need to clean up the PRC and get her working good for New Mexicans.”
Bones program, which held an informational meeting on classes at the Roswell Civic and Convention Center, Thursday, “This program is geared more towards ... older adults,” Shannon Woodin, extension home economist with the Chaves County Extension Of fice, said. “We’ll do strength exercising with weights ... and we’ll do a warm up and a cool down along with some squats.” According to Woodin, the
a dog in a neighboring yar d. Once the two youngsters, estimated ages 6-8, saw the officer, they ran and threw the guns down. Neither of the kids wer e caught, and police collected the guns and placed them into property/evidence. Anyone with information about these or any other crimes is asked L yons says he also plans to investigate how insurance rates are raised on consumers and that he would like to help push legislation to have any rate hikes be approved by the PRC. “Right now, the insurance commissioner can just raise your rates,” he said. “We want that to go through the commission.” Prior to being elected to the PRC, Lyons served as the state’s Commissioner of Public Lands and as a state senator.
CONTRACTOR/JOURNEYMAN
Building, electrical, plumbing, gas HVAC, piping. Specialties: painting, cabinets, tile, fencing, glazing, flooring, welding, insulation, stucco, excavation, concrete, others. Business & Law. NM Testing daily in Roswell.
NM & TX STATE EXAM PREP in Roswell
Also, Texas electrical master & journeyman exam prep.
CLASSES JAN. 15 & 16 Limited seating.
CONTRACTORS SCHOOL 1-800-247-1300
75% 30% off off SOFT SHADES
WOOD BLINDS
1608 S. Main
MITH PAINT
to call Crime Stoppers, 1-888-594-TIPS (8477). Callers can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward.
65% off
75% off
VERTICAL BLINDS
MINI BLINDS
622-2020 Mon-Fri: 7:30 - 5:30 Sat. 8-12
LOTTERIES Pick 3
1-9-2
Roadrunner Cash 9-16-19-20-26
pick up again sometime during the year. “This will be ongoing,” she said. “It’s not something that we want to do for 12 weeks and just stop.” Although the program is under the umbrella of the Strong Womens, Strong Bones program, men are encouraged to attend classes too. “I do have men that come and participate,” Woodin said.
National Guard yellow ribbon ceremony is Jan. 13
“WAKE UP WITH A”
GRAND BREAKFAST
$3.99
2 eggs, bacon, sausage, hashbrowns, toast or biscuit
1900 N. Main Street
REGISTRATION FOR THE RASC WINTER CLASSES Saturday, January 8th 9:00 – 11:00 am at 807 N. Missouri. Over 40 classes offered. Call 624-6718 for information. All seats before 6 PM $6.00 (Excludes 3D) (*) No Pass or Discount MATINEES INDICATED BY( )SAT & SUN ONLY!
4501 N.MAIN
Register at allentheatresinc.com for e-mail specials & info
*TRON 3D (PG)
(12:30) 3:30 6:30 9:30 $2 3D SURCHARGE APPLIES
TRUE GRIT (PG13) (11:50) 2:20 4:55 7:30 10:00 *GULLIVER’S TRAVELS 3D (PG)
*YOGI BEAR 3D (PG)
(12:10) 2:10 4:20 6:50 9:00 $2 3D SURCHARGE APPLIES
LITTLE FOCKERS (PG13) (11:35) 2:00 4:30 7:00 9:20 THE FIGHTER (PG13) (12:00) 2:15 4:25 6:45 9:15 (11:35)4:50 10:00 $2 3D SURCHARGE APPLIES *CHRONICLES OF NARNIA 3D (PG) *SEASON OF WITCH (PG13) (12:05) 2:25 4:50 7:20 9:40 (11:15) 2:05 4:40 7:15 9:50 $2 3D SURCHARGE APPLIES THE TOURIST (PG13) 2:25 7:30
Heartland Care of Artesia COMING SOON: GREEN HORNET 3D THE DILEMMA
LPN’s and RN’s CNA’s Social Worker
If you enjoy working with the elderly, come join our team. Immediate openings are available. Come by our office and pick up an application at 1402 Gilchrist in Artesia or call (575) 746-6006.
Roswell Daily Record
USPS No 471-200
News & Business Telephone 622-7710 Circulation Telephone 622-7730
Charles Fischer Publisher
cfischer@roswell-record.com
Andrew Poertner Editor
editor@roswell-record.com
R. Cory Beck Publisher (1987-2006)
Kim Gordon ........................................................Advertising Director kim.gordon@roswell-record.com Jim Dishman .....................................................Circulation Director jdishman@roswell-record.com Published daily except Monday at 2301 N. Main St., Roswell, N.M. 88201. Copyright Notice The entire contents of the Roswell Daily Record, including its flag on Page 1, are fully protected by copyright and registry and cannot be reproduced in any form for any purpose without written permission from the Daily Record.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES by carrier delivery in Roswell: $10 per month, payable in advance. Prices may vary in some areas. As a convenience to subscribers, advance payments for home delivery for periods of 3 months to 12 months may be made directly to the Roswell Daily Record. No responsibility for advance payments over 30 days assumed by the company unless paid directly to the Roswell Daily Record. All home carrier subscriptions will continue being delivered past expiration date causing an arrears owed unless the circulation department is contacted and told to stop service prior to expiration.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ALL NEW MEXICO 882 ZIP CODES, $12 ONE MONTH, $36 THREE MONTHS, $72 SIX MONTHS, $144 ONE YEAR. All other New Mexico zip codes, $13 one month, $39 three months, $78 six months, $156 one year. All other states in USA, $18 one month, $54 three months, $108 six months, $216 one year. Periodical-postage paid at Roswell, N.M. Postmaster: Please mail change of address to Roswell Daily Record, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell, N.M. 88202-1897. All postal subscriptions will stop at expiration unless payment is made prior to expiration.
GENERAL/WORLD
A3
Ivory Coast election winner wants rival ousted Roswell Daily Record
Friday, January 7, 2011
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast (AP) — The internationally recognized winner of Ivory Coast’s presidential election is asking for special forces to launch a commando operation to remove the country’s defiant sitting president who has refused to cede power five weeks after losing the vote. Hunkered down at a hotel guarded by United Nations peacekeepers, Alassane Ouattara told The Associated Press on Thursday that Laurent Gbagbo would try to flee if the regional Economic Community of West African States, or ECOWAS, sent in troops to oust him. “I know Mr. Gbagbo,” Ouattara said on the lawn of the lagoonside hotel. “If he sees that ECOWAS troops are coming to capture him, believe me he will start running away. I know him well. He does not have the courage to face those type of situations.” While the U.N. and other world powers recognize Ouattara as the winner of the Nov. 28 presidential runoff, Gbagbo has refused to step down, insisting he was the victor. The political standoff has paralyzed this once prosperous country, the world’s largest cocoa producer, and tensions over the outcome have sparked violence, with the U.N. confirming at least 173 deaths. While ECOWAS has
threatened military action against Gbagbo, African leaders in recent days have shied away from making a commitment, fearing mass casualties and a possible return to civil war in the nation that was divided by such bloodshed after a civil war that erupted in 2002. Ouattara, 68, addressed those concerns in the AP interview, saying that if West African nations “do send in special forces with the objective of removing Mr. Gbagbo, he will be removed, without much damage.” An ECOWAS military operation would not take much time or many resources, and Gbagbo would cave in immediately, said Ouattara, who is protected at the hotel by U.N. peacekeeping troops. Gbagbo’s location can be quickly identified by a team of elite troops because he “is essentially at his residence or at the presidential palace,” Ouattara said. He added that elite forces have carried out similar operations in Latin America and Africa “to remove the person who is the problem.” Nigeria, Africa’s most populous nation and the strongest of ECOWAS’ 15 members, has a large military and the kind of special forces that Ouattara is calling for. But participation of Nigerian commandos would
require the approval of Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan, who as recently as Tuesday said more time is needed to resolve the Ivory Coast standoff. At home, Ouattara has been confined to the grounds of the resort hotel and has been barred access
to the institutions of power, including the presidential palace located across the lagoon where Gbagbo has continued to hold Cabinet meetings. But abroad, Ouattara has succeeded in exerting his influence, including asking some 20 countries to no longer recognize Gbagbo’s ambassa-
dors. In recent weeks, both Britain and Canada have asked the Ivorian diplomats there to leave. In a tit-for-tat late Thursday, Gbagbo’s government announced that they were expelling both the British and the Canadian ambassadors in Ivory Coast, said Pascal Affi N’Guessan, the
president of Gbagbo’s party and one of his top advisors. “The ministry of foreign affairs has decided to apply the principle of reciprocity following what has happened to our ambassadors,” he said. “They will be asked to leave in the same condition that ours are being asked to leave.”
NEW YORK (AP) — The holiday shopping season was the best since 2006, as a strong November more than offset spending that tapered off in late December. The strength of holiday sales from Oct. 31 through Jan. 1 suggests a recovery in consumer spending. For
investors, whose expectations were riding high after a stronger -than-expected November, the December figures were disappointing. That hurt retail stocks Thursday. Early holiday discounts, which started in late October, drove big sales early in the season but also had
shoppers finishing more gift-buying before December. A lull early in December and a blizzard Dec. 26 in the Northeast also took bites out of sales. From Oct. 31-Jan. 1, revenue at stores open at least a year rose 3.8 percent over last year, according to an index compiled by the Inter-
national Council of Shopping Centers. That’s the biggest increase since 2006, when the measurement rose 4.4 percent. The index tailed off to a 3.1 percent increase in December after a 5.4 percent rise in November. “The overall season was good, but the strength came from the beginning of the season,” said Michael P. Niemira, chief economist at International Council of Shopping Centers. December’s gains came on top of a solid 3.6 percent gain in December 2009; November’s figures compare with a 0.2 percent decline. Thursday’s figures are based on revenue at stores open at least a year. That’s long been considered a key indicator of a retailer’s health, because it excludes revenue at stores that open or close during the year. However, changes in shopping habits and other factors have led the figure to lose some of its luster as a yardstick. Some stores exclude online revenue, which soared 12 percent overall and accounts for 8 to 10 percent of total holiday spending. Online spending spiked 17 percent the week
after Christmas, according to comScore, possibly getting a boost from shoppers cooped up by snow. In addition, many retailers have stopped reporting monthly figures, including some of the biggest chains: Wal-Mart Stores, Best Buy Co. and Sears Holdings Corp. Only about 30 merchants report now, down from about 60 at the end of 2005. Nevertheless, the figures offer what analysts believe was a fair picture of the holiday season, according to Ken Perkins, president of RetailMetrics LLC. Analysts say that the holiday 2010 season also marked the time that spending in many categories returned to pre-recession levels. Online spending, as well as spending on groceries, auto parts and clothing, are now above the prerecession peak, according to MasterCard Advisors’ SpendingPulse, which tracks all transactions including cash. Jewelry, home furnishings and luxury goods are still below peaks, according to the data service. Niemira says he’s confident spending growth
should continue in 2011. “What really has to kick in is the employment story to keep the momentum going,” Niemira said. A government jobs report due Friday is expected to show the unemployment rate dipped to 9.7 percent in December from 9.8 percent in November. For Jerrie McKennon, a retiree in Burleson, Texas, 2010 was a good year. “I loosened up in 2010. The money we lost came back,” said the retiree in Burleson, Texas, who was at Manhattan Mall on Thursday. Nearly all of McKennon’s investments regained their pre-recession value last year, with the exception of her home. After watching her spending for two years, she allowed herself some large splurges in 2010, including two elaborate vacations and a new Lexus. For December, many retailers including Target Corp., Costco Wholesale Corp. and Macy’s Inc. reported gains below Wall Street expectations. Clothing chain Gap Inc. suffered a surprise 3 percent drop in December. Analysts had expected a 2.6 percent increase.
AP Photo
Alassane Ouattara, foreground in red tie, walks with advisers and staff in the garden of the Golf Hotel in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Thursday, Jan. 6, 2011. Ouattara, the man recognized as the winner of Ivory Coast's recent presidential election, called Thursday for special forces from West African nations to remove Ivory Coast's incumbent president Laurent Gbagbo in a commando operation.
December increase seals strong holiday for retail
AP Photo
In this Dec. 18, 2010, file photo, a customer service associate helps Kenia Alvarez, center, of the Bronx borough of New York, choose a coat at the J.C. Penney store at the Manhattan Mall in New York. U.S. retailers are reporting surprisingly weak December revenue after a strong November pulled forward holiday spending and a blizzard in the Northeast took a bite out of sales after Christmas.
A4 Friday, January 7, 2011
OPINION
The trouble with promoting climate change theories
A headline in Der Spiegel’s online magazine reads: “Green Groups Try to Sex Up Climate Change.” It’s a fascinating analysis of how environmental groups are trying to restart a fickle public’s interest in preventing global warming. The problem? Interest in global warming among regular voters in democracies has fallen off a cliff. “Environmentalists and scientists are concerned about the massive drop in public interest in the topic over the last year,” the article states. Why the great change? Much of this has to do with the damage done by “Climategate,” the release of e-mails showing global warming scientists acting as “gatekeepers” to prevent critiques of their work. The case for massive changes in our economy to reduce global warming rests on the speculative future, not on anything tangible we can see around us. It requires a new, absolute faith in the scientists who are predicting disaster if we fail to act. When those scientists, however
EDITORIAL
MAGGIE
GALLAGHER COLUMNIST
well-intentioned, demonstrated that they were not committed to pure reason — that they are human beings who sometimes attack each other and attempt to punish dissenters when they think the issue is important enough — voters lost faith. The special status of science in our society as the pathway to truth has created a new set of incentives to manipulate science in order to achieve power — even wanting the power to do good is a form of lust for power. Science is a pathway to truth only when the road remains open. Even when ultimately proved wrong, dissenters to scientific con-
sensus are what keeps science from becoming just another form of dogma. “Trial and error” is the heart of the scientific process, which paradoxically produces truth. But activists need something else: They need moral truth — truth that compels the dissenters and the doubters, too. So now, according to Der Spiegel, looking to “turn the tide,” green groups are searching for “mindbombs,” or “highly emotional images that reduce a complex problem to one core message.” This search explains the ugly video they tried first and quickly pulled: exploding children who refused to “help” stop climate change into a bloody mess. What kind of movement imagines that the public is going to put up with this? But they haven’t yet found a good substitute. Polar bears are too remote, hockey-stick graphs turn out to be false, wind turbines generate little emotion and Al Gore has dropped off a cliff, too.
Roswell Daily Record
But Der Spiegel notes that some innovative new strategies are emerging: “Climate activists have begun directing millions in funding into training programs for environmental journalists, with the goal of encouraging what’s known as ‘advocacy journalism.’” The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has even created a new “code of conduct” governing interactions between scientists and journalists. In a strange new directive on the careful use of language, the IPCC warns scientists to avoid using certain words — words like “risk” and “uncertainty.” This analysis, however, leaves out what is probably the most important reason for the sudden drop off of public interest in speculative environmental disaster: economic collapse. Even liberal Democrats like Nancy Pelosi knew better than to attempt to use the lame-duck session to pass cap-and-trade bills that would burden economic growth. The worst problem the climate change advocates have to
deal with goes unacknowledged: The solutions they propose are so destructive that ignoring the problem begins to look good in comparison. Destroying jobs now so that sea levels will not rise in 50 years is not a good trade-off to the general public. Maybe it won’t happen. Maybe they are wrong. Maybe it won’t be as harmful as they predict. Humans have been adapting to climate change for thousands of years. Maybe, rather than impoverishing people now, we should trust that human beings in the future will find new ways to adapt to climate change — and maybe even find ways to help polar bears do so, too. Maggie Gallagher is the founder of the National Organization for Marriage and has been a syndicated columnist for 15 years. © 2011 Maggie Gallagher
National Opinion Prosecuting insider trading
As of today, seven people have been charged in an insider-trading investigation focused on investors and consultants connected to Primary Global Research, an expert-network firm. The cases, brought by Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, paint a disturbing picture of how some hedge funds have used this company to illegally procure information and distort the workings of a healthy financial market. A decade ago, the Securities and Exchange Commission barred publicly traded companies from disclosing information selectively to favored investors. That regulation led to the growth of expert-network firms, with some providing access not only to outside experts but to employees of publicly traded companies with inside information. Insider trading has always been hard to prove, and this middleman approach makes it even harder — providing plausible deniability to clients. A winning prosecution depends on establishing not only who knew what and when but also who knew that a tip came from a source breaching a duty of confidentiality. In the past, the government relied mainly on whistle blowers to warn them of insidertrading abuses, and successful prosecutions were rare. Mr. Bharara’s aggressive pursuit is welcome. A healthy financial market needs clear — and vigilantly enforced — rules on what’s fairly researched information and what’s an illegal tip. Guest Editorial The New York Time
North Korea diplomacy
If frequent-flier points convert to diplomatic progress, the endless tensions with North Korea might be reduced by a flurry of air travel. In the first week of the new year, U.S. special envoy to North Korea, Stephen Bosworth, will be in South Korea, China and Japan. His trip and others hint at a return by North Korea to six-party talks that stalled two years ago, when the government in Pyongyang walked away. Bosworth’s trip will be followed by a Jan. 14 meeting in Seoul between U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates and the South Korean defense minister. All of the activity points toward Jan. 19 in Washington, when President Barack Obama welcomes Chinese President Hu Jintao. The Obama administration is working the issue hard, prodding China to exert influence on its neighbor, promoting the resumption of talks between South Korea, North Korea, China, Japan and the U.S., and opening bilateral contacts with the North. A month of intense diplomacy might yield historic change. Then again, it’s North Korea. Guest Editorial The Seattle Times DEAR DR. GOTT: I am a 58year-old male. Over the last year, I have developed a twitch or spasm around my left eye. I take hydrochlorothiazide and Accupril for my high blood pressure. Can you tell me what is going on? DEAR READER: Hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ) is a diuretic (water pill) that treats hypertension and helps prevent the body from absorbing too much salt, which can lead to fluid retention. It is prescribed for people with kidney disorders, congestive heart failure, high blood pressure and other conditions. Side effects can include loss of appetite, lightheadedness, diarrhea, dizziness, temporary blurred vision, low potassium and loss of appetite. Severe allergic reactions can produce hives,
Will the 112th Congress finally get it right? Incoming House Speaker John Boehner and his Republican colleagues are intensely aware of public fury over how Congress operates. But following a lame-duck Congress that continued with business as usual, will this new Congress finally get it right? As the 112th Congress officially convenes this week, the questions most of us have on our minds are: Will it finally: — Reduce gover nment spending? — Reduce the national deficit? — Reduce the national debt? — Reduce ear marks and pork?
Doonesbury
ASK DR. GOTT UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE
difficulty breathing, low urine output, muscle pain or cramps and more. Accupril is an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE inhibitor), also used to treat hypertension and heart failure. As with many drugs, it can be prescribed for other, seemingly unrelated conditions as well. Side effects can include cough (known as an ACE inhibitor
CHUCK NORRIS
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
— Reduce briberies by lobbyists and special interests? — Reduce Americans’ taxes? — Reduce illegal immigration? — Reduce our foreign entanglements? — Reduce government overreach into our lives? — Reduce government lying,
cough), lightheadedness, nausea, fatigue, headache and more. Severe allergic reactions are similar to those of HCTZ. To the best of my knowledge, eye twitching is not a side effect of either medication, but you should seek the advice of your prescribing physician for the final word on the subject. Most twitching is benign and not an indication of a serious medical problem. It can likely be handled without medical intervention; however, more serious and uncommon symptoms should be brought to a physician’s attention for evaluation. Technically known as blepharospasm, involuntary eye twitching is related to the nervous system. Benign twitches may be related to stress, fatigue, eyestrain, caffeine intake, allergies,
cheating and corruption? — Reduce constitutional disobedience? And so stabilize the nation and economy? Nov. 2 was undoubtedly a reprimand and a repudiation of the direction Washington is going and how it is conducting government business. But it was also a big renunciation of who our politicians have become. Getting government right isn’t merely a matter of knowing how; we’ve had plenty of that type of politician who have screwed up our country even worse. In fact, there has been one prevailing element that has been missing in
a nutritional imbalance, dry eyes and alcohol use. A year is simply too long for you to suffer from this annoying condition. Unless there has been increased stress at work or at home, you are consuming more caffeine than you should or you have a viable explanation, I urge you to see your primary-care physician, ophthalmologist or neurologist. You might be helped by allergy medication, Botox injections or drug therapy. Perhaps your drug combination is too strong and something as simple as a dose reduction might alleviate the problem. Because of the possibility of an allergy involvement, I am sending you a copy of my Health Report “Allergies.” Other readers who
See GOTT, Page A5
recent recipes to reawaken and rebound our republic. It’s the last “E” in the three E’s to a successful gover nment: expertise, experience and a good set of ethics. For example, President Barack Obama made the audacious claim in the beginning of his presidency that his administration would “clean up both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue” with “the most sweeping ethics reform in history.” He repeatedly pledged that “an Obama administration is going to have the toughest ethics laws of any administration in history.”
See NORRIS, Page A5
25 YEARS AGO
Jan. 7, 1986 • The Roswell Police Department has announced the selection of Of ficer Clifton Lee Frosch as Employee of the Month. Frosch worked as a campus police officer at Easter n New Mexico UniversityRoswell, as a mechanic for Great Southwest Aviation and at the Chaves County Jail as a jailer. He also served in the U.S. Marine Corps for four years. • Lance M. Derbonne, son of Elizabeth J. Roberts of Roswell, has been promoted to Air Force specialist four. Derbonne is a medical specialist at Fort Bragg, N.C., with the 504th Airborne Infantry.
LOCAL
A5
Newly planted tulips may bloom next year Roswell Daily Record
Q. Can I plant tulips now? I received some tulip bulbs for Christmas and would love to see them bloom. A. It is getting rather late for planting tulips outside now, but they are better off in the ground rather than sitting on a shelf somewhere. If you plant them now, they may bloom. However, they may just produce leaves and you may have to wait until next year to see them bloom. Very often tulips and other bulbs received as gifts in mid-winter are intended for forcing. That is for planting in pots, or special vases and grown indoors for late winter flowers. They can often be planted outside after blooming indoors to bloom in the garden in subsequent springs. Q. I got the chipper I had been wanting for Christmas. Can I prune my trees now and add the trimmings to my compost pile to use in my garden this spring? A. Winter, when trees and shrubs are dormant, is a good time for pruning. However, if you add the wood chips to a compost pile now, they may not be completely decomposed by spring. That should not discourage you. Anything that is not completely decomposed can be screened
VISTAS POLICY
We try to publish all information about local events and achievements that we can, given time and space limitations. However, we have no legal or ethical requirement to publish everything we receive. Staff members make the final determination on when or if information is published. The Roswell Daily Record reserves the right to reject or edit announcements for any reason. We publish announcements only once, except in cases of error on our part. To submit an announcement for publication we require a typewritten, legible press release. The release should contain the date, time, location, subject and any other relevant information. Press releases must include a name and contact information, should we have questions regarding the notice. All e-mailed Around Town, Area Scene and Local Achievement items MUST be sent to the Vistas editor at vistas@roswell-record.com, at least FIVE days prior to the requested publishing date. Any other announcements of upcoming events must also be e-mailed or delivered to the RDR a minimum of FIVE business days before a desired publication date. Delivery or receipt of an item to the RDR after that time does not guarantee publi-
Norris
Continued from Page A4
But what we’ve seen from his administration is more of the same old government corruption — back-door deals, sidestepping constitutional protocol, manipulating the American public, buying votes, compounding broken promises, perpetuating Chicago-style politics, etc. Good morals precede good laws, which is why government isn’t much help. Unless the people and their legislators are grounded in morality, the best of laws will be broken and the worst of laws will be made, legalizing immorality. Our Founders knew that for a government to “get it right,” it first has to be filled with people who are “right and good.” They knew that morality and religion are essential buttresses of a good and free government. As George Washington once said, “a good moral character is the first essential in a man.” Patrick Henry wrote: “The great pillars of all government and of social life (are) virtue, morality, and religion. This is the armor ... and this alone, that renders us invincible.” And Charles Carroll of Carrollton, who signed the Declaration of Independence on behalf of Maryland, similarly wrote, “Without morals a republic cannot subsist any length of time; they therefore who are decrying the Christian religion, whose morality is so sublime and pure ... are undermining the solid foundation of morals, the best security for the duration of free governments.” Our Founders had it right in the beginning, and we can, too, if we follow their footsteps. Good government is created and sustained only when we discern and elect character before charisma and promised political carrots.
Gott
Continued from Page A4
would like a copy should send a selfaddressed stamped No. 10 envelope and a $2 check or money order made payable to Newsletter and mailed to Newsletter, P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH 44092-0167. Be sure to mention the title or print an order form off my website at www.AskDrGottMD.com. DEAR DR. GOTT: You stated in a previous article that biotin was needed for healthy hair and to help stop hair loss. How much biotin is safe to take? I take 1,000 milligrams twice daily, but I lose a lot of hair every time I wash it, which is every other day. DEAR READER: Biotin, otherwise known as vitamin B7, is produced naturally in the intestines. When the body doesn’t manufacture adequate amounts, hair loss and other conditions develop.
to separate it from the finished compost. The undecomposed portion can be returned to the compost. Wait until the winter is almost over before pruning evergreen trees if you can. They are more likely to suffer winter desiccation if pruned too early.
The smaller the wood chip sizes, the faster they will decompose to form compost, so make the chips as small as feasible. Wood is high in carbon. This is one of the materials needed by the organisms that turn landscape waste into valuable compost. The other necessary food for the decomposer organisms is material high in nitrogen. Green kitchen waste — such as lettuce leaves, cabbage leaves, carrot tops and scrapings, even potato peels — are
cation by the desired date. We cannot guarantee publication on a specific date. Press releases can be delivered to the RDR offices at 2301 N. Main St. (enter on the south side of the building only), faxed to 575-625-0421 or e-mailed to vistas@roswell-record.com. E-mails should contain the message in plain text in the body of the message only. The Daily Record now charges for wedding, engagement and anniversary announcements. The charges will be $12 for the first 8 column inches of text and 18 cents a line thereafter. A photo is $5. Wedding, engagement and anniversary announcement forms are available at the RDR offices, 2301 N. Main St. Anniversary announcements for page C2 in Sunday editions are for couples celebrating their 25th anniversary and are then published in five-year intervals up to the 60th anniversary. Couples celebrating 60 or more years are eligible every year. Couples with anniversaries less than 25 years, or those with anniversaries not falling on the five-year intervals, will have the option of placing the announcement on page C2 on Sundays, or the A section any day of the week. Anniversary announcements may be accompanied by two photographs. That is why I endorsed Mike Huckabee a few years ago in the presidential race — because I believed, before anything else, that he is a man of integrity, someone who means what he says and says what he means. I trust his word. And right now, he is encouraging all of us in Texas to ensure the vote for Ken Paxton, who is looking to become the next speaker of the Texas House of Representatives. I echo Mike’s concern to rally citizens in local districts to call their state representatives and encourage them to vote for Ken. As Mike and Huck PAC wrote, “soon to start his fifth term in office, Ken has twice been named ‘Texas Taxpayer Hero’ by Texans for Fiscal Responsibility. Ken proudly believes in the sanctity of life, and supporting conservative family values like traditional marriage between one man and one woman. Ken recognizes that the matters of social issues directly impact our economy, and I’m confident having Ken’s conservative voice lead the new Texas House of Representatives will result in some great accomplishments.” The vote takes place Jan. 11. On Nov. 2, many decent, good, lawabiding and God-fearing men and women were elected, in and outside Washington. And it is this moral momentum in appointing leaders that we must continue. So be active in local elections, as well as national ones, and be mindful that our representatives are often electing their own leaders, so they need our feedback then, too. In the end, the question isn’t only whether the 112th Congress finally will get it right; it’s also whether we the people finally have gotten it right by appointing good and morally upright people to leadership positions all across our land. © 2011 Chuck Norris This can occur because of excessive exercise, too much alcohol, seizure disorders, lactation and aging. Biotin supplements are commonly available in 1,000-microgram or 5,000microgram dosages. My guess is that you are taking micrograms, not milligrams. The National Institute of Health indicates an adequate intake for people 18 and over is 30 micrograms. Dosing depends on health, age and other conditions. There is a lack of scientific evidence to confirm an appropriate range of dosing for this product. Speak with your physician for clarification. Dr. Peter H. Gott is a retired physician and the author of several books, including “Live Longer, Live Better,” “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Diet” and “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Cookbook,” which are available at most bookstores or online. His website is www.AskDrGottMD.com.
Friday, January 7, 2011
all high in nitrogen and will help the wood to decompose. Garden debris can also be added to the compost to speed the decomposition of the wood. However, these materials, once they are dried are no longer a good source of nitrogen. Do not add plants that were diseased and do not add weeds that have gone to seed. Manure and nitrogen fertilizers can add the necessary nutrients to speed decomposition. Never the less, you will probably still have some undecomposed wood chips to return to the compost pile or use as mulch in garden walkways.
For more gardening information, visit the NMSU Extension publications website at http://aces.nmsu .edu/pubs/_h.
Send your gardening questions to Yard and Garden, Attn: Dr. Curtis Smith, NMSU Agricultural Science Center, 1036 Miller Road, SW, Los Lunas, N.M., 87031. Curtis W. Smith, Ph.D., is an Extension Horticulture Specialist with New Mexico State University’s Cooperative Extension Service. NMSU and the U.S. Department of Agriculture cooperating.
RASC class registration set
The Roswell Adult and Senior Center, 807 N. Missouri Ave., will be holding registration for its classes from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m., Saturday, Jan. 8. Classes being offered include ceramics, oil painting, lapidary, Spanish, Hawaiian dance, tap dance, line dance, computer classes, belly dancing, digital photography, fly tying, investments and much more. Come by the center for a schedule of classes. Classes are reasonably priced and range in length from four to 10 weeks. For more information, call 624-6718.
Pancake breakfast
The Salvation Army, 612 W. College Blvd., will hold its monthly pancake breakfast from 7 a.m. to 11 a.m., Saturday, Jan. 8. Mark Granada will have something special to start the new year in a tasty manner! Prices remain the same. For more information, call Fran at 6228700.
Scrapbooking class
The dates for Peggy Seskey’s new scrapbooking class at ENMMC Senior Circle, 2801 N. Main St., will meet at 9:30 a.m. Monday, Jan. 10, 17 and 24; the class will then decide how often they’d like to meet. The class is free to members; people 50 or older can join Senior Circle for $15 a year and gain lots of additional benefits. Senior Circle is sponsored by Eastern
New Mexico Medical Center for people in the area age 50 and older. It offers fellowship and activities, health education, parties, travel, discounts, hospital benefits and much more. Seskey has lots of ideas and ways to save money in scrapbooking, which can be pretty pricey. She will demonstrate many techniques and have sample pages made up. For more information, call the office at 623-2311.
Health Fair
Alton’s Power Block Gym will be holding its third annual Health Fair from 4 p.m. to 7 p.m., Monday, Jan. 10, at the gym, 1300 N. Virginia Ave., behind Starbucks Coffee. Free health screenings, including EKGs, blood pressure and many more, will be offered by ENMMC and its associates. There will also be information on smoking cessation and health insurance. For more information, call 623-5481.
A6 Friday, January 7, 2011 OBITUARY
Pentagon
Services are pending at Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory for Connie Ozbun, 83, who passed away Jan. 6, 2011. A further announcement will be made once arrangements have been finalized.
pretty cloudy crystal ball,” Gates said. “Any number of these decisions could be reversed.” Although it took Gates more than 30 minutes to read an explanation of the reductions, he called the proposals modest and realistic.
Connie Ozbun
Ponce
Continued from Page A1
lum that better engages students. She also will push for more parental involvement in the classroom. “Certainly the teacher in the classroom is incredibly important, and I know that on a daily basis,” Ponce
Continued from Page A1
said, “but the component of that support from parents is just so important, and you can’t minimize how important that is.” A Roswell native, Ponce has more than 35 years of experience in education, including RISD superintendent for one year. She was principal of Berrendo Elementary School, assistant principal of Berrendo
NATION/OBITUARY
Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said he thinks the Afghanistan war will shrink as planned in 2014, when the United States and its allies want to hand over control of the country’s security to the Afghan government. “There’s certainly some risk there, but we think it’s acceptable risk right now,” Mullen said.
Almost immediately the proposal ran into opposition in Congress, including Republicans who say President Barack Obama is short-changing the military. “I’m not happy,” said Rep. Buck McKeon, who as chairman of the House Armed Services Committee helps oversee the military budget. “This is a dramatic shift for a nation at war and a
Middle School, RISD assistant superintendent and deputy superintendent, director and coordinator of Central Office which performs administrative tasks for the superintendent, and a school teacher at both the elementary and middle school levels. She received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in elementary education at
ENMU as well as an education special degree in public school administration. In the past, she has served as president to the Pecos Valley Rotary Club, Roswell Library, St. John’s Parish Council, New Mexico School Personnel Administration and New Mexico Coalition of School Administrators. She has
of the White House is changing. Obama, whose hopes for a second ter m will be shaped largely by how the economy does, immediately linked Daley’s appointment to that task. For the most influential staf f job in American politics, Obama chose a fellow Chicagoan and former Cabinet secre-
tary who has run both companies and campaigns. “I’m convinced that he’ll help us in our mission of growing our economy,” an upbeat Obama said in a White House ceremony as Daley stood to one side. On the other side of the president was Pete Rouse, the interim chief of staff who oversaw a busy three months but did not want to stay in the job. Said Daley to his new boss: “This team will not let you down, nor the nation.” Rouse, who disdains the spotlight but is considered one of Obama’s most essential advisers, choked back some rare public emotion as his colleagues gave him a rousing ovation and the president praised him. He will remain on board for the rest of Obama’s current term as counselor to the president, the only one in the building to hold that elevated title. As the new Republican majority in the House exerts its power, Obama has been resetting his team briskly, with one eye on governing and the other on getting re-elected. After two long years on the job, on top of two nonstop years of campaigning, some of Obama’s most senior advisers are heading out.
Roswell Daily Record dangerous signal from the commander-in-chief,” McKeon, R-Calif., added. In the meantime, many newly elected tea party activists and anti-war Democrats have said the Defense Department isn’t doing enough to scale back its mammoth half-trillion dollar annual budgets. The Defense Department represents the largest portion of the federal governalso served as a board member on the Roswell Hispano Chamber of Commerce and currently is an ex officio member of the ENMU board of regents. During her time in office as a House representative, Ponce worked on the education committee. She was ousted in 2004 by Candy Spence Ezzell (R-Roswell) who received 55 percent of
ment’s discretionary budget. “We have nearly doubled our military budget in the past 10 years,” Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., told his local newspaper, The Courier Journal, this week. “To avoid bankruptcy, we will have to evaluate all spending — from food stamps to foreign aid to foreign wars,” Paul said. the vote compared to Ponce’s 42 percent. Peterson, who was running as a Libertarian, gathered three percent of the vote. The RISD school board is a nonpartisan organization and elections will be held Feb. 1. For information on polling places, contact the Chaves County Clerk’s office at 624- 6614.
Meet the new boss: Daley is Obama’s chief of staff
WASHINGTON (AP) — Overhauling his team at the top, President Barack Obama on Thursday named banker and seasoned political fighter William Daley as his new chief of staf f, hoping to rejuvenate both a White House stor ming into reelection mode and an economy still gasping for help.
The choice of Daley immediately brought howls of protest from the left flank of the Democratic Party, where advocates questioned his insider ties to Wall Street. Centrists, business leaders and Republican lawmakers rallied around the move, one that underscored just how much and how fast the face
AP Photo
The president is losing his press secretary, Robert Gibbs, and his trusted strategist, David Axelrod; he is bringing in for mer campaign chief David Plouffe as a top staff adviser starting Monday. Yet change only goes so far, as all three of them will end up playing vital roles in Obama’s 2012 election campaign, just as they did last time. On Friday, Obama is expected to name Gene Sperling as his chief economic adviser, who once served for President Bill Clinton — just like Daley. The chief of staff is the one charged with shaping Obama’s time while managing a mammoth juggle of issues, crises, opinions and egos. Few jobs are as consuming. Daley is known to be deft at deal making and organizing. He of fers Obama credibility with the business community, familiarity with the ways of the Cabinet and experience in navigating divided government. On Capitol Hill, the top Republican in the Senate, Mitch McConnell, offered the Democratic president some backhanded praise. He called Daley’s business experience a hopeful sign
emiller@roswell-record.com
in a White House where, as McConnell put it, no one has “ever even run a lemonade stand.” Daley has never run for office but is the son of a legendary Chicago mayor and the brother of the current one, and he managed Al Gore’s campaign for the presidency, right through the bitter and historic recount vote of 2000. He helped Clinton seal the North American Free Trade Agreement and later served as his commerce secretary. Among his challenges: He has supported Obama but not been personally close to him, and now he must run an operation of the president’s loyal staffers. Ron Klain, who has known and worked with Daley over the last two decades, said Daley has the temperament and finesse to deliver on the challenge. “This is a guy who does not tolerate bickering,” said Klain, who himself is exiting the White House after serving as Vice President Joe Biden’s chief of staff. “He certainly knows how to run a tight ship. But he does it with a charm that has people wanting to perfor m for him. He’s not someone who manages by intimidation.”
House Republicans challenge Obama on debt limit President Barack Obama shakes hands with his new White House Chief of Staff William Daley in the East Room of the White House, Thursday.
WASHINGTON (AP) — In power scar cely a day, House Republicans bluntly told the White House on Thursday its request to raise the nation’s $14.3 trillion debt limit will require federal spending cuts to win their approval, laying down an early marker in a new era of divided government. Speaker John Boehner made the challenge as the new GOP majority voted to cut funding for House members’ own offices and committee operations by $35 million. Rank and file Republicans described that vote as a mere down payment on a much more ambitious assault on record federal deficits. “It’s not massive,“ firstterm Rep. Cory Gardner, R-Colo., said of Thursday’s cut. “But it is monumental.” At a news conference, Boehner, R-Ohio, also said emphatically he was standing by a pre-election pledge to cut government spending by at least $100 billion this year. “No ifs, ands or buts about it,” he said, despite recent comments from other Republicans the total might be overly ambitious. The Republicans who took control of the House on Wednesday include dozens of newcomers elected last fall with the support of tea party activists eager for a smaller, less intrusive government. And Thursday’s events suggested a bonejarring struggle could be mere weeks away as con-
servative lawmakers use the T reasury’s need for more borrowing authority to try and extract concessions fr om Pr esident Barack Obama and congressional Democrats. Obama has spoken favorably but in general ter ms about a need to reduce federal deficits. An administration official said the White House wants that issue to proceed independently of the debt limit increase. “The American people will not stand for such an incr ease unless it is accompanied by meaningful action by the president and Congr ess to cut spending and end the jobkilling spending binge in Washington,” Boehner said. “While America cannot default on its debt, we also cannot continue to borrow recklessly, dig ourselves deeper into this hole, and mortgage the future of our
children and grandchildren.” Boehner’s statement was triggered by a letter from Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, who wrote congressional leaders the government could exhaust its borrowing authority of $14.29 trillion between March 31 and May 16. He said the precise date depends on the economy, tax r eceipts and other matters, but added, “It will be necessary for Congress to act by the end of the first quarter of 2011.” Without an increase, he said the gover nment would eventually default on its obligations and “catastrophic damage to the economy” could result. Congressional legislation is required to increase
the government’s borrowing ability. Such bills periodically pr ompt showdowns in Congress, where many lawmakers in both parties cringe at having to cast votes that acknowledge the government is living beyond its means. By contrast, the House has unilateral authority to cut its own spending, and GOP leaders chose a 5 per cent r eduction as a symbolic initial action by lawmakers on their first full day on the job. AP Photo
RIGHT: House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, right, accompanied by House Majority Leader Eric Cantor of Va., gestures during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday.
Notice of Open Enrollment Sidney Gutierrez Middle School
The Sidney Gutierrez Middle School (School), a Roswell public charter school, announces its open enrollment period from January 3-18, 2011, during which time it will accept applications for the 2011-2012 school year. The school will accept up to 22 6th grade students and may fill vacancies in the 7 and 8th grades. Applications may be picked up at the School, downloaded from the website www.sgms.us or requested by calling (575) 347-9703. All completed applications must be returned to either the school administrator in person or P.O. Box 1674, Roswell, NM 88202 and postmarked no later than close of business January 18, Electronic (facsimile or email) submission of applications will not be accepted. If you are currently on the waiting list, you must re-apply for next year.
The School is located at #4 Challenger Road in Roswell at the Roswell Industrial Air Center. The School is dedicated to a program of high academic expectations and achievement in a small school setting, with an emphasis on the application of computer technology to education. The School is a public school established pursuant to the New Mexico Charter Schools Act. There are no entrance fees and no tests required for admission. The School does not discriminate on the basis of disability, race, creed, color, gender, national origin, religion, ancestry, or need for special education services.
Aviso de Matriculación Escuela Secundaria Sidney Gutierrez
La Escuela Secundaria Sidney Gutierrez (escuela), una escuela exclusiva de Roswell, anuncia el periodo de matriculación comenzando el 3 de enero hasta el 18 de enero del 2011. Durante este tiempo, se aceptarán solicitudes para el año escolar 2011-2012. La escuela aceptará hasta 22 estudiantes de sexto grado y llenará vacantes en el séptimo y octavo grado. Las solicitudes pueden ser adquiridas en la escuela, por medio la página www.sgms.us, o por teléfono al (575) 347-9703. Todas las solicitudes completas deberán ser recibidas en la oficina del administrador de la escuela, en persona o por correo en el P.O. Box 1674, Roswell, NM 88202 pre fechadas antes del 18 de enero del 2010. Solicitudes via fax o via correo electrónico no serán aceptadas. Si actualmente está en la lista de espera, debe de re aplicar para el próximo año. La dirección de la escuela es #4 Challenger Road en Roswell en el Roswell Industrial Air Center. La escuela se dedica a un programa de alta expectación académica y logros escolares, con énfasis en educación usando la tecnología de las computadoras.
La escuela es pública y establecida según los mandatos del New Mexico Charter Schools Act. La escuela es gratis y no hay que tomar examenes para ser aceptados. La escuela no descrimina en base de deshabilidad, raza, creencia, color, sexo, nacionalidad, religión, decenendencia, o la necesidad de educación especial.
Roswell Daily Record
Friday, January 7, 2011
T O D AY AT R O S W E L L F O R D . . .
A7
Fall in love with a new car or truck! These new Ford vehicles are ready elationship! for a long term relationship!
2011 FORD FIESTA SE #110124
2011 FORD FOCUS SEDAN #110040
Up to 40 mpg. Squeezes every last drop.
Up to 35 mpg. Unlimited fun.
or
MSRP Retail Customer Cash
Final Price
$199 month
$13,995 500
$13,495
*
With $1000 down
or
$233 month
$18,180 MSRP - 3,000 Retail Customer Cash College Student Program - 500
$14,680
Final Price
*
With $0 down
2011 FORD FUSION SE #110103
2011 FORD ESCAPE XLT #110091
IImpressive mpressive ep power. ower. Great Great economy. economy
High g p performance e o a ce low o impact. pact
MSRP $24,165 Roswell Ford Savings 950 Retail Customer Cash - 2,000 College Student Program 500
or
$20,715
Final Price
$329 month *
With $0 down
2010 FORD F150 SUPER CREW Strong, S trong, d durable urable a and nd d dependable. ependab
#10437. #104 #1 0437 7.
MSRP Roswell Ford Savings Retail Customer Cash Ford Credit Bonus Cash
$31,185 - 1,130 - 3,000 - 1,000
or
$399 month
$25,555
Final Price
*
With $1000 down
or
$349 month
MSRP $25,170 Roswell Ford Savings - 680 Retail Customer Cash - 2,000 College Student Program - 500
Final Price
$21,990
*
With $0 down
2011 FORD F250 XLT CREW CAB #110104.
Best-in-class horsepower and torque.
MSRP Roswell Ford Savings Retail Customer Cash FordCreditBonus
Final Price
$51,560 - 3,500 - 2,500 - 1,000
Total
$7000
$44,560
Savings!* With $0 down
*Prices and payments based on total of all rebates and programs applied. 2010 F150 Super Crew monthly payments based on 72 months at 5.49% APR with approved credit. All other vehicles based on 72 months at 4.49% APR with approved credit. Prices do not include tax, registration and dealer service transfer fee. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Pictures are for illustrative purposes only and may not represent the actual vehicles. Not responsible for typographical errors.
ROSWELL FORD
Toll-free: 877-624-3673
www.roswellford.com llf d
821 N. MAIN ST. OPEN: MON.-FRI. 8AM - 7PM, SAT. 8AM - 5PM SALES: 623-3673 SERVICE DEPT.: 623-1031
A8 Friday, January 7, 2011
WEATHER
Roswell Seven-day forecast Today
Tonight
Partly sunny
Cloudy with a shower late
Saturday
A shower in the morning
Sunday
Tuesday
Monday
Mostly sunny
Partly sunny
Mostly cloudy and cooler
Roswell Daily Record
National Cities
Wednesday
Thursday
Partly sunny and warmer
Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Boston Charlotte Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit El Paso Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Lubbock
Partly sunny and warmer
High 69°
Low 28°
62°/25°
58°/28°
58°/23°
42°/28°
44°/27°
64°/25°
NW at 7-14 mph POP: 0%
NW at 6-12 mph POP: 40%
NNW at 4-8 mph POP: 55%
VAR at 3-6 mph POP: 5%
N at 3-6 mph POP: 5%
NNW at 4-8 mph POP: 25%
NW at 4-8 mph POP: 0%
WSW at 4-8 mph POP: 5%
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Almanac
New Mexico Weather
Roswell through 5 p.m. Thursday
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Regional Cities Today Sat.
Temperatures High/low ........................... 56°/33° Normal high/low ............... 55°/24° Record high ............... 73° in 2008 Record low ................... 9° in 1960 Humidity at noon ................... 17%
Farmington 38/13
Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Deming Espanola Farmington Gallup Hobbs Las Cruces Las Vegas Los Alamos Los Lunas Lovington Portales Prewitt Raton Red River Roswell Ruidoso Santa Fe Silver City T or C Tucumcari White Rock
Clayton 53/22
Raton 52/13
Precipitation 24 hours ending 5 p.m. Thu. Month to date ....................... Normal month to date .......... Year to date ......................... Normal year to date .............
0.00” 0.00” 0.12” 0.00” 0.12”
Santa Fe 45/15
Gallup 41/14
Tucumcari 58/23
Albuquerque 48/24
Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast
Clovis 60/23
Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading 28 0-50
51-100
Good
Source: EPA
101-150
Ruidoso 58/32
151+
Moderate Unhealthy Unhealthy sensitive
T or C 55/30
Sun and Moon The Sun Today Sat. The Moon Today Sat. First
Full
Jan 19
Last
Jan 26
Set 5:06 p.m. 5:07 p.m. Set 8:32 p.m. 9:27 p.m. New
Feb 2
VISIT US ONLINE
WWW.RDRNEWS.COM
Jan 12
Rise 7:02 a.m. 7:02 a.m. Rise 8:58 a.m. 9:26 a.m.
Alamogordo 61/27
Silver City 59/32
ROSWELL 69/28 Carlsbad 73/38
Hobbs 70/31
Las Cruces 60/37
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2011
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
61/27/pc 48/24/pc 43/10/pc 72/39/pc 73/38/pc 42/11/pc 53/22/s 49/24/pc 60/23/pc 61/30/c 47/23/pc 38/13/pc 41/14/sf 70/31/pc 60/37/pc 52/17/pc 45/19/pc 51/22/pc 66/31/pc 61/25/pc 43/12/c 52/13/s 42/9/pc 69/28/pc 58/32/pc 45/15/pc 59/32/c 55/30/c 58/23/pc 47/21/pc
55/24/c 43/24/c 38/7/c 64/32/c 66/30/c 37/0/c 47/23/c 40/2/sf 55/23/c 56/24/c 42/23/c 36/16/c 38/15/c 60/27/c 54/30/c 45/18/c 39/11/c 48/25/c 56/29/c 52/23/c 40/15/c 50/14/c 37/2/c 62/25/c 51/29/c 40/17/c 51/28/c 52/28/c 51/22/c 43/15/c
YEAR PHONE
Sat.
Today
Sat.
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
18/2/s 48/29/pc 36/18/sf 36/28/sn 45/23/c 21/10/sn 26/15/sf 67/39/pc 48/21/pc 23/13/sf 64/36/pc 76/64/pc 69/41/pc 28/14/sf 40/19/pc 55/35/pc 64/49/pc 62/25/pc
17/6/s 47/23/pc 34/18/sf 33/23/sn 43/18/pc 24/15/pc 28/17/sf 57/37/c 45/20/c 25/15/sf 58/31/c 78/64/pc 65/45/pc 27/16/pc 28/15/c 55/35/pc 60/46/pc 53/28/c
70/56/pc 65/29/pc 16/-3/sf 62/44/s 35/25/sn 34/12/pc 66/47/s 35/22/sf 63/41/c 25/14/sf 45/36/r 44/23/pc 38/20/sn 36/22/pc 60/49/c 47/36/r 66/36/c 38/23/sf
73/58/s 60/30/c 7/-12/pc 62/44/pc 32/23/sf 18/9/c 70/46/s 33/21/sf 60/40/pc 25/16/sf 43/31/sh 43/20/pc 30/16/pc 41/20/sn 58/49/pc 44/32/sh 60/32/pc 35/22/sf
U.S. Extremes (For the 48 contiguous states)
State Extremes
High: 81°.......................Miami, Fla. Low: -22° ................ Roseau, Minn.
High: 65°............................ Clayton Low: -6° .........................Angel Fire
Seattle 47/36 Billings 38/27 Minneapolis 16/-3 San Francisco 54/45
Los Angeles 64/49 Atlanta 48/29
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
El Paso 64/36 Houston 69/41
Miami 70/56
Fronts Cold
Warm
-10s -0s
Precipitation Stationary
0s
10s
20s
Showers T-storms
30s
40s
50s
Rain
60s
Flurries
70s
80s
Snow
Ice
90s 100s 110s
SALE
HTC WildfireTM
7999
after $50 mail-in rebate debit card with qualifying 2-yr. agreement.
Washington 38/23
Kansas City 40/19
$
FREE
New York 35/25
Detroit Chicago 23/13 21/10
Denver 48/21
BlackBerry® BoldTM 9650 smartphone
Samsung MessagerTM Touch
Miami Midland Minneapolis New Orleans New York Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Raleigh St. Louis Salt Lake City San Diego Seattle Tucson Washington, DC
National Cities
W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice
NEW NEW
Today Hi/Lo/W
FREE
after $100 mail-in rebate debit card with qualifying 2-yr. Smart Choice Pack agreement.
after $50 mail-in rebate debit card with qualifying 2-yr. Smart Choice Pack agreement.
For areas acquired by AT&T, please call 1-800-255-8351 or visit alltel.com/attmap.
Switch to Alltel Promotional offers available at participating agent locations and the following Alltel retail locations only: Alltel Retail Stores • These Retail Stores Now Open Sunday.
Alamogordo 650 S. White Sands Blvd. | (575) 439-0268
Get a $
100
Bill Credit †
Artesia 325 W. Main St. | (575) 748-9814
Ruidoso 114 A2, Hwy. 70 | (575) 378-8638
Carlsbad • 1223 W. Pierce St. | (575) 885-1092
Shop at a participating retailer:
Hobbs • 1819 N. Turner | (575) 393-9136 Roswell • 4311 N. Main St. | (575) 623-4073
alltel.com 1-800-alltel-1
now part of at&t in your area
Hobbs A #1 Wireless | (575) 492-1515 RadioShack | (575) 392-3930
Equipment & promotional offers at these locations may vary.
Lovington What's Up? Wireless | (575) 396-3435
Alamogordo RadioShack | (575) 437-4022
Roswell Advance Wireless | (575) 623-8505 RadioShack | (575) 624-1038
Proud Sponsor of:
Carlsbad RadioShack | (575) 885-0655
For Business & Government Accounts call 1-866-WLS-BIZZ or visit alltelbusiness.com Offers available at participating locations only, while supplies last. See store sales representative for details. Federal, state & local taxes & charges apply. In addition, Alltel may charge monthly connectivity, regulatory, administrative & 911 surcharges up to $2.19 & federal & state Universal Service Fund fees (both may vary by customer usage). These additional fees may not be taxes or government-required charges & are subject to change. Additional information regarding your taxes, fees & surcharges is available from your Alltel customer service representative & on your monthly bill. †New Activation Credit: $100 bill credit available for a limited time to eligible new customers in participating markets. Must activate a primary line of service on a qualifying rate plan $39.99 & higher with qualifying service agreement. Wireless data card activations do not qualify. New secondary line activations do not qualify. Must be a customer for 30 consecutive days to receive credit. Limit one (1) $100 one-time bill credit per primary account. Depending on the customer’s bill cycle, credit may be applied to either the first or second bill after qualifying activation. Offer not available to business, Residential Wireless or prepaid customers. Certain other restrictions apply. See representative for complete details. May be discontinued at the discretion of Alltel. Coverage: Promotional minutes apply within your rate plan’s calling area. Actual coverage may vary. See coverage map at alltel. com for details. Usage outside your calling plan is subject to add’l roaming, minute & long-distance charges. Rebate: Device applicable rebates available for a limited time, while supplies last, with activation of a qualifying rate plan. Rebate will be in the form of a debit card. Limit 1 rebate per qualifying purchase. Phone may be returned within 15 days of purchase. If mail-in rebate certificate has been submitted, Alltel will refund the purchase price less the rebate amount. Sales tax calculated based on state law. See rebate certificate for details. Device Details: Qualifying Alltel rate plan, a new 2-yr. service agreement & credit approval required. $25 non-refundable activation fee applies per line. $200 early termination fee may apply per line. Coverage limited to the Alltel network & roaming partners. See map at alltel.com for details. Data Usage Details: Data usage is calculated per kilobyte rather than for airtime used. You may be disconnected & lose your data session at any time. In addition to the data transmission charges, you will be charged for other applications, at the rates specified at the time of access or download. Tethering smart devices to a computer requires an additional charge. Smart Choice Pack Requirement: All new or existing customers activating or upgrading to a smart device are required to purchase & maintain a Smart Choice Pack of $69.99 or higher/mo for the duration of their contract. Downloads & Applications: Features only available for use in Alltel digital wireless & roaming partner markets. Qualifying Alltel rate plan & approved wireless phone required. Airtime, text messaging &/or kilobyte charges may apply when downloading or using features. All features may not work on all phones or in all areas. Features are subject to change & may not be available in all markets. Usage outside of your calling plan is subject to additional roaming & long-distance charges. Ringtone/game storage varies by phone. Deleted ringtones/games must be downloaded again for reuse, resulting in an additional charge. Use of games & entertainment applications are intended for amusement purposes only. By using certain downloadable applications, such as graphics or games, customer agrees to the Alltel Shop End User License Agreement. For download questions or problems, call Alltel customer service at 1-800-alltel-1. Additional Information: Offer available for a limited time. $25 non-refundable activation fee & $200 early termination fee may apply per line. Offers are subject to the Alltel Terms & Conditions for Communications Services available at any Alltel store or alltel.com. All product & service marks referenced are the names, trade names, trademarks & logos of their respective owners. ©2011 HTC Corporation. All rights reserved. The HTC logo, HTC Wildfire & Quietly Brilliant are the trademarks of HTC Corporation. Android is a trademark of Google Inc. Use of this trademark is subject to Google Permissions. Screen images are simulated. ©2011 Alltel Communications, LLC. All rights reserved. ©2011 AT&T Intellectual Property. All rights reserved. AT&T, the AT&T logo & all other marks contained herein are trademarks of AT&T Intellectual Property &/or AT&T affiliated companies.
Friday, January 7, 2011
LOCAL SCHEDULE FRIDAY JANUARY 7 HIGH SCHOOL BOYS BASKETBALL 4 p.m. • Hagerman vs. Carrizozo, at Smokey Bear Tournament, at Capitan 6:30 p.m. • Loving at Lake Arthur 7 p.m. • Dexter at Ruidoso • Lovington at Goddard HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL 5:30 p.m. • Loving at Lake Arthur • Hagerman vs. Capitan, at Smokey Bear Tournament, at Capitan 7 p.m. • Deming at Roswell HIGH SCHOOL WRESTLING TBA • Goddard at St. Michael’s Invitational, at Santa Fe
LOCAL BRIEFS RACE FOR BACKPACKS TO BE HELD FEB. 5
The Boy Scouts Conquistador Council, in conjunction with the Rsowell Parks & Recreation Department and the Roswell Runners Club, will hold the inaugural Race for Backpacks on Feb. 5 at Cahoon Park. The event will feature a 5K walk and a 5K run. The entry fee to participate is a school backpack, which will be donated to Chaves County CASA. Race day registration begins at 7:30 a.m. and the race will begin at 9 a.m. For more information, call the Parks & Recreation Department at 624-6720 or Matt Gardner at 623-2627.
• More briefs on B2
NATIONAL BRIEFS ZENYATTA, BLAME AMONG ECLIPSE AWARD FINALISTS
MIAMI (AP) — It’s Zenyatta versus Blame one more time. The superstar mare and the 4-year-old horse who ended her 19-race unbeaten streak in the Breeders’ Cup Classic are among the finalists for the Eclipse Award’s Horse of the Year. Zenyatta, Blame and European star Goldikova are finalists for the award, which will be handed out on Jan. 17. Zenyatta is considered the heavy favorite to win champion older female for the third straight year. Other finalists in that category are Breeders’ Cup Ladies’ Classic winner Unrivaled Belle and Life At Ten. Blame, along with Quality Road and Richard’s Kid, are vying for older male honors. Preakness champion Lookin At Lucky is among the finalists for 3-year-old champion. Wood Memorial winner Eskendereya and Secretariat Stakes winner Paddy O’Prado are the other finalists in that category.
SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS 2006 — The New England Patriots set an NFL mark with 10 straight postseason victories by beating the Jacksonville Jaguars 28-3. New England’s milestone surpasses the nine straight playoff victories by Green Bay in the 1960s.
ON THIS DAY IN...
COMMENT OR IDEA?
E-mail • sports@roswell-record.com Twitter • www.twitter.com/rdrsports Phone • 575-622-7710, ext. 28 Fax • 575-625-0421
SPORTS
B
VCA wins parochial hardwood war Section
Roswell Daily Record
KEVIN J. KELLER RECORD SPORTS EDITOR
When Roswell’s two parochial schools — Valley Christian and Gateway Christian — do battle, it’s almost always an entertaining affair, no matter the sport. Thursday’s match of the schools’ boys basketball teams lived up to that. Valley got up early, Gateway battled back, but Valley got the last laugh with a fourth-quarter run to secure a 59-44 win at the Red Rock Warrior Center. The Lions dominated much of the first half despite falling behind by five less than 2 1/2 minutes into the game. They rallied out of that hole thanks to four triples from the duo of Logan Rader and Taylor Line. VCA coach Randy Lyons was happy with the way his team played in the early stages. “We played pretty decent,” he said. “We tried to force the ball too much sometimes, it was one pass and we’ve got to get the perfect pass in to score. “When we just moved the ball, we looked pretty good. We’re capable of playing that way, but we haven’t played in three weeks, so we had a little bit of rust.” The Lions cut the five-point hole to one in a span of a minute before Gateway’s Garrett Gill made it a three-point game with a bucket underneath. From there, though, the Lions scored 11
straight over the final 4 minutes of the period and took a 17-9 lead into the second quarter. Valley slowly built that lead up to 11 by the end of the second quarter, taking a 2918 advantage into the break. Gateway battled back into the game in the third quarter, though. “Our intent was that we were going to pick up the tempo at that point,” said Warrior coach Troy Grant. “And it worked.” The Warriors dug out of a 33-22 hole with a 14-7 run in the final 4:24 of the third quarter. Luke Grant kissed one off the glass with 10 seconds left in the period to cap the run and send the game to the fourth with Valley leading 40-36. The play of Grant and Mason Miller was critical to the Gateway run. “I was extremely proud of my big guys tonight at times, especially the second half,” Grant said about the pair. “They did a much better job inside, defensively, and, of course, I think they were my high scorers.” Miller’s play was critical throughout the night, which is why Grant continued to play him despite foul trouble. “Obviously, Mason is key to our offense,” Grant said. “There’s certain points where you have to make a decision; do you take the risk and leave him in or take him out.
Luck returning
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck has decided to stay in college to get his degree instead of immediately cashing in on the riches of being the likely No. 1 pick in the NFL draft. Luck announced his decision Thursday, more than a week before the deadline for underclassmen to declare for the NFL draft. Luck, who sat out his first year as a redshirt, has two years of eligibility remaining but is on track to graduate next spring. “I am committed to earning my degree in architec-
tural design from Stanford University and am on track to accomplish this at the completion of the spring quarter of 2012,” Luck said in a statement issued through the school. Stanford said Luck was not available for further comment. Luck’s decision to stay at Stanford comes as coach Jim Harbaugh is being wooed by NFL teams for a possible job. Harbaugh met Wednesday with officials with the San Francisco 49ers and was set to meet See LUCK, Page B2
AP Photo
Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck barks out signals to his teammates during Stanford’s Orange Bowl win. On Thursday, Luck announced he was returning for his senior season.
See PAROCHIAL, Page B2
Kevin J. Keller Photo
Valley Christian’s Taylor Line drives the baseline past Gateway Christian’s Austin Wulf during Valley’s win over the Warriors, Thursday.
AP Photo
New Cowboys coach Jason Garrett, center, poses for a picture with team owner Jerry Jones, right, and Stephen Jones after a news conference at which Garrett was formally introduced as the team’s new head coach, Thursday.
Garrett gets nod from ’Boys
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — About 10 minutes into his tenure as coach of the Dallas Cowboys, Jason Garrett had to step aside. Team owner Jerry Jones had something to say. Garrett had been asked how much authority he would have over choosing his coaching staf f and Jones wanted to be the one who answered. It seemed like business as usual for the Cowboys. Only, it wasn’t. “Jason will have the final say on any person that leaves the coaching staff or comes to the coaching staff,” Jones said. “There won’t be a player on this team that Jason does not want on the team. ... That’s the way we’re going to operate.” So Jones didn’t just change coaches Thursday. He changed his way of
doing business. He ceded power and declared the start of a new era, one that could last for a while — maybe not 29 years like Tom Landry’s tenure, but something along those lines. Garrett is 44 and received a four -year contract. “You can dream that the thing is in place long term because of his age and, frankly, his background and experience,” Jones said. Another overwhelming factor is the bond already forged between the Jones and Garrett families. At least one Garrett has been with the Cowboys for 20 of the 22 seasons that Jones has owned the club. Jason Garrett just finished his 12th year as a player or coach. His dad, Jim, was a scout when Jones bought the team in
1989 until retiring in 2004. Jason’s brother, John, is the tight ends coach and another brother, Judd, is director of pro scouting. In 2007, Judd’s wife died suddenly and Jones lent the Garrett family his plane for multiple trips; Judd worked for the Rams then. When Jason’s wife, Brill, arrived at Thursday’s news conference, she was greeted with hugs and kisses from Jones’ wife, Gene, and their daughter, Charlotte Anderson. They also made space for her to sit between them. Sure, there’s been excitement, optimism and af fection every time the Joneses have welcomed a new coach and his wife to the Cowboys family. But, again, the difference is the
Prep hoops: Hagerman boys win easily at Smokey Bear tourney RECORD STAFF REPORT
CAPITAN — With only six players, the Hagerman boys basketball team used a 33-point third quarter to cruise by Hondo Valley, 83-44, at the Smokey Bear Tournament on Thursday. Michael Garcia scored 27 points and kept the Bobcats going despite a sluggish start. “Michael kept us in the ballgame early,” Hagerman coach Anthony Mestas said. “We came out extremely sluggish and we played
down to their potential instead of up to ours. Michael just towered over them and he helped us win this game.” The Bobcats held a 44-32 lead after two quarters and at halftime, Mestas challenged his players to pick up their intensity. “At halftime I told them, ‘We have to pick up our intensity,’” he said. “I had to challenge the boys to do better in the second half and we played much better. We’re supposed to play like we did in the second half, not how we played in
the first half.” Isaac Bejarano poured in 21 points for Hagerman, while Edward Montoya chipped in with 14.
Dexter 48, Jal 46 JAL — The Dexter boys basketball rebounded from a loss to Hager man by downing Jal on Thursday. The Demons (5-6) let a sevenpoint lead slip away late in the fourth quarter, but were able to pull out a win. “It was a really exciting game,”
See GARRETT, Page B2
said Dexter coach James Bracken. “We tied the game up in the third and early in the fourth we got the lead. It was back and forth in that fourth quarter. We went up by seven points, but they scored backto-back baskets. “Then, they stole an inbounds pass and we fouled a kid while shooting a three. He made all the free throws, but we got a breakaway layup to go up by two in the closing minute.” See HOOPS, Page B2
B2 Friday, January 7, 2011 Luck
Continued from Page B1
with Miami Dolphins owner Stephen Ross on Thursday in the Bay Area, two people with knowledge of the situation said. Both spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the meeting was to remain confidential. New Denver Broncos chief football executive John Elway has said he hopes to interview Harbaugh for their job.
Garrett
Continued from Page B1
Garretts already have been part of the clan. “I’m just so comfortable with him,” Jones said. “I know him so well. ... The thing that I want you to understand is how much I value his judgment.” Jones said it was important for him to make this public announcement of Garrett’s authority. “I wanted to make sure our fans knew the extent of his power,” Jones said. “Let’s not be naive. You know that I’m criticized for basically making decisions in areas where fans and other people would like coaches to make. ... That’s the reason that I’m being as definitive as I am about this.” Garrett avoided directly answering whether he requested such decision-making power. Jones said it is not written into the contract. “Ultimately, we’re going to feel good about
High School
Thursday’s Scores By The Associated Press Boys Basketball Aztec 53, Raton 36 Bloomfield 69, Magdalena 36 Clayton 77, Clovis Christian 28 Del Norte 56, Bernalillo 53 Dexter 48, Jal 46 Gallup 81, Farmington 59 Highland 49, Volcano Vista 46 Lordsburg 68, Animas 38 Manzano 43, Albuquerque Academy 33 Menaul 63, Temple Baptist 21 Sandia Prep 59, Grants 41 St. Pius 68, Rio Grande 56 Taos 70, Capital 57 Tucumcari 83, Mountainair 43 Valley Christian 59, Gateway Christian 44 Zuni 75, Newcomb 60 Aztec Tournament Piedra Vista 62, Ignacio, Colo. 51 Lordsburg Tournament Cliff 83, Duncan, Ariz. 50 Smokey Bear Tournament Capitan 83, Corona 12 Carrizozo 52, Cloudcroft 49 Hagerman 83, Hondo 44 Reserve 60, Mescalero Apache 41 Girls Basketball Animas 52, Quemado 25 Belen 75, Navajo Pine 73 Bloomfield 58, Shiprock JV 33 Clayton 54, San Jon 6 Del Norte 72, Bernalillo 42 Elida 60, Floyd 41 Hope Christian 44, Albuquerque Academy 34 Jal 54, Dexter 37 Kirtland Central 77, Ignacio, Colo. 15 Piedra Vista 52, Wingate 35 Lady Bronco Kirtland Central 77, Ignacio, Colo. 15 Smokey Bear Tournament Capitan 55, Corona 16 Cloudcroft 52, Reserve 27 Hagerman 45, Carrizozo 24 Mescalero Apache 43, Hondo Valley 38
Basketball
National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct Boston . . . . . . . . . . . .27 7 .794 New York . . . . . . . . . .20 14 .588 Philadelphia . . . . . . . .14 21 .400 Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . .12 23 .343 New Jersey . . . . . . . .10 25 .286 Southeast Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . .28 9 .757 Orlando . . . . . . . . . . .23 12 .657 Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . .24 14 .632 Charlotte . . . . . . . . . .12 21 .364 Washington . . . . . . . . .8 25 .242
GB — 7 13 1⁄2 15 1⁄2 17 1⁄2
GB — 4 4 1⁄2 14 18
LOCAL BRIEFS BASEBALL CLINIC SET FOR JAN. 8-9
The New Mexico School of Baseball will hold a pitching and catching clinic on Jan. 8-9 at Canutillo High School in El Paso. The camp for 9- to 13-year-olds will run from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and the camp for 14- to 18-yearolds will run from 2-4 p.m. Florida Marlins scout Sam Chavez and Colorado Rockies scout Darrell Carrillo will serve as instructors for the camp. The cost is $55 for both days or $35 for one day. The camp is limited to 30 players per age group. For more information, call 505463-2122 or e-mail ddc22@msn.com.
It’s unclear whether Luck’s decision to stay in school will impact Harbaugh’s decision whether to leave for an NFL job this year. If Harbaugh does leave Stanford, the opportunity to coach Luck next season will likely make Stanford a plum assignment. Luck was the runner-up this season to Aubur n’s Cam Newton for the Heisman Trophy and will now be one of the favorites for next year’s award. Luck was widely considered the top draft prospect the decisions we make as an organization,” Garrett said. “We’ll communicate, we have very similar football values and we’ll come to the right conclusions together.” Garrett already has made one executive decision: He will remain the offensive coordinator. Garrett becomes the eighth coach in club history and the first to also have played for the Cowboys. He was a backup to T roy Aikman in the 1990s, then played for the Giants and Dolphins. Jones joked that he “stayed mad about him for about two years because he would not let me sell him on quit playing and start coaching now when he went to the Giants.” Garrett got into coaching with Miami. In 2007, Jones interviewed him to become head coach and was so smitten he hired him to an undisclosed position. It turned out to be offensive coordinator under Wade Phillips. Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Chicago . . . . . . . . . . .23 Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . .14 Milwaukee . . . . . . . . .13 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . .11 Cleveland . . . . . . . . . .8
L 11 18 20 24 27
WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L San Antonio . . . . . . . .29 6 Dallas . . . . . . . . . . . . .26 9 New Orleans . . . . . . .21 15 Houston . . . . . . . . . . .16 19 Memphis . . . . . . . . . .16 19 Northwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24 12 Oklahoma City . . . . . .24 13 Denver . . . . . . . . . . . .20 14 Portland . . . . . . . . . . .19 17 Minnesota . . . . . . . . . .9 27 Pacific Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L L.A. Lakers . . . . . . . .25 11 Phoenix . . . . . . . . . . .14 19 Golden State . . . . . . .14 21 L.A. Clippers . . . . . . .11 24 Sacramento . . . . . . . .7 25
Pct GB .676 — .438 8 1 .394 9 ⁄2 .314 12 1⁄2 .229 15 1⁄2 Pct GB .829 — .743 3 1 .583 8 ⁄2 .457 13 .457 13 Pct .667 .649 .588 .528 .250
GB — 1⁄2 3 5 15
Pct GB .694 — .424 9 1⁄2 .400 10 1⁄2 .314 13 1⁄2 .219 16
Wednesday’s Games Toronto 120, Cleveland 105 New Jersey 96, Chicago 94 Orlando 97, Milwaukee 87 Philadelphia 109, Washington 97 Boston 105, San Antonio 103 Charlotte 108, Minnesota 105, OT Golden State 110, New Orleans 103 Portland 103, Houston 100 Atlanta 110, Utah 87 L.A. Clippers 106, Denver 93 L.A. Lakers 99, Phoenix 95 Thursday’s Games Oklahoma City 99, Dallas 95 Denver at Sacramento, 8:30 p.m. Friday’s Games San Antonio at Indiana, 5 p.m. Chicago at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. New Jersey at Washington, 5 p.m. Toronto at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Utah at Memphis, 6 p.m. Portland at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Houston at Orlando, 6 p.m. Miami at Milwaukee, 6:30 p.m. Cleveland at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. New York at Phoenix, 8:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Indiana at Atlanta, 5 p.m. Washington at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at New Jersey, 5 p.m. Philadelphia at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Boston at Chicago, 6 p.m. Memphis at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Orlando at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Utah at Houston, 6:30 p.m.
Football
NFL Playoff Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 8 New Orleans at Seattle, 2:30 p.m. (NBC) N.Y. Jets at Indianapolis, 6 p.m. (NBC) Sunday, Jan. 9 Baltimore at Kansas City, 11 a.m. (CBS)
TV SPORTSWATCH
SPORTS
after two spectacular years at Stanford. His decision will be a blow to the Carolina Panthers, who have the No. 1 pick in April’s draft and are looking for a quarterback. Luck capped this season by completing 18 of 23 passes for 287 yards and four touchdowns in the fifth-ranked Cardinal’s 4012 victory over No. 12 Virginia Tech in the Orange Bowl on Monday night. That helped Stanford (12-1) extend its school record for wins in a season and has the Cardinal
Hoops
Roswell Daily Record
poised to finish in the top five of the AP poll for the first time since the unbeaten 1940 team finished No. 2. Luck, the son of former NFL quarterback Oliver Luck, is a major reason why Stanford has gone from a one-win team in 2006 before Harbaugh arrived to one of the top teams in the country. He has led Stanford to a 20-5 record in his 25 career starts, only missing last season’s Sun Bowl loss to Oklahoma with a broken right index finger.
Continued from Page B1
Clay Garnett led the Demons with 15 points and seven rebounds. Bracken said that the win was big for his team. “It was a huge win,” he said. “It gives the kids some positive momentum coming off two tough losses against Hagerman. It regained our confidence and got us back on a winning note. It was huge because we won a close game at home. It was an ugly game, but we found out a way to walk away with a ‘W.’”
Girls basketball
Hagerman 45, Carrizozo 24 CAPITAN — The Hagerman girls basketball team jumped out to an early lead and never let Capitan back in the game, in the Bobcats’ win at the Smokey Bear Tournament. Hagerman (5-7) outscored the Tigers 24-14 in the first half, but it was the first quarter lead that really pleased coach Casey Crandall. “We came out and it was 10-4 and that is always a good thing for me to see,” he said. “I like having the first two points on the board too and we did that tonight.”
Parochial Continued from Page B1
“And tonight, we decided to go ahead and leave him in and it backfired on us.” With Valley leading 45-40, Miller picked up his fifth foul and went to the bench with 5:32 left. His absence changed the game.
Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 15 Indianapolis, Kansas City or Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 2:30 p.m. (CBS) Green Bay, New Orleans or Seattle at Atlanta, 6 p.m. (FOX) Sunday, Jan. 16 Philadelphia, New Orleans or Seattle at Chicago, 11 a.m. (FOX) N.Y. Jets, Kansas City or Baltimore at New England, 2:30 p.m. (CBS)
Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 23 NFC, 1 p.m. (FOX) AFC, 4:30 p.m. (CBS)
Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 30 At Honolulu AFC vs. NFC, 5 p.m. (FOX)
Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 6 At Arlington, Texas AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 4:30 p.m. (FOX) —————
AP sources: Harbaugh not joining Dolphins
MIAMI (AP) — Jim Harbaugh forced the Miami Dolphins to call an audible. Harbaugh and the Dolphins broke off talks Thursday, and the team was expected to retain Tony Sparano as coach, two people familiar with the negotiations said. Both people spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because the negotiations were to remain confidential. Dolphins owner Stephen Ross courted Harbaugh in a meeting in the San Francisco area, two other people with knowledge of the situation said. But after the meeting, Harbaugh was still considering staying at Stanford, one person said. Harbaugh also met Thursday with the president of the university and the provost. The school made an amended offer to the coach with enhancements from an offer presented in early December. A late-season collapse by the Dolphins put Sparano’s job in jeopardy. He has a year left on his contract and was at work at the team’s complex in Davie, while Ross was on the other side of the country courting Harbaugh. Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck may have helped the Cardinal’s chances of keeping Harbaugh by deciding to stay to get his degree instead of cashing in on the chance to be the likely No. 1 pick in this year’s NFL draft. Luck, a sophomore, announced his decision Thursday. Harbaugh met Wednesday with the San Francisco 49ers about their coaching vacancy. He may consider other suitors as well. The Dolphins endured a 38-7 drubbing at New England on Sunday and lost at home in December to three sub-.500 teams. Their 1-7 home record matched the worst in franchise history.
TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press All times Mountain Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Friday, Jan. 7 BOXING 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Ruslan Provodnikov (17-0-0) vs. Mauricio Herrera (15-1-0), for the vacant WBC Continental America’s and USBA light welterweight title, at Las Vegas COLLEGE FOOTBALL 5 p.m. ESPN2 — NCAA, FCS tournament, championship game, Delaware vs. E. Washington, at Frisco, Texas
Sparano led Miami to the AFC East title in 2008, his first year as an NFL coach. He has a three-year record of 25-23 with the Dolphins, who haven’t won a playoff game since 2000 and haven’t reached the Super Bowl since 1984. —————
Wade Phillips eager to start with Texans
HOUSTON (AP) — Wade Phillips knows how he can fix the Houston Texans’ defense. Phillips was hired as defensive coordinator on Wednesday, two days after coach Gary Kubiak fired four defensive assistants, including coordinator Frank Bush. The Texans (610) lost eight of their last 10 games, mostly due to a defense that ranked 30th in yards allowed (386.6 per game) and last against the pass (267.5 yards per game). Phillips said in a phone interview on Thursday that he already sees what areas need improvement. “I won’t go into specific things, but I look at things and try to see what I can do to help and get players better,” Phillips said. “I’ve got a lot of experience, so I think I know the kinds of things that can help players, and the schemes that can help them. That’s what you do as a football coach.” Texans owner Bob McNair said the addition of Phillips gives the franchise its strongest coaching staff in the team’s nine years of existence. McNair spoke at a ribboncutting ceremony for a $7.5-million YMCA that is the first to bear the name of an NFL team. “I’ve never been so confident about our coaching staff,” McNair said. “It would’ve made a difference for us last year. It will make a difference for us this year.” Phillips, fired as the head coach of the Dallas Cowboys after a 1-7 start, has strong ties to both the city and Kubiak. He grew up in the area and played linebacker at the University of Houston in the 1960s. He began his NFL coaching career in the late 1970s with the Houston Oilers, who were coached by his father, Bum. Kubiak was a ball boy for the Oilers back then, and the two have remained friends across 30 years. Phillips was not only thrilled to return to his roots, but also join a team that he believes is close to becoming a winner, even though the Texans are still seeking their first playoff appearance. “It’s a dream job for me, coming back home, being with great people,” he said. “And it looks like a great opportunity to win. Those are all positive things.” Phillips interviewed with the team on Wednesday, and was hired by the early evening. As speculation swirled that Phillips would join the staff, defensive ends Mario Williams and Antonio Smith were skeptical at how well they would fit into the 3-4 alignment that Phillips teaches. Phillips downplayed their concerns, saying that he’ll be the one adjusting to Houston’s personnel. He said the Cowboys switched between a 3-4 and 4-3 scheme last season. “I don’t think it’s as big a deal as everybody is trying to make it out to be,” Phillips
6 p.m. FOX — Cotton Bowl, LSU vs. Texas A&M, at Arlington, Texas GOLF 7 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Africa Open, second round, at East London, South Africa (same-day tape) 3:30 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Tournament of Champions, second round, at Maui, Hawaii NBA BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN — Houston at Orlando 8:30 p.m. ESPN — New York at Phoenix
decision. “Call him old school,” Oliver Luck said. “He comes from a faction of people who believe you go to college to pursue your degree.” Luck has completed 64.4 percent of his passes for 5,913 yards, 45 touchdowns and 12 interceptions in his career. He has also rushed for 807 yards and five scores. That athleticism, along with his strong, accurate arm and on-field poise, has had NFL scouts salivating at his potential as a pro.
Leah Dunnahoo paced the Bobcats with 16 points, while Lexi Mason chipped in with 14. Crandall said that his team limited their breakdowns against the Tigers. “We played really good at times,” he said. “There were a lot of stretches where we did some incredible things with the basketball. The defense was a lot better at times and we had a lot less breakdowns.” Jal 54, Dexter 37 JAL — The Lady Demons fell behind by eight thanks to a three-point first quarter and could never recover in a loss to Jal on Thursday. The Panthers outscored Dexter 11-3 in the opening period and held a 29-17 advantage at the break en route to the victory. “We missed a lot of easy shots once again,” said Dexter coach Kim Hamill about the loss. “(The Panthers) are very, very tall, so we couldn’t get a shot over the top of them inside.” Sylvia Mediano and Jenna Garcia led Dexter with eight points apiece. Despite the loss, Hamill was pleased with her team’s effort. “They went hard and they played hard,” she said. “I couldn’t ask for them to go any harder, but we just couldn’t put the ball in the basket.”
Valley ran off eight in a row and led 53-40 less than a minute and a half later. Gateway’s Austin Hensley stopped the streak with a deuce, but Valley answered with a run of six straight to effectively put the game out of reach. “It’s a choice people will make on how it’s played,” said Lyons about the stretch after Miller fouled out. “Logan (Rader) was in foul trouble and we
SCOREBOARD
Green Bay at Philadelphia, 2:30 p.m. (FOX)
“This is a win-win for him,” Oliver Luck said. “He gets to spend another year at Stanford, be part of team that will be highly ranked again next year, finish his degree and enjoy Palo Alto. “It’s not like the NFL is going anywhere, it’s one of the best run leagues in the world. It will still be there when he graduates.” Luck’s father, the athletic director at West Virginia, said that the possibility of an NFL lockout or being selected by the Panthers did not influence his son’s
took him out, but he came back in and played within himself. He gave up some points, but he wasn’t going to jeopardize being out on the court. “(Gateway) chose to be more aggressive with it and that’s what happened.” Line led all scorers with 23 for the Lions. Rader and Gus Gray each had 13. Gill led Gateway with 13 points. kjkeller@roswell-record.com
said. McNair was impressed by how Phillips broke down the deficiencies in Houston’s defense during Wednesday’s interview. “He’s looked at our film, we’ve talked about it,” McNair said. “He saw exactly what the problems were, and he had ideas as to how they could be corrected that weren’t necessarily requiring a lot of additional personnel. “I agree with him,” McNair said. “We can perform a lot better than we did, and I think with the right coaches in there, you’re going to see some great improvement.” Phillips said he’s brainstorming with Kubiak about possible assistants to hire. The Texans also fired secondary coach David Gibbs, linebackers coach Johnny Holland and assistant linebackers coach Robert Saleh on Monday. Phillips will be formally introduced on Monday, and said he’ll talk to as many players as he can that day.
Golf
Byrd, Pettersson lead TOC
KAPALUA, Hawaii (AP) — Jonathan Byrd and Carl Pettersson didn’t miss a beat in the PGA Tour opener Thursday, both enjoying the views and surprisingly calm conditions in the Tournament of Champions to share the lead at 7-under 66. That wasn’t the case for others. Kapalua was missing its two-time defending champion when Geoff Ogilvy had to withdraw with 12 stitches in his right finger, making him the first defending champ in 50 years to miss the winners-only event. Stuart Appleby was missing his putter. It wasn’t in the bag when he showed up Thursday morning, and he sent caddie Scott Sajtinac to a nearby golf shop to get the closest he could find. With the price tag still glued to the shaft, Appleby opened with a 69. Jim Furyk (68) was missing a playing partner when Ogilvy withdrew, so he brought along Scott Carroll as a marker. The popular head pro at Kapalua got the loudest ovation of anyone on the first tee. Above all, the Plantation Course was missing its notorious wind. It was Byrd’s first tournament since he qualified for the Tournament of Champions by winning in Las Vegas with the best finish of the year, a hole-in-one in a three-man playoff in Las Vegas. After making five birdies on the front nine, Byrd holed out another shot. This was only a wedge from 111 yards that caught the grain perfectly and rolled sideways about 4 feet and into the cup. Ben Crane was a stroke behind the leaders. He played bogey-free in the calm, overcast conditions with the sun trying to break through the clouds but never quite succeeding. Bubba Watson hit the longest tee shot on the 18th during a long drive competition Wednesday, and his driver again was the key club on the finishing hole Thursday — only this one was a driver off the fairway, setting up a 10-foot eagle putt for a 70.
Tournament of Champions Scores By The Associated Press Thursday At Kapalua Resort, The Plantation Course Kapalua, Hawaii Purse: $5.6 million Yardage: 7,411; Par 73 (36-37) First Round Jonathan Byrd . . . . . . . . . . .31-35 — 66 Carl Pettersson . . . . . . . . . .34-32 — 66 Ben Crane . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33-34 — 67 Bill Haas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35-33 — 68 Charley Hoffman . . . . . . . . .35-33 — 68 Jim Furyk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32-36 — 68 Robert Garrigus . . . . . . . . . .35-34 — 69 Stuart Appleby . . . . . . . . . . .33-36 — 69 Anthony Kim . . . . . . . . . . . .34-35 — 69 Francesco Molinari . . . . . . .34-35 — 69 Steve Stricker . . . . . . . . . . .34-35 — 69 Matt Kuchar . . . . . . . . . . . . .34-35 — 69 Bill Lunde . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35-35 — 70 Heath Slocum . . . . . . . . . . .32-38 — 70 Ian Poulter . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33-37 — 70 Ryan Palmer . . . . . . . . . . . .33-37 — 70 Bubba Watson . . . . . . . . . . .35-35 — 70 Hunter Mahan . . . . . . . . . . .34-36 — 70 Graeme McDowell . . . . . . . .34-37 — 71 Zach Johnson . . . . . . . . . . .36-35 — 71 Dustin Johnson . . . . . . . . . .33-38 — 71 Arjun Atwal . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34-38 — 72 Cameron Beckman . . . . . . .37-35 — 72 Derek Lamely . . . . . . . . . . .35-37 — 72
Jason Bohn . . . . . . . . . . . . .36-36 Tim Clark . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37-35 Camilo Villegas . . . . . . . . . .33-39 Ernie Els . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36-36 Matt Bettencourt . . . . . . . . .35-38 Adam Scott . . . . . . . . . . . . .36-37 Jason Day . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37-36 Justin Rose . . . . . . . . . . . . .36-39 Rocco Mediate . . . . . . . . . . .41-38
— — — — — — — — —
72 72 72 72 73 73 73 75 79
Transactions
Thursday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Agreed to terms with 1B Derrek Lee on a one-year contract. CLEVELAND INDIANS—Designated INFOF Jordan Brown for assignment. MINNESOTA TWINS—Announced the retirement of Twins Sports Inc. president Jerry Bell. TEXAS RANGERS—Agreed to terms with OF David Murphy on a one-year contract and with LHP Zach Jackson and OF Erold Andrus on minor league contracts. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Agreed to terms with 2B Dan Uggla on a five-year contract. CINCINNATI REDS—Agreed to terms with RHP Jared Burton on a one-year contract. MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Agreed to terms with OF Caleb Gindl, C Anderson Delarosa, OF Logan Schafer and INF Zelous Wheeler on minor league contracts. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES—Agreed to terms with LHP J.C. Romero on a one-year contract and with RHP Brian Bass, C Tuffy Gosewich, C Joel Naughton, INF Robb Quinlan, RHP Michael Schwimer, RHP Michael Stutes and INF-OF Delwyn Young on minor league contracts. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA—Promoted Kerry D. Chandler to executive vice president, Chris Granger to executive vice president, team marketing & business operations, and Danny Meiseles to executive vice president and executive producer, production, programming and broadcasting. MIAMI HEAT—Reassigned C Dexter Pittman to Sioux Falls (NBADL). WASHINGTON WIZARDS—Assigned C Hamady Ndiaye to Dakota (NBADL). FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS—Fired Bill Davis defensive coordinator. CLEVELAND BROWNS—Signed OL Branndon Braxton, OL Pat Murray, OL Phil Trautwein, RB Tyler Clutts and RB Quinn Porter, TE Tyson DeVree and DB DeAngelo Smith from practice squad. DALLAS COWBOYS—Named Jason Garrett coach. HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Assigned D Jassen Cullimore to Rockford (AHL). COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS—Waived D Mike Commodore and C Kyle Wilson. Placed LW Ethan Moreau on injured reserve. Recalled LW Matt Calvert from Springfield (AHL). PHOENIX COYOTES—Recalled G Matt Climie from San Antonio (AHL). TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Assigned D Marc-Andre Bergeron to Norfolk (AHL). SOCCER U.S. SOCCER—Named April Heinrichs technical director and Jill Ellis development director for the U.S. women’s national teams. COLLEGE ARKANSAS—Announced QB Ryan Mallett will enter the NFL draft. CALDWELL—Announced the resignation of men’s soccer coach Jamie Nash. MCMURRY—Announced the resignation of defensive line coach Barris Grant to become defensive coordinator at Tiffin. MEMPHIS—Announced men’s basketball F Ferrakohn Hall transferred from Seton Hall. MISSISSIPPI STATE—Promoted Chris Wilson to defensive coordinator and Angelo Mirando to receivers coach. NJIT—Named Cesar Markovic men’s soccer coach. SMU—Signed athletic director Steve Orsini to a contract extension through May 2015. VIRGINIA TECH—Sophomore RB Darren Evans announced he’s entering the NFL draft. WISCONSIN—Announced DE J.J. Watt will enter the NFL draft.
FINANCIAL
Roswell Daily Record
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
Div Last Chg DiaOffs .50a 67.29 -.85 DrSCBear rs ... 15.11 +.19 A-B-C DirFnBear ... d8.79 +.09 ABB Ltd .48e 21.78 -.14 DrxFBull s ... 29.71 -.41 AES Corp ... 12.99 +.22 DirxSCBull .11e 74.38 -1.05 AFLAC 1.20 56.07 -.31 DirxLCBear ... d8.45 +.03 AK Steel .20 16.59 -.13 Discover .08 18.99 -.18 .40f 39.65 -.31 AMR ... 8.45 -.12 Disney AT&T Inc 1.72f 29.15 -.40 DollarGen ... 29.80 -.30 AU Optron ... 10.08 -.16 DowChm .60 u35.34 +.66 AbtLab 1.76 48.17 -.10 DrPepSnap1.00 36.58 +.33 AberFitc .70 53.53 -1.82 DuPont 1.64 u49.98 -.24 Accenture .90f 48.46 +.18 DukeEngy .98 17.74 -.03 AMD ... 8.69 -.22 DukeRlty .68 12.73 -.05 Aeropostl s ... 25.32 +.99 ECDang n ... 27.89 +1.80 ... u23.67 +.24 .04 32.09 +.59 EMC Cp Aetna Agilent ... 41.48 +.08 EOG Res .62 92.82 +.49 ... 5.65 -.09 Agnico g .64f 69.76 -1.84 EKodak AirTran ... 7.46 -.02 ElPasoCp .04 13.70 -.07 ... 6.76 +.48 AlcatelLuc ... 2.97 -.03 Elan Alcoa .12 16.36 -.20 EldorGld g .05 17.01 -.63 ... .80 -.04 EmersonEl1.38f 57.06 -.14 AldIrish Allstate .80 31.50 -.36 EnCana g .80 28.89 -.38 AlphaNRs ... 64.33 -1.08 EvergE rs ... .99 -.16 1.52 24.58 +.10 ExcoRes .16 19.06 -.21 Altria AmBev s .99e 30.55 -.03 Exelon 2.10 42.67 -.04 AEagleOut .44a 15.05 +.58 ExxonMbl 1.76 u75.18 +.48 AEP 1.84f 36.14 +.18 FairchldS ... u16.48 +.70 .72 44.73 -.31 FamilyDlr .62 44.39 -.60 AmExp AmIntlGrp ... u60.45 -.50 FstBcPR h ... .36 -.13 AmTower ... 50.62 -.14 FstHorizon .72t 12.28 -.08 AmeriBrgn .40f u34.86 +.40 FirstEngy 2.20 38.16 +.14 Anadarko .36 74.46 -1.82 FlagstB rs ... 1.76 -.03 .50 65.35 +.26 AnalogDev .88 37.81 +.21 Fluor Anglgld 13 3.00 d51.93 -1.37 FootLockr .60 18.81 -.29 FordM ... u18.22 +.33 AnglogldA .18e 44.80 -2.08 AnnTaylr ... 23.83 -.97 ForestLab ... 32.23 +.44 FrankRes 1.00f 109.74 -.57 Annaly 2.65e 17.65 +.10 Aon Corp .60 44.78 -.22 FMCG 2.00a 116.08 -2.27 Apache .60u122.38-2.53 FrontierCm .75 9.55 -.17 ArcelorMit .75 35.89 -1.07 FrontierOil ... u18.43 +.33 ArchCoal .40 34.91 -.80 Frontline 1.90e 27.06 +.92 ArchDan .60 31.69 +1.17 G-H-I ArvMerit ... 21.40 -.33 AssuredG .18 19.75 +.39 GameStop ... 20.63 -1.26 .88 30.14 +.49 Gannett .16 15.23 -.08 Avon .40 20.70 -1.53 BB&T Cp .60 26.89 -.58 Gap BHP BillLt1.74e 88.92 -1.58 GenElec .56f 18.56 -.08 BP PLC ... 46.23 -.27 GenGrPr n ... 14.93 -.48 BPZ Res ... 4.96 +.38 GenMarit .04m 3.58 +.18 BRFBrasil s.10eu17.07 +.03 GenMills s 1.12 35.96 -.38 .60 54.83 -1.16 GenMot n ... u38.90 +.83 BakrHu BcBilVArg .55e 9.37 -.41 GM cvpfB 2.38 u56.40 +.77 BcoBrades .82r 19.84 -.85 GenOn En ... 3.76 -.14 BcoSantand.80e 10.13 -.37 Genworth ... 14.21 +.67 BcoSBrasil .45e 13.08 -.29 Gerdau .32e 14.48 -.03 BkofAm .04 14.44 -.06 GlimchRt .40 8.41 -.36 BkIrelnd 1.04e 2.48 -.02 GoldFLtd .16e 16.82 -.54 BkNYMel .36 31.44 -.25 Goldcrp g .36 43.08 -1.04 ... 1.24 +.01 GoldmanS 1.40 172.21 -1.79 BkAtl A h Barclay .28e 17.26 -.19 Goodyear ... 12.27 -.43 Bar iPVix rs ... d35.93 +.10 HCP Inc 1.86 36.68 -.57 BarrickG .48 49.26 -.64 Hallibrtn .36 38.22 -1.20 Baxter 1.24f 50.25 -.44 HarleyD .40 u36.28 +.02 BeazerHm ... 5.89 +.31 HartfdFn .20 27.83 -.51 BerkH B s ... 80.37 -.54 HatterasF 4.40e 29.03 +.18 BestBuy .60 35.25 -.45 HltCrREIT 2.76 47.70 -.14 ... 9.92 -.51 Blackstone .40 14.98 +.02 HeclaM 1.80 48.38 -.62 BlockHR .60 12.59 ... Heinz Hershey 1.28 47.93 +1.31 Boeing 1.68 68.80 +1.32 ... 14.54 -.35 BostonSci ... 7.41 -.12 Hertz .40 u79.21 -.26 ... 11.64 -.01 Hess BoydGm Brinker .56 21.66 +.46 HewlettP .32 44.88 +.68 ... 19.96 -1.89 BrMySq 1.32f 25.84 -.22 hhgregg Brunswick .05 20.31 +.29 HomeDp .95 34.42 -.14 CB REllis ... 20.74 +.12 HonwllIntl 1.33f 54.36 -.01 .20 19.47 +.27 HostHotls .04 u18.32 -.13 CBS B CIGNA .04 39.01 +1.41 HovnanE ... 4.47 +.22 ... 57.06 +2.02 CMS Eng .84f 18.71 -.04 Humana 1.04f u66.23 +.34 Huntsmn .40 16.59 +.24 CSX CVS Care .35 35.03 -.36 IAMGld g .08f 17.97 -.02 CablvsnNY .50 34.82 -.36 ICICI Bk .53e 46.08 -1.42 ... 9.83 -.12 Calpine ... 13.98 ... ING Cameron ... 48.79 -.39 iShGold s ... 13.41 -.05 iSAstla .82e 24.51 -.25 CdnNRs gs .30 43.10 -1.27 CapOne .20 45.40 -.12 iShBraz 2.53e 76.78 -.77 CapitlSrce .04 u7.65 +.32 iSh HK .45e 19.88 -.08 CardnlHlth .78 u39.35 +.47 iShJapn .14e 10.94 ... Carnival .40 u47.27 -.28 iSh Kor .39e 61.51 -.43 Caterpillar 1.76 93.54 -.98 iSMalas .34e 14.72 -.10 Cemex .43t 10.62 -.32 iShMex .54e u62.65 -.28 CenterPnt .78 15.61 -.16 iShSing .43e 13.90 -.06 CntryLink 2.90 45.44 -.95 iSTaiwn .29e 15.32 -.03 Chemtura n ... 16.13 +.07 iSh UK .43e 17.31 -.15 ... 28.42 -.19 ChesEng .30 26.67 +.17 iShSilver Chevron 2.88 90.69 -.75 iShChina25.63e 43.97 -.35 iSSP500 2.36eu127.85 -.24 Chicos .16 11.31 -.43 Chimera .69e 4.10 +.04 iShEMkts .64e 47.69 -.52 ChinaGreen ... 7.48 -.63 iShB20 T 3.86e 91.86 +.40 Chubb 1.48 58.74 -1.07 iS Eafe 1.42e 57.60 -.67 Citigp pfN 1.97 27.00 -.04 iSR1KV 1.29e u65.76 -.28 ... 4.95 -.02 iSR1KG .73e 57.89 +.02 Citigrp CliffsNRs .56 83.32 -1.61 iSR2KV 1.16e 71.63 -.32 Clorox 2.20 62.48 +.54 iShR2K .89e 78.97 -.37 Coach .60 52.88 +.34 iShUSPfd 2.86e 38.92 +.05 CocaCE .48f 24.31 -.33 iShREst 1.97e 55.75 -.30 CocaCl 1.76 63.03 -.46 IngerRd .28 46.94 -.33 2.60u148.66+1.61 Coeur ... 24.53 -1.32 IBM ... u8.59 +.10 ColgPal 2.12 78.71 -.47 Intl Coal Comerica .40f 41.31 -1.87 IntlGame .24 18.78 +.17 .50 27.89 -.25 ComScop ... 31.37 ... IntPap CompPrdS ... 25.82 -2.33 Interpublic ... 10.61 -.01 .44 24.35 -.04 ConAgra .92 22.69 ... Invesco ConocPhil 2.20 66.97 -.58 ItauUnibH .65e 23.71 -.72 ConsolEngy .40 50.43 -.87 IvanhM g 1.48e 24.11 +.12 ConstellA ... 19.84 -1.74 J-K-L ConstellEn .96 31.01 +.20 Corning .20 19.51 +.53 JPMorgCh .20 44.48 -.22 .28 u21.45 +.19 Covidien .80f 46.46 -.47 Jabil CrwnCstle ... 42.14 -.76 JanusCap .04 13.45 +.09 Cummins 1.05u110.16-2.83 JohnJn 2.16 63.21 -.10 CurEuro .01e 129.64 -1.40 JohnsnCtl .64f 40.34 -.26 JnprNtwk ... u38.21 +.33 D-E-F KB Home .25 14.33 +.02 .23e u15.23 +.09 DCT Indl .28 5.25 +.06 KKR n DR Horton .15 12.83 +.43 Keycorp .04 8.71 -.31 KimbClk 2.64 63.02 -.09 DanaHldg ... u17.97 -.27 .72f 18.09 -.16 Danaher s .08 46.90 +.03 Kimco KingPhrm ... 14.10 +.04 DeanFds ... 8.89 +.02 Deere 1.40f 84.25 +.01 Kinross g .10 17.48 -.32 ... 52.23 -1.67 DelMnte .36 18.89 +.02 Kohls 1.16 31.27 -.26 ... 12.91 -.07 Kraft DeltaAir .42f 21.61 -.24 DenburyR ... 18.45 -.25 Kroger DBGoldSh ... 15.70 +.03 LDK Solar ... 10.29 -.06 ... 6.12 -.02 DevelDiv .08 13.59 -.24 LSI Corp ... 47.64 -.39 DevonE .64 78.23 -.47 LVSands Name
Name Sell Chg Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 19.85 -.03 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 18.87 -.03 Amer Century Inv: 7.26 -.02 EqInc GrowthI 26.09 -.07 22.92 +.01 Ultra American Funds A: AmcpA p 19.04 -.02 AMutlA p 25.49 -.03 BalA p 18.06 -.01 BondA p 12.15 +.02 CapIBA p 49.79 -.19 CapWGA p35.72 -.17 CapWA p 20.25 -.05 EupacA p 41.32 -.19 FdInvA p 36.97 -.07 GovtA p 13.85 +.03 GwthA p 30.70 -.08 HI TrA p 11.33 +.01 IncoA p 16.59 -.04 IntBdA p 13.40 +.02 IntlGrIncA p30.99 -.20 ICAA p 28.37 -.07 NEcoA p 25.77 -.05 N PerA p 28.61 -.07 NwWrldA 54.63 -.34 STBFA p 10.06 ... SmCpA p 39.03 -.18 TxExA p 11.79 -.02 WshA p 27.46 -.06 American Funds B: GrwthB t 29.79 -.08 Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 30.02 -.16 IntlEqA 29.30 -.15 IntEqII I r 12.42 -.06 Artisan Funds: Intl 21.77 -.12
IntlVal r 26.93 -.09 MidCap 33.98 -.08 MidCapVal20.19 +.04 SCapVal 16.82 -.05 Baron Funds: Growth 51.22 -.47 SmallCap 23.90 -.10 Bernstein Fds: 13.70 +.04 IntDur DivMu 14.25 -.02 TxMgdIntl 15.66 -.11 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 17.57 -.08 GlAlA r 19.44 -.04 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 18.16 -.04 BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 17.60 -.08 GlbAlloc r 19.53 -.03 CGM Funds: Focus n 35.84 -.12 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 54.36 -.11 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 29.21 -.16 DivEqInc 10.19 -.05 DivrBd 4.99 +.01 SelComm A45.63 +.25 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 30.16 -.16 AcornIntZ 40.66 -.24 ValRestr 50.88 -.21 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 9.16 -.10 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq n11.21 -.07 USCorEq1 n11.13-.03 USCorEq2 n11.11-.03 DWS Invest S: MgdMuni S 8.64 -.03
NEW YORK(AP) - Cattle/hogs futures on the Chicago Merchantile Exchange Friday: chg.
+.10 +.25 +.35 +.25 +.25 +.33 +.18 +.25
+.95 +.67 +.52 +.70 +.62 +.62 +.62 +.55
+1.75 +1.93 +1.38 +1.67 +1.15 +1.22 +.63 +.15 +.25 +.40 +.30
M-N-0
... 12.55 -.14 MBIA MEMC ... 11.35 -.03 MF Global ... 9.02 +.25 MFA Fncl .90f 8.00 -.02 MGIC ... 11.31 -.01 MGM Rsts ... 15.22 -.25 Macys .20 23.97 -1.00 Manulife g .52 17.75 -.08 MarathonO1.00 37.60 +.26 MktVGold .40e 56.74 -1.48 MktVRus .18e u38.81 -.25 MkVEMBd .49e 26.48 -.06 MktVJrGld2.93e 36.12 -1.55 MktV Agri .33e u54.67 +.27 MarIntA .35f 40.87 -.70 MarshM .84f 27.28 -.42 MarshIls .04 7.03 +.07 Masco .30 13.52 +.38 MasseyEn .24 u54.65 -1.74 McDrmInt s ... 19.93 -.33 McDnlds 2.44f 74.21 -.45 McGrwH .94 37.85 +.35 McKesson .72 u74.86 +2.53 McAfee ... 47.36 +.86 ... u32.57 -.43 Mechel MedcoHlth ... 61.91 +.64 Medtrnic .90 36.51 +.02 Merck 1.52 37.06 +.50 MetLife .74 46.38 -.04 MetroPCS ... 13.30 -.96 MitsuUFJ ... 5.34 +.04 MobileTel s ... 20.37 -.33 Molycorp n ... 52.86 -7.84 Monsanto 1.12 70.79 +1.66 MonstrWw ... u25.27 +.24 Moodys .46f 29.67 +2.35 MorgStan .20 28.80 -.03 Mosaic .20 u77.62 +.49 MotrlaSol n ... 39.68 -.15 MotrlaMo n ... 33.01 +.80 NCR Corp ... u16.62 +.06 NRG Egy ... 19.52 -.12 NYSE Eur 1.20 30.83 -.29 Nabors ... 22.80 -.38 NBkGreece.29e d1.60 -.03 NOilVarco .44f 63.72 -2.35 NatSemi .40 14.08 +.35 NY CmtyB 1.00 18.78 -.19 NY Times ... 10.31 -.15 NewellRub .20 18.30 +.04 NewmtM .60 56.94 -1.22 NewpkRes ... 5.79 -.20 Nexen g .20 22.19 -.63 NiSource .92 17.92 -.01 NobleCorp .90e 36.18 -.70 NokiaCp .56e 10.59 -.07 Nordstrm .80 42.94 +.08 NorflkSo 1.44 63.80 +.08 NorthropG 1.88 67.20 +1.50 Novartis 1.99e 58.04 +.31 Nucor 1.45f 43.91 -.41 OcciPet 1.52 96.46 -.56 OfficeDpt ... 6.01 -.09 OfficeMax ... 17.66 -.77 OilSvHT 2.40e 136.44 -3.02 Omnicom .80 47.40 +.54
P-Q-R
PG&E Cp 1.82 47.21 +.35 PMI Grp ... 3.77 -.06 PNC .40 62.28 +.48 PPL Corp 1.40 26.64 -.19 PatriotCoal ... 22.50 +.51 PeabdyE .34f 61.60 -1.19 Penney .80 32.06 -.41 PepsiCo 1.92 66.84 +.25 Petrohawk ... 19.15 +.10 PetrbrsA 1.20e 32.83 -.37 Petrobras 1.20e 36.77 -.41 Pfizer .80f 18.18 +.07 PhilipMor 2.56 57.72 -.78 PhilipsEl .95e 29.81 -.95 Pier 1 ... u10.78 +.12 PioNtrl .08 u87.98 -.17 PlumCrk 1.68 39.17 +.79 Potash .40u169.10+7.12 PwshDB ... 27.22 -.37 PS USDBull ... 23.29 +.18 PrinFncl .55f 32.38 -.69 PrUShS&P ... d23.19 +.09 ProUltQQQ ... u85.76 +.52 PrUShQQQ ... d11.03 -.08 ProUltSP .43e u49.23 -.18 ProUShL20 ... 38.79 -.28 ProUShtFn ... d14.98 +.15 ProUFin rs .07e 69.21 -.71 ProUSR2K ... 12.29 +.10 ProUSSP500 ... d18.69 +.11 ProUltCrude ... 11.83 -.45 ProUSSlv rs ... 10.99 +.17 ProctGam 1.93 64.69 -.11 ProgrssEn 2.48 43.90 +1.13 ProgsvCp 1.16e 19.95 -.18 ProLogis .45m 14.50 -.15 Prudentl 1.15f 61.42 +.43 PSEG 1.37 31.25 -.07 PulteGrp ... 8.23 +.25 QuantaSvc ... 21.26 +.43 QntmDSS ... u4.36 +.13 QksilvRes ... 14.83 -.08 QwestCm .32 7.47 -.17 RAIT Fin ... 2.53 ... RBS pfE 1.47 12.87 -.15 RPC s .19f 16.43 -1.98 Rackspace ... 31.24 -.57 RadianGrp .01 8.90 -.13 Raytheon 1.50 48.72 +1.02 RegionsFn .04 7.14 -.07 ReneSola ... 9.27 -.06 RepubSvc .80 29.79 +.19 ReynAm s 1.96f u33.85 +1.00 RiteAid h ... .00 +.04 RylCarb ... u47.86 -1.05 RoyDShllA3.36e 65.74 -1.11 RubyTues ... u14.77 +.76
Davis Funds A: NYVen A 34.67 -.05 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 35.02 -.05 NYVen C 33.53 -.05 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.20 +.02 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq n22.23 -.20 EmMktV 36.29 -.30 IntSmVa n 17.11 -.09 LargeCo 10.04 -.01 USLgVa n 20.48 -.07 US Micro n13.89 -.06 US Small n21.59 -.08 US SmVa 25.82 -.15 IntlSmCo n17.02 -.10 Fixd n 10.32 ... IntVa n 18.40 -.10 Glb5FxInc n10.86 +.02 2YGlFxd n 10.14 ... Dodge&Cox: Balanced 71.26 -.06 Income 13.22 +.02 IntlStk 35.56 -.26 Stock 109.84 -.16 Dreyfus: Aprec 38.11 -.19 Eaton Vance A: LgCpVal 18.42 -.08 NatlMunInc 8.87 -.05 Eaton Vance I: 8.99 +.01 FltgRt GblMacAbR10.29 +.01 LgCapVal 18.47 -.08 FMI Funds: LgCap p 15.76 -.02 FPA Funds: NwInc 10.85 ... FPACres n26.88 -.05 Fairholme 36.13 -.27
CATTLE/HOGS
Open high low settle CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 106.72 107.72 106.60 106.72 Apr 11 110.62 111.55 110.50 110.80 Jun 11 108.42 109.02 108.17 108.60 Aug 11 108.65 109.27 108.65 108.85 Oct 11 110.80 111.45 110.80 111.00 Dec 11 112.00 112.50 112.00 112.20 Feb 12 112.40 112.90 112.40 112.50 Apr 12 113.00 113.30 113.00 113.15 Jun 12 112.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 39541. Wed’s Sales: 37,153 Wed’s open int: 328895, off -1411 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Jan 11 121.50 122.15 121.50 121.92 Mar 11 122.90 123.80 122.90 123.07 Apr 11 123.80 124.40 123.80 123.82 May 11 123.85 124.50 123.85 124.30 Aug 11 124.80 125.30 124.80 125.27 Sep 11 124.35 124.95 124.35 124.92 Oct 11 124.35 124.95 124.35 124.92 Nov 11 123.80 124.30 123.80 124.30 Last spot N/A Est. sales 3756. Wed’s Sales: 4,668 Wed’s open int: 49005, off -131 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 79.30 80.10 78.32 79.77 Apr 11 83.45 84.25 82.40 84.10 May 11 90.50 91.50 90.50 91.50 Jun 11 93.35 94.10 92.60 94.02 92.00 93.10 92.00 92.97 Jul 11 Aug 11 91.95 92.65 91.80 92.57 Oct 11 81.90 82.40 81.90 82.40 Dec 11 78.60 78.70 78.50 78.70 Feb 12 79.70 79.80 79.70 79.75 Apr 12 80.60 80.80 80.60 80.80 May 12 83.00 Jun 12 85.60 85.80 85.60 85.80 Last spot N/A
LennarA .16 19.14 +.04 LillyEli 1.96 34.94 +.16 Limited .60a 28.89 -.69 LincNat .20f 29.22 -.44 LloydBkg ... 4.14 -.12 LockhdM 3.00f 73.18 +1.26 .44 24.13 -.55 Lowes LyonBas A ... u34.97 +.12
S-T-U
SAIC ... 16.06 ... SAP AG .67e 49.74 -.60 SLM Cp ... 13.24 +.43 SpdrDJIA 2.77e 116.78 -.26 SpdrGold ... 133.83 -.54 SP Mid 1.51e 165.67 -.43 S&P500ETF2.37eu127.39 .25 SpdrHome .33e 17.69 +.12 SpdrKbwBk.13e 26.48 -.33 SpdrLehHY4.68e 40.20 +.02 SpdrKbw RB.35e 26.54 -.37 SpdrRetl .49e 47.08 -.68 SpdrOGEx .20e 52.75 -.26 SpdrMetM .38e 69.21 -.87 Safeway .48 21.23 -.23 StJude ... 40.61 -.02 Saks ... 11.50 +.51 Salesforce ... 143.34 +1.14 SandRdge ... 7.85 +.31 SaraLee .46f 17.46 ... Schlmbrg .84 80.53 -2.06 Schwab .24 17.97 -.11 ScrippsNet .30 48.52 -1.69 SemiHTr .56e 32.89 +.24 SiderNac s .58e 17.44 -.04 SilvWhtn g ... 34.19 -2.46 SilvrcpM g .08 11.70 -.48 SimonProp3.20f 95.35 -2.90 ... 20.05 -.05 SmithfF ... u24.63 +.64 Solutia SouthnCo 1.82 37.89 -.21 SwstAirl .02 13.16 -.15 SwstnEngy ... 37.75 +.42 SpectraEn 1.04f 24.86 -.42 SprintNex ... 4.65 +.03 SP Matls 1.17e 38.35 -.20 SP HlthC .57e 32.09 +.13 SP CnSt .78e 29.18 -.10 SP Consum.49e 37.72 -.23 SP Engy .99e 67.79 -.65 SPDR Fncl .16e 16.36 -.11 SP Inds .60e u35.19 -.06 SP Tech .32e u25.87 +.15 SP Util 1.27e 31.47 +.03 StdPac ... 4.71 +.14 StateStr .04 47.32 +.04 ... 20.15 -.62 StillwtrM StratHotels ... 5.58 -.02 .72f 54.64 -.02 Stryker Suncor gs .40 37.23 -1.17 Suntech ... 8.38 -.27 SunTrst .04 28.65 -1.10 Supvalu .35 9.20 -.01 Synovus .04 2.70 ... Sysco 1.04f 29.86 +.19 TCF Fncl .20 15.30 -.49 TECO .82 18.01 +.01 TJX .60 45.52 +2.52 TaiwSemi .47e u12.87 +.51 Talbots ... d7.62 -.27 TalismE g .25 22.35 +.15 Target 1.00 54.93 -4.01 TataMotors.32e 28.14 -.89 TeckRes g .60f 62.38 -.68 TenetHlth ... u6.87 +.01 Teradyn ... 13.52 +.04 Terex ... 29.25 -.75 ... u19.45 +.33 Tesoro TexInst .52f 33.25 +.45 Textron .08 24.46 +.17 ThermoFis ... 56.58 +.06 ThomCrk g ... 14.34 -.41 3M Co 2.10 86.14 -.53 TimeWarn .85 33.27 +.10 TitanMet ... 17.71 +.64 TollBros ... 20.93 +1.05 Total SA 3.13e 54.16 -.38 Transocn ... 73.04 -.21 Travelers 1.44 54.39 -.85 TrinaSol s ... 24.70 +1.22 TycoElec .64 35.14 -.05 TycoIntl .86e 42.74 -.04 Tyson .16 16.56 +.11 UBS AG ... 16.78 +.13 UDR .74 22.75 -.17 ... 11.24 +.14 US Airwy USEC ... 6.06 +.08 UnilevNV 1.11e 30.51 -.55 UnionPac 1.52f 92.55 -.41 UtdContl ... 25.75 +.40 UtdMicro .08e 3.17 +.08 UPS B 1.88 72.49 -.41 US Bancrp .20 26.29 -.53 US NGsFd ... 6.00 -.11 US OilFd ... 37.68 -.84 USSteel .20 59.06 -1.52 UtdTech 1.70 u79.15 -.08 UtdhlthGp .50 u38.37 +.78
V-W-X-Y-Z
Vale SA .76e 35.13 -.78 Vale SA pf .76e 30.92 -.42 ValeantPh .38a u35.55 +5.60 ValeroE .20 u23.78 +.02 VangEmg .82e 48.20 -.43 VerizonCm1.95f 36.23 -.95 ViacomB .60 40.42 -.18 VimpelC n .46p 15.54 -.15 Visa .60f 73.17 +1.08 VishayInt ... u15.76 +.37 VivoPart .84e u34.39 -.10 ... 2.74 +.11 Vonage WalMart 1.21 53.96 -.45 .70 u40.32 +.12 Walgrn WalterEn .50u135.49 -.58 WeathfIntl ... 21.85 -.76 WellPoint ... 59.52 +1.04 WellsFargo .20 32.15 -.22 WendyArby .08f 4.65 +.08 WDigital ... 33.01 +.22 WstnUnion .28f 19.37 +.43 Weyerh .60f u20.02 -.14 WmsCos .50 24.53 -.05 WmsSon .60 34.38 -1.06 WT India .15e 25.61 -.50 XL Grp .40 22.16 -.01 XcelEngy 1.01 23.50 -.02 .17 11.46 ... Xerox Yamana g .12f 11.78 -.27 YingliGrn ... 10.43 +.03 ... 40.59 +2.67 Youku n YumBrnds 1.00 48.91 +.34 Zimmer ... 52.60 -1.68
Federated Instl: GroCo n 85.50 +.27 KaufmnR 5.53 -.02 GroInc n 18.55 -.05 TotRetBd 11.11 +.02 GrowthCoK85.45 +.27 Fidelity Advisor A: HighInc r n 9.02 +.01 NwInsgh p 20.14 -.02 Indepn n 24.73 -.08 StrInA 12.40 ... IntBd n 10.53 +.03 IntmMu n 10.01 -.02 Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI n 20.33 -.02 IntlDisc n 33.02 -.16 InvGrBd n 11.36 +.02 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 n 13.64 -.01 InvGB n 7.37 +.02 FF2015 n 11.39 -.01 LgCapVal 12.03 -.04 FF2020 n 13.85 -.03 LatAm 58.57 -.70 FF2020K 13.25 -.03 LevCoStk n28.76 -.05 FF2025 n 11.58 -.03 LowP r n 38.53 -.08 FF2030 n 13.85 -.04 LowPriK r 38.51 -.08 FF2030K 13.68 -.04 Magelln n 72.30 +.11 FF2035 n 11.55 -.03 MidCap n 29.08 -.15 FF2040 n 8.07 -.02 MuniInc n 12.23 -.03 NwMkt r n 15.72 -.02 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 12.82 -.03 OTC n 56.89 +.43 AMgr50 n 15.48 -.01 100Index 8.88 -.02 AMgr20 r n12.81 +.01 Ovrsea n 32.22 -.19 Balanc n 18.35 -.01 Puritn n 18.08 ... BalancedK18.35 -.01 RealE n 25.50 -.27 BlueChGr n46.24 -.05 SCmdtyStrt n12.37 Canada n 57.88 -.26 .14 CapAp n 25.76 ... SrsIntGrw 11.15 -.08 CpInc r n 9.58 +.02 SrsIntVal 9.96 -.06 Contra n 68.37 -.09 StIntMu n 10.60 ... ContraK 68.34 -.09 STBF n 8.45 +.01 DisEq n 22.89 -.05 SmllCpS r n20.20 +.08 DivIntl n 30.01 -.21 StratInc n 11.10 ... DivrsIntK r 29.98 -.21 StrReRt r 9.53 -.03 DivGth n 28.73 -.06 TotalBd n 10.70 +.02 EmrMk n 26.50 -.15 USBI n 11.29 +.02 Eq Inc n 44.98 -.19 Value n 69.37 -.15 EQII n 18.56 -.06 Fidelity Selects: Fidel n 32.55 -.12 Gold r n 49.61-1.09 FltRateHi r n9.84 +.01 Fidelity Spartan: GNMA n 11.45 +.02 ExtMkIn n 38.58 -.08 GovtInc 10.38 +.02 500IdxInv n45.08 -.08
Est. sales 28711. Wed’s Sales: 27,405 Wed’s open int: 207676, up +2380 PORK BELLIES 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 106.00 Mar 11 107.00 May 11 106.70 Jul 11 103.50 Aug 11 102.50 Last spot N/A Wed’s Sales: Wed’s open int: 3, unch
COTTON
NEW YORK(AP) - Cotton No. 2 futures on the N.Y. Cotton Exchange Friday: Open high low settle COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Mar 11 147.09 149.09 141.20 141.22 May 11 141.61 143.95 136.91 137.22 Jul 11 133.07 135.00 128.00 128.25 Oct 11 111.60 Dec 11 100.90 102.50 100.00 100.97 Mar 12 97.49 97.50 95.50 96.54 May 12 95.50 95.57 95.50 95.57 Jul 12 95.30 95.30 94.97 94.97 Oct 12 89.97 Dec 12 90.00 90.00 89.35 89.35 Last spot N/A Est. sales 26272. Wed’s Sales: 16,897 Wed’s open int: 208074, up +179
chg.
-3.98 -2.89 -2.91 -.40 +.95 +1.15 +.78 +.24 +.40 +.35
GRAINS
CHICAGO(AP) - Futures trading on the Chicago Board of Trade Thursday: Open high
low settle
chg.
WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Mar 11 782 809fl 782 789 -19ü May 11 820fl 835ø 815 816ü -18fl Jul 11 832ø 847 827ü 828ü -18
Friday, January 7, 2011
MARKET SUMMARY
NYSE
AMEX
NASDAQ
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Vol (00) Last Chg Name Citigrp 6816260 4.95 -.02 BkofAm 2332512 14.44 -.06 Pfizer 1164885 18.18 +.07 S&P500ETF1054954127.39-.25 FordM 924842 18.22
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name DaqoNEn n ValeantPh GlbShipLs QiaoXMob SkilldHcre
Last 13.50 35.55 5.79 5.55 10.66
Chg +2.23 +5.60 +.75 +.72 +1.13
%Chg +19.8 +18.7 +14.9 +14.9 +11.9
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Goldcp wt Molycorp n RPC s BasicEnSv AmbwEd n
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
Last 2.62 52.86 16.43 14.77 11.85
Chg -.54 -7.84 -1.98 -1.44 -1.15
DIARY
%Chg -17.0 -12.9 -10.8 -8.9 -8.8
1,207 1,836 92 3,135 195 6 5,035,976,447
52-Week High Low 11,742.68 9,614.32 5,219.80 3,742.01 413.75 346.95 8,071.43 6,355.83 2,225.48 1,689.19 2,704.86 2,061.14 1,277.63 1,010.91 13,567.21 10,596.20 801.13 580.49
Vol (00) Name RareEle g 117103 VantageDrl109892 NthgtM g 91042 RadientPh 89305 AvalRare n 64810
Last 13.84 2.18 2.91 1.18 6.40
Vol (00) Last Name Intel 1139497 20.77 Microsoft 857377 28.82 Nvidia 829191 19.33 Cisco 645747 20.95 PwShs QQQ44121155.92
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Last 6.13 8.16 2.93 4.14 2.18
Name Hyperdyn UnvSecInst Advntrx rs ChiArmM VantageDrl
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
DIARY
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
195 285 38 518 21 4w Lows 194,459,69180
INDEXES
Name Dow Jones Industrials Dow Jones Transportation Dow Jones Utilities NYSE Composite Amex Index Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
Last 11,697.31 5,143.97 406.43 8,000.90 2,172.91 2,709.89 1,273.85 13,526.14 791.42
Chg
YTD %Chg Name
PE Last
BkofAm
.04
21
14.44 -.06
Chevron
2.88
11
90.69 -.75
CocaCl
1.76
19
63.03 -.46
-4.2 PepsiCo
Disney
.40f
20
39.65 -.31
+5.7 Pfizer
EOG Res
.62
46
92.82 +.49
...
9
18.22 +.33
Div
+8.2 ONEOK Pt
Last 4.70 3.23 3.41 3.90 4.80
Chg +1.10 +1.28 +.69 +.54 +.36
DIARY
%Chg +91.7 +54.0 +45.8 +33.3 +20.6
Chg -.70 -.48 -.49 -.55 -.67
%Chg -13.0 -12.9 -12.6 -12.4 -12.2
1,153 1,472 130 2,755 189 8 2,073,562,580
Net % Chg Chg -25.58 -.22 -10.62 -.21 +.23 +.06 -39.14 -.49 -27.61 -1.25 +7.69 +.28 -2.71 -.21 -28.14 -.21 -3.67 -.46
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
Div
Last 2.30 3.65 2.20 2.16 2.11
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Last Chg %Chg Name RareEle g 13.84 -2.20 -13.7 Phazar AvalRare n 6.40 -.90 -12.3 Thrmogn rs BioTime 8.62 -.88 -9.3 Kingstone PlatGpMet 2.32 -.21 -8.3 Wowjnt un ChinaShen 9.50 -.74 -7.20.6 PacSunwr
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
Chg -.17 +.82 +2.35 +.18 +.18
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Chg %Chg Name +.78 +14.6 CtrVABcs h +.85 +11.6 HaupgDig +.26 +9.7 LexiPhrm +.35 +9.2 IndBkMI rs +.17 +8.5 NthnStat
Name
FordM
Chg -2.20 +.17 -.12 -.18 -.90
YTD % Chg +1.03 +.73 +.36 +.46 -1.61 +2.15 +1.29 +1.24 +.99
52-wk % Chg +10.28 +24.38 +2.48 +8.21 +16.32 +17.82 +11.58 +14.14 +23.28.
Chg
YTD %Chg
78.84 -.12
-.8
PE Last
4.52f
24
.50
32
13.19 -.05
+1.3
1.92
17
66.84 +.25
+2.3
.80f
9
18.18 +.07
+3.8
+1.5 SwstAirl
.02
24
13.16 -.15
+1.4
+8.5 TexInst
.52f
14
33.25 +.45
+2.3
-.6 PNM Res
HewlettP
.32
12
44.88 +.68
+6.6 TimeWarn
.85
15
33.27 +.10
+3.4
HollyCp
.60
46
40.77 -.18
... TriContl
.25e
...
13.93 -.04
+1.2
Intel
.72f
11
20.77 -.17
-1.2 WalMart
1.21
13
53.96 -.45
+.1
IBM
2.60
14 148.66 +1.61
+1.3 WashFed
.24f
16
16.93 +.01
+.1
Merck
1.52
19
+2.8 WellsFargo
.20
13
32.15 -.22
+3.7
23.50 -.02
-.2
Microsoft
.64
37.06 +.50
HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW 7
28.82 +.82
+3.3 XcelEngy
1.01
14
Here are the 525 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, the 400 most active on the Nasdaq National Markets and 100 most active on American Stock Exchange. Mutual funds are 450 largest. Stocks in bold changed 5 percent or more in price. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name Div Last Chg (not its abbreviation). Company names made up of initials appear at Name the beginning of each letters’ list. AAR .48 12.88 # Div: Current annual dividend rate paid on stock, based on latest quar- ACMIn 1.10 9.75 +.13 ACM Op .80 7.25 # terly or semiannual declaration, unless otherwise footnoted. ACM Sc 1.10 8.50 -.13 Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. ACMSp .96 7.50 # Chg: Loss or gain for the day. No change indicated by ... mark. Fund Name: Name of mutual fund and family. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold. Chg: Daily net change in the NAV.
Name
Div Last Chg
AAR
.48 12.88
Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. d – New 52- ACMIn 1.10 9.75 +.13 wk low during trading day. g – Dividend in Canadian $. Stock price in U.S.$. n – ACM Op .80 7.25 # ACM Sc 1.10 8.50 -.13 New issue in past 52 wks. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. s – Split ACMSp .96 7.50 # or stock dividend of 25 pct or more in last 52 wks. Div begins with date of split or stock dividend. u – New 52-wk high during trading day. v – Trading halted on primary market. Unless noted, dividend rates are annual disbursements based on last declaration. pf – Preferred. pp – Holder owes installment(s) of purchase price. rt – Rights. un – Units. wd – When distributed. wi – When issued. wt – Warrants. ww – With warrants. xw – Without warrants. Dividend Footnotes: a – Also extra or extras. b – Annual rate plus stock dividend. c – Liquidating dividend. e – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos. f – Annual rate, increased on last declaration. i – Declared or paid after stock dividend or split. j – Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last meeting. k – Declared or paid this year, accumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m – Annual rate, reduced on last declaration. p – Init div, annual rate unknown. r – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos plus stock dividend. t – Paid in stock in last 12 mos, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or distribution date. x – Ex-dividend or ex-rights. y – Ex-dividend and sales in full. z – Sales in full. vj – In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. • Most active stocks above must be worth $1 and gainers/losers $2. Mutual Fund Footnotes: e – Ex-capital gains distribution. f – Wednesday’s quote. n - No-load fund. p – Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r – Redemption fee or contingent deferred sales load may apply. s – Stock dividend or split. t – Both p and r. x – Ex-cash dividend.
MUTUAL FUNDS
#
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
IntlInxInv n34.98 -.16 TotMktInv n36.90 -.06 Fidelity Spart Adv: 500IdxAdv n45.08-.08 TotMktAd r n36.90-.06 First Eagle: 46.44 +.01 GlblA OverseasA22.61 +.01 Forum Funds: AbsStrI r 10.84 ... Frank/Temp Frnk A: CalTFA p 6.68 -.02 FedTFA p 11.29 -.03 FoundAl p 10.57 -.01 HYTFA p 9.60 -.03 IncomA p 2.19 ... NYTFA p 11.14 -.03 StratInc p 10.45 ... USGovA p 6.72 +.01 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: GlbBdAdv p ... ... IncmeAd 2.18 ... Frank/Temp Frnk C: IncomC t 2.21 ... Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 20.93 ... Frank/Temp Temp A: ForgnA p 7.00 -.01 GlBd A p 13.62 -.03 GrwthA p 17.90 -.07 WorldA p 14.98 -.03 Frank/Temp Tmp Adv: GrthAv 17.90 -.06 Frank/Temp Tmp B&C: GlBdC p 13.64 -.04 GE Elfun S&S: S&S PM 40.85 -.05 GMO Trust III: Quality 20.31 +.04
GMO Trust IV: IntlIntrVl 21.81 -.12 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 14.79 -.09 IntlCorEq 28.97 -.17 Quality 20.31 +.04 Goldman Sachs A: MdCVA p 36.30 -.08 Goldman Sachs Inst: 7.34 +.01 HiYield MidCapV 36.55 -.08 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.06 +.02 CapApInst 37.26 -.06 IntlInv t 59.57 -.47 Intl r 60.12 -.47 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 35.27 +.05 Hartford Fds C: CapApC t 31.30 +.04 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI n 35.28 +.05 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 43.18 +.02 Div&Gr 19.73 -.03 Advisers 19.53 +.01 TotRetBd 10.89 +.03 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 12.20 +.07 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r16.78 +.04 Invesco Funds A: CapGro 13.68 -.02 Chart p 16.32 -.03 EqIncA 8.71 ... GrIncA p 19.55 -.05 HYMuA 8.93 -.02 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 24.01 -.08 AssetStA p24.71 -.08 AssetStrI r 24.92 -.08
Sep 11 846 864 844ü 845 -17 Dec 11 863ü 875 859ø 860fl -15ü 869fl 869fl -14ü Mar 12 870 884 Last spot N/A Est. sales 112564. Wed’s Sales: 66,904 Wed’s open int: 503098, up +4560 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Mar 11 602 621ø 600ü 602 -17ü May 11 611ø 629ø 608fl 610fl -16fl Jul 11 616 633ü 613 615 -16fl Sep 11 574 587fl 574 575ü -12ü Dec 11 549ø 560ü 549ü 550 -8ü 557ø 558ü -8ü Mar 12 559 568 May 12 567 572 563fl 564ü -8 Jul 12 570ø 579 570 570 -7fl Sep 12 533fl 545ü 533fl 534 -11ü Dec 12 517fl 525 515 516 -11ü Last spot N/A Est. sales 562078. Wed’s Sales: 277,536 Wed’s open int: 1556130, up +9975 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Mar 11 375 388fl 375 377fl -11ø May 11 383 389ø 380ø 382ø -11 Jul 11 386 391ü 380 382ø -10 Sep 11 360 360 352ø 352ø -7ø Dec 11 346 348fl 345 347ø -7ø Mar 12 361 361 358 358 -3 365 365 -3 May 12 368 368 Last spot N/A Est. sales 1888. Wed’s Sales: 1,788 Wed’s open int: 12249, off -314 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jan 11 1371fl 1390 1369ø 1369ø -16ø Mar 11 1376 1398fl 1376 1378 -15ø May 11 1391 1405fl 1384ø 1386ø -14 Jul 11 1391ø 1407 1387fl 1389ø -12fl Aug 11 1363 1375 1359 1361 -12ø Sep 11 1324 1333 1322 1322 -11 Nov 11 1286 1300fl 1284 1286 -9ø Jan 12 1292ü 1300ø 1290ø 1290ø -8ø Last spot N/A Est. sales 307699. Wed’s Sales: 165,160 Wed’s open int: 626287, up +3676
JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.45 +.02 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd n 11.45 +.03 HighYld n 8.23 +.02 IntmTFBd n10.75 -.02 ShtDurBd n10.96 +.01 USLCCrPls n21.05 .01 Janus T Shrs: OvrseasT r52.23 +.15 PrkMCVal T22.62 -.07 Twenty T 66.87 -.03 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggr 12.40 -.04 LSBalanc 13.00 -.01 LSGrwth 12.95 -.03 LSModer 12.67 ... Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p24.93 .14 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.79 -.20 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p22.19 -.21 Legg Mason A: WAMgMu p15.02 -.05 Longleaf Partners: Partners 28.61 -.06 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.29 +.03 StrInc C 14.90 +.03 LSBondR 14.24 +.03 StrIncA 14.82 +.03 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdY 12.08 +.02 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 11.80 -.05 BdDebA p 7.86 +.01 ShDurIncA p4.60 ...
FUTURES
Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t4.63 +.01 MFS Funds A: TotRA 14.19 -.01 ValueA 23.13 -.04 MFS Funds I: ValueI 23.23 -.04 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBA 5.92 +.01 Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 8.49 -.05 Matthews Asian: AsianGIInv18.15 ... PacTgrInv 23.80 -.04 MergerFd 15.84 +.02 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.36 +.03 TotRtBdI 10.36 +.03 MorganStanley Inst: IntlEqI 13.59 -.05 MCapGrI 37.93 -.15 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 29.58 +.02 GlbDiscZ 29.92 +.01 QuestZ 17.85 -.01 SharesZ 21.09 +.01 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 45.72 -.22 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 47.38 -.23 Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.34 ... MMIntEq r 9.98 ... Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 27.75 -.02 19.44 +.05 Intl I r Oakmark r 41.96 +.01 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.78 ... GlbSMdCap15.42-.07
OIL/GASOLINE/NG
NEW YORK(AP) - Trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange Friday: Open high
low settle
chg.
LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. Feb 11 88.55 90.71 87.85 88.38 -1.92 Mar 11 89.84 91.83 89.20 89.75 -1.67 Apr 11 90.92 92.79 90.40 90.90 -1.49 May 11 91.77 93.46 91.42 91.84 -1.39 Jun 11 92.45 94.24 92.09 92.54 -1.33 Jul 11 93.22 94.60 92.75 93.09 -1.29 Aug 11 93.44 94.96 93.39 93.46 -1.25 Sep 11 93.76 95.16 93.65 93.72 -1.20 Oct 11 93.81 95.27 93.40 93.92 -1.13 Nov 11 94.11 95.51 93.98 94.09 -1.06 Dec 11 94.06 95.72 93.73 94.25 -.99 Jan 12 94.40 95.58 94.10 94.30 -.92 Feb 12 94.29 -.87 Mar 12 94.26 -.84 Apr 12 94.22 -.82 May 12 94.18 -.81 Jun 12 95.45 95.45 94.15 94.15 -.80 Jul 12 94.09 -.77 Aug 12 94.04 -.74 Sep 12 93.99 -.71 Oct 12 93.97 -.67 Nov 12 93.96 -.65 Dec 12 94.04 95.43 93.57 93.99 -.64 Jan 13 93.88 -.62 Last spot N/A Est. sales 1050897. Wed’s Sales: 911,745 Wed’s open int: 1481197, up +9971 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Feb 11 2.4309 2.4739 2.4238 2.4430 -.0021 Mar 11 2.4368 2.4774 2.4287 2.4464 -.0053 Apr 11 2.5348 2.5673 2.5200 2.5365 -.0103 May 11 2.5390 2.5703 2.5270 2.5399 -.0124 Jun 11 2.5380 2.5681 2.5198 2.5360 -.0143 Jul 11 2.5229 2.5575 2.5147 2.5269 -.0147 Aug 11 2.5109 -.0160 Sep 11 2.4932 -.0160 Oct 11 2.3860 2.3890 2.3820 2.3848 -.0164 Nov 11 2.3655 2.3660 2.3620 2.3660 -.0164
Oppenheimer A: CapApA p 43.75 -.11 DvMktA p 36.23 -.30 GlobA p 60.42 -.09 GblStrIncA 4.29 ... Gold p 46.24-1.34 IntBdA p 6.47 -.04 MnStFdA 32.93 ... Oppenheimer Roch: LtdNYA p 3.21 -.01 RoMu A p 15.14 -.06 RcNtMuA 6.61 -.02 Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 35.83 -.31 IntlBdY 6.47 -.03 PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 10.81 +.01 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r10.51 -.01 AllAsset 12.04 -.01 ComodRR 9.12 -.07 HiYld 9.36 ... InvGrCp 10.47 +.02 LowDu 10.37 +.01 RealRtnI 11.34 +.04 ShortT 9.86 ... TotRt 10.81 +.01 TR II 10.32 +.01 TRIII 9.55 +.01 PIMCO Funds A: LwDurA 10.37 +.01 RealRtA p 11.34 +.04 TotRtA 10.81 +.01 PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 10.81 +.01 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 10.81 +.01 PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 10.81 +.01 Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n 26.84 +.09
NASDAQ NATIONAL MARKET
... 37.45 -.04 Div Last Chg Copart CorinthC ... 5.57 +.35 A-B-C CostPlus ... 10.27 +.68 .82 70.65 -.34 ASML Hld .27e 36.32 -.31 Costco ... 67.22 +.11 ATP O&G ... 17.19 -.20 Cree Inc Crocs ... 16.75 -.44 AVI Bio ... 2.17 +.01 AcmePkt ... u61.31 +.72 Ctrip.com s ... 45.26 +.67 ... 1.53 +.02 AcordaTh ... 27.98 -.65 Cyclacel ... u18.92 +.58 ActivsBliz .15 12.26 -.03 CypSemi AdobeSy ... 32.27 +.05 D-E-F Adtran .36 u38.93 +2.09 ... 14.26 +.39 Affymax ... 6.95 +.33 Dell Inc AkamaiT ... 48.45 -.40 DeltaPtr h ... .76 -.00 AlaskCom .86 10.49 -.49 DemandTc ... u12.08 +.15 ... 35.42 +.21 AllosThera ... 4.27 -.19 Dndreon AllscriptH ... 20.31 +.18 Depomed ... u6.75 +.22 AlteraCp lf .24 36.33 +.43 DirecTV A ... 41.17 -.23 ... 185.86 -1.56 DiscCm A ... 40.31 -.24 Amazon ACapAgy 5.60e 29.23 +.54 DiscCm C ... 34.86 -.47 AmCapLtd ... 7.86 -.16 DishNetwk ... 21.09 +.33 AmerMed ... 18.44 +.09 DonlleyRR 1.04 17.61 +.07 ... 5.45 +.07 ... 28.22 -.69 DryShips AmSupr Amgen ... 56.55 -.18 ETrade rs ... 16.28 -.08 ... 28.42 -.31 AmkorT lf ... 7.59 +.23 eBay ... 14.68 ... EagleBulk ... 5.06 +.02 Amylin ErthLink .64 8.78 -.01 Anadigc ... 7.63 +.20 ... u33.72 +.72 EstWstBcp .04 20.35 +.12 Ancestry ... 16.23 -.05 Angiotc gh ... .22 -.11 ElectArts ... 1.21 +.04 A123 Sys ... 9.71 +.08 Emcore ApolloGrp ... 39.47 -.35 EndoPhrm ... 35.84 -.08 ... 3.50 -.15 ApolloInv 1.12 11.38 -.17 Ener1 Apple Inc ...u333.73 -.27 EngyConv ... 4.84 +.18 ... 7.20 -.08 Entegris ApldMatl .28 13.89 +.13 AMCC ... 11.20 +.33 EntropCom ... u13.24 +.02 ... 82.00 -.84 ArenaPhm ... 2.11 +.03 Equinix AresCap 1.40 16.63 -.16 EricsnTel .28e 11.26 -.11 ... 8.19 +.23 ... 5.23 ... Exelixis AriadP ... 9.80 -.13 ArmHld .12e u21.78 -.10 ExideTc ... 11.52 -.07 Expedia .28 25.10 -.33 Arris ArubaNet ... 23.75 +.27 F5 Netwks ... 138.07 +.78 ... 29.18 -.25 AscenaRtl ... 25.78 -.54 FLIR Sys AsiaEntRs ... 10.94 +1.06 Fastenal .84f 59.37 -.71 .04 14.62 -.34 FifthThird AsiaInfoL ... 19.40 +.37 ... u32.25 +1.39 AsscdBanc .04 14.83 -.17 Finisar .16 16.03 -.66 ... 44.56 -.08 FinLine Atheros AtlasEngy ... 44.15 -.11 FMariner h ... .52 +.05 .04 12.46 +.17 Atmel ... u13.08 +.19 FMidBc Autodesk ... u41.26 +.02 FstNiagara .60f 14.05 +.01 ... 134.53 +2.93 AutoData 1.44f u48.00 +.37 FstSolar ... 7.97 +.08 AvagoTch .07p 28.52 +.53 Flextrn AvanirPhm ... 4.26 +.09 FocusMda ... 22.92 -.42 AvisBudg ... 14.60 -.11 Fossil Inc ... 70.53 -1.47 Axcelis ... 3.27 -.05 FosterWhl ... 35.20 +.45 ... 47.54 +.06 FresKabi rt ... .04 ... BMC Sft ... 2.02 -.07 BSD Med ... 5.18 +.38 FuelCell BannerCp .04 2.20 ... FultonFncl .12 10.30 -.09 BebeStrs .10 5.80 -.11 G-H-I ... 48.84 -.18 BedBath BiogenIdc ... 67.26 +.58 GSI Cmmrc ... 23.98 +.88 GT Solar ... 9.95 -.06 ... 1.70 +.02 BioSante BrigExp ... 26.92 -.46 Garmin 1.50f 30.90 -.56 .44 u31.53 +.80 Brightpnt ... u9.41 +.34 Gentex Broadcom .32 44.86 +.88 Genzyme ... 71.56 +.26 ... 5.26 -.08 Broadwind ... 2.33 -.06 GeronCp BrcdeCm ... 5.67 -.06 GileadSci ... 37.51 -.02 Bucyrus .10 89.91 +.15 GlbSpcMet .15 17.90 +.39 CA Inc .16 24.72 +.04 GluMobile ... u2.72 +.04 ... 613.50 +4.43 CH Robins1.16f 79.64 -.24 Google ... 29.91 -.74 Cadence ... 8.44 +.12 HSN Inc HampRB h ... .82 +.13 CdnSolar ... 13.26 -.21 CapFdF rs ... 11.74 -.01 HanmiFncl ... 1.21 +.03 CpstnTrb h ... 1.08 +.09 HansenMed ... 1.70 +.05 Cardtronic ... 17.38 -.39 HansenNat ... 53.62 +1.66 ... 34.20 +.79 Harmonic ... 8.53 -.06 Carrizo CathayGen .04 16.75 -.36 Hasbro 1.00 46.05 -.19 CaviumNet ... u44.66 +1.71 HaupgDig ... 3.65 +1.28 Celgene ... 58.99 -.40 HercOffsh ... 3.62 -.18 ... 18.87 -.17 CelldexTh ... 3.94 -.24 Hologic CentAl ... 16.78 -.15 HudsCity .60 13.17 -.08 ... 24.82 +.36 HumGen Cephln ... 60.46 -.38 .48 41.42 +.11 CerusCp ... 2.62 +.04 HuntJB HuntBnk .04 7.15 -.03 ... 3.53 -.07 ChrmSh ... 46.72 -1.64 iShAsiaexJ .97e 64.28 -.50 ChkPoint Cheesecake ... 31.10 -.04 iSh ACWI .81e 46.81 -.30 ... u20.72 +.16 ChildPlace ... 45.91 -1.27 IconixBr ... u67.00 +1.00 ChinAgri s ... 13.19 +.61 Illumina Imax Corp ... 27.86 -.26 ChinaMda ... 16.33 -.29 ... 16.38 +.01 ChinaMed ... 11.18 -.13 Incyte ChinaTcF ... u4.38 +.15 IndBkMI rs ... 2.16 +.54 ... 11.06 +.42 CienaCorp ... u23.99 +1.06 Infinera ... 3.88 +.04 Cintas .49f 28.00 -.01 InspPhar IntgDv ... 6.72 +.08 Cirrus ... 17.49 +.29 .72f 20.77 -.17 Cisco ... 20.95 +.18 Intel InterDig .40 u46.88 +1.29 ... 68.90 +.94 CitrixSys CleanEngy ... 14.11 +.02 InterMune ... 38.93 -.15 .48 14.66 +.11 Clearwire ... 5.77 +.44 Intersil ... 48.30 -.44 ClickSft ... u9.11 +1.07 Intuit ... 57.00 +1.58 CognizTech ... u75.51 -.68 Itron Coinstar ... 57.33 +.31 J-K-L ColdwtrCrk ... 3.12 +.07 ... 7.02 +.04 ColumLabs ... u2.48 +.11 JA Solar JDS Uniph ... u16.04 +1.01 Comcast .38 u22.76 +.02 ... 2.38 +.12 Comc spcl .38 u21.49 -.03 Jamba JamesRiv ... u25.68 +.28 Compuwre ... 11.71 +.04 ... 6.95 -.15 Conexant ... 1.88 +.21 JetBlue
Name
M-N-0
MIPS Tech ... u17.34 +.60 MagicSft .50e 7.06 -.21 MannKd ... 8.38 -.05 ... 31.42 -.03 Martek ... 19.56 +1.00 MarvellT Masimo 2.75e 28.19 -1.11 Mattel .83f 24.85 -.62 Mattson ... 2.36 +.08 MaximIntg .84 24.10 +.33 MelcoCrwn ... 6.87 +.06 MentorGr ... 12.03 +.05 MercadoL ... 74.54 +2.43 Microchp 1.38f 35.02 +.20 ... 8.58 +.04 MicronT Microsoft .64 28.82 +.82 Micrvisn ... 2.07 -.15 Mindspeed ... 6.91 +.41 Momenta ... 16.25 +.71 Motricity n ... 20.04 +.13 Move Inc ... 2.70 +.09 Mylan ... 22.46 +.77 ... 21.30 -.32 MyriadG NII Hldg ... 43.06 -.42 NasdOMX ... 23.55 -.10 NatPenn .04 8.12 -.25 NetLogic s ... u35.33 +1.41 NetApp ... u57.49 -.38 Netflix ... 177.99 -1.74 NewsCpA .15 14.81 -.04 NewsCpB .15 16.52 +.08 NorTrst 1.12 56.35 -.20 NwstBcsh .40 11.64 -.08 NovtlWrls ... 9.75 +.01 Novell ... 5.94 -.01 Novlus ... 31.90 +.49 NuanceCm ... u19.87 +.25 Nvidia ... u19.33 +2.35 OReillyAu ... 56.44 -1.83 ... 13.65 +.01 Oclaro rs OmniVisn ... 28.49 +.18 OnSmcnd ... u10.42 +.13 OpenTable ... 76.10 +2.39 optXprs 4.50e 14.76 +.21 Oracle .20 31.17 +.13 Orexigen ... 9.41 +.01 Oxigene h ... .25 +.01
P-Q-R
PDL Bio 1.00e 6.20 -.01 PMC Sra ... 8.89 +.30 PSS Wrld ... 23.09 +.59 Paccar .48a 57.48 -.15 PacSunwr ... 4.80 -.67 PanASlv .10f 36.97 -1.21 .20 20.25 -.53 PattUTI Paychex 1.24 31.88 +.34 PnnNGm ... 33.85 -.17 PeopUtdF .62 14.16 +.01 Perrigo .28f 66.04 +2.87 PetsMart .50 38.95 -.55 ... 5.70 -.01 PhotrIn Polycom ... 39.50 +.43 Popular ... 3.13 -.07 Power-One ... 10.58 +.14 PwShs QQQ.33eu55.92 +.18 Powrwav ... u3.35 +.15 PriceTR 1.08 65.16 ... ...u437.32+3.72 priceline ProspctCap1.21 10.89 ... QiaoXing ... 3.17 -.27 Qlogic ... 17.19 +.11 Qualcom .76 u52.67 +.64 QuantFu h ... .44 +.00 Questcor ... 15.37 +.55 QuickLog ... u6.65 +.30 Quidel ... 13.23 -1.20 QuinStrt n ... u21.96 +1.54 RF MicD ... 7.76 -.02 Rambus ... 20.36 -.01 Randgold .17e 79.14 +.97 RedRobin ... 21.78 +1.07 ... 5.75 +.48 Rdiff.cm
RentACt .24 30.06 -1.37 RepubAir ... 7.49 -.23 RschMotn ... 61.37 -.55 ResConn .16 21.40 +2.45 RightNow ... 25.44 +1.16 RossStrs .64 63.77 +1.12 Rovi Corp ... 63.86 -1.80
S-T-U
SBA Com ... 39.69 -1.06 STEC ... 19.83 +.48 SalixPhm ... 45.64 -1.60 ... u52.73 +.48 SanDisk Sanmina ... 12.32 -.27 Sapient .35e 12.50 +.39 SavientPh ... 10.96 -.32 Schulmn .62 20.31 -1.67 SeagateT ... 14.75 +.05 SearsHldgs ... 70.55 -1.80 SeattGen ... 15.74 +.20 Sequenom ... 7.61 -.14 SifyTech ... 2.20 +.02 SilicnImg ... 7.78 -.04 ... 49.24 +1.71 SilcnLab Slcnware .41e 5.77 -.01 SilvStd g ... 24.37 -1.14 Sina ... u77.08 +1.98 Sinovac ... 4.28 -.03 SiriusXM ... 1.64 -.01 SkywksSol ... u30.15 -.05 SmartM ... 5.95 +.04 SmartT gn ... 8.87 -.31 SodaStrm n ... 28.99 +1.93 Sohu.cm ... 67.58 +2.05 Solarfun ... 8.32 -.02 SonicCorp ... 11.19 -.12 SonicSolu ... u14.88 -.42 Sonus ... 2.83 +.04 Sourcefire ... 24.68 -2.14 SpectPh ... 6.82 -.14 Staples .36 23.41 -.27 Starbucks .52 31.96 -.39 StlDynam .30 18.83 +.18 SteinMrt .50e 8.92 -.26 StemCells ... 1.11 -.01 SuccessF ... 30.91 +.37 SunPowerA ... 13.63 -.23 SuperMda ... 11.40 -.03 SusqBnc .04 9.35 -.29 Symantec ... 17.69 +.07 Synopsys ... 26.68 -.10 TD Ameritr .20 19.82 +.62 TakeTwo ... 12.28 -.13 TalecrisBio ... 22.95 +.18 Taleo A ... 30.23 +.37 Tekelec ... 12.94 -.34 Tellabs .08 7.03 +.23 Terremk ... u14.08 +.75 TeslaMot n ... 27.88 +1.05 TevaPhrm .75e 53.44 +1.33 Thoratec ... 29.46 +.26 TibcoSft ... 19.50 -.26 ... 9.92 +.07 TiVo Inc TomoThera ... 3.64 ... TridentM h ... 1.65 +.02 TriQuint ... u13.39 -.18 UTiWrldwd .06 21.00 -.31 UltaSalon ... u37.18 +2.66 UtdCBksGa ... 2.02 -.21 UtdOnln .40 7.00 +.13 UtdWstn hlf ... .42 +.09 UrbanOut ... 36.07 +.32
V-W-X-Y-Z
ValueClick ... 16.14 -.15 VeecoInst ... 45.95 +1.39 Verigy ... 12.92 -.29 Verisign 3.00e 33.76 +.27 VertxPh ... 36.20 -.64 VirgnMda h .16 26.85 +.17 Vivus ... 10.55 +.69 Vodafone 1.33e 27.56 +.06 WarnerCh s8.50e23.19 +.21 WebMD ... 52.10 +.03 WebMda h ... 1.74 +.21 WernerEnt .20a 23.13 -.35 WetSeal ... 3.46 -.45 WhitneyH .04 13.87 -.18 WholeFd .40 48.10 -.91 Windstrm 1.00 13.62 -.39 Winn-Dixie ... 6.61 -.15 Wynn 1.00a 114.67 +.83 XOMA rs ... 6.78 +.11 Xilinx .64 u30.14 +.50 Xyratex ... 17.12 +.66 YRC Ww rs ... 3.53 +.07 Yahoo ... 17.06 +.15 Zagg ... 8.78 +.45 Zalicus ... 2.01 ... ZionBcp .04 24.83 -.07 Zoran ... 9.02 +.20 Zumiez ... 24.44 -2.23
AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE
Div Last Chg ChiGengM ... ChinNEPet ... AbdAsPac .42 6.65 -.01 ChinaShen ... AdeonaPh ... 1.59 +.09 ClaudeR g ... AdvPhot ... 1.53 -.17 Crossh g rs ... Advntrx rs ... 2.93 +.26 Crystallx g ... AlexcoR g ... 7.15 -.30 CubicEngy ... AlldNevG ... 24.59 -.44 DenisnM g ... AlmadnM g ... 4.47 -.31 eMagin ... Anooraq g ... 1.48 -.10 EndvSilv g ... ArcadiaRs ... .31 ... Fronteer g ... ArmourRsd1.44 8.03 +.11 GabGldNR 1.68 Aurizon g ... 6.74 -.16 GascoEngy ... AvalRare n ... 6.40 -.90 Gastar grs ... Banro g ... 3.64 -.02 GenMoly ... BarcUBS36 ... 48.03 -.61 GoldResrc .18e BarcGSOil ... 24.74 -.59 GoldStr g ... BrcIndiaTR ... 75.01 -1.51 GranTrra g ... BioTime ... 8.62 -.88 GrtBasG g ... Brigus grs ... 1.79 -.17 GugFront .13e CAMAC En ... d1.78 -.12 Hemisphrx ... Cardero g ... 1.90 -.10 Hyperdyn ... ... .83 -.01 ImpOil gs .44 CelSci ... CFCda g .01 19.40 -.37 IndiaGC CheniereEn ... 6.56 +.17 InovioPhm ... ChiArmM ... 4.14 +.35 IntTower g ... Name
JoyGlbl .70 86.54 -.96 KEYW n ... 14.00 -.69 KLA Tnc 1.00 38.20 +.30 Kulicke ... 7.64 +.36 L&L Egy n ... 10.46 -.20 LTXCrd rs ... 7.40 +.04 LamResrch ... 47.29 +.03 LamarAdv ... 39.73 -1.30 Lattice ... 6.08 +.22 LawsnSft ... 9.32 -.14 LeapWirlss ... 13.96 -.37 Level3 h ... 1.13 ... LexiPhrm ... 2.20 +.69 LibGlobA ... 37.47 -.08 LibtyMIntA ... 15.88 +.12 LifeTech ... 56.40 -.18 LimelghtN ... 6.39 -.11 LinearTch .92 34.70 +.20 LinnEngy 2.64f u38.12 +.12 Logitech ... 18.28 +.25 lululemn g ... 66.99 -1.50
Perm Port Funds: Permannt 45.33 -.06 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 41.26 -.16 Price Funds: BlChip n 38.64 -.08 CapApp n 20.46 -.03 EmMktS n 35.46 -.34 EqInc n 24.00 -.07 EqIndex n 34.32 -.06 Growth n 32.51 -.09 HiYield n 6.83 ... IntlBond n 9.72 -.05 IntlStk n 14.19 -.10 MidCap n 59.16 +.01 MCapVal n23.88 -.09 N Asia n 19.41 -.08 New Era n 51.68 -.56 N Horiz n 33.75 -.10 N Inc n 9.45 +.01 R2010 n 15.41 -.02 R2015 n 11.96 -.02 R2020 n 16.54 -.04 R2025 n 12.13 -.03 R2030 n 17.42 -.05 R2035 n 12.34 -.04 R2040 n 17.57 -.05 ShtBd n 4.84 ... SmCpStk n34.63 -.16 SmCapVal n36.30-.19 SpecGr n 17.89 -.06 SpecIn n 12.35 ... Value n 23.75 -.03 Principal Inv: LT2020In 11.72 -.02 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 13.78 -.03 MultiCpGr 51.50 ... VoyA p 24.30 +.02 Royce Funds: LwPrSkSv r18.05 -.09
Dec 11 2.3550 2.3998 2.3508 2.3582 Jan 12 2.3677 Feb 12 2.3807 Mar 12 2.3932 Apr 12 2.4897 May 12 2.4927 Jun 12 2.4922 Jul 12 2.4867 Aug 12 2.4772 Sep 12 2.4622 Oct 12 2.3592 Nov 12 2.3462 Dec 12 2.3400 2.3432 2.3400 2.3432 Jan 13 2.3471 Last spot N/A Est. sales 125637. Wed’s Sales: 107,032 Wed’s open int: 272556, up +2441 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Feb 11 4.421 4.623 4.380 4.434 Mar 11 4.386 4.582 4.351 4.404 Apr 11 4.355 4.539 4.322 4.375 May 11 4.389 4.565 4.359 4.410 Jun 11 4.424 4.594 4.400 4.451 Jul 11 4.483 4.646 4.462 4.513 Aug 11 4.511 4.681 4.491 4.545 Sep 11 4.523 4.680 4.500 4.556 Oct 11 4.597 4.759 4.572 4.620 Nov 11 4.800 4.911 4.771 4.786 Dec 11 5.013 5.142 4.990 5.023 Jan 12 5.145 5.283 5.128 5.170 Feb 12 5.105 5.221 5.100 5.138 Mar 12 4.990 5.128 4.990 5.030 Apr 12 4.760 4.867 4.751 4.785 May 12 4.760 4.850 4.760 4.788 Jun 12 4.792 4.840 4.792 4.813 Jul 12 4.840 4.890 4.828 4.855 Aug 12 4.900 4.920 4.869 4.890 Sep 12 4.900 4.970 4.898 4.898 Oct 12 4.944 5.004 4.944 4.965 Nov 12 5.137 5.170 5.118 5.118 Dec 12 5.355 5.380 5.300 5.345 Jan 13 5.485 5.510 5.445 5.495 Feb 13 5.453 Last spot N/A Est. sales 343400. Wed’s Sales: 279,746 Wed’s open int: 775269, up +8248
3.78 +.06 5.81 +.29 9.50 -.74 1.97 -.10 1.96 -.24 .30 -.01 1.08 +.01 3.06 -.15 u7.07 -.09 6.47 -.24 10.45 -.30 18.48 -.20 .44 +.04 4.44 +.05 5.97 -.36 26.25 -.85 4.10 -.16 7.98 -.09 2.65 -.13 24.12 +.02 .52 -.02 u6.13 +.78 39.88 -1.14 .57 +.03 1.29 -.04 8.93 -.34
KodiakO g MadCatz g Metalico Metalline MincoG g Minefnd g NIVS IntT Nevsun g NDragon NwGold g NA Pall g NDynMn g NthnO&G NthgtM g NovaGld g Oilsands g OpkoHlth OrsusXel ParaG&S PhrmAth PionDrill PlatGpMet Protalix PudaCoal RadientPh RareEle g
... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
6.25 -.16 u1.25 +.06 5.95 -.22 1.13 -.02 2.38 -.11 10.71 -.02 2.20 ... 6.96 -.42 .04 +.00 9.06 -.29 6.44 -.14 14.20 -.32 27.01 -.34 2.91 -.12 13.06 -.56 .45 ... 3.96 +.09 .18 +.01 3.73 -.20 3.43 -.11 8.48 -.07 2.32 -.21 10.46 +.24 13.97 -.30 1.18 -.18 13.84 -2.20
B3
Rentech ... RexahnPh ... Rubicon g ... SamsO&G ... ScolrPh ... SeabGld g ... Senesco ... SinoHub ... SulphCo ... Taseko ... TimberlnR ... TrnsatlPet ... TriValley ... US Geoth ... Uluru ... Ur-Energy ... Uranerz ... UraniumEn ... VangTotW .92e VantageDrl ... VirnetX .50e VistaGold ... YM Bio g ... ZBB Engy ...
1.27 1.44 5.22 1.50 .28 28.32 .31 2.28 .24 4.89 .99 3.22 .48 1.17 .10 2.83 3.85 5.44 47.83 u2.18 15.50 3.04 u2.64 1.40
-.01 +.03 -.21 -.08 -.04 -.76 +.01 -.07 -.01 -.06 -.07 -.03 -.04 +.02 +.00 -.13 -.13 -.21 -.34 +.17 +.84 -.03 +.17 +.12
PennMuI r 11.66 -.05 IntGrAdm n61.23 -.48 LTIGrade n 9.20 +.02 TotlIntl n 15.66 -.11 PremierI r 20.22 -.06 ITAdml n 13.26 -.02 Morg n 18.31 +.01 TotStk n 31.97 -.05 TotRetI r 13.16 -.06 ITGrAdm n 9.89 +.03 MuInt n 13.26 -.02 LtdTrAd n 10.99 -.01 MuLtd n 10.99 -.01 Vanguard Instl Fds: Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 37.65 -.07 LTGrAdml n9.20 +.02 PrecMtls r n25.38 -.59 BalInst n 21.51 -.01 S&P Sel 19.83 -.04 LT Adml n 10.65 -.02 PrmcpCor n13.85 -.02 DevMkInst n9.89 -.07 MCpAdml n92.79 -.25 Prmcp r n 66.60 +.12 ExtIn n 41.72 -.11 Scout Funds: Intl 32.10 -.14 MorgAdm n56.75 +.01 SelValu r n18.91 -.03 FTAllWldI r n93.30 MuHYAdm n10.07-.02 STAR n 19.16 -.02 Selected Funds: AmShD 41.80 -.08 PrmCap r n69.10 +.13 STIGrade n10.76 +.01 .66 AmShS p 41.82 -.08 ReitAdm r n77.98 -.82 StratEq n 18.49 -.07 GrwthIst n 31.93 -.03 Sequoia n 132.44+2.31 STsyAdml n10.66 ... TgtRetInc n11.28 +.01 InfProInst n10.39 +.03 STBdAdml n10.53+.01 TgRe2010 n22.35-.01 InstIdx n 116.55 -.21 St FarmAssoc: Gwth 53.38 -.08 ShtTrAd n 15.86 ... TgtRe2015 n12.46 InsPl n 116.56 -.20 STFdAd n 10.74 +.01 .01 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 19.96 -.06 STIGrAd n 10.76 +.01 TgRe2020 n22.18-.03 InsTStPlus n28.91-.05 SmCAdm n35.17 -.10 TgtRe2025 n12.67 - MidCpIst n 20.50 -.05 Third Avenue Fds: ValueInst 53.36 +.27 TtlBAdml n10.55 +.02 .03 SCInst n 35.17 -.10 TStkAdm n31.97 -.06 TgRe2030 n21.80-.04 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 28.07 -.07 ValAdml n 21.11 -.05 TgtRe2035 n13.17 - TBIst n 10.55 +.02 TSInst n 31.98 -.06 IntValue I 28.69 -.06 WellslAdm n52.48+.01 .03 WelltnAdm n54.08-.01 TgtRe2040 n21.63 - ValueIst n 21.11 -.05 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 23.92 +.09 Windsor n 46.29 +.01 .06 Vanguard Signal: WdsrIIAd n46.36 -.03 TgtRe2045 n13.59 VALIC : 500Sgl n 96.96 -.17 .03 StkIdx 25.14 -.04 Vanguard Fds: STBdIdx n 10.53 +.01 Wellsly n 21.66 ... n 24.62 -.01 AssetA Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml n 21.51 -.01 CapOpp n 33.74 +.12 Welltn n 31.31 -.01 TotBdSgl n10.55 +.02 CAITAdm n10.69 -.02 DivdGro n 14.44 -.03 Wndsr n 13.72 ... TotStkSgl n30.86 -.06 CpOpAdl n77.93 +.29 Energy n 64.53 -.64 WndsII n 26.12 -.02 Victory Funds: EMAdmr r n40.04 -.36 Explr n 73.90 -.09 Vanguard Idx Fds: Energy n 121.17-1.20 GNMA n 10.70 +.01 500 n 117.38 -.20 DvsStA 15.83 -.04 ExplAdml n68.76 -.09 GlobEq n 18.02 -.07 DevMkt n 9.97 -.07 Waddell & Reed Adv: ExtdAdm n41.73 -.10 HYCorp n 5.73 +.01 EMkt n 30.47 -.28 AssetS p 9.44 -.03 500Adml n117.38 -.21 HlthCre n 123.97 +.64 Extend n 41.71 -.11 GNMA Ad n10.70 +.01 InflaPro n 12.99 +.04 Growth n 31.92 -.04 Wells Fargo Adv C: GrwAdm n 31.93 -.03 IntlGr n 19.25 -.15 MidCap n 20.44 -.06 AstAllC t 11.74 ... HlthCr n 52.31 +.27 IntlVal n 32.20 -.17 SmCap n 35.14 -.10 Western Asset: HiYldCp n 5.73 +.01 ITIGrade n 9.89 +.03 SmlCpGth n22.24 -.04 CorePlus I 10.77 +.03 InfProAd n 25.51 +.08 LifeCon n 16.38 -.01 SmlCpVl n 16.13 -.07 ITBdAdml n11.16 +.04 LifeGro n 22.17 -.05 STBnd n 10.53 +.01 Yacktman Funds: ITsryAdml n11.27 +.03 LifeMod n 19.63 -.02 TotBnd n 10.55 +.02 Fund p 16.73 +.02
-.0162 -.0170 -.0170 -.0175 -.0175 -.0165 -.0160 -.0150 -.0140 -.0130 -.0115 -.0105 -.0095 -.0095
-.039 -.037 -.031 -.030 -.029 -.027 -.027 -.027 -.027 -.029 -.029 -.024 -.026 -.025 -.017 -.017 -.017 -.019 -.019 -.019 -.017 -.019 -.017 -.017 -.017
METALS NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Thu. Aluminum -$1.1087 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$4.2908 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper $4.3210 N.Y. Merc spot Thu. Lead - $2568.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.0922 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1368.50 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1371.40 troy oz., NY Merc spot Thu. Silver - $29.285 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $29.110 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Thu. Platinum -$1735.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1732.70 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Thu. n.q.-not quoted, n.a.-not available r-revised
B4 Friday, January 7, 2011
Jumble
Family Circus
COMICS
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
DEAR ABBY: Just how honest should you be with a friend? My friend “Frannie” did not receive a promotion in her department, and I think I know why — her appearance. The promotion would have required more interaction with clients. Frannie is bright, hard-working, has Christian ethics, a beautiful, trim figure, a wide smile and dresses well. But — she wears no makeup, doesn’t pluck her huge unibrow and wears sandals that expose her very hairy toes and the hairy tops of her feet. Many people have commented to me about her hairy feet and face, but I have not had the heart to tell her what they say. She has also been asking me why guys shy away from her. Do I say nothing, or should I offer helpful advice? FRANNIE’S FRIEND IN NORTH CAROLINA
DEAR FRIEND: What you need to ask yourself before raising a sensitive subject like this is: Is it true? Is it helpful? Is it kind? From where I sit, telling Frannie what she needs to hear passes those tests. Because Frannie has been asking why men shy away from her, that’s your opening to talk to her about her grooming. Many women have body-hair issues, but there are Dear Heloise: I’ve come up with some simple hints for STORING LUGGAGE. My goal is to use the space that I have, and to maintain my luggage in good condition. Here are some of my luggage hints: * First off, be sure to remove all articles from the luggage. This is important, especially if you’re returning from a beach vacation or a cruise, where wet swimsuits and clothes may have been tucked into pockets of luggage. * Keep luggage, especially leather pieces, in your home (not in the garage, damp basement or hot attic).
DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE
solutions for it. The poor woman needs the services of a cosmetologist. #####
DEAR ABBY: My husband and I separated more than a year ago, but we have remained friends for the sake of our children. During our marriage, my sister moved in with us. When I moved out, she stayed on to help my husband financially, and also to help with our children. Yesterday, my husband confirmed that he’s now sleeping with my sister. I must see them almost daily and I don’t want to make a difficult situation worse. How can I get over the hurt and betrayal I feel toward them — especially my sister? How can I forgive them? Will time really heal this wound? BETRAYED BY MY SISTER DEAR BETRAYED: It may help in your healing if you accept
HINTS
FROM HELOISE
KING FEATURES SYNDICATE
* Look for places in your home that are out of the way to store bags. Under the bed is ideal if the luggage will fit.
* A used dryer sheet can go in the bag to freshen it. (New dryer sheets may leave an oily spot if
Today’s Crossword Puzzle
that your marriage ended the day you walked out the door, leaving your sister in the role of wife — contributing financially to the household, parenting the children, and I assume, emotionally supporting your husband. Not to have seen this coming was naive. The stronger you become, the easier it will be to forgive them and go on with your life, but getting there may require professional counseling. I’m recommending you start sooner rather than later. ##### DEAR ABBY: My friends and I were recently discussing supermarket etiquette and hope you can provide some insight. When checking out at the grocery store and a customer is standing behind you ready to unload her basket, is it your responsibility to move the divider bar to the end of your order or should it be the person behind you? Which is more proper? CONSCIENTIOUS SHOPPER, ERIE, PA. DEAR CONSCIENTIOUS: The person unloading the basket usually places the bar to ensure that her (or his) groceries are kept separate from the person in front. There are, however, no hard-and-fast rules about it.
Hagar the Horrible
Blondie
Zits
subjected to high heat). * Luggage set pieces usually can “nest” inside larger pieces. J. Hines, via e-mail For those who use traditional luggage once in a while, these are good hints. For others, especially using rolling totes, find a closet to store it in between trips. Heloise Dear Heloise: I have found that a bag with dividers (meant for wine bottles) comes in very handy when taking children on trips to museums, play groups, etc. There are six divided compartments, and I use four of them for water bottles, snacks, gloves, eyeglasses in cases, pop-up wipes or whatever else might be needed. You can slip this bag inside a larger bag for longer trips. This gives you room for things like coloring or storybooks, a washcloth and towel, or even a change of clothes. Betty Harris, Goffstown, N.H.
Snuffy Smith
Dilbert
Dear Heloise: The two most germ-laden items in hotel rooms are the remote control and the doorknobs. My husband cleverly uses the plastic bag from the drinking glass to cover the remote. We use it without getting the germs. A Reader, San Antonio
Dear Heloise: For a neat and organized address book, here’s my way of keeping it updated: Use a program on the computer to create a label document. Type a label for all friends you keep in your address book. Include the address, phone number, e-mail, birthday, kids’ names, etc. Paste the labels in a storebought address book. If something changes, it is easy to just change the information in the computer and print out a new one. Letty in Orange, Calif. Dear Heloise: After recently moving for my first and only time, I have a suggestion: Pack a suitcase as if you were going on a trip — toiletries, clothing for one day, medication and any other nextday items you need. A scavenger hunt for my toothbrush was not what I wanted to do after a long day of carrying boxes and directing a moving crew. Fran, via e-mail
The Wizard of Id
For Better or For Worse
Roswell Daily Record
CLASSIFIEDS
Roswell Daily Record The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1Difficult
Friday, January 7, 2011
ing your thinking. Loosen up and remember that there is more to life than a certain issue. Tonight: Meet a friend, then ... LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)] ##### Others appear quickly but don’t have the same issues. Your objective could be very different, but soon you will be on the same page if you have patience. A discussion could be vague. Make sure you aren’t wearing rose-colored shades. Tonight: Follow the leader. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ### Your understanding evolves. You might feel as if there is only one way, but a discussion allows you to see otherwise. What you thought was a done deal has trailers. Watch, observe and understand. Tonight: Let another person take the driver’s seat. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) #### Your ability to understand could be quite different from others’ perceptions. Your creativity and thought process bypass many people. Make plans to escape the doldrums early, which might look like a late lunch or inviting an associate to join you. Tonight: Call it a night whenever you want. SCORPIO (Oct 23-Nov. 21) #### Slowly move away from being closed off and keeping your thoughts to yourself. A brainstorming session feeds your imagination and allows greater give-and-take. Sometimes it is better that others understand your ideas more thoroughly — if you want to greet success. Tonight: Toss yourself into the game of life.
JACQUELINE BIGAR ARIES (March 21-April 19)
#### Think “people, friends and weekend.” Has your mood changed? Your fatigue could be playing a factor in you not makYOUR HOROSCOPE ing a strong decision. Postpone what you can; do only what is necessary. Schedule a meeting at the end of the day. Tonight: And now the weekend begins. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) #### Sometimes taking a stand isn’t the best decision. Note the amount of divisiveness around you. Your imagination plays a role with listening to a higher-up. Count on the fact that you are distorting some information. Tonight: Could be late. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ##### Understand that others might not enjoy the same situations or people as you. Though these differences could be annoying right now, you could appreciate them later. An offer from a distance might have a hidden agenda. Tonight: Take off ASAP. CANCER (June 21-July 22) #### Let others dominate as they would like. You feel a bit tired and pushed to the limit. A domestic matter could be color-
Legals
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) #### You say what you mean and mean what you say. Clearly others listen but don’t necessarily agree. Debate, discuss and find a middle point if you feel you need agreement. Many of you will go out and forge a new path on this issue. Be open to suggestions, even if only making plans. Tonight: Ask, and you shall receive ... CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) ### Fatigue marks a decision. You decide that maybe another path is more acceptable. Your abilities go way past the obvious. Don’t make what seems too good to be true a reality. Tonight: Go with the flow. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) #### Notice what is happening behind the scenes. You have a remarkable ability to bypass problems by just donning your rose-colored shades. You have a sense of having done too much and need to relax. Schedule light activities toward the end of the day. Tonight: Make it OK to go in early. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) ### Being able to say “enough” means absolutely that. A partner might be closing down. Manipulation plays a significant role in events and what occurs. Let this person brood, and when he or she is ready, he or she will come out of the doldrums. Tonight: Nap, then decide. BORN TODAY Actor Nicolas Cage (1964), singer, songwriter Kenny Loggins (1948), news correspondent Katie Couric (1957)
Legals
Legals
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 7, 14, 2011
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 7, 2011
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 7, 2011
GEORGE GONZALES ORCIA McCURTIS RUBEN MOJICA AMANDA JOHNSON JERRY ADAMS NONA WOOTEN KAREN McDONALD ELSA RODRIQUEZ JERRY R. VANDER DUSSEN LOUISE BARBER
Notice is hereby given that a regular meeting of the Board of Education of the Roswell Independent School District, Roswell, New Mexico will be held at the Administrative and Educational Services Complex, Board Room, on the 11th day of January, 2011 at the hour of 6:00 p.m. for the purpose of discussing and taking action upon items o the agenda for such meeting. Copies of the agenda will be available to the public at the office of the Superintendent, 300 North Kentucky, Roswell, New Mexico at least twenty-four (24) hours prior to the meeting.
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: Notice is hereby given that a Public Hearing will be held at 7:00 P.M. on TUESDAY, JANUARY 25, 2011 before the Roswell Planning and Zoning Commission in the City Hall Council Chambers, 425 NORTH RICHARDSON AVENUE, Roswell, New Mexico.
NOTICE OF SALE TO SATISFY LIEN
The above named person(s) are hereby notified that the household goods, wares and merchandise left by them in storage with UFO SPACE STORAGE company will be sold or disposed by said company on January 20, 2011 at 10:00 A.M. Silent bids will be taken at 3612 S. Main St. We have the option To refuse any bid. The public sale is to satisfy the lien for said storage of said household goods, wares and merchandise together with incidental and proper charges pertaining thereto including the reasonable expenses of this sale as allowed by the state of New Mexico.
NOTICE
Individuals with disabilities who need any form of auxiliary aid to attend or participate in this meeting, please contact the Superintendent of Schools at 627-2511 at least three working days prior to the meeting. Upon request, public documents will be provided in the accessible form necessary to the individual requesting the particular auxiliary aid. Board members may meet in executive session to discuss negotiations and limited personnel matters prior to and/or after the meeting.
Kimberly F. Cade UFO Space Storage Manager
/s/ Milburn Dolen Milburn Dolen President Board of Education
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish Dec. 17, 24, 31, 2010 January 7, 2011
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish Dec. 17, 24, 31, 2010 January 7, 2011
STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF Chaves Fifth JUDICIAL DISTRICT
STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
Deutsche Bank National Trust Company, as trustee in trust for The Benefit of the Certificateholders Ameriquest Mortgage Securities Trust for Asset-Backed Pass-Through Certifi2005-R10, cates, Series 2005-R10, Plaintiff, v.
WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A, Plaintiff, v.
Case No. D-504-CV-200901081
RAY BELL; DORTHA ANN BELL; DAWAYNE ROSWELL HOSPITAL CORPORATION D/B/A/ NEW MEXICO MEDICAL CENTER; EASTERN OCCUPANTS, WHOSE TRUE NAMES ARE UNKNOWN, IF ANY; THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF DORTHA ANN BELL, IF ANY, Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will on January 12, 2011 at 11:30 AM, the west steps entrance of the County Courthouse, 400 N. Virginia, Chaves Roswell, NM, sell and convey to the highest bidder for cash all the right, title, and interest of the above-named defendants in and to the following described real estate located in said County and State: Lot 9, Block 1 of West View Subdivision, in the City of Roswell, County of CHAVES and State of New Mexico, as shown on the official Plat recorded June 7, 1948 in Plat Book B, Page 105, Property Records of CHAVES Real County, New Mexico.
The address of the real property is 416 S. Hemlock Ave, Roswell, NM 88203. Said sale will be made pursuant to the Decree of Foreclosure entered on November 16, 2010 in the above entitled and numbered cause, which was a suit to foreclose a mortgage held by the above Plaintiff and wherein Plaintiff was adjudged to have a lien against the above-described real estate in the sum of $71,567.56 plus interest from October 22, 2010 to the date of sale at the rate of 10.500% per annum, the costs of sale, including the Special Master's fee, publication costs, and Plaintiff's costs expended for taxes, insurance, and keeping the property in good repair. Plaintiff has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash.
At the date and time stated above, the Special Master may postpone the sale to such later date and time as the Special Master may specify.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that this sale may be subject to a bankruptcy filing, a pay off, a reinstatement or any other condition that would cause the cancellation of this sale. Further, if any of these conditions exist, at the time of sale, this sale will be null and void, the successful bidder's funds shall be returned, and the Special Master and the mortgagee giving this notice shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damages.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due.
CHARLES BORMAN AKA DAVE BORDAVID MARIA GARCIA-BORMAN; OCCUPANTS, MAN; WHOSE TRUE NAMES ARE UNKNOWN, IF ANY, Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will on January 12, 2011 at 11:30 AM, the west steps entrance of the County Courthouse, 400 N. Virginia, Chaves Roswell, NM, sell and convey to the highest bidder for cash all the right, title, and interest of the above-named defendants in and to the following described real estate located in said County and State: Unit 2, of Washington Square CondoSubdivision, in the City of minium Roswell, County of CHAVES and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat recorded December 14, 1979 in Plat Book H, Page 15, Real Property Records of CHAVES County, New Mexico.
TOGETHER Area 2-A
09-3759 FC01
exclusive
use
of
Common
The address of the real property is 1111 N Washington Avenue #2, Roswell, NM 88201. Said sale will be made pursuant to the Decree of Foreclosure entered on November 3, 2010 in the above entitled and numbered cause, which was a suit to foreclose a mortgage held by the above Plaintiff and wherein Plaintiff was adjudged to have a lien against the above-described real estate in the sum of $62,164.19 plus interest from November 3, 2010 to the date of sale at the rate of 6.25% per annum, the costs of sale, including the Special Master's fee, publication costs, and Plaintiff's costs expended for taxes, insurance, and keeping the property in good repair. Plaintiff has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. At the date and time stated above, the Special Master may postpone the sale to such later date and time as the Special Master may specify.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that this sale may be subject to a bankruptcy filing, a pay off, a reinstatement or any other condition that would cause the cancellation of this sale. Further, if any of these conditions exist, at the time of sale, this sale will be null and void, the successful bidder's funds shall be returned, and the Special Master and the mortgagee giving this notice shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damages. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above-described real property subject to rights of redemption.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above-described real property subject to rights of redemption. ________________________ Jeffrey Lake Special Master c/o Castle Stawiarski, LLC 20 First Plaza NW, Suite 602 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Attorney for Plaintiff (800) 286-0013; (505) 848-9500
WITH
10-0072 FC01
________________________ Jeffrey Lake Special Master c/o Castle Stawiarski, LLC 20 First Plaza NW, Suite 602 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Attorney for Plaintiff (800) 286-0013; (505) 848-9500
Dennis the Menace
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
PURPOSE OF HEARING: To hear and consider public response to the following applications:
CASE NO. 11-001: Conditional Use Permit- Recreational Vehicle, 2702 Seranata Drive, Lot 7 Except the West 5.1' and Lot 6 Except the East 38.2' of Block 4 Encantadas Addition, Tony and Jennie Lomitas Ortiz/Owners.
Location maps of the above cases and detailed descriptions are available for review at the Planning and Zoning Department, City Hall Annex, 415 North Richardson Ave. The information package prepared by Staff and provided to the Commission will be available after 1 p.m. on Wednesday, JANUARY 19, 2011, for interested parties to review.
Oral protests or comments to the proposed cases may be made at the hearing in person, by agent or attorney. Written protests representing twenty percent (20%) or more of the property owners within 100 feet of the proposed zoning change requires a two-thirds vote of all Commission members for approval. To be considered, written protests must be submitted to the Planning and Zoning Department no later than noon the working day prior to the public hearing.
Final and binding decisions on the above applications may be made at the public hearing and lesser modifications of the application than those identified above may be considered on request by the applicant prior to or at the meeting.
Case No. D-504-CV-201000752
B5
DATED: JANUARY 5, 2011
s/ Louis Jaramillo, Zoning Administrator
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish December 31, 2010, January 7,14,21, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
NO. CV 2010-6
BANK OF OKLAHOMA, N.A., vs.
Plaintiff,
Legals
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 7, 14, 21, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT No. CV-2011-6
BABAK MIRIN, Plaintiff, v.
CLARENCE IRVIN, AGNES IRVIN, THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF CLARENCE IRVIN AND AGNES IRVIN, Defendants. NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION
To: The following-named defendants: Clarence Irvin and Agnes Irvin, if living; if deceased, their unknown heirs
Plaintiff has filed suit against you to quiet title in his name to property commonly known as 3719 Tome, Roswell, New Mexico.
You are required to file a written answer to the lawsuit within thirty days of the date of the last publication in this newspaper and serve a copy on Dr. Mirin’s attorney. If you do not file a written answer within (30) days, a default judgment may be rendered against you. The attorney for Dr. Mirin is:
Brett A. Schneider 215 W. Third Street, Suite A Roswell, NM 88201 (575) 624-0000 - phone (575) 623-8179 - fax
ALONSO ESTRADA,
Defendant.
NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the above-entitled Court, having appointed me or my designee as Special Master in this matter with the power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property (the “Property”) situated in Chaves County, New Mexico, commonly known as 1809 Western Avenue, Roswell, New Mexico 88203, and more particularly described as follows: LOT 7 AND THE SOUTH 33.5 FEET OF LOT 8 IN BLOCK 3 OF PLAINS PARK SUBDIVISION NO. 2, IN THE CITY OF ROSWELL, COUNTY OF CHAVES AND STATE OF NEW MEXICO, AS SHOWN ON THE OFFICIAL PLAT FILED IN THE CHAVES COUNTY CLERK’S OFFICE ON MARCH 31, 1954 AND RECORDED IN BOOK C OF PLAT RECORDS, AT PAGE 11.
The sale is to begin at 1:45 p.m. on February 3, 2011, outside the front entrance to the Chaves County Courthouse,, City of Roswell. County of Chaves, State of New Mexico, at which time I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in lawful currency of the United States of America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and to satisfy the Judgment granted Bank of Oklahoma, N.A.
Bank of Oklahoma, N.A., was awarded a Judgment on December 15, 2010, in the principal, sum of $93,200.31, plus outstanding interest through November 1, 2010, in the amount of $8,318.10 and accruing daily thereafter at a rate of $16.08 per day, plus late charges of $500.48, plus escrow advances of $2,880.44, plus fee and cost advances of $1,438.84, plus attorney’s fees in the amount of $1,500.00 and costs in the amount of $570.40, with interest on the above-listed amounts, attorney’s fees and costs at the rate of 6.30% per annum from date of the entry of the Judgment until paid. The sale is subject to rights and easements of record, to unpaid property taxes and assessments, and to the one (1) month right of redemption in favor of the Defendant as specified in the Judgment filed herein.
PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT THE SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING.
/s/Faisal Sukhyani, Special Master c/o Leverick and Musselman, L.L.C. 5120 San Francisco Road NE Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109 (505) 858-3303
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish December 24, 31, 2010, January 7, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT No. CV-2010-807
BAC HOME LOANS SERVICING, LP fka Countrywide Home Loans Servicing LP, Plaintiff,
vs.
KEVIN L. JONES; LISA K. JONES; and FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Defendants.
NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF SUIT
TO: DefendantLisa K. Jones You are hereby notified that the above_named Plaintiff has filed a civil action against you in the above_entitled Court and cause, the general object thereof being to foreclose a mortgage on property located at 4 Mercedes Court, in the City of Roswell, New Mexico, more particularly described as: LOT NINETEEN (19) OF REPLAT CORONADO SUBDIVISION NO. 2, IN THE CITY OF ROSWELL, COUNTY OF CHAVES AND STATE OF NEW MEXICO, AS SHOWN ON THE OFFICIAL PLAT FILED IN THE CHAVES COUNTY CLERK'S OFFICE ON FEBRUARY 1, 1985 AND RECORDED IN BOOK K OF PLAT RECORDS, CHAVES COUNTY, NEW MEXICO, AT PAGE 04.
That unless you respond to the Complaint within 30 days of completion of publication of this Notice, judgment by default will be entered against you. Name, address, and phone number of Plaintiff's attorney: Susan C. Little & Associates, P.A., 4501 Indian School NE, Suite 101, Post Office Box 3509, Albuquerque, NM 87190-3509, 505-254-7767. WITNESS the Honorable RALPH D. SHAMAS, District Judge of the Fifth Judicial District Court of the State of New Mexico, and the Seal of the District Court of Chaves County, this 15th day of December, 2010. KENNON CROWHURST CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT By: Catalina D. Yabarra (SEAL)
Deputy
B6 Friday, January 7, 2011 Legals
---------------------------------Publish Jan. 7, 14, 2011
045. Employment Opportunities COMFORT KEEPERS NOW HIRING in Roswell & Artesia. Seeking reliable, experienced caregivers for immediate F/T or P/T work days or week-ends. This will be the best job you ever had! Call Carol @ 624-9999 and apply at 1410 S. Main St. Roswell www.beacomfortkeeper.com.
JUDICIAL DISFIFTH TRICT COURT COUNTY OF CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF EDRIE JANE KUYKENDALL, deceased. No. PB-2010-65
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed as Personal Repof the resentative above-named Estate. All persons having claims against this Estate are required to present their within two (2) claims months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned Personal Representative, PO Box 6669, Pine Bluff Arkansas 71711, or filed with the Chaves County District Court at PO Box 1776, Roswell, New Mexico 88202-1776. /s/ Paul H. Kuykendall
GARAGE SALES
DON ’T’ MISS A SALE BY MISSING THE 2:00 PM DEADLINE FOR PLACING YOUR ADS
006. Southwest 2906 S. Louisiana, Sat. 7am. 2 WD, freezer, elec. range, 2 DW baby items, clothes, hunting gear, desk, king comforter sets, remodeling items, much more.
BARN SALE 1310 S. Eisenhower, Fri-Sat, 9-3. Small fridge, night stand, DVD, clothes, misc.
3103 S. Lea, Fri-Sat, 8-4. Inside sale - dressers, sheet sets, lots more. 1200 PRINCETON Sat. & Sun. 0900-1:30 Granma’s downsizing sale- household items, tools, dishes, books, etc. No early birds.
ANNOUNCEMENTS 015. Personals Special Notice PLAZA MOVIE Center, 301 W. McGaffey, 623-4816. Mon-Sat, 2-8pm. New releases every Tuesday.
025. Lost and Found FOUND 5-6 month old female Crane Terrier Border Collie mix, black with white chest and toes. Found between 1st St. & Michigan by Lawrence Bros. 624-5357
FOUND 12/18/10 female Boston Terrier, older. 420-3782 FOUND 1/6/11 Shepherd mix with collar, flea collar, No ID tag by Garden & Hondo River. After 1 week will turn over to Animal Control. Call 625-1105 or 626-6072
INSTRUCTION
EMPLOYMENT
045. Employment Opportunities CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE/ ROUTE DRIVER Requisition Number 102577 High School Diploma/GED, experience with Route Sales desired, ability to work directly with our customers, build relationships with our customers by providing resolution to problems and/or complaints, conduct customer satisfaction reviews, clean driving record, ability to lift up to 50 lbs, and ability to pass a Department of Transportation Drug Screen and physical. Competitive salary and benefits. Application available at 515 N. Virginia, Roswell, NM 88201 from 12/10/10 to 01/07/11. EOE EMPLOYER
COUNSELING ASSOCIATES, Inc. is seeking to fill the full-time position of Safe and Stable Families Practitioner. This is an in-home service program working with children and families who are or have been involved with Child Protective Services. If you are an energetic person and want a rewarding career in the mental health field come be a part of our team. Bachelors degree in Human Services, Education or related field required. Salary DOE. An EOE. Bilingual (English/Spanish) a plus. Please send resume to: Counseling Associates, Inc. Attn: Samantha Reed PO BOX 1978, Roswell, NM 88202. HAVE A Family or just need some flexibility? Wouldn’t you like to be in charge of your work day? Come be a part of our family and join the health care team that cares. We are a successful, local, home health agency seeking licensed, self-motivated, Physical and Occupational therapists with the knowledge, professionalism and heart, to serve in- home therapies to our home care clients in Artesia, Roswell and surrounding area. We offer competitive pay, full benefits, and a great working environment with the opportunity to grow and expand with us. For more information or to apply please contact: Della Milligan Director of Nursing Call: (575) 746-2892 or 1-800-995-8041 Fax: (575) 746-3102 Email: info@jjhc.org
BETWEEN HIGH School and College? Over 18? Drop that entry level position. Earn what you’re worth!!! Travel w/Successful Young Business Group. Paid Training. Transportation, Lodging Provided. 1-877-646-5050 AVON, Buy or Sell. Pay down your bills. Start your own business for $10. Call Sandy 317-5079 ISR. Opening for Office Assistant. Microsoft Office Program a must. Other duties will include ten key, filing, answering phones & other misc. duties. Email resumes to rskippermjg@ qwestoffice.net or Fax to 575-623-3075 FRESENIUS MEDICAL Care/Southeastern New Mexico Kidney Center is seeking 1 Staff RN. Full benefits, 401, medical, vision, dental. PTO after 6 months. Other company benefits. Open Mon-Sat. Off Sundays.12 hour shifts. Competitive pay. Apply in person at 2801 N. Main St. Suite H. DO YOU want a Career with Cable One? You must have a go get ‘em attitude and enjoy customer service.
FREE Cable, internet & phone. • Install and service Cable One’s video, phone & internet services. • Must be able to operate power tools and hand tools safely and work in all seasons and some scheduled weekends. • Lift 80 pound ladder. • Gladly educate customers as to the proper operation of all services & equipment • Must possess a valid driver’s license, be a team player, be selfmotivated, & possess good communication, technical and public relation skills. • Must pass preemployment testing that includes Math skills, background check along with physical & drug screening. Please apply in person at 2005 S. Main. No calls. •
045. Employment Opportunities NOW TAKING applications for Experienced Servers. Must be 21 years of age and liquor certified. Apply in person at Billy Ray’s, 118 E. 3rd. No phone calls, please.
NOW HIRING - Customer Service Specialist. Seeking a courteous professional with an outgoing personality. We offer an excellent benefit package including HEALTH, DENTAL, VISION, 401k and PAID VACATION. All applicants must pass a drug test. Apply in person at 2211 W. 2nd St. Ask for B.J. Sills.
OFFICE ASSISTANT flexible work hours, pay commensurate based on qualifications and experience. Send resumes to John Jerge, CPA PC at 101 South Union, Roswell, New Mexico 88203. WE ARE seeking someone who is enthusiastic and energetic, who possesses a competitive spirit and positive attitude to fill the position of Sales Representative for the Roswell area. Sales experience in beverage industry desired. Responsible for operation of sales, service and distribution of our products in this territory. Must be able to pass criminal background check, physical, drug screen and MVR. Apply at L&F Distributors in person only at 2200 N. Atkinson, Roswell, NM. No phone calls please. We are proud to be an equal opportunity employer DRIVERS Come join our team! Coastal Transport is seeking Drivers with Class (A) CDL. Must be 23 yrs old (X) Endorsement with 1 yr experience, excellent pay, home everyday! Paid Vacation, saftey bonus, company paid life inc. We provide state of the art training program. $2000 sign on bonus. For more information call 1-877-297-7300 or 575-748-8808 between 8am & 4pm, Monday-Friday. Do you enjoy people? Do you like to have fun?
Champion Motorsports Southeastern New Mexico's largest motorcycle dealership is holding A Job Fair January 15, 2011 From 9:00am-4:30pm
We are looking for people who: • Understand what great customer service means • Like to have fun • Like to be productive • • • • • •
In Exchange We Offer: Fun people to work with Competitive pay Health Insurance 401K Vacation All the training you will need to be successful in our store
Champion Motorsports
has openings in Motorcycle Sales, Parts & Accessories Sales, Motorclothes Sales, Service and Custodial. Only those interested in helping us make Champion Motorsports famous for out of this world service should apply. If that's you stop by to fill out an application on January 15, 2011 from 2801 9:00am-4:30pm. West Second Street Roswell, NM . FAMILY RESOURCE & Referral seeks energetic and self-motivated individuals to work in our After School Program 16 hours weekly. Must be at least 18 years old. Previous experience is preferred but not required. Please apply at 118 E. 4th Street or call 623-9438. EOE.
060. Jobs Wanted Male Female PROFICIENT retired sec’y, seeks PT office work in Roswell. Karen 627-0618
SERVICES
105. Childcare NEED CHILD care? Find the widest range of available childcare for your children and their needs. 1-800-691-9067 or www.newmexic okids.org. You may also call us; Family Resource & Referral 622-9000 and we can help you navigate the system.
CLASSIFIEDS
105. Childcare HOME DAYCARE providing weekend childcare. 626-6203
140. Cleaning JD CLEANING Service, Licensed and bonded. References. 623-4252
HOUSEKEEPING - Home and/or office. Honest & dependable. 575-749-4900 or 575-578-1447
195. Elderly Care
ADVANCED HOME Care. All caregivers are licensed bonded & have passed federal criminal back-ground checks. Loving care since 1994. 627-6256 WILL CARE for your loved ones. Will cook, light housekeeping, laundry, bathe, 627-6363 good ref.
200. Fencing M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991
Rodriguez Construction FOR WOOD, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100
210. Firewood/Coal SEANSONED MOUNTAIN wood $100 1/2 cord. Free delivery/stack. 626-9803.
GRAVES FARM oak and elm. Cord and 1/2 cord delivered. 622-1889 FIREWOOD Seasoned cedar & juniper: split, stacked & delivered, sale any amount call for pricing. 575-910-4842
220. Furniture Repair REPAIR & Refinish furniture, build furniture, firewood. Southwest Woods. 1727 SE Main. 623-0729 or 626-8466 By appointment only.
225. General Construction
MILLIGAN CONTRACTING Bathroom remodels, painting, tile, home repairs & more. Licensed, bonded & insured. Call Geary at 578-9353. VETERAN HANDYMAN can build almost anything. Big/small jobs welcome. Call 202-271-4420.
230. General Repair
T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Call John 317-1477 T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Handyman for a day. Call John for all your misc. repairs. 317-1477
232. Chimney Sweep CHIMNEY SWEEP Have your woodstove or fireplace inspected and cleaned. Dust free Guarantee. 35 years Experience, Licensed, Insured. Bulldog Janitorial Services 575-308-9988
232. Chimney Sweep Cordova Chimney 623-5255 or 910-7552
235. Hauling
PROPERTY CLEANUPS Will tear down old buildings, barns, haul trash, old farm equipment. 347-0142 or 317-7738
270. Landscape/ Lawnwork
Greenscapes Sprinkler Systems Lawn mowing, field mowing, gravel, sod-hydro seed, pruning, tilling, For dependable & reliable service call 622-2633 or 910-0150. WEEKEND WARRIOR Lawn Service mowing, property cleanup, residential rain gutter cleaning, and much more 575-626-6121
LAWN SERVICE & much more work at low price. 914-0803 or 914-1375
WE DO landscaping, lawn maintenance, tree pruning, sprinklers, odd jobs. Just ask we may do it. 512-744-7611 Roswell Lawn Service rake leaves, trim trees, general cleanup, 420-3278
285. Miscellaneous Services I REBUILD Planetary gear boxes for $550 with parts and labor included (mostly 68:1 gear ratio) and pivot points (T&L systems) Call Junior at 575-748-5613
305. Computers COMPUTER DOCTOR Microsoft Certified 50% off any repair (Labor only) 575-208-9348 Call Billy
345. Remodeling
BERRONES CONSTRUCTION. Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing. Licensed, Bonded. Ray: 625-9924/ 626-4153. NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552.
350. Roofing
T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Call John 317-1477 Guaranteed Shingle Roof jobs. Locally owned. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 622-2552.
405. TractorWork LANGFORD TRACTOR work. Septic tanks installed/inspected. Blade work and backhoe work. Gravel, topsoil. 623-1407.
410. Tree Service
STUMP GRINDING. Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 623-4185
Leading petroleum distributor seeks an Operations Manager to manager our Fuel and Lubricant Distribution Business in the Artesia, NM area. Degree in Business Management or related field of study with 3 – 5 years experience in the Fuel or Transportation industry preferred. Responsibilities include but not limited to: • Knowledge of state and federal regulations affecting the sell and trade of fuel products • Direct sales and service enhancements • Customer Service oriented, with strong communication skills • Computer skills including Microsoft office, Outlook and the Internet Qualified candidates should submit resumes to: Operations Manager C/o Human Resources P.O. Box 156 Artesia, NM 88211 Equal Opportunity Employer
Roswell Daily Record 410. Tree Service
ALLEN’S TREE Service. The oldest tree service in Roswell. Million $ ins. 626-1835
435. Welding RANCHERO’S WELDING and Construction On site repairs or fabrication. Pipe fencing, Wrought iron, Work, Roofs, Shingle, Metal, Stone, Concrete, Drywall, Tape, Frame, Block, Lath, Stucco, Tile. Bobcat Work Services. More Info www.rancheroswelding.com
Hector (575) 910-8397
440. Window Repair AQUARIUS GLASS For Less. Screens, Patio & Shower Drs., Table Tops & Mirrors. 623-3738.
T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Call John 317-1477
FINANCIAL
485. Business Opportunities DO YOU earn $800 in a day? Your Own Local Candy Route! 25 Machines and Candy All for $9995. 877-915-8222 All Major Credit Cards Accepted!
ARE YOU tired of exchanging your time for money and watching life pass by in an instant? Do you seem to spend more time at your job than at home with your family doing what you actually enjoy? I’m involved in an opportunity that can change that, and give you complete freedom of time. Not to mention, the income potential is outstanding. ACN Independent Representative Ronika Thomas 575-626-9409.
REAL ESTATE
490. Homes For Sale EQUAL HOUSING NOTICE All real estate advertised in the Roswell Daily Record is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion or sex, family status and handicap or national origin or an intention to make any such preference limitation or discrimination. The Roswell Daily Record will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
490. Homes For Sale
515. Mobile Homes - Sale
OPEN HOUSE Call 622-7010/910-6104. 3305 Riverside, 2222 sq. ft., 4/3/2, will negotiate 1% finders fee.
2004 FLEETWOOD 2br, 2ba, in North Adult Park, $29,000. 575-623-8930
ADVERTISE YOUR HOME ALL OVER NEW MEXICO. CALL THE DAILY RECORD FOR DETAILS. 622-7710
3 for 1 (49,900) Capitan property Sierra Blanca view 3 lots 2 homes large shop paved access, city water. 317-2285. 4Bd, 1 Ba, new paint, carpet, doors,fncd yrd, $59,500, M-Th 624-1331 2 HOUSES-2BR/1BA, $60k each , owner will finance w/$6k down. 623-0459 REDUCED Must sell charming 2 bed 1 bath, located at 601 S. Missouri. Basement, huge lot, new fencing. $64,900, owner financing avail. 637-5530 Charming 3/2, garage fenced, remodeled in & out. 1514 W. 1st $119k 910-4247 118 N. Wind Lp, 4/2/2, granite counters, new paint & A/C unit. 317-3703 FOR SALE Remodeled 3br, 1.5ba in Plains Park area. 361-401-0049
495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale COUNTRY HOME HORSE PROPERTY W. of Roswell, 5ac, 1800sf home, 4br, 2ba, fl. sz arena w/roping chutes, covered runs, metal barn, tack hse, shop, trees - ready to sell. 623-2538
505. Investment/ Commercial/ Business Property Restaurant bldg, $275K cash/trade for Ruidoso prprty, M-Th 624-1331
515. Mobile Homes - Sale WE BUY used mobile homes. Single & double wides. 575-622-0035 D01090.
2BR, 1BA, “As Is”, asking $5500. Call 317-9754 or 317-8388 after 4pm 1997 CLATON, 3/2 in adult park, can be moved, nice. Call 575-317-6489. FIXER UPPER. ‘83 Skyline 14x70, 2br, 2ba, needs roof & floor repair, has all appliances plus ref. air, many other extras, handicapped steps, awning, carport, etc. Must be moved. Selling cheap. 575-622-0035 D01090.
‘94 SOUTHERN Energy 16x80, 3br, 2ba, quality built 2x6 walls, hardboard siding shingle roof. Well equipped, has ref. air. Selling $18,900. Call 575-622-0035 D01090.
520. Lots for Sale
OWNER FINANCING for a limited time. Ready to build 5 acre lots w/ great views & good covenants. Located 9 miles West of Roswell @ the Club House Banquet Facility. Free land maps and at entrance. 575-623-1800. www.BuenaVidaLand.com Mobile Home Lots for Sale $15,000. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. We Take Visa and Mastercard! 420-1352. PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, Owner will finance with 10% down, New Construction only (no mobile homes), , Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd. between Country Club & Berrendo Rd. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 626-6791, 626-4337 Enchanted Hills on Sanders St. 125x124, $30K obo. No covenants. Call 910-3247 for info.
RENTALS
535. Apartments Furnished 1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331
540. Apartments Unfurnished
VALLE ENCANTADA YOUR BEST $ RENTAL VALUE! LARGE 1,2,3 BEDROOMS. FREE UTILITIES. unfurnished, laundry room, playground, pool, ample parking. 2001 South Sunset. 623-3722. Town Plaza Apartments New Owners, friendly new managers. New Remodeled EXTRA LARGE 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Each 2 & 3 bedroom is multi level, upstairs/downstairs w/ large closets, stove & refrigerator, private patios, and private parking. Complex has a pool, laundry room, and a quiet garden setting environment. Friendly managers on-site. Seniors 55yrs plus, will receive discount. No HUD. Good credit? Pay less rent! 575-623-2735 2 BED, 2 ba, 1 car garage, central air, fenced yard, 26-A Bent Tree Rd, $700/mo, $700/dep., 627-9942
Roswell Daily Record 540. Apartments Unfurnished PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHANTED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN.
BEST VALUE IN TOWN 3br/2ba, $559+elec, newly remodeled, only a few apts left, 1br $380, 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944 ALL BILLS PAID 3br, 2ba, $680 mo., brand new everything. 1br $480. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, 930 sf, $559 plus electric. 502 S. Wyoming. 2 bedroom, 1 bath $480 or 1 bedroom $380. Call 622-4944. 1BR, 650 sq ft, $380 + elec. Central heating, ref air, new carpet, paint & tile. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944 EFFICIENCY 2 BR, downtown, clean, water paid. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD Call 623-8377 EFFICIENCY 1 br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348.
1 BD, all bills pd, no pets, no smoking, no HUD 623-6281 1&2Bd, wtr pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331
THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS!! Become the newest member of our proud community. Income qualify, and your rent could be even lower! Efficiency One Bedroom, Large One Bedroom, One Bedroom w/Study, Two Bedroom, one Bath, Two Bedroom, two Bath All deposits are Saddlecreek Apartments 1901 S. Sunset 622-3042 Set Aside Units for AHDP. saddlecreek@cableone.net 2BR, 1BA duplex, w/d hookup & carport, $650 mo., $400 dep. North area. 575-626-7506 LARGE 1 bedroom apartment. References and background check required. Washer and Dryer hookups. Private parking. 420-0100 SUPER NICE 2/2 central Ht-master suite-recent remodel $595 317-1078
2 BDR. No Pets, No HUD, $500+ Dep. 1702 E. 2nd St. 773-396-6618
LARGE 3/2, unfurnished w/ref. air, 1212 N. Washington, no HUD. 623-8240
1 BEDROOM apartment. Call 910-8170
305 W. Deming alley apartment, 1br, refrig. air, utilities pd., $450 mo, $400 dep. No pets. 623-7678 STUDIO APARTMENT, close to NMMI, utilities paid, central A/C & heat, full kitchen, laundry room w/washer & dryer, Whirlpool tub, carport. No smokers/pets. $600 mo., $250 dep. 627-0583 2BR, 1BA, no pets. Also avail. 2br, 1ba mobile home, rent to own & 3br, 2ba mobile home rent to own. 624-2436
1BR APT., all bills paid $600, $250 dep. 420-5604
545. Houses for Rent-Furnished FLETC Homes for rent. Long & short term rentals. 5 minutes from FLETC. Brand new & beautiful! Visit our website: www.lgrentalhomes.com or Call 420-0519 or 910-7670
3 BR 2 bath 2 living areas, game room, 2600sqft, 1101 Camino Real off Sunset & McGaffey. $1200 mo. $500 dep. No Hud/pets 575-317-1748 NMMI HISTORICAL area, nice 2/2 + office. Hardwood floors, fireplace, quiet, fenced, gas grill. FLETC or Nurse. 575-910-7148 EXCEPTIONAL 2/2 furnished home in NW location convenient to hospitals/shopping. No HUD. All utilities paid/security system. Pet considered w/additional deposit. Owner/Broker. 626-7663
Fully-furnished 1 br,1 ba in Historic district, modern style w/DSL, fenced yard & more, $995 month. 420-3562 30 DEBORAH Dr., partially furnished, 2-3 br, 2ba, 1100sqft, w/d & all appl. Large backyard, $950/mo. 578-1132
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 409 LA Fonda - Nice and Clean 3 bedroom, 2 bath, one car garage - $1,100 a month. Call 627-7595 or 840-7411.
200 S. Washington Ave. - 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, detached garage on an extra large lot. $700.00 per month with 1 month security deposit. Renter pays all utilities. No indoor pets, no smokers. Hud accepted. Call 575-317-5322 or 575-625-8627. 504 W. Albuquerque, 2br, w/d hookups, heat pump, no pets, $550 mo., $500 dep. 637-8234
705 S. Union, 3br, garage, w/d hookups, heat pump, no pets, $750 mo., $500 dep. 637-8234
114 W. Oliver St. 3 bdrm/2bth, $1100 mo. $500 dep. newly remodeled, new appliances,Granite counter tops, ref. air, hot tub, sky lights. NO SMOKING,NO PETS! Leroy (702)232-7578 NEW TOWNHOME, 1830sf, 3BD, 2BA. Call John Grieves, Prudential Enchanted Lands REALTORS, 626-7813. 3 BD/1 ba. 1 car gar. 66 G St., ref air, RIAC $650 mo., $650 dep. 627-9942.
NOW AVAIL. 3br, 2ba, new carpet & tile, $900 mo., $600 dep., no HUD, no pets. 420-5930
2&3 Bd, 1&2 Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331 OLDER LADY to share 2br home in Artesia. 575-746-3912
NEWLY REMODELED, 3br, 2ba, hardwood floors, attached garage, good location, no appl., no HUD, $850 mo., $500 dep., you pay bills. 420-5604
400 1/2 E 5th 1 bedroom stove, refrig., water paid, $325 mo. $200 dep. No HUD & No Pets. 910-9648 LOOKING FOR a place to rent? Let us help you!! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors, 501 N. Main. (575) 624-2262 Stop by to pick up a list of our available rentals or check them out online at www.roswellforrent.com! 5 HOMES rent-sale $500 + $1k dn + $250dep. Al 703-0420, 202-4702
LARGE 3 bedrooms 2 bath w/d hook ups appliances. No pets or HUD $700 mo. $500 dep. 840-8630 or 623-6200 Dan, 914-0531 3/2, $600 mo. plus deposit. 420-6396 4/1.5BA, 115 E. Poe, stove, fridge, w/d hookup, $800 mo., $750 dep. Call after 10am, 914-0549 or 622-1252. CLEAN 1BR, all bills pd., 607 Woody, $425 + dep, no pets, no HUD. 626-2190.
1305 W. College, 2br, 1ba, garage, all elec., nice & clean, $595. 626-9530 1111 N. Washington, 2br, 2ba, laundry room. 910-4225
NICE HOUSE 2 bed, 1ba for rent or sale. Rent to own. 623-8240. 710 S. Wyoming Apt. A, 2BR, Appl. $500/m, $300 dep., water paid. Call 625-1952
2BR 1ba, stove, frig, w/d hkup, fenced, storage. 1710 N. Maryland $475mo $475 dep. 626-0935
3/2/1 TOWNHOME, w/d hookup, FP, court yard, fenced backyard, $850mo., avail. 1-15-11. 575-937-8658 30 DEBORAH Dr., partially furnished, 2-3 br, 2ba, 1100sqft, w/d & all appl. Large backyard, $950/mo. 578-1132
2/1B, $550/mo., $250 dep., wtr pd, no HUD or pets, 101 S. Nevada. 910-1300
1103 MONTERREY 3 bedroom, 2 bath 2 living areas, total electric. $1,200 Month. $1,000 Deposit 625-1952 4BR, 2BA, w/garage & ldry rm, fenced yd, near ENMU-R, HUD approved, $650, #59 Luebke Pl. 317-2945 or 623-6999 NO PETS, No HUD, 3br, $650 mo., $500 dep. 914-0101
3/2, REFRIGERATOR, stove, w/d hookups, lots of upgrades, 1108 Purdue, $900 mo., $800 dep. Call Jim 910-7969 2br, 1ba, wtr pd, no HUD, 1007 1/2 S. Lea, $550/$300 dep. 637-2818
3 bdrm 650 @ mo 350 dep ref. no pets, w/d hook ups 317-3222
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 1204 S. Missouri, 2/3br, 1ba, range, fridge, w/d hookup, garage, fenced, $700 mo., $400 dep, No HUD, 622-2485.
2/1, fenced yard, $550/ $500dep. 304 S. Kansas. 623-1800 or 420-5516
555. Mobile Homes for Rent 2BR, 1BA, $500 mo., $400 dep. 5009 W. 2nd. Call 575-623-3105 for details.
TAKING APPLICATIONS 3br, 1ba, newly remodeled, SW location, appliances, $595 mo., $400 dep, wtr pd, HUD ok, no pets. 626-7453 or 623-1864
569. Mobile Home Spaces/Lots
EASY LIVING community 1337 McCall Loop, Roswell. Long term RV’s welcome. 624-2436
570. Mobile Home Courts
SOUTH FORK. A 55 & above community w/large quiet and attractive lots for people that care. 624-1742 500 W Brasher Rd.
580. Office or Business Places OFFICE SPACE for Rent. Prime downtown area, 2,061 sq.ft. Please call 622-8711.
STOREFRONT/Retail/ 2500 sqft 58 ft frontage at 3106 N. Main 1200/month 627-9942
EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITE for lease: Newly decorated, private rest room, covered parking at 1210 North Main. Contact David McGee, Owner / Broker 622-2401 FOR LEASE - Space in Sunwest Centre aka the Bank of America Building. Various size spaces available. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 623-1652 or mobile 420-2546.
CLASSIFIEDS
605. Miscellaneous for Sale CEMETERY PLOT for sale. Contact Richard 830-249-7338
NEW QUEEN rust color sofa sleeper, 6’x6’ oak entertainment center, china cabinet, Dining table,chairs. Call for appointment 910-1277 BAJA DR 70 mini dirt bike low hrs ready to ride $500, Whirlpool fabric sense washer/dryer 3 yrs old in great shape $400 for set. 575-626-0497 POWER WHEELCHAIR, walker, commode chair, wheelchair lift. 622-7638
FOR SALE by owner: 12’ outdoor kitchen $4500, Minolta 4000 office copier $2000 obo, Carved beds King & Queen $600-$800, dining table & china hutch lighted upper end $3000, 11’6” entertainment center wood $2500, cubes of brick & ceramic tile 1/2 price, 1900 wood burning cooking stove. Call for appointment must see, Dave 626-5837 FOR SALE by owner: Tutnour Autoclave originally $3500 will sell for $2000, Also Gurney- tiltable $500 both in good condition great for medical office or hospital call Connie 626-9155
Friday, January 7, 2011
620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous
650. Washers & Dryers FRIGIDAIRE WASHER/DRYER combo. Excellent condition, like new, $300 firm. 623-0414
WE BUY Home furnishings, furniture, appliances, collectibles, tools and everything else from A-Z including personal estates and whole house fulls. 627-2033 or 623- 6608
715. Hay and Feed Sale
WE BUY PECANS Top Prices Paid. On Grand Ave. between 4th & 5th St. Behind Courthouse.
Alfalfa Hay- small bales, oat hay & sudan all grades $4.50-$9.50 per bale. Big bales available $110-$140 each. Open 8:00-5:30 MonSat.1:00-5:00 Sunday, Graves Farm & Garden 622-1889 Credit Cards Accepted
SELL THOSE Pecans Haley Farms paying up to $1.75 per pound for your pecans. Monday-Friday 2:00 to 5:00 Sat. 9:00-2:00 5018 W. Country Club Rd.
745. Pets for Sale
HARD TIMES? Get the most cash for your old & broken gold & silver jewelry. Also, US silver coins. Call Skeets in Roswell, 578-0805.
CHOTTIES READY Christmas Eve. Small (8-10lbs.), fuzzy cuteness $100. 622-6190
WILL BUY your good used washers & dryers. 626-7470
PITBULL PUPPIES, 5 male, 2 brown, 3 light brown/gray, 1 female, tan, 6 wks old, $85 ea. 910-2510 or 623-6611.
BUYING PECANS N. Main & Berrendo Rd. Mon. & Weds. 575-399-2212
635. Good things to Eat
615. Coins, Gold, Silver, Buy, Sell, Trade U.S. & FOREIGN coins and currency, buy, sell or trade, gold and silver coins. 622-7239, 2513 W. 2nd
GRAVES FARM & Garden Frozen green chile, extra hot, regular hot, big Jim & mild. Dried red chile pods. New crop in January. Convenient store items available. We accept EBT, Credit cards and debit cards, we ship anywhere. 7 1/2 miles South on old Dexter Hwy. 622-1889 hours Monday thru Saturday 8-5:30 Sunday 1-5
AKC PRECIOUS Golden Retriever puppies, $500, born Nov. 27, ready to go mid-January. 627-7282
FREE CATS! Some older cats, some spayed, neutered, shy now but will be friendly, all need good homes. 626-4708.
PUPPY LOVE Grooming Large Dogs Welcome, Cats also - 575-420-6655 BLUE EYED Great Pyrenees/Siberian Husky puppies. 623-4295 Joe
CKC PEKINGESE puppies, 3 males left, $375 ea., blk/white, white/sable spots. 420-1658
CHIHUAHUA MALE puppy blue-merle $100 10wks 2nd shots. 623-2897
RECREATIONAL
775. Motorcycles & Scooters 2000 YAMAHA YZF 600R $1,500 for information call 575-840-9609
780. RV’s & Campers Hauling
FEMALE CHIHUAHUA spade w/shots needs a home. Lovable dog, nervous around small rowdy kids. Interested call 420-7329
MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. Your dealer of choice. Sales, parts, service, consignments, purchases, propane, dump station. 2900 West Second. 622-1751, 1-800-929 0046
AKC REG. Miniature Schnauzer, white male puppy, ready mid Jan. $500, 420-2006 or 624-1858
TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale FORD CONTOUR 83k miles, runs great, $2850, no financing. 420-1352
1997 KIA Sportage, runs good, new tires, cd player $2000 obo. 317-0958 GRANDMA’S MERCEDES, original paint, original leather interior, beautiful car, runs great, low miles! $3500. 317-3529 1988 OLD 98 Regency 4 door runs great $1300, 1993 Ford Explorer 4x4 6 cyl. $1800 622-1362, 317-4434 COLLECTIBLE CONVERTIBLE, 1985 Chrysler 600, new engine, $2500 obo, 623-9041 after 6pm.
795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans 1997 GMC 2500- extended cab 98,800 actual miles Granpas “Cream Puff” all extras incl. step rails tool box, headache rack, bed liner, wheels- terrific stereo. $6495 Call 910-1328 between 10am-9pm
796. SUVS
2003 CHEVY Tahoe Z71, 4wd, 110k miles, clean, good condition, $10,950, 637-9242 or 904-222-4380
ROSWELL FORD'S PRE-OWNED VEHICLES
A CAR YOU'LL LOVE AT A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD! 3 to t choose from!
STOREFRONT - Retail Or Customized professional office suite. Everything new inside & out, 105 W. 6th, across from Peppers. 575-420-6050 STAN ALONE building in North Roswell. 640 sq. Ft. Good office or beauty/barber shop. Available in January 2011. Call 420-2100 or 622-7163
745. Pets for Sale
B7
2010 01 10 H Hyundi yundi E Elantra lantra 4 d dr. r. GLS #17338
$13,900
2010 010 Merc Mercury cury G Grand rand M Marquis arquis L LS #17332
$19,900
112 W. 1st, office for lease, 1200sqft, A/C, $400 mo., $400 dep. 575-317-6479
EXCELLENT PROFESSIONAL building, 7 offices, 1550 square feet, water paid $1,050 per month. North Roswell. Available first of February. Call 420-2100 to see property. BEAUTY SHOP for lease, 103 N. Pennsylvania. A/C, plubming & stations ready to go, $595 mo., $500 dep. 575-317-6479
MERCHANDISE
605. Miscellaneous for Sale ROLL ENDS. Use for packing, mulch, art projects and other uses. Buy day old paper by the bundles, also boxes 15x12x10. Roswell Daily Record Circulation Department. 622-7710.
NEED FURNITURE? Shop Blair’s Trading Post for the best prices in town for your household items. We buy & sell furniture, appliances, home decor, collectibles, electronics, saddles, jewelry, tools, fishing & camping items, movies plus everything else from A-Z. Including many hard to find items. Serving Roswell for 40 years. Open daily 9-5. Accept Visa & MC. 5611 Hummingbird Ln. 627-2033 ATTENTION ROCKHOUNDS I have quality rocks and fossils at discount prices. 622-8945 REACH OVER 500,000 READERS in more than 30 newspapers across the state for one low price. Contact your local newspaper’s classified department or visit nmpress.org for details.
MOUNT GILEAD Missionary Association will have a clothing give away, open to the public. Location, 700 E.Summit St., Friday, January 7, 2011, 8-4 & Saturday, January 8, 2011, 8-12. 505-681-8670 Esther Gibbs for info. ASHLEY DESK & hutch, black stained wood, $1800 new, sell for $750. Kenmore Elite W/D, 3yrs old, excellent shape, $400 for both. Call 625-9833.
2007 Ford F-150 H-D Super Crew #17329
$27,900
2007 GMC GMC Y Yukon ukon X XL L 4x4 S SLT L #17293
$27,900
1999 Buick Park Ave. #17135
$ 7,900
2007 Ford Mustang GT #17172
$20,900
2005 Pontiac Aztek #17289
$ 9,900
2008 Ford F-150 Super Cab #17101
$ 20,900
2004 Lincoln LS #17221
$ 10,900
2010 Mercury Grand Marquis LS #17299 $20,900
2006 Chevy Cobalt 2 dr. Coupe SS #17349
$ 10,900
2003 Nissan Pathfinder LE #17327
$ 11,900
2007 Ford Fusion SEL V-6 #17322
$ 14,900
2008 Ford Explorer Sport Trac Limited #17137
2008 Ford Fusion SE 4 dr. #17179
$ 15,900
2008 Chevy Silverado Crew Cab #17242 $ 22,900
2004 Ford F-150 4x4 XLT #17261
$ 15,900
2009 Ford Explorer 4x 4 XLT #16935
$ 24,900
2008 Chevy Malibu LT #17264
$ 16,900
2005 GMC Yukon SLT#17288
$ 17,900
2007 Ford F-250 Crew Cab Diesel 4x4 #17177
$ 24,900
2004 Ford F-150 4x4 Lariat #17235
$ 17,900
2006 Ford F-150 4x4 Lariat #17258
$ 17,900
2005 Ford F-150 Super Crew #17303
$ 16,900
2008 Dodge Grand Caravan SXT #17350 $ 21,900
$ 22,900
2008 Dodge 1500 4x4 Quad Cab #17283 $ 24,900 2010 Ford F-150 Crew Cab XLT #17097 $ 26,900
2007 Ford F-150 Super Cab XLT #17171 $ 18,900
2008 Honda Ridgeline 4x4 Crew Cab #17348
2008 Lincoln Town Car
2009 Chevy Avalanche Crew Cab #17265 $ 28,900
$ 27,900
Signature Limited #17279
$ 18,900
2005 Ford F-250 Super Cab Diesel #17196
$ 18,900
2008 Ford F-250 Crew Cab XLT #17187 $29,900
2009 Mercury Milan Premier #17208
$ 19,900
2008 Mercury Mariner Premier #17185
$ 19,900
2007 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500#17232
$ 35,900
2008 Dodge 3500 Mega Cab DRW 4x4 #17346
$36,900
2010 Ford Expedition EL 4x4 Eddie Bauer #17295
$ 38,900
2008 Ford F-250 Super Cab XLT #17195 $ 19,900 2007 Ford F-150 Super Cab Flareside #16774
$ 19,900
2010 Ford F-150 Crew Cab XLT #17347 $28,900
Prices do not include tax, registration and dealer service transfer fee. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Pictures are for illustrative purposes only and may not represent the actual vehicles. Not responsible for typographical errors.
ROSWELL FORD
Toll-free: 877-624-3673
Se habla espanol
www.roswellford.com
821 N. MAIN ST. OPEN: MON.-FRI. 8AM - 7PM, SAT. 8AM - 5PM SALES: 623-3673 SERVICE DEPT.: 623-1031
B8 Friday, January 7, 2011
CLASSIFIEDS
Roswell Daily Record