09 18 13 Roswell Daily Record

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Roswell Daily Record THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

Gunman told police he was hearing voices Vol. 122, No. 224 75¢ Daily / $1.25 Sunday

WASHINGTON (AP) — A month before he went on the rampage that left 13 dead, Washington Navy Yard gunman Aaron Alexis complained to police in Rhode Island that people were talking to him through the walls and ceilings of his hotel rooms and sending microwave vibrations into his body to deprive him of sleep.

The account, contained in an Aug. 7 report from Newport, R.I., police, adds to the picture that has emerged of an agitated and

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erratic figure whose behavior and mental state had repeatedly come to authorities’ attention but didn’t seem to affect his security clearance. Alexis, a 34-year -old infor mation technology employee at a defenserelated computer company, used a valid pass Monday to get into the Navy Yard and killed 12 people before he was slain by police in a shootout that lasted more than a half-hour. A day after the assault, the motive was still a mys-

still going on. He had been suffering a host of serious mental problems, including paranoia and a sleep disorder, and had been hearing voices in his head, the officials said. The assault is raising more questions about the adequacy of the background checks done on contract employees who hold security clearances — an issue that came up recently with National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden.

tery. U.S. law enforcement officials told The Associated Press that investigators had found no manifesto or other writings suggesting a political or religious motivation.

Alexis, a for mer Navy reservist, had been undergoing mental health treatment from Veterans Affairs since August but was not stripped of his security clearance, according to the law enforcement officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the criminal investigation was

Jill McLaughlin Photo

A coalition of Roswell-area veterans and city officials are working to start development on a 5-acre section at South Park Cemetery for an official veterans cemetery in the next 60-90 days. The future site is planned near this established area, beyond where other veterans, such as Iraq veteran Sgt. Christopher Sanders, are buried. Sanders, a former student of the New Mexico Military Institute, died from wounds suffered during combat.

Veterans cemetery in the works JILL MCLAUGHLIN RECORD STAFF WRITER

A coalition of Roswellarea veterans, with the backing of city officials, are pushing forward with

plans to break ground on a local, official veterans cemetery within the next two to three months. The group hopes to start burying on at least 5 acres at an undeveloped area at South Park Cemetery, said

coalition member Ron McKay. Plans will continue to develop at a meeting set for later this month. “We’ll start at one end with an acre and move forward,” McKay. “That way, we can see how the fund-

ing and everything goes.” Gov. Susana Martinez announced, in July, the State Veterans’ Cemetery Initiative to establish See CEMETERY, Page A3

Attention in Colo. turns to damage tallies

LYONS, Colo. (AP) — The emergency airlifts of flood victims waned Tuesday, leaving rescue crews to systematically search the nooks and crannies of the northern Colorado foothills and transportation officials to gauge what it will take to rebuild the wasted landscape. More than 3,000 people have been evacuated by air and ground since last week’s devastating floods, but calls for those emergency rescues are now dwindling, federal and state emergency officials said.

Military rescue crews have met to identify new areas to check and places to cover again with hundreds of people still considered missing. “They’ve kind of transitioned from that initial response to going into more of a grid search,” Colorado National Guard Lt. Skye Robinson said. In one of those searches Tuesday, Sgt. 1st Class Keith Bart and Staff Sgt. Jose Pantoja leaned out the window of a Blackhawk, giving the thumbs-up sign to people they spotted on

the ground while flying outside of hard-hit Jamestown. Most waved back and continued shoveling debris. But then Bart spotted two women waving red scarves, and the helicopter descended. Pantoja attached his harness to the helicopter’s winch and was lowered to the ground. He clipped the women in, and they laughed as they were hoisted into the Blackhawk. After dropping of f the women at the Boulder airport, the Blackhawk was

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Russia insisted Tuesday that a U.N. Security Council resolution gover ning Syria’s handling of its chemical weapons not allow the use of force, but it suggested that could change if Damascus reneges on the deal to give up its stockpile. The main Syrian opposition coalition, meanwhile, urged the inter national community to take swift action against the regime of President Bashar Assad in response to a U.N. finding

that the nerve agent sarin was used in a deadly attack near the capital last month. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said his country “spoke clearly” about rejecting the use of force when the chemical weapons agreement was worked out Saturday in Geneva between Washington and Moscow. The plan calls for an inventory of Syria’s chemical weapons within a week, with all components of the program out of the country or destroyed by mid-2014.

But if signs emerge that Syria is not fulfilling the agreement or there are reports of further chemical weapons use, “then the Security Council will examine the situation,” Lavrov said, suggesting the issue could be reconsidered. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said a resolution on the U.S.-Russia deal must be enforceable, telling reporters that the “most ef fective” way is under Chapter 7 of the U.N. Charter. That deals with threats to inter na-

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HIGH 86 LOW 65

• ESTHER (ALENA) JOLLIFF •.PHYLLIS INEZ PIRTLE SMITH

WEDNESDAY

AP Photo

The flag flies at half-staff at the front entrance of the Naval Air Station Joint Reserve Base in Fort Worth, Texas, Tuesday.

Airlift canceled for flood isolated town

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — An emergency ground delivery of food, water and other supplies was planned Tuesday for a tiny western New Mexico community that remained isolated after weekend flooding damaged the only paved road leading to it. New Mexico Department of Homeland Security spokesman Estevan Lujan said state authorities and National Guard the planned to deliver readymade meals and other supplies by foot to residents of the privately run ghost town of Mogollon in the Gila National Forest. Lujan said the original planned airlift was canceled after officials determined there was not enough space to land a helicopter. Officials said a creek paralleling the one paved road into town — state Route 159 — surged from its banks after heavy rains and made the road inaccessible from a mile outside the community. A spokesman for Gov. Susana Martinez said the governor was scheduled to tour part of the Gila later Tuesday and attempt to visit Mogollon. “She will visit as close to

Mogollon as she can, likely the spot on the road that is washed out,” spokesman Enrique C. Knell said. Roughly 15 residents live year-round in Mogollon, a former mining town nestled in the mountains. Meanwhile, forecasters said flash flooding was less likely in much of northern and central New Mexico. But continued rain was keeping that threat alive in some areas, particularly on the eastern plains south of Interstate 40. “Comparing this week with last week, we’re definitely going to be quieting down,” said Christopher Luckett, a National Weather Service meteorologist in Albuquerque. Authorities planned to use a bulldozer to scrape out a makeshift road for four-wheel-drive vehicles. Tafoya said there was no estimate on when the work would be completed. Martinez approved the emergency delivery to Mogollon. Mogollon wasn’t the only town hit hard with flooding in the Gila National Forest, an area devastated by last year’s Whitewater -Baldy Fire. That blaze raced See FLOOD, Page A3

back in the air less than a minute later to resume the search.

The state’s latest count has dropped to about 580 people missing, and the number continues to decrease as the stranded get in touch with families.

One of the missing is Gerald Boland, a retired math teacher and basketball coach who lives in the damaged town of L yons. Boland’s neighbors, all of whom defied a mandatory See DAMAGE, Page A3

Russia opposes use of force in resolution on Syria

TODAY’S FORECAST

September 18, 2013

Jessica Palmer Photo

Between 200 to 300 items, including a telescope, can be viewed and claimed through today until 6 p.m.

Viewing of recovered items continues today JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER

Lavrov

tional peace and security and has provisions for enforcement by military or non-military means, such as sanctions.

• JOHN ALLEN BUCHANAN • ROSELYN CLAIRE MURPHY • HOWARD IRWIN

TODAY’S OBITUARIES

The Roswell Police Department held a viewing of goods stolen during a recent spate of burglaries. The viewing started around 9 a.m. Tuesday, with a second opportunity for victims to look over the items on

CLASSIFIEDS ..........B8 COMICS .................B6 ENTERTAINMENT ...A10 FINANCIAL ..............B7

Wednesday. Among the items the police have on display is: a telescope, car radios and speakers, several notebooks and books, a gas-powered weedeater, two saws, loose strips of copper wire, along with a roll of copper wire, tool boxes and tools, picture frames See VIEWING, Page A3

INDEX GENERAL ...............A2 HOROSCOPES .......A10 LOTTERIES .............A2 OPINION .................A4

SPORTS .................B1

WEATHER ............A10

WASHINGTON .........A8


A2 Wednesday, September 18, 2013

GENERAL

Roswell Daily Record

Report: DHS must better track excessive force The report’s biggest revelation may have been the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Inspector General could not come up with a tally of excessive force allegations against Border Patrol agents and customs officers because the agency’s databases do not allow them to be categorized that way. The report was requested last year by 16 members of Congress concer ned with the case of 42-year -old Anastasio Hernandez, who died after being shocked several times with a stun gun at San Diego’s San Ysidro border crossing in May 2010. The letter lawmakers sent requesting the review said, “we are also

STATE BRIEFS

Union sues over return of workers to building

SANTA FE (AP) — A public employees union has filed a lawsuit to stop the Public Education Department from returning employees to the basement of a gover nment office building in Santa Fe that’s undergone remediation for mold and asbestos. A local chapter of the Communications Workers of America brought the lawsuit Tuesday in state District Court in Santa Fe, saying the department hasn’t adequately addressed health hazards in the building. Department spokesman Larry Behrens has said about 20 workers will be relocated to the building’s basement. State officials contend that testing has shown no potential health risks. The union wants testing for hazardous vapors that could seep into the building from soil and groundwater contamination from leaking underground gasoline storage tanks in the area and chemicals from other former businesses.

State insurance exchange kicking off ad campaign

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — New Mexico’s health insurance exchange is launching an advertising campaign to make small businesses and individuals aware they can buy health coverage through

LOTTERY NUMBERS Mega Millions 6-15-27-31-39 Mega Ball: 25 Roadrunner Cash 1-10-13-22-34 Pick 3 4-8-2

concerned that this incident is simply part of a larger cultural problem at the Department.” The Justice Department’s investigation into his death —one of at least 19 deaths since 2010 that the American Civil Liberties Union attributes to U.S. Customs and Border Protection — continues. Two of the lawmakers who requested the review said Tuesday the report did not go far enough. U.S. Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Ariz., called the incomplete records of allegations “deeply disturbing” and said he planned to pursue redacted portions. “We expected much more content. We expected a deeper look into it,” he said. U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., said in an email that he welcomed the report’s recommendations, “but Border Patrol needs to do more to curb excessive use of force that has resulted in unnecessary deaths.” The ACLU similarly called the report a good first step, but said more

the online shopping center. Exchange officials said Tuesday that radio ads are starting this week and 34 billboards are going up statewide. Television ads are to air in about two weeks. The exchange will begin enrolling New Mexicans next month for coverage that starts in 2014. More than 80,000 uninsured New Mexicans are expected to obtain insurthrough the ance exchange next year. The state is launching a New Mexico-run exchange for small businesses to shop for coverage for their employees, but individuals initially will enroll through a federally operated exchange for the next year. Tax credits will be available to some consumers to reduce premium costs.

State reports its first flu case of the season

SANTA FE (AP) — The New Mexico Department of Health says the state has its first flu case of the season will be. Officials say it’s a 60year -old man from Ber nalillo County. No other infor mation was immediately released Tuesday. Last year, the first case of flu in the state was reported in November. Health officials say it’s dif ficult to predict how severe this flu season. They recommend everyone six months of age and older should get a flu vaccine each flu season.

As of 10:05 p.m., Tuesday, there were 0.32 inches of rain in the gauge at the Daily Record.

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was expected. CBP also has faced fierce criticism for policies that allow agents to respond to rock throwers with deadly force, a response CBP says is justified by the danger. Eight people have been killed by Border Patrol agents in rock throwing incidents since 2010, according to the ACLU. And the report found that of 185 rock assaults in fiscal 2012, agents responded with firearms 12 percent of the time. Shawn Moran, vice president of the National Border Patrol Council, a union representing agents, said they are satisfied with the agency’s use-of-force training. “We feel that the training is top notch for use of force and our agents use it reluctantly,” Moran said. CBP began its own internal review of deadly force incidents in November, in addition to an independent review contracted to the Police Executive Research Forum. Specific references to the findings

AP Photo

A group of new Border Patrol agents run with their instructor at the Border Patrol Academy in Artesia, N.M., April 5, 2007.

of both were redacted from Tuesday’s report, which said recommendations were under consideration by the acting CBP commissioner. The inspectors did credit the agency for beginning field audits last year to evaluate use-of-force training outside of the

academy. But the report said follow-up needs to be formalized and the staff expanded.

It noted that one such audit revealed that “many agents and officers do not understand use of force and the extent to which they may or may not use force.” The recommenda-

tions that followed were redacted, but CBP said it was an isolated finding that was immediately addressed.

Some critics have blamed a rapid increase in Border Patrol agent staffing for deterioration in the quality of recruits and their training.

Immigrants prepare for reform

SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — Immigration refor m is stalled in Congress but that’s not stopping immigrants from contacting lawyers, filling out paperwork and making other preparations in hopes of getting a head start should laws change.

That’s got some advocates concerned that immigrants, who have been duped before by unscrupulous attorneys and others, could be snookered again. California lawmakers last week passed a bill to ban the practice of charging fees for services related to immigration reform before Congress passes an overhaul. Immigrant supporters are warning people to be wary of anyone — lawyers, immigration consultants or “notarios” — who offers to help fill out paperwork for a still-non-existent legalization program. Yet many are also urging immigrants to make sure their personal documents are in order now, saying there could be long lines at consular

offices for passports and other paperwork. “If you start planning for it the day it passes, you are probably going to be too late,” said Daniel Sharp, legal director at the Central American Resource Center in Los Angeles. Immigration is one of President Barack Obama’s top priorities for his second ter m, but a refor m bill faces an uncertain future in Congress. With an estimated 11 million immigrants in the country illegally, a broad overhaul could mean millions of people would be seeking legal services and consular documents and filing paperwork with the U.S. government. Immigrants, especially those who are newcomers and speak little English, have been conned in the past, most infamously by so-called “notarios,” who try to earn their trust with a term that carries hefty legal weight in many Latin American countries. Such scams not only sap immigrants of their hard-earned

cash but could even wind up getting them deported. To steer immigrants clear of fraud, the Mexican government has started a free hotline to provide information about the immigration debate. And in Los Angeles, officials said they are investigating websites that claim to help immigrants get their legal papers even though no legislation has passed. The Califor nia bill, if signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown, would also crack down on those billing themselves as “notarios.” “Everybody wants to be first in line but there’s no line to get in,” said the bill’s author, Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez, D-San Diego. The State Bar pushed hard for the legislation, over the cries of immigration attorneys, fearing the rampant fraud that has long been a problem in immigration services could bankrupt a fund created to compensate clients duped by crooked lawyers. Should an immigration

bill pass, advocates say, immigrants may only have a year to submit an application. Some advocates say it’s too soon to see a lawyer, and certainly too early to shell out large sums of money to get ready for immigration reform.

Immigrants can better spend their time obtaining their children’s school records and collecting documents to prove their residence like rental agreements and car loans, said Jorge-Mario Cabrera, a spokesman for the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles.

Lawyers say they can help now by running background checks and potentially find that immigrants are eligible for other benefits, which has occurred with young people trying to stay in the U.S. legally under an Obama administration program, said Reed T rautz, director of the American Immigration Lawyers Association’s practice and professionalism center.

Four shoplifting incidents at Walmart Shoplifting

• The police responded to Walmart, 4500 N. Main St., four times over the weekend. On Friday, police received a call about a shoplifting where shoes were stolen. Walmart employees provided such a good description of the vehicle that police were able to execute a traf fic stop and apprehend the subject. Also on Friday, police were dispatched to Walmart after a subject took a Shark vacuum cleaner, valued at $228, and left the store without

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items. The second time, employees were unsure what had been taken.

paying. Later of ficers returned to the store following a beer skip. During the fourth incident, police were called to Walmart when a subject removed clothing and a trashcan, with a total value of $227.68. Again, of ficers were able to apprehend the 23-year-old subject during a traffic stop. • Police were dispatched

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to Lawrence Brothers, 900 W. Second St., three times; twice following a beer skip and the third time a subject took candy.

• Police were called to Factory 2 U, 2601 N. Main Street, twice on Saturday. The first time, subjects removed some $75 worth of

• Police were also called to Autozone, 2811 N. Main St., Friday, when subjects took a head lamp light bulb, valued at $69. The item was recovered.

Anyone with information about these or any other crimes should contact Crime Stoppers at 1888-594-TIPS (8477). Callers may remain anonymous and could be eligible for a reward.

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2013

McALLEN, Texas (AP) — A widely anticipated federal report released Tuesday on excessive force among U.S. border agents contained little discussion of use-of-force policies, but recommended improvements to training and the tracking of such allegations.


GENERAL

Roswell Daily Record

Cemetery

tion. A fence was installed in anticipation of the new site. South Park Cemetery was first established in the 1880s. Gravesites on the grounds hold the remains of veterans from the Civil War, Spanish American War, World War I, World War II, Vietnam, Korea, Iraq and Afghanistan. The 210-acre grounds were first set aside as a territorial land grant. Since then, 80 acres have been developed. Twenty more acres are planned for use. He hoped recent developments and new motivation to build a permanent site for veterans in Roswell would continue to escalate. “I think we can keep it going,” Eldridge said. “We just need to get the public more involved. We need to see if the public does or does not want it. Money is always a problem. We need donations.” McKay said the process has been a struggle, but plans are moving along. “This is the best thing that’s happened to us. We’re getting it done,” McKay said. “We want to start putting people in, in the next 60 to 90 days. That’s how hard we’re working on things.” Jurney said the timing depends on how quickly plans will come together. “If we can come to a design that meets the standards of a national cemetery, so the city can take on maintenance, that’s the best case for the city,” Jurney said. “There are still some very pivotal calls and points that need to come together. It’s going to happen.”

Continued from Page A1

cemeteries for the state’s rural-area veterans. New Mexico currently only has three federal veterans cemeteries, located in Santa Fe, Ft. Bayard and Ft. Bliss. Martinez and Cabinet Secretary Timothy Hale met with Roswell veterans and leaders at a town hall Sept. 3 to discuss the initiative. The state Department of Veterans Services expects to identify up to 10, 3- to 5-acre sites. The department would manage the new cemeteries, but the decision about where to locate the cemeteries would not be official for up to two years. But the local group has decided to move forward with its established plans, in hopes of later recouping costs through the federal program. “We want to at least start with part of it,” McKay said. Last week, Mayor Del Jurney, McKay, Bert Eldridge and others invited Santa Fe National Cemetery Director Cliff Shields to Roswell to gather information about how to operate and build the site to federal specifications. Shields discussed details, including vault sizes, headstone details, crematorium standards, water-related concerns, engineering standards and ceremony practices. A separate entrance was discussed. Eldridge said the planning and engineering is complete for the South Park addi-

Viewing

Continued from Page A1

jects went up and down the street, tested door handles and if the car or truck was unlocked, the suspects would enter the vehicle and take whatever they could find, from vehicle titles, insurance registration, wallets, credit cards, jewelry, dishes with change in them and tools.

and pictures. The items were found during two search warrants executed on a home and a single motel room. The suspects have already been charged with three burglaries and one larceny, the latter where items were removed from the back of a pickup truck. According to Detective Ricky Romero, the suspects have now have been connected with another 11 burglaries. A total of 15 people arrived at the police department in the first hour of the viewing. “So far, I have eight bags full of things where we had victims’ names. We have between 200 and 300 items,” Romero said. He added that each burglary occurred with unsecured vehicles, where the doors had been left unlocked. He said the sub-

Romero said the areas of town hardest hit were north and west, although there may have been other burglaries in other areas of Roswell. He encouraged people to lock their doors and be alert to what is happening around them.

The Roswell Police Department asks anyone who was the subject of a vehicle burglary between Aug. 19 and Sept. 5, to come to 128 W. Second St., Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. to come view the items and make a report of the incident.

Damage

Continued from Page A1

evacuation order, said Boland took his wife to safety Thursday then tried to return home. Two search teams went looking for him Monday. “He was very sensible. I find it amazing that he would do something that would put himself in harm’s way,” said neighbor Mike Lennard. “But you just never know under these circumstances.” State officials reported six flood-related deaths, plus two women missing and presumed dead. The number was expected to increase. It could take weeks or even months to search through flooded areas looking for people who died. With the airlifts tapering, state and local transportation officials are tallying the washed-out roads, collapsed bridges and twisted railroad lines. The rebuilding effort will cost hundreds of millions of dollars and take months, if not years. Initial assessments have begun trickling in, but many areas remain inaccessible and the continuing emergency prevents a thorough understanding of the devastation’s scope. “The numbers are going to change tomorrow as we

AP Photo

SFC Keith Bart, with 2-4 GSAB 4th Infantry Division based in Ft. Carson, helps a woman who was winched up to a helicopter outside Jamestown, Colo., which was cut off due to flooding, Tuesday.

get into more places, and the numbers are going to change the day after that,” Federal Emergency Management Agency spokesman Ricardo Zuniga said. Norther n Colorado’s broad agricultural expanses are especially affected, with more than 400 lanemiles of state highway and more than 30 bridges destroyed or impassable. A Colorado Department of Transportation helicopter crew has been survey-

Roswell Daily Record

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ing damage, said department spokesman Ashley Mohr.

County of ficials have started their own damage tallies: 654 miles of roads in Weld County bordering W yoming, 150 miles of roads in the Boulder County roads foothills, along with hundreds of bridges, culverts and canals.

A3

AP Photo

Lottery players could see more giant jackpots Bob Knowles buys a Powerball ticket, Tuesday, in Des Moines, Iowa.

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — If it seems that giant lottery jackpots have people lining up at convenience stores more frequently, just wait: More big payouts could be coming. Most attention has been on Powerball jackpots since the game’s rules were changed in early 2012 to boost payoffs. For Wednesday’s drawing, Powerball’s estimated $400 million jackpot will be the nation’s fifth-largest ever, though its jackpot hit $590 million earlier this year. Now organizers of the country’s other big lottery, Mega Millions, are planning changes of their own. Although Mega Millions still holds the record for the largest jackpot in U.S. history — a $656 million prize in March 2012 — organizers are hoping to more regularly see huge jackpots by lessening the odds of winning big while upping a player’s shot at smaller but still hefty prizes. Mega Millions doesn’t plan to change its $1 ticket price, but an extra $1 option already in the game will be expanded to allow players to increase their secondary prize total to between $1 million and $5 million, a major increase from $250,000. Game changes also include boosting the starting jackpot from $12 million to $15 million, and allowing the jackpot to grow by at least $5 million between drawings when no top winner is selected. It’s those jackpots, not the name on the game, that ultimately draw in 45year-old Trent Shenefield. “Depends on what’s up the highest,” the electrician said Tuesday while at a QuickTrip convenience store in suburban Kansas City. “I guess everyone wants to win the big one.” But fellow lottery player Bob Knowles, a school bus driver in Iowa, said the changes didn’t really matter. The 62year-old said he purchases tickets for both games several times a week and would be happy with any jackpot.

Flood

Continued from Page A1

through the Gila and became the largest in the state’s recorded history, leaving burn scars.

Marianne Sutton, owner of the Whitewater Motel in Glenwood, said the basement of her motel was flooded starting late Sunday when a nearby creek overflowed its banks. She evacuated guests from three rooms. Water filled

Roswell Independent School District – Special Services Department

For the Parents of Students with Disabilities

Individuals with Disabilities Education Act

(IDEA) Parent Meeting Date: September 23, 2013

Location: Fairfield Inn – 1201 N. Main Time: 6:00 to 7:00 p.m.

Snacks and Refreshment will be provided

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“That’s nice, but I don’t care. I can get by with $10 million. I can get by with $3 million,” he said after buying Powerball tickets at a grocery store in Des Moines. “I just play along with the Mega and Powerball. What it starts off with would be pretty comfortable for me to win.” The changes take effect for the Oct. 22 drawing and were based on extensive consumer research, said Paula Otto, executive director for the Virginia Lottery and lead director for Mega Millions. She said officials decided not to increase ticket prices, but acknowledged Powerball’s success after it increased its ticket prizes from $1 to $2. “Certainly we were looking at the fact that changes that Powerball made, primarily by increasing the price point, it definitely favorably impacted the jackpot,” Otto said. “It’s doing what it’s supposed to do, which is helping Powerball have bigger jackpots on a pretty consistent basis.” She noted that both games are now sold side by side, as part of a 2010 licensing agreement, in 43 states, plus the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands. “It’s great to have both games available to players and to have drawings four nights a week. I think that the two games complement each other,” Otto said. The Iowa-based Multi-State Lottery Association is operated by 33 state lotteries that help oversee Powerball. Mega Millions has no central office and is run by individual state lotteries that handle their own accounting matters. “I applaud them for looking at changes,” said Iowa Lottery CEO Terry Rich. “You need to revise, you need to refresh. Any good, big company knows that you need to revitalize your product.” The next Powerball drawing is scheduled for today at 8:59 p.m. MDT.

her backyard and floated the propane tank that serves the motel. “It was horrendous,” she said in a telephone interview Monday night. She was left with no hot water or propane and said her septic system might have been compromised by the flooding. Whitewater Creek swept up debris, including burnt logs from a fire in the mountains last year. The debris snagged on a bridge in town, Sutton said.

Gila National Forest spokeswoman Andrea Martinez said most of the forest was saturated with water and many roads were inaccessible.

“All creeks and arroyos are full,” Martinez said. “We are advising everyone to stay off the roads if they can.”

Meanwhile, the American Red Cross said it has opened a new shelter in Crownpoint in northwestern New Mexico.

El Distrito Escolar Independiente de Roswell –Departamento de Servicios Especiales

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A4 Wednesday, September 18, 2013

OPINION

Expecting Syria to live up to an agreement between Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov for the cataloging, inspection, removal and eventual destruction or sequester of chemical weapons is a subtle seduction. Why would a dictator like Bashar al-Assad relinquish his most potent weapon in the midst of a civil war? President Obama and his sycophants claim it was the threat of military action against Syria that focused Assad’s mind. That hardly seems credible after Kerry’s promise that any U.S. missile strike would be “unbelievably small.” Tyrants have a poor record of living up to agreements. One hates to resurrect Adolf Hitler, but the Munich Agreement of 1938 serves as one of many examples. The agreement gave Nazi Germany the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia, as long as Hitler agreed not to attempt to annex any other

that could take that power away. Assad has been called a “war criminal.” He fits the definition, having reportedly slaughtered more than 100,000 Syrians, allegedly including more than 1,400 with chemical weapons. Millions more have fled the country. Assad has no future outside Syria, other than exile, a jail cell or the gallows. It is conceivable Assad might move some of his chemical weapons to hiding places in other countries, or within Syria. Could the United States through satellite technology and other means discover such subterfuge, as it did when Soviet missiles were detected entering Cuba 50 years ago? Perhaps, but remember that Iraq’s Saddam Hussein used chemical weapons against his Kurdish population. After the first Gulf War in 1991, when Iraqi forces were evicted from Kuwait, Saddam put on a public display in which at least some of his chemical weapons

World must not be seduced by Assad’s deception

EDITORIAL

CAL THOMAS SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

land. Hitler broke the pact in 1939 when he invaded Poland. Also in 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union signed a nonaggression treaty known as the MolotovRibbentrop Pact, ensuring that the Soviet Union would stay out of the European war. That lasted until 1941 when Hitler invaded Russia. At the Yalta Conference in February 1945, Soviet General Secretary Joseph Stalin promised free elections in Poland, but soon broke that promise, leading to the Cold War. People whose only scruples are keeping themselves in power are not about to honor agreements

Roswell Daily Record

arsenal was destroyed. In 2003, when President George W. Bush ordered an invasion of Iraq on the pretext that Saddam had weapons of mass destruction and was attempting to acquire more, none were found. Do we really believe Hussein destroyed them all? According to a report in the Lebanese daily Al-Mustaqbal, reprinted in Sunday’s Jerusalem Post, Syria moved “20 trucks worth of equipment and material used for the manufacturing of chemical weapons into neighboring Iraq.” If true, that would have been the day after the agreement between the U.S. and Russia was announced. The Iraqi government denies it is assisting Syria in hiding chemical weapons. Who can be believed in the murky Middle East? “Trust, but verify” was the slogan used by the Reagan administration when it came to promises made by the Soviet Union. That

mantra should be updated in any dealings with Assad, as well as Iran: “Don’t trust and verify.” The Obama administration is attempting to sell this deal with Russia as if it were on a par with the surrender documents ending World War II. As evil as those regimes were, the cruel dictators in the Middle East are at least their equals. That is why they can’t be trusted to live up to any promise not in their own interest. Unless, of course, they are forced to do so through more international pressure than they are currently receiving and with a credible military option that is something larger than “unbelievably small.” (Write to Cal Thomas at: Tribune Media Services, 2225 Kenmore Ave., Suite 114, Buffalo, N.Y. 14207. Readers may also e-mail Cal Thomas at tmseditors@tribune.com.) © 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

Arresting free speech

Government officials who are so concerned about a Florida preacher’s publicity stunts inciting riots overseas should be more focused on not allowing themselves to be goaded into violating his constitutional rights at home. The Rev. Terry Jones, pastor of the evangelical Christian Dove World Outreach Center, and his associate pastor were arrested last week by local sheriff’s deputies as they were on their way to a city park to burn 2,998 copies of the Quran — one for each victim killed in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. The two men were charged with unlawful conveyance of fuel as they traveled in a pickup truck towing a barbecuestyle grill filled with Qurans soaked in kerosene. Jones first drew worldwide attention in 2010 when he announced he would burn a copy of the Muslim holy book on the anniversary of 9/11. Then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and U.S. military officers implored him not to do it, arguing that the act could inflame the Muslim world and endanger American servicemen and women stationed abroad. Jones eventually called it off, although he has burned Qurans other times, which sparked violent protests in the Middle East and Afghanistan. Recently he said he would burn 2,998 Qurans on 9/11, which once again drew a protest from Army Gen. Lloyd Austin III, commander of U.S. Central Command at Tampa’s MacDill Air Force Base, who said the act would endanger troops. It also apparently gained the attention of local law enforcement, who intercepted him before he could get to the park. County Sheriff Grady Judd said deputies saw Jones at a McDonald’s and watched as he doused the books with kerosene on his way to the park. The sheriff said dumping kerosene onto the books presented a hazardous situation. “He was potentially driving a bomb around if he had gotten into a crash,” Judd said at a press conference Wednesday night. Jones has a First Amendment right to burn Qurans. He doesn’t have a right to violate other laws to do it. However, the government also cannot single him out for enforcement of said laws based solely on who he is and his message. Did the sheriff’s deputies just happen to spot Jones dousing Qurans with kerosene in the back of his truck? Or were they following him around? If so, why? He wasn’t plotting a crime, but a public protest. Is it customary for police to intervene in such situations? How many other people have been charged with “unlawful conveyance of fuel”? (Perhaps if they announced beforehand they would be towing fuel-soaked material they might be.) Jones and his followers are the Rev. Fred Phelps/Westboro Baptist Church of antiMuslim sentiment, clowns who do provocative things to draw publicity. They are best ignored, denying them what they crave — attention. However, like the Westboro group, as offensive as their antics may be they have a First Amendment right to express them. They cannot be silenced because someone threatens to riot in response — that amounts to a “heckler’s veto” of free speech. Government should not be using other means to shut Jones up, lest it elevate him from local kook to First Amendment martyr.

Guest Editorial The Panama City News Herald

The state of education in New Mexico Through the decades there have been educational reforms that have come and gone such as the “New Math,” No Child Left Behind (NCLB) and the report “A Nation at Risk.” During these times there have been education gurus like Madelyn Hunter and Dr. Robert Marzano who advocated for refor m and improved delivery of curriculum. If New Mexico ranks among the lowest in the nation in the quality of education, exactly what will it take to provide our kids with a world class education? NCLB brought testing and with testing the districts

Doonesbury

DEAR DOCTOR K: I have hypertension. Should I be monitoring my blood pressure at home? DEAR READER: You bet. It’s easy and inexpensive, and provides you and your doctor the information you need to protect your health. About one in three adults in the United States has high blood pressure, or hypertension. And about half of those with high blood pressure don’t have it under control. Hypertension increases the risk for heart disease and stroke. In my opinion, hypertension may be the most important public health problem in the United States, as it affects so many people. Recognizing and treating it brings enormous health

began to analyze results and determine areas of strength and opportunities for improvement. Although many school districts paid no attention to date the Roswell schools have been looking at and analyzing student test data for years. There were many who in the early years of NCLB felt that they were doing an exceptional job because they were “making AYP” — Adequate Yearly Progress. What they did not factor into the equation was the bar for making AYP was rising every year. In the early years of NCLB and AYP, almost all schools could say that they made AYP! As the

ASK DR. K UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE

benefits. You always have a blood pressure, every minute of the night and day, and it can change a lot from one moment to the next. What matters most to your health is where your blood pressure is on average. Before we had home blood pressure monitoring machines, the way a doctor determined if your blood pres-

percentage of proficiency went up, it became almost impossible to reach the bar. In the original plan of NCLB it was expected that 100 percent of the students in the United States be “Proficient or Advanced” by 2014. In 2012, New Mexico was granted a waiver of the NCLB rules and now has the A-F system. The waiver requires all students score proficient on the New Mexico SBA (Standards Based Assessment). This means that the students who score at the proficient level on the 11th grade assessment will most likely graduate. However, in addition

students must show competence in other than tested areas by scoring as proficient on the End of Course Exam (EOC). Sounds complicated! It is complicated! Tracking the students who passed the tests, the EOC exams, offering tutoring and interventions tailored to meet an individual student’s needs is a challenge to all school administrators. The concern is graduation. What if the SBA or an EOC is not mastered, what happens? The graduation rates at GHS, RHS and UHS were 66 per-

sure was controlled was to have you make a trip to his or her office. If you think about it, that’s pretty silly. The doctor is supposed to estimate what your average blood pressure is all day and all night based on one visit to the doctor’s office every several months. And since many people get nervous when they visit the doctor — yes, even my patients — the reading in the office may not be representative. Home blood pressure machines make it easy to get a much better estimate of what your average blood pressure really is. The latest evidence for the benefits of home blood pressure monitoring comes from

researchers who studied 450 people with hypertension. About half were given home blood pressure monitors that electronically sent readings to a secure website. The volunteers were asked to send six readings each week. Pharmacists analyzed that information and adjusted medications if needed or offered advice on lifestyle changes to lower blood pressure. The other volunteers received usual care from their primary care providers. At every step of the way, people in the home monitoring group had more success getting their blood pressure under control. The benefits

See BURRIS, Page A5

See DR. K, Page A5


OPINION II

Roswell Daily Record

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Gay marriage: politics v. Bible

Dear Editor, About same sex marriage!!! There is much talk and debate going on about same sex marriage and our clerks granting marriage license to same sex couples, why don’t we see what our creator God had to say about this abomination. There are many warnings in scriptures relating to this, even in the first book of the Bible; the Book of Genesis there are dire warnings about this, Genesis chapter 19 gives a message to Lot the nephew of Abraham about the city of Sodom and Gomorrah and their wickedness. Two Angels came to Lot to warn him to get out of the city of Sodom, because God was fixing to destroy the city because of its wicked behavior. The men and boys of Sodom had seen more strangers (angels disguised as men) come to Lot’s house. They wanted some fresh encounters of strange (homosexual) sex. They demanded that Lot bring the men out to them. Lot refused and begged the homosexual boys and men of the city not to do anything to these strangers. He even went so far as to offer his virgin daughters in the place of these angels but wicked inhabitants demanded to have the men. They were so benighted that they didn’t recognize the holiness of these men (angels). Finally with much urging, Lot his wife and two daughters were persuaded to leave all their possessions behind and get out of the city before God destroyed it. As they left they were warned not to look back. Lots wife did not heed the angel’s warnings and looked back and she was turned into a pillar of salt. Genesis 19 and many other places in the Bible warn against the abomination of homosexual behavior. If God destroyed wicked Sodom and Gomorrah because of this abomination, how does America think she can survive God’s judgment? Also the book of Romans in the New Testament gives additional war nings. Romans chapter one beginning with verse 18 warns us about pushing the truth away from us about this great sin! It declares that when people refuse to obey God that “God gives them over to a reprobate mind”. Claiming to be wise in their minds they became “fools” verse 24 states that God gave them up to their shameful desires. He states that even women turned against the natural way to have sex with men and instead decided to have sex each other. And the men, instead of having normal sexual relations with their wives, burned with lust for each other.

Burris

Continued from Page A4

cent, 62 percent and 37 percent respectively last year. If the rules of the NCLB waiver are indeed followed our graduation rate, and the graduation rate of high schools in the state, will drop dramatically. Buying a graduation gown and inviting family to graduation will not guarantee that the student has attained the performance level that has been set out for them to graduate. Do you have questions yet? Probably so. Talk to your student, ask about the results of the latest SBA and EOCs, make an appointment with the school administrator or counselor, attend parent meetings and open houses. Education has changed and we, as parents, must be aware of the new graduation requirements. It is no longer the case that just because a student attends school, they will graduate. Find out what you can do to help your child to make their high school years positive. One of my initiatives this year is to

Men did shameful things with other men and as a result, suffered within themselves the penalty. How does so-called enlightened America think they can escape the wrath of almighty God? America wake up before it is too late!! Sodom and Gomorrah had been blessed beyond measure. They were prosperous and had all they could want. But they indulged in shameful sin and sinfulness could not be overlooked by God. These warnings are written in the Bible, America wake up, the hour is late!! Some more scriptures that pertain to this is Deuteronomy 29:23; Isaiah13:19; Luke 1:6 etc. By the way: Are we more interested in what Obama and the secular government says than what God says. There are many places in the Bible that condemn homosexuality. Read what happened to Sodom and Gomorrah in Gen 19 and then turn to Romans chapter one verses 31-46 and see what God says!

Thanks, Semi-retired Pastor Gail Whitehead Roswell

Benefiting from tragedy

Dear Editor: I was appalled and shocked after reading the article in your August 6th edition entitled “Prison Riot Site May Become Museum.” I think that it’s shameful that New Mexico state officials are even considering making a tourist attraction out of such a tragic riot in 1980, which resulted in large part to the overcrowded conditions in the prison, a fault of the Department of Corrections of New Mexico. Besides the 33 men who were killed, there were over 100 others hurt in the incident. Many of the family members are still alive, and I believe a decision to enact something such as a museum would be very hurtful to them. I do think that the building could be put to very good use — rehabilitation sessions, 12- step meetings, and job training which the men will need when they are released from their incarceration. I believe “dark tourism” is a very negative outlook for the Department of Corrections to attain financial gain.

Sincerely, Margaret LaMure Alto

increase attendance rates of all students. Studies have shown that missing more than 10 days in a school year reduces the chance that a student will score proficient in state testing. There are state statutes that require students between the ages of 5 and 18 to attend school regularly. This year if a student has 10 days of unexcused absences the district will be referring those students to court for enforcement of the mandatory attendance statute. Last week the courtroom was full of students who had already missed five days unexcused. The students and parents heard Judge Romero explain the importance of education and the penalty for non-attendance. The courts may impose a penalty of a $100 fine and 50 hours of community service on the parent if the student does not attend. Please help us give our students the advantages of a great education in the best large school district in the state of New Mexico, Roswell. Superintendent Tom Burris can be contacted at tburris@risd.k12.nm.us or 575627-2511.

TODAY IN HISTORY

THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Today is Wednesday, Sept. 18, the 261st day of 2013. There are 104 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight On Sept. 18, 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed a commission naming Rabbi Jacob Frankel of Rodeph Shalom Congregation in Philadelphia the first Jewish chaplain of the U.S. Army. On this date In 1759, the French formally surrendered Quebec to the British. In 1793, President George Washington laid the cornerstone of the U.S. Capitol. In 1810, Chile made its initial declaration of independence from Spain with the formation of a national junta. In 1850, Congress passed the Fugitive Slave Act, which created a force of federal commissioners charged with returning escaped slaves to their owners. In 1927, the Columbia Phonograph Broadcasting System (later CBS) made its on-air debut with a basic network of 16 radio stations. In 1931, an explosion in the Chinese city of Mukden damaged a section of Japaneseowned railway track; Japan, blaming Chinese nationalists, invaded Manchuria the next day. In 1947, the National Security Act, which created a National Military Establishment, went into effect. In 1961, United Nations Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold (dahg HAWM’-ahrshoold) was killed in a plane crash in northern Rhodesia. In 1970, rock star Jimi Hendrix died in London at age 27. In 1975, newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst was captured by the FBI in San Francisco, 19 months after being kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army. In 1981, a museum honoring former President Gerald R. Ford was dedicated in Grand Rapids, Mich. In 1990, the city of Atlanta was named the site of the 1996 Summer Olympics. The organized crime drama “GoodFellas,” directed by Martin Scorsese, had its U.S. premiere in New York. Ten years ago: Hurricane Isabel plowed into North Carolina’s Outer Banks with 100 mph winds and pushed its way up the Eastern Seaboard; the storm was later blamed for 30 deaths. Five years ago: President George W. Bush told the country his administration

Dr. K

Continued from Page A4

persisted six months after the program had ended. You can buy a good home blood pressure monitor for under $100. Look for: — an automatic monitor that doesn’t require a stethoscope (it’s easier to use); — a monitor that takes the blood pressure reading using a cuff that fits around the upper arm; — a read-out large enough for you to see the numbers; — a seal of approval from a trusted organization.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

A5

was working feverishly to calm turmoil in the financial markets. The president met with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Federal Reserve Chair man Ben Bernanke, who then asked Congress to give the gover nment power to rescue banks by buying up their bad assets. Stocks on Wall Street shot up more than 400 points on word a plan was in the works.

One year ago: Chicago teachers voted to suspend their strike and return to the classroom after more than a week on picket lines, ending a combative stalemate with Mayor Rahm Emanuel over evaluations and job security.

Today’s Birthdays: Singer Jimmie Rodgers is 80. Actor Robert Blake is 80. Former Sen. Robert Bennett, R-Utah, is 80. Actor Fred Willard is 80. Actor Eddie Jones is 79. Gospel singer Bobby Jones is 75. Singer Frankie Avalon is 73. Actress Beth Grant (“The Mindy Project”) is 64. Rock musician Kerry Livgren is 64. Actress Anna Deavere Smith is 63. Basketball coach Rick Pitino is 61. College Football Hall of Famer and retired NFL player Billy Sims is 58. Movie director Mark Romanek is 54. Baseball Hall of Famer Ryne Sandberg is 54. Alt-country-rock musician Mark Olson is 52. Singer Joanne Catherall (Human League) is 51. Actress Holly Robinson Peete is 49. Rhythm-and-blues singer Ricky Bell (Bell Biv Devoe and New Edition) is 46. Actress Aisha Tyler is 43. Racing cyclist Lance Armstrong is 42. Opera singer Anna Netrebko is 42. Actress Jada Pinkett Smith is 42. Actor James Marsden is 40. Actress Emily Rutherfurd is 39. Actor Travis Schuldt is 39. Rapper Xzibit is 39. Comedian-actor Jason Sudeikis (TV: “Saturday Night Live”) is 38. Actress Sophina Brown is 37. Actor Barrett Foa is 36. TV correspondent Sara Haines is 36. Actress Alison Lohman is 34. Actors Taylor and Brandon Porter are 20. Actor C.J. Sanders is 17.

Thought for Today: “We want the facts to fit the preconceptions. When they don’t it is easier to ignore the facts than to change the preconceptions.” — Jessamyn West, American author (1902-1984). Ask your doctor, nurse or pharmacist for help in calibrating your monitor and learning how to use it. (On my website, AskDoctorK.com, I’ve posted a video showing the correct way to use a home blood pressure monitor.) Also ask how often you should check your blood pressure, and share the results of your readings with your doctor. Finally, remember that home monitoring is not a substitute for regular physician checkups. (Dr. Komaroff is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. To send questions, go to AskDoctorK.com, or write: Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.)

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Eastern New Mexico State Fair Flower Show

YOUR CREDIT

“We want to make you a loan”

(575)624-2929

$200 - $2,000

Horticulture Entries will be accepted on Sunday, September 29, 2013 from 11:00 a.m. until 3:00 p.m., at the ENM State Fair Art Building. Horticulture Categories include: Section 1: Bulbs, Corms and Tubers Section 2: Annuals Section 3: Perennials Section 4: Roses Section 5: Chrysanthemums Section 6: Vines, Shrubs and Trees Section 7: Container Grown Plants Section 8: Seeds, Pods, Foliage, Succulents Design Entries will be accepted on Thursday, October 3, 2013 from 9:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m. The full schedule can be found on-line at www.enmsf.com. The Youth Division uses the same schedule, but will be judged separately.

Any questions call 625-9182 or 622-7709.

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A6 Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Unique exhibit taking local art

The Art Department at Eastern New Mexico University- Roswell and the Visual Arts Department of the Fergus Falls Campus of the Minnesota State Community and Technical College are hosting a Mail Art Exchange Exhibit. Any media, style, theme and content of work is accepted and encouraged for this exhibition, but only twodimensional works that measure 5 by 7 inches will be accepted. Eligible artwork is artwork done by anyone associated with the participating institutions (any branch campus) at any time in the past or present, in any capacity. This includes past or present students, faculty, staff, alumni, faculty emeritus, former participants in previous art exhibits, former judges of previous art shows, actors and stage hands in theatrical productions, participants in university-sponsored events of any kind or type. A graphic design component of this exhibit is also being planned. Graphic design students, instructors, graphic designers and others with any association at all to the participating universities/colleges are invited to enter logo designs, again on a 5 by 7 inch format, using the postal abbreviations for Minnesota and New Mexico (MN and NM). The winning graphic design entry, selected from submissions from both the Minnesota and the New Mexico institutions, will be used as a logo for the exhibit. The works submitted locally to ENMU-R will be collected by Nov. 22. Artwork should be sent to Jennie Bower, Art Department, ENMU-Roswell, P.O. Box 6000, 52 University Blvd., Roswell, NM, 88202. Artists can also contact Bower at 624-7226 or Jennie.bower @roswell.enmu.edu. None of the works will be for sale, none will be returned to the artists at the close of the exhibition, and there will be no awards or prizes (with the exception of the graphic design component of the exhibit). All of the submitted works will remain with the institutions that finally receive them as donations to the art collections of these institutions. The artwork will be displayed during a reception on Jan. 23, 2014, from 4-5:30 p.m. The exhibit will be open to the public Friday, Jan. 24, 2014, through Feb. 13, 2014, which will serve as a preview of ENMU-Roswell, Ruidoso, and Portales artwork before they are shipped to Minnesota. The artwork will then be sent to Minnesota State Community and Technical College in Minnesota for their official display during the spring semester of 2014. Meanwhile, an opening reception displaying the works donated from MState campuses to ENMU-Roswell, ENMU (Portales and Ruidoso) is tentatively planned on Thursday, April 17, 2014, from 4-5:30 p.m. That exhibit will be open to the public from Friday, April 18, 2014, through Friday, May 9, 2014.

NOTICE TO OUT-OF-TOWN SUBSCRIBERS

Listed below are our distributors in your local delivery area:

Buena Vida, Picacho, Tinnie, Hondo, Glencoe

Ruidoso, Alto Ruidoso Downs, Capitan, Lincoln

Carrizozo, Ft. Stanton

Artesia (Inside City Limits) Dexter, Rural Dexter

Hagerman Rural Hagerman Rural Artesia Lake Arthur Rural Roswell

Dan Parson 575.937.6539

Dan Parson 575.937.6539

Dan Parson 575.937.6539

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Carmen Scafella 575.625.0727

Circulation Department 575.622.9480

Any questions or comments? Call 1-888-842-4121

LOCAL

Roswell Daily Record

Cemetery plans: revisited, revised and revived Please bear with me for what I feel will be the last recap of events in an ongoing disagreement as to how the Roswell veterans cemetery should be created. Things are finally coming together and prospects for a veterans cemetery in our area look very promising. The past problems have simply been over how long the creation should take and what degree of perfection is necessary. The original plan (2 ½ years ago) was to finish the immediate necessary preparation and construction within 90 days, and start burials within the first six months. Then, the city would take over the maintenance and upkeep after the “veterans” finished sections ready for interments. During the city’s approval process, another plan focusing on site construction (which would be VA certified) was recommended by the mayor and city planners. This would mean the federal government would take over maintenance and cemetery management after construction was completed. That approach yielded about one chance out of 100 that Roswell would be approved as a VA National Cemetery (as Santa Fe did receive). A local conflict ensued over long-term versus short-term completion. More than a year ago, I wrote a

Leave your mark

column on Louisiana Sen. Mary Landrieu obtaining $8.4 million for a 21-acre rural veterans cemetery in Slidell, La., so that “Louisiana military veterans and their families shouldn’t have to travel hundreds of miles for cemetery services or to visit the graves of their loved ones.” I suggested in the column that possibly Sen. Landrieu could instruct our State’s politicians on how to accomplish that same task in New Mexico. Then, in a column I wrote three months ago, I made the following admonition, “Consider the following: the State of Louisiana currently has seven Government veterans cemeteries, three National and four State. Sen. Mary Landrieu has also obtained $8.4 million for additional veterans cemetery funding. “After sacrificing to defend and protect our country, our military families should not have to travel (100 miles) or more for cemetery services or to visit the graves of their loved ones,” Sen. Landrieu said. Seventy-eight miles is the target limit in Louisiana. Our New Mexico Congressional people have said there is no money for cemeteries or local VA medical care. Why any local or federal politician can’t see why veterans get (negative) and (angry) totally blows my mind! Then, a flurry of activity started.

JOHN TAYLOR VETERANS ADVOCATE

Two months later, Gov. Susana Martinez and New Mexico Veterans Services Secretary Col. Tim Hale announced a plan that would give (us) a shot at a certified veterans cemetery. Not a formal VA National Cemetery, but a VA-approved New Mexico state cemetery, maintained and managed by the State of New Mexico. Project completion is estimated to be approximately 2015-2016, but with a new approach formulated.

A steering committee was formed following meetings held with the veteran community by Congressman Steve Pearce (who invited the Chair man of the House Committee on Veterans Affairs, Jeff Miller, R-FL) and a second meeting by Martinez/Hale (announcing the new approach to certification). The committee members are Jane Batson, Col. Ron McKay, Bert Eldridge, Mayor Del Jurney,Will Cavin, Orlando Padilla, Harry McGraw, Magil

Duran, Richard Moncrief and yours truly. Shortly, a formal Veterans Cemetery Board will be appointed to combine previous efforts into a new, coordinated approach to project completion. A positive turning point and new direction for the veterans cemetery has been created.

Pearce and Miller toured the cemetery property with McKay, Eldridge, McGraw and Taylor to get a feel for the layout, followed by a two hour meeting with the veteran community. Pearce, Miller and McKay, then met with the mayor to discuss planning possibilities involving the two planning factions. The steering committee began to take shape.

Bottom line, the Martinez/Hale state-federal project will begin around 2015-2016 (if all approvals from the VA and State financial people are received). Meanwhile, one acre of the 20acre donated tract will immediately be developed, allowing for completion and first burials in three to four months from Oct. 1. This initial one-acre phase will rely on funding from grants, private and corporate/business contributions (which are tax-deductible). Things are definitely looking up! God bless.

Volunteer


Altrusa, Toastmasters meet every Wednesday LOCAL

Roswell Daily Record

Altrusa

Sertoma

The Roswell Sertoma Club welcomes new members. For more information about this club, drop by during one of its meetings. The Roswell Sertoma meets Fridays at noon at the Roswell Elks Lodge, 1720 N. Montana Ave.

Altrusa International Inc. of Roswell meets every second and fourth Wednesday at noon at the Elks Lodge, 1720 N. Montana Ave. President is Joan Blodgett. Contact Donna Oracion, 624-7403 for more information.

Free flu shots

Toastmasters

Looking to get to the next step on your career ladder? We can give you a boost up. Visit a Toastmasters meeting Wednesday from 12:151:15 p.m. at Aldersgate United Methodist Church on the cor ner of Union Avenue and 19th Street. Be the best employee you can be, come to Toastmasters and learn how. For more information, please call Del at 627-6007. Hope to see you Wednesday!

Farm tour

An organic farm tour to take place Thursday is not open. Anyone interested in joining the Garden Club may call Jan Smith at 6226461. The next regular meeting of the Club will be in October.

Democratic Party

The Democratic Party of Chaves County will hold its monthly meeting on Thurs-

Cannabis Alliance announces schedule

The Southeast New Mexico Medical Cannabis Alliance, the first medical cannabis patient support group in New Mexico, is pleased to announce the meeting schedule for Fall of 2013. SENMMCA meetings will be held the fourth Wednesday of each month. This change is due to patient requests. SENMMCA will no longer meet at the Public Carlsbad Library. SENMMCA would like to thank the Carlsbad Library staff and board, Mayor Dale Janaway, the Carlsbad City Council and the citizens of Carlsbad for their support of the SENMMCA and its patient members. The library provided a safe, secure and centrallylocated place to meet. Without the genuine, concerned support from these people, patients might have found themselves compromised and isolated. Thank you from the patients and caregivers of the SENMMCA. Our new meeting location and information can be found by calling 831-917-5314 or by sending an e-mail inquiry to medicansenm@yahoo.com. The SENMMCA meets every fourth Wednesday of the month. Meetings are at 6:30 p.m. SENMMCA’s meetings are open to all patients and caregivers, legal producers, cannabis advocates and interested, supportive individuals and organizations. SENMMCA collects no fees or dues. No medication is sold, traded, provided by, accepted by, bartered for or allowed to be used at SENMMCA meetings. SENMMCA is not affiliated with any political, religious, special interest, lobbying, government funded or any organization or individual falling within these categories. We are solely supported by and supportive of New Mexico’s Medical Cannabis Patients. SENMMCA in no way supports the illegal use of cannabis.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

day at the Elks Lodge, 1720 N. Montana Ave. Meeting starts at 6:30 p.m. Come early for food. This month’s guest speaker will be New Mexico’s Commissioner on Public Lands, Mr. Ray Powell, M.S. D.V.M.

Rockhounds

The Chaparral Rockhounds will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Roswell Adult Center, 807 N. Missouri Ave. Members and visitors are encouraged to bring a dark blue colored rock, mineral, fossil, or gemstone. Jeri House will present “It’s Showtime!” All visitors are welcome. For details, call 622-5679.

Bottled water

The New Mexico Corrections Department will be taking bottled water to provide to residents affected by

the floods over the past week. Water donations will be accepted through Friday. Residents can drop off water at any Probation and Parole office in the state. Inmates in NMCD custody will then be utilized to transfer the water from the of fices to the towns and cities affected. During this difficult time, we want to do our part to help these communities rebuild.

Spay/neuter clinic

Animal Welfare Alliance will hold its next spay and neuter clinic this Friday, Saturday and Sunday. After being short-handed over the past few months, the clinic will be back in full swing beginning in September. If you would like to schedule an appointment for your dog or cat, please call 317-7430 and a volunteer will call you back.

Easter n New Mexico Medical Center is supplying its Senior Circle chapter with flu vaccine so that free flu shots will be available to members. This vaccine combines the seasonal flu and H1N1 (swine flu) protection in one shot. Anyone 50 and older not currently a Senior Circle member may sign up for $15 and many more benefits in order to take advantage of the free shot. Nurses will be on-hand from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at the facility in the Wilshire Center, 2801 N. Main St., next door to Family Dollar. People are asked not to all come at one time — that creates a wait for you. There’s plenty of vaccine — we won’t run out. Senior Circle is a resource of ENMMC for people in the area age 50 and older. It offers fellowship and activities, health education, parties, travel, discounts, hospital benefits

and much more. For more information, call the office at 623-2311.

Revival

There will be a revival featuring prophetess Lillie Adams of Lubbock, Texas, Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. at St. Paul Ministries Church at 300 N. Missouri Ave. The event will deal with healing, deliverance, salvation, abuse, pornography and individual concerns. Come hear the Word, receive prayer and be blessed.

Basketball league

The Yucca Recreation Center is having registration through Sept. 27 for ages 5 to 8 years for the Youth basketball league. The child must be of school age by Sept. 1. First-time players will need to bring a birth certificate to verify age. All children are required to play two quarters per game. The cost is $30 for the first child and $25 for each additional child. The Yucca Recreation Center is located at 500 S. Richardson Ave. If you have any questions, please call 624-6719.

Community yard sale

The next Community Yard Sale benefiting the

A7

Roswell Humane Society will take place Sept. 28 at 1500 N. Grande Ave., better known as the Russ DeKay Soccer Complex across from the Wool Bowl. More than 100 vendors are expected to begin selling items around 6 a.m., with the sale ending around 3 p.m. that day. Individual yard sale vendors can purchase a permit to be part of the event now through Sept. 27. This may be done online at roswellhumane. org or by visiting the Roswell Humane Society at 703 E. McGaf fey St. For more information, call 6228950.

Heritage dinner

The board of directors for the Historical Society and Foundation of Southeast New Mexico cordially invite you to attend the 32nd annual Heritage Dinner honoring Senate President Pro-Tem Timothy Jennings. The event will take place Tuesday, Oct. 8, at the Roswell Convention Center. Reception and silent auction begin at 6 p.m., with a dinner at 7 p.m. Cost is $50 per person. For more information, call 622-8333.

Volunteer with Carlsbad Caverns on National Public Lands Day

CARLSBAD—On Saturday, Sept. 28, Carlsbad Caverns National Park will recognize National Public Lands Day by offering free general entry to the caver n. This year marks the 20th anniversary of National Public Lands Day, the nation’s largest, single-day volunteer effort for public lands. Free general entry will provide access to the two self-guided trails in the cavern, the Big Room and Main Corridor trails. All other ranger-led tours will require normal fees. Carlsbad Caverns National Park also would like to invite the public to take part in a volunteer service project to actively improve their public lands. Volunteers will join rangers in collecting and removing weathered glass and some metal objects from a dumping area that has not been used for more than 80 years. Items in the dump were discarded by residents, visitors, and staff in the 1920s when Carlsbad Caverns was still a monument. This area was previously outside of the monument’s boundaries and there was no garbage collection in place at the time. Museum Curator

Volunteers should arrive at the Carlsbad Caverns visitor center at 9 a.m. to receive orientation and to caravan a short distance to the work site. The site is a quarter of a mile from a parking area and can only be accessed by foot over rocky, vegetated desert terrain. We recommend strong, sturdy footwear, preferably boots. Also, volunteers who own gloves are asked to bring them. Water will be provided by the park. The project will conclude at 12 p.m., when lunch will be provided for all volunteers.

The Eastern New Mexico University- Roswell Foundation will hold its 11th annual Golf Tournament on Saturday, Oct. 19, at NMMI Golf Course. Tee times are 8 a.m. and 1 p.m. The cost for the four-person team scramble tournament is $75 per player or $300 per team. Teams should have a minimum total handicap of 40.

The fee includes breakfast (for morning players), lunch, green fees, carts, and range balls. The top three teams in each flight will receive gift certificates to the NMMI Pro Shop. Other prizes will go to players who make the longest drive and get closest to the pin. Additional prize drawings will also be held with donated items from local businesses.

David W. Kayser said of the project, “Removing the broken glass will help restore this location to a more natural condition. And park archeologists will sort through removed items to gain some insights into the people who lived in and visited the park in its early days.”

Advance registration is required to participate in the service project. To register, contact Education Specialist Helen Fields by Sept. 25 by phone at 575-785-3127 or by email at Helen_m_fields@nps.gov.

ENMU-R FOUNDATION HOSTING 11TH ANNUAL GOLF TOURNAMENT

Proceeds from the golf tournament will benefit the Foundation’s General Excellence Fund. Event ($1,500), Corporate ($500), and Hole ($150) sponsorships are available.

An Event Sponsor will receive two 4-member golf teams, as well as special banner signage at the event. A Corporate Sponsor will receive one 4-member golf team and signage at

Courtesy Photo

the event. As a Hole Sponsor, the business or individual name will be placed on a sign at a tee box.

To sign up a team or become a sponsor, call Craig Collins at 6247304. Payments can be sent to: ENMU-Roswell Foundation, P.O. Box 6000, Roswell, NM 882026000.

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A8 Wednesday, September 18, 2013

WASHINGTON

Federal gun laws didn’t block Navy Yard shooter AP Photo

In a Friday, April 5, file photo, Newtown, Conn., resident Jennifer Killin wipes tears on the steps of Hartford, Conn., City Hall, during a rally to urge passage of federal legislation to curb gun violence.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The gunman in the mass shootings at the Washington Navy Yard, Aaron Alexis, had a history of violent outbursts, was at least twice accused of firing guns in anger and was in the early stages of treatment for serious mental problems, according to court records and U.S. law enforcement officials. But Alexis apparently managed to exploit seams in the nation’s patchwork of complicated gun laws designed to keep weapons out of the hands of dangerous people. He was able to buy a shotgun in Virginia with out-of-state identification, even though that would have prevented him from buying a hand-

gun. It is illegal for gun dealers to sell handguns to such out-of-state buyers, but the Firearms Owners’ Protection Act, passed by Congress in 1986, opened up interstate sales for shotguns and rifles. Virginia gun laws require only that an out-ofstate buyer show valid identification, pass a background check and otherwise abide by state laws in order to buy a shotgun in the state. Alexis was never prosecuted for the two misdemeanors involving guns. Alexis bought the shotgun at Sharpshooters Small Arms Range in Lorton, Va., on Saturday, according to a statement from the attorney for the gun range.

Michael Slocum said in an email that Alexis rented a rifle, bought bullets and used the range before buying the shotgun and 24 shells. Slocum said Alexis passed a federal background check. Law enforcement officials visited the range Monday, reviewing the store’s video and other records. “What the 1986 Firearms Owners’ Protection Act did was it made it more convenient for gun buyers,” said Kristen Rand, the legislative director at the Violence Policy Center. “That’s the road we’ve been on for a while: The convenience of gun owner always seems to trump the right of victims not to be shot.” Federal gun laws bar the mental-

GOP revise funding strategy WASHINGTON (AP) — House GOP leaders are looking to reverse course and agree to tea party demands to try to use a vote this week on a must-pass temporary government funding bill to block implementation of President Barack Obama’s health care law. A GOP aide says the latest strategy, to be offered to rank-and-file Republicans at a closed-door meeting on Wednesday, would be to link a “defund Obamacare” provision to the stopgap funding bill and send it to the Senate. The aide required anonymity to discuss the strategy because it has not been announced. GOP aides said no decision has been made — “or will be made, until House Republican members meet and talk tomorrow,” Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Tuesday.

The Senate would likely strip out the health care provision and send it to the House, raising the possibility of a confrontation that could lead to a partial government shutdown after the Sept. 30 end of the budget year. The earlier strategy, rejected last week by angry conservatives, would have sent the measure to the Senate as two bills to ensure the Democratic-controlled chamber would be able to ship the spending measure straight to the White House and more easily avert a government shutdown. The idea was to avoid a subsequent vote on a “clean” stopgap spending bill in the House after Senate Democrats vote to strip the provision out. The fear is that angry GOP conservatives might withhold their votes rather than surrender to the Senate and its top Democrat, Majority Leader Harry Reid

of Nevada. The idea of defunding Obama’s health care law has been a crusade of tea party conservatives such as Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and outside groups like the Heritage Foundation. Conservatives are frustrated that Republicans control only one chamber of Congress and have little chance to enact their agenda over the opposition of Obama and Senate Democrats. Conservatives want to take a must-pass bill hostage and add the assault on the Affordable Care Act in an attempt to force Obama and congressional Democrats to make concessions. GOP leaders have viewed the effort with skepticism since Democrats would never go along and that Republicans are likely to get the blame if the impasse leads to a partial government shutdown.

AP Photo

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid of Nev. walks to a closed-door meeting with House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio, and other congressional leaders on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday.

Roswell Daily Record

ly ill from legally buying guns from licensed dealers. But the law requires that someone be involuntarily committed to a mental health facility or declared mentally ill by a judge, and that information must be reported to the FBI in order to appear on a background check. In the wake of the 2007 shooting at Virginia Tech, state authorities changed state laws to make it tougher for the mentally ill to buy guns there. But like other recently accused mass shooters, Alexis was never declared mentally ill by a judge or committed to a hospital. He was being treated by the Veterans Administration as recently as August, according to two law enforcement officials, but the Navy had not declared him mentally unfit. The Virginia Tech shooter, Seung Hi Cho, was declared mentally ill by a judge, but nobody ever reported it to federal authorities to get him included in the database of banned purchasers. After the December massacre at a Connecticut elementary school, U.S. lawmakers pushed to overhaul gun laws. Among the proposals was a ban on military-style rifles, including the popular AR-15, and high-capacity ammunition magazines. There was also a plan to expand background checks to make sure anyone who wanted a gun got the approval of the federal government. No legislation has moved forward

in Congress, despite urgent pleas from the president, some lawmakers and victims’ families. President Barack Obama has made a few narrow administrative changes, but those are not likely to impact the kinds of guns most often found at crime scenes. Obama said Tuesday he was concerned that an American ritual could emerge where every few months, the nation suffers a horrific mass shooting, then fails to take action to stop the next one from occurring. He said he would continue speaking out about the need for new gun laws, but that ultimately, it’s up to lawmakers. “I’ve taken steps that are within my control,” Obama said in an interview with Telemundo. “The next phase now is for Congress to go ahead and move.” Monday’s shooting prompted a new round of calls for action from lawmakers. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., and Sen. Joe Manchin, D.-W.Va., the author of a bill on background checks, both said they would like to see a vote on the background checks bill, but the votes aren’t there for passage at this time. Still, Reid said he hopes to get another gun control vote this year. “I don’t want any more bad things to happen, you know. Something’s going to have to get the attention of these characters who don’t want any controls.” Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., a leading advocate for tougher gun control in the Senate, said in a statement that the shooting “is one more event to add to the litany of massacres.” “Congress must stop shirking its responsibility and resume a thoughtful debate on gun violence in this country. We must do more to stop this endless loss of life,” she said.


BUSINESS REVIEW

Roswell Daily Record

Merry Maids makes cleaning a breeze. Merry maids is a professional home cleaning business which has been serving the Roswell area for over 20 years. Founded in 1979, Merry Maids is the largest home cleaning provider in the nation, with customized residential cleaning services through 1,350 franchises and branches in the United States. For local service please call 623-5000 to obtain the services of Merry Maids cleaning professionals.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

A9

“As an Enrolled Agent, I make sure my clients take advantage of all the credits and deductions they are entitled to take. This reduces their tax burden and saves them money,” Marilyn Cozzens says. “It is my main philosophy to see that my clients pay the least amount of tax that they are legally required to pay.” Marilyn operates Cozzens Tax Service at 6275871. Call now for more information!

RDR Business Review Page is a great way to advertise

The Roswell Daily Record’s Business Review Page is a great way for a business to advertise. The Business Review Pages run three times a week, in the Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday papers. There are only a few spots available right now so if you’ve “been thinking about it”, NOW would be the time to get your spot before they’re all gone. Your RDR advertising representative can fill you in on the complete details. Please phone or ask them for the information. The basic setup for the Business Review Page is as follows: You sign up and we run your ad on the bottom half of the Business Review Page on its assigned day (Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday) each week. We have a maximum of twenty six ads running per page. After advertising weekly for six months you will recieve a “free future article” (then another one six months after your first free one and another free one six months after that). as our “Thank You!” for advertising on the busi-

Killgo’s Brake and Alinement, 1508 West Second St., is the place to go for brake and front-end work, on a new vehicle or on a classic like this beautiful 1966 Chevrolet Nova. Ira rodery is correcting a steering problem on this classic. Phone 623-7009 for expert service. If it has anything to do with brakes or front-end work (shocks, struts, ball joints, or wheel bearings,) Killgo’s Brake and Alinement is the place to call. obtain effective advertising have to offer (services We do whatever works best ness review page. and/or product); who you for you. This six month on a small budget. schedule comes from havLeasa Metcalf is the The feature article are (history); where you are ing twenty-six (maximum) typically uses two or three located; when you are open; Business Review Page advertisers per page and a photographs and the equiv- and how to get in touch with Editor. Leasa takes the phofifty-two week year. tographs and either writes alent of two double-spaced you. The typical layout the text (with your input) or With ads starting typewritten pages of inforas low as $21.43 (including mation about your business. can be altered to fit your cir- uses an article that your tax) per week the business Its an ad that looks like a cumstance. If you want provide for your feature review page is ideal for busi- written story. This info usu- more pictures we can cut story. We can also use your nesses large and small to ally consists of what you down on the article’s length. photographs, if you have

ones that you want to use. Many local business owners (like the three pictured here) have found this feature to be an ideal way for them to advertise economically. They have an ad in the Roswell Daily Record once a week, on their regular day, and then they have a half page write-up with pictures twice a year to tell the story of their business. Please call your Roswell Daily Record advertising representative at 622-7710 for complete information and prices. In this economy you’ve got to advertise to stay in business, and the Roswell Daily Record’s Business Review page is an effective way to do it. Call now while there are still spaces available. Its a great deal and you will see more customers coming in the front door of your business when you advertise in the newspaper. Advertising in the Roswell Daily Record works because it is a great way to inform people about your business and what you have to offer. Phone 622-7710.

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A10 Wednesday, September 18, 2013

WEATHER

Roswell Seven-day forecast Today

Mostly sunny

Tonight

Partly cloudy

Thursday

Friday

Partly sunny

Saturday

Partly sunny

Partly sunny

Sunday

Sunny and warm

Roswell Daily Record

National Cities

Monday

Sunny and warm

Tuesday

Sunny and warm

High 86°

Low 65°

88°/64°

83°/60°

84°/62°

89°/60°

90°/59°

89°/59°

SSE at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

SSE at 4-8 mph POP: 10%

SW at 4-8 mph POP: 15%

NW at 10-20 mph POP: 25%

N at 4-8 mph POP: 5%

SE at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

SSE at 8-16 mph POP: 10%

SSW at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

New Mexico Weather

Roswell through 8 p.m. Tuesday

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

Temperatures High/low ........................... 82°/66° Normal high/low ............... 85°/58° Record high ............... 98° in 2005 Record low ................. 41° in 1968 Humidity at noon .................. 60%

Farmington 82/54

Clayton 85/59

Raton 82/50

Precipitation 24 hours ending 8 p.m. Tue. . Month to date ....................... Normal month to date .......... Year to date .......................... Normal year to date .............

0.15" 3.64" 0.93" 8.24" 9.86"

Santa Fe 79/53

Gallup 76/50

Tucumcari 90/63

Albuquerque 82/62

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Clovis 83/62

Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading

Ruidoso 71/56

T or C 82/64

Source:Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

Sun and Moon The Sun Today Thu. The Moon Today Thu. Full

Rise 6:43 a.m. 6:44 a.m. Rise 6:25 p.m. 7:02 p.m. Last

Sep 19

Sep 26

New

Oct 4

Set 7:00 p.m. 6:59 p.m. Set 5:49 a.m. 6:53 a.m.

Alamogordo 83/63

Silver City 80/61

ROSWELL 86/65 Carlsbad 87/67

Hobbs 86/65

Las Cruces 82/65

First

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013

Oct 11

Regional Cities Today Thu. 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

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

83/63/s 82/62/s 69/40/s 86/66/s 87/67/s 72/44/s 85/59/s 67/52/s 83/62/s 82/63/s 80/60/s 82/54/s 76/50/s 86/65/s 82/65/s 78/52/s 76/54/s 85/59/s 85/65/s 84/62/s 76/50/s 82/50/s 69/42/s 86/65/s 71/56/s 79/53/s 80/61/s 82/64/s 90/63/s 78/55/s

83/60/pc 82/59/pc 69/40/pc 90/67/pc 89/67/pc 72/41/t 79/54/pc 70/46/pc 83/59/pc 86/63/pc 81/58/pc 81/51/pc 77/49/pc 88/61/pc 86/65/pc 76/47/pc 76/53/pc 85/60/pc 88/64/pc 85/59/pc 75/47/pc 77/47/pc 67/39/pc 88/64/pc 73/54/pc 80/54/pc 82/61/pc 83/63/pc 87/60/pc 78/54/pc

W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice

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ARIES (March 21-April 19) Your hard work and effort will pay off far more than you might’ve thought possible. You could find an YOUR HOROSCOPE instrumental partner to be overserious. Do not take this person’s attitude personally. Opportunities surround your home and your personal life. Tonight: Not to be found! TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Everything from your gait to the way you carry yourself exudes resilience and confidence. A partner could be jealous, and he or she might be very cold toward you as a result. Don’t let this behavior get to you. Make your presence known. Tonight: Rearrange your plans, if need be. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You have a strong sense of what needs to be done, and it is unlikely that you will settle for anything less than what you want. Money might flow out of your account as quickly as it goes in. Take a break in the afternoon in order to pace yourself. Tonight: A must appearance. CANCER (June 21-July 22) You are in the position to make one of your long-desired dreams a reality, yet

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Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

49/43/r 80/65/pc 72/51/s 71/55/s 76/56/pc 80/68/pc 76/61/s 94/76/pc 86/51/pc 77/62/pc 82/70/s 89/73/pc 91/76/pc 82/66/pc 90/70/pc 91/71/s 79/60/pc 86/67/s

51/36/pc 82/65/pc 77/57/pc 75/60/s 81/57/pc 87/70/t 81/66/pc 92/74/pc 70/48/s 82/67/pc 86/69/pc 89/74/s 91/76/t 85/68/t 88/64/t 91/71/s 83/64/s 84/63/t

U.S. Extremes

Today 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

Thu.

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88/77/t 86/69/pc 82/71/pc 88/77/pc 72/56/s 90/69/s 90/73/t 73/54/s 103/79/s 75/57/pc 70/49/pc 76/56/pc 87/71/pc 70/48/s 73/63/pc 66/49/c 97/73/s 74/59/s

88/76/pc 86/66/t 80/57/t 87/76/pc 75/62/s 80/56/t 88/73/pc 76/60/s 101/79/s 77/61/pc 79/54/s 80/57/s 90/71/t 75/53/s 76/65/pc 74/54/s 96/73/s 78/62/pc

(For the 48 contiguous states)

State Extremes

High: 115° .........Death Valley, Calif. Low: 25° ........... Saranac Lake, N.Y.

High: 86° ........................ Lordsburg Low: 37° ........................Eagle Nest

National Cities

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

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there might be some fear around realizing this wish. You could trip yourself up unless you are willing to root out the issue. Revamp plans with a key associate or loved one. Tonight: Buy tickets to a concert. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You have pushed so hard lately that your energy seems to be waning, even though your enthusiasm remains high. If you would take just an hour for relaxing, and then delegate what you can to others, you will feel revitalized. Tonight: Go along with a loved one’s request. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You tend to let others take the lead. Some people might not realize that you make a conscious choice to defer to them; otherwise, they could be taken aback. A meeting that transforms into a friendly get-together will be the highlight of your day. Tonight: Say “yes.” LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Emphasis is on routine and daily matters. You might want to make a situation more exciting. You are likely to tease someone whom you’ve put on a pedestal. Fortunately, all parties involved have a sense of humor. Tonight: Put your feet up and watch a favorite TV show. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You might want to express concern about someone’s interpretation of a situation. Perhaps you feel as though this person is way off. Realize that it could be just your wild imagination. Make a point to indulge a loved one. Tonight: Adapt to a friend’s request.

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SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) If you can play it low-key, you’ll feel better by the end of the day. A partner could come through for you in a major way. You might not believe everything you hear. Do your own research, and as a result, you will feel more confident in making decisions. Tonight: At home. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Emphasize your priorities. You know what will happen if you are able to get your way. Unfortunately, you might not have that opportunity, as a partner will be so charming that people naturally will gravitate toward his or her way of thinking instead. Tonight: Go with the flow. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You might notice that you have a need to catch up with others financially. The good news is that this attitude is temporary. Your values could be considerably different from those around you. Try not to point out the differences, but do respect them. Tonight: Indulge a little. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You are in your element. You would have to work very hard in order to displease someone in your life. You naturally say and do the right thing. You might not even be aware of the number of admirers you seem to have. Tonight: Be yourself, and let the good times roll. BORN TODAY Actress Greta Garbo (1905), singer Frankie Avalon (1940), cyclist Lance Armstrong (1971)


SPORTS

B

Ace-happy Portales downs Goddard Wednesday, September 18, 2013 Phone: 575-622-7710, ext. 304

KEVIN J. KELLER RECORD SPORTS EDITOR

Section

Roswell Daily Record

Like goals in soccer, kills get the bulk of attention in volleyball and passing gets overlooked. And when you can’t pass, you can’t win. Goddard found that out the hard way on Tuesday at Ground

Zero Gymnasium. The Rockets struggled mightily with serve-receive and never got their offense going in a three-set loss to visiting Portales. “That shut us down. Whenever you let them serve at you like that and we can’t pick the ball up, of course we can’t run any offense,” said Rocket coach Sheri

E-mail: sports@rdrnews.com

Gibson about her team’s struggles with serve-receive. “And then when we would get one, we were throwing them free balls to feed back to us.” Goddard (7-3) allowed 18 aces on the night — 10 in the first set, two in the second set and six in

See ACE, Page B3

Shawn Naranjo Photo

ABOVE: Goddard’s Renee Carrica (4) and Mande Hudson go up for a block during the Rockets’ loss to Portales, Tuesday.

LEFT: Goddard middle blocker Megan Meeks, left, hits an attack over the net during her team’s loss, Tuesday.

GHS controls game, but falls 2-1 TUESDAY

ON THE

PITCH

LAWRENCE FOSTER RECORD ASST. SPORTS EDITOR

Among his famous quotes, of which there are many, legendary Green Bay Packers coach Vince Lombardi said that, “We didn't lose the game; we just ran out of time.” That was the case during the Goddard girls soccer game against Carlsbad on Tuesday. Following a sluggish start, the Rockets dominated possession and shots on goal, but came up short in a 2-1 loss to the Cavegirls. In the game’s first 20 minutes, Carlsbad was the team asserting itself as shots came in bunches. In the 18th minute, the Cavegirls’ Amelia Bierle fired a shot from the right side of the Rocket box that bounced into the opposite corner, making it 1-0. The deficit seemed to serve as a kick starter for Goddard (7-4). In the 20th minute, Danielle Hubbard had a free kick that required a great save by Cavegirl keeper Kodie Johnson to keep the Rockets off the board. Goddard kept the pressure on the remainder of the half, but couldn’t find the back of the net. The Rockets continued their roll in the second half and, finally, in the 54th minute, the pressure paid off. Goddard’s Bethany Alvarez had possession of the ball deep in the Carlsbad box when she fired a cross to her left. The pass found Desarae See PITCH, Page B3 Marty Foster Photo

LEFT: Goddard’s Cristina Ornelas looks to make a move on Carlsbad’s Hannah Johns during their game, Tuesday.

Arnold J. Roe Photo

Sanchez scores 3, RHS pounds Hobbs LOCAL BRIEFS

Roswell’s Victor Garcia gains control of the ball during the Coyotes’ 8-3 victory over Hobbs, Tuesday.

There are few things as sweet in sports as beating a team after losing to them earlier in the season. The Roswell boys soccer team experienced that high on Tuesday after trouncing Hobbs 8-3. Last week, the Eagles handed the Coyotes (11-1) their first loss of the season, thanks in large part to a two-man ref system and the absence of Fernando Sanchez. In the rematch, however, there were three refs and

Sanchez came back with a vengeance. Sanchez scored the first goal in the first minute off a Victor Garcia assist and, for the Coyotes’ second goal, Garcia was the beneficiary of a pass from Diego Aceves to make it 2-0. See BRIEFS, Page B3

Roswell Youth Basketball League 5-8 yrs. Boys/Girls Registration

REGISTRATION DEADLINE: SEPT. 30 YUCCA RECREATION CENTER

— WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 18 — • Frank Phillips at NMMI, 7 p.m.

COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL

Nov. 1-30th 9-13 yrs.

Players Must Bring State Certified Birth Certificates

500 S. Richardson 624-6719 Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8am-8pm

LOCAL SCHEDULE

Must be school age as of Sept. 1st $30.00 1st Child, each additional child $25.00 * All children play 2 quarters each*

We are currently hiring officials. Must pass background check.

SPOTLIGHT 1899 — A tennis tournament known as “The Cincinnati Open” begins. Today, it is the oldest tennis tournament in the United States still played in its original city and is now known as the Cincinnati Masters & Women’s Open. 1946 — Joe Louis knocks out Tami Mauriello in the first round at Yankee Stadium in New York to retain the world heavyweight title.

ON

SPORTS

ON THIS DAY IN ... 1960 — Goose Gonsoulin intercepts four passes to lead the Denver Broncos to a 27-21 win over the Buffalo Bills. 1965 — In his first collegiate game, quarterback Billy Stevens of Texas-El Paso gains 483 total yards against North Texas State. Receiver Chuck Hughes has 349 of those yards. 1996 — Roger Clemens equals his own major

league record, fanning 20 batters and pitching a fourhitter to lead Boston over the Detroit Tigers 4-0. 2005 — Green Bay’s Brett Favre joins Dan Marino and John Elway with 50,000 yards passing and also breaks Elway’s single-stadium NFL touchdown record of 180 with a 4-yard toss to Tony Fisher with 4 seconds left of a 26-24 loss to Cleveland at Lambeau Field.


B2 Wednesday, September 18, 2013

SPORTS

AP Pro32: Broncos move to top of rankings

Peyton Manning and the Denver Broncos dismantled the defending Super Bowl champion Baltimore Ravens in the season opener. Then they delivered a convincing victory on the road against Manning’s younger brother and the rest of the New York Giants. The strong start helped the Broncos hold off the Seattle Seahawks for the top spot in this week’s AP Pro32 power rankings, released Tuesday. The Broncos moved up one spot from second after receiving eight first-place votes. “Denver looks Super Bowl good right now,” said Newsday columnist Bob Glauber, referring to the All-Pro left tackle. After their commanding win over San Francisco on Sunday night, the Seahawks swooped in to take the other four first-place votes and settle in at No. 2. The 49ers, after tallying seven first-place votes last week, fell two spots to third. Seattle, which was fifth last week, settled the debate until the rematch in December about which bitter NFC West division rival is better by beating the 49ers 29-3. The Seahawks managed that even with a rough game by quar-

terback Russell Wilson, further highlighting their aggressive, punishing defense that’s still missing cornerback Brandon Browner and defensive ends Chris Clemons and Bruce Irvin because of injuries. “Can anyone go into Seattle and get a win?” asked voter Pat Kirwan of CBSSports.com and SiriusXM satellite radio. Voters have even begun to envision a Denver -Seattle Super Bowl, as far ahead as February might be. “I’m not convinced Peyton can beat Seahawks’ secondary,” wrote John Czarnecki of FoxSports.com. Houston and Green Bay rounded out the top five. NBC Sports analyst Tony Dungy raised a question about the Texans. “Two come from behind wins. Is that good or bad?” the former Colts coach asked. New England and New Orleans tied for sixth. Chicago was eighth, Atlanta finished ninth, Kansas City jumped seven spots to 10th and Miami made the same leap to 11th. The Dolphins were the lowest of the eight unbeaten teams. The Saints continued their creep

toward the top, catching the eye of the panel with an uncharacteristically stout defense. “My hat is off to Rob Ryan and the defensive product he’s putting on the field,” Kirwan wrote, praising the coordinator. “The Saints have given up 31 points in two games. Last year they gave up 75 points in the first two games.” Added Alex Marvez of FoxSports.com: “Who Dat?!? The Saints’ defense wasn’t supposed to play this well in 2013.” Baltimore, Cincinnati, Dallas, Indianapolis, San Diego, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Detroit and Tennessee filled out slots 12 through 20. The Chargers made the biggest jump, advancing nine spots from 25th after a 33-30 victory on the road over the Eagles. The bottom third of the league comprised Arizona, Buffalo, the Giants, Minnesota, Washington, the Jets, Pittsburgh and Carolina, with Oakland and Tampa Bay tying for 29th. Then came Cleveland, one of eight teams without a win. Finally, for the second straight week, Jacksonville was a unanimous choice for last place. The Jaguars have scored 11 points over two games.

Roswell Daily Record

AP Pro32 Rankings

The Associated Press Pro32 NFL Power Rankings, as voted by a 12-member panel, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Sept. 17, total points based on 32 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 32nd-place vote, and previous ranking: ............................................................W L T Pts Pvs 1. Denver Broncos (8)................................2 0 0 380 2 2. Seattle Seahawks (4) .............................2 0 0 376 3 3. San Francisco 49ers..............................1 1 0 353 1 4. Houston Texans ....................................2 0 0 342 4 5. Green Bay Packers................................1 1 0 322 6 6. New England Patriots............................2 0 0 313 5 6. New Orleans Saints...............................2 0 0 313 6 8. Chicago Bears.......................................2 0 0 301 10 9. Atlanta Falcons.....................................1 1 0 292 8 10. Kansas City Chiefs ..............................2 0 0 280 17 11. Miami Dolphins...................................2 0 0 264 18 12. Baltimore Ravens ................................1 1 0 253 15 13. Cincinnati Bengals..............................1 1 0 251 14 14. Dallas Cowboys...................................1 1 0 219 11 15. Indianapolis Colts ...............................1 1 0 210 9 16. San Diego Chargers.............................1 1 0 190 25 17. Philadelphia Eagles .............................1 1 0 185 12 18. St. Louis Rams....................................1 1 0 183 16 19. Detroit Lions .......................................1 1 0 163 12 20. Tennessee Titans ................................1 1 0 153 21 21. Arizona Cardinals ...............................1 1 0 148 24 22. Buffalo Bills ........................................1 1 0 124 28 23. New York Giants .................................0 2 0 121 20 24. Minnesota Vikings...............................0 2 0 107 22 25. Washington Redskins ..........................0 2 0 100 19 26. New York Jets .....................................1 1 0 91 26 27. Pittsburgh Steelers..............................0 2 0 88 27 28. Carolina Panthers ...............................0 2 0 66 23 29. Oakland Raiders .................................1 1 0 55 30 29. Tampa Bay Buccaneers.......................0 2 0 55 29 31. Cleveland Browns ...............................0 2 0 26 31 32. Jacksonville Jaguars...........................0 2 0 12 32

Rangers snap seven-game skid, stay tied atop wild-card standings ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — It took only one pitch Tuesday night for the Texas Rangers to take the lead in a game for the first time in more than a week. Ian Kinsler drove Jeremy Hellickson’s first fastball for a home run, and the Rangers went on to beat the Tampa Bay Rays 7-1, breaking a sevengame losing streak. “Obviously we’ve been fighting from behind a lot in this last week or so,” Kinsler said. “So to be able to get a first hit out of the way, and a first run out of the way, gave (Alexi) Ogando a little bit of breathing room.” Elvis Andrus felt it from

MLB

American League At A Glance All Times Mountain By The Associated Press East Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Boston . . . . . . . . . . . .92 60 Tampa Bay . . . . . . . . .82 68 Baltimore . . . . . . . . . .80 70 New York . . . . . . . . . .79 72 Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . .69 81 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . .88 63 Cleveland . . . . . . . . . .82 69 Kansas City . . . . . . . .79 72 Minnesota . . . . . . . . .64 86 Chicago . . . . . . . . . . .60 91 West Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Oakland . . . . . . . . . . .88 62 Texas . . . . . . . . . . . . .82 68 Los Angeles . . . . . . . .73 77 Seattle . . . . . . . . . . . .66 85 Houston . . . . . . . . . . .51 100

Pct GB .605 — .547 9 .533 11 .523 12 1⁄2 .460 22

Pct GB .583 — .543 6 .523 9 .427 23 1⁄2 .397 28 Pct GB .587 — .547 6 .487 15 1 .437 22 ⁄2 .338 37 1⁄2

Monday’s Games Detroit 4, Seattle 2 Tampa Bay 6, Texas 2 Cincinnati 6, Houston 1 Kansas City 7, Cleveland 1 Chicago White Sox 12, Minnesota 1 L.A. Angels 12, Oakland 1 Tuesday’s Games Toronto 2, N.Y. Yankees 0 Detroit 6, Seattle 2 Baltimore 3, Boston 2 Texas 7, Tampa Bay 1 Cincinnati 10, Houston 0 Cleveland 5, Kansas City 3 Chicago White Sox 4, Minnesota 3 L.A. Angels at Oakland, 8:05 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Minnesota (Diamond 5-11) at Chicago White Sox (Joh.Danks 4-13), 12:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Vargas 8-7) at Oakland (Griffin 14-9), 1:35 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (P.Hughes 4-13) at Toronto (Happ 4-6), 5:07 p.m. Seattle (Iwakuma 12-6) at Detroit (Verlander 13-11), 5:08 p.m. Baltimore (W.Chen 7-7) at Boston (Peavy 11-5), 5:10 p.m. Texas (D.Holland 9-9) at Tampa Bay (Archer 9-7), 5:10 p.m. Cincinnati (G.Reynolds 1-2) at Houston (Peacock 5-5), 6:10 p.m. Cleveland (Salazar 1-2) at Kansas City (B.Chen 7-3), 6:10 p.m. Thursday’s Games Seattle at Detroit, 11:08 a.m. Houston at Cleveland, 5:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Toronto, 5:07 p.m. Baltimore at Boston, 5:10 p.m. Texas at Tampa Bay, 5:10 p.m. Minnesota at Oakland, 8:05 p.m.

National League At A Glance All Times Mountain

TV SPORTSWATCH

TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press All times Mountain Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Wednesday, Sept. 18 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Noon WGN — Minnesota at Chicago White Sox 5 p.m. ESPN — Texas at Tampa Bay 8 p.m. ESPN — L.A. Dodgers at Arizona SOCCER 12:30 p.m. FSN — UEFA Champions League, Celtic at AC Milan FS1 — UEFA Champions League, Ajax at Barcelona

the on-deck circle. “I think the homer by Ian made the whole team just relax,” he said. “We haven’t scored first in a little while.” Kinsler and Andrus homered and drove in three runs each to help the Rangers pull even with the Rays at the top of the AL wild-card race. The Rangers, who held the No. 1 wild-card spot or the AL West lead for most of the summer, won for only the fourth time in 17 games. “Given the circumstances, it’s a big win,” Kinsler said. “You’ve got to have a sense of relief when you lose seven in a row and

By The Associated Press East Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . .89 62 Washington . . . . . . . .81 70 Philadelphia . . . . . . . .71 80 New York . . . . . . . . . .67 83 Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . .55 96 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L St. Louis . . . . . . . . . . .88 63 Pittsburgh . . . . . . . . .87 64 Cincinnati . . . . . . . . . .86 66 Milwaukee . . . . . . . . .67 83 Chicago . . . . . . . . . . .63 88 West Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Los Angeles . . . . . . . .86 64 Arizona . . . . . . . . . . .76 73 San Diego . . . . . . . . .70 80 San Francisco . . . . . .70 81 Colorado . . . . . . . . . .69 83

Pct GB .589 — .536 8 .470 18 1 .447 21 ⁄2 .364 34

Pct GB .583 — .576 1 .566 2 1⁄2 1 .447 20 ⁄2 .417 25

Pct GB .573 — .510 9 1⁄2 .467 16 .464 16 1⁄2 .454 18

Monday’s Games Philadelphia 12, Miami 2 San Diego 2, Pittsburgh 0 Atlanta at Washington, ppd. Milwaukee 6, Chicago Cubs 1 Cincinnati 6, Houston 1 Colorado 6, St. Louis 2 Arizona 2, L.A. Dodgers 1 Tuesday’s Games Washington 6, Atlanta 5, 1st game Washington 4, Atlanta 0, 2nd game Philadelphia 6, Miami 4 San Diego 5, Pittsburgh 2 San Francisco 8, N.Y. Mets 5 Milwaukee 4, Chicago Cubs 3 Cincinnati 10, Houston 0 St. Louis 11, Colorado 4 L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 7:40 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Atlanta (A.Wood 3-3) at Washington (Ohlendorf 4-0), 5:05 p.m. Miami (Eovaldi 3-6) at Philadelphia (Miner 01), 5:05 p.m. San Diego (T.Ross 3-8) at Pittsburgh (Morton 7-4), 5:05 p.m. San Francisco (M.Cain 8-9) at N.Y. Mets (Harang 0-1), 5:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Rusin 2-4) at Milwaukee (Thornburg 2-1), 6:10 p.m. Cincinnati (G.Reynolds 1-2) at Houston (Peacock 5-5), 6:10 p.m. St. Louis (Wainwright 16-9) at Colorado (Chatwood 7-4), 6:40 p.m. L.A. Dodgers (Fife 4-3) at Arizona (McCarthy 4-9), 8:10 p.m. Thursday’s Games San Diego at Pittsburgh, 10:35 a.m. San Francisco at N.Y. Mets, 11:10 a.m. Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee, 12:10 p.m. St. Louis at Colorado, 1:10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers at Arizona, 1:40 p.m. Miami at Washington, 5:05 p.m.

Holliday leads Cards to 11-4 win over Rockies

DENVER (AP) — Matt Holliday had four hits, including a two-run homer, to help the St. Louis Cardinals take over sole possession of the NL Central with an 11-4 victory over the Colorado Rockies on Tuesday night. The Cardinals entered the night tied with the Pittsburgh Pirates, who lost 5-2 at home to San Diego. St. Louis reduced its magic number for clinching a playoff spot to five with 11 games remaining. Joe Kelly (9-4) baffled the Rockies as he allowed three hits over five sharp innings before turning a 10-0 lead over to the bullpen. The hard-throwing right-hander has been one of the team’s most consistent pitchers since becoming a permanent member of the rotation in July. Juan Nicasio (8-8) struggled with his command, lasting just 2 2⁄3 innings and allowing eight runs, which tied a career high. Holliday led an 18-hit night by the Cardinals, who had seven players with at least two hits. Holliday finished 4 for 4 with a walk, double and two-run homer against his former team. He drove in three runs and scored twice. The Cardinals ran away with the game in the third when they sent 11 batters to the plate and scored six times. Daniel Descalso had a two-run triple in the decisive inning, while Holliday added a double and an RBI

you know you’re a better team than that,” Rangers manager Ron Washington said. Kinsler’s 12th home run broke a streak of seven homerless games for the Rangers, their longest in 23 years. The 1-0 lead marked the first time Texas has led in a game since its last victory, on Sept. 8. Kinsler added a two-run single in the Rangers’ four-run third, driving in three runs on the first two pitches he saw from Helickson (11-9). Andrus followed with his third home run of the season to put the Rangers up 5-0. “The first pitch of the game was not a good fast-

ball,” Hellickson said. “Then I settled down a bit, but in the third I walked the leadof f guy (Mitch Moreland) and you can’t do that against a lineup like that.” Ogando (7-4) won in his first start since Aug. 13, giving up two hits in five innings. He had made four relief appearances after spending three weeks on the disabled list with shoulder inflammation. Ogando retired the first seven Rays he faced, the last four with strikeouts, before Jose Lobaton homered in the third inning. Washington said after the game that Ogando will start Sunday at Kansas City.

SCOREBOARD

single. Colorado’s Michael Cuddyer finished 2 for 3 with a walk and an RBI to raise his average to .331, which is tops in the NL. Kelly hardly seemed intimidated in his first start at Coors Field. He didn’t allow a base runner to reach as far as third base until the fourth inning. He wiggled out of that jam when first baseman Matt Adams corralled Josh Rutledge’s liner. Once Kelly was out of the game, the Rockies went to work as they scored four runs off reliever Carlos Martinez in the seventh. But the bullpen shut down the Rockies from there, with Kevin Siegrist striking out pinch-hitter Jordan Pacheco to end the game. Leadoff hitter Matt Carpenter was frequently on base for the Cardinals, with two singles and a hit by pitch. He leads the league hits (187), doubles (51) and multi-hit games (60). Yadier Molina gave the Cardinals a lead in the first inning with a two-out single to center. Molina is one of the top hitters in the league with runners in scoring position. Todd Helton nearly tied the game in the bottom half of the first, but Holliday made a leaping catch against the fence in left field. The 40-year-old Helton announced last weekend his decision to retire after his 17th season with the Rockies. He leaves as the franchise’s leader in virtually every offensive category.

NFL

National Football League At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain AMERICAN CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct New England . . .2 0 0 1.000 Miami . . . . . . . . .2 0 0 1.000 Buffalo . . . . . . . . .1 1 0 .500 N.Y. Jets . . . . . . .1 1 0 .500 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct Houston . . . . . . .2 0 0 1.000 Indianapolis . . . . .1 1 0 .500 Tennessee . . . . .1 1 0 .500 Jacksonville . . . .0 2 0 .000 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct Baltimore . . . . . . .1 1 0 .500 Cincinnati . . . . . .1 1 0 .500 Pittsburgh . . . . . .0 2 0 .000 Cleveland . . . . . .0 2 0 .000 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct Kansas City . . . .2 0 0 1.000 Denver . . . . . . . .2 0 0 1.000 Oakland . . . . . . .1 1 0 .500 San Diego . . . . . .1 1 0 .500

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct Dallas . . . . . . . . .1 1 0 .500 Philadelphia . . . .1 1 0 .500 N.Y. Giants . . . . .0 2 0 .000 Washington . . . . .0 2 0 .000 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct New Orleans . . . .2 0 0 1.000 Atlanta . . . . . . . . .1 1 0 .500 Carolina . . . . . . .0 2 0 .000 Tampa Bay . . . . .0 2 0 .000 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct Chicago . . . . . . . .2 0 0 1.000 Detroit . . . . . . . . .1 1 0 .500 Green Bay . . . . .1 1 0 .500 Minnesota . . . . . .0 2 0 .000 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct Seattle . . . . . . . . .2 0 0 1.000 St. Louis . . . . . . .1 1 0 .500 San Francisco . . .1 1 0 .500 Arizona . . . . . . . .1 1 0 .500

Thursday’s Game

New England 13, N.Y. Jets 10 Sunday’s Games Kansas City 17, Dallas 16 Houston 30, Tennessee 24, OT Green Bay 38, Washington 20 Chicago 31, Minnesota 30 Atlanta 31, St. Louis 24 San Diego 33, Philadelphia 30 Miami 24, Indianapolis 20 Baltimore 14, Cleveland 6 Buffalo 24, Carolina 23 Arizona 25, Detroit 21 New Orleans 16, Tampa Bay 14 Oakland 19, Jacksonville 9 Denver 41, N.Y. Giants 23 Seattle 29, San Francisco 3 Monday’s Game Cincinnati 20, Pittsburgh 10 Thursday, Sept. 19 Kansas City at Philadelphia, 6:25 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 22 San Diego at Tennessee, 11 a.m. Arizona at New Orleans, 11 a.m. St. Louis at Dallas, 11 a.m. Cleveland at Minnesota, 11 a.m. Houston at Baltimore, 11 a.m. N.Y. Giants at Carolina, 11 a.m. Detroit at Washington, 11 a.m. Tampa Bay at New England, 11 a.m. Green Bay at Cincinnati, 11 a.m. Atlanta at Miami, 2:05 p.m. Indianapolis at San Francisco, 2:25 p.m. Jacksonville at Seattle, 2:25 p.m. Buffalo at N.Y. Jets, 2:25 p.m. Chicago at Pittsburgh, 6:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 23 Oakland at Denver, 6:40 p.m.

Cowboys release DT Landon Cohen, add David Carter

PF PA 36 31 47 30 45 46 28 30

PF PA 61 52 41 41 40 39 11 47

PF PA 41 55 41 34 19 36 16 37

PF PA 45 18 90 50 36 30 61 61 PF PA 52 48 63 60 54 77 47 71

PF PA 39 31 48 47 30 36 31 34

PF PA 55 51 55 49 66 54 54 65

PF PA 41 10 51 55 37 57 49 48

IRVING, Texas (AP) — The Dallas Cowboys have released defensive tackle Landon Cohen and replaced him with David Carter. Carter was added by the Cowboys on Tuesday, a little more than two weeks after the Arizona Cardinals released him at the end of the preseason. He was a sixth-round pick by Arizona in 2011. Carter has played in 32 games with four starts, recording 18 tackles and a sack. Cohen signed with Dallas early in training camp and played in both regular-season games, getting one tackle and one pressure. The Cowboys also released receiver Danny Coale from their practice squad and replaced him with receiver Jamar Newsome, who has played in eight games with Jacksonville and Kansas City.

Clark to fill in for Clady as Manning’s protector

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — The Denver Broncos’ excitement over their scorching start is tempered by a serious injury to All-Pro left tackle Ryan Clady and the specter of being without Peyton Manning’s protector on the blindside for a lengthy time. Clady might miss the rest of the season or at least a good chunk of it with a sprained left foot. While the team hasn’t specified the exact nature or extent of his injury, it’s believed to be a Lisfranc sprain, which usually involves a separation of ligaments and joints in the bottom of the foot and requires an arduous rehab. The Broncos already have been without two of their other stars. All-Pro linebacker Von Miller is serving a six-game suspension and perennial Pro Bowl cornerback Champ Bailey (foot) hasn’t practiced since Aug. 17. Clady was hurt in the closing minutes Sunday when Giants defensive lineman Cullen Jenkins rolled up on him while the Broncos were trying to run out the clock in their 41-23 win. The Broncos were still contemplating their options with Clady on Tuesday. Among them: placing him on season-ending injured reserve or on IR with a designation to return, which would keep him out a minimum of eight weeks. That’s a special one-time-only provi-

“Ogando went out there and did way beyond the call of duty, and I think he deserves a lot of credit,” Washington said. “We weren’t expecting five (innings). I was hoping he could go deep, but he gave us five quality innings.” Leonys Martin doubled twice and added a ninthinning home run, his eighth of the season. Rookie Wil Myers had two of Tampa Bay’s four hits. Hellickson, who is 1-6 in his last nine starts, gave up five earned runs in 2 23 innings. NOTES: Kinsler has led off 29 games with a home run, two this season. ... Rangers OF Nelson Cruz,

sion of IR that would allow Clady to return to practice in six weeks and rejoin the roster in Week 11, at the earliest. Either way, their new left tackle is undrafted fifth-year journeyman Chris Clark, who coincidentally signed a two-year contract extension this week. Clady wasn’t in the locker room during the open access period Tuesday, and coach John Fox won’t meet with the media again until Thursday. Clark said Clady’s spirits are up but that he didn’t even ask him how long he’ll be out. “You know why? It really doesn’t matter,” Clark said. “I’m here to do a job and if my job is to start for however long, that’s how it’s going to be. Like I said, I’ve always viewed myself as a starter. In this league you can’t view yourself as a backup, so I prepare myself as if I’m going to play every week.” The Broncos are riding high behind Manning, the first NFL quarterback ever to throw for nine touchdowns with no interceptions in the first two weeks of a season. Clark, who has started six times at tight end, will make his first start at left tackle on Monday night when the Broncos (2-0) host the Oakland Raiders (1-1), who are tied for the league lead with nine sacks. “I’ve been behind Ryan for a while now and I’ve learned a lot, so I can pick his brain without even talking to him,” Clark said. “Just trying to do things the way he does things, mimic things he does but put my own twist on it is pretty much the way I play. I feel everything will be OK.” Manning leads the league with a 131.0 passer rating and he hasn’t been intercepted in 85 pass attempts — thanks in part to the protection provided by Clady. Clark put in plenty of work with Manning and the rest of the starters in the offseason while Clady was recuperating from right shoulder surgery and awaiting a new contract. “That definitely helped a lot,” Clark said. “You get a chance to learn different things, snap counts, learn his rhythm.” Clark said he realizes that anybody would be a downgrade from Clady, a three-time Pro Bowler and two-time All-Pro who allowed just one sack in more than 1,110 snaps last season and has played in all 85 of Denver’s games since entering the NFL in 2008 as the 12th overall pick. That dominance and durability led to a five-year, $52.5 million contract this summer. “It’s not about filling a guy’s shoes for me,” Clark said. “It’s about me creating my legacy or whatever, just helping the team the best way I can, doing my job.” Clark said his aim right now is to make sure the Broncos’ Super Bowl aspirations aren’t derailed because of Clady’s injury. “No one wants to be that guy,” Clark said.

Transactions

Tuesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL COMMISSIONER’S OFFICE—Suspended Seattle minor league RHP Forrest Snow (Tacoma-PCL) 50 games after a second positive test for a drug of abuse in violation of the Minor League Drug Prevention and Treatment Program. NATIONAL BASEBALL HALL OF FAME— Promoted Brad Horn to vice president of communications and education, Ken Meifert to vice president of sponsorship and development and Erik Strohl to vice president of exhibitions and collections. American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Reinstated OF Steve Pearce from the 15-day DL. BOSTON RED SOX—Recalled INF Brock Holt, RHP Brayan Villarreal and RHP Steven Wright from Pawtucket (IL). HOUSTON ASTROS—Placed C Jason Castro on the 15-day DL. LOS ANGELES ANGELS—Reinstated INF Chris Nelson from the 15-Day DL. National League CHICAGO CUBS—Released 3B Cody Ransom. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CHICAGO BULLS—Promoted Randy Brown to assistant general manager, Ivica Dukant to director of international scout-

who is suspended for the rest of the regular season, began workouts at the team’s training facility in Arizona. ... The Rangers’ 43-33 road record is the best in the majors. ... The Rays promoted 32-year old outfielder Freddy Guzman and added him to the active roster. Guzman has played in 47 major league games, most recently in 2009 with the New York Yankees. ... . RHP Jesse Crain, who has been on the DL with a right shoulder strain since the Rays acquired him from the Chicago White Sox on July 29, could be activated as early as Wednesday. ing/special assistant to the general manager and Nick Papendieck to head strength coach. Named Matt Johnson assistant strength coach. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS—Signed WRs Dan Buckner and Brittan Golden to the practice squad. Released WR Sam McGuffie from the practice squad. ATLANTA FALCONS—Placed LB Sean Weatherspoon on the injured reserve/return list. CAROLINA PANTHERS—Placed S Charles Godfrey on injured reserve. Signed S Robert Lester from the practice squad. CINCINNATI BENGALS—Terminated the contract of RB Bernard Scott. CLEVELAND BROWNS—Waived WR Tori Gurley. Released WR Arceto Clark. DALLAS COWBOYS—Released DT Landon Cohen. Signed DT David Carter. Released WR Danny Coale from the practice squad. Signed WR Jamar Newsome to the practice squad. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS—Placed G Donald Thomas on injured reserve. Waived FB Dan Moore. SAN DIEGO CHARGERS—Signed CB Crezdon Butler. Waived DE Drake Nevis. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Placed NT Ian Williams on injured reserve. Signed FB Owen Marecic to a one-year contract. Canadian Football League CFL—Named Jim Lawson chairman of the Board of Governors. WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS—Added OL Dan Knapp and Jarvis Jones to the practice roster. Arena Football League LA KISS—Named Bob McMillen coach. HOCKEY National Hockey League CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Assigned F David Gilbert to Rockford (AHL), D Dillon Fournier to Rouyn-Noranda (QMJHL), D Travis Brown to Moose Jaw (WHL) and G Brandon Whitney to Victoriaville (QMJHL). Released Fs Wade Brookbank and Pat Mullane and D Joe Gleason, Jared Nightingale and Bobby Shea. MONTREAL CANADIENS—Assigned Fs Louis Leblanc, Joonas Nattinen, Stephen MacAulay, Sven Andrighetto, Stefan Fournier and Erik Nystrom; D Morgan Ellis, Darren Dietz and Dalton Thrower; and G Robert Mayer to Hamilton (AHL). OTTAWA SENATORS—Signed F Curtis Lazar to a three-year, entry-level contract. Returned D Ben Harpur to Guelph (OHL), G Chris Driedger to Calgary (WHL), F Vincent Dunn to Gatineau (QMJHL) and G Francois Brassard to Quebec (QMJHL). PHOENIX COYOTES—Assigned RW Henrik Samuelsson to Edmonton (WHL). SAN JOSE SHARKS—Assigned D Konrad Abeltshauser, G JP Anderson, D Kyle Bigos, LW Jimmy Bonneau, RW Riley Brace, RW Chris Crane, D Dylan DeMelo, RW James Livingston, C Travis Oleksuk, C Sebastian Stalberg and C Marek Viedensky to Worcester (AHL). TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Signed F Joel Vermin to a three-year, entry-level contract. Released F Brett Welychka, D Jake Dotchin and G Eric Brassard from their amateur tryout agreements. COLLEGE CARTHAGE—Named Dennis Cox II women’s lacrosse coach. KANSAS STATE—Named Candace PerryFairer assistant track coach. MAINE-FARMINGTON—Named Tess Perry men’s and women’s assistant cross country coach, Matt Lamb men’s assistant soccer coach, Alyssa St. Pierre and Hattie Laliberte assistant field hockey coaches, Dave Ronald women’s assistant soccer coach, Devorn Hansack assistant baseball coach and Orion Cochrane assistant golf coach. MISSISSIPPI STATE—Announced basketball G Jalen Steele will not play his senior season. NEW MEXICO—Suspended DL Gerron Borne and Paytron Hightower indefinitely. SETON HALL—Named Oliver Antigua men’s assistant basketball coach. VANDERBILT—Dismissed WR Chris Boyd following his conditional guilty plea for his role in attempting to cover up the rape of an unconscious student.


SPORTS

Roswell Daily Record

Pitch

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Flores, who was able to redirect the ball to the opposite post. The shot bounced off the post and in, tying the game at 1. “We just told them to hang in there and play tough,” Rocket coach Betty Elizondo said regarding what she told her team at halftime. “We felt like when we were coming of f the field, Carlsbad was getting to them a little bit. We told them, ‘No, you can’t have that. We have got to play tough and be mentally tough.’” In the 59th minute, Carlsbad got one of its few second-half opportunities and cashed in when Shay Rostro scored off a deflection. Goddard had numerous chances to tie the score, particularly in the final 10 minutes when possession was seemingly just in the Cavegirl box. In the 72nd minute, Goddard sent two crosses into the box, but the Rockets couldn’t get a good touch on either pass. A few minutes later, Hubbard sent another cross into the box, but Cierra Saavedra’s header was saved by Johnson. Despite the loss, Elizondo said that this was a good game for her team. “The girls decided to step up and play. I told them,

Ace

B3

DON’T Miss Out On Our

Lawrence Foster Photo

Goddard’s Bethany Alvarez (22) dribbles around Carlsbad’s Amelia Bierle during their game, Tuesday. Bierle and the Cavegirls won the match 2-1. ‘This is a 5A school and 5A schools are going to play physical,’” she said. “‘You have to learn to do that. We stepped up and hopefully realized that we can play that physical game. We played well. “I know the score doesn’t indicate it, but I felt like we

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the third set. That killed any chance of the Rockets using their decided offensive advantage. “We just couldn’t get our rhythm. We couldn’t get anything started,” Gibson said. “We just couldn’t get anything going. I don’t know. (The girls) weren’t sure what was going on. “We just never got into the (match).” In the first set, Portales added seven kills to the 10 aces for a 25-20 victory. The Rams trailed in the early going, but took control when Kristen Wagner, who led all hitters with 14 kills on the night, came up to serve. She delivered five aces during an eight-point service game, helping Portales take a 14-9 lead. Goddard closed within three late in the set, but Portales won three of the next four to close out the victory. In the second set, Portales again had seven kills, including four from Wagner, on its way to a 25-21 win. Goddard controlled throughout the

Briefs

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The rout was on from there as Garcia (two), Brighton Pope, Gerrardo Barron, Sanchez and Chris Mesquita added to the total. Roswell coach James Vernon said that this was a much different game than the first matchup. “The guys weren’t able to play their style in Hobbs and we weren’t able to push into the attack,” he said. “(In this game having all three refs) changed the whole scheme of things because we could play an offsides trap.”

Carlsbad 2, Goddard 0 CARLSBAD — Carlsbad scored two second-half goals to come away with a win over visiting Goddard on Tuesday. Miguel Robles had 10 saves in goal for the Rockets (4-6).

NMMI 2, Artesia 1, PK AR TESIA — NMMI’s Pablo Zamorano had the winning penalty kick as the Colts came away with a 6-5 penalty-kick win over the Bulldogs on Tuesday. The Colts (2-5) trailed 1-0 before German Corral tied the game with a goal in the 32nd minute. Neither team was able to score the rest of the game or either overtime, which sent it to penalty kicks.

Girls soccer

Santa Teresa 2, Roswell 0 SANTA TERESA — Roswell fell to 5-6 with a road loss to Santa Teresa on Tuesday. The Coyotes’ Izzie Cain had 15 saves in goal.

Prep vollebyall

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Hagerman 3, Loving 0 LOVING — Hagerman improved to 6-2 with a straight-set win over Loving on Tuesday. The Bobcats won by scores of 25-13, 2624 and 25-14. Lori Gossett paced Hagerman with 16 kills, while Taylor Hamill and Jessica

controlled the game. Carlsbad snuck two shots on us and sometimes that’s all it takes ... (But) I believe that this is going to be a good game for them to realize they can do this. We can play at this level and we can compete at this level.” l.foster@rdrnews.com

set, but back-to-back tandem blocks by the Rams started a five-point run that closed the set for Portales. In the third set, Goddard built a 1514 lead, but saw it wiped away by another long service game and a dominating finish that gave Portales a 25-17 win. Kambrey Blakey’s kill tied the match at 15 and spurred a run that saw the Rams win 11 of the final 13 points. During the run, Portales had five kills and four aces. All of it came back to one thing — serve-receive. Gibson said afterward that her team may have just gotten the wake-up call it needed. “I think this is maybe a wake up for them. Hopefully we’ll turn it around from now. “We just had that same conversation in (the locker room). ... When they’re on top of their game, I don’t think they are going to be stopped very easily.” Shaylee Griffin led Goddard’s offense with six kills on the night. Megan Meeks added five kills.

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Rodriguez each had nine kills. Emeli Najera picked up four blocks for the Bobcats.

Roswell 3, Carlsbad 0 CARLSBAD — Roswell improved to 5-4 with a road victory over Carlsbad on Tuesday. The Coyotes won by scores of 25-20, 2522 and 25-16. Georgia Lynn Eldridge led Roswell with 11 kills, while Katelyn Jordan added 14 assists and three aces. Charlotte Gonzalez had nine digs for the Coyotes.

Gateway Chr. 3, Capitan 1 Gateway Christian improved to 4-5 with a four-set win over Capitan on Tuesday. The Warriors took Game 1 25-20, but dropped the second game 25-21. Gateway rebounded to take Game 3 25-19 and closed out the match with a 26-24 win in the fourth game. Charlee Longmire led the Warriors with nine kills, six digs and four aces, while Jordan Menagh chipped in with four kills and an ace. Ali Taylor had a kill and Mikayla Fuller had a block for Gateway. NMMI 3, Hondo Valley 1 HONDO — Bianca Walker had 13 kills and NMMI improved to 10-4 on the year with a four-set victory over Hondo Valley, Tuesday. The Colts won the first set 25-23, the third set 25-14 and the fourth set 25-23. Hondo Valley’s lone win came in the second set, 25-19. Harley Bonnell added five kills and three aces for NMMI.

Texico 3, Dexter 1 DEXTER — Dexter took Game 1, but dropped the next three on its way to a loss to Texico on Tuesday night. The Demons took the first game 25-23, but lost the next three by scores of 25-18, 25-23 and 25-14. Nayely Anderson led Dexter with 10 kills and three digs, while Danielle Batista had 14 digs for the Demons. Brenda Granado added nine kills and Pamala Munoz collected 13 digs for Dexter.

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B4 Wednesday, September 18, 2013 OBITUARIES

Esther (Alena) Jolliff

Esther (Alena) Jolliff was born August 20, 1934, in Pine Valley, Oklahoma, to Jim and Lucy Robinson. She married Kenneth (Doyle) Jolliff on April 30, 1961, in Oakland, CA. She passed from this life into the arms of her Lord and Savior Jesus Christ on Tuesday, September 17, 2013. She was preceded in death by her parents: Jim and Lucy Robinson; and brother Elmer Robinson. She is survived by her husband of the family home, Doyle Jollif f; her daughter, Phyllis Y. Jolliff, of Roswell; her son, David Jolliff and wife, Phyllis D. of Lemoore, CA; her son, Jim Jollif f and wife, Tammy, of Roswell, NM; her son, Steve Jolliff and wife, Sue of Prescott Valley, AZ; her grandchildren: Kerstin and husband, Jason Velho, of Lemore, CA; Wesley Jolliff and wife, Jackie, of Crofton, MD; Andrew, Kenny and Stephen Jolliff, Roswell; Kailey of Doughtery, of Prescott Valley, AZ; great-grandchildren: Amery and Liam Velho, of Lemore, CA; her sisters, Grace Pendergrass, of Corvallis, OR; Edith Marks, of Brookings OR; Alice Worley, of Las Alamos, NM; her brothers: Joe Robinson and wife, Florence of Shallowwater, TX, and John Robinson and wife, Laura, of Boles Acres, NM; her sisters, Glenna Cloin and husband, Cecil, of Parks, AZ; sister-in-law, Ellen Moncher, of Nockin, CA and numerous nieces, nephews, cousins and friends all left to cherish her memory. As a child, Alena lived in New Mexico, Arizona and Oregon. She graduated from high school in Mapleton, OR, and moved back to New Mexico and worked at Holloman Air Force

OBITUARIES

Base. She later went to college at Central Bible College in Springfield, MO. She met her husband, Doyle Jollif f, at Holloman Air Force Base in Alamogordo, NM. They got married on April 30, 1961, in Oakland, CA. They lived in San Leandro, CA, then moved to Fremont, CA, where she raised their four children as a homemaker. She worked at Home Express in Fremont after the children were all grown. Alena moved to Roswell in October of 2001. She attended First Assembly of God in Roswell for many years and then moved to Midway Assembly of God in Midway, NM. She touched many people’s lives by being a prayer warrior. She would wake in the middle of the night to pray for those brought to her mind. She loved her Lord and Savior. She loved her husband of almost 53 years as well as her children and grandchildren. She would make special meals or treats for each of them. Memorial services will be at 10 a.m. Friday, September 20, 2013, at Midway Assembly of God with Pastor Danny Sons and her Brother Joe Robinson officiating. Graveside will follow the memorial at South Park Cemetery and a lunch will be provided by the church for all friends and family to gather together at Midway Café at 12:30 p.m. Honorary pallbearers will be Andrew, Kenny, Stephen, and Wesley Jolliff, Jason Velho, Pete Gonzalez, Bob Cabral, Neal Barnes, Morris Schertz and Liam Velho. The family would like to thank Dr. Evan Nelson for his years of gentle caring, Dr. Vijay Chechani, most recently Dr. Vogelsang, Dr. Oscar Hernandez and Dr. Robert Rader, the nurses and Roberto and Amanda, respiratory help and all of the hospice staff for the loving care of a wife and mother. Please take a moment to share your memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com. Services are under the direction of Anderson-Bethany Funeral Home and Crematory.

scheduled for 10 a.m., Friday, September 20, 2013, at LaGrone Funeral Chapel for Phyllis Inez Pirtle Smith, age 85, of Roswell, who passed away on September 15, 2013. Chaplain John Bariou will officiate with interment to follow at South Park Cemetery. Phyllis was bor n June 24, 1928, in Roswell to J.C. Pirtle and Anna Patterson; they have preceded her in death as well as two sons: Thurman E. and Sephen A. Smith; brothers: Jesse Pirtle, Jerald Pirtle, Raymond Rockow and Ira Pirtle; sisters: Ruby Ashford and Ivalene Shannon. Phyllis married Emmett Smith in Roswell on April 13, 1947. He also has preceded her in death. Phyllis is survived by sister, Marie Tucker, and her husband, Harold, of Roswell; nine grandchildren: Dianna Bariou and her husband, John, of San Angelo, TX, Beverly Long, of Colorado Springs, CO, Shane Curry, of Alamogordo, NM, Robert Smith and his wife, Raven, of Elizabeth, CO, Mike Smith, of Las Cruces, Stephanie Ohle, of Vanceboro, NC, Terry Smith and his wife, Chrisi, of Roswell, NM, Kelli Ciaramitaro and her husband, Pete, of Memphis, TN, and Michelle Bradshaw and her husband, Tim, of Chicago, IL; She also had a multitude of great-grandchildren, nieces and nephews. Phyllis received her degree at ENMU-Portales in 1962. She was a thirdgrade teacher at Del Norte School; she retired in 1983. Condolences may be made online at lagronefuneralchapels.com. Arrangements are under the personal directions of the professionals at LaGrone Funeral Chapel.

John Allen Buchanan

Phyllis Inez Pirtle Smith

Funeral services are

A graveside service is scheduled for 10 a.m., Saturday, September 21, 2013, at South Park Cemetery for John Allen Buchanan, 73, who passed away after a short illness on Tuesday, September 10, 2013, at Mission Arch Care Center. A memorial service, lunch and visitation will follow at 11 a.m. at The First Presbyterian Church, 400 West Third in Roswell. John was bor n in Roswell, New Mexico, on

For Results You Can Measure

Roswell Daily Record

March 22, 1940, to J.B. “Buck” Buchanan and Wanita Buchanan. A local resident his entire life, John attended LFD, North Jr. High and Roswell High School. He graduated from Roswell High School in 1958, and attended NMSU. Through the years, he was employed as a bookkeeper for Roswell Business. He was a member of The First Presbyterian Church. John was a compassionate and generous man who enjoyed traveling and in later years taking friends to dinner and playing cards. Mr. Buchanan was preceded in death by his parents: J.B. “Buck” and Wanita Buchanan. John is survived by two brothers: Joe Buchanan and his wife, Barbara, of Ruidoso; Jerry and his wife, Sarah, of Taos; four nieces, two nephews and four greatnieces. Memorial gifts may be sent to New Mexico Christian Children’s Home, 1356 NM 236, Portales, NM 88130. Arrangements have been entrusted to Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory. An online registry can be accessed at ballardfuneralhome.com.

Roselyn Claire Murphy

Roselyn Claire Murphy, 74, of Roswell, New Mexico, passed away on August 29, 2013. Roselyn was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, on January 7, 1939, to Joseph and Carroll Murphy. Roselyn’s parents and brother, Earl Murphy, preceded her in death. She is survived by her sister, Carol J. Kocher and her husband, Ray, of Indianapolis. Other survivors are nephews: Kevin Kocher, of Indianapolis, and his children; Sean, Khara and Katelyn; Scott and Diane Kocher, of Madison, IN, and their children: Dustin, Brandon and Nicole. She was known to her many close and dear friends in New Mexico, Indiana and elsewhere as “Roz.” Roselyn attended Indiana University, ear ning her degree in Education and went on to attain her master’s degree in Health and Physical Education from Indiana University. Roselyn spent many years as a health, physical

education teacher and coach. She taught at Tudor Hall School for Girls, Southport High School, and Perry Meridian High School. While at Perry Meridian High School, she was the head girls basketball coach, and served on the board of directors for the Indiana Basketball Coaches Association 19771978. After her successful education career in Indiana, she relocated to Roswell, New Mexico, where she worked for the State of New Mexico as a health educator for drug and disease control programs. A memorial service is scheduled for Roselyn Claire Murphy at 10 a.m. Thursday, September 19, 2013, at St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 505 N. Pennsylvania Ave., Roswell, NM, with Father Dale W. Plummer officiating. In place of flowers, please consider giving to St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 505 N. Pennsylvania Ave., Roswell, NM. Please take a moment to share your memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com. Services are under the direction of AndersonBethany Funeral Home and Crematory.

Howard Irwin

A memorial service is scheduled for 10:30 a.m., Saturday, September 21, 2013, at Ballard Funeral Home Chapel for Howard Irwin, 89, who passed away on Thursday, September 12, 2013, at Villa Del Rey. Howard was born April 2, 1924, in Sulfur Springs, Texas, to Clarence Guy and Bess Sadie Irwin. His parents preceded him in death; his wife, Barbara B. Irwin, preceded in death in August 2012. Those left to cherish his memory are his sons: Robert Howard Irwin and wife, Veronica, of Gillette, Wyoming, Retired L TC Daniel Bigbee Irwin and wife, Norma, of Lorton, Virginia; daughter Pamela Brightwell and her husband, William, of Santa Fe, New Mexico; sister, Ruth Eberle, of Artesia, New Mexico, and grandchildren: Sherryl Nens and husband John, of Michigan, Kala Brightwell, of Maryland, Amanda, Kimberly and Jennifer Irwin, of Virginia,

and Destiny Irwin, of Wyoming.

Howard graduated from Roswell High School in 1942; he attended ENMU before he left Roswell to join the Ar my Air Corps during WWII, afterward he attended University of Texas and later worked for GMAC. It was there Howard met and married his wife, Barbara Bigbee on July 28, 1951. They moved to Alamosa, Colorado, for a short time and then moved to Texas for four years and then back to New Mexico in 1959, and began working with local car dealers and then entered the banking business in 1967, with First National Bank of Hobbs as vice president/trust officer. He soon became the general manager of First National Bank of Santa Fe in Los Alamos, from 1972 – 1974; he became the senior vice president of First National Bank of Roswell in 1974. Howard retired as executive vice president of United New Mexico Bank in 1987 in Roswell, New Mexico. Howard was an avid golfer and carried a zero handicap for a number of years. He enjoyed playing with his many friends in Texas and New Mexico; he was a member of the Roswell Rotary and past president of the Roswell Country Club.

Honorary pallbearers are Robert Hannagan, Earl “Red” Worley, Phelps White, Jim Bruin, Mack Rattliff, Gilbert Licon, Harold Hensley, Stuart Shanor, Mack Chase and Phil Troutman. Following memorial service, the family will receive friends at the Howard Irwin home.

The family greatly appreciates the wonderful care their father received in the past eight months from the following medical providers: Villa Del Rey/Emeritus, Frontier Medical, one month at Mission Arch following a hospital stay, Dr. Adajar and staff, Gentiva Hospice, and Comfort Keepers in his final days.

In lieu of flowers, you may make donations to the Assurance Home Inc., 1000 E. 18th Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201

Arrangements have been entrusted to Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory. An online registry can be accessed at ballardfuneralhome.com.

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MINI PAGE

Roswell Daily Record release dates: September 14-20

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

37-1 (13)

TM

Mini Spy . . . Š 2013 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

Supreme Law

B5

Mini Spy and the gang are visiting the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence at the National !RCHIVES 3EE IF YOU CAN FIND s ICE CREAM CONE s RING s LETTER $ s ARROW s FISH s MUSHROOM s NUMBER s EYEGLASSES s WORD -).) s LADDER s LETTER * s MUG s BOOK s PEANUT s LETTER % s FISHHOOK s HEART

Our Constitution

2

1

Our country’s most valuable charters, or documents, are displayed in special cases under protective glass. Visiting the National Archives, you can see: 1. The Declaration of Independence 2. All four pages of the Constitution 3. The Bill of Rights

3

photo courtesy National Archives

The U.S. Constitution is a set of basic laws organizing, granting and limiting the powers of our government. It is something that all American citizens share. The Constitution is on display at the National Archives building in Washington, D.C. An archives is a place where important documents are preserved. This week, we celebrate Constitution Week, Sept. 17-23, with an issue about this historic document.

Constitution fact-a-roonies s )T WAS CREATED IN Philadelphia ‌ s DURING THE SUMMER of 1787 ‌ s IN SECRET x s IN ABOUT DAYS s )T HAS SIGNERS x s AND IS MADE UP OF a preamble, seven articles and 27 amendments, which were added later. s 4HE ORIGINAL #ONSTITUTION IS handwritten on four parchment pages. %ACH PAGE IS ABOUT INCHES HIGH AND 24 inches wide. s /UR #ONSTITUTION IS THE LONGEST lasting written national constitution in the world.

from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

Father of the Constitution

TM

James Madison was a smart student of government and a great statesman. He was a friend of Thomas Jefferson. Madison was only 36 when the Constitution was written. He influenced what went on at the Constitutional Convention more than any other delegate. He wrote a plan for the new government, the Virginia Plan. Many of his ideas were adopted. He also took many notes and wrote up detailed reports. His records are our best sources of what went on. These were

not published until after his death. Madison worked hard for ratification. He later served as a Virginia congressman and proposed the first 10 amendments (the Bill of Rights). After serving as James Madison secretary of state under Thomas Jefferson, he was elected as our fourth president. He lived longer than any other signer. He died at the age of 85 in 1836.

Rookie Cookie’s Recipe

Easy Banana Pancakes You’ll need: s RIPE BANANAS s 1 2 cup cottage cheese s 1 2 cup rolled oats s 1 2 TEASPOON VANILLA EXTRACT s EGGS What to do: 1. Place all ingredients in a small blender. Process until smooth. 2. Heat skillet and coat with cooking spray. 3. Pour batter in heated skillet and cook as pancakes, flipping when edges bubble. 4. Serve with syrup or fresh fruit. You will need an adult’s help with this recipe. from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

Meet Brandon T. Jackson photo by Murray Close TM and Š 2013 Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp. All rights reserved.

Brandon T. Jackson stars as Grover IN THE MOVIE h0ERCY *ACKSON 3EA OF -ONSTERS v (E HAS ACTED IN SEVERAL OTHER movies and TV shows. Brandon is a stand-up comic, or someone who performs comedy in front of live audiences. He began performing at his parents’ church during talent shows and youth nights. By age 14, he was performing on stage elsewhere in the community. He worked as an intern, or person being trained, at a Detroit radio station. He later became guest host of a radio show. "RANDON GREW UP IN $ETROIT WITH SEVEN SIBLINGS (E NOW lives in Los Angeles. from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

TM

Supersport: Alex Morgan Birthdate: 7-2-89 Height: 5-7 Hometown: Diamond Bar, Calif.

.O MATTER WHAT SHE DOES PEOPLE WATCH !LEX -ORGAN She plays soccer like a magician. Since taking up the sport as a teenager, she has outrun, outkicked and outplayed hundreds of opponents. In 2012, the relentless forward led the U.S. National 4EAM WITH POINTS AND ASSISTS WON AN /LYMPIC GOLD MEDAL AND was America’s female soccer Player of the Year. Now she’s sparkling for Portland in the National Women’s Soccer League. Morgan, a college All-American at the University of California, Berkeley, is very popular, with a monster following on Twitter. She enjoys wakeboarding, snowboarding and tennis. Morgan is also writing a series of books she hopes will inspire middleschool kids. Her goals in life include more than scoring goals!

Big Ideas in Government Inside the Constitution are several big ideas: s Separation of powers: The delegates feared that giving too much power to any person or group could be dangerous. So they created three branches, or parts, of government: executive, legislative and judicial. s Checks and balances: This idea limits the power of each government branch. No single branch can OVERPOWER THE OTHERS /FTEN EACH branch needs the help of the others to do its job. s Enumerated E .//- ER ATE ed) powers: the listed powers of government. s Implied powers: the powers that are not listed but suggested. s Federalism: the idea that our government divides powers between the national government and the state governments.

The Constitution includes: s ! preamble (an introduction) s 3EVEN articles (sections), covering: s Article I: The Congress s Article V: How the Constitution (legislative can be amended, branch). or changed.

s Article II: The president EXECUTIVE branch).

s Article VI: The Constitution is the supreme law of the land.

s Article III: The judges and national courts (judicial branch).

s Article VII: Ratification, or approval.

s Article IV: How states relate to each other and the national government.

s 4HE SIGNATURES OF DELEGATES

from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

TM

Amendments Our Constitution is not perfect. It has been amended, or changed. Twenty-seven amendments have been added. The first 10 are called the Bill of Rights (1791).

3rd: quartering of soldiers limited.

freedom of assembly and petition.

1st: freedom of religion

4th: searches and seizures regulated.

freedom of speech

5th: rights to due process of law, including protection against self-incrimination.

9th: citizens entitled to rights not listed in the Constitution.

6th: rights of a person accused of a crime, including the right to be represented by a lawyer.

14th: rights of citizenship, due process and equal protection under the law (1868).

7th: right to a trial by jury. 12th: new way of selecting the president and vice president (1804).

10th: powers not listed reserved to the states or the people.

15th: voting rights for former slaves (1870).

19th: women 18th: sale of alcohol gained right BANNED TO VOTE

17th: U.S. senators to be elected by the people

Next week, Mini Page readers will enjoy some famous and familiar quotes from William Shakespeare.

The Mini Page Staff Betty Debnam - Founding Editor and Editor at Large Lisa Tarry - Managing Editor Lucy Lien - Associate Editor Wendy Daley - Artist

<j^YZ id i]Z 8dchi^iji^dc The popular nine-part series on the Constitution, written in collaboration with the National Archives, is now packaged as a colorful 32-page softcover book. The series covers: s the preamble, the seven articles and 27 amendments s the “big ideas� of the document s the history of its making and the signers

Constitution

TRY ’N’ FIND

Words that remind us of the Constitution are hidden in the block below. Some words are hidden backward or diagonally, and some letters are used twice. See if you can find: AMENDMENT, CONSTITUTION, CONVENTION, DELEGATES, ENUMERATED, FEDERALISM, IDEAS, IMPLIED, LAW, MADISON, PARCHMENT, PHILADELPHIA, SEPARATION, SIGN, SUPREME, WASHINGTON. W N O S I D A M X

A S U P R E M E O

I M D B V T R U N

H S E G M A C W O

P I I N Q R O A I

L L L O D E N S T

E A P I E M V H U

D R M T L U E I T

A E I A E N N N I

L D D R G E T G T

I E E A A Z I T S

H F A P T C O O N

P J S E E L N N O

L A W S S I G N C

T N E M H C R A P

Ready Resources

26th: voting age 27th: congressional Add` i]gdj\] ndjg cZlheVeZg lowered to 18 salaries regulated [dg ^iZbh VWdji 8dchi^iji^dc LZZ`#

I]Z B^c^ EV\Zœ

from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2013 Universal Uclick

22nd: president limited TO TWO TERMS

24th: no poll 25th: presidential TAXES IN FEDERAL succession and ELECTIONS DISABILITY

Brown Bassetews N The d’s Houn

TM

IT’S THE SUPREME LAW OF THE LAND!

20th: dates of the presidential 21st: 18th Amendment and congressional REPEALED TERMS SET

23rd: people in District of Columbia given right to vote for president

Barb: What do balloons like to drink? Beth: Soda pop! Barr: What is a balloon’s least favorite music? Bart: Pop songs!

16th: federal income TAXES AUTHORIZED 13th: slavery abolished (1865).

Bill: Why did the balloon burst? Bob: Because it saw a lolly-pop!

2nd: right to bear arms.

freedom of the press

11th: rules for lawsuits AGAINST STATES

8th: unfair bail, fines and punishment forbidden.

All the following jokes have something in common. Can you guess the common theme or category?

The Mini Page provides ideas for websites, books or other resources that will help you learn more about this week’s topics. On the Web: s USA GOV )M& s ARCHIVES GOV EXHIBITS CHARTERS CONSTITUTION HTML At the library: s h/UR #ONSTITUTION 2OCKSv BY *ULIETTE 4URNER s h4HE &OUNDERS 4HE 3TORIES "EHIND THE 5 3 #ONSTITUTIONv BY $ENNIS "RINDELL &RADIN AND -ICHAEL McCurdy

To order, send $9.95 plus $3.50 postage and handling for each copy. Send check or money order (U.S. funds only) payable to: Andrews McMeel Universal, P.O. Box 6814, Leawood, KS 66206 or call toll-free 1-800-591-2097. Please send ______ copies of The Mini Page Guide to the Constitution (Item #0-7407-6511-6) at $13.45 each, total cost. (Bulk discount information available upon request.) www.smartwarehousing.com Name: ________________________________________________________________________ Address: _______________________________________________________________________ City: _________________________________________ State: _________ Zip: ________________

Please include all of the appropriate registered trademark symbols and copyright lines in any publication of The Mini PageÂŽ.


B6 Wednesday, September 18, 2013 DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE

DEAR ABBY: I’m a 14-year-old girl who just started high school. I started to notice boys when I was in middle school, and I’d like to start dating soon. The problem is I’ve never had a close friend who was a boy, and the idea isn’t natural to me. How can I ask a boy out if I don’t even grasp the concept of being friends with one? I’m frustrated over this, especially because I really like one particular guy. The only advice I have been given is, “Get over your fear and

just TALK to him.” This isn’t very helpful to me. I want to know how to get over my fear! Abby, your thoughts would be appreciated. CAN’T FIND THE NERVE IN OHIO DEAR CAN’T FIND THE NERVE: I’ll gladly share some thoughts. The first is I hope you realize how many girls and guys your age feel EXACTLY the same way you do. Social skills don’t come naturally to everyone — but they can be learned. And like any learned skill, they take practice. The surest cure for shyness — which is the “fear” you are experiencing — is to forget about yourself and concentrate on the other person. Smile and introduce yourself if the guy doesn’t know you. If you share a class with him or know an activity he’s involved in, ask a question about it. He’s not good at sports? Not

COMICS

musical? Ask him about a class assignment. You don’t have to be brilliant or witty. Try leading off with a friendly remark or a compliment. (“Nice shirt, cellphone,” etc.) I know very few people who don’t appreciate a compliment. Overcoming shyness takes practice, so don’t go after the boy you “really like” at first. Make a point of smiling and saying hello to everyone. It’s friendly, it’s welcoming. Keep in mind that the majority of people have the same insecurities you do. Many of them will respond positively because they appreciate being noticed. That’s how you make friends of both genders. I have a booklet that offers even more suggestions. The title is “How to Be Popular,” and it contains hints for polishing social skills for people of all ages. It can be ordered by sending your name and address, plus check or money order for $7 (U.S. funds) to Dear Abby Popu-

larity Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. Shipping and handling are included in the price. Remember, you don’t have to be the prettiest or smartest girl in school. But you CAN be one of the nicest.

Family Circus

Show an interest in others. Be honest but always tactful. Cultivate your own interests so you will have something to talk about with others. If there are clubs at your school, join the ones that interest you. It’s another way of making friends of both sexes. Most young people go out in groups these days. So, if you and some friends plan to do something (and after you have been friendly and let the young man you like notice you), smile and ask if he’d like to come along. If he’s shy, it’s a way of making HIM feel less self-conscious, too. Good luck!

The Wizard of Id

HINTS

Beetle Bailey

Blondie

FROM HELOISE

KING FEATURES SYNDICATE Dear Heloise: A recipe for CHOCOLATE BROWNIES appeared in your column years ago. Unfortunately, I misplaced it. Could you please reprint it? Brenda H., via email

Dilbert

Absolutely! Here is the recipe for Heloise’s brownies from a cake mix. These are more cakelike brownies, but they will do in a pinch and with things you usually have on hand. Grab the following ingredients:

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

1 egg 3/4 cup water plus more as needed 1/2 cup chopped pecans (optional) 1 (18.25 ounces) box devil’s-food cake mix Preheat the oven to 350 F and grease a 13-by-9-inch pan.

In a large bowl, mix together the egg, water and nuts (if using). Add the cake mix and STIR WELL. The batter will be thick; however, if it is too thick, add only a teaspoonful of water at a time to help thin it. Just be sure NOT to overmix. Pour into the greased pan and smooth the top. Bake for about 20-25 minutes for chewy brownies. If you like them more of a cake consistency, then bake them for a few minutes longer. You need to watch them and test for how “done” you like them. If you like desserts, especially cakes, then order my Heloise Cake Recipes pamphlet by sending $3 and a long, selfaddressed, stamped (66 cents) envelope to: Heloise/Cakes, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 782795001. Be sure to let the brownies cool before cutting, and use a plastic knife to cut them with little or no sticking! Heloise ##### Dear Heloise: Some time ago, I think you wrote NOT to put eggshells down the garbage disposal. Please tell me why, and don’t say, “Because I said so!” John in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Well, John, some experts suggest that a lot of eggshells can damage a disposal, but I personally don’t see how. The real point is that in large amounts, they also can clog the drains farther down in the pipes! This is why you must run A LOT of water before, during and after a food item is put in the disposal. Instead of putting these shells down the sink, try using them as compost. Heloise ##### Dear Heloise: When making cookies that call for oatmeal, what kind is the best to bake cookies with — the one-minute oatmeal, or the old-fashioned kind? I read your column every day and thank you for all the hints and advice. Sharon C. in Houston You can use the one-minute oatmeal or regular when baking. Both have the same flavor; the only difference is in the appearance of the cookies. The quicker-cooking oatmeal has a finer texture, so the oatmeal will be blended into the cookie. When using regular oatmeal, you will be able to see the oats in the cookie. Heloise

#####

Dear Heloise: When making calamari, an easy solution for removing the tough inner membrane of a squid involves the use of tweezers. Easy to grab onto the membrane and then remove it. Araceli in San Antonio

For Better or For Worse

Garfield

Hagar the Horrible

Snuffy Smith

Zits

Roswell Daily Record


FINANCIAL

B7

Here’s what to watch for Wednesday from the Fed Roswell Daily Record

WASHINGTON (AP) — If there’s one thing global investors are hoping for when the Federal Reserve ends a policy meeting Wednesday, it’s this: No surprises. Pretty much everyone expects the Fed to take its first step toward slowing the economic stimulus it’s supplied since the financial crisis and the Great Recession swept through the economy five years ago. Yet it’s also assumed the Fed will do so gingerly: with a small cut in its monthly T reasury and mortgage bond purchases — from $85 billion to perhaps $75 billion. Those purchases have helped keep long-term loan rates ultra-low to encourage borrowing and spending. The Fed is also expected to stress that while it’s slowing its bond purchases, it plans no change anytime soon in its benchmark short-term rate. It’s kept that rate at a record low near zero since 2008. Investors will be watching for anything the Fed says about this rate, which affects rates on countless business and consumer loans. Here’s what to look for from each of four key events Wednesday: a statement the Fed will issue when its twoday meeting ends; the Fed’s updated economic outlook; Chairman Ben Bernanke’s news conference; and the reaction of investors: — FED STATEMENT This is where the Fed would announce its first slowdown in bond purchases. Many economists expect the cut to come entirely from the Fed’s $45 billion a month in T reasury bond

purchases. That would leave untouched its $40 billion a month in mortgage bond purchases. The reasoning: The mortgage bond buying is intended to keep downward pressure on mortgage rates. The Fed likely doesn’t want to diminish its support for the housing market, whose gradual but steady comeback has been a pillar for the U.S. economic recovery. The statement is also where the Fed could strengthen its commitment to keep its key short-term rate at a record low. In December, the Fed began saying it expects to keep this rate near zero at least until unemployment falls to 6.5 percent — as long as the inflation outlook remains mild. Unemployment is now 7.3 percent. And in the past 12 months, consumer prices are up 1.5 percent, below the Fed’s 2 percent inflation target. The Fed could stress anew that 6.5 percent unemployment is merely a threshold, not a trigger, for any rate increase. Which means it might choose to keep the benchmark rate at a record low for an extended period even after unemployment has dipped below 6.5 percent. That’s especially true if unemployment is dropping mainly because more people have stopped looking for work, rather than because employers are hiring lots of people. The government doesn’t count people as unemployed once they stop looking for a job. —ECONOMIC OUTLOOK This is one of four meetings each year when the Fed updates its economic out-

look, based on individual forecasts of board members and regional bank presidents. It’s likely to downgrade its outlook as it takes account of reality: The U.S. economy hasn’t grown as fast this year as the Fed had expected. In their previous forecast three months ago, Fed officials predicted that the economy would grow between 2.3 percent and 2.6 this year and between 3 percent and 3.5 percent next year. Most economists think the economy will have grown 2 percent — at best — this year and roughly 2.6 percent next year. The Fed will update its forecasts for unemployment and inflation, too. Besides updating its outlook for 2013, 2014 and 2015, the Fed will offer its first economic predictions for 2016. These numbers will be watched for any hint that the Fed has grown more or less optimistic. More optimism could mean the Fed feels the economy could handle future rate increases relatively soon. Less optimism could signal that any rate increases remain further off. — BERNANKE NEWS CONFERENCE This will be a major event — and not just because it will likely follow the Fed’s announcement of a pullback in bond buying. It’s also Bernanke’s next-to-last news conference as chairman before his term ends Jan. 31. (His final news conference will follow the Fed’s last meeting of the year in mid-December.) Early this week, Lawrence Summers withdrew from

ALASKA ASKS CONOCOPHILLIPS TO REOPEN LNG PLANT ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The state of Alaska wants ConocoPhillips to reopen its mothballed Kenai Peninsula liquefied natural gas plant to provide an incentive for petroleum companies to explore and invest in Cook Inlet. In a Sept. 5 letter to ConocoPhillips President Trond-Erik Johansen, Natural Resources Commissioner Joe Balash requested that the company apply for a threeyear federal LNG export license for

CATTLE/HOGS

NEW YORK(AP) - Cattle/hogs futures on the Chicago Merchantile Exchange Friday: Open high

low

settle

CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 13 125.42 125.52 124.30 125.17 Dec 13 129.05 129.05 124.80 128.65 Feb 14 130.90 130.92 129.82 130.47 131.97 131.97 127.82 131.60 Apr 14 Jun 14 126.65 126.75 125.70 126.15 Aug 14 125.70 125.70 125.25 125.25 128.17 128.17 127.85 127.85 Oct 14 Dec 14 129.50 129.75 129.50 129.60 Feb 15 130.20 130.20 130.20 130.20 Last spot N/A Est. sales 51845. Mon’s Sales: 40,141 Mon’s open int: 291612, up +1426 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Sep 13 157.00 157.00 156.55 156.60 Oct 13 159.50 159.50 157.80 157.87 Nov 13 160.35 160.35 158.57 158.60 159.60 159.87 158.45 158.50 Jan 14 Mar 14 159.92 159.92 158.50 158.80 Apr 14 159.60 159.60 158.97 159.10 May 14 159.10 159.15 159.00 159.05 Aug 14 161.00 161.00 161.00 161.00 Last spot N/A Est. sales 5107. Mon’s Sales: 3,619 Mon’s open int: 29649, up +121 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 13 91.50 91.87 90.35 90.97 Dec 13 88.05 88.45 86.92 87.52 Feb 14 89.22 89.25 82.45 88.60 Apr 14 87.90 88.05 86.97 87.65 91.20 91.25 91.20 91.20 May 14 Jun 14 92.70 92.95 92.30 92.70 Jul 14 90.85 91.00 90.55 90.85 Aug 14 89.50 89.55 89.10 89.30 Oct 14 78.50 80.00 78.30 78.30 Dec 14 75.55 75.55 75.50 75.50 Feb 15 76.75 76.75 76.75 76.75 Last spot N/A Est. sales 49295. Mon’s Sales: 57,828 Mon’s open int: 333550, up +1396

chg.

-.38 -.57 -.58 -.52 -.60 -.60 -.50 -.15 -.10

-1.00 -1.63 -1.65 -1.45 -1.15 -1.15 -1.00 -.40

-1.15 -.95 -.72 -.35 -.10 -.25 -.25 -.17 -.10 +.25

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. Oct 13 85.12 85.12 84.77 84.77 Dec 13 84.08 85.02 83.90 84.44 Mar 14 84.07 84.72 83.86 84.15 May 14 83.90 84.28 83.66 83.99 Jul 14 83.56 83.89 83.18 83.68 Oct 14 79.81 Dec 14 79.30 79.75 79.30 79.55 Mar 15 79.37 May 15 79.31 Jul 15 79.25 Oct 15 79.25 Dec 15 79.25 Mar 16 79.25 May 16 79.25 Jul 16 79.25 Last spot N/A Est. sales 11201. Mon’s Sales: 15,584 Mon’s open int: 174373, up +948

chg.

-.23 +.44 +.36 +.50 +.60 +.55 +.55 +.55 +.55 +.55 +.55 +.55 +.55 +.55 +.55

GRAINS

CHICAGO(AP) - Futures trading on the Chicago Board of Trade Thursday: Open high

low

settle

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 13 641ü 652 641ü 643 Mar 14 653fl 662ü 651ø 653ø May 14 656fl 665 656ø 658ø Jul 14 653fl 663 652ø 654fl Sep 14 663ü 665 657fl 659 Dec 14 671ø 671ø 664ü 667

chg.

+1fl +1ø +2 +fl -ü

the plant at Nikiski, about 70 miles southwest of Anchorage. ConocoPhillips in March announced it would not extend its natural gas export license beyond March 31 but said it would consider a new license if the needs of local gas markets were met and sufficient natural gas was on hand to export. Balash said contracts are in place to support local utility needs through 2018. Concerns exist, he

Mar 15 673ø 673ø 673ø 673ø 675ø 677 May 15 675ø 677 677ø 679 674fl 676ü Jul 15 Sep 15 678fl 679ø 678fl 679ø Dec 15 687 688ü 687 688ü 688ü Mar 16 687 688ü 687 688ü May 16 687 688ü 687 700 700 690 690 Jul 16 Last spot N/A Est. sales 78009. Mon’s Sales: 53,114 Mon’s open int: 356083, off -1629 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 13 457 468ø 453ü 454 Mar 14 469fl 480ø 465fl 466ø May 14 478 488ø 473fl 474fl 484ø 495 480ü 481ø Jul 14 486ü Sep 14 489ü 496fl 485 Dec 14 495fl 504 492 492fl Mar 15 505 509ü 502 502ø May 15 511 516ü 507ø 507ø Jul 15 519 519 510fl 510fl Sep 15 504fl 504fl 501ø 501ø Dec 15 503 508fl 499 499ü Jul 16 515fl 515fl 512fl 512fl Dec 16 502 502 499 499 Last spot N/A Est. sales 211609. Mon’s Sales: 125,185 Mon’s open int: 1105961, up +7355 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 13 312ø 316 304ø 306fl 307ø Mar 14 313ø 313ø 305 May 14 311ü 311ü 307ø 307ø Jul 14 304ø 304ø 300fl 300fl Sep 14 311 311 307ü 307ü Dec 14 320ü 320ü 316ø 316ø Mar 15 320ü 320ü 316ø 316ø May 15 320ü 320ü 316ø 316ø Jul 15 320ü 320ü 316ø 316ø Sep 15 320ü 320ü 316ø 316ø Jul 16 320ü 320ü 316ø 316ø Sep 16 320ü 320ü 316ø 316ø Last spot N/A Est. sales 1561. Mon’s Sales: 822 Mon’s open int: 9737, off -19 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Nov 13 1349 1366ø 1332 1342ø Jan 14 1349 1365 1332 1343 Mar 14 1323ø 1338ü 1314 1325 May 14 1295 1309 1288ü 1299 Jul 14 1286 1304fl 1281ø 1291ø Aug 14 1266ø 1270 1266ø 1270 Sep 14 1216ø 1222 1216ø 1222 Nov 14 1174 1188 1172 1181fl Jan 15 1180 1185fl 1180 1185fl Mar 15 1176ø 1182ü 1176ø 1182ü May 15 1170 1175fl 1170 1175fl Jul 15 1171ø 1177ø 1171ø 1177ø Aug 15 1169fl 1175ø 1169fl 1175ø Sep 15 1159fl 1164 1159fl 1164 Nov 15 1148 1153fl 1148 1153fl Jul 16 1144fl 1147ø 1144fl 1147ø Nov 16 1115 1117fl 1115 1117fl Last spot N/A Est. sales 229442. Mon’s Sales: 178,758 Mon’s open int: 613690, off -5358

FUTURES

+1ø +1 +fl +1ü +1ü +1ü -2ü

-2ø -2ø -2ø -2ü -2 -3 -2fl -2fl -3 -3ü -3 -3 -3

-4fl -4 -3fl -3fl -3fl -3fl -3fl -3fl -3fl -3fl -3fl -3fl

-5fl -5ü +3 +4ø +2fl +2ø +4 +5fl +5fl +5fl +5fl +6 +5fl +4ü +2fl +2fl +2fl

OIL/GASOLINE/NG Open high

AP Photo

This July, 18 file photo shows Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, testifing before the Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on "The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress” on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Federal Reserve is expected to take its first step toward reducing the extraordinary stimulus it’s supplied to help the U.S. economy rebound on Wednesday.

consideration for the chairman’s job, leaving the Fed’s vice chair, Janet Yellen, as the leading candidate. Obama could announce his choice later this month. As always, Bernanke will use his news conference to try to clarify any decisions the Fed announces. He’s surely hoping for a more positive response than he drew at his June news conference. There, he said he’d been “deputized” by his colleagues to describe a possible path toward slowing the bond purchases. Bernanke said the slowdown would likely start before year’s end and be completed by mid2014.

said, for future exploration. “Without market opportunities for gas discoveries, companies lack the incentive to invest in continued exploration activities,” he wrote. “In addition to the economic challenges this would present for those employed in the Cook Inlet energy industry, a lack of healthy exploration now may lead to supply contractions in the future as existing wells’ production levels decline.” ConocoPhillips spokeswoman

NEW YORK(AP) - Trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange Friday: low

settle

chg.

LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. Oct 13 106.22 106.43 104.94 105.42 -1.17 Nov 13 105.83 302.50 104.40 104.82 -1.37 Dec 13 104.43 104.64 92.40 103.46 -1.36 102.98 103.21 101.54 101.99 -1.36 Jan 14 Feb 14 101.70 101.81 100.26 100.67 -1.34 Mar 14 100.13 100.50 99.00 99.40 -1.27 98.79 98.80 97.96 98.29 -1.18 Apr 14 May 14 98.19 98.19 97.00 97.38 -1.08 Jun 14 97.34 97.52 96.10 96.56 -.98 Jul 14 95.90 95.90 95.72 95.72 -.87 95.20 95.20 94.95 94.95 -.80 Aug 14 94.99 94.99 93.93 94.30 -.75 Sep 14 Oct 14 93.68 -.71 Nov 14 93.09 -.66 Dec 14 92.77 93.12 92.15 92.56 -.60 Jan 15 91.90 -.55 91.00 91.27 91.00 91.27 -.50 Feb 15 Mar 15 90.73 90.90 90.40 90.65 -.45 90.20 90.20 89.82 90.04 -.39 Apr 15 May 15 89.52 -.34 Jun 15 89.00 89.34 88.74 89.07 -.30 Jul 15 88.65 88.65 88.52 88.52 -.27 Aug 15 88.17 88.21 88.05 88.05 -.25 Sep 15 87.40 87.66 87.40 87.66 -.22 87.33 -.19 Oct 15 87.15 87.15 86.86 87.11 -.16 Nov 15 Last spot N/A Est. sales 744590. Mon’s Sales: 667,795 Mon’s open int: 1925445, off -7259 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon 2.7164 2.7221 2.6443 2.6611 -.0555 Oct 13 2.7063 2.7126 2.6354 2.6495 -.0570 Nov 13 Dec 13 2.6835 2.6958 2.6210 2.6340 -.0571 Jan 14 2.6762 2.6872 2.6171 2.6292 -.0557 Feb 14 2.6861 2.6894 2.6211 2.6323 -.0544 Mar 14 2.6916 2.6963 2.6282 2.6411 -.0531 Apr 14 2.8520 2.8520 2.7890 2.7960 -.0521 May 14 2.8316 2.8330 2.7764 2.7851 -.0510 Jun 14 2.7938 2.7938 2.7443 2.7555 -.0473 Jul 14 2.7476 2.7476 2.7111 2.7203 -.0452

NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Tue. Aluminum -$0.7867 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$3.1977 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper -$3.2280 N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Lead - $2039.50 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $0.8277 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1312.25 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1309.50 troy oz., NY Merc spot Tue. Silver - $21.755 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $21.735 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Platinum -$1435.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1422.40 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. n.q.-not quoted n.a.-not available r-revised

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE CALL TODAY

575.622.7710

-.0435 -.0422 -.0381 -.0346 -.0301 -.0291 -.0296 -.0301 -.0301 -.0301 -.0301 -.0301 -.0301 -.0301 -.0301 -.0301

+.007 +.008 +.012 +.013 +.011 +.009 +.009 +.008 +.007 +.005 +.004 +.003 +.004 +.003 +.003 +.002 +.003 +.002 -.001 -.001 -.002 -.003 -.003 -.003 -.004

keep its benchmark rate low far into the future. Economists generally think the Fed has done enough, through comments from Fed officials, to prepare the markets for the start of a modest and gradual reduction in bond purchases. Yet if the Fed’s initial move to trim the purchases is larger than investors expect, watch out. The reaction could be turbulent. And if the Fed surprises everyone and decides against trimming its bond purchases at all? The markets may just rally.

He stressed that any Fed moves to scale back its support would hinge on how the economy fares. But investors didn’t hear such assurances. They responded in panic to the prospect that the Fed would soon reduce its support for the economy. The Dow Jones industrial average sank 560 points in two days. — MARKET REACTION Investor response to a pullback in bond purchases is expected to be mild if the Fed announces a slight reduction of around $10 billion a month. That’s particularly true if the Fed balances its move by underscoring its commitment to

Natalie Lowman said Tuesday the company appreciates the state’s comments and shares its interest in promoting local energy security and the local economy. The U.S. Geological Survey has estimated the Cook Inlet basin may hold trillions of cubic feet of gas, Balash said. “More market opportunities would create a more attractive business environment for gas sales that would in turn encourage

2.7129 2.7129 2.6800 2.6845 Aug 14 2.6475 2.6475 2.6455 2.6473 Sep 14 Oct 14 2.5085 2.5085 2.5084 2.5084 Nov 14 2.4679 2.4449 Dec 14 2.4384 Jan 15 Feb 15 2.4459 Mar 15 2.4574 2.5874 Apr 15 2.5899 May 15 Jun 15 2.5749 2.5569 Jul 15 2.5379 Aug 15 2.5149 Sep 15 Oct 15 2.3949 Nov 15 2.3649 Last spot N/A Est. sales 160537. Mon’s Sales: 112,828 Mon’s open int: 268757, off -1088 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Oct 13 3.741 3.776 3.720 3.745 3.824 3.852 3.797 3.822 Nov 13 3.969 3.993 3.942 3.970 Dec 13 4.053 4.076 4.027 4.054 Jan 14 Feb 14 4.062 4.072 4.031 4.050 Mar 14 4.005 4.024 3.980 4.003 Apr 14 3.918 3.950 3.892 3.917 May 14 3.931 3.950 3.913 3.931 Jun 14 3.962 3.971 3.940 3.955 3.983 3.995 3.950 3.982 Jul 14 4.006 4.010 3.950 3.996 Aug 14 Sep 14 3.997 4.005 3.950 3.993 Oct 14 4.025 4.032 3.994 4.016 Nov 14 4.090 4.101 4.068 4.086 Dec 14 4.242 4.243 4.223 4.236 4.323 4.330 4.298 4.318 Jan 15 4.286 4.291 4.281 4.291 Feb 15 4.220 4.230 4.220 4.224 Mar 15 Apr 15 4.015 4.015 3.994 4.004 May 15 4.025 4.025 4.005 4.012 Jun 15 4.038 4.048 4.030 4.036 Jul 15 4.065 4.065 4.059 4.065 Aug 15 4.077 4.079 4.075 4.079 Sep 15 4.075 4.079 4.068 4.079 Oct 15 4.099 Nov 15 4.170 4.170 4.168 4.168 Last spot N/A Est. sales 336593. Mon’s Sales: 318,855 Mon’s open int: 1331584, up +8673

METALS

GET NOTICED

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

NYSE

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Name Vol (00) Last BkofAm 706328 14.55 S&P500ETF703140171.07 iShJapan 463149 11.70 iShEMkts 452961 41.53 GenElec 346729 24.45

Chg +.02 +.76 -.05 -.09

%Chg +18.1 +16.8 +14.0 +13.5 +13.1

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Last 21.87 40.01 11.93 45.92 3.97

AT&T Inc Aetna BkofAm Boeing Chevron CocaCola Disney EOG Res EngyTsfr ExxonMbl FordM HewlettP HollyFront Intel IBM JohnJn

Name Vol (00) InovioPhm 57123 GoldResrc 42915 AlldNevG 37058 NwGold g 28540 Neuralstem 26507

Last 2.35 7.24 4.67 6.21 2.72

Chg -.09 -.90 +.20 +.18

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Air Inds TanzRy g FAB Univ Medgenics TrioTch

Chg +1.17 +.51 +.68 +.40 +.26

%Chg +19.4 +15.9 +13.0 +9.0 +7.79

Name Facebook Microsoft Intel MicronT SiriusXM

Vol (00) 901288 707378 359815 321353 317179

Last 45.07 32.93 23.74 16.84 3.86

Chg +2.56 +.13 +.35 +.40 +.03

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name KytheraBio Repros wtA HorizPhm IntrntGold SinoGlob

%Chg -21.3 -15.1 -13.4 -12.0 -11.8

2,064 1,008 99 3,171 157 33

Last 7.20 3.72 5.93 4.85 3.62

NASDAQ

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg -3.12 -12.5 GoldResrc 7.24 -.90 -11.1 Galectin un 24.70 -6.70 -5.06 -11.2 UraniumEn 2.09 -.19 -8.3 Galectin wt 5.00 -.89 -.96 -7.4 RareEle g 2.59 -.23 -8.2 MethesE n 2.90 -.45 -3.44 -7.0 Compx 14.03 -.85 -5.7 DigitalAlly 14.27 -1.95 -.27 -6.4 MexcoEn 6.66 -.34 - RecovE h 2.16 -.29

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

2,701,688,868 Volume

52-Week High Low 15,658.43 12,471.49 6,686.86 4,838.10 537.86 435.57 9,741.64 7,841.76 2,509.57 2,186.97 3,756.25 2,810.80 1,709.67 1,343.35 18,157.57 14,036.94 1,065.25 763.55

Name

AMEX

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

%Chg +25.1 +20.0 +17.3 +15.9 +15.1

DIARY

Volume

Lowman said truck-rack facilities would be part of the evaluation.

Chg +8.42 +4.35 +.48 +1.19 +.38

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name BerryPls n Cvent n Blyth KapStone Lentuo

Balash also requested that ConocoPhillips install equipment that could be used to truck LNG throughout Alaska. The plant could back up plans for providing North Slope natural gas to Fairbanks and other interior Alaska communities.

MARKET SUMMARY

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg Aeropostl 10.17 +1.56 iP LXR1K 186.79+26.90 CSVInvBrnt 30.30 +3.73 ChinZenix 3.88 +.46 DaqoNE rs 13.93 +1.61

aggressive exploration,” he said.

DIARY

248 161 35 444 15 7Lows

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

INDEXES

Last 15,529.73 6,604.57 479.61 9,738.93 2,370.24 3,745.70 1,704.76 18,143.13 1,066.39

Net Chg +34.95 +7.42 +2.29 +34.46 +10.59 +27.85 +7.16 +91.92 +10.14

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

PE

Last

Chg

1.80 .80 .04 1.94 4.00 1.12 .75f .75 3.58 2.52 .40 .58 1.20a .90 3.80 2.64

26 13 26 21 9 21 20 46 11 9 12 ... 5 13 13 20

34.75 +.18 67.75 -.96 14.55 +.02 117.11 +1.44 124.34 +.26 38.79 -.07 66.98 +.04 167.77 +1.97 50.11 -.55 88.94 +.27 17.44 +.09 21.67 -.07 41.56 -.34 23.74 +.35 192.16 -.99 89.06 +.03

DIARY

88,721,006 Volume

Name Dow Jones Industrials Dow Jones Transportation Dow Jones Utilities NYSE Composite Amex Index Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000

Div

Last 41.95 26.10 3.25 8.67 2.89

YTD %Chg Name +3.1 +46.3 +25.3 +55.4 +15.0 +7.0 +34.5 +38.9 +16.7 +2.8 +34.7 +52.1 -10.7 +15.1 +.3 +27.0

Merck Microsoft OneokPtrs PNM Res PepsiCo Pfizer Phillips66 SwstAirl TexInst TimeWarn TriContl VerizonCm WalMart WashFed WellsFargo XcelEngy

1,704 794 116 2,614 134 16

1,449,421,961

% Chg +.23 +.11 +.48 +.36 +.45 +.75 +.42 +.51 +.96

YTD % Chg +18.51 +24.46 +5.85 +15.34 +.62 +24.05 +19.53 +20.99 +25.55

52-wk % Chg +14.49 +29.93 +2.55 +16.11 -4.82 +17.87 +16.82 +18.88 +24.44

Div

PE

Last

Chg

YTD %Chg

1.72 1.12f 2.88f .66 2.27 .96 1.25 .16 1.12 1.15 .70e 2.12f 1.88 .36 1.20 1.12

26 13 21 17 19 15 8 27 25 17 ... 99 15 16 12 14

48.01 32.93 51.29 21.95 81.66 28.64 56.05 14.22 40.73 62.90 18.45 48.57 75.15 21.21 42.85 27.10

-.18 +.13 -.24 +.30 +.64 -.07 -.78 +.12 +.28 +.18 -.02 +.27 +.37 +.18 -.04 -.02

+17.3 +23.3 -5.0 +7.0 +19.3 +14.2 +5.6 +38.9 +31.9 +31.5 +15.0 +12.2 +10.1 +25.7 +25.4 +1.5

If you would like your stock to been seen here please contact editor@rdrnews.com


B8 Wednesday, September 18, 2013

CLASSIFIEDS

Review: ‘Enough Said’ a winning comic romance LOS ANGELES (AP) — Beholding the late James Gandolfini doing a lovely job in a change-ofpace role significantly intensifies the already funny/sad aspects of “Enough Said,” an engaging comic romance set amid the minefields that imperil starting up mid-life relationships. The title notwithstanding, writer-director Nicole Holofcener’s look at a 50-ish divorced mother with a daughter about to leave home is never at a loss for words, many of them quite amusing, making the film a leading contender for best girls’ night movie of the season. For their part, men will enjoy watching Gandolfini in a relaxed, selfeffacing, regular guy performance. Employing to her advantage a more traditional story structure than is her norm, Holofcener builds her snappy social comedy around a key piece of information that her heroine doesn’t know,

GARAGE SALES

002. Northeast 301 LA Fonda, Weds-Fri, 7am-4pm. Furniture, small appl., clothes & misc.

ANNOUNCEMENTS 015. Personals Special Notice

that the guy she’s beginning to date is the much-disparaged ex of her new best friend. This sort of trick has provided the trigger for rich farcical doings going back at least as far as Shakespeare, and Holofcener uses it as a springboard to look at a raft of selfabsorbed, often myopic LA Westside types who have it together in some ways but not in others. Almost everyone here is divorced with an ex living nearby and one kid who’s about to fly the coop for college. Eva (Julia LouisDreyfus) is a massage therapist who lugs her portable table to her clients’ homes and is preparing emotionally for the looming moment when her smart daughter Ellen (Tracey Fairway) heads East for school. A crowded cocktail party provides a convenient way to start stirring the pot, as well as for the writer to show her knack for lively, acerbic banter, much of

025. Lost and Found

FOUND DOG, female, Spaniel mix. Vicinity of Mama Tucker’s. Call to describe, 914-0593. FOUND SCOTTISH Terrier. Vicinity of Coronado & Washington. 575-308-1511

INSTRUCTION

EMPLOYMENT

045. Employment Opportunities

JFA Distributing LLC •Management opportunity •Paid vacations •Training Provided

1600/month per agreement

(575) 578-4817

LIKE TO play horseshoes, have a good time? It’s a club. Call 317-3698.

Legals

-----------------------------------------------------------------------Publish September 18, 25, October 2, 9, 2013 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-504-CV-2013-00201

BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., Plaintiff, vs.

JILL B. STANLEY, Defendant.

NOTICE OF SALE

Notice is hereby given that on October 16, 2013, at the hour of 11:30 am the undersigned Special Master, or her designee, will, at the west steps entrance of the Chaves County Courthouse, at 400 N. Virginia, Roswell, NM 88202, sell all of the rights, title and interest of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real estate to the highest bidder for cash. The property to be sold is located at 1000 W. Deming Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88203, (if there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control) and is more particularly described as follows: LOT ONE (1) in BLOCK THREE (3) of LODEWICK ADDITION, 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 April 10, 1944, and recorded in Book B of Plat Records, Chaves County, New Mexico, at Page 37.

including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limitied to, mobile homes. Subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to a one (1) month right of redemptiohn by the Defendant upon entry of an order approving sale. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on September 4, 2013, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the above-described property. The Plaintiff’s judgment is $86,702.44, and the same bears interest at the rate of 6.3500% per annum, which accrues at the rate of $15.08 per diem, commencing on September 24, 2013, with the Court reserving entry of final a judgment against said Defendant Jill B. Stanley for the amount due after foreclosure sale, for costs and attorney’s fees, plus interest as may be assessed by the Court. The Plaintiff has the right to bid at such sale all of its judgment amount and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master.

The Court’s decree, having duly appointed its Special Master to advertise and immediately offer for sale the subject real estate and to apply the proceeds of sale first to the costs of sale and the Special Master’s fee, then to pay the above-described judgment, interest, and costs of sale, and to pay unto the registry of the Court any balance remaining to satisfy future adjudication of priority mortgage holders;

NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that in the event that said property is not sooner redeemed, the undersigned will as set forth above, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, the land and improvements described above for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment described herein and decree of foreclosure together with any additional costs and attorney’s fees, costs of advertisement and publication, a reasonable receiver and Special Master’s fee to be fixed by the Court. The total amount of the judgment due is $86, 702.44, plus interest to and including date of sale of $346.84 for a total judgment plus interest of $87,049.28. Sale is subject to the entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of this sale.

Witness my hand this 13th day of September, 2013. /s/Bernadette F. Gutierrez - Electronically Filed BERNADETTE F. GUTIERREZ, Special Master PO Box 91988 Albuquerque, NM 87199-1988 Telephone: (505) 433-4576 Facsimile: (505) 433-4577 E-mail: bernadette@ancillaryls.com

AUI INC., an EEO heavy highway construction company (License No. 20617), seeks full-time experienced OPERATORS / WATER TRUCK DRIVERS / OILERS / LABORERS for projects located in the Artesia area. Pre-employment drug screen required for position. * Available health / dental insurance package * Paid Vacation * 401K Savings Plan * Salary DOE Mail resumes to, Attn: HR, PO Box 9825, Albuquerque, NM 87119, fax to (505) 998-5251, or email to recruitment@auiinc.net NEED CASH? Be your own boss & build your business at Blairs Monterey indoor market at 1400 W. 2nd. Booths start at $75 mo. Call 623-0136

Phlebotomy Certification Class (Blood Drawing), September 28th & 29th, $300. 505-410-7889 or 505-410-9559 swphlebotomy.com WE’RE GROWING Ferguson Enterprises has an immediate opening for Counter Sales & Warehouse FT. Competitive wages & employee benefits. Background and drug test required. Apply in person at 605 N. Virginia, Roswell. EOE FULL TIME ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT for busy real estate office. Outgoing, friendly, organized and able to multi-task. Must be proficient in Word and Excel. Mail resume to 501 N. Main St. Roswell, NM 88201.

it coming from Eva, who early on decides that there’s no one there she finds attractive. The man she’s just met, Albert (Gandolfini), agrees. With her uncensored emotional expressiveness and ready humor, Eva is an instantly accessible protagonist, always ready to confide and/or make a joke about a situation or herself. No intellectual, she nonetheless strikes up a quick friendship with an odd bird, Marianne (Holofcener regular Catherine Keener), a divorced poet whose refined lifestyle Eva admires and who speaks very openly about the many shortcomings of her unnamed former husband. The castoff, of course, is Albert, who, on a dinner date with Eva, proves to be spirited company. He is, admittedly, quite heavy (“I’m planning on losing some weight. I really need to,” says Gandolfini’s

045. Employment Opportunities

INTERIM HEALTHCARE is hiring a Full Time RN & Part Time LVN in the Roswell area.

Apply online or call Twila to schedule an interview. 575-625-8885 1210 N. Main Suite 200, Roswell, NM 88201-3569 Interim HEALTH CARE EOE www.interimhealthcare.com THE PECOS Valley Regional Education Cooperative #8 is seeking applications for a Special Education Specialist. This is a full time position providing assistance to four small regional school districts and the PVREC. The selected candidate would provide guidance on Special Education operations within the NM State and Federal rules and regulations.

The individual filling this position must possess or be eligible to possess a New Mexico Public Education Department level 3 license. A minimum of a Masters Degree in Special Education is required for this position. Special Education administrative experience would be a plus. Excellent leadership skills, organizational skills and ability to function in a continuous improvement environment are a must. Travel will be part of the job function. We offer competitive pay, great benefits and an excellent work environment. We will accept resumes until filled and the position will start as soon as possible.

If interested please contact or send resume to: PVREC #8 ATTN: David Willden P.O. Box 155 Artesia, NM 88211-0155 dwillden@pvrec8.com (575) 748.6100 Phone (575) 748.6160 Fax The PVREC #8 is an equal opportunity employer and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, sex, religion, age, marital status, disability, handicap or veteran status in employment or the provision of services in accordance with the federal and state laws.

Legals

-----------------------------------------------------------------------Publish September 18, 25, October 2, 2013

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIANSHIP PETITION OF JESSICA K. DUNCAN

PQ-2013-16

NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION

TO: Unknown Father of D.C.D.

You are hereby notified that the is now pending in the District Court of Chaves County, New Mexico, Case No. DM-2013-16 a Petition for the Appointment of Guardian of a Minor action wherein Jessica K. Duncan is the Petitioner. The general object of this action is to obtain Guardianship of a male child, initials D.C.D., born 11/20/09, in Roswell, New Mexico to K.C.S. Notice is further given that unless you respond in writing to said cause on or before October 9, 2013, judgment by default will be entered against you in conformity with the allegations of the Petition for Guardianship of a minor child. The name and address of Petitioner’s attorney is Sheryl L. Saavedra, LLC, PO Box 1327, Roswell, New Mexico 88202-1327. WITNESS my hand and seal of said District Court on this 10th day of September, 2013.

character, who has to work at not being a slob. But he’s got a daughter (Eve Hewson) heading for college as well, he and Eva laugh easily together and there are no awkward silences. Promising. While massaging Marianne, Eva hears more and more horror stories about her ex, just as Eva is enthusing to her girl pals, such as Sarah (Toni Collette), about her freshly revived intimate life. At the same time, she gets into trouble by encouraging one of her daughter’s friends (Tavi Gevinson) to go ahead and lose her virginity and otherwise doesn’t always use the best judgment. This is Holofcener’s sweet spot, the depiction of the emotional confusions, self-deceptions, uncertainties and misguided decisions that can cloud and get the better of otherwise bright, aware people, especially the female char-

045. Employment Opportunities

Avon, Buy/Sell. Become Ind. Sales Rep $10 to start Sandy 317-5079 ISR Kentucky Fried Chicken Is looking for motivated individuals to become Team Members, Assistant Managers, and General Managers. To become a team member, contact the restaurants directly at 575-622-5498 or 575-622-4013 for further information. If you are interested in becoming an Assistant Manager or General Manager, contact 530-913-2047. EOE

IMMEDIATE OPENING for Journeyman Electrician & 2 yr apprentice, paid vacations & some holidays. Call or fax your resume to 575-734-0335.

Dean Baldwin Painting, LP aircraft strip and paint services, is presently looking to fill the following long term, full-time positions: PAINTERS – Exp in stripping and painting aircraft or vehicles. PAINTER HELPERS – Exp preferred but not required. On the job training available! CPA or CPA candidate needed for a friendly, growing CPA firm This is a position leading to a partnership offer. Duties include general ledger preparation through financial statement presentation and tax preparation. Prior experience in the preparation of consolidated and foreign corporate tax returns is a big plus. Experience with QuickBooks, Word and Excel is required. Flexible hours, pleasant working environment and excellent benefits including medical insurance reimbursement, profit-sharing and pension plan. You will be the fourteenth person in our office family and you will enjoy working with us. Please e-mail your resume or letter of introduction to dsc.classified@gmail.com or mail to DSC, PO Box 2034, Roswell, NM 88202-2034.

EASTERN NM State Fair is now hiring for temporary help from Sept. 28 -Oct 5, 2013. Call 575-626-4909 between 8am & 3pm only. TEENAGER BOY PUPPIES PEKA-CHIS (Pekingnese X Chihuahua) and DOXIE-TESE (Mini Dachshund X Maltese) very cute and playful $100 adoption fee. Had 4 puppy shots 4-5 months old. txt/call 575-910-1818 WE ARE COMFORT KEEPERS

EXPERIENCE THE JOYS AND REWARDS of being a Comfort Keeper

Quality of life is important to everyone. Helping seniors maintain their independence is what being a Comfort Keeper® is all about. We provide many services such as, meal preparation, light housekeeping, running errands, medication reminders and personal care. Our Comfort Keepers® come first, that is second to none in the area. We offer flexible full-time or part-time hours with competitive pay. If you want to learn more about becoming a Comfort Keeper, stop by our office today to learn more. EOE 1410 S Main St Roswell, NM 88203 Ph. 575-624-9999

Clerk of the District Court By: /s/Cynthia Brackeen Deputy

Roswell Daily Record

WWW.COMFORT KEEPERS.COM

045. Employment Opportunities

Vocational Rehabilitation Counselor. The Roswell office of a State of NM govt agency is recruiting for an individual to provide the full-range of VR services to blind/visually impaired clients in Southeastern NM. Full-time, $30k-$54k annually, state govt benefits. Closing date Sept. 19. Minimum quals BA in VR, Sociology, Psych, Guidance/Counseling, Social Work, and/or Spec Ed with no experience. Apply online only www.spo.state.nm.us HVAC TECH NEEDED Pay based on experience. Must pass a drug test. 622-4944 Apartment Maintenance Worker needed. Painting, plumbing, carpet, A/C, landscaping, you will be doing a bit of everything. Must be honest, reliable, hard working & pass a drug test. Pay based on experience. 622-4944 SOUTHEAST NM Community Action Corporation Roswell Head Start Program is accepting applications for: Family Services Assistant ~ $10.03 Health Coordinator ~ $13.35 Cook Assistant ~ 9.27

!!! 4 DAY WORK WEEK (Mon-Thurs)!!!

WORK SCHEDULE PER HEAD START CALENDAR REVIEW DEADLINE ~ SEPTEMBER 23, 2013 POSITION WILL REMAIN OPEN UNTIL FILLED

APPLY AT DEPT. OF WORKFORCE SOLUTIONS AT 2110 S. MAIN, ROSWELL, NM OR Mail application to 1915 San Jose Blvd., Carlsbad, NM 88220 or email to dtaylorhr@snmcac.com Go to www.snmcac.org to print out application packet. SNMCAC is an EEOE

RESIDENTIAL CLEANING, 2 hrs min. $10 hr., daily, weekly, or monthly. ref.& 5 yrs. exp. 347-8633 CALL TODAY start immediately. $1600/mo per written agreement. Full time, no experience needed. Call Rick at 575-578-4817. TUMBLING coaches needed for an all start gym. Call 575-639-4114. HIRING Housekeeper & Front Desk Personnel. Apply in person at 2803 W. 2nd St. No phone calls please. Turquoise Health and Wellness is seeking to fill a full-time position as a Safe and Stable Families Supervisor. If you are an energetic person and want a rewarding career in the mental health field, come be a part of our team. This is an in-home service program working with families to improve parenting, life skills, and access to community resources. Master’s degree in Social Work, Human Services, Education or related field is required. Must have 7 years experience working with families and 2 of those years must be in a supervisory role. An EOE. Bilingual (English/Spanish) a plus. Please send resume to: Turquoise Health and Wellness, Attn: Samantha Reed, 110 E. Mescalero Rd., Roswell, NM 88201 or sreed@thwnm.org

acters she tends to specialize in. When a chance revelation announces to all concerned that Marianne’s ex and Eva’s new boyfriend are one in the same, the fallout is immediate and widely felt. The aftermath provides just the right amount of time for both the characters and the audience to assess how the damage can be repaired. In what turns out to be his second-to-last film (“Animal Rescue” will be released next year), Gandolfini is quite wonderful playing a mensch with plenty of faults but an honest, relaxed, slyly funny guy who’s reassuring to be around. “Enough Said,” a Fox-Searchlight release, is rated PG-13 by the Motion Picture Association of America for “crude and sexual content, comic violence, language and partial nudity.” Running time: 93 minutes.

045. Employment Opportunities

PUT GRAPHICS IN YOUR AD! ADD A PICTURE OF YOUR PET, YOUR HOUSE, YOUR CAR, YOUR COMPANY’S LOGO!

E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

Clinical Therapist Turquoise Health and Wellness, Inc., a well established, progressive community mental health center, seeking to fill above position. Position requires Master's Degree from accredited university. Must have a New Mexico license; requires experience in demonstrated assessment, counseling, documentation and cultural competency skills. Bilingual (English/Spanish) a plus. Excellent fringe benefits include: health insurance, retirement plan, and vacation package. Salary DOE. An EOE. Open until filled. If you need further assistance, please contact David Martinez at (575)623-1480 ext. 1056 Send resume to: Turquoise Health and Wellness, Inc. ATTN: HR Department Roswell, New Mexico 88201 REGISTERED NURSE Counseling Associates, Inc. is currently hiring a registered nurse. Applicants must hold a valid New Mexico license. Experience with psychiatric clients preferred. Bilingual (English/Spanish) a plus. This is a 40 hour per week position with no late nights, no week-ends and paid holidays. Great Fringe benefits. If interested, please mail resume to the address down below: Turquoise Health and Wellnes, Attn: Sylvia Orosco 110 E. Mescalero Rd., Roswell, NM 88201. If you need further information, please contact Sylvia Orosco at 575-623-1480 ext 1058. Turquoise Health and Wellness is seeking to fill a half-time position as a Safe and Stable Families Practitioner. If you are an energetic person and want a rewarding career in the mental health field, come be a part of our team. This is an in-home service program working with families to improve parenting, life skills, and access to community resources. Bachelor’s degree in Human Services, Education or related fields is required. Must have 3 years experience working with families. An EOE. Bilingual (English/Spanish) a plus. Please send resume to: Turquoise Health and Wellness, Attn: Samantha Reed, 110 E. Mescalero Rd., Roswell, NM 88201 or sreed@thwnm.org NEED PART time home health attendant for quadriplegic person. Call 575-420-1860 for interview. DRIVER NEEDED Class A or B CDL with clear driving record, local route, competitive pay, 401K, insurance and paid time off. Call 800-658-2673 or 806-293-4431

045. Employment Opportunities

ATTENTION DEDICATED & REGIONAL DRIVERS! Averitt Offers Excellent Benefits & Hometime. CDL-A req. 888-362-8608. Recent Grads w/a CDL-A, 1-6 wks. Paid Training. Apply online at AverittCareers.com Equal Opportunity Employer ADVERTISE YOUR DRIVER JOBS in 33 New Mexico newspapers for only $100. Your 25-word classified ad will reach more than 288,000 readers. Call this newspaper to place your ad or log onto www.nmpress.org for more information. BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE Associates, Inc is seeking a full-time independently licensed mental health therapist: LPCC, LISW, or LMFT. The ideal candidate has experience working with children, adolescents, and adults. Competitive pay, an excellent benefits package, admin support, and continuing education reimbursement are offered for the full time position. Those interested please forward resume/ CV with 3 references to Provider Recruitment: 1010 North Virginia Ave, Roswell, NM 88201 or call Jacque at 623-9322 for more information. 106455 PRODUCTION Worker Must be able to pass drug test. Apply at AmeriPride Linen between 8:00am and 11:00am at 515 N Virginia, Roswell NM 88201 between 08/22/13 to 08/29/13 Competitive salary and benefits. This is for full time position. Application may be filled out at office online at http://intranet.corp. ameripride.com/ and click on career opportunities No phone calls will be accepted. AA/EEO EMPLOYER M/F/D/V 2 TEMPORARY Workers Barnes Ranch Tony W. Allen 15471 A. Ozona TX. 76943. Occupation: Farmworkers, Farm, Ranch, and Animals 10/29/2013 - 08/29/2014 Pay rate $10.18 per hour. Farm workers. Guaranteed 3/4 of contract hours. All tools, supplies, equipment and housing will be provided at no cost to the worker. Duties Horse working vaccinated & branded. Transportation and subsistence expense reimbursed. Interested applicants can send resumes nearest State Workforce Agency office (512)475-2571 using job listing number TX6908654. WATER-WELL RIG helper. Apply at Keys Drilling, 1012 E. 2nd St., Roswell, NM. ROSWELL MEDICAL Clinic is seeking a front desk receptionist with coding experience. Please bring your resume with references to 111 W. Hobbs St. (Bilingual is a plus) AMERIPRIDE LINEN Requisition# 106413 Customer Service Manager

Job Description is listed on line at Career Builders Application must be filled out on line at careerbuilders.com. This is a full time position Must be able to pass drug test. Competitive salary and benefits. EOE EMPLOYER


Roswell Daily Record 045. Employment Opportunities

045. Employment Opportunities

ARBY'S AND Dairy Queen of New Mexico and Texas is currently accepting applications for HVAC Technician. We offer: Top Salary and Benefits. Send resume or work history to 204 W. 4th St. Roswell, New Mexico 88201 or fax to 575-623-3075 email to: mjgcorp@cs.com

FLORAL DESIGNER. Applicant must have a minimum of two years experience in a full service flower shop, be dependable, detail oriented, and have excellent people skills. Work schedule and wages are negotiable. Please send resume with references to Florist, PO Box 1263, Roswell, NM 88202.

Bookkeeper/Secretary Apply at Keys Drilling, 1012 E. 2nd St., Roswell, NM.

SERVICES

IMMEDIATE OPENING Automatic Vending Service is seeking a Full Time Route Driver. Must be at least 21 yrs old. Apply at the Workforce Connection, 2110 S. Main, Roswell or send resume to jbanister@plateautel.net or fax to 575-769-1296. EYE TECH Computer & medical skills prefered, but will train the right candidate. Send resume to PO Box 8244 Roswell, NM 88202. KYMERA

NEW MEDICAL OFFICE POSITIONS: As a growing Independent Physicians Office, Kymera is now seeking Qualified Applicants for:

080. Alterations

ALTERATIONS & MISC. SEWING - 840-8065.

135. Ceramic Tile

CERAMIC TILE Do you need to tile your floor? Here in Roswell, Ben does it for you. From $295 ONLY per room. It includes everything. I also do small plumbing jobs. 505-990-1628 or 575-825-0579 (cell)

140. Cleaning

JD CLEANING Service, Licensed and bonded. References. 623-4252

Billing/Coding Specialist: FT - Exp in insurance billing and coding, patient/insurance collections and computer skills required. Knowledge of EMR systems. Quals: Minimum of 2 yrs. medical billing; knowledge of CPT; ICD-9; HCPCS; superb communication and people skills. Fax Resume w/Cover letter to: 575-627-9520

I CLEAN HOUSES, OFFICES, WINDOWS, & DO SEWING. 840-8065

150. Concrete

CONCRETE DRIVEWAYS, sidewalks, retaining walls and steps. Free estimates: 575-973-1019

200. Fencing

Quality Fence construction. Free estimates: 575-973-1019 M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991

210. Firewood/Coal MOUNTAIN WOOD for sale, Delivery available. 575-420-5124

220. Furniture Repair WE BUILD and repair furniture. 840-7849 or 626-8466

225. General Construction

Alpha Construction New Construction, remodels, additions, concrete & painting. Lic. & Bonded Call Adam 626-2050

232. Chimney Sweep

CHIMNEY SWEEP Have your woodstove or fireplace or pellet stove inspected and cleaned. Dust free Guarantee. 39 yrs Exp., Licensed, Insured. Bulldog Janitorial Services 575-308-9988

235. Hauling

PROPERTY CLEANUPS Tear down old bldgs, barns, haul trash, old farm equip. 347-0142/317-7738 HAULING NEEDS? Blue Collar Haulers. You call, we haul. Josh, 937-9620

CLASSIFIEDS

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

Summer Clean-up rake leaves, tree trimming, weed eating, haul trash, property clean-up & much more. Call Joseph, 317-2242.

PROFESSIONAL LANDSCAPING/ Irrigation design and construction. Free estimates: 575-973-1019 Yard work, clean-ups, lawns. Handyman svc. David 637-9580. WE WORK All Yard work & hauling. Call Will at 317-7402 WW LAWN Service Property cleanup - Mowing - Shrub & hedge trimming & much more. Call Juan, 626-6121. Bòidheach Yards and Gardens. Property cleanup & hauling, year round maintenance, landscaping, tree management. You'll love our prices! 578-9404. “Big E’s” Landscaping & Yardwork mow, trim, prune property clean-up, sprinkler sys. senior disc. 914-6025

285. Miscellaneous Services

GROCERY GETTERS We will get your groceries & deliver to your home. Call 623-1044. I CLEAN HOUSES, OFFICES, WINDOWS, & DO SEWING. 840-8065 SAVE $$$ on AUTO INSURANCE from the major names you know and trust. No forms. No hassle. No obligation. Call READY FOR MY QUOTE now! CALL 1-888-719-6435

MEDICAL ALERT for Seniors - 24/7 monitoring. FREE Equipment. FREE Shipping. Nationwide Service. $29.95/Month CALL Medical Guardian Today 888-416-2099

• Published 6 Consecutive Days

• Ads posted online at no extra cost

(includes tax)

MAIL AD WITH PAYMENT OR FAX WITH CREDIT CARD NUMBER Call (575)-622-7710 --- 625-0421 Fax 2301 N. Main TO BUY-SELL-RENT-TRADE ANY AND EVERYTHING

Quality Painting! Affordable prices, Sr. Discounts. Mike 622-0072 INTERIOR, EXTERIOR painting, free estimates, 20yrs experience, 575-914-3522

330. Plumbing

SAVE ON Cable TVInternet-Digital PhoneSatellite. You`ve Got A Choice! Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 888-706-8846

3 LINES OR LESS . . . ONLY $ 68 9 NO REFUNDS

310. Painting/ Decorating

ATTENTION SLEEP APNEA SUFFERERS with Medicare. Get FREE CPAP Replacement Supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 1-866-938-5101. Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-661-3783, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping.

310. Painting/ Decorating

TIME TO PAINT? Quality int./ext. painting. Call 637-9108.

GAS LINES and plumbing specials, best prices, licensed, 840-9105

345. Remodeling

BERRONES CONSTRUCTION. Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing. Licensed, Bonded. Ray: 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

RESIDENTIAL ROOFING, new and repairs. 575-973-1019 Guaranteed Shingle Roof jobs. Locally owned. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 622-2552.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

490. Homes For Sale FSBO: 816 Trailing Heart, NE, 1745 sqft, 3/2 w/2 car air conditioned garage, & new door openers, 2 living areas, new tile, carpet & paint, wood stove, office, storage building, central air, $125k, owner will pay closing cost, prequalified buyers only. 575-626-0926 NICE AND cozy 3/2/1, NE in county, close to schools & shopping, new ref. air, carpet & water heater, $85,000. For appt. call 623-2500 can leave msg. FSBO: 3br/1ba, laundry room, completely remodeled, 308 E. Ballard, $89k OBO. Call 627-2143 or 420-8281 3BR, 1 3/4ba, north part of town, 3110 N. Bandolina, 1 car garage, all new carpet, paint & roof, 2 blks from swimming pool. Priced to sell, $108,000. Owner may finance w/large down payment. 622-5031 or 420-1022 2BR, ALL new plumbing, new tub, faucets, vanity, kitchen sink & cabinet, newly painted inside/out, all new doors & carpet, $25k-OBO, in a decent area, 1609 N. Kansas. 575-347-5648 or 575-626-0518.

I AM looking for work. I have experience doing metal roofs, for estimates call Fernando, 317-1145.

GREAT NE home, split bedrooms, 3/2/2, owner financing available, $139,900, 842 Swinging Spear. 626-4666 or 622-4470

Stucco, Lath, synthetic, guaranteed work. Memo 575-637-1217

1br/1ba, $25k nice starter home, owner can finance, $38k with $4k down, could paint and ?? for part down, 1814 N. Cambridge 575-973-2353.

395. Stucco Plastering

M. G. Horizons All types of Stucco and Wire lath. Free Estimates 623-1991

405. TractorWork

Tractor work Lots mowed, discing, blading, post holes. 347-0142 or 317-7738 WEED MOWING, discing & blading, $50/hr, 1hr min. 626-4173 after 4pm

410. Tree Service

STUMP GRINDING. Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 623-4185 Allen’s Tree Srvc. Trim top removal, good clean up. Free estimates. 626-1835

4br/2ba, $79k, ref. air, all elec., storage building, large corner lot, $79k owner can carry with $7k down, 600 N. Garden. 575-973-2353 2br/1ba, wood floors, carport, large lot, 2 storage areas, new gas furnace, $72k with allowance for new kitchen floor, $4k down, 503 S. Kansas. 575-973-2353 BEVERS REALTY, 575-840-6451. 702 Chrysler, $259,900; 1602 N. Union, 3br/2ba, $119k refurbished or remodeled; 1516 N. Union, 2br/1ba, $75k.

492. Homes for Sale/Rent

TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL, free estimates, super clean up, 840-9105

FINANCIAL

REAL ESTATE

490. Homes For Sale 2BR, large backyard, completely fenced, everything new. Located on S. Michigan, close to Missouri Ave. School. $75,000. 806-445-3640 for info. (MUST SEE-VERY CUTE HOME)

Dennis the Menace

B9

495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale

5br/3ba country home, nestled away on Old Clovis Hwy, close to town. Over 2700 sqft, 2 large master bedrooms, large covered porch, updated kitchen, wood laminate floors, on 6 acres with two pastures, grandfather water rights, many trees, mobile home/RV hookup, owner can finance, $377,000 with $35,000 down negotiable. 575-973-2353 TWO NEIGHBORING 20 acre ranches each just $12,900 or together for $24,000. Lender repossession. 1 hour 45 minutes southwest of Albuquerque. These ranches previously sold for 3x the new asking price. Remote, high dessert setting with good access and electric. Financing available. Call NMRS 1-888-676-6979.

510. Resort-Out of Town

ADVERTISE YOUR VACATION PROPERTY, to more than 284,000 New Mexico newspaper readers. Your 25-word classified ad will appear in 32 newspapers around the state for only $100. Call this newspaper for more details or visit www.nmpress.org for more info.

515. Mobile Homes - Sale

2006 SOLITAIRE, 28’x60’ DW located in retirement village, 414 E. 23rd Space 31. Covered double carport, covered decks for both entries, 8’x10’ Tuff Shed storage, covered patio & 5’ Cedar fence around backyard. All electric, ref. air, beautiful inside & out, $70K. 575-914-8316

520. Lots for Sale

SELL OR RENT YOUR HOUSE FASTER! INCLUDE A PICTURE FOR JUST $5! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

PREMIUM 5 acre tracts, good covenants (no mobile homes), Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd between Country Club & Berrendo. Owner will finance with 10% down. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 626-6791, 626-3848. Mobile Home Lots for sale: Lot size 50x134 $19,500. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. 420-1352.

520. Lots for Sale

2 LOTS for sale on the base, $2000 each. 420-3637 NICE BUILDING lot for sale, 1200 W. Stone, $5000. 622-6786 FOR SALE by owner 5 acre lot, great location NW area, well, electric on site, wonderful community custom built homes, $55,000 OBO 760-716-0610 or 575-910-7969 **SEPTEMBER SPECIAL** 10% DOWN LOTS STARTING AT $20,000

NO CLOSING COST 6% INTEREST 10 YRS OWNER FINANCING

Your own 5 Acre lot in the country Good covenants 9 miles west of Roswell www.buenavidaland.com Jim Moore - Owner/Broker 575-623-1800 or 575-626-5352 LOT FOR sale in Enchanted Hills, $14,000. 575-317-3703 PREMIUM 5 acre tracts, good covenants (no mobile homes), Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd between Country Club & Berrendo. Owner will finance with 10% down. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 626-6791, 626-3848.

521. Cemetery Lots

1 LOT in older section. Call Chris 623-1206 or 317-9815.

RENTALS

535. Apartments Furnished

1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, call M-Th 8a-4p 624-1331 FURNISHED ROOM private bath, 15min south of Roswell, $100wkly all utilities included,575-347-8890

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.

CLASSIFICATION

PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE

SEND TO: Roswell Daily Record, Classified Department, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell, N.M. 88202 WE ACCEPT:

EXPIRES ________

Card # __________________ 3 Digit # (ON BACK OF CARD)________ NAME ____________________________________________ ADDRESS _________________________________________ PHONE ___________________________________________

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CAREER OPPORTUNITIES at ROSWELL FORD

High School Didn’t Work For You? Here’s Your Second Chance!

To Place or Cancel an Ad

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Personal Advertising totaling less than $20 will not be billed on an open account, unless the advertiser already has a history of good credit with us. Visa, Master Card & Discover are accepted as prepayment. There will be no refunds or credit on prepaid cancellations. All individuals who are not in our retail trade zone must prepay their advertising. All new commercial accounts must have a standard application for credit on file. If we do not have an approved credit application on file, the advertising must be charged on a credit card until credit is approved. CORRECTING AN ERROR — You are responsible for checking your ad the first day it appears in the paper. In the event of an error, call the Classified Department immediately for correction. THE ROSWELL DAILY RECORD WILL ONLY ALLOW ONE ADDITIONAL DAY FOR INCORRECT INSERTIONS.

CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS

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Add 12 word count to word ad for approved addressing directions.

Come grow with us! We offer great pay and benefits in an excellent working environment. We will provide training for the right people. Please apply in person 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.

SERVICE TECHNICIAN

A NATIONAL GUARD YOUTH PROGRAM GED instruction, 15-18 college credits, All in 22 weeks! For New Mexico Residents 16-18 years of age If you have dropped out of high school And desire a second chance, Come see what we are all about! Wednesday, September 18th at 6:00 PM New Mexico Youth Challenge Academy 131 Earl Cummings Loop, Bldg. 610 Roswell, NM Candidates must attend with a parent or guardian & prospective Mentor. For more information contact Sabrina Lara at 575-347-7610 or 575-973-0336 or log on to our Website at www.ngycp.org/nm ABSOLUTELY NO COST TO PARTICIPANTS!

Build your career here! Roswell Ford has an immediate opening for a general service technician and a diesel service technician. We offer top pay, great benefits and a busy shop.

SALES REPRESENTATIVES Great salespeople are the backbone of our business and we’re on the lookout for talented individuals who like people, like cars and present themselves well.

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT You’ll need strong computer skills, excellent communication abilities and be able to stay organized in a fast moving environment.

SERVICE ADVISOR You’ll need a thorough understanding of automotive systems, enjoy working with people and present yourself in a professional manner.

AUTO DETAILER If you know what you’re doing and can do it fast, we have lots of work available, some Saturdays.

!"#$%&&'("!) 821 NORTH MAIN, ROSWELL, NM • 575-623-3673 www.roswellford.com


B10 Wednesday, September 18, 2013 540. Apartments Unfurnished

BETTER LIVING is within reach! 2br/1ba $592, 3br/2ba, $674, 5br/2ba $812, central H/C, fridge, stove, DW, GD, W/D hookups, 2 refreshing pools, Section 8 Vouchers accepted, 623-7711, Villas of Briar Ridge. ALL BILLS PAID 1BR $544, 2BR $653, 3br/2ba $753/mo., ref air, newly remodeled. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944 Spacious 2br 1ba, extra storage, laundry facilities, freshly painted, ceramic tile floors, $600 water & gas paid, 1114 S. Kentucky, 910-0851 or 910-7076 1&2Bd, 3 locations, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, M-Th 8a-4p 624-1331 2301 N. Grand Apt. A, 2br, 1.5ba, 1car garage & laundry room. 910-4225. 1 or 2bd, furnished-unfurnished, no smoking/Hudpets all bills pd. 623-6281 Roswell Apartment 1700 N. Pontiac Dr., 2br/1ba, stove & fridge, a/c, water paid. 626-864-3461

FIRST MONTH FREE 3br/2ba, $753, 1000 sqft, all bills paid, cold central AC, newly remodeled, 502 S. Wyoming, 622-4944. EFF, 1 & 2br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348. PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHANTED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN. EFF, 1BR, downtown, clean, wtr pd. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD. 623-8377 HISTORIC DISTRICT 612 W. 3RD, 2bd, duplex hardwood floors, water pd W/D, $750, 575-937-8658. HISTORIC DISTRICT 213 N. WASHINGTON, 1BD, duplex, water pd, hardwood floors, W/D, $675, 575-937-8658 REMODELED 2BR/2BA, Princeton yard, all electric, outside pets ok, $650/mo, $500/dep. 910-0827 2/1, $625/mo., $400/dep., wtr pd, no HUD/pets, 302 W. Mescalero. 910-1300 THREE RENTALS Available: All 2 bedrooms, no pets, water paid, $500/mo, $400/dep. Inquire at 804 S. Atkinson. 2br/2ba, single car garage, completely renovated apt in Historical District & walking distance to downtown. Located @ 608 N. Penn Apt. A, $850 mo + utilities, $500 dep. Call Sherlea Taylor at 575-420-1978 or 575-624-2219 for details. Available Oct. 1, 2013.

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

36 H St., $550/mo, $550/dep, 2br/1ba, fenced yard, wtr pd, min. 1yr lease, 627-9942. NORTHEAST 3BR/2BA, livingroom/den + sun room, fenced yard, pets negotiable, no HUD, $1200/mo, $800/dep + utilities, 1yr lease required. Avail. 9/13. Call Luis at 575-637-1031.

2&3Bd, 1&2Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-4p 624-1331

706 W. 10th, 3br/1ba, ref air, w/d hookups, no pets or HUD, $700/mo, $600/dep. 914-5402 3BR, $550, 1310 SE Main commercial $1200 Al 703-0420 or Dr 703-0421 LARGE 3BD, 1 3/4 ba, in excellent condition, $950mo., $950dep., no hud, 1904 S Lea, 575-626-4666, 622-4470

2BR/1BA, $570/MO, $500/dep, 1312 N. Missouri. Julie, 05-220-0617

TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262 513 S. Sycamore, remodeled 3br/3ba, ref. air, w/d hookups, no pets or HUD, $900/mo, $700/dep. 575-914-5402

2br/1ba, no pets $575/mo, $400/dep. 612-242-5458 or 832-265-0484 1519 N. Kansas, $750/mo, 3br, owner/broker, 575-840-6451. 3/2/1, ref air, no pets or HUD, $850/mo, $700/dep. 575-420-5930

1br $475/mo $400 dep. no pets/Hud. 575-317-7373 Clean 2BR, 1527 N. Michigan $500 + Dep. No Pets. No HUD. Call 626-2190. 2BR/1BA, SMALL fenced yard, 200 S. Michigan Ave. $575/mo., $500/dep. 575-420-5516 or 575-623-1800.

3BR/2BA, 1616 S. Washington, close to schools & shopping, pets allowed w/non-refundable pet dep., $600/dep, $900/mo, newly remodeled. Call 623-8922. 1105 W. 14th St. 2br/1ba. $450/mo, $450/dep. 420-3167 or 420-4038

3br/2ba, 2 car gar, No HUD, $1000/mo, $500/dep, 412 Evergreen. 910-1300 2/1, $625/mo., $400/dep., wtr pd, no HUD/pets, 609 W. Eighth. 910-1300

{{{RENTED}}} 1br/1ba, utilities pd, couple or single, includes washer & dryer, $550/mo, $500/dep. 5BR/1BA, 609 Alameda. 575-317-5958 CSD PROPERTY Mngmt csdpm11@gmail.com

BETTER LIVING is within reach! 2br/1ba $592, 3br/2ba, $674, 5br/2ba $812, central H/C, fridge, stove, DW, GD, W/D hookups, 2 refreshing pools, Section 8 Vouchers accepted, 623-7711, Villas of Briar Ridge.

www.roswellnmhouses.com

Very nice 2br Apartment. 304 W. Mescalero, $625/mo wtr pd, $300/dep. 6 mo. lease, no HUD or pets, 420-4535.

1br/1.5ba, Washer, dryer, stove, fridge, central ht/air, $500/mo, $450/dep, no pets, smoking or HUD, 623-7565 or 420-0856

Town Plaza Apartments NO HUD ACCEPTED ALL UTILITIES PAID Friendly managers. New Renovated 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. Good credit? Pay less rent! 575-623-2735.

LARGE HOUSE, fenced yard, norh side, 3br/1.5ba, ref. air, No Hud. 623-7565.

545. Houses for Rent-Furnished

1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-4p 624-1331 RESTORED 3BD/2BA or 2/2 w/art studio near NMMI. Huge lvg & bd $1000/mo + utl. Brenda, 626-6286

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 3/1/1 FOR small family, 6 month lease, background check required, no HUD or Pets, 623-0316, lv msg

32 GEIGER, 3BR/1BA W/GARAGE, laundry room & large fenced yard, $680/mo, $500/dep. 575-420-5516 or 575-623-1800. 3BR NEAR ENMU-R, #20 Murphy Place, HUD approved, w/garage, ldry rm, new carpet, very clean, $650/mo. 623-6999 or 317-2945 1602 N. Kansas, 2br/1ba, $650/$300, both near hospitals 622-2877 FANTASTIC TOWNHOME on Country Club golf course w/views. 3 BR, 3 BA or 2 BR + office, 2 patios, fireplace, all appliances, hurry won’t last long. 575-420-8201 or 575-644-8657.

575-637-3716 575-622-7191 1621 S. Union 2/2 A/C,D/W,Stove $875 Mo $875 Dep

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

3, 4, & 6br, $550-$650, $1200; 1br util. pd, $600. Al 575-703-0420, 420-3495

555. Mobile Homes for Rent Mobile homes for rent, sale or rent to own, mobile home lots available, RVs welcome. Country Club Mobile Home Manor, 1200 E. Country Club, 623-6660

580. Office or Business Places

222 B W. 2nd, office space, $375/mo, $375/dep, wtr pd, 627-9942 Wanted to lease small office space zoned C2, preferably county, but in city limits may work. Cannot be within 1000 ft of a school, church or daycare. Contact Mandy at 575-937-6788. AVAILABLE 750 sqft at 2600 N. Main. Call John Grieves, Prudential Enchanted Lands, 575-626-7813. 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. CSD PROPERTY Mngmt csdpm11@gmail.com www.roswellnmhouses.com

575-637-3716 Commercial 6230 N. Main St. Great Office Space loading dock, yard $1500 Mo $1500 Dep

MERCHANDISE

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

OVERHEAD PROJECTOR $35; (3) 6ft cabinets $35 each. 622-6786 Cummins portable generator, Micron desk collector. 626-8466 LIFT chair, pwr wheelchair, patient lifter, crutches, overbed table. 622-7638. Top Quality reconditioned appliances on sale. Many like new less than half the price! Washers, dryers $75 & up. Refrigerators, stoves from $100. Excellent selection, Camper’s Appliances, 300 E. McGaffey 623-0397. Everything guaranteed! Hospital bed, walker, bath transfer bench, items for handicapp. 622-7638 THE TREASURE Chest Must see. Sofas, boxing gloves & punching bag, weights, chests, antiques, antique wood stove, sports cards, rare Avon bottles, more. 1204 W. Hobbs, 914-1855, Weds-Sat, 10-5. DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-315-7043 BABY CHANGING table w/drawers. Set 3 living room tables. Semi new griller. Dining table w/4 chairs. Weight bench. 3 TVs. Twin bed. 2 headboards. 910-1749

CLASSIFIEDS

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

745. Pets for Sale

WEDDING GOWN size 8 gorgeous, elegant, never worn. Pd $575, asking $400 obo. 575-495-1839 SEMI NEW Olhausen unassembled maple pool table “American Series” deluxe corner stand, 4 cues included, $3800 obo. Local pick up only. 910-1749 DIRECTV - Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Call Now! Triple savings! $636.00 in Savings, Free upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sunday ticket free!! Start saving today! 1-800-264-0340

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

620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous

We buy Gold & Silver, broken & good jewelry, coins,vintage pocket & wrist watches. 114 S. Main or call Perez Time at 575-317-9060

635. Good things to Eat

GRAVES FARM Bell peppers, squash - 5 different kinds, sweet corn, onions, green beans & black-eyed peas (call for your bushel order), pinto beans, Armenian cucumbers, watermelons, cucumbers, peanuts, dried red chile pods & cantelopes. 622-1889, 8:30am-5:30pm, Mon-Sat, Sunday 1pm-5pm.

670. Farm Equipment

SIDE ROLL Sprinklers (used) 6’ wheels, complete call 623-9264, M-F 7-4

715. Hay and Feed Sale

4x8 SORGUM bales $75 each. Call Janet at 575-626-0159.

ADD A PICTURE OF YOUR PET FOR SALE FOR JUST $5! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

Labradoodle puppies, adorable, healthy, 1st shots & well socialized, born 7/10/13. $500. 317-1237 ADORABLE SHIH Tzu, 6 wks, 3M $350 ea., 1F $425. 575-622-6129 BOSTON TERRIERS for sale. 575-914-0435

RECREATIONAL

775. Motorcycles & Scooters

2008 KAWASAKI Vulcan 900, very low miles, $7500 OBO. 575-626-4233 or 703-3320 03’ SUZUKI BURGMAN 400, 8K miles, $2,800. Call 505-917-0101 ‘02 HONDA VTX 1800, Vance and Hines exhaust windshield, passenger seat, 12k miles, with trailer, $6k. 915-694-1046

780. RV’s & Campers Hauling

MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. New & Used Travel Trailers & 5th Wheels. Parts & Service. 2900 W. 2nd St. 575-622-1751. Mon-Fri, 8-5:30, Sat. 9-2. maintrailersalesinc.com

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If you or someone you know has what it takes to continue that legacy, Apply on line at: http://www.lovelacehealthsystemjobs.com/

ICU RN - Full Time & PRN

Med /Surg Full Time & PRN –RN Full Time & PRN –Unit Secretary Full Time & PRN - PCT OR Full Time Charge RN Full Time – RNe Emergency RN - Full Time

780. RV’s & Campers Hauling 2012 42FT fiberglass 5th wheel, 4 slide outs, 2br, 2 airs, washer/dryer, dishwasher, 4 seasons, many extras, like new, $38,900. 505-385-3944

TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale

790. Autos for Sale

‘10 HONDA Civic Coupe, 51k miles, after market wheels, $13,500. 420-9917

Pharmacy PRN - Tech

Dietary PRN-Food Service Work

Environmental Service (HOUSEKEEPING) Full Time & PRN - Tech

790. Autos for Sale

‘86 ISUZU Trooper, 4x4 diesel, $1200 OBO. 317-0071

795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans

1967 MUSTANG Coupe-Restored $30,000 invested must sell $17,000. Serious inquires only. Call 575-623-3315 for appointment to view.

PUPPY LOVE Grooming & Boarding - Large Dogs Welcome, Cats also 575-420-6655

There are jobs, and then there are jobs at Lovelace Regional Hospital. We’re about so much more than time clocks and paychecks. Here, our employees create higher and better standards for health care in the Southwest. It’s our legacy.

Labor and Delivery RN - Full Time & PRN

Roswell Daily Record

1999 DODGE Ram 1500, 132k miles, $5000, quad cab, single owner, Call or lv msg, 625-2477. ‘05 387 Pete C-15, 475Hp. CAT, 900K, $18,500 Call 626-6400 2002 CHEVY Silverado 4.8 motor, 1 owner 94k miles, also 2000 travel trailer, 29ft Gooseneck $8k. 420-5503

796. SUVS

SHOW US WHAT YOU’RE SELLING! INCLUDE A PICTURE IN YOUR AD FOR JUST $5! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

97’GMC YUKON, 8 cylinder, 4door, asking $4K-Call 575-914-1334

810. Auto Parts & Accessories

15TH ANNUAL Swap Meet and Car Corral, October 11, 12, 1802 W. Main St., Artesia, $15 reserved, $20 at gate, Spectators free, 575-746-9477 or 622-4350

CLASSIFIEDS INDEX

Announcements

005 Special Notice 010 Card of Thanks 015 Personals/Special 020 Transportation 025 Lost & Found

Instruction

030 Education 035 Music – Dance/Drama 040 Instructions Wanted

Employment

045 Employment Opportunities 050 Salesperson/Agents 055 Employment Agencies 060 Jobs Wanted – M & F

Services

070 Agricultural Analysis 075 Air Conditioning 080 Alterations 085 Appliance Repair 090 Auto Repair 100 Babysitting 105 Childcare 110 Blade Work 115 Bookkeeping 120 Carpentry 125 Carpet Cleaning 130 Carpeting 135 Ceramic Tile 140 Cleaning 145 Clock & Watch Repair 150 Concrete 155 Counseling 160 Crafts/Arts 165 Ditching 170 Drafting 175 Drapery 180 Drilling 185 Electrical 190 Engraving 195 Elderly Care 200 Fencing 205 Fertilizer 210 Firewood – Coal 215 Floor Covering 220 Furniture Repair 224 Garage Door Repair 225 General Construction 226 Waterwell 230 General Repair 232 Chimney Sweep 235 Hauling 240 Horseshoeing 245 House Wrecking 250 Insulation 255 Insurance 260 Ironing & Washing 265 Janitorial 269 Excavating 270 Landscape/Lawnwork 280 Masonry/Concrete 285 Miscellaneous Service 290 Mobile Home Service 293 Monuments 295 Musical 300 Oil Field Services 305 Computers 306 Rubber Stamps 310 Painting/Decorating 315 Pest Control 316 Pets 320 Photography 325 Piano Tuning 330 Plumbing 335 Printing 340 Radio/TV’s/Stereo’s 345 Remodeling 350 Roofing 355 Sand Blasting 356 Satellite 360 Screens/Shutters 365 Security 370 Sewer Service & Repair 375 Sewing Machine Service 380 Sharpening 385 Slenderizing 390 Steam Cleaning 395 Stucco Plastering 400 Tax Service 401 Telephone Service 405 Tractor Work 410 Tree Service 415 Typing Service 420 Upholstery 425 Vacuum Cleaners 426 Video/Recording 430 Wallpapering 435 Welding

440 Window Repair 441 Window Cleaning 445 Wrought Iron 450 Services Wanted

Financial

455 Money: Loan/Borrow 456 Credit Cards 460 Insurance Co. 465 Oil, Mineral, Water, Land Lease/Sale 470 Investment: Stocks/Sale 475 Mortgages for Sale 480 Mortgages Wanted 485 Business Opportunities

Real Estate

490 Homes for Sale 495 Acreage/Farm/Ranch 500 Business for Sale 505 Commercial Business Property 510 Resort Out of Town Property 515 Mobile Homes/Sale 520 Lots for Sale 525 Building Transfer 530 Real Estate Wanted

Rentals

535 Apartments, Furnished 540 Apartments, Unfurnished 545 Houses, Furnished 550 Houses, Unfurnished 555 Mobile Homes – Rental 560 Sleeping Rooms 565 Rest Homes 569 Mobile Home Lots/Space 570 Mobile Home Courts 571 RV Parks 575 Resort Homes 580 Office/Business Rentals 585 Warehouse & Storage 590 Farms/Acreage – Rent 595 Miscellaneous for Rent 600 Want to Rent

Merchandise

605 Miscellaneous for Sale 610 Garage Sales, Individuals 611 Garage Sales, Businesses 615 Coins/Gold/Silver 620 Want to Buy – Miscellaneous 625 Antiques 630 Auction Sales 635 Good Things to Eat 640 Household Goods 645 Sewing Machines 650 Washers & Dryers 652 Computers 655 TV’s & Radios 660 Stereos 665 Musical Merchandise 670 Industrial Equipment 675 Camera/Photography 680 Heating Equipment 685 Air Conditioning Equipment 690 Business/Office Equipment 695 Machinery 700 Building Materials 705 Lawn/Garden/Fertilizer 710 Plants/Flowers 715 Hay & Feed Sale 720 Livestock & Supplies 721 Boarding Stables 725 Livestock Wanted 730 Poultry & Supplies 735 Poultry Wanted 740 Show Fowl 745 Pets for Sale

Recreational

750 Sports Equipment 755 Bicycles for Sale 760 Hunting & Camping Equipment 765 Guns & Ammunition 770 Boats & Accessories 775 Motorcycles 780 RV’s/Campers 785 Trailers Wanted

Transportation

790 Automobiles for Sale 795 Trucks & Vans 796 SUV’s 800 Classic Automobiles 805 Imported Automobiles 810 Auto Parts & Accessories 815 Wanted – Autos


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