03-23-2011

Page 1

Roswell Daily Record

Vol. 120, No. 71 50¢ Daily / $1 Sunday

INSIDE NEWS

The Roswell Police Department held its Active Gunman Training Program, Tuesday. The 8-hour program was initiated by Deputy Police Chief, then Commander, Jody Scifres in 1999 as a reaction to the shootings that occurred in April of that year at Columbine High Scvhool in Littleton, Colo., where - PAGE A2

March 23, 2011

Wetlands get international designation JONATHAN ENTZMINGER RECORD STAFF WRITER

RPD HOLDS GUNMAN TRAINING

THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

Bitter Lake National Wildlife Refuge and Bottomless Lakes State Park were recognized as international wetlands of global importance, Tuesday. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and New Mexico State Parks led a ceremony detailing the recognition and the parks’ special international designation by the Ramsar Convention. The designation was the first for New Mexico and only the 29th in the United States.

WEDNESDAY

www.rdrnews.com

“This is something to be proud of, not only for the state park and the refuge, but for the citizens of Roswell and Chaves County,” Joe Saenz, Bitter Lake manager said. The Ramsar designation puts Roswell and its wetlands and wildlife parks in “very good company,” Joy Nicholopoulos, deputy regional director of FWS Region 2, exclaimed during the ceremony that included local, federal and state officials. Ramsar designations around the globe include the Florida Everglades, Brazil’s Amazonian Mami-

rau Reserve and now Roswell’s Artesian Wetlands. Roswell Mayor Del Jurney also had words at the ceremony, and handed out the official Ramsar citations of wetlands to Sanez and Joe Kasuboski, Bottomless Lakes park superintendent. Inferencing the Roswell Incident, Jurney said Ramsar designation once again puts the community “on the international field of excellence.” He thanked Bitter Lake and Bottomless See WETLANDS, Page A3

Mark Wilson Photo

Alan Fiala, southeast regional manager for state parks, views ducks through a Carl Zeiss Diascope during the International Wetlands ceremony, Tuesday.

US’ no-fly control to end soon

TOP 5 WEB

For The Past 24 Hours

• Burglars hit 4, early Thursday • Man found shot • Camel draws crowd • ‘Overwhelmed’ vet gets new home • Rio Pecos Wag-n-Walk howling success

INSIDE SPORTS

Mark Wilson Photo

CSI Roswell: Girl Scouts crack case Girl Scouts study "Bob", a forensic facial reconstruction mannequin, while learning about the science of crime scene investigation during a CSI Roswell camp, Tuesday.

EMILY RUSSO MILLER RECORD STAFF WRITER

Bloody footsteps through the kitchen of the Girl Scouts Service

COYOTES WIN GAME 1

• • • • • • • •

OBITUARIES

Carol Jean Jankus Paul Hutsell Floie Edith Seitz Onita Pearl Harrison Judy Lucero Geraldine C. Coons Charles ‘Randy’ Brown Baudelio Huerta - PAGE A6

HIGH ...81˚ LOW ....41˚

TODAY’S FORECAST

CLASSIFIEDS..........B6 COMICS.................B4 FINANCIAL .............B3 GENERAL ..............A2 HOROSCOPES ........A8 LOTTERIES ............A2 NATION .................A6 OPINION ................A4 SPORTS ................B1 WEATHER ..............A8

INDEX

watching a movie and eating goldfish crackers. It was up to the Girl Scouts of the Desert Southwest to crack the

Pearce talks timber in Cloudcroft FDA halts some MATTHEW ARCO RECORD STAFF WRITER

In the stadium that once played host to the single greatest home-run hitting season — sans steroids — in baseball history, it was a hard-hit single in the seventh that gave Roswell its third win of the season on Tuesday. The Coyotes rallied out of a 4-0 hole with seven runs in the final five innings to beat 5A Clovis 7-6 at Joe Bauman Stadium. - PAGE B1

TODAY’S

Center led a gaggle of budding investigators to a shocking crime scene — two alien balloons were murdered Monday night while the pink and purple couple were

WASHINGTON (AP) — The fourday air assault in Libya will soon achieve the objectives of establishing a no-fly zone and averting a massacre of civilians by Moammar Gadhafi’s troops, President Barack Obama said Tuesday, adding that despite squabbling among allies, the United States will hand off control of the operation to other countries within days. Obama said he has “absolutely no doubt” that a non-U.S. command entity can run the operation, although perhaps the most obvious candidate — the NATO military alliance — has yet to sort out a political agreement to do so. The president said NATO was meeting to “work out some of the mechanisms.” Despite the cost — not only in effort, resources and potential casualties, but also in taxpayer dollars — Obama said he believes the American public is supportive of such a mission. Obama spoke as one senior

Matthew Arco Photo

John Braziel, owner of Big Beaver Clearing, gives Rep. Steve Pearce, R-N.M., a tour of forests near Cloudcroft, Monday.

Congressman Steve Pearce, R-N.M., met with constituents in Cloudcroft Tuesday morning to discuss legislation he recently introduced on the House floor that would breathe life into the state’s timber industry, he said. The lawmaker blamed an over-regulated federal government for reducing the number of jobs in the timber industry in the past few decades. Pearce told members of the community, See PEARCE, Page A3

See CSI, Page A3

See LIBYA Page A3

Japan food imports WASHINGTON (AP) — The Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday it will halt imports of dairy products and produce from the area of Japan where a nuclear reactor is leaking radiation. The FDA said those foods will be detained at entry and will not be sold to the public. The agency previously said it would just step up screening of those foods. Other foods imported

from Japan, including seafood, still will be sold to the public but screened first for radiation. Japan’s Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear complex has been leaking radiation after it was damaged in a devastating earthquake and tsunami earlier this month. The sea near the nuclear plant has also shown elevated levels of radioactive

See FDA, Page A3

Bill would offer treatment See ’ya later, alligator! Enjoy Florida to some drug offenders

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — Allowing the option of sending some people charged with drug possession to treatment rather than jail will benefit the state by reducing court costs and repeat offenders, a state lawmaker said. Rep. Antonio “Moe” Maestas, D-Albuquerque, estimates the Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act he sponsored in the House will remove 2,000 to 3,000 cases a year from New Mexico’s courts, saving $18 million. If cases can be diverted away from the courts, “that’s more time and energy the district attorney and the court could devote to violent criminals,” said Maestas, who was a prosecutor for five years. In addition, treatment “deals with the crux of the

crime, which is the addiction itself. So instead of penalizing the possession, you attack the addiction,” he said. Sen. Richard Martinez, a for mer magistrate who sponsored the measure in the Senate, said treatment, not jail time, will reduce the number of repeat offenders. “We’ve got lives here at stake,” said Martinez, DEspanola. “It’s more important to treat them than incarcerate them.” It also makes economic sense, Martinez said. Treatment is less expensive than incarceration, and offenders, rather than the state, will pay for its cost, he said. The measure would go into effect July 1 if signed See BILL, Page A3

Mark Wilson Photo

JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER

Roswell’s American alligators, confiscated by Animal Control on Friday, have found a new home in Florida. The animals were discovered by the Chaves County Metro Narcotics Task Force as of ficials were executing a search warrant.

The two juvenile alligators were being kept in overcrowded conditions in a 30-gallon aquarium. Orlando Padilla, Animal Control officer, said it is illegal to keep the American alligators and the owners were in violation of city ordinance because the alligators were kept in unsafe and unsanitary conditions. However, the law

required Animal Services maintain the animals for 72 hours until they spoke with the owners. Municipal Court Judge Larry Loy signed a court order, Monday, to release the animals, which allowed them to be transported elsewhere. Meanwhile Animal Services kennel manager Tammie McKee’s attempts to find placement within the state had met with negative results. According to Animal Services supervisor Joseph Pacheco, the final placement was a cooperative effort coordinated by the Roswell Humane Society working through the offices of the Animal Humane Assn. of New Mexico in Albuquerque and ABQ BioPark Zoo. See GATOR, Page A3


A2 Wednesday, March 23, 2011

GENERAL

Roswell Daily Record

RPD holds Gunman training Iowan killed in 1-vehicle crash A 70-year-old Iowa man died early Tuesday afternoon following a one-vehicle crash on Highway 285, south of Roswell, police said. New Mexico State Police are investigating whether Ronald Brunk, of Bloomfield, Iowa, may have suffered a heart attack that led to the motor home he was driving to veer off the highway and crash through the guardrail. The vehicle came to rest on its side in an embankment. Judith Brunk, the vehicle’s passenger, was transported to Eastern New Mexico Medical Center with minor injuries, according to Roswell Fire Department officials.

law enforcement agencies across the nation. “In the past year, 47 of ficers have died,” Scifres said. The instructors review the incidents of the past. The hands-on portion took place at New Mexico Military Institute, empty because of spring break. Scifres encourages the various agencies to send their officers again as circumstances allow. “Three of the people here have taken the class in the past,” Scifres said. Jessica Palmer Photo Each person must learn not only one posiMembers of the Sheriff’s Office and Roswell Police Departtion, such as lead, but ment prepare to clear a classroom. every possible position in the state police, the FBI, the response team, for in JESSICA PALMER Game and Fish, even U.S. a real-life situation, the RECORD STAFF WRITER Marshals,” said Scifres. positions and the people Scifres explained the must be interchangeable. The Roswell Police goal of training is to Thus, each officer must Department held its decrease the amount of be prepared to take on Active Gunman Training time spent in preparation. any post either in the Program, Tuesday. The group, no matter front line or the rearThe 8-hour program was initiated by Deputy how diverse, must act as guard. In addition, the instrucPolice Chief, while a com- a unit, which requires consistency in training. tors have their students mander, Jody Scifres in The RPD also trains repeat each scene. 1999 as a reaction to the agencies in other areas While it may seem shootings that occurred and personnel from local tedious as the officers go in April of that year at agencies. through the process sevColumbine High School in Tuesday’s training eral times, the repetition Littleton, Colo., where 12 included a mix of sheriff’s is deadly serious. The students and one teacher deputies and police offilives of the officers and were killed and 21 stu- cers. the lives of the potential dents injured. Members of the FBI victims depend on the Scifres said the training have been invited to knowledge being retained. is similar to the SWAT attend future training The class also teaches training, but the classes programs. the officers how to deal cross agency lines. “In June, we will be with barricades and bot“With an active gun- going to Ruidoso,” said tlenecks, with one shooter man, there’s no time to Scifres. or several. call SWAT. You never The program consists of As with SWAT training, know when or where a an hour of classroom communication is the key situation like this is going instruction and eight to success and survival, to happen. We have to hours of hands-on train- and establishing a line of call in all our resources, ing and relies on the command is paramount. the Sheriff’s Department, experiences learned by j.palmer@roswell-record.com

COMMISSION SPECIAL SESSION THURSDAY

The Chaves County Commission will hold a special commission meeting at 9 a.m., on Thursday, March 24, in the Commission Chambers of the Chaves County Administrative Center, 1 St. Mary’s Place.

The commission will be hearing resolutions for amendments to the sole community providerships from both Eastern New Mexico Medical Center and Roswell Regional Hospital. In other business, the commission will hear a change order to the Pavement Preservation Project. The commissioners are also slated to take their annual tour of the Chaves County Detention Center.

GOLDEN, Colo. (AP) — Air tankers and ground crews battled a windwhipped wildfire in the foothills west of Denver as officials warned that easter n Colorado’s worst drought in nearly a decade makes that part of the state vulnerable to more burning. Two helicopters, two aerial tankers and 200 firefighters kept the 2square-mile blaze from growing substantially Tuesday, officials said. People were allowed to return to 17 homes evacuated Monday, but were cautioned to stay on standby in case the fire

Crimestoppers 1 - 8 8 8 - 5 9 4 - T I P S

The couple were traveling north on Highway 285 and crashed near mile post 100.

Ronald Brunk was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.

flared up. Tankers dropped 7,000 gallons of fire retardant and the helicopters dropped 9,200 gallons of water before they were grounded when the wind picked up in the afternoon. The winds were blowing from 25 to 40 mph with sporadic gusts as high as 60 mph, the National Weather Service in Boulder said. Firefighters were battling winds of 75 mph in some parts of the mountains, Jefferson County sherif f’s spokeswoman Jacki Kelley said. The fire has been eating through grass, brush and

trees in two rugged canyons outside Golden since Sunday. Authorities said they went door -todoor through the affected area Monday to make sure everyone had left. Residents of hundreds more homes were told to be ready to leave. Kelley said more evacuations might be necessary if the flames spread north. The fire, which officials suspect was humancaused, was 20 to 25 percent contained by Tuesday afternoon. No injuries have been reported and no structures have burned.

Burglar brandishing blade hits Sally Port Inn kitchen, Tuesday

CORRECTION

In Tuesday’s story

titled “Lizard listing bad

for oil, gas,” the Roswell Daily Record incorrectly

refered to the David Petroleum Corp. as the

Davis Petroleum Corp. The Record regrets the error.

Criminal damage

2800 block of North Main Street, Monday, after someone broke into a vehicle and removed the CD player, valued at $200. Officers observed pry marks and scratches on the driver’s door where the subjects attempted to enter the vehicle. The window on the driver’s side was shattered.

An Iowa man died Tuesday following a one-vehicle accident on Highway 285 South just outside of Roswell, police said.

Crews battle Colorado wildfires

Thief gets games, currency, clothes, card •Police were dispatched to the 1500 block of North Michigan Avenue, Monday, where $1,780 worth of goods were reported stolen. The subjects gained entry into the residence though a bedroom window. The suspects removed an Xbox 360 and remote, a black change box, Ar my coins and medals, Iraqi currency, Social Security cards, a black storage locker full of clothes and a birthday card meant for the victim’s son. •Police were called to the

Matthew Arco Photo

Police were dispatched to the 600 block of South Main Street, Monday, where subjects tried to get into a vehicle. The doors were scratched and the paint damaged.

Anyone having information about these or any other crimes should contact Crime Stoppers at 1-888-594-TIPS (8477). Callers may remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward.

Late-night construction workers at Sally Port Inn, 2000 N. Main St., were surprised by a burglar brandishing a knife. The incident occurred around 12:30 a.m., Tuesday. The supervisor said the workmen heard a loud bang coming from an area near the kitchen. When the workers went to investigate, they discovered a man exiting the kitchen. The suspect threatened them with a knife and told them not to call the police. Then he ran through the door on the southwest side of the building. The suspect was

described as a tall, white male, wearing a red and black jacket, a brown ball cap and carrying a black backpack. Officers discovered a bag of spices and condiments, although the workmen could not say if anything else had been removed from the kitchen. Investigation also

LOTTERY NUMBERS

revealed a window shattered on the west side, or back of the building, where it is believed the suspect gained entry. Roswell Police Department asks people who saw any suspicious activity between midnight and 1 a.m. near the Sally Port Inn to contact Crime Stoppers at 1-888-594-TIPS (8477).

Mega Millions 1-14-35-50-53 MegaBall: 43 Roadrunner Cash 6-20-21-23-25 Pick 3 1-6-3

CONSTRUCTORS, INC.

General, Asphalt, Concrete, Aggregate, Dirt and Utility Construction

Call Constructors for any size construction job at

575.622.1080

Constructors, Inc. Serving Southeast New Mexico for more than 50 years.

“WAKE UP WITH A”

GRAND BREAKFAST

$3.99

2 eggs, bacon, sausage, hashbrowns, toast or biscuit

for the

non-

conformist in you

Roswell Daily Record

USPS No 471-200

News & Business Telephone 622-7710 Circulation Telephone 622-7730

Charles Fischer Publisher

cfischer@roswell-record.com

Andrew Poertner Editor

editor@roswell-record.com

R. Cory Beck Publisher (1987-2006)

Kim Gordon ........................................................Advertising Director kim.gordon@roswell-record.com Jim Dishman .....................................................Circulation Director jdishman@roswell-record.com Published daily except Monday at 2301 N. Main St., Roswell, N.M. 88201. Copyright Notice The entire contents of the Roswell Daily Record, including its flag on Page 1, are fully protected by copyright and registry and cannot be reproduced in any form for any purpose without written permission from the Daily Record.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES by carrier delivery in Roswell: $10 per month, payable in advance. Prices may vary in some areas. As a convenience to subscribers, advance payments for home delivery for periods of 3 months to 12 months may be made directly to the Roswell Daily Record. No responsibility for advance payments over 30 days assumed by the company unless paid directly to the Roswell Daily Record. All home carrier subscriptions will continue being delivered past expiration date causing an arrears owed unless the circulation department is contacted and told to stop service prior to expiration.

Custom jewelry It’s as non-conformist as you!

2011

1900 N. Main Street

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ALL NEW MEXICO 882 ZIP CODES, $12 ONE MONTH, $36 THREE MONTHS, $72 SIX MONTHS, $144 ONE YEAR. All other New Mexico zip codes, $13 one month, $39 three months, $78 six months, $156 one year. All other states in USA, $18 one month, $54 three months, $108 six months, $216 one year. Periodical-postage paid at Roswell, N.M. Postmaster: Please mail change of address to Roswell Daily Record, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell, N.M. 88202-1897. All postal subscriptions will stop at expiration unless payment is made prior to expiration.


GENERAL

Roswell Daily Record

Wetlands Continued from Page A1

Lakes, and national and state of ficials and their committees for their collaborative efforts in securing the designation. Jur ney repeatedly emphasized the important economic impact that comes with the recognition. “Not until I began to think about this celebration, did I fully understand the economic impact that these wetlands bring to our economy,” Jur ney commented. “As our quality of life is enriched, so, too, is the quality of visits for

CSI

Continued from Page A1

case of “whodunnit” on Tuesday using the training they received Monday from the Roswell Police Department, New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department and a local Neighborhood Watch group. “There’s lipstick on this cup!” Lorena Fierro, 12, told the others as she was looking for clues in the kitchen. “We need a photographer,” another young

Libya

Continued from Page A1

American military official said the Persian Gulf nation of Qatar was expected to start flying air patrols over Libya by this weekend, becoming the first member of the Arab League to participate directly in the military mission. Obama and NATO had insisted from the start on Arab support. The president also suggested the administration would not need to request funding from Congress for

Bill

Continued from Page A1

into law by Gov. Susana Martinez. Sen. Martinez said he hopes the gover nor will sign it but expressed doubts because “she has a prosecutor’s mentality.” The governor was district attor ney in Las Cruces before winning the gubernatorial election last year. Her spokesman, Scott Darnell, said the bill had not yet reached her desk but would be reviewed closely. The measure calls for a hearing to determine if the program would be a viable

Gator

Continued from Page A1

Cassie Gross from the Roswell Humane Society contacted Peggy Weigle, the executive director of Animal Humane. She, in turn, contacted Doug Hotle, the curator of herpetology at Albuquerque’s zoo. “Normally, he would not have been able to take them because of the risk of contamination, but he took our two little alligators because he had two other crocodilians going to Flori-

those who select Roswell as their tourist destination. Many don’t realize that billions of dollars are spent in southeastern New Mexico from wildlife and outdoor recreational activity. When efforts are made to conserve and to restore and promote our natural resources ... jobs are created and private investments are enhanced. The economic impact of this designation is significant.” Other speakers included L ynn Ditto, on behalf of Sen. Jef f Bingaman, DN.M., Steve Patterson, former park superintendent of Bottomless Lakes and Sanez. Ramsar designation is investigator yelled into the adjoining room. The three-day camp, CSI: Roswell, was intended to teach the girls in Chaves County about careers in investigations, pathology and law enforcement, according to Christi Patton, program director . Patton said one aspect of the Girl Scouts mission is to build skills for success in the real world. “Part of what we do is we teach leadership skills, and we look at different fields of careers they can go into,” Patton said, adding that the focus this the air operations but would pay for them out of money already approved. Administration officials briefed lawmakers during the day about costs and other details to date. Domestic criticism of the operation has been muted so far, with the president out of the country, but is likely to increase once he flies home on Wednesday — a few hours earlier than had been scheduled. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, meanwhile, said the administration is getting reports — of questionable credibility — option for a drug possession defendant. Treatment could last no more than 18 months and could include court-ordered monitoring. The case would be dismissed if a defendant successfully completes treatment. If not, the case could move ahead in court. “We know that incarceration without treatment does not prevent future crimes,” Maestas said. “If a drug addict is able to overcome their addiction, they not only won’t commit drug crimes anymore, but also not commit property crimes and other crimes associated with their drug addiction.” Critics complained the program would mean a

da,” Gross said. David Mathews, media resources manager for Albuquerque’s Cultural Services Department, said the process could take up to two months. “The alligators will arrive at ABQ BioPark’s Zoo this afternoon. The zoo will put them into quarantine as the curator applies for the federal and state permits required for transport,” he said. The alligators will eventually find a home at St. Augustine Alligator Farm and Zoological Park in St. Augustine, Fla.

G e t C l a s s i fi e d

awarded after a “long” application and nomination process. Roswell Artesian Wetlands designation was finally awarded on Jan. 10, 2010, after a one-and-onehalf-year nomination process. The process includes several letters of recommendation from local and state wildlife agencies, members of Congress and stakeholders associated with the proposed site. In addition, Ramsar designated sites must meet one of nine criteria for designation. According to Saenz, Bitter Lake and Bottomless Lakes met five out of nine criteria required for designation. “That’s not bad for being

in the desert,” Saenz said. “That’s something to be proud about. Once the application was completed, it was reviewed by the Fish and Wildlife Service and sent to Washington. Fish and Wildlife and the U.S. Ramsar committee made recommendations for inclusion into the Ramsar site. The application was reviewed by the secretary general of Ramsar and eventually the site was added as the 29th site in the United States.” The Ramsar designation puts Roswell in a “distinct group of wetlands,” which Jurney hopes will not only attract tourists to Roswell, but compel them to stay

year was on science, technology, math and engineering. On Monday, the RPD taught the girls how to process and analyze fingerprints, while a Neighborhood Watch group took their mug shots and gave a short speech about public safety. Investigators from CYFD and deputies from the Chaves County Sherif f’s Of fice talked about their careers, and a former lawyer with the district attorney’s office is slated to speak today about how to prosecute cases.

The 10 Girl Scouts treated the alien murder mystery like a true crime scene investigation. They each had a designated job — medical examiner, forensic scientist, police, photographer and investigator— and they marked off the crime scene with yellow tape, located the bodies and murder weapon, collected evidence by dusting for fingerprints and traces of lipstick and blood, examined the balloon body in a makeshift morgue and analyzed the evidence in a science laboratory.

that some in Gadhafi’s inner circle may be looking for a way out of the crisis. She said some of them, allegedly acting on the Libyan leader’s behalf, have reached out to people in Europe and elsewhere to ask, in effect, “How do we get out of this?” “Some of it is theater,” Clinton said in an interview with ABC’s Diane Sawyer. “A lot of it is just the way he behaves. It’s somewhat unpredictable. But some of it we think is exploring. You know, ‘What are my options? Where could I go? What could I do?’ And we

would encourage that.” The Pentagon said two dozen more Tomahawk cruise missiles were launched from U.S. and British submarines late Monday and early Tuesday against Libyan targets, raising the total to 161 aimed at disabling Gadhafi’s air defenses. Adm. Samuel J. Locklear III said Libyan ground troops will be more vulnerable as the coalition grows in size and capability, but he declined to provide details of future targeting. He spoke to reporters at the Pentagon from aboard

catch-and-release program for offenders. But Maestas argued the state has nothing to lose. Of fenders who aren’t serious about treatment or who violate a judge’s order go back to court, “and state is in no worse position to prosecute the case,” Maestas said. And, offenders who complete treatment “don’t have the scarlet letter of a felony,” he said. The same measure died in the 2010 session when time ran out, but this year it passed the Senate on a 21-3 vote. It passed the House 41-26 Friday night, hours before the session’s Saturday noon adjour nment.

Although not a native species, alligators are not completely unknown to New Mexico’s waterways. Besides the cayman taken in by Animal Services three years ago, Mathews told of another incident that occurred in his hometown of Hobbs in the 1980s when officials found a 12foot alligator, which he believed was someone’s pet, that had been released into the water reclamation pond.

j.palmer@roswell-record.com

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, Fort Stanton Artesia (Inside City Limits)

Dexter, Rural Dexter

Hagerman, Rural Hagerman

Rural Artesia, Lake Arthur

Rural Roswell

Loyd Sanders 317-7562

Loyd Sanders 317-7562 Loyd Sanders 317-7562

Carmen Scafella 625-9480 Patricia Hariston 347-2087 Senida Jurado 914-1729

Senida Jurado 914-1729

Circulation Department 622-7730 Any questions or comments? Call 1-888-842-4121

Pearce

Continued from Page A1

“jobs will start tomorrow” if rules are more in line with what is practical. “It’s time to quit playing games and put people back to work,” he said. “We can protect the environment and put people to work.” The federal lawmaker toured the village’s surrounding forest following the brief meeting with residents. He visited the

FDA

Continued from Page A1

iodine and cesium, prompting the government to test seafood. Japanese foods make up less than 4 percent of all U.S. imports, and the FDA said it expects no risk to the U.S. food supply from radiation. Of ficials and

Wednesday, March 23, 2011 around for a while. “When we get someone to Roswell for a day, we’ll keep ’em for two — hopefully three, and it’s tourism,” he said. “That’s the economic value that we’re looking for. “ According to Fish and Wildlife, Bitter Lake and Bottomless Lakes encompasses more than 2,200 acres of wetlands and diverse natural habitats for three endangered species: Roswell and Koster’s spring snails and the Noel amphipod, in addition to many other animals and plants. On the banks of the Pecos River, the Roswell Artesian Wetlands are fueled by the Roswell Basin, “that forms “Looks like she got stabbed around here,” adult leader Katy Garrison told the group gathered around a table, pointing to the chest of the pink alien balloon. “I need a bag,” Wendy Hobbs, 9, said as she extracted “blood,” which was chocolate syrup and red dye, from the balloon. Garrison, who has been in Girl Scouts for the past 12 years, says she remembers doing the same crime scene investigation camp when she was younger. “I think the girls are really having a blast with his command ship in the Mediterranean Sea. Several members of Congress, including a number from Obama’s own party, were increasingly questioning the wisdom of U.S. involvement. “We began a military action at the same time that we don’t have a clear diplomatic policy, or a clear foreign policy when it comes to what’s going on in Libya,” said Sen. Jim Webb, D-Va., adding that the Obama administration lacks a clear understanding of rebel forces trying to oust Gadhafi, who has forests with members of the timber industry, who say mills have been subject to closure because of the federal restrictions on national forest land. “We need to get people looking at forest health as a whole,” said John Braziel, owner of Big Beaver Clearing. “Logging can help the forest by opening it up,” he said, referring to harvesting mature trees and leaving room for growth for younger trees. Pearce’s bill would provide sanctuaries for the health experts say the doses are low and not a threat to human health unless the tainted products are consumed in abnormally excessive quantities. Still, the World Health Organization said this week that Japan should act quickly to ensure that no contaminated foods are sold. The most common imports from Japan to the United States are seafood,

A3

a series of springs, seeps and sinkhole lakes at both sites.” “This designation is part of a global community,” Nicholopoulos said. “Bitter Lake is in the company of Everglades International Park. How cool is that?” Ramsar is an inter national treaty signed in Iran, in 1971, that promotes wetland conservation throughout the world. For more information on wetlands of international importance, visit ramsar.org. j.entzminger@roswell-record.com

the murder scene,” Garrison said. “That brought a lot of memories back of when I did it.” Patton said after the fake murder scene, the Girl Scouts would use tomatoes to analyze different structures of DNA, rebuild a forensic facial reconstruction mannequin and watch videos about people who work in the forensic science field. “They’re lear ning a whole lot,” Patton said. “Something I am trying to do is more programs in the science field.” emiller@roswell-record.com

ruled for 42 years. The Marine Corps, meanwhile, offered fresh details of its role in the rescue of an Air Force F-15E pilot who ejected over eastern Libya on Monday. The plane’s weapons system officer, who also ejected and made it safely back to U.S. control, was recovered in a separate operation not involving the Marines. Unconfir med reports from Libya said a number of civilians were wounded, apparently during the pilot rescue, but the circumstances were murky. Mexican Spotted Owl and he says his hope is to designate 1,000-acre parcels of land for such purpose. However, the authority to define sanctuaries is given to the secretary of agriculture, according to Pearce’s office. Pearce’s bill drew praise from local officials who attended the meeting. “We have a congressman who has the right idea,” said Cloudcroft Mayor Dave Venable..

mattarco@roswell-record.com

snack foods, and processed fruits and vegetables. Food safety advocates long have expressed concern over the agency’s lack of money for reliable inspections abroad. A food safety overhaul bill signed into law by President Barack Obama earlier this year would increase inspections of foreign food facilities that export to the U.S.


Dynamics of Legislature different in 2011 A4 Wednesday, March 23, 2011

OPINION

SANTA FE — What a change of pace. The dynamics of the 2011 Legislature were different from the previous eight years in almost every way possible. A new governor can be expected to be different from the previous governor but Gov. Susana Martinez made the same promise of “bold change,” the same promise Gov. Bill Richardson made when he took office. Who knew that Martinez’s bold change meant going from a governor who attempted too much to one who has attempted almost nothing. Martinez’s one big change involved taking driver’s licenses from illegal aliens. She invested leftover campaign funds in robocalls and radio ads to sell the idea. Lawmakers were hugely unimpressed. They are not accustomed to governors who mess with constituents in their legislative district. They want to be treated as fellow elected officials and dealt with face-to-face. But

EDITORIAL

JAY MILLER

INSIDE THE CAPITOL

face-to-face contact with legislators or anyone else has not been Martinez’s style thus far. Consequently, Martinez only got small parts of her meager legislative proposals. She got a watered down version of her Katie’s Law changes involving DNA from felons. She got one of three education changes she sought — the one that will give letter grades to schools. She got a $50 million cap on tax credits for any one film project. She had wanted to lower the rebate from 25 percent to 15 percent. Neither she nor the film industry liked the compromise.

Roswell Daily Record

But she refused to meet with top Hollywood executives who twice traveled to Santa Fe with alternatives they felt would be beneficial to both sides. As the session wound down last Friday night, both houses sent up a flurry of bills to the governor. They did not include taking driver’s licenses from illegal aliens, a ban on social promotions, merit pay for teachers and administrators, a reinstatement of the death penalty or photo identification at polling places. Most of Saturday morning was spent with filibusters by Republicans upset about the sudden death of many of their favorite issues. It wasn’t an outstanding session. The best that can be said is that not a lot of bad legislation was passed. Budget problems were kicked a little further down the road. No noticeable job-creating legislation was passed. The film industry says the $50 million cap on rebates will be a

job killer. We’ll have to wait and see on that. Some states lowered their film incentives but others raised or reinstated theirs. The bottom line is that no one has any idea what the best formula might be. Legislation did pass requiring the state Taxation and Revenue Department to analyze receipts and expenditures. Maybe next year we can have an intelligent discussion. The budget deficit was plugged with about $150 million, mostly from public employee benefit contributions. There was little talk of the $200 million to $450 million gap mentioned during last year’s campaigns. Lawmakers complained that they didn’t have all the information they needed for budget decisions. They passed a bill requesting more infor mation on contracts the executive branch signs. The bill became Gov. Martinez’s first veto. Gov. Bill Richardson vetoed the same bill last year amid cries of political cover ups.

Martinez has until April 8 to act on bills sent to her the last three days of the session. Maybe those signings and vetoes will give a better picture of her bold program. One of the other evidences of Martinez’s lack of communication during the legislative session involved bills sent to executive departments requesting fiscal impact reports. Normally state employees have a good idea of where the governor stands on all bills being considered by the Legislature. Gov. Richardson used to put a code in the lower left hand corner of the bills he had introduced. But this year, state employees and their department heads had no idea whether they might be trashing a bill the governor liked or saying good things about a bill she did not want. (Write to Jay Miller at 3 La Tusa, Santa Fe, NM 87505; by fax at 984-0982; or by e-mail at insidethecapitol@hotmail.com)

Don’t overreact on nuclear power

Americans need electricity. But when a modern source of it threatens humans and wildlife, it is time to reassess how much risk we’ll accept for voltage. Is an abundant and sustainable source of electricity worth the risks? It’s not the nuclear part the public should worry about. Maybe it’s the windmill part. To date, no American has been killed by commercial nuclear power — a fact confirmed by the extensive research of Politifact.com. No other source of electricity in the United States has proved anywhere near that safe. Speaking with Andrew Marsh, an economist with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Politifact found that 13 Americans have been killed by hydroelectric power generation since 2003. Fossil-fuel plants have killed 23 Americans since 2003. Then there are windmills, which provide 2 percent of the country’s electricity at most. The harmless-looking turbine blades seen along rural highways are behemoths that spin at up to 179 miles an hour. They kill up to 275,000 birds each year in the United States. A study in 2008 found that the Altamont Pass wind farm in Central California, kills 80 golden eagles each year. That’s 100 times more birds than are killed each year by all of ExxonMobil’s open oil and wastewater storage facilities. Turbines also kill humans. The Caithness Windfarm Information Forum, dedicated to “protecting our environment,” found that wind turbine incidents had directly killed 52 humans in Europe as of Dec. 31, 2010. Last week in The Wall Street Journal, author William Tucker explained in detail the nature of any threats posed by Japan’s post-earthquake nuclear problems. Even a full meltdown would be contained, he wrote, posing no substantial threat to the public. “With all the death, devastation and disease now threatening tens of thousands in Japan, it is trivializing and almost obscene to spend so much time worrying about damage to a nuclear reactor,” Tucker wrote. “What the Japanese earthquake has proved is that even the oldest containment structures can withstand the impact of one of the largest earthquakes in recorded history.” Nuclear power has proved itself among the safest sources of power in the world. Let’s not let media hysteria, in the wake of an extraordinary natural disaster, set the U.S. back in its quest to develop sensible sources of reliable power at fair and reasonable prices. Guest Editorial The New Bern (N.C.) Sun Journal

Gearing up for war number three

Libya’s recently resigned ambassador to the U.S., Ali Aujali, is optimistic about the outcome of the bombing of his country. He tells me he thinks dictator Moammar Gadhafi will be ousted, that free and fair elections will be held and that a new government will be pro-Western. From his lips to Allah’s ears. Given the history of the Middle East, such a notion requires greater faith than that possessed by the holiest of holy men. After first displaying indecisiveness about Libya, Presi-

Doonesbury

CAL THOMAS

SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

dent Obama touted his shotgun marriage to a “coalition” of nations attempting to dislodge Gadhafi. In Brasilia, Brazil recently, the president used the word “coalition” five times. Was this an attempt to align himself with for mer President George W. Bush, who advanced a “coalition of

the willing” against Saddam Hussein in Iraq? President Obama seems to be channeling his predecessor. He signed an order closing Guantanamo prison as his first presidential act, but recently announced it will stay open and the military tribunals established by President Bush and supported by Congress will resume. And now, instead of Saddam Hussein, Obama is going after Gadhafi. Is this the same man who delivered a stem-winding, anti-Iraq war speech almost nine years ago in Chicago when he was a state senator?

That speech is worth revisiting. State Senator Obama said on Oct. 2, 2002 that he isn’t “opposed to all war,” only “dumb war, rash war.” Substitute Gadhafi and Libya for Saddam Hussein and Iraq in this excerpt from that speech: “I suffer no illusions about (Moammar Gadhafi). He is a brutal man. A ruthless man. A man who butchers his own people to secure his own power. He has repeatedly defied UN resolutions. ... He’s a bad guy. The

See THOMAS, Page A5

TODAY IN HISTORY

Today is Wednesday, March 23, the 82nd day of 2011. There are 283 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On March 23, 1775, Patrick Henry delivered an address to the Virginia Provincial Convention in which he is said to have declared, “Give me liberty, or give me death!”

DEAR DR. GOTT: For the past seven or eight years, I have what has been identified as a venous lake. When it first appeared, I went to my dermatologist, and he cut it to let it bleed out. After that, my lip was swollen and uncomfortable for several weeks, but it seemed to disappear. Within six months, it was back again. I then went to a skin specialist. A few years later, he explained that tiny blood vessels slowly leaked blood into my lip. He recommended my lip be lasered, which he did three times in a row. This procedure did seem like a miracle, but again, within a short period of time, my lip pooled with blood. At that time, he told me that if the laser treatment did

ASK DR. GOTT UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE

not work and it came back, my lip could not be lasered again. Well, it came back even larger than before. I no longer can conceal my lower lip with lipstick, and at this point I don’t know what to do. Do you have any recommendations? DEAR READER: Venous lakes are rather common lesions caused by dilation of small blood vessels that pres-

ent on the ears and lip, occurring in adults older than 50 who have had long-term exposure to the sun. Men are more prone to them than are women. They are dark blue to purple, soft, smooth and have well-defined edges. Compression of the lesion will often empty the blood contained within. To some degree, they can be compared to a varicose vein, a condition that seems easier to understand. Diagnosis can often be made by visual examination, but surgical biopsy may be performed as well to differentiate between a benign lesion and a cancerous one. If treatment is accomplished, it is either for cosmetic reasons or because of recurrent bleeding. Medication

cannot remove the lesions. Surgical procedures include excision, electrosurgery, sclerotherapy and cryosurgery. Laser lights such as a flashlamp pulsed-dye process have been used with success. This treatment may require several procedures before removal is successful. Another procedure utilizes a cool gel that protects the epidermis. Reports are few, but this approach is similar to light lasers yet doesn’t require anesthesia and there is no crusting or bleeding under the skin; nor is there scarring. If your lesion bleeds frequently or is bothersome because of its size, you may wish to proceed with further See GOTT, Page A5

25 YEARS AGO

March 23, 1986

New Mexico State University recently announced the fall semester dean’s list. Students named from Roswell were: Rebecca L. Dann, Rebecka A. Dickman, Philip Grossklaus, Barry K. Anderson, William R. Anderson, Melissa G. Baldwin, Gregory J. Fouratt, Janetta B. Hicks, Robert H. Irwin, Don W. Lupien, Sidney MacArthur, Warren E. Neff; Donald K. Humble, James E. Kunko, Wendolyn Wakefield, Lois R. Wilson, Richard A. Becker, Scott L. Cross, Sam W. Daugherty, Gary D. Heimstetler, Daniel P. Lilley, Randy R. Rankin, Kay C. Jenkins. Students from Dexter: Lisa R. Reinecke, Maria N. Rodriguez and Samuel R. Prieto.


LOCAL

Roswell Daily Record

Thomas

Continued from Page A4

world and the (Libyan) people would be better off without him.” Here is Obama in 2002, with his ultimate argument against the Iraq war. Again I substitute Libya for Iraq and Gadhafi for Hussein: “(Gadhafi) poses no imminent and direct threat to the United States, or to his neighbors ... the (Libyan) economy is in shambles ... the (Libyan) military (is) a fraction of its former strength and ... in concert with the international community he can be contained until, in the way of all petty dictators, he falls away into the dustbin of history.” If Obama believed what he said in 2002 about Iraq and Saddam Hussein, doesn’t that seem a good rationale for not committing anymore treasure — which we have run out of — and possibly more American lives with no greater goal than unseating Gadhafi in the hope that someone better will take his place? What is this president’s foreign policy? Does he have one other than pressuring Israel not to build more “settlements”? A “no-fly zone” will not depose Gadhafi and his sons. They must be overthrown, but that is not our announced objective. Does the president seriously believe a Gadhafi-free Libya will suddenly embrace Jeffersonian democracy? If so, he is a bigger amateur on the world stage than

Gott

Continued from Page A4

corrective attempts. If there is a cosmetic issue, you may wish to experiment with a foundation concealing product that can be covered with lipstick. from Complaints patients who have undergone surgical excision include a post-surgical lumpy area, discoloration of the surrounding tissue and a wish they never had the procedure done in the first place. Others, however, have experienced good results. I guess the bottom line here is, if you are going to have anything done, choose a person you have confidence in, whom you know will do the best job possible. I’m not sure what the proper procedure for you really is. If you are dissatisfied with your past experiences,

some suspect.

President Obama says, “humanitarian reasons” are a motivating factor for using American and allied forces to topple Gadhafi. What makes Gadhafi worthy of special humanitarian concerns when many other governments similarly oppress their people?

Gadhafi can’t live forever. The actuarial table will soon catch up with him. What’s the rush, especially if a power vacuum is created in Libya that terrorist groups are all too happy to fill, as they might do in Egypt and other countries in the region that are now experiencing revolutions? Former Ambassador Aujali strongly doubts that will happen, but no one can be certain.

If Iraq qualified as a “dumb war” in Obama’s mind back in 2002, what is smart about starting a third war against Moammar Gadhafi today? Is the United Nations, rather than Congress, now the authority for such action? That’s what Democrats asked when President Bush was in the White House. It remains a valid question under President Obama. (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.) © 2011 T ribune Media Services, Inc.

seek the services of yet another professional. Present your case and express your dissatisfaction and the previous lack of progress. Perhaps a plastic surgeon is the answer. Readers who would like related information can order my Health Report “Medical Specialists”by sending a selfaddressed stamped No. 10 envelope and a $2 check or money order payable to made Newsletter and mailed to Newsletter, P.O. Box 167, Wicklif fe, OH 44092-0167. Be sure to mention the title. Dr. Peter H. Gott is a retired physician and the author of several books, including “Live Longer, Live Better,” “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Diet” and “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Cookbook,” which are available at most bookstores or online. His website is www.AskDrGottMD.com.

A5

Chapter Z, P.E.O. meets Thursday Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Chapter Z, P.E.O. will meet at 1 p.m., Thursday, March 24, in the home of Judy Borst. Nanette Haines will be the co-hostess. The program will be Cottey College, the program for continuing education and scholar awards. For more information, call Judy at 625-9747, or Nanette at 623-7717.

Beta Sigma Phi

The Alpha Iota chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will meet for a St. Patrick’s Day potluck and game night at 6 p.m., Thursday, March 24, in the home of Gloria Boston. For more information, call 6241415.

Carrie Tingley Clinic

Children in the Roswell area with orthopaedic problems can be scheduled for an outreach clinic on Friday, March 25. Physicians from Carrie Tingley Hospital at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center will examine patients at Children’s Medical Services, 200 E. Chisum St. Children and young adults up to the age of 21 with chronic physical problems or difficulty with bones, joints and/or muscles, may be scheduled for appointments. Doctors, rehabilitation therapists specializing in seating needs and orthotists specializing in support braces will evaluate and treat patients. Medicaid and insurance are accepted for payment. Written pre-authorizations and referrals from the patient’s primary care physician are necessary. For appointments, call 1-800-4723235 option 2. Advance scheduling is requested.

Ladies Newcomers Club

The Roswell Ladies Newcomers Club will meet at noon, Tuesday, April 5, at the Elks Lodge, 1720 N. Montana Ave. There will be a buffet luncheon and then the group will play bridge, canasta, pinochle or Shanghai rummy. The invitation is open to any woman no matter how long she has

VISTAS POLICY

We try to publish all information about local events and achievements that we can, given time and space limitations. However, we have no legal or ethical requirement to publish everything we receive. Staf f members make the final determination on when or if information is published. The Roswell Daily Record reserves the right to reject or edit announcements for any reason. We publish announcements only once, except in cases of error on our part. To submit an announcement for publication we require a typewritten, legible press release. The release should contain the date, time, location, subject and any other relevant information. Press releases must include a name and contact information, should we have questions regarding the notice. All e-mailed Around Town, Area Scene and Local Achievement items MUST be sent to the Vistas editor at vistas@roswell-record.com, at least FIVE days prior to the requested publishing date. Any other announcements of upcoming events must also be emailed or delivered to the RDR a minimum of FIVE business days

lived in Roswell or the surrounding area. New members and visitors are welcome. Reservations must be called in by Saturday, April 2, to Joan Koonmen at 623-4274, or Marty Sparks at 6233002.

ENMU-R spring musical

The Eastern New Mexico University Roswell Theatre Department will present the spring musical production of “Grease” in the Performing Arts Center on campus April 14-17. Show times are 7:30 p.m., April 1416 and at 2:30 p.m. on Sunday, April 17. A large, diverse cast will sing and dance the popular love story of Sandy and Danny, who fell in love during a summer vacation in 1959 and meet again as a new school year begins at Rydell High School. The musical is directed by Dallas Jeffers-Pollei. Tickets are $8 for general admission; $6 for seniors and students with ID; $4 for children 12 and under; and $1 for ENMU-R students with ID. Group discounts are available for groups of 10 or more. For more information, call 6247398 or 624-7017. Cash or checks will be accepted for tickets purchased at the door.

Slow Art Day

The Roswell Museum and Art Center will host Slow Art Day from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Saturday, April 16, in its galleries. This event is open to the public free of charge and is a way to relax, reflect and discuss art with others, slowly. Typically, most art viewers spend about eight seconds in front of a work before a desired publication date. Delivery or receipt of an item to the RDR after that time does not guarantee publication by the desired date. We cannot guarantee publication on a specific date. Press releases can be delivered to the RDR offices at 2301 N. Main St. (enter on the south side of the building only), faxed to 575-625-0421 or e-mailed to vistas@roswellrecord.com. E-mails should contain the message in plain text in the body of the message only. The Daily Record now charges for wedding, engagement and anniversary announcements. The charges will be $12 for the first 8 column inches of text and 18 cents a line thereafter. A photo is $5. Wedding, engagement and anniversary announcement forms are available at the RDR offices, 2301 N. Main St. Anniversary announcements for page C2 in Sunday editions are for couples celebrating their 25th anniversary and are then published in five-year intervals up to the 60th anniversary. Couples celebrating 60 or more years are eligible every year. Couples with anniversaries less than 25 years, or those with anniver-

of art. Slow Art Day is a global grassroots art celebration designed to inspire people to look at art for a longer period of time, taking in the totality of the work, and then discussing the art in a relaxed atmosphere over lunch. From 11 a.m. to noon, Slow Art Day participants will view three paintings and an installation. Participants are urged to spend five to 10 minutes observing each piece of art. At noon, the group will gather in the Museum’s Bassett Auditorium to have lunch and discuss the recentlyviewed artworks. Bring a brown bag lunch, or order a Tinnie Deli salad or sandwich by calling the Museum at 624-6744, ext. 10 by 3 p.m., April 15. To pre-register for Slow Art Day, call the museum at 624-6744, ext. 10.

Bridge winners

The Pecos Valley Duplicate Bridge Club has announced its winners for the week of March 14-19. Monday, March 14 — 5 tables The first-place north-south winners were Pat Davidson and Jewel Harp; in second, Peter Yeaton and Jim Perkowski. The first-place east-west winners were Mary Ann Bosch and Arthur Brown; in second, Marion Riley and Howard Smith. Thursday, March 17 — 4 1/2 tables The first-place overall winners were tied between Judy and Jim Farley and Nancy Lynd and Jewel Harp; in third, Rose Caldwell and Kay Rogers; and in fourth, Jane Miller and Claribel Marshall. Saturday, March 19 — 5 1/2 tables The first-place overall winners were Rose Caldwell and Peter Yeaton; in second, Sally Stockton and Jewel Harp; in third, Pat Davidson and Kay Rogers; and fourth, Marion Riley and Mary Ann Bosch. Anyone interested in playing duplicate bridge is invited to call Rose Caldwell at 622-7779. saries not falling on the five-year intervals, will have the option of placing the announcement on page C2 on Sundays, or the A section any day of the week.

Anniversary announcements may be accompanied by two photographs.

The deadline for submission of anniversary, engagement or wedding announcements is at noon the Wednesday before the desired Sunday of publication.

Anniversary announcements are for couples celebrating at least their 25th anniversary, and are then published in five-year intervals up to the 60th anniversary. Couples celebrating 60 or more years of marriage are eligible every year. A photograph can accompany an anniversary, engagement or wedding announcement.

The deadline for submission of anniversary, engagement or wedding announcement is at noon on the Wednesday before the desired Sunday of publication.


A6 Wednesday, March 23, 2011 OBITUARIES

Carol Jean Jankus

A memorial service for Carol Jean Jankus, 65, of Roswell, will be held Friday, March 25, 2011, at 2 p.m., at Anderson Bethany Funeral Home with Cecil Kimberlin officiating. She passed away Monday, March 21, 2011, in Roswell. Carol was born Sept, 20, 1945, in Chicago, to Joseph and Helen Jankus. Miss Jankus was a very loving person. She loved to listen to Elvis, travel, and shop at Walmart. She loved her dog Sadie very much. She will be deeply missed by her friends and family. Those left behind to cherish her memory are her sister Dolores Schmitz; nieces and nephews, Joseph Schmitz and wife Lorie, of El Paso, and Julie Ann Schroeder and husband Carl, of Springfield, Ill.; best friend Natalie Anaya, “Her Nat Nat,” and husband Marcus Anderson “Antonio” of Roswell; and special friends, Terri Hanson, Adolph Marquardt, Eddie Rhodes, David Barwick, Edward Aguilar and Robert Setzer. She was preceded in death by her mother, father, sister Cindy, and special friend Betty Tricarico. Over the years, the following agencies were a positive influence on Miss Jankus’ life: Tobosa Mentor, Esperanza, J & J, and High Desert Family Services. The family would like to send a special Thank You to the doctors and nurses at the Cancer Center for the care they provided Carol, and the above agencies for the wonderful rela-

NATION/OBITUARIES tionships that were made possible. Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com. Arrangements are under the direction of Anderson Bethany Funeral Home and Crematory. To Miss Jankus: My Angel And Friend by Smile I never thought that I would find a friend so great and a friend so kind I look up to you in every way ’cause I learn something from you every day. Without you I don’t know where I’d be but you’re still here, friends with me you deserve so much more than I can give but without you I would not live. You’ve given me more than money can buy and for you I’d give my all and I would die This feeling I feel gets stronger every day hoping not to screw it up, I constantly pray. I know we have our problems every now and then but once it’s fixed our friendship is better, times ten and I want you to know that I truly do care even in fights when I say things that aren’t fair. You’re an angel from God up above and I’m thankful for your understanding love because when you’re around everything seems right and for you, until the end, I will fight. It doesn’t matter what you do or say because you’ll be my friend anyway I know the real you that’s down deep inside and in you, I’ll always confide. Thanks for being the friend you are you’re my best friend, an angel by far everything in you is an inspiration to do great and you’ll be loved by all cause that’s your fate! So never stop being the real and wonderful you

cause God shines through in all that you do and whenever it seems like I’m never there remember this: I love you and I’ll always care! From: “Your Nat Nat”

Sotomayor, writing for the court, said companies don’t have to have concrete data before sharing what they have with investors. “Given that medical professionals and regulators act on the basis of evidence of causation that is not statistically significant, it stands to reason that in certain cases reasonable investors would as well,” she said. Sotomayor also said all of the allegations against Matrixx “give rise to a ‘cogent and compelling’ inference that Matrixx elected not to disclose the reports of adverse events not because it believed they were meaningless but because it understood their likely effect on the market.” The case now goes back to the lower court. Matrixx withdrew Zicam

Cold Remedy Swabs and Zicam Cold Remedy Gel from the market in June 2009 after the Food and Drug Administration told consumers they should stop using the products because they can permanently damage the sense of smell. In the Saint-Gobain case, the justices ruled that there doesn’t have to be a written complaint to a government agency for a worker to claim anti-retaliation protection under the Fair Labor Standards Act. Kasten was fired from a Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics facility in Portage, Wis. He had complained to Saint-Gobain that the time clocks were placed in a location where employees would lose overtime. The

Paul Hutsell

Services are scheduled for the Rev. Paul Hutsell, 81, of Roswell, on Thursday, March 24, 2011, at 2 p.m., at First Assembly of God Church in Roswell, with the Rev. Phil Hutsell officiating. Burial will follow in South Park Cemetery. The family will be receiving friends and condolences at the funeral home with a public visitation on Wednesday, March 23, 2011, from 6 to 8 p.m. He passed from this life on Saturday, March 19, 2011, in Roswell. Paul was born to Harvey Elvert Hutsell and Daisy Marion Hayden Hutsell May 12, 1929, in Torrington, Wyo. He married Dreta Pack on April 14, 1948, in Modesto, Calif. He was an ordained minister and foreign missionary with the Assemblies of God from 1956 to 1998. He led many lives to Jesus, with his missionary work throughout the years. He was a member of Who’s Who Colleges and Universities, and missions area director for South American Andean area and the Caribbean areas. He loved his Lord with all his heart, and devoted more than 50 years of his life to the Lord’s work. He will be missed by all his family and close friends. Those left behind to cherish his memory are his wife Dreta Hutsell, of Roswell; daughter, Diane Collins

and son-in-law Ron Collins, of Roswell; daughter, Beverly Moss and son-in-law the Rev. Michael R. Moss, of El Reno, Okla.; son, the Rev. Philip Hutsell and daughter -in-law Devonna Hutsell, of Roswell; son, Steven Hutsell of Seattle; son, Chaplain Maj. Loren Hutsell and daughter -inlaw Heather Hutsell, of Seattle; granddaughters, Devany Hutsell Rojas and husband Javier Rojas, Tricia Collins Surratt and husband the Rev. Dwight Surratt, Lisa Collins Seaton and husband the Rev. Chris Seaton, Kelly Moss Fields and husband Tony Fields, Melodie Moss, Abigail Hutsell and Julia Hutsell; grandsons, Paul James Hutsell and wife Mery, Adam Hutsell, and Joel Hutsell; and greatgrandchildren Daphnee, Dakota and Darci Surratt, Audrey and Avery Fields, Blake Moss and Maia Hutsell. Paul is also survived by his brother Dick Hutsell and sister -in-law Amy, of Spokane; and numerous nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents; sister Alice Hutsell; and brothers, Earle, Kenneth, Buck, Donald, Frank and Robert Hutsell. We would also like to express our sincere gratitude to Dr. Charles Fenzi, Dr. Madel Villegas, Dr. Hamid Feroze and Dr. Chudi Adi, and numerous medical personnel who cared for our husband/father/grandfather during this difficult journey. We are very grateful for your compassion and care. To our extended family, members of our church families, neighbors and friends, words cannot express how grateful we are for your many expressions of love, thoughtful gifts and prayers. Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com. Arrangements are under the direction of Anderson Bethany Funeral Home and Crematory.

Roswell Daily Record Floie Edith Seitz

No services are scheduled at this time for Floie Seitz, 77, who passed away Friday, March 18, 2011, at her home. Floie was bor n Oct. 6, 1933, in Bixby, Mo., to Homer and Laura Alice Pratter Clements. Both parents preceded her in death. She was also preceded in death by her husband Lloyd Seitz; sons, Eugene Raymond Seitz and Homer Jeffery Seitz; and sister, Roberta Brown. Floie is survived her son Edward Seitz, of Roswell; and sisters, Ulamay McWhorters of Salem, Mo., and Nor ma Chase of Salem. She moved to Roswell from National City, Calif., in 2003. Floie was a housewife and enjoyed gardening, taking care of others and traveling to visit family. Arrangements have been entrusted to Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory. An online registry can be accessed at ballardfuneralhome.com.

Onita Pearl Harrison

Funeral services are scheduled for 11 a.m., Friday, March 25, 2011, at Berrendo Baptist Church, for Onita Pearl Harrison, 87, of Roswell, who passed away March 22, 2011. The Rev. Troy Grant of Berrendo Baptist Church will officiate, with interment to follow in Memory Lawn Memorial Park. Friends may pay respects online at lagronefuneralchapels.com. Arrangements are under the direction of LaGrone Funeral Chapel.

Judy Lucero

A rosary will be recited for Judy Lucero, 71, of Roswell, at 9:30 a.m., Thursday, March 24, 2011, at St. Peter Catholic Church. A funeral Mass will be celebrated following the rosary at 10 a.m., at St. Peter Catholic Church. She passed away Tuesday, March 22, 2011, in Roswell.

died on Monday, March 21, 2011, at Otterbein-St. Marys Retirement Community, having lived to a good old age. She was born on Valentine’s Day 1920, in Johnstown N.Y., to W. Harold and Jennie (Woolrich) Calderwood. On March 1, 1947, she married James S. Coons in Syracuse, N.Y., and he died in 1980. Jerry is survived by two sons, James Jr. (Sheryl), in New Bremen, and John, in California; two grandsons, James III, of Madison Wis., Robert, of Portland, Ore., and their mother Mary, of Ft. Wayne Ind.; and by two brothers, Richard (Deb) and Donald, in New York state. She was valedictorian of her high school class and graduated from the Syracuse University College of Nursing. She worked for many years as a school nurse in Manlius, N.Y., before retiring to Roswell, N.M. She served as a volunteer at St. Mary’s Hospital in Roswell. She requested that her body be donated to the Boonshoft School of Medicine at Wright State University, Dayton. Jerry shared her love of music with others in churches and community choruses throughout her life. After moving to Otterbein-St Marys in 1997, she played the piano for campus activities, assisted in the medical clinic, and was active in campus organizations. A memorial service will be held at Otterbein-St. Marys at a later date. Memorial contributions may be made to the Otterbein-St. Marys Benevolent Care Fund, 11230 St. Rt. 364, St. Marys, OH 45885.

Charles ‘Randy’ Brown

Charles Randolph “Randy” Brown passed away on March 20, 2011. A private memorial will be held by the family.

Baudelio Huerta

Geraldine C. Coons

NEW BREMEN, Ohio — Geraldine C. Coons, 91,

Services are pending at Anderson-Bethany Funeral Home & Crematory for Baudelio Huerta, 80, of Dexter, who passed away Tuesday, March 22, 2011.

meant to limit complaints in such a way. “Why would Congress want to limit the enforcement scheme’s effectiveness by inhibiting use of the Act’s complaint procedure by those who would find it difficult to reduce their complaints to writing, particularly illiterate, less educated, or overworked workers?” Breyer said. Plus, forcing workers to write down complaints could “prevent government agencies from using hotlines, interviews and other oral methods of receiving complaints,” Breyer said. Justices Antonin Scalia

and Clarence Thomas disagree with the majority’s ruling, saying that workers have to complain to a government agency or court. The law “makes clear that the retaliation provision contemplates an official grievance filed with a court or an agency, not oral complaints — or even formal written complaints — from an employee to an employer,” Scalia said. The case now goes back to the lower court. Justice Elena Kagan did not participate in the SaintGobain case because she worked on it while serving as solicitor general.

Supreme Court makes it easier to sue businesses

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court made it easier to haul businesses into court on Tuesday, ruling that investors can sue them for purposefully withholding damaging information about a product and that employees can sue them for retaliation without having to make a written complaint. The court ruled unanimously to let a lawsuit by a group of investors against Matrixx Initiatives Inc., the makers of the now-discontinued Zicam nasal cold remedies, go forward, while ruling in a separate case on a 6-2 vote to let Kevin Kasten’s retaliation lawsuit against Saint-Gobain Perfor mance Plastics Corp. proceed. In the Matrixx case, the high court unanimously affirmed a decision by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to let a securities fraud lawsuit against the company go forward. A group of investors had sued the Scottsdale, Ariz.based company, complaining that the company made misleading statements about Zicam. The company said sales were going to rise and that reports of its product causing loss of smell were “completely unfounded and misleading.” A federal judge had agreed to Matrixx’s request to throw out the lawsuit accusing the company of misleading investors because there was no statistical proof at that time that the loss of smell was directly linked to Zicam. But Justice Sonia

company moved the clocks the same day he was fired, and settled with other employees for nearly $1.5 million. Kasten sued, saying he was fired because he spoke up. He claimed retaliation protection under the Fair Labor Standards Act, but the company said, and the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals agreed, that to get protection workers who have “filed any complaint” about workplace conditions must have written it down. But Justice Stephen Breyer, writing for the majority, said he didn’t believe that Congress


BUSINESS REVIEW

Roswell Daily Record

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

A7

Meadowbrook Farm offers plants and trees that work in our area’s soil and water conditions

Meadowbrook Farm can supply all your tree and plant needs. Meadowbrook Farm is located at 804 Meadow Brook Road just south of Bland Street on the east side of town.

Meadowbrook Farm, located at 804 Meadow Brook Road, is your “go to” nursery. Meadow Brook runs north and south about a mile east of Atkinson Ave. It extends from 2nd Street south to McGaffey Street. Meadow Brook Farm is located on the west side of Meadow Brook Road just south of Bland Street. Owner Mike Beagles has lived in Roswell all his life except for his time in the military. Mike knows what will grow here and what won’t grow in our area. Mike specializes in Xeriscape plants and trees. Xeriscaping refers to “landscaping and gardening in ways that reduce or eliminate the need for supplemental water from irrigation.” Xeriscaping is promoted in regions that do not have easily accessible, plentiful, or reliable supplies of fresh water, and is gaining acceptance in other areas as climate patterns shift. It's Xeriscape, not Zeroscape Xeriscape is a complicated sounding word for a very wise and simple concept. In a nutshell, xeriscaping is water-efficient landscaping that's appropriate to the

Owner Mike Beagles knows the area and the plants that will thrive here. For more information, call Mike at 575-840-6959.

Mike puts some planters down for some sun. Meadowbrook Farm starts all their vegetables from seed. natural environment. The can save a tremendous word xeriscape is derived amount of water. An estabfrom the Greek word xeros, lished, properly maintained which means dry. xeriscape needs about oneThe goal of xeriscaping is third the water of a traditionto create a visually attrac- al turf-based landscape. tive landscape that uses Some xeric plants require plants selected for their almost no supplemental water efficiency. Xeriscapes watering once they are

“We start all our vegetable plants here at Meadowbrook Farm from seed,” says Mike Beagles. And Mike warns about planting too early (see article).

established. An established xeriscape also requires less maintenance than a traditional landscape. Contrary to popular misconception, xeriscape does not mean rock and a cactus. New Mexico has a wonderful variety of water-wise plants. Some of these plants are perfect for adding yearround greenery and texture. Other native plants are great for adding a splash of seasonal color. The properly planned xeriscape can offer brilliant color from March through October. Meadowbrook Farm always has great heirloom tomato plants (in season). Last year they had over 20 different varieties of tomatoes, from white, green zebra, orange, purple, pink, yellow, cherry and green, plus the two and a half pound Bullsheart tomatoes. “Don’t be fooled... tomatoes don’t grow upside down. Don’t fall for it,” says Mike. “We start all our vegetable plants here at the nursery from seed.” Meadowbrook Farm also has artichokes, which are perennial to this area, fruit trees, flowers, ornamentals, shade and evergreen trees, plus red, purple, yellow and white honeysuckle.

Meadowbrook Farm offers a quiet place to pick and choose plants, trees and other items for your lawn and garden. Mike has some tips for as well as bad bugs. all you people out there • Be careful about buying getting ready to plant plants that won’t grow in your home gardens: our area. One example is • Don’t plant too early. blueberries. Don’t let this warm weather • A weed-free lawn is a fool you - hold off planting healthy lawn. Spot treat vegetables (especially toma- only, don’t treat the toes and peppers) for a whole area! while. It still may freeze. Go to Meadowbrook Farm (The normal last freeze in for all your plant and tree Roswell is March 8, but it needs. Located at 804 can occur later.) Meadow Brook Road, • Be careful. Do not use a Meadowbrook Farm is here fertilizer and weed killer to serve you with local mix because it will recog- knowledge and advice on nize trees as a “broad your lawn and garden. leaf” weed and can kill Contact Mike Beagles at them. 575-840-6959 or at mead • Pesticides and herbicides: Read the labels! Pesticides kill good bugs

owbrookfarm@plateautel .net .

Check out the featured business at www.rdrnews.com - Click on Business Review Been in an accident and need your vehicle repaired? Call the Professionals for a FREE estimate at DESERT SUN COLLISION CENTER Randy Fisher, Estimator James Hampton, Manager 2912 W. Second 622-4102

MASTER CLEAN SPECIALIZING IN CARPET CLEANING

WE’LL CLEAN 3 ROOMS GET 4TH FREE 24 Hr. Emergency Service Insurance Claims Owner, Fermin Sosa

FOR APPOINTMENT 622-5376 420-0965

In business more than 67 years

Contact us for all of your insurance needs

(575) 624-0404

Serving the Pecos Valley’s granite and quartz countertop needs

Dale Bristow Owner/Operator

Call for Appointments Phone: 575-746-2503 Cell: 575-308-2222 Email: ddbristow@q.com Crossroads Granite 2307 W. Hermosa Drive Artesia, NM 88210

TEN MINUTE TANNING

1907 N. Main St. Roswell, NM 88201 (575) 627-7900

Rudy’s Towing

Call us first for all your towing needs! We care! 420-7670/623-5021 24/7 $ For Junk Vehicles Free Car Removal From Your Property

Encore!

Flowers & Gifts

3107 N. Main St. • 627-6300 encoreflowersandgifts.com

SPRING HAS SPRUNG! Come in to see our selection of Spring and Easter items.

Becky Neeley, Designer/Owner

INDOOR ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL & HOME COMFORT

Membership is open to those who live or work in Roswell.

Roswell’s own Community Credit Union 2514 N. Main • 110 W. College Blvd. Ste G WWW.ROSWELLCU.ORG 623-7788 - Toll Free: 1-877-623-7788 Hours: Lobby: Mon-Fri 9 am - 4:30 pm Drive Up: Mon-Thur 8:30 am - 5:30 pm • Fri 8:30 am - 6 pm Saturday 9 am - 1 pm Branch: Mon-Fri 9 am - 4 pm

Low Income Spay/Neuter Program

Must File Taxes to Qualify Please call 622-8950 for more information

Roswell Humane Society 703 E. McGaffey 622-8950

Carrier systems technology can guarantee you a more comfortable home at a lower energy cost. For a great indoor weather forecast as us about

Carrier’s Heat Pump System® with ComfortHeat™ Technology.

622-4977


A8 Wednesday, March 23, 2011

WEATHER

Roswell Seven-day forecast Today

Tonight

Clear

Windy with plenty of sun

Thursday

A full day of sunshine

Friday

Saturday

Mostly sunny

Sunny and breezy

Sunday

Sunny and windy

Monday

Sunny and beautiful

Roswell Daily Record

National Cities Tuesday

Bright and sunny

High 81°

Low 41°

88°/41°

84°/45°

82°/44°

76°/43°

74°/40°

76°/42°

NE at 10-20 mph POP: 0%

NNE at 6-12 mph POP: 0%

ENE at 3-6 mph POP: 0%

E at 7-14 mph POP: 5%

ENE at 7-14 mph POP: 0%

E at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

ESE at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

ENE at 3-6 mph POP: 5%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

New Mexico Weather

Roswell through 5 p.m. Tuesday

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

Temperatures High/low ........................... 75°/53° Normal high/low ............... 72°/37° Record high ............... 85° in 1978 Record low ................. 18° in 1955 Humidity at noon ................... 10%

Farmington 59/30

Clayton 61/28

Raton 60/21

Precipitation 24 hours ending 5 p.m. Tue. . Month to date ....................... Normal month to date .......... Year to date ......................... Normal year to date .............

0.00” 0.00” 0.26” 0.09” 1.06”

Santa Fe 62/29

Gallup 59/22

Tucumcari 69/34

Albuquerque 63/38

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Clovis 69/36

Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading 52 0-50

51-100

Good

Moderate

Source: EPA

101-150

Ruidoso 63/46

151+

Unhealthy Unhealthy sensitive

T or C 70/39

Sun and Moon The Sun Today Thu. The Moon Today Thu. Last

Mar 26

Rise Set 6:58 a.m. 7:11 p.m. 6:57 a.m. 7:12 p.m. Rise Set none 9:30 a.m. 12:12 a.m. 10:23 a.m. New

Apr 3

First

Apr 11

Full

Apr 17

Alamogordo 74/39

Silver City 66/34

ROSWELL 81/41 Carlsbad 83/49

Hobbs 81/38

Las Cruces 71/41

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

74/39/s 63/38/s 56/23/s 81/49/s 83/49/s 53/19/s 61/28/s 54/21/s 69/36/s 71/34/s 62/37/s 59/30/s 59/22/s 81/38/s 71/41/s 62/27/s 57/26/s 64/39/s 78/42/s 69/36/s 59/26/s 60/21/s 54/21/s 81/41/s 63/46/s 62/29/s 66/34/s 70/39/s 69/34/s 61/28/s

74/41/s 66/39/s 57/24/s 88/53/s 91/53/s 54/26/s 72/35/s 56/22/s 75/41/s 75/35/s 65/38/s 60/34/s 59/30/s 84/40/s 72/42/s 62/31/s 61/28/s 68/41/s 82/47/s 75/41/s 60/29/s 66/26/s 55/22/s 88/41/s 65/41/s 66/30/s 68/37/s 74/40/s 75/38/s 65/29/s

Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Boston Charlotte Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit El Paso Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Lubbock

Today

Thu.

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

39/28/sn 75/55/c 57/44/t 40/32/sn 85/53/pc 50/25/c 44/27/r 84/51/s 58/23/s 40/24/r 75/43/s 85/72/s 84/65/pc 70/35/r 64/31/s 67/47/pc 60/48/r 78/41/s

38/28/sf 73/43/s 52/32/pc 39/30/sf 75/40/s 37/23/pc 32/18/pc 82/62/s 63/29/pc 34/16/pc 78/49/s 83/71/s 81/62/s 44/27/pc 52/37/s 63/49/s 62/50/pc 75/45/s

83/68/s 77/45/s 36/10/sn 80/66/s 39/34/sn 50/26/c 84/62/s 40/38/r 75/53/s 55/30/r 54/39/pc 84/55/pc 74/36/pc 55/36/pc 62/53/pc 54/39/pc 76/47/s 58/46/t

83/67/s 82/48/s 31/20/pc 78/58/s 44/28/c 48/32/pc 85/62/s 43/31/c 73/52/s 37/18/c 59/41/c 71/41/pc 47/33/pc 53/35/sh 61/54/pc 55/40/c 75/45/s 53/31/pc

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

U.S. Extremes (For the 48 contiguous states)

State Extremes

High: 94°.................. Laredo, Texas Low: -10° .. Bodie State Park, Calif.

High: 78°..........................Carlsbad Low: 23°..............................Chama

National Cities Seattle 54/39 Billings 41/25

Minneapolis 36/10 Detroit 40/24 Chicago 50/25

San Francisco 57/47

Denver 58/23

Washington 58/46

Kansas City 64/31

Los Angeles 60/48 El Paso 75/43

Atlanta 75/55

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

Houston 84/65

Miami 83/68

Fronts

Precipitation

WE GET INTO HELPING YOU HEAR BETTER Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2011

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

Warm

Cold

-10s

-0s

0s

Stationary

10s

20s

Showers T-storms

30s

40s

IT’S TIME FOR YOUR FREE HEARING TEST!

Allman Hearing Health Care

622-0375

214 West First St.

JACQUELINE BIGAR

New York 39/34

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult

ARIES (March 21April 19) Finish up any key discussions in the morning. Schedule meetings YOUR HOROSCOPE in the p.m. You also might decide you need another source, opinion and/or more facts. Do some research, but nothing replaces a true expert. Tonight: Follow the music. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might not like everything that you see in the morning. Assume you are seeing a play that is perhaps not based in reality, and a lot of theatrics go along with it. By the afternoon, discussions become possible with more of a reality orientation. Tonight: Make togetherness the theme. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Complete errands and anything else you feel must be done. By the afternoon, people seem to find you for different reasons, providing too much, but welcome, distraction. Go with the moment if possible; some opportunities will never present themselves again. Tonight: A midweek break. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your creativity surges, and you see life from a different perspective moment to moment this morning. You suddenly understand the depth and perception of people and their actions. Use the after noon to explore an unusual insight. Tonight: Think (or dream) . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Stay put and try to understand what is happening beyond the obvious. As you get a better sense of others who directly impact you, you will know what the correct decision is. Open up an issue for discussion. You could be amazed by what you hear. Tonight: Let your hair down. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You have a way of stating situations so that others stop and listen. They simply don’t see situations in the same way as you do. Open up to new thoughts and consider them seriously. You might even want to try out a suggestion. Tonight: Happy at home. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Stay in touch with realistic spending. In the long run, that is the only way to go. A discussion takes you into a new realm, where you see another approach. Brainstorm away. Break past self-imposed restrictions. Tonight: In the thick of things. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Yes, you are on a roll and difficult to stop. You wonder what is too much and what is not enough. Look at the end results, and you will be able to judge. Use care with your finances, especially around someone who is glib. Tonight: Pay bills first. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) In the morning, rather than beating yourself up for not doing this or that, honor the fact that you are just warming up. By the afternoon, you are going full throttle, finding it difficult to stop. Utilize that energy for what you wanted to accomplish this a.m. Tonight: Say “yes” to living. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A planned path to a goal changes in a meeting. You see other dimensions open up and wonder what is the right decision. If you are not 100 percent sure of yourself, choose to wait. More information will come forth in the next few days.

CALL FOR AN EXCLUSIVE APPOINTMENT

Tonight: Get some much-needed R and R. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You barely have time for anything, as so much happens at such a rapid pace. You realize that perhaps another approach could be viable. A brainstorming session in the afternoon could prove to be unusually fruitful. Tonight: Respond to your growing popularity! PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You might wake up in never -never land and decide you don’t want to

OUT OF TOWN

1-800-675-7657

50s

Rain

60s

Flurries

70s

80s

Snow

Ice

90s 100s 110s

BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE

Improve the performance of your hearing aid with fresh Audiobel batteries

Expires 03/31/11 limit two per household

leave. Indulge a little in the morning, and allow your fantasies to run their full course. Life demands your presence by the afternoon. Your enriched morning gives an extra zing to whatever you do. Tonight: Count on it being late.

BORN TODAY R&B singer Chaka Khan (1953), actress Joan Crawford (1905), psychologist, philosopher Erich Fromm (1900)


Wednesday, March 23, 2011 Phone: 575-622-7710, ext. 28

LOCAL SCHEDULE WEDNESDAY MARCH 23

SPORTS Roswell Daily Record

KEVIN J. KELLER RECORD SPORTS EDITOR

COLLEGE BASEBALL Noon • NMMI at Wayland Baptist

LOCAL BRIEFS FIRST TEE ACCEPTING NEW STUDENTS

The First Tee of The Pecos Valley is accepting new students for classes that will begin on April 4. Students meet for classes one day per week from 4-5:30 p.m. at the NMMI Golf Course. The cost is $100. For more information, call 623-4444.

• More briefs on B2

NA T I O N A L

BRIEFS EX-GIANT TAYLOR GETS PROBATION

NEW CITY, N.Y. (AP) — The teenage girl at the center of the sex-crimes case against football great Lawrence Taylor made a surprise appearance at his sentencing Tuesday, eager to declare that he should be behind bars. She was denied the chance to speak in court, and Taylor was sentenced to six years’ probation, as agreed when he pleaded guilty in January to sexual misconduct and patronizing an underage prostitute. The former New York Giants linebacker must register as a sex offender, but a hearing on exactly how that will affect him was postponed to April 12. The girl arrived with celebrity lawyer Gloria Allred, who described her as “a sex-trafficking victim.” The girl, now 17, has been identified in court and by Allred only by the initials C.F. Allred stood beside the girl at a news conference but later refused to reveal her name. She would not say whether the girl plans a lawsuit against Taylor but said, “We look forward to representing her as she continues her fight for justice.” She said Taylor “should be in the hall of shame, not the Hall of Fame.” The girl was 16 — under the age of consent — when she met Taylor last May. Speaking outside the Rockland County Courthouse, she denied she was a prostitute and said another man, whom she called Rasheed, forced her to go into Taylor's Montebello hotel room by punching her in the face. She said Taylor should have been able to tell she had been beaten and that she was underage. “I believe Mr. Taylor could see my face and how young I was,” she said. “I did what he told me to do because I was afraid what would happen if I didn’t.” She added, her voice breaking, “I am upset that he will not go to jail for what he did to me.” The other man has been identified in a separate federal prosecution in Manhattan as Rasheed Davis.

SPOTLIGHT ON

Kevin J. Keller Photo

Roswell’s Brandon Rodriguez delivers a pitch in the fourth inning of the Coyotes’ first game against Clovis, Tuesday. Roswell beat the Wildcats, 7-6, in Game 1 and Rodriguez picked up the win on the mound.

In the stadium which once played host to the single greatest home-run hitting season — sans steroids — in baseball history, it was a hard-hit single in the seventh that gave Roswell its third win of the season on Tuesday. The Coyotes rallied out of a 4-0 hole with seven runs in the final five innings to beat 5A Clovis 7-6 at Joe Bauman Stadium. “We did off-the-wall type things and took some chances and the kids pulled through and did what they needed to do,” said Roswell coach Dane Kyser. “It was very exciting to come away with a win against a 5A team.” Roswell fell behind 4-0 in the top of the third inning when Clovis got a two-run double from Tyler Greene and a two-run 400-foot-plus home run from Craig Cook, both with two outs. The Coyotes got one back in the third to make it 4-1 and tied things up with three in the fourth.

E-mail: sports@roswell-record.com

Kevin Kelly drove home Michael Foster for the first run of the fourth and Clovis’ Tanner Massanari balked home the second to make it 4-3. James Singleton’s shot to the shortstop then sent Kelly home, tying things at 4-4. Clovis answered in the top of the fifth with an RBI double by Brenden Graham that scored Cook, who tripled to lead off the inning. After the two teams traded scoreless half-innings, Roswell took its first lead of the game in the bottom of the sixth. David Herrera led off with a single, then stole second and scored when Singleton roped a single into right to tie the game at 5-5. Luis Vale moved Singleton to third with the Coyotes’ third straight single and got to second himself on the throw, giving Roswell runners at second and third with nobody out. Clovis’ Matt Woodbury sat down the next two Coyotes and looked as though he’d get a third when Foster dribbled one right back to him.

Instead of throwing to first for the sure out, Woodbury flipped it to his catcher, Graham, as Singleton raced for the plate. Graham put the tag on Singleton, but the ball popped out of his mitt and Singleton was safe to give Roswell a 6-5 lead. Woodbury retired the next batter he faced to end the inning. Clovis wasted no time in tying things again in the top of the seventh. On the first pitch he saw from Roswell’s Brandon Rodriguez, Greene blasted a solo shot over the wall in right-center field to make it 6-6. Rodriguez didn’t let the homer shake him, though. He retired the next two Clovis hitters, and after a walk to Graham, got Woodbury to ground into a fielder’s choice to end the inning. It would take Roswell just four batters in the bottom of the seventh to win the game. David Sordo and Kelly started the inning with

Take a knee: NFL moves kickoffs to 35

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — The NFL will move kickoffs up 5 yards to the 35-yard line, keep touchbacks coming out to the 20 and allow the number of players in a blocking wedge to remain at two. Kick coverage players now will be limited to lining up 5 yards or fewer from the spot of the kickoff. Team owners also voted Tuesday to make all scoring plays reviewable by the replay official and referee. But they tabled a proposal to ban players launching themselves to make a tackle, and will reconsider it in May. The league’s competition committee proposed placing the ball at the 25 after touchbacks on kickoffs and banning the wedge altogether. Several coaches expressed concern about making too many changes to kickoffs, also saying bringing touchbacks out 5 more yards would affect field position too much. Coaches worried about an increase in touchbacks from the 16 percent of kickoffs last season. “Any time there’s a touchback and now it’s not coming to the 20,” Saints coach Sean Payton said, “I think that that probably was the most drastic of the four or five items that constituted one rule.” Making kickoffs safer was the objective, and Payton believes the owners met it, voting 26-6 for the new rule. “The bottom line is it’s ... the highest risk of injury play,” he said. Browns standout returner Joshua Cribbs wasn’t thrilled by the changes, tweeting: “Essentially taking returners out of the game...injuries will still take place, then what move it up again, or eliminate it all together.” On touchbacks, competition committee chairman Rich McKay said coaches were concerned

See RHS, Page B2

AP Photo

New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick speaks with reporters after an NFL owners meeting in New Orleans, Tuesday.

about an increase in high kicks from the 35 intended to trap returning teams deep and severely decreasing the number of returns. He also said the two-man wedge was not a driving force in the uptick in injuries on kickoffs. Indeed, more injuries occur in coverage than on the return squads. As for the six no votes, McKay said: “The objections were, ‘Hey, you’re affecting my team.’

Clearly, some teams have good kick returners and they said, ‘What if there’s 10 percent less returns?’ “We have no answer,” McKay added, “but player safety will always trump any other consideration.”

Bonds’ defense: I didn’t know they were steroids Spurs’

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Barry Bonds admits using steroids during his baseball career, his lawyer told a jury Tuesday. The catch is that Bonds’ personal trainer misled him into believing he was taking flax seed oil and arthritis cream.

“I know that doesn’t make a great story,” Allen Ruby said during his opening statement at the home run leader's perjury trial. “But that's what happened.” Assistant U.S. Attorney Matt Parrella called such claims “ridiculous and

SPORTS 1956 — Bill Russell led San Francisco to an 83-71 victory over Iowa in the NCAA basketball championship.

ON THIS DAY IN...

1957 — North Carolina defeats Wilt Chamberlain-led Kansas 54-53 in triple-overtime to win the NCAA men’s championship and finish the season with a perfect 32-0 record. 1968 — Lew Alcindor scores 34 points to lead UCLA to a 7855 win over North Carolina in the NCAA basketball championship. 1974 — N.C. State ends UCLA’s streak of seven national championships with an 80-77 victory in double overtime of the NCAA tournament semifinals. David Thompson leads the Wolfpack with 28 points and 10 rebounds, while teammate Tom Burleson scores 20 and pulls down 14 rebounds. 2003 — Tiger Woods closes with a 4-under 68 to win the Bay Hill Invitational four straight times. Woods becomes the first player since Gene Sarazen in the Miami Open (1926-30) to win the same event four straight times.

B

Coyotes win wild Game 1, 7-6 Section

AP Photo

Barry Bonds leaves the federal courthouse after the second day of his perjury trial on Tuesday in San Francisco.

unbelievable” and portrayed Bonds as a liar during his first chance to present the government’s position. And so the crux of the criminal case against Bonds was laid before an eightwoman, four -man jury as the testimony phase of the trial got under way. Bonds has pleaded not guilty to four charges of lying to a grand jury in 2003 when he denied knowingly taking steroids and one count of obstruction. Parrella started the day by saying Bonds lied to the grand jury even though the government promised not to prosecute him for drug use if he testified truthfully. “All he had to do was tell the truth,” Parrella said. “That’s all, but he couldn’t do it.” Parrella tried to show a deep connection between Bonds and the Bay Area Laboratory Co-Operative, known as BALCO, the Burlingame company at the center of an international sports doping ring that the grand jury was investigating. Five men, including BALCO’s founder Victor Conte and Bonds’ personal trainer Greg Anderson, pleaded guilty to steroids distribution after a 2003 government raid on BALCO.

See CHANGES, Page B2

On Tuesday, Parrella displayed a photograph taken from a magazine of Bonds, Conte and Anderson and called the trio the “Three Musketeers of BALCO,” drawing an objection from Ruby. Dressed in a dark suit with a light blue shirt, Bonds sat slouched in his chair, his long legs crossed at the ankles and poking out the other side of the defense table, as he watched Parrella tell jurors that a childhood friend of Bonds will discuss watching him inject steroids. Parrella promised other witnesses will talk about conversations they had with Bonds regarding his steroid use, while others will discuss their deep suspicions. Ruby, Bonds’ lead attorney, countered by trying to discredit some of the government witnesses scheduled to testify during a trial that is expected to last between two and four weeks. He said at least two prosecution witnesses have axes to grind because of bitter fallouts with the man who hit 762 career home runs, a Major League Baseball record. He also holds the mark for home runs in a single season, with 73 in See BONDS, Page B2

Duncan on crutches

SAN ANTONIO (AP) — Tim Duncan is on crutches and the San Antonio Spurs don’t know when he’ll be back. Duncan passed an MRI test Tuesday with no signs of structural damage in his sprained left ankle. The Spurs won’t know how long the 34-year-old might be out until later this week, but Duncan will miss at least the next three games as the NBA’s winningest team tries to clinch the West’s No. 1 seed. “It structurally looks good,” general manager R.C. Buford said Tuesday. “We will have a better idea of what the timeline is in the next 48 hours.” Duncan sprained the ankle Monday night in a win over Golden See DUNCAN, Page B2


B2 Wednesday, March 23, 2011 Changes Continued from Page B1

Yet the two player safety amendments were tabled until the May league meetings. A proposal to outlaw players launching to make hits was deferred, as was expanding the definition of a defenseless receiver. McKay said joining those two additions to a previous rule caused the tabling. Each of the proposals will

Bonds

Continued from Page B1

2001. Ruby alleged that Bonds’ ex-girlfriend, Kimberly Bell, and former business partner, Steve Hoskins, were “facing the loss of the financial benefit that Barry provided to them over the years” when Bond ended his relationships with them in 2003. Hoskins and Bell are key government witnesses. Bell plans to testify that Bonds admitted to her he took steroids. She will also testify to physical and mental changes she says Bonds experienced and that prosecutors attribute to steroid use. But in a deep baritone, Ruby told the jury that “after the break up Ms. Bell was extremely unhappy,” suggesting she has motivation to unfairly denigrate Bonds. Ruby, a former professional wrestling announcer now with a prestigious law firm, said Hoskins has somewhat similar motives as Bell.

Baseball

Braves to use Venters, Kimbrel as their closers

KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) — The Atlanta Braves are finding that former closer, Billy Wagner — and his 422 career saves — isn’t easy to replace. So they won’t try to do it with just one person. Jonny Venters and Craig Kimbrel will enter the season sharing the closer’s role. Manager Fredi Gonzalez isn’t concerned about not having a full-time answer for the ninth inning. “In a perfect world, you’d like to name one guy, but I can’t sit here and say May 15 is going to be the day or June 20,” he said. “Maybe we’ll go the whole way. It’s not a bad thing. It really isn’t.” Neither the left-handed Venters nor the right-handed Kimbrel started the season in the major leagues, so they don’t have much experience. Kimbrel, 22, at least had been a closer in the minor leagues. That will enable Gonzalez to mix and match, depending on whether left-handed or right-handed hitters are coming up. “It’s a luxury ... that we have two guys that have closer stuff,” said general manager Frank Wren. Both showed great promise last season and the bullpen again appears to be a plus instead of a minus for the Braves with Wagner’s retirement. “Craig’s got a crazy arm and I expect he’ll be running out there for the ninth most times,” Venters said. “But if they stick me in there, I’m comfortable with it. I feel good about it. I feel like I have a good mentality for it. I like to go right at guys and see what happens.” Venters, who turned 26 on Sunday, was a starter before joining the Atlanta bullpen early last season. Appearing in 79 games a year ago, his hard sinker baffled major league hitters as he posted a 1.95 ERA and struck out 93 batters in 83 innings. Opponents just hit .203 off of him. He hasn’t allowed a run yet this spring and has given up just two hits in his eight one-inning outings. Kimbrel, who dominated at times last season after coming up for good in the minors, has a fastball that reaches the high 90s and a knee-buckling curveball. He was 4-0 with a 0.44 ERA and struck out 40 in 20 2/3 innings with the Braves. Control is his only real issue. He struggled in two of his first three appearances this

TV SPORTSWATCH

TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press (All times Mountain) Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Wednesday, March 23 MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 11 a.m. ESPN — Preseason, N.Y. Mets vs. St. Louis, at Jupiter, Fla. MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. ESPN2 — NIT, quarterfinal, College of Charleston at Wichita State 7 p.m. ESPN2 — NIT, quarterfinal, Miami at Alabama 9 p.m. ESPN2 — NIT, quarterfinal, Northwestern vs. Washington State NBA BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN — Orlando at New York 8:30 p.m. ESPN — San Antonio at Denver NHL HOCKEY 5:30 p.m. VERSUS — Vancouver at Detroit

SPORTS be made into separate amendments before being presented again. “We didn’t feel like there was enough support to get it passed,” said Giants owner John Mara, a competition committee member. “A number of people seemed to be, in my opinion, more concerned about flags being thrown for questionable hits. My feeling is, I’m more concerned about needless concussions, so I’m willing to But there is one crucial government witness who won’t testify at all — Anderson, who prosecutor alleges supplied Bonds with steroids and detailed instructions on how to use them. Anderson was taken to jail Tuesday after he told U.S. District Judge Susan Illston he was refusing to testify against Bonds, whom he grew up with in San Mateo County. Bonds looked away when Anderson and his attorney, Mark Geragos, entered the courtroom and again when U.S. Marshals led him away to jail, where he will remain until he changes his mind or the trial ends. Anderson has been held in contempt before. He served more than a year in prison for refusing to testify in 2006 before a grand jury investigating Bonds. Illston later read a special instruction to the jury about Anderson's absence from the trial. “Greg Anderson is unavailable to both parties to testify in this trial,” Illston said. “You may not speculate as to the cause of his unavailability.” spring. But he has six straight scoreless outings in which he has allowed one hit while striking out eight and walking one in the six innings. “We miss Billy Wagner,” Venters said. “He really taught me a lot last season and I know he helped Craig, too. But I think we still have a good bullpen. Now it’s our time to show it.”

Basketball

National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB — y-Boston . . . . . . . . . .50 19 .725 Philadelphia . . . . . . . .36 34 .514 14 1/2 New York . . . . . . . . . .35 35 .500 15 1/2 New Jersey . . . . . . . .22 47 .319 28 Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . .20 50 .286 30 1/2 Southeast Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB x-Miami . . . . . . . . . . .48 22 .686 — x-Orlando . . . . . . . . . .45 26 .634 3 1/2 Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . .40 31 .563 8 1/2 Charlotte . . . . . . . . . .28 41 .406 19 1/2 Washington . . . . . . . .17 51 .250 30 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB — y-Chicago . . . . . . . . .51 19 .729 Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . .31 40 .437 20 1/2 Milwaukee . . . . . . . . .28 41 .406 22 1/2 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . .25 45 .357 26 Cleveland . . . . . . . . . .13 56 .188 37 1/2

WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB — x-San Antonio . . . . . .57 13 .814 x-Dallas . . . . . . . . . . .49 21 .700 8 New Orleans . . . . . . .40 31 .563 17 1/2 Memphis . . . . . . . . . .39 32 .549 18 1/2 Houston . . . . . . . . . . .37 34 .521 20 1/2 Northwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Oklahoma City . . . . . .45 24 .652 — Denver . . . . . . . . . . . .42 29 .592 4 Portland . . . . . . . . . . .40 30 .571 5 1/2 10 Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36 35 .507 Minnesota . . . . . . . . .17 54 .239 29 Pacific Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB — y-L.A. Lakers . . . . . . .50 20 .714 14 Phoenix . . . . . . . . . . .35 33 .515 Golden State . . . . . . .30 41 .423 20 1/2 L.A. Clippers . . . . . . .27 44 .380 23 1/2 Sacramento . . . . . . . .17 52 .246 32 1/2 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division

Monday’s Games Orlando 97, Cleveland 86 Indiana 102, New Jersey 98 Boston 96, New York 86 Chicago 132, Sacramento 92 Memphis 103, Utah 85 San Antonio 111, Golden State 96 Denver 123, Toronto 90 Tuesday’s Games Chicago 114, Atlanta 81 Washington at Portland, 8 p.m. Phoenix at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Indiana at Charlotte, 5 p.m. New Jersey at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Atlanta at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Memphis at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Miami at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Sacramento at Milwaukee, 6 p.m.

LOCAL BRIEFS ENMU-R HOSTING 27TH ANNUAL HOOPS TOURNEY

Eastern New Mexico University Roswell will host its 27th annual 5-on-5 basketball tournament on April 8-9. The entry fee is $200 and includes a tournament T-shirt. Rosters are limited to 10 players per team and all players must be shorter than 6-foot-2. Numbered team shirts are required. The entry deadline is April 5. For more information, call 6247338 or 624-7191.

make that trade. But I think we need to go back and just clarify some of the language, maybe to make it a little bit more clear for everybody.” McKay praised players for avoiding launching themselves during the second part of last season after the league threatened suspensions for illegal and flagrant hits. No suspensions were handed out, but Ray Anderson, the NFL’s chief disciplinarian,

RHS

Continued from Page B1

back-to-back singles to left, bringing Herrera to the plate with two on and nobody out. A.J. Marez ranged to his left and made a diving catch on Herrera’s weak blooper and then delivered a strike to first to double off Kelly, who was already at the second base by the time Marez got to his feet. Singleton made sure Kelly’s base-running gaffe

Duncan

Continued from Page B1

State. Four minutes had barely passed in the game when Duncan, after making a short jumper, landed awkwardly on his left foot and collapsed beneath the basket. The two-time MVP lay clutching the foot for more than a minute in the scariest moment for the Spurs all

two minutes of each half and in overtime. Coaches pushed for the change in great part because they felt they did not get a fair shake in road games. “It’s a real big competitive disadvantage,” Ravens coach John Harbaugh said. “You don’t get that look at it on the road that you get at home; they just don’t show it.” One proposal was adopted unanimously, giving the

commissioner the power to approve or deny requests to change the color of the playing field from green. Falcons owner Arthur Blank said the concer n was that sponsors could approach teams and suggest a deal that involved altering a field’s color. As McKay previously noted with a smile, “We don’t want any red fields like at Eastern Washington.”

didn’t matter shortly thereafter. He laced a liner into center on the third pitch of his at-bat and Kyser waved home Sordo from second. The throw from Clovis’ Jordan Hill came up well short and Sordo crossed home standing up to secure the victory. “James Singleton had been hitting all game, so I wasn’t particularly nervous,” Kyser said of Singleton’s clutch hit. “It’s a little nervous having two outs, but if we had to have anyone up at that time, he’s

the one. “He came through and did his job.” Rodriguez picked up the win for Roswell after coming on in relief of Herrera, who started the game by striking out the first five Wildcats he faced. Ethan Denny took the loss for Clovis.

Kelly took the loss on the mound and went 2 for 3 at the plate for Roswell (3-9). Steven Lucero and Joey Espinoza each went 1 for 3. “We just didn’t come out focused like we needed to be,” Kyser said about the Game 2 loss. “We gave up some big hits and some walks, and then the wheels just kind of fell off the wagon. “We didn’t look too good. Our concentration and focus went out the window.”

season. San Antonio has reclaimed its place atop the NBA behind the durability of Duncan, Tony Parker and Manu Ginobili after injuries derailed the four-time champions the last few years. Duncan will not travel with the Spurs on a threegame road trip that begins Wednesday in Denver. The Spurs (57-13) have a sevengame lead over the Los Angeles Lakers for the top seed in the West with 12 games remaining.

Only one of San Antonio’s remaining dozen opponents — Sacramento — are out of the playoff chase. Buford said Duncan’s ankle is between a grade 1 and 2 sprain. He said team doctors are waiting for the swelling to subside to see how the ankle responds to early treatment. “There’s a lot of frustration,” Buford said. “But I think he’s pretty tough and you guys saw him on the court.”

Buford and the rest of San Antonio’s front office left their box at the AT&T Center and went to the locker room after Duncan limped off the court Monday night, steadying himself with the help of trainers. Duncan is averaging career lows (13.3 points, 9 rebounds) and the Spurs no longer revolve their offense around the two-time MVP. But the Spurs are quick to say Duncan is still what makes them tick.

Bush will be on it. “He’s a guy that we feel will be a part of our team. ... He’s a guy that we had a lot of dialogue with prior to (the lockout),” Payton said. Bush is due more than $11 million next season under his current contract but has acknowledged that he might have to renegotiate — and possibly take a pay cut — to remain with the Saints. “I think he’s got a pretty good grasp of the economy and where he’s at,” Payton said. “That’s a big strength, especially when a player knows who he is and the type of team he’s with. That’s not a sure thing because, hey, there might be another suitor possibly, but I think he has a genuine desire to play here. I think the feeling is mutual.”

to lead the Nationwide Tour the next year, he still is not guaranteed a spot on the PGA Tour. He could hit a bad patch during the three-event series and have to start over. The tour needs an umbrella sponsor for its developmental tour after 2012, and this would make it more appealing. That said, the tour has been looking at the merits of Qschool and the Nationwide Tour long before Nationwide decided to end its sponsorship. The tour still is providing players a shot at the PGA Tour — just not right away. Fowler and Jamie Lovemark lost in a playoff at the Frys.com Open toward the end of 2009. One of them went on to earn his card at Q-school (and play in the Ryder Cup), the other went to the Nationwide Tour and led the money list. Under the proposal, both would have been on the Nationwide Tour. “Obviously, I was trying to make the PGA Tour, but what I wanted was a place to play,” Fowler said. “Look at Jamie. He found his way here, he just took a side route. I would not have been upset playing the Nationwide Tour.” Even so, there’s a stigma about the Nationwide Tour. It’s about settling for second best. Bill Haas was so disappointed at not making it out of Q-school in 2004 that he said, “I think if I have to play there more than four or five years, I’ll quit golf.” He played one full year, earned his card through Q-school and has been on the PGA Tour ever since. One way or another, the best will get through. Duval was one of the best players of his generation, yet he failed to get through Qschool. After one year on what was then the Nike Tour, he had three runner-up finishes and was 11th on the PGA Tour money list as a rookie. He is not surprised by the outrage over the potential for something new. Golf, perhaps more than any sport, is slow to embrace change. “We play a game long on traditions,” Duval said. No matter how this shakes out, he only wants to make sure one tradition doesn’t change. “As long as the low score still wins.”

said they will be in play from the outset of next season. The replay change passed 30-2, with one modification: The third coach’s challenge that the competition committee suggested dropping will be kept. The replay official now can call for the referee to review any scoring play. Previously, replay officials only could order reviews (on any play) in the final

SCOREBOARD

Utah at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Orlando at New York, 6 p.m. Golden State at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Toronto at Phoenix, 8 p.m. Washington at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m. San Antonio at Denver, 8:30 p.m. Thursday’s Games Minnesota at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. New Orleans at Utah, 7 p.m.

Knicks believe they’ll get it right by playoffs

GREENBURGH, N.Y. (AP) — Even before needing five stitches above his left eye, Carmelo Anthony understood this could be painful. Though the New York Knicks envisioned themselves as a dangerous team after trading for him, instead they’re two games under .500 since making the deal. And the more time they spend together, the worse they’ve played. A team with Anthony and Amare Stoudemire, the NBA’s second-highest scoring duo, running Mike D’Antoni’s system, has endured three straight subpar offensive games, and offense is supposed to be the Knicks’ strong suit. Yet as they reach the one-month anniversary of his arrival, Anthony says these struggles weren’t a surprise, and he still believes there is time for the Knicks to get past them. “That’s something that I keep telling myself, I keep telling the guys on the team, that at the end of the day it’s going to get to where we want it to be at. And I’m not really too concerned about that,” Anthony said Tuesday after practice, his eye looking a little puffy after what he said was the first time he needed stitches. “I’m confident in that, I’m positive about making that happen, making this whole thing work, and for the most part I know we’re losing games right now, but everybody seems like their energy is up, nobody is bowing their heads and feeling sad about anything because everybody knows this wasn’t going to be easy. This is a long road to get where we want to be at.” It’s been much bumpier than anyone could have guessed. New York fell to 7-9 since acquiring Anthony with Monday’s 96-86 loss to the Boston Celtics, when he was cut after colliding with Rajon Rondo while trying to steal a pass. The Knicks have dropped six of seven and at 35-35, will have a losing record for the first time since November if they lose Wednesday to an Orlando team that has already beaten them twice this season. The Knicks talked of moving up to the No. 5 seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs, but instead have fallen behind Philadelphia into seventh after they held the No. 6 spot for more than three months. A losing record is the norm in New York this time of year, with the Knicks in a franchise-worst stretch of nine straight losing seasons. But they have bigger goals this season, and they insist those plans are still intact. “It really boils down to do you have a choice, and we don’t have a choice,” Stoudemire said. “You have to get it ready for the playoffs if you want to make things special out of this year.” They have at times looked capable, rallying to beat the Heat in Miami in the third game after the trade, and blowing out likely playoff teams New Orleans and Atlanta. New York was 6-3 with Anthony after his game-winning jumper at Memphis on March 9, but was routed at Dallas the next night before getting swept in a home-and-home series by eighth-place Indiana. Following a victory over the Grizzlies last week, the Knicks have dropped three straight, all in shockingly poor offensive performances for a team that ranks second in the league with 106.2 points per game. Anthony was 2 of 12 for six points in a loss at Detroit on Friday, and the Knicks then managed only nine points in the first quarter of a loss at Milwaukee on Sunday. Just as they were in position to beat the Celtics on Monday, neither Anthony nor Stoudemire managed a field goal in the fourth quarter and the Knicks totaled just 35 points in the second half. “You have to understand what we’re trying to accomplish in the fourth quarter and right now, there’s not a clear understanding and we’re trying to clear it up,” D’Antoni said. “Again, when it gets to the fourth quarter, you get pressure on people, you get a little

Roswell Daily Record

fatigue on people’s legs, you revert back and you kind of hold the ball, you’re not quite sure what to do. It’s almost paralysis by analysis. You’re trying to figure it out and you’re not going anywhere, and I do think that’ll clear up.” The Knicks site plenty of reasons for their problems: An injury to Chauncey Billups cost him six games after he played so well in the first four after coming with Anthony from Denver, and the March schedule is heavy on games but short on practice time. Soon comes their first playoff berth since 2004, which seems assured thanks to the big cushion they built when they were playing well. “We have a little bit under a month to get this thing right to get ready for the playoffs and right now we’re just figuring it out on the go,” Anthony said. “As long as we figure it out by the time them playoffs come, I’m not really too concerned about what’s going on right now or how it’s going on. Losing games can be a little bit frustrating at times, but that happens, especially when you’re trying to get things right and trying to get everybody on the same page.” The Knicks have watched the Nuggets’ much smoother transition, but they knew the trade could set them back in the short term. “We’ve just got to keep our focus on getting to the playoffs, getting this right and then making a run in the playoffs,” D’Antoni said. “And that’s our focus.”

Football

Payton says he’d like a contract extension

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Sean Payton said that he “absolutely” wants a contract extension with the New Orleans Saints and has spoken already to general manager Mickey Loomis about it. While attending the NFL owners meeting Tuesday in New Orleans, Payton said he and Loomis have laid out a list of priorities for the club which includes matters such as signing quarterback Drew Brees to an extension as well. Payton, who has two years remaining on his current contract, said he could not yet put a timeline on when his extension might get done. “There’s a time for that and it’s not necessarily March or April, but it’s on the list,” Payton said. “It’s something that when the time comes, I think I would have a strong interest in going through that.” Payton said he is aware of “speculation” that he is interested in coaching elsewhere, which he said likely arose from his decision earlier this year to move his family to suburban Dallas, where he was once an assistant with the Cowboys. “The speculation arises from that more than anything else,” Payton said. “It’s not a big topic otherwise.” Payton, who maintains a residence in New Orleans, said travel back and forth between New Orleans and Dallas has been easy. “I know I’ll make it work from an efficiency standpoint. I mean, I jump out of here today for instance and I’m on a flight and I’m there an hour, an hour and 10 minutes, we land,” Payton said. “What’s interesting is the people have been unbelievable when I’m at the airport, when I’m out last night (at) the restaurants, because they want us to win.” Payton said he understood why his move was news in New Orleans, but also thought it was blown out of proportion with the intensity of the coverage, particularly when he saw news helicopters flying above his house. “The people want someone who’s productive, someone who’s going to win, someone who can continue to win,” Payton said. “You know, we’re graded on what we do. You know, two losing seasons in a row and they along with everyone else are going to help you move. So it really is just that, you know, a personal decision. And it’s that simple. Now I know it’s been made more complicated, but it’s that simple.” Payton also said he does not believe his new Dallas residence should become an issue if the Saints struggle at some point next season. “I think the first rough patch we hit is a rough patch anyway,” Payton said. “I might get a dumb question about it. ... but I don’t think that will happen.” As far as next year’s roster is concerned, Payton said he’s sure running back Reggie

Clovis 22, Roswell 0 The second game of the doubleheader was the total opposite of the first as Clovis pounded out 22 runs en route to a five-inning win over the Coyotes.

Golf

A potentially new path to the PGA Tour ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Someone’s dream comes true every December. It could be an All-American from a golf powerhouse or a guy who has been toiling on the mini-tours for longer than he cares to remember. It could be someone as old as Allen Doyle (48) or as young as Ty Tryon (17). Some of them are so choked up they can’t speak. Others are so excited they can’t stop talking. These are the stories and the emotions of Q-school for those who earn a ticket to the PGA Tour. And this is what the PGA Tour wants to take away. “I don’t think I necessarily like that,” J.B. Holmes, speaking from experience. Holmes went straight from Kentucky to the Walker Cup to all three stages of Q-school and had his PGA Tour card. Two months later, he won the Phoenix Open. And then there’s Rickie Fowler. He also made it through Q-school on his first try at age 21. Ten months later, he birdied the last four holes at Celtic Manor to earn an improbable halve in a critical singles match at the Ryder Cup. Why take away an opportunity like that? Because of all the other stories that don’t have such a happy ending. “There is some charm to that,” David Duval said of Q-school. “But history shows that romanticism, as attractive as it may be, leads to failure 10 months later when you lose your card and you’re back in the cycle.” According to the PGA Tour media guide, Q-school has been around since 1965. A record 57 players earned PGA Tour cards in 1983. But as the minor leagues took root, tour officials began taking away the number of cards offered at Q-school and giving more to the top Nationwide players. The thinking was they proved themselves over an entire season. The next move appears to be radical. The policy board has given preliminary approval to a concept that essentially would end Q-school as we know it. At the end of the regular season in Greensboro, N.C., the top 125 in the standings would go to the FedEx Cup playoffs and the money list would be closed for the year. The next 50 or 75 players would join the top 50 or 75 players from the Nationwide Tour to play the “Finals Series,” comprised of three tournaments that amount to a different kind of playoffs. The top 50 players from those three tournaments would earn their cards for the next season. Consider it 12 rounds of Q-school spread over three weeks. The pressure could be just as great. The quality of competition would be stronger than ever. As for Q-school? It still would be played at the end of the year, but the only cards available would be for the Nationwide Tour. If not for a player’s pride and patience, there shouldn’t be a problem. Statistics show that players who spend a year on the Nationwide Tour typically are more prepared for the PGA Tour than someone straight out of Q-school. They learn to cope with success and slumps while traveling from week to week. It’s life on the tour, minus the courtesy cars and press coverage. “I’ve yet to find a serious flaw in it, how it’s not better than what we have,” said Paul Goydos, who is on the policy board. “Is it as romantic and sexy as we had? Maybe not. More efficient? Yeah. We get caught up in the idea that we’re losing a piece of golf tradition that we’ve had our whole lives. But all I’ve ever heard players talk about (Q-school) was that it was torture.” Among the countless details for the tour to work out is this harrowing prospect — if a player goes through all three stages of Qschool, then wins a record amount of money

kjkeller@roswell-record.com

Transactions

Tuesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League CHICAGO WHITE SOX—Optioned OF Alejandro De Aza, C Tyler Flowers and RHP Gregory Infante to Charlotte (IL). Reassigned RHP Brian Bruney, OF Jordan Danks, RHP Jeff Gray, RHP Josh Kinney, RHP Shane Lindsay and INF Dallas McPherson to their minor league camp. CLEVELAND INDIANS—Sent RHP Jensen Lewis outright to Columbus (IL). DETROIT TIGERS—Optioned RHP Robbie Weinhardt, INF Scott Sizemore and OF Clete Thomas to Toledo (IL). Reassigned LHP Fu-Te Ni and C Max St. Pierre to their minor league camp. National League LOS ANGELES DODGERS—Reassigned RHP Oscar Villarreal to their minor league camp. FOOTBALL Canadian Football League EDMONTON ESKIMOS—Released DT Dario Romero. HOCKEY National Hockey League DALLAS STARS—Called up D Brad Lukowich from Texas (AHL). DETROIT RED WINGS—Assigned G Joey MacDonald to Grand Rapids (AHL). Recalled RW Jan Mursak from Grand Rapids. MONTREAL CANADIENS—Signed D Joe Stejskal to a two-year contract. OTTAWA SENATORS—Recalled D Patrick Wiercioch from Binghamton (AHL). ST. LOUIS BLUES—Recalled D Tyson Strachan from Peoria (AHL). TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Signed G Pat Nagle to a two-year contract. VANCOUVER CANUCKS—Recalled F Victor Oreskovich. COLLEGE NCAA—Named Kathleen McNeely vice president of administration and chief financial officer. EDINBORO—Named Doug Sams football offensive coordinator. MONTANA—Announced the addition of women’s softball in 2014. MONTANA STATE—Announced the resignation of tight ends coach Dale Ploessl. NORTH GREENVILLE—Named Michael Bayne track and field and cross country coach.


FINANCIAL

Roswell Daily Record

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

Div Last Chg DenburyR ... 24.04 +.07 DevelDiv .16f 13.65 -.03 A-B-C DevonE .68f u93.10 +.41 ABB Ltd 1.12e 23.43 -.35 DrSCBr rs ... 39.87 +.50 ACE Ltd 1.32e 61.75 -.34 DirFnBr rs ... 41.68 +.56 AES Corp ... 12.47 -.15 DirLCBr rs ... 38.59 +.37 AFLAC 1.20 52.84 +.31 DrxEMBll s .84e 35.75 +.46 AK Steel .20 15.15 -.21 DrxFBull s ... 29.28 -.40 ... 6.52 -.26 DirxSCBull ... 77.91 -1.17 AMR AT&T Inc 1.72f 28.10 -.16 Discover .08 u22.25 -.39 .40f 41.44 -.38 AbtLab 1.92f 47.96 -.07 Disney AberFitc .70 54.87 +.55 DollarGen ... 30.84 +.46 Accenture .90f 50.35 ... DomRescs1.97f 44.43 -.06 AMD ... 8.36 -.19 DowChm .60 36.73 -.24 AdvSemi .06e 5.53 -.15 DuPont 1.64 53.67 -.16 Aetna .60f 35.43 -.14 DukeEngy .98 17.76 +.04 Agilent ... 43.19 -.76 DukeRlty .68 13.82 +.07 Agrium g .11 87.52 -.81 Dynegy rs ... 5.96 +.04 AirTran ... 7.32 -.03 ECDang n ... 21.12 +2.21 ... 26.36 -.22 AlcatelLuc ... 5.10 -.16 EMC Cp Alcoa .12 16.45 -.10 EOG Res .64f 113.36 +1.96 EKodak ... 3.24 -.03 Alcon 3.95e 164.43 -.11 Allergan .20 69.26 -.68 Eaton s 1.36f 52.48 -.69 Allstate .84f 31.48 +.19 EdisonInt 1.28 36.52 +.12 AlphaNRs ... 56.92 +.88 ElPasoCp .04 17.74 -.11 Altria 1.52 25.43 +.28 EldorGld g .10f 16.07 -.23 AmBev s 1.16e 27.39 +.25 EmersonEl 1.38 57.42 -.72 ... 10.24 +.05 AMovilL .52e 54.71 +.46 Emulex AEagleOut .44a 15.32 +.18 EnCana g .80 34.46 -.27 AEP 1.84 34.16 +.10 EndvSilv g ... 9.49 -.16 AmExp .72 44.75 +.43 ENSCO 1.40 u57.19 -.47 AmIntlGrp ... 36.95 -.08 Entergy 3.32 66.90 +1.21 AmTower ... 48.72 +2.11 Exelon 2.10 41.07 +.67 Ameriprise .72 59.50 -1.68 Express n ... 18.42 +1.02 AmeriBrgn .40 38.30 +.45 ExxonMbl 1.76 82.56 -.28 Anadarko .36 80.79 +.81 FairchldS ... 17.59 -.45 AnalogDev .88 37.97 -.15 FedExCp .48 88.29 -1.57 Annaly 2.62e 17.83 -.20 FirstEngy 2.20 36.81 +.02 Apache .60 125.88 +.78 FlagstB rs ... 1.47 +.02 ... u8.06 +.71 ArcelorMit .75 35.24 -.44 Flotek .50 71.72 -.33 ArchCoal .40 34.34 +.31 Fluor ArchDan .64f 36.04 +.16 FootLockr .66f 18.70 -.08 ... 14.34 -.25 ArvMerit ... 18.53 -.23 FordM Avon .92f 26.96 -.26 FMCG s 1.00a 52.28 -.15 BB&T Cp .64f 26.63 -.25 FrontierCm .75 8.07 +.01 BHP BillLt1.82e 88.71 -.88 FrontierOil .24a 27.08 -.70 BJs Whls ... 48.84 +2.32 G-H-I BP PLC .42e 45.74 -.06 BPZ Res ... 5.35 -.03 GMAC CpT ... 25.60 -.01 ... 5.66 +.20 .60 70.61 ... GMX Rs BakrHu BcBilVArg .56e 12.61 -.01 Gafisa SA .14e 12.72 +.38 BcoBrades .82r 19.63 +.66 GameStop ... 21.02 -.17 BcoSantSA.79e 11.99 -.14 Gannett .16 15.19 -.32 .45f 21.85 -.06 BcoSBrasil .70e 11.98 +.28 Gap BkofAm .04 13.88 -.17 GenElec .56 19.49 -.23 BkIrelnd 1.04e 1.92 -.06 GenGrPr n ... 15.48 ... BkNYMel .52f 29.14 +.07 GenMarit .04m 2.03 +.03 Barclay .35e 18.95 -.13 GenMills s 1.12 36.91 -.21 Bar iPVix rs ... 32.50 -.17 GenMot n ... d30.74 -.54 BarrickG .48 50.22 -.10 GenOn En ... 3.68 -.04 Baxter 1.24 52.66 -.02 Genworth ... 12.91 -.06 BerkH B ... 84.98 -.19 Gerdau .25e 12.33 -.16 BestBuy .60 31.42 -.48 GblX Uran .40p 15.95 -.09 BigLots ... 42.28 +.53 GoldFLtd .19e 16.52 -.29 BioMedR .80f 18.07 ... Goldcrp g .41f 48.18 ... Blackstone .40 17.54 +.09 GoldmanS 1.40 160.79 +.58 BlockHR .60 16.11 -.12 Goodyear ... u15.03 -.36 Boeing 1.68 71.85 +.65 GrubbEllis ... 1.04 +.06 BorgWarn ... 73.21 -3.00 GpTelevisa ... 23.29 -.01 BostonSci ... 6.98 -.29 HCA Hld n ... 31.87 -.38 BoydGm ... 9.10 -.23 HCP Inc 1.92f 37.08 -.52 BrMySq 1.32 26.29 +.29 HSBC 1.80e 51.33 -.26 CB REllis ... 27.32 -.05 Hallibrtn .36 45.70 -.03 CBL Asc .84f 17.27 -.37 HarmonyG .07e 12.46 +.10 CBS B .20 u24.66 +.15 HartfdFn .40f 26.43 -.06 CF Inds .40 122.56 -4.58 HarvNRes ... 16.02 +2.03 CIGNA .04 41.89 -.07 HatterasF 4.20e 28.22 -.21 CIT Grp ... 41.96 -.44 HltCrREIT 2.76 50.97 -.78 ... 10.16 -.09 CMS Eng .84 19.25 -.01 HltMgmt CNO Fincl ... 7.17 +.09 Heckmann ... 6.26 -.02 HeclaM ... 8.71 +.01 CSX 1.04 u78.37 +.28 1.80 48.51 -.13 CVS Care .50 33.41 -.32 Heinz ... 16.45 +.20 CablvsnNY .50 34.75 -.39 HelixEn ... 15.60 +.10 Calpine ... 15.35 +.23 Hertz .40 82.10 -.07 Cameco g .40f 32.20 +.49 Hess Cameron ... 60.00 -.90 HewlettP .32 41.74 -.03 CdnNRs gs .36f 49.40 -.36 HomeDp 1.00f 36.29 -.14 ... 38.77 -1.17 CP Rwy g 1.08 64.05 -1.70 Honda CapOne .20 50.56 -.68 HonwllIntl 1.33f 56.54 -.50 CapitlSrce .04 7.03 +.05 HostHotls .08f 17.63 -.21 CardnlHlth .78 40.87 -.03 IAMGld g .08f 21.87 -.01 ... u12.87 +.06 CarMax ... 32.63 -1.19 ING Carnival 1.00f 39.16 -1.85 iShGold s ... 13.94 -.01 Caterpillar 1.76 106.79 -.80 iSAstla .82e 24.95 ... Celanese .20 40.44 -.37 iShBraz 2.53e 74.71 +1.12 .50e 33.15 -.03 Cemex .43t 8.68 -.04 iSCan Cemig pf 1.19e 17.93 +.24 iShGer .29e 24.92 -.17 CenterPnt .79f 16.89 -.21 iSh HK .45e 18.23 ... CntryLink 2.90 40.89 +.41 iShJapn .14e 10.63 -.04 ChesEng .30 33.70 -.05 iSh Kor .44e 60.07 +.02 Chevron 2.88u105.23 +.04 iShMex .54e 59.73 +.35 Chicos .20f 14.00 -.02 iShSing .43e 13.09 +.08 Chimera .66e 4.10 -.18 iSTaiwn .29e 14.35 -.11 ... 35.54 +.24 ChinaUni .23e 16.63 +.47 iShSilver Citigrp ... 4.42 -.01 iShChina25.63e 42.83 +.08 iSSP500 2.36e 130.31 -.46 Citigp wtB ... d.20 -.01 CliffsNRs .56 92.00 +.26 iShEMkts .64e 46.24 +.14 Coach .60 51.09 -.36 iShSPLatA1.18e 51.66 +.63 CocaCola 1.88f 63.51 -.06 iShB20 T 3.86e 93.22 +.31 CocaCE .48 26.43 -.21 iS Eafe 1.42e 59.18 -.17 Coeur ... 33.79 +.33 iSR1KV 1.29e 67.43 -.25 ColgPal 2.32f 78.43 +.02 iSR2KG .58e 90.74 -.42 Comerica .40 37.27 -.41 iShR2K .89e 80.87 -.43 CmclMtls .48 15.69 -.37 iShREst 1.97e 58.40 -.53 1.36 54.73 -.27 CompPrdS ... 30.19 -.53 ITW ConAgra .92 22.99 -.07 IngerRd .28 47.47 -.71 2.60 158.00 +.32 ConocPhil 2.64f 77.22 -.33 IBM ... u11.10 +.74 ConsolEngy .40 53.82 -.86 Intl Coal ConstellA ... 18.60 +.08 IntlGame .24 15.97 -.29 .75f 26.82 -.29 ConstellEn .96 30.86 -.18 IntPap ... 77.38 -1.86 ContlRes ... 69.40 +1.17 InterOil g Corning .20 20.80 +.03 Interpublic .24 11.96 -.22 Invesco .44 25.36 -.09 Covidien .80 52.03 -.95 CrwnCstle ... 37.98 +.61 InvMtgCap3.71e 21.28 -.89 .75 29.52 +.67 Cummins 1.05 101.70 -.87 IronMtn CurEuro .01e 141.40 -.24 ItauUnibH .67e 22.70 +.81 CypSharp 2.40 12.65 -.11 J-K-L D-E-F JPMorgCh1.00f 45.47 -.16 .28 18.93 -.58 DCT Indl .28 5.20 -.09 Jabil ... 5.37 +.12 DR Horton .15 11.85 -.26 Jaguar g DanaHldg ... 16.97 -.19 JohnJn 2.16 58.79 -.04 JohnsnCtl .64 39.94 -.52 Danaher s .08 51.27 -.02 DeanFds ... 10.30 +.09 JnprNtwk ... 39.13 -1.41 Deere 1.40 91.05 -.56 KB Home .25 13.23 -.12 DeltaAir ... 10.00 -.17 KBR Inc .20 36.46 -.14 Name

Name Sell Chg Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 20.14 -.07 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 19.13 -.06 Amer Century Inv: EqInc x 7.31 -.05 GrowthI 26.45 -.15 Ultra 23.18 -.07 American Funds A: AmcpA p 19.37 -.04 AMutlA p 25.84 -.04 BalA p 18.36 -.02 BondA p 12.22 -.01 CapIBA p 50.25 +.11 CapWGA p36.17 -.02 CapWA px 20.63 -.18 EupacA p 41.76 -.03 FdInvA p 38.03 -.12 GovtA p 13.91 -.01 GwthA p 31.17 -.09 HI TrA p 11.50 +.01 IncoA p 16.96 ... IntBdA p 13.44 ... IntlGrIncA p31.81 +.04 ICAA p 28.63 -.08 NEcoA p 25.85 -.03 N PerA p 28.98 -.06 NwWrldA 53.44 +.19 SmCpA p 38.79 +.01 TxExA p 11.80 ... WshA p 28.08 -.04 Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 29.88 +.03 IntlEqA 29.15 +.03 IntEqII I r 12.33 +.01 Artisan Funds: Intl 21.91 -.08 IntlVal r 27.49 +.01 MidCap 34.44 -.25 MidCapVal21.56 -.08

SCapVal 17.83 -.06 Baron Funds: Growth 54.18 -.02 SmallCap 25.22 -.07 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 13.77 -.01 DivMu 14.29 -.01 TxMgdIntl 15.75 -.06 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 18.20 -.04 GlAlA r 19.79 ... BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 18.45 -.01 BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 18.24 -.04 GlbAlloc r 19.88 -.01 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 54.38 -.24 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 29.59 -.14 DivEqInc 10.41 -.03 DivrBd 5.03 -.01 SelComm A45.17 -.23 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 30.57 -.14 AcornIntZ 40.75 +.07 ValRestr 51.60 -.08 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 9.66 +.07 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq n11.53 ... USCorEq1 n11.41-.05 USCorEq2 n11.44-.05 DWS Invest S: MgdMuni S 8.64 ... Davis Funds A: NYVen A 35.17 -.02 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 35.55 -.03 NYVen C 33.96 -.02

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

+.67 +.18 +.17 +.03 +.08 +.30 +1.03 +1.35

+.70 +.40 +.60 +1.02 +.60 +.57 +.55 +.13

+1.30 +.67 +.48 +.05 -.28 +.25 -.38 +.25 +.20

+.50

M-N-0

MBIA ... 10.50 -.14 MEMC ... 12.18 -.27 MF Global ... 7.94 -.09 MFA Fncl .94f 8.11 -.14 MGIC ... 8.74 -.19 MGM Rsts ... 12.78 -.11 Macys .20 22.87 -.54 Manitowoc .08 20.69 -.24 Manulife g .52 17.49 -.12 MarathonO1.00 51.21 -.63 MktVGold .40e 58.17 +.15 MktVRus .18e 40.45 -.14 MktVJrGld2.93e 38.07 -.15 MarIntA .35 36.98 -1.64 MarshM .84 29.05 -.39 MarshIls .04 7.84 +.05 Masco .30 13.96 -.32 MasseyEn .24 64.38 +1.98 McDrmInt s ... 24.63 +.07 McDnlds 2.44 73.87 +.11 MeadJohn 1.04f 56.77 -.31 MedcoHlth ... 53.38 +.93 Medtrnic .90 37.59 -.38 Merck 1.52 32.53 +.14 MetLife .74 44.58 -.01 MetroPCS ... 15.50 -.14 MitsuUFJ ... 4.88 +.09 MobileTel s ... 21.19 -.15 Molycorp n ... 52.57 +7.89 Monsanto 1.12 68.95 -.03 MonstrWw ... 15.49 -.03 Moodys .46f 32.19 -.88 MorgStan .20 27.76 -.03 Mosaic .20 76.21 -1.03 MotrlaSol n ... 42.66 +.62 NRG Egy ... 21.10 +.24 NYSE Eur 1.20 34.88 +.44 Nabors ... 27.20 -.44 NBkGreece.29e 1.90 -.05 NatGrid 7.04e 48.14 +.68 NOilVarco .44 78.61 -.78 NatSemi .40 14.00 -.18 NY CmtyB 1.00 17.54 -.09 NY Times ... 9.41 -.28 NewellRub .20 19.05 -.11 NewfldExp ... u75.58 +.35 NewmtM .60 53.17 +1.47 Nexen g .20 26.78 -.62 NikeB 1.24 75.45 -1.39 NobleCorp .98e u45.45 +.10 NokiaCp .55e 8.38 -.02 Nordstrm .92f 42.64 +.34 NorflkSo 1.60f u67.30 -.51 NorthropG 1.88 67.98 -.24 Novartis 2.53e 54.73 +.34 Nucor 1.45 45.70 +.05 OcciPet 1.84f 100.16 -.82 OfficeDpt ... 4.85 -.13 OilSvHT 2.42e 159.52 -.68 OldRepub .70f 12.33 -.12 Omnicom 1.00f 47.45 -.39

P-Q-R

PG&E Cp 1.82 PMI Grp ... .40 PNC PPL Corp 1.40 PatriotCoal ... PeabdyE .34 Penney .80 PepsiCo 1.92 Petrohawk ... PetrbrsA 1.41e Petrobras 1.41e Pfizer .80f PhilipMor 2.56 Pier 1 ... PlainsEx ... Potash s .28f PwshDB ... PS Agri ... PS USDBull ... PrUShS&P ... ProUltQQQ ... PrUShQQQ rs... ProUltSP .43e PrUShtFn rs ... ProUShL20 ... ProUSSP500 ... PrUltCrde rs ... ProctGam 1.93 ProgrssEn 2.48 ProgsvCp 1.40e ProLogis .45 ProUSR2K rs ... Prudentl 1.15f PSEG 1.37 PulteGrp ... QksilvRes ... QwestCm .32 RAIT Fin .03e RadianGrp .01 RadioShk .25 RangeRs .16 Raytheon 1.50 RedHat ... RegionsFn .04 ReneSola ... RepubSvc .80 RioTinto s1.08e RiteAid ... Rowan ...

43.76 +.01 2.67 -.04 61.43 -.87 24.47 -.21 24.05 -.16 70.62 -.31 35.86 -.34 63.94 -.16 22.68 -.05 34.74 +.50 39.81 +.46 19.94 -.04 63.34 +1.03 9.28 -.20 35.99 -.03 55.06 -.80 30.08 +.22 33.95 +.05 21.66 +.01 22.02 +.14 83.90 -.10 54.85 +.14 50.79 -.36 58.88 +.53 36.64 -.22 17.21 +.16 55.23 +2.07 60.93 -.37 44.86 +.20 20.92 +.01 15.19 -.14 45.48 +.39 61.11 -.04 31.00 +.24 7.14 -.06 14.24 +.01 6.79 +.10 2.48 +.05 6.61 -.16 13.95 -.19 53.61 +.83 50.39 -.03 39.56 -.25 7.30 +.05 8.83 -.25 29.00 -.58 66.13 -.62 1.03 -.04 42.18 -.47

RylCarb ... 41.66 -1.67 RoyDShllB 3.36 72.21 +.90 RoyDShllA 3.36 71.70 +.83

S-T-U

SAIC ... 16.86 +.02 SLM Cp ... 14.83 +.01 SpdrDJIA 2.98e 119.92 -.15 SpdrGold ... 139.05 -.09 SP Mid 1.55e 173.28 -1.14 S&P500ETF2.34e129.29-.45 SpdrHome .31e 17.89 -.16 SpdrKbwBk.15e 25.68 -.14 SpdrLehHY4.51e 40.46 +.01 SpdrRetl .50e 48.33 -.44 SpdrOGEx .49e u61.86 +.08 SpdrMetM .41e 71.04 +.73 Safeway .48 22.33 -.24 StJude .84 u51.41 +2.97 Saks ... 11.36 -.25 Salesforce ... 121.49 -2.93 SandRdge ... 11.27 +.15 SaraLee .46 17.49 +.23 Schlmbrg 1.00f 88.77 -.96 Schwab .24 17.79 +.14 SeadrillLtd2.74e 36.52 -.35 SemiHTr .55e 33.51 -.19 ShawGrp ... 34.29 +.50 SiderNac s .58e 15.86 +.10 SilvWhtn g .12 42.49 +.40 SilvrcpM g .08 13.81 +.16 SmithfF ... 22.85 +.37 SouthnCo 1.82 37.39 -.03 SthnCopper1.83e40.18 -.09 SwstAirl .02 12.32 +.04 SwstnEngy ... 42.03 +.42 SpectraEn 1.04f 26.51 -.06 SprintNex ... 4.47 +.11 SP Matls 1.23e 38.29 -.09 SP HlthC .61e 32.22 -.02 SP CnSt .81e 29.37 -.04 SP Consum.56e 37.86 -.30 SP Engy 1.05e 77.51 -.17 SPDR Fncl .16e 16.26 -.09 SP Inds .64e 36.47 -.29 SP Tech .33e 25.28 -.04 SP Util 1.31e 31.29 +.05 StarwdHtl .30f 56.72 -1.98 StateStr .72f 43.63 -.29 Statoil ASA1.10e 27.41 -.42 StillwtrM ... 21.98 -.28 Suncor gs .40 45.58 +.03 Suntech ... 8.53 -.27 SunTrst .04 29.17 -.23 Supvalu .35 8.43 +.07 Synovus .04 2.54 -.01 Sysco 1.04 28.08 +.05 TCF Fncl .20 15.61 +.05 TE Connect .64 34.17 +.43 TJX .60 48.86 -.41 TaiwSemi .47e 11.82 -.12 Talbots ... d4.56 -.33 TalismE g .25 24.41 -.32 Target 1.00 50.50 -.21 TataMotors.32e 25.40 -.17 TeckRes g .60f 53.19 -.78 TelefEsp s1.75e 25.03 -.14 TenetHlth ... 7.03 -.07 Teradyn ... 17.31 -.27 Tesoro ... 25.49 -.14 TexInst .52 33.64 -.04 Textron .08 26.37 -.50 ThermoFis ... 53.95 +.20 3M Co 2.20f 90.70 -.25 Tiffany 1.00 59.49 -.73 TW Cable 1.92f 69.08 -.01 TimeWarn .94f 34.86 -.60 Titan Intl .02 25.24 -.01 TitanMet ... 17.63 -.15 TollBros ... 20.49 -.46 Total SA 3.16e 59.18 +.07 Transocn ... 80.28 +.12 Travelers 1.44 58.28 -.67 TrinaSolar ... 26.77 -.68 TycoIntl 1.00f 44.42 -.51 Tyson .16 19.04 -.06 UBS AG ... 18.43 -.14 US Airwy ... 8.90 -.27 US Gold ... 7.75 +.12 USEC ... 4.87 +.10 UnilevNV 1.12e 30.24 -.33 UnionPac 1.52 94.63 -1.94 UtdContl ... 23.45 -.52 UPS B 2.08f 72.05 -.79 US Bancrp .50f 26.46 -.14 US NGs rs ... 11.36 +.26 US OilFd ... 41.93 +.80 USSteel .20 53.42 -.74 UtdTech 1.70 80.88 -.58 UtdhlthGp .50 42.74 -.45 UnumGrp .37 26.01 -.24

V-W-X-Y-Z

Vale SA .76e 32.25 -.17 Vale SA pf .76e 28.53 -.08 ValeantPh .38a u42.34 +.79 ValeroE .20 28.10 -.20 VangTSM1.24e 67.10 -.22 VangEmg .82e 46.61 +.05 VerizonCm 1.95 36.95 +.49 ViacomB .60 44.85 +.17 VimpelC n .65e 13.94 +.01 Visa .60 71.60 -.36 VMware ... 76.75 +.30 Vonage ... 4.09 -.01 WalMart 1.46f 52.00 +.08 Walgrn .70 39.21 -2.76 WalterEn .50 118.75 +1.95 WsteMInc 1.36f 36.81 +.05 WeathfIntl ... 20.75 -.07 WellPoint 1.00 67.47 +.38 WellsFargo.20a 31.51 -.37 WDigital ... 34.21 -.17 WstnRefin ... 15.96 -.14 WstnUnion .28 21.40 +.07 Weyerh .60f 24.49 -.57 WmsCos .50 30.50 -.25 WT India .15e 22.99 +.15 .44f 22.74 +.02 XL Grp XcelEngy 1.01 23.45 +.02 Xerox .17 10.14 -.11 Yamana g .12a 12.58 +.10 YingliGrn ... 11.62 -.26 YumBrnds 1.00 50.82 -.43

Mon’s open int: 215302, up +2533 PORK BELLIES 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Mar 11 117.00 May 11 112.00 Jul 11 108.50 108.50 108.50 108.50 +2.50 Aug 11 102.50 Feb 12 117.00 Mar 12 117.50 Last spot N/A Mon’s Sales: Mon’s open int: , unch

COTTON

NEW YORK(AP) - Cotton No. 2 futures on the N.Y. Cotton Exchange Friday: Open high low settle COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. May 11 199.30 205.96 197.43 205.96 Jul 11 190.90 196.90 188.50 196.90 Oct 11 150.10 153.19 150.10 153.19 Dec 11 124.00 128.70 122.57 128.27 Mar 12 117.93 121.27 116.00 121.27 May 12 112.70 115.35 111.99 115.08 Jul 12 106.99 110.00 106.99 109.94 Oct 12 100.38 Dec 12 99.75 99.80 99.00 99.72 Mar 13 100.96 Last spot N/A Est. sales 14414. Mon’s Sales: 16,994 Mon’s open int: 160801, off -12318

chg.

+7.00 +7.00 +4.75 +3.90 +3.85 +2.75 +1.76 +1.00 +.78 +.62

GRAINS

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

low settle

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 11 723fl 728 705ü 722ü Jul 11 759 763 740fl 757fl Sep 11 798fl 802ø 780ø 796ø

chg.

+1ü +fl -ø

MARKET SUMMARY

NYSE

AMEX

NASDAQ NATIONAL MARKET

NASDAQ

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Name Vol (00) Last Chg Citigrp 3245401 4.42 -.01 SprintNex 1209075 4.47 +.11 S&P500ETF1180300129.29-.45 iShJapn 913026 10.63 -.04 BkofAm 726969 13.88-

Name Vol (00) RareEle g 73562 LucasEngy 67730 AdeonaPh 64147 ChinaShen 63991 AvalRare n 62052

Name Last Chg Molycorp n 52.57 +7.89 HarvNRes 16.02 +2.03 Molycp pfA 101.00+11.82 ECDang n 21.12 +2.21 BiP GCrb 34.48 +3.48

Name Last Chg %Chg Name ChiGengM 3.22 +1.25 +63.5 PranaBio ChinaShen 4.48 +1.00 +28.7 AsteaIntl Innovaro 2.85 +.60 +26.7 BluDolp rs RareEle g 12.88 +2.50 +24.1 BOS Ltd Accelr8 4.12 +.73 +21.5 BiostarPh

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

%Chg +17.7 +14.5 +13.3 +11.7 +11.2

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name NeoPhoto n GreenDot n Talbots Walgrn Dex One

Last 8.36 42.90 4.56 39.21 5.11

52-Week High Low 12,391.29 9,614.32 5,306.65 3,872.64 422.43 346.95 8,520.27 6,355.83 2,438.62 1,689.19 2,840.51 2,061.14 1,344.07 1,010.91 14,276.94 15.80 838.00 587.66

Name

Div

BkofAm

.04

Chevron

2.88

CocaCola

Name Vol (00) Last Cisco 595959 17.45 Intel 449487 20.15 MicronT 347374 10.35 ACapAgy 338463 28.29 PwShs QQQ32345055.40

Chg +2.50 +.58 +.28 +1.00 +.89

Last 2.20 6.12 4.36 2.09 17.34

Chg -.50 -.77 -.53 -.21 -1.63

DIARY

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

Last 12,018.63 5,099.93 406.35 8,228.41 2,318.38 2,683.87 1,293.77 13,728.48 808.66

21

Chg

13.88 -.17

11 105.23 +.04

YTD %Chg Name

1,056 1,545 122 2,723 72 32Ele g 1,631,217,900

Net % Chg Chg -17.90 -.15 -66.90 -1.29 +.12 +.03 -27.95 -.34 +6.63 +.29 -8.22 -.31 -4.61 -.36 -50.86 -.37 -4.36 -.54

Div

+4.0 ONEOK Pt

%Chg +36.3 +29.3 +28.7 +27.1

DIARY

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

PE Last

Chg +.98 +.93 +1.55 +.51 +.42

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

229 236 43 508 4 5w Lows 160,693,65600

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

Last 3.68 4.10 6.95 2.39 2.22

Name Last Chg %Chg PlumasBc 2.40 -.37 -13.4 GuanweiR 2.50 -.31 -11.0 EmmisC pf 16.50 -2.00 -10.8 ChinaNet 3.33 -.40 -10.7 BroadSft n 46.39 -5.43 -10.5

%Chg -18.5 -11.2 -10.8 -9.1 -8.6

INDEXES

Chg +.06 -.05 -.01 -.81 -.117

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Chg %Chg Name -.82 -8.9 IntellgSys -3.63 -7.8 eMagin -.33 -6.7 VoyagerOG -2.76 -6.6 AmDGEn -.33 -6.1 FstWV

1,279 1,733 114 3,126 102 9 3,639,425,466

Last 12.88 4.05 1.75 4.48 7.63

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

DIARY

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

PE Last

YTD % Chg +3.81 -.13 +.34 +3.32 +4.98 +1.17 +2.87 +2.76 +3.19

52-wk % Chg +10.38 +15.63 +6.66 +10.02 +22.27 +11.12 +10.19 +11.73 +17.15.4

Chg

YTD %Chg

4.56f

23

81.68 +.24

+2.7

+15.3 PNM Res

.50

27

14.50 -.10

+11.4

-3.4 PepsiCo

1.92

16

63.94 -.16

-2.1

.80f

20

19.94 -.04

+13.9

1.88f

13

63.51 -.06

Disney

.40f

18

41.44 -.38

EOG Res

.64f

... 113.36 +1.96

+24.0 SwstAirl

.02

20

12.32 +.04

-5.1

7

-14.6 TexInst

.52

13

33.64 -.04

+3.5

FordM

...

14.34 -.25

HewlettP

.32

11

41.74 -.03

HollyCp

.60

29

56.69 -1.12

10

20.15 -.05

+10.5 Pfizer

.94f

14

34.86 -.60

+8.4

+39.0 TriContl

-.9 TimeWarn

.28e

...

14.26 +.03

+3.6 -3.6

Intel

.72

-4.2 WalMart

1.46f

13

52.00 +.08

IBM

2.60

14 158.00 +.32

+7.7 WashFed

.24f

14

17.05 -.16

+.8

Merck

1.52

16

-9.7 WellsFargo

.20a

14

31.51 -.37

+1.7

23.45 +.02

-.4

Microsoft

.64

32.53 +.14

HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW 6

25.30 -.04

-9.4 XcelEngy

1.01

14

Here are the 525 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, the 400 most active on the Nasdaq National Markets and 100 most active on American Stock Exchange. Mutual funds are 450 largest. Stocks in bold changed 5 percent or more in price. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Company names made up of initials appear at the beginning of each letters’ list. AAR .48 12.88 # Div: Current annual dividend rate paid on stock, based on latest quar- ACMIn 1.10 9.75 +.13 ACM Op .80 7.25 # terly or semiannual declaration, unless otherwise footnoted. ACM Sc 1.10 8.50 -.13 Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. ACMSp .96 7.50 # Chg: Loss or gain for the day. No change indicated by ... mark.

Fund Name: Name of mutual fund and family. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold. Chg: Daily net change in the NAV.

AAL Mutual: Bond p 9.49 -.01

Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

MUTUAL FUNDS

IntlCorEq 29.68 -.04 Quality 20.38 -.03 Goldman Sachs A: MdCVA p 37.03 -.23 Goldman Sachs Inst: GrOppt 25.01 -.07 HiYield 7.41 ... MidCapV 37.32 -.24 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.23 ... CapApInst 36.88 -.22 IntlInv t 61.07 -.07 Intl r 61.67 -.08 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 34.63 -.17 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI n 34.66 -.17 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 43.30 -.19 Div&Gr 20.22 -.08 Advisers 19.90 -.06 TotRetBd 11.01 -.01 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 11.96 -.03 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r17.03 +.04 Invesco Funds A: CapGro 13.77 -.06 Chart p 16.80 -.06 CmstkA 16.24 -.05 EqIncA 8.81 -.04 GrIncA p 19.86 -.10 HYMuA 8.83 -.01 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 23.85 -.03 AssetStA p24.58 -.02 AssetStrI r 24.80 -.02 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.51 ... JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd n 11.50 ...

Dec 11 828ü 831fl 809fl 825ø Mar 12 847ø 849 836ø 842 May 12 860 860 848fl 851 Jul 12 841ø 845 826 839fl Last spot N/A Est. sales 157324. Mon’s Sales: 79,665 Mon’s open int: 475764, off -969 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 11 686 687 673 686fl Jul 11 693fl 694 680 694 Sep 11 644ø 645fl 635ø 645fl Dec 11 611 612ü 600 612ü Mar 12 617ø 620fl 608ü 620fl May 12 624ø 627 615 627 Jul 12 627 630ø 619 630ø Last spot N/A Est. sales 427911. Mon’s Sales: 257,755 Mon’s open int: 1580942, up +4068 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 11 344ø 350ü 337ø 342 Jul 11 352fl 356 346fl 350ü Sep 11 360 362 355ü 357ø Dec 11 370ø 373 366 368 Mar 12 388 388 381 381 May 12 395 395 388 388 Jul 12 402 402 395 395 Last spot N/A Est. sales 1045. Mon’s Sales: 830 Mon’s open int: 12635, off -32 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 11 1364 1366 1344 1365ø Jul 11 1373ü 1375 1354 1375 Aug 11 1366fl 1370ø 1356fl 1370ø Sep 11 1355ø 1357 1334ü 1356ø Nov 11 1342fl 1345 1323ø 1344 Jan 12 1345 1348ø 1329 1348ø Mar 12 1341 1346 1325ü 1344ø May 12 1328ü 1334 1320ü 1332ü Jul 12 1325 1328ø 1308ø 1327ø Aug 12 1309ü 1309ü 1309ü 1309ü Last spot N/A Est. sales 211398. Mon’s Sales: 166,610 Mon’s open int: 613437, off -788

-ø -4ø -4fl -ü

HighYld n 8.34 +.01 IntmTFBd n10.82 -.01 ShtDurBd n10.98 ... USLCCrPls n21.04.09 Janus T Shrs: BalancdT 25.74 -.02 OvrseasT r50.41 +.46 PrkMCVal T23.44 -.08 Twenty T 64.92 +.07 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggr 12.58 -.04 LSBalanc 13.20 -.03 LSGrwth 13.14 -.03 Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p26.26.13 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 20.65 +.11 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p21.01 +.10 Legg Mason A: WAMgMu p14.98 -.01 Longleaf Partners: Partners 30.04 -.14 SmCap 28.20 -.19 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI x 14.50 -.06 StrInc C x 15.11 -.05 LSBondR x14.44 -.06 StrIncA x 15.03 -.06 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdY 12.30 ... Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 11.97 -.06 BdDebA p 7.99 ... ShDurIncA p4.60 ... Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t4.63 ... MFS Funds A: TotRA 14.39 -.02

FUTURES

+ü +ø +ü +2fl +2fl +2ø +2

-8 -8 -7 -7 -7 -7 -7

+2ø +2 +1 -1 -1 -1ü -1ø -1fl -1

ValueA 23.65 -.04 MFS Funds I: ValueI 23.76 -.05 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBA 5.99 ... Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 8.87 ... Matthews Asian: AsianGIInv17.52 +.01 PacTgrInv 22.15 +.11 MergerFd 16.06 +.03 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.44 ... TotRtBdI 10.44 ... MorganStanley Inst: IntlEqI 14.00 +.02 MCapGrI 38.50 +.06 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 29.74 -.06 GlbDiscZ 30.11 -.06 QuestZ 18.09 -.03 SharesZ 21.44 -.07 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 48.54 -.19 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 50.27 -.20 Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.44 ... MMIntEq r 9.96 ... Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 28.44 -.04 Intl I r 19.77 +.11 Oakmark r 42.70 -.22 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.94 +.01 GlbSMdCap15.84-.01 Oppenheimer A: CapApA p 44.05 -.20 DvMktA p 34.72 +.18 GlobA p 62.25 -.33 GblStrIncA 4.32 ...

OIL/GASOLINE/NG

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

Div Last Chg Comc spcl .45f 22.61 -.07 Compuwre ... 11.19 -.03 A-B-C Conexant ... 2.38 ... ASML Hld .54e 41.77 -.27 ConstantC ... u33.83 +.79 ... 4.64 -.01 ATP O&G ... 18.39 -.33 CorinthC .82 71.55 +.51 AXT Inc ... 6.48 -.01 Costco Cree Inc ... 49.00 -.32 Achillion ... u6.48 +.14 ... 16.41 -.35 AcmePkt ... 64.97 -4.59 Crocs AcordaTh ... 22.24 -.34 Cryptologic ... 1.15 +.05 ActivsBliz .17f 10.74 -.01 Ctrip.com ... 37.61 -.41 ... 3.05 -.20 AdobeSy ... 32.88 +.54 Curis ... 1.34 +.02 Adtran .36 40.91 -3.11 Cyclacel ... 19.03 -.21 AEterna g ... 1.75 ... CypSemi Affymax ... 5.90 -.01 D-E-F Affymetrix ... 4.45 -.28 AkamaiT ... 36.56 +.18 DeerConsu .20 8.45 -.20 Dell Inc ... 14.71 +.00 Alexza ... 1.46 -.12 ... 32.19 -.73 AllosThera ... 2.84 -.03 Dndreon AllscriptH ... 21.21 -.19 Dentsply .20 35.61 -.12 AlteraCp lf .24 40.73 -.24 DirecTV A ... 45.08 +.35 Amazon ... 162.60 -1.93 DiscCm A ... 39.57 -.39 ACapAgy 5.60e 28.29 -.81 DishNetwk ... 23.22 -.02 AmCapLtd ... 9.00 -.03 DonlleyRR 1.04 17.98 -.09 AmSupr ... 23.34 -.29 DrmWksA ... 25.79 -.15 ... 4.66 +.02 Amgen ... 52.78 -.31 DryShips AmkorT lf ... 6.92 +.06 ETrade rs ... 15.64 +.17 eBay ... 30.22 -.36 Amylin ... 10.45 -.16 Anadigc ... 4.43 +.01 EagleBulk ... 3.85 +.08 Ancestry ... 31.68 -.73 EaglRkEn .60f u10.15 +.18 Ansys ... 53.55 +.81 ErthLink .20m 7.90 +.04 A123 Sys ... 7.93 -.04 EstWstBcp .04 21.97 -.27 ... 18.82 -.12 ApolloGrp ... 42.38 +1.24 ElectArts ApolloInv 1.12 11.50 -.23 Emcore lf ... 2.21 -.05 Apple Inc ... 341.20 +1.90 EndoPhrm ... 34.83 -.08 ... 3.00 +.04 ApldMatl .32f 15.11 -.10 Ener1 AMCC ... 10.39 -.01 EngyConv ... 2.19 +.01 Entegris ... 8.01 +.01 ArenaPhm ... 1.42 -.05 AresCap 1.40 16.20 -.56 EntropCom ... 7.78 -.12 EnzonPhar ... 10.45 +.01 AriadP ... 6.39 -.10 Ariba Inc ... 32.66 +1.16 EricsnTel .35e 12.15 +.02 ... 11.13 -.42 ArmHld .09e 24.94 -.41 Exelixis ArubaNet ... 31.86 -.14 Expedia .28 21.58 -.03 AsscdBanc .04 14.76 -.22 ExpdIntl .40 47.10 -1.23 ... 27.17 -.41 Atheros ... 44.59 +.03 EZchip Atmel ... 12.27 -.02 F5 Netwks ... 91.67 -3.93 Autodesk ... 41.51 +.54 FLIR Sys .24 u33.53 +.47 AutoData 1.44 50.06 +.16 Fastenal 1.00f 61.74 -.23 Auxilium ... 22.01 -.05 FedMogul ... 24.96 -.30 AvagoTch .32f 30.71 -.28 FifthThird .24f 13.85 -.17 ... 21.48 -.54 AvanirPhm ... 3.76 ... Finisar AviatNetw ... 5.25 -.21 FinLine .20f 17.59 +.01 .04 11.48 +.02 AvisBudg ... u16.47 -.01 FMidBc Axcelis ... 2.50 -.04 FstNiagara .64f 14.08 -.08 ... 149.00 -1.18 BMC Sft ... 48.56 -.29 FstSolar BedBath ... 46.45 -.15 FstMerit .64 16.74 -.01 ... 7.18 -.03 Biodel ... 2.12 -.14 Flextrn BiogenIdc ... 69.76 +.15 FocusMda ... 28.49 +.29 ... 9.87 -.02 BioMarin ... 23.46 -.29 FormFac ... 42.30 -1.48 BioSante ... 1.86 -.02 Fortinet BiostarPh ... 2.22 +.42 Fossil Inc ... 83.04 +1.24 FosterWhl ... 35.34 -.59 BlueCoat ... 27.23 -.21 ... 2.01 +.01 BrigExp ... 35.58 +.01 FuelCell Brightpnt ... 10.38 -.32 FultonFncl .16f 10.83 -.22 Broadcom .36f 40.01 -.50 G-H-I BroadSft n ... 46.39 -5.43 Broadwind ... 1.41 -.07 GSI Cmmrc ... 18.95 -.64 ... 10.47 -.18 BrcdeCm ... 5.90 -.01 GT Solar Bucyrus .10 91.06 -.09 Garmin 1.50f 33.76 -.06 Gentex .48f 27.58 -.55 CA Inc .16 23.09 -.10 CH Robins 1.16 71.55 -2.12 Genzyme ... 75.66 +.00 ... 1.63 +.17 CNinsure .26e d12.87 -.68 GeoMet ... 4.80 -.08 Cadence ... 9.57 -.22 GeronCp CdnSolar ... 11.15 +.17 GileadSci ... 40.44 +.18 CapFdF rs .30a 11.33 -.07 GlobDefT ... 24.19 ... ... 8.77 +.38 CpstnTrb h ... u1.95 +.05 GloblInd Carrizo ... 35.25 -.86 Globalstar ... 1.30 -.03 CathayGen .04 16.06 -.45 GlbSpcMet .15 22.65 +.61 CaviumNet ... 39.50 -.60 GluMobile ... 3.63 -.05 CeleraGrp ... 8.13 -.08 GolarLNG .75r u24.15 +.64 ... 577.32 +.82 Celgene ... 52.84 -.45 Google CentEuro ... 11.77 -.10 GrWlfRes ... 2.26 -.18 CentAl ... 17.23 -.01 GulfportE ... u32.20 -1.21 Cephln ... 56.29 -.58 Halozyme ... d6.06 -.14 Cerner ...u107.80+1.79 HancHld .96 32.72 +.05 ChkPoint ... 49.02 +.10 HansenNat ... 55.01 +.12 Cheesecake ... 28.63 -.37 HanwhaSol ... 7.00 -.18 ChinaBAK ... 1.64 -.02 HarbinElec ... 17.85 +.62 ChinaBiot ... d7.90 -.20 Hasbro 1.20f 45.98 -.72 ... 6.08 -.31 ChinaCEd ... 6.16 -.04 HawHold ChinaInfo ... d3.14 -.01 HercOffsh ... 5.87 +.08 Hologic ... 21.84 -.11 ChinaNGas ... 6.20 +.61 ChiValve ... d4.64 -.28 HotTopic .28a 5.28 +.13 CienaCorp ... 22.32 -1.70 HudsCity .60 9.96 +.03 ... 27.04 -.26 CinnFin 1.60 32.59 -.29 HumGen Cintas .49f 28.14 +.06 HuntBnk .04 6.57 -.08 iSh ACWI .81e 47.46 +.06 Cirrus ... 20.37 -.58 ... 2.58 -.18 Cisco .24 17.45 +.06 iGo Inc ... 63.18 +.13 CitrixSys ... 66.84 -1.49 Illumina ... 3.52 +.12 CleanEngy ... 13.50 +.10 Imunmd Clearwire ... 5.39 +.33 ImpaxLabs ... 23.91 -.09 ... 8.00 +.33 ClinicData ... 30.33 -.05 Infinera ... 47.98 +.12 CognizTech ... 76.87 +1.26 Informat InfosysT .90e 64.52 -.68 Coinstar ... 43.98 -.78 ... 3.73 +.06 ColumLabs ... 3.59 -.10 InspPhar ... 7.06 -.07 Comcast .45f 24.06 -.11 IntgDv Name

low settle

chg.

LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. Apr 11 103.80 104.54 101.43 104.00 +1.67 May 11 104.35 105.20 102.10 104.97 +1.88 Jun 11 104.94 105.71 102.74 105.52 +1.80 Jul 11 105.44 106.17 103.29 106.00 +1.72 Aug 11 105.94 106.41 103.74 106.27 +1.66 Sep 11 105.92 106.75 103.96 106.46 +1.60 Oct 11 105.86 106.56 104.52 106.56 +1.56 Nov 11 106.51 106.62 104.42 106.62 +1.53 Dec 11 106.15 106.81 104.25 106.65 +1.49 Jan 12 106.03 106.52 104.35 106.52 +1.48 Feb 12 105.76 106.32 105.76 106.32 +1.47 Mar 12 104.70 106.08 104.30 106.08 +1.45 Apr 12 105.24 105.78 105.24 105.78 +1.41 May 12 105.48 +1.39 Jun 12 103.33 105.21 103.30 105.21 +1.36 Jul 12 104.90 +1.34 Aug 12 104.60 +1.32 Sep 12 104.31 +1.31 Oct 12 104.08 +1.26 Nov 12 103.92 +1.25 Dec 12 103.57 103.94 102.00 103.80 +1.25 Jan 13 103.54 +1.25 Feb 13 103.29 +1.25 Mar 13 103.06 +1.26 Last spot N/A Est. sales 531265. Mon’s Sales: 499,436 Mon’s open int: 1514243, off -14344 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Apr 11 2.9870 3.0226 2.9741 3.0045 +.0071 May 11 2.9983 3.0329 2.9856 3.0136 +.0076 Jun 11 2.9938 3.0229 2.9755 3.0061 +.0105 Jul 11 2.9700 3.0050 2.9657 2.9944 +.0140 Aug 11 2.9619 2.9772 2.9470 2.9772 +.0171 Sep 11 2.9374 2.9540 2.9160 2.9524 +.0197 Oct 11 2.8048 2.8260 2.8008 2.8248 +.0197 Nov 11 2.7779 2.7974 2.7779 2.7974 +.0196 Dec 11 2.7680 2.7898 2.7550 2.7870 +.0193 Jan 12 2.7828 2.7894 2.7689 2.7894 +.0189

Gold p 47.29 +.18 IntBdA p 6.57 ... MnStFdA 32.60 -.10 Oppenheimer Roch: RoMu A px14.80 ... RcNtMuA x 6.49 ... Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 34.36 +.17 IntlBdY 6.57 ... PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 10.89 ... PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r10.74 +.02 AllAsset 12.29 +.01 ComodRR 9.53 +.06 DevLcMk r 10.82 +.02 DivInc 11.49 ... HiYld 9.44 ... InvGrCp 10.58 ... LowDu 10.43 ... RealRtnI 11.53 -.02 ShortT 9.89 ... TotRt 10.89 ... TR II 10.41 ... PIMCO Funds A: LwDurA 10.43 ... RealRtA p 11.53 -.02 TotRtA 10.89 ... PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 10.89 ... PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 10.89 ... PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 10.89 ... Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n 27.12 -.11 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 47.05 -.06 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 41.90 -.21

Intel InterDig Intersil Intuit

.72 .40 .48 ...

20.15 43.26 11.86 49.81

J-K-L

JA Solar ... JDS Uniph ... JamesRiv ... JazzPhrm ... JetBlue ... .70 JoyGlbl KLA Tnc 1.00 Kulicke ... LECG ... LamResrch ... Lattice ... LawsnSft ... LeapWirlss ... Level3 ... LexiPhrm ... LibGlobA ... LibtyMIntA ... LifeTech ... LimelghtN ... LinearTch .96f LinnEngy 2.64 Logitech ... lululemn g ...

-.05 -.12 +.09 -.65

6.59 -.16 18.71 -.67 23.60 +.37 29.41 -.57 5.87 -.12 92.97 -1.81 45.56 -.40 8.82 -.02 .23 -.01 51.08 -1.02 5.84 -.08 11.86 +.03 14.04 -.01 1.34 +.04 1.72 -.04 41.10 +.11 15.62 -.15 50.05 -.28 6.13 -.11 32.84 -.09 38.98 -.04 18.41 -.20 77.21 +.33

M-N-0

B3

priceline ... 455.70 -1.23 PrinctnR ... .41 +.01 PrUPShQQQ ... 28.40 +.11 ProspctCap1.21 12.07 -.05 QIAGEN ... 19.47 -.13 QiaoXing ... 2.07 +.21 QlikTech n ... 23.28 -.05 Qlogic ... 17.02 -.08 Qualcom .86f 52.49 -1.14 QuestSft ... 24.35 -.13 RF MicD ... 6.13 -.04 RAM Engy ... 1.88 +.21 Rdiff.cm ... 6.59 +.82 RschMotn ... 62.41 +.24 RexEnergy ... 11.57 +.09 RossStrs .88f 67.99 -.62 Rovi Corp ... 54.58 -.10

S-T-U

SBA Com ... 36.94 -.09 STEC ... 18.87 -.56 SVB FnGp ... 54.53 +.03 SanDisk ... 43.49 -.65 Sanmina ... 10.29 +.07 Sapient ... 10.64 -.38 SavientPh ... 9.37 +.03 SciGames ... 8.48 -.53 SeagateT ... 13.46 -.04 SearsHldgs ... 78.13 -1.63 Sequenom ... 5.90 -.03 ShufflMstr ... 10.31 -.47 Shutterfly ... 44.61 +1.58 SifyTech ... u3.52 +.18 SigaTech h ... 12.02 -.09 SigmaAld .72f 63.41 -.05 SilicnImg ... 9.02 +.19 Slcnware .41e 6.15 -.05 SilvStd g ... 28.94 +.29 Sina ... 94.70 +1.65 SiriusXM ... 1.71 -.01 SkywksSol ... 30.47 -.71 SmartHeat ... 3.42 +.05 Sohu.cm ... 80.15 +.37 SonicCorp ... 9.08 -.12 Sonus ... 3.72 +.28 SpectPh ... 8.03 +.12 Spreadtrm ... 19.27 -.02 Staples .40f 19.85 -.14 StarScient ... 3.62 -.10 Starbucks .52 34.95 -.36 StlDynam .40f 18.11 -.08 SuccessF ... 36.67 -.13 SunPowerA ... 15.71 -.40 Symantec ... 17.63 -.04 Synopsys ... 27.10 -.10 TD Ameritr .20 20.73 -.23 TGC Inds .21t u7.92 +.19 THQ ... 4.56 +.06 TakeTwo ... 15.09 -.09 TalecrisBio ... 25.96 -.08 Tekelec ... 7.77 -.02 Tellabs .08 d4.95 +.03 TeslaMot n ... 22.19 -.54 TevaPhrm .78e 48.02 +.12 TibcoSft ... 24.61 +.03 TiVo Inc ... 8.64 -.01 TomoThera ... 4.59 ... TowerGrp .50 23.80 -.22 Travelzoo ... u53.97 +4.10 TridentM h ... d.94 -.04 TriQuint ... 12.32 -.18 UtdTherap ... 65.10 -.70 UnivDisp ... u50.60 +3.87 UrbanOut ... 30.40 -1.39

MIPS Tech ... 10.26 -.03 Magal ... 3.09 +.06 MagicSft ... 5.42 -.17 Magma ... 6.31 -.09 MannKd ... 3.64 +.08 MarvellT ... 15.63 +.12 Mattel .92f 24.58 -.22 Mattson ... 2.18 -.12 MaximIntg .84 24.71 -.15 MedAssets ... 15.00 -.09 MelcoCrwn ... 7.31 +.01 MentorGr ... 14.98 -.02 Microchp 1.38 36.08 -.18 MicronT ... 10.35 -.01 MicroSemi ... 19.88 -.34 Microsoft .64 25.30 -.04 Micrvisn ... 1.24 -.06 Mindspeed ... 8.10 +.10 Molex .70 24.65 -.26 Motricity n ... 14.40 +1.61 Move Inc ... 2.03 -.19 Mylan ... 22.06 +.26 MyriadG ... 19.21 -.04 NII Hldg ... 39.05 +.58 NPS Phm ... 7.57 -.26 NXP Sem n ... 27.22 -.63 NasdOMX ... 25.15 -.21 NetLogicM ... 39.02 -.18 NetApp ... 48.11 -.47 Netflix ... 221.39 +8.55 NetSpend n ... d9.25 -.63 NewsCpA .15 16.72 -.19 NewsCpB .15 17.68 -.01 NorTrst 1.12 50.44 +.01 Novavax ... 2.62 +.03 Novell ... 5.76 -.04 Novlus ... 35.64 -.50 NuanceCm ... 17.54 -.26 Nvidia ... 17.45 -.32 NxStageMd ... 22.00 +.89 OReillyAu ... 56.51 +.06 Oclaro rs ... 10.41 -.30 OmniVisn ... 31.48 -.18 OnSmcnd ... 9.76 -.13 OnyxPh ... 35.40 -1.05 OpenTable ... 92.63 +.48 V-W-X-Y-Z Opnext ... 2.29 -.16 optXprs 4.50e u17.89 -.01 VarianSemi ... 45.92 -.54 Oracle .20 31.13 -.29 VeecoInst ... 49.33 -1.51 Orexigen ... 2.79 -.01 Verigy ... 14.20 +.14 Verisign 3.00e 35.24 -.26 P-Q-R Verisk ... 31.71 -.20 PDL Bio .60 5.49 -.04 VertxPh ... 46.16 +.87 PF Chng .92e 44.39 -1.36 VirgnMda h .16 26.69 -.64 PMC Sra ... 7.36 -.19 ViroPhrm ... u19.00 -.41 PSS Wrld ... u26.45 -.19 Vivus ... 6.52 +.03 Paccar .48a 49.26 -1.30 Vodafone 1.33e 28.80 ... PacSunwr ... 3.55 -.07 Volcano ... 25.38 -.57 PaetecHld ... d3.17 -.18 PanASlv .10 35.55 -.42 WarnerCh s8.50e22.71 +.06 WebMD ... 53.70 +.28 ParamTch ... 21.75 -.12 Patterson .48f 31.44 -.31 WstptInn g ... 18.87 +.21 ... 3.48 -.13 PattUTI .20 27.53 -.35 WetSeal Paychex 1.24 31.93 -.25 WholeFd .40 61.37 -.36 PnnNGm ... 34.43 -.57 Windstrm 1.00 12.95 +.14 PeopUtdF .62 12.43 +.07 Wynn 1.00a 118.41 -3.35 PetsMart .50 40.78 +.03 XenoPort ... 6.54 +.28 .76f 31.98 -.32 PhotrIn ... 7.83 -.65 Xilinx Polycom ... 50.38 +.19 YRC Ww rs ... 1.99 +.13 ... 16.36 +.07 Popular ... 2.92 -.08 Yahoo ... 6.31 -.31 Power-One ... 8.29 -.09 Zagg ... 2.06 -.02 PwShs QQQ.39e 55.40 -.11 Zalicus Powrwav ... u4.22 +.30 ZionBcp .04 23.40 +.37 ... 3.51 -.02 PriceTR 1.24f 63.03 -.65 Zix Corp

AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE

Name

Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. d – New 52- CaGrp 14.47 -.03 wk low during trading day. g – Dividend in Canadian $. Stock price in U.S.$. n – MuBd 10.43 -.01 New issue in past 52 wks. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. s – Split SmCoSt 9.73 -.05 or stock dividend of 25 pct or more in last 52 wks. Div begins with date of split or stock dividend. u – New 52-wk high during trading day. v – Trading halted on primary market. Unless noted, dividend rates are annual disbursements based on last declaration. pf – Preferred. pp – Holder owes installment(s) of purchase price. rt – Rights. un – Units. wd – When distributed. wi – When issued. wt – Warrants. ww – With warrants. xw – Without warrants. Dividend Footnotes: a – Also extra or extras. b – Annual rate plus stock dividend. c – Liquidating dividend. e – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos. f – Annual rate, increased on last declaration. i – Declared or paid after stock dividend or split. j – Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last meeting. k – Declared or paid this year, accumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m – Annual rate, reduced on last declaration. p – Init div, annual rate unknown. r – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos plus stock dividend. t – Paid in stock in last 12 mos, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or distribution date. x – Ex-dividend or ex-rights. y – Ex-dividend and sales in full. z – Sales in full. vj – In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. • Most active stocks above must be worth $1 and gainers/losers $2. Mutual Fund Footnotes: e – Ex-capital gains distribution. f – Wednesday’s quote. n - No-load fund. p – Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r – Redemption fee or contingent deferred sales load may apply. s – Stock dividend or split. t – Both p and r. x – Ex-cash dividend.

Delaware Invest A: StrInA 12.54 ... Indepn n 24.93 -.13 Fidelity Spart Adv: Diver Inc p 9.23 ... Fidelity Advisor I: IntBd n 10.61 ... 500IdxAdv n45.96-.16 Dimensional Fds: NwInsgtI n 20.39 -.07 IntmMu n 10.04 ... TotMktAd r n37.68-.14 EmMCrEq n21.31 +.11 Fidelity Freedom: IntlDisc n 33.10 -.13 First Eagle: EmMktV 34.92 +.14 FF2010 n 13.88 -.02 InvGrBd n 11.44 ... GlblA 46.98 -.15 IntSmVa n 17.76 +.12 FF2015 n 11.59 -.02 InvGB n 7.44 ... OverseasA22.69 -.03 LargeCo 10.20 -.03 FF2020 n 14.11 -.02 LgCapVal 11.94 -.05 Forum Funds: USLgVa n 21.36 -.11 FF2020K 13.50 -.03 LatAm 56.77 +.76 AbsStrI r 10.83 +.01 US Micro n14.22 -.04 FF2025 n 11.80 -.02 LevCoStk n29.70 -.22 Frank/Temp Frnk A: US Small n22.25 -.12 FF2025K 13.73 -.03 LowP r n 39.65 -.04 CalTFA p 6.66 ... US SmVa 26.79 -.12 FF2030 n 14.12 -.02 LowPriK r 39.64 -.04 FedTFA p 11.38 -.01 IntlSmCo n17.57 +.07 FF2030K 13.94 -.03 Magelln n 73.14 -.29 FoundAl p 10.84 -.01 Fixd n 10.34 ... FF2035 n 11.77 -.02 MagellanK 73.09 -.30 GrwthA p 45.73 -.18 IntVa n 19.00 -.03 FF2040 n 8.23 -.01 MidCap n 29.90 -.19 HYTFA px 9.58 ... Glb5FxInc n10.95 -.01 Fidelity Invest: MuniInc n 12.28 ... IncomA p 2.23 ... 2YGlFxd n 10.17 ... AllSectEq 12.73 -.05 NwMkt r n 15.54 +.01 NYTFA p 11.18 ... Dodge&Cox: OTC n 57.57 -.20 USGovA p 6.72 -.02 AMgr50 n 15.70 -.02 Balanced 72.43 -.29 AMgr20 r n12.93 ... 100Index 8.99 -.03 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: Income 13.42 ... Balanc n 18.68 -.04 Ovrsea n 33.10 -.12 GlbBdAdv p n13.49 IntlStk 35.88 +.20 BalancedK18.68 -.05 Puritn n 18.42 -.05 +.01 Stock 111.61 -.60 BlueChGr n46.07 -.27 RealE n 26.57 -.20 IncmeAd 2.22 ... DoubleLine Funds: Frank/Temp Frnk C: Canada n 61.03 -.08 SCmdtyStrt n12.97 TRBd I 11.06 ... CapAp n 25.90 -.20 +.10 IncomC t 2.25 ... Dreyfus: CpInc r n 9.73 -.02 SrsIntGrw 11.21 -.02 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: Aprec 39.34 -.09 Contra n 68.69 -.23 SrsIntVal 10.40 -.01 SharesA 21.27 -.06 Eaton Vance A: ContraK 68.68 -.23 SrInvGrdF 11.44 -.01 Frank/Temp Temp A: LgCpVal 18.40 -.08 DisEq n 23.25 -.13 StIntMu n 10.61 ... ForgnA p 7.34 -.01 Eaton Vance I: DivIntl n 30.54 -.09 STBF n 8.48 ... GlBd A p 13.53 +.01 FltgRt 9.07 +.01 DivrsIntK r 30.52 -.09 SmllCpS r n20.13 -.19 GrwthA p 18.46 -.04 GblMacAbR10.17 ... DivGth n 29.37 -.14 StratInc n 11.22 -.01 WorldA p 15.33 -.05 LgCapVal 18.45 -.07 EmrMk n 25.61 +.20 StrReRt r 9.84 ... Frank/Temp Tmp FMI Funds: Eq Inc n 46.01 -.24 TotalBd n 10.79 ... B&C: LgCap p 16.02 -.04 EQII n 18.98 -.11 USBI n 11.34 ... GlBdC p 13.56 +.02 FPA Funds: Fidel n 33.42 -.23 Value n 71.90 -.37 GE Elfun S&S: NwInc 10.93 ... FltRateHi r n9.85 ... Fidelity Selects: S&S PM 41.55 -.11 FPACres n27.64 -.08 GNMA n 11.46 -.01 Gold r n 50.18 +.25 GMO Trust III: Quality 20.37 -.03 Fairholme 34.82 -.12 GovtInc 10.43 ... Fidelity Spartan: Federated Instl: GroCo n 85.92 -.36 ExtMkIn n 39.63 -.21 GMO Trust IV: KaufmnR 5.38 -.02 GroInc n 18.80 -.07 500IdxInv n45.95 -.16 IntlIntrVl 22.54 ... GrowthCoK85.89 -.36 IntlInxInv n35.88 -.04 GMO Trust VI: Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 20.19 -.07 HighInc r n 9.14 ... TotMktInv n37.67 -.15 EmgMkts r 14.59 +.05

CATTLE/HOGS Open high low settle CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Apr 11 113.97 114.42 112.95 114.27 Jun 11 113.62 114.02 112.65 113.85 Aug 11 115.77 115.87 114.60 115.77 Oct 11 119.40 119.60 118.52 119.40 Dec 11 119.50 120.20 119.15 120.05 Feb 12 119.90 120.20 118.92 120.15 Apr 12 119.60 120.70 119.15 120.70 Jun 12 115.10 116.35 115.10 116.35 Aug 12 114.00 Last spot N/A Est. sales 10336. Mon’s Sales: 37,599 Mon’s open int: 359386, off -70 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Mar 11 129.50 130.00 129.15 130.00 Apr 11 131.00 131.40 130.30 131.40 May 11 133.15 133.40 132.00 133.12 Aug 11 135.12 135.25 133.77 135.17 Sep 11 134.00 134.25 133.30 134.25 Oct 11 133.50 134.20 133.20 134.17 Nov 11 133.72 134.27 133.72 134.25 Jan 12 131.00 131.10 131.00 131.10 Last spot N/A Est. sales 484. Mon’s Sales: 4,149 Mon’s open int: 41394, off -254 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Apr 11 89.75 89.92 88.40 89.70 May 11 99.30 100.05 99.00 100.02 Jun 11 100.95 101.50 100.60 101.45 Jul 11 100.85 101.10 100.45 101.10 Aug 11 100.60 100.80 100.00 100.52 Oct 11 90.10 90.70 89.60 90.65 Dec 11 86.15 86.45 85.10 86.22 Feb 12 86.30 86.65 85.90 86.45 Apr 12 87.10 87.40 87.00 87.40 May 12 90.20 Jun 12 92.40 92.50 92.35 92.50 Jul 12 91.20 91.50 91.20 91.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 17774. Mon’s Sales: 28,588

KKR n .52e 17.00 +.20 KKR Fn .60f 9.14 -.26 Kellogg 1.62 53.97 -.13 KeyEngy ... u15.53 -.39 Keycorp .04 8.69 -.01 KimbClk 2.80f 65.01 -.17 Kimco .72 17.84 +.03 Kinross g .10 15.87 +.58 Kohls 1.00 52.95 -.01 Kraft 1.16 31.03 +.14 Kroger .42 23.65 +.01 LDK Solar ... 11.25 -.15 LSI Corp ... 6.58 -.02 LVSands ... 38.11 -.58 LennarA .16 19.52 -.30 LillyEli 1.96 34.57 +.19 Limited .80f 31.20 -.05 LincNat .20 29.79 -.51 LloydBkg ... 3.95 +.05 Lorillard 5.20f u91.25 +2.10 Lowes .44 26.45 +.13 Lubrizol 1.44 133.76 -.23

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Div Last Chg CheniereE 1.70 ChiGengM ... 6.79 -.01 ChinaShen ... 4.12 +.73 Crossh g rs ... 1.75 +.28 CubicEngy ... 2.09 +.08 DejourE g ... 8.87 -.27 DenisnM g ... 34.03 +.80 EV LtdDur 1.39 3.95 +.17 eMagin ... 1.20 -.02 Fronteer g ... .11 +.00 GSE Sy ... 7.44 +.05 GabGldNR 1.68 5.45 +.31 GascoEngy ... 7.15 -.11 Gastar grs ... 7.63 +.89 GenMoly ... .24 -.03 GeoGloblR ... 2.69 -.07 GoldStr g ... 50.50 +.39 GranTrra g ... 27.73 +.55 GrtBasG g ... 1.61 -.01 GtPanSilv g ... 77.74 +.45 Hyperdyn ... .58 +.04 IndiaGC ... 5.70 +.03 InovioPhm ... .55 -.00 IntTower g ... 22.42 +.01 KodiakO g ... 9.00 +.68 LongweiPI ...

AbdAsPac .42 Accelr8 ... AdeonaPh ... Advntrx rs ... AlexcoR g ... AlldNevG ... AlmadnM g ... Anooraq g ... ArcadiaRs ... ArmourRsd1.44 Augusta g ... Aurizon g ... AvalRare n ... Banks.com ... Banro g ... BarcUBS36 ... BarcGSOil ... Brigus grs ... BritATob 3.24e CanoPet ... CapGold ... CelSci ... CFCda g .01 CheniereEn ...

Price Funds: Balance n 19.80 -.05 BlChip n 39.03 -.21 CapApp n 21.00 -.04 EmMktS n 34.06 +.33 EqInc n 24.56 -.10 EqIndex n 34.97 -.12 Growth n 32.67 -.15 HiYield n 6.91 ... IntlBond n 10.17 ... Intl G&I 13.78 -.03 IntlStk n 14.26 +.03 MidCap n 61.38 -.33 MCapVal n24.53 -.15 N Asia n 18.17 +.06 New Era n 55.87 -.11 N Horiz n 35.27 -.21 N Inc n 9.48 ... R2010 n 15.69 -.02 R2015 n 12.18 -.03 R2020 n 16.86 -.04 R2025 n 12.36 -.04 R2030 n 17.76 -.05 R2035 n 12.58 -.04 R2040 n 17.91 -.06 ShtBd n 4.85 ... SmCpStk n35.99 -.17 SmCapVal n37.60-.18 SpecGr n 18.21 -.07 SpecIn n 12.50 -.01 Value n 24.51 -.12 Principal Inv: LT2020In 11.95 -.03 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 14.01 -.06 MultiCpGr 51.85 -.27 VoyA p 23.99 -.14 Royce Funds: LwPrSkSv r18.84 -.06 PennMuI r 12.23 -.05 PremierI r 21.56 -.08

Feb 12 2.8014 Mar 12 2.8142 Apr 12 2.9272 May 12 2.9287 Jun 12 2.9222 Jul 12 2.9097 Aug 12 2.8887 Sep 12 2.8627 Oct 12 2.7417 Nov 12 2.7157 Dec 12 2.7002 Jan 13 2.7041 Feb 13 2.7116 Mar 13 2.7191 Last spot N/A Est. sales 106843. Mon’s Sales: 82,804 Mon’s open int: 270703, up +2244 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Apr 11 4.221 4.269 4.151 4.254 May 11 4.301 4.345 4.229 4.331 Jun 11 4.366 4.407 4.299 4.396 Jul 11 4.434 4.472 4.378 4.463 Aug 11 4.465 4.497 4.410 4.493 Sep 11 4.474 4.506 4.435 4.502 Oct 11 4.526 4.557 4.478 4.553 Nov 11 4.684 4.718 4.646 4.717 Dec 11 4.934 4.961 4.895 4.961 Jan 12 5.065 5.092 5.027 5.092 Feb 12 5.045 5.080 5.017 5.080 Mar 12 4.983 5.019 4.957 5.018 Apr 12 4.837 4.861 4.807 4.861 May 12 4.838 4.885 4.838 4.885 Jun 12 4.880 4.918 4.858 4.918 Jul 12 4.932 4.960 4.910 4.960 Aug 12 4.954 4.987 4.940 4.987 Sep 12 4.952 4.993 4.940 4.993 Oct 12 5.013 5.041 4.991 5.041 Nov 12 5.145 5.174 5.121 5.174 Dec 12 5.358 5.385 5.348 5.385 Jan 13 5.480 5.508 5.458 5.508 Feb 13 5.340 5.468 5.340 5.468 Mar 13 5.388 Apr 13 5.080 5.118 5.080 5.118 Last spot N/A Est. sales 276333. Mon’s Sales: 301,678 Mon’s open int: 900384, off -8188

TotRetI r 13.55 -.04 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 38.44 -.14 S&P Sel 20.22 -.07 Scout Funds: Intl 32.83 -.11 Selected Funds: AmShD 42.45 -.02 AmShS p 42.45 -.02 Sequoia n 138.13 -.03 St FarmAssoc: Gwth 54.53 -.15 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 20.71 -.05 Third Avenue Fds: ValueInst 51.43 -.09 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 28.61 +.11 IntValue I 29.26 +.11 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 23.66 +.07 VALIC : StkIdx 25.61 -.09 Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml n 21.89 -.05 CAITAdm n10.76 ... CpOpAdl n78.37 -.38 EMAdmr r n38.81 +.23 Energy x n136.181.10 ExplAdml n71.21 -.40 ExtdAdm x n43.08-.23 500Adml n119.66 -.42 GNMA Ad n10.74 -.02 GrwAdm n 32.18 -.11 HlthCr x n 53.15 -.43 HiYldCp n 5.80 ... InfProAd n 26.11 -.06 ITBdAdml e n11.19.05 ITsryAdml e n11.32-

+.0194 +.0202 +.0195 +.0190 +.0190 +.0195 +.0200 +.0205 +.0215 +.0220 +.0225 +.0225 +.0225 +.0225

+.093 +.090 +.083 +.080 +.078 +.076 +.075 +.071 +.069 +.067 +.067 +.067 +.062 +.060 +.062 +.060 +.058 +.058 +.056 +.053 +.057 +.058 +.056 +.055 +.065

18.69 +.25 3.22 +1.25 4.48 +1.00 1.31 -.04 .77 +.05 .39 +.03 2.83 -.04 16.01 +.08 6.12 -.77 14.88 ... 2.33 +.23 18.49 +.35 .47 +.01 4.52 +.04 5.30 ... .68 +.00 3.06 -.02 8.14 -.12 2.64 -.02 4.29 -.06 6.09 +.25 .59 -.01 1.11 ... 8.99 +.09 6.90 +.01 2.00 ...

LucasEngy MadCatz g Metalico Metalline MdwGold g MincoG g Minefnd g NIVS IntT Neoprobe Nevsun g NewEnSys NwGold g NA Pall g NDynMn g NthnO&G NthgtM g NovaGld g Oilsands g OpkoHlth ParaG&S PionDrill PlatGpMet Protalix PudaCoal Quepasa RadientPh

.01 IntGrAdm n62.04 -.03 ITAdml n 13.31 -.01 ITGrAdm e n9.88 -.08 LtdTrAd n 11.00 ... LTGrAdml n9.32 +.03 LT Adml n 10.65 ... MCpAdml x n96.44.57 MorgAdm n57.28 -.25 MuHYAdm n10.05 ... PrmCap r n69.55 -.32 ReitAdm r n81.27 -.61 STsyAdml n10.68 ... STBdAdml e n10.54.02 ShtTrAd n 15.87 ... STFdAd n 10.76 -.01 STIGrAd e n10.75-.04 SmCAdm x n36.35.21 TtlBAdml n10.59 -.01 TStkAdm n32.65 -.12 ValAdml n 21.77 -.08 WellslAdm n53.73-.03 WelltnAdm n55.18-.12 Windsor n 47.49 -.26 WdsrIIAd n47.58 -.18 Vanguard Fds: AssetA n 25.17 -.07 CapOpp n 33.93 -.16 DivdGro n 14.79 -.02 Energy x n 72.52 -.58 Explr n 76.50 -.43 GNMA n 10.74 -.02 GlobEq n 18.26 -.03 HYCorp n 5.80 ... HlthCre x n125.961.00 InflaPro n 13.29 -.03 IntlGr n 19.50 -.01

... 4.05 ... 1.65 ... 5.87 ... 1.14 ... 1.93 ... 2.34 ... u12.00 ... 2.24 ... 3.88 ... 5.88 ... 5.45 ... 10.83 ... 6.15 ... 14.12 ... 28.58 ... 2.74 ... 12.56 ... .52 ... 3.73 ... 4.07 ... 12.94 ... 2.08 ... 6.00 ... 11.30 ... 5.90 ... .39

+.58 +.01 +.07 ... +.07 +.01 +.05 +.01 +.23 ... +.01 +.08 -.02 -.24 -.86 -.01 -.22 +.00 +.03 +.21 +.17 -.05 +.03 +.10 +.07 -.04

RareEle g ... Rentech ... RexahnPh ... Rubicon g ... SamsO&G ... SulphCo ... Taseko ... Tengsco ... TimberlnR ... TrnsatlPet ... TravelCtrs ... TriValley ... TriangPet ... Uluru ... Ur-Energy ... Uranerz ... UraniumEn ... VantageDrl ... VirnetX .50e VistaGold ... VoyagerOG ... WizzardSft ... YM Bio g ... ZBB Engy ...

IntlVal n 32.40 ... ITIGrade e n9.88 -.08 LifeCon n 16.63 -.02 LifeGro n 22.59 -.04 LifeMod n 19.97 -.03 LTIGrade n 9.32 +.03 Morg n 18.47 -.08 MuInt n 13.31 -.01 PrecMtls rx n25.16.03 PrmcpCor n14.04 -.07 Prmcp r n 67.03 -.30 SelValu r n19.54 -.11 STAR n 19.48 -.03 STIGrade e n10.75.04 StratEq n 19.44 -.11 TgtRetInc n11.46 -.01 TgRe2010 n22.72-.03 TgtRe2015 n12.66.02 TgRe2020 n22.55-.04 TgtRe2025 n12.89.03 TgRe2030 n22.19-.04 TgtRe2035 n13.41.03 TgtRe2040 n22.03.05 TgtRe2045 n13.84.03 Wellsly n 22.17 -.02 Welltn n 31.94 -.07 Wndsr n 14.07 -.08 WndsII n 26.81 -.10 Vanguard Idx Fds: TotIntAdm r n26.60 +.02 TotIntlInst r n106.40 +.09 500 n 119.63 -.41

12.88 +2.50 1.19 +.01 1.40 ... 4.67 +.09 3.83 +.07 .16 +.00 5.76 -.04 1.17 +.02 1.01 -.04 3.04 -.02 7.12 +.25 .56 +.03 8.28 +.05 .07 -.00 1.94 -.08 3.80 -.09 4.16 -.09 2.03 +.05 13.79 +.39 u4.08 +.22 4.36 -.53 .25 -.00 2.57 -.06 1.18 +.02

DevMkt n 10.24 -.01 Extend x n 43.05 -.23 Growth n 32.17 -.11 MidCap x n21.24 -.13 SmCap x n36.31 -.21 SmlCpGth x n23.13.14 SmlCpVl x n16.55 -.10 STBnd e n 10.54 -.02 TotBnd n 10.59 -.01 TotlIntl n 15.90 +.01 TotStk n 32.63 -.13 Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst n 21.89 -.05 DevMkInst n10.16-.01 ExtIn x n 43.07 -.24 FTAllWldI r n94.78 +.05 GrwthIst n 32.18 -.11 InfProInst n10.63 -.03 InstIdx n 118.82 -.41 InsPl n 118.84 -.40 InsTStPlus n29.52-.12 MidCpIst x n21.30-.13 SCInst x n 36.34 -.22 TBIst n 10.59 -.01 TSInst n 32.65 -.13 ValueIst n 21.77 -.08 Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl n 98.85 -.34 MidCpIdx x n30.43.18 STBdIdx e n10.54-.02 TotBdSgl n10.59 -.01 TotStkSgl n31.51 -.12 Western Asset: CorePlus I 10.84 -.01 Yacktman Funds: Fund p 17.22 -.04

METALS NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Tue. Aluminum -$1.1502 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$4.3171 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper $4.3035 N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Lead - $2712.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.0429 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1426.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1427.50 troy oz., NY Merc spot Tue. Silver - $36.315 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $36.271 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Platinum -$1742.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1739.40 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. n.q.-not quoted, n.a.-not available r-revised


B4 Wednesday, March 23, 2011

COMICS

Garfield

Jumble

Family Circus

Beetle Bailey

DEAR ABBY: I have read with interest your columns with tales of discontent involving overbearing in-laws. Some of them have been downright frightening, although, of course, not all inlaw relationships are fraught with conflict. I bring this up because I’m about to become a mother-inlaw for the first time. My oldest son will marry his longtime girlfriend early this summer. She’s a lovely girl, and we already consider her to be a cherished member of our family. I remember a “Mother -inLaw’s Prayer” that ran in your column years ago. It was a kind of “pep talk” from a woman to herself as she approaches mother-in-law status. I found it quite humorous. Would you please reprint it for me and for other mothers-inlaw as the spring wedding season beckons? Hopefully, I won’t need to refer to it often. Also, how can I get the booklet that contains it? KATHERINE M., FORT WAYNE, IND.

DEAR KATHERINE: Congratulations on your son’s forthcoming wedding. The item you referenced has been asked for many times. Over the years, readers have

Dear Heloise: Here’s how to make “OMELETS” in plastic zippered bags. This works great! It’s good for when all your family is together. The best part is that no one has to wait for a special breakfast. Have guests write their name on a quart-size plastic freezer bag with permanent marker. Crack two eggs into the bag (not more than two); shake to combine them. Put out a variety of ingredients such as: cheeses, ham, onion, green pepper, tomato, hash browns, salsa, etc. Each guest adds prepared ingredients of choice to his or her bag and shakes. Make sure to get the air out of

DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE

requested that I reprint articles that have special meaning to them on subjects such as parenting, children, animals, aging, death, forgiveness, etc. My booklet (“Keepers”) contains 72 column pieces that people have told me they kept to reread until the pieces were yellow with age and falling apart. It can be ordered by sending your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $6 (U.S. funds) to: Dear Abby Keepers Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. Shipping and handling are included in the price. You’ll find stories, poems and prayers like the one below to inspire you, make you think or simply brighten your day. If all mother-in-law relationships were judged solely by the letters in my column, many people would conclude that it’s an emotional minefield. I discussed this subject with a psy-

HINTS

FROM HELOISE

KING FEATURES SYNDICATE

the bag and close it. Place the bags in rolling, boiling water for exactly 13 minutes. You usually cook six to eight bags in a large pot. Open the bags, and the mixture will roll out easily. Be prepared for everyone to be amazed. Nice to serve with

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

chiatrist who shared that a mother-in-law who is perceived as overbearing may be one who was a conscientious mother. But now that her child is grown, she finds it difficult to relinquish her role as teacher and protector and quit “hovering” — an interesting observation.

Hagar the Horrible

A MOTHER-IN-LAW’S PRAYER

“O, Lord, help me to be glad when my son (or daughter) picks a mate. If he brings home a girl with two heads, let me love both of them equally. And when my son says, ‘Mom, I want to get married,’ forbid that I should blurt out, ‘How far along is she?’ “And please, Lord, help me to get through the wedding preparations without a squabble with the ‘other side.’ And drive from my mind the belief that had my child waited a while, he or she could have done better. “Dear Lord, remind me daily that when I become a grandmother, my children don’t want advice on how to raise their children any more than I did when I was raising mine. “If you will help me to do these things, perhaps my children will find me a joy to be around, and maybe I won’t have to write a ‘Dear Abby’ letter complaining about my children neglecting me. Amen.”

fresh fruit and coffee cake; everyone gets involved in the process, and it’s a great conversation piece. Imagine having these ready the night before and putting the bag in boiling water while you get ready! And in 13 minutes, you get a nice breakfast, and it’s quick! Try it, it really works! A Reader, via e-mail Wow! I thought this was a little wacky, but I tested it several times and love it! The dish turns out more like scrambled eggs with “the fixins.” Be sure to use a sturdy freezer plastic bag, and the timing may vary, so watch the pot! Heloise

Blondie

Zits

Snuffy Smith

Dear Heloise: My mom used to make for us kids mini pizzas with English muffins. She would toast them first, then add a healthy spread of tomato paste (sprinkled with oregano and garlic powder), browned, chopped meat and mozzarella or Muenster cheese. She browned them under the broiler until the cheese melted. Your imagination can make any variation, including using leftovers for a unique mini pizza experience. Dee in Florida Dear Heloise: I had purchased a bakery birthday cake and wanted to display it on a glass-pedestal cake plate. The bakery cake plate was plastic. To keep it from slipping, I cut a shape of the plate from rubber shelf lining, put that on the pedestal and placed the cake on it. The cake looked nice on the pedestal, and there was no slipping. Susan from South Dakota

Dilbert

The Wizard of Id

Dear Heloise: For many years, I have used dry gelatin (regular or sugarfree) to sprinkle on top of cookies before baking. You can use any flavor you want. Sandra, via e-mail You also can use flavored drink mixes. They come in a variety of flavors and would be delicious on cookies. Heloise

Dear Heloise: My husband and I have a hint for you. To keep coffee from leaking through the kitchen garbage bag, we put the used filter and grinds inside the plastic wrapper from the morning newspaper. Renee and Kevin from Texas

For Better or For Worse

Roswell Daily Record


MINI PAGE

Roswell Daily Record release dates: March 19-25

Wednesday, March 23, 2011 12-1 (11)

B5 TM

Mini Spy . . .

Mini Spy and Gus and Goldie Goodsport are volunteering to clean up a park in their neighborhood with Roots & Shoots. 3EE IF YOU CAN FIND s ICE CREAM CONE s SHARK s CAT s ARROW s MOUSE s LETTER 6 s CHICKEN s FUNNY FACE s WORD -).) s FROG s BUTTERFLY s LETTER $ s HORSE HEAD s NUMBER s ICE POP s PIG S FACE

Š 2011 Universal Uclick from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick

Kids Changing the World

Roots & Shoots photo Š the Jane Goodall Institute

The first group of Tanzanian students who helped found Roots & Shoots met in 1991.

Making a difference

In the early 1990s, Dr. Jane, as kids call her, was working on environmental causes with adults in Tanzania. She also talked with local students, who kept saying, “There is nothing we can do. We’re just kids.� As she traveled, she kept meeting young people who thought their future had been stolen from them. They thought they had no role in fixing problems. Dr. Jane thought that if kids understood the power they have to change things, they could make a difference. In 1991, she and 12 students in Tanzania founded Roots & Shoots to give kids the power to help the planet. Today there are about 150,000 members in more than 120 countries.

The first group of Roots & Shoots kids organized efforts to clean up the beaches in Tanzania. They also were concerned that people were treating chickens cruelly. They set out to educate the adults about treating chickens and other animals humanely, or more kindly.

TM

Rookie Cookie’s Recipe

Dressed-Up Broccoli You’ll need:

s OUNCE PACKAGE FRESH OR FROZEN broccoli florets s TABLESPOONS NONFAT SOUR CREAM s TABLESPOONS LOW FAT MILK s TABLESPOON REDUCED FAT MAYONNAISE s TABLESPOONS LEMON JUICE

s 1/ teaspoon sugar s 1/8 teaspoon salt s 1/8 teaspoon pepper s 1/2 tablespoons sliced almonds

What to do:

#OOK BROCCOLI ACCORDING TO DIRECTIONS EITHER IN MICROWAVE OR ON stovetop). 2. Once broccoli is tender, cut into smaller pieces. 0LACE ALL REMAINING INGREDIENTS EXCEPT ALMONDS IN A SMALL BLENDER Blend until smooth. 0OUR MIXTURE OVER BROCCOLI TOP WITH ALMONDS -AKES SERVINGS You will need an adult’s help with this recipe. from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick

Meet Justin Bieber photo Š 2011 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

Justin Bieber stars as himself in the documentary, or true-story movie, “Justin Bieber: Never Say Never.â€? He is a singer who first became known on YouTube. When he was 12, he came in second place in “Stratford Idol,â€? a competition in his hometown. He started putting videos from his competition online in Justin with his mom, order to show his performances to his friends Pattie Mallette and family. But strangers enjoyed them, too. He became famous through word-of-mouth, as more and more people began telling others about his videos. His now-manager spotted his talent and helped him with his career. Then Usher, a rhythm-and-blues performer, saw Justin’s videos and helped him become even more famous. He taught himself to sing and to play drums, piano, trumpet and guitar. His first album was “My World.â€? *USTIN NOW GREW UP IN 3TRATFORD /NTARIO #ANADA from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick

TM

Volunteers at a Roots & Shoots Youth Leadership trip in Tanzania prepare to plant trees. Many Roots & Shoots groups work to replant forests.

from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick

Supersport: Meryl Davis Height: 5-2 Birthdate: 1-1-87 Hometown: West Bloomfield, Mich.

Gliding, leaping, spinning and twisting, Meryl Davis produces a dazzling act on ice. One of the world’s elite skaters, $AVIS AND LONGTIME PARTNER #HARLIE 7HITE RECENTLY WON THEIR third U.S. ice dancing championship in a row. Now Davis and White, silver medal winners at the 2010 Olympics, hope to add a world title this spring in Japan. Growing up in Michigan, Davis started skating on a frozen pond as a young girl and developed a passion for the sport. While a dedicated athlete, Davis does have other interests. She’s studying anthropology at the University of Michigan. She enjoys cooking, listening to music and going boating. But it’s producing a championship performance on ice that gives her the biggest thrill.

Kids Learn How to Help A name with power

Look around you

Jane Goodall’s Roots & Shoots took its name from parts of a plant that are important but often ignored. (A shoot is a new part of the plant.) Jane Goodall says, “Roots creep underground everywhere and make a firm foundation. Shoots seem very weak, but to reach the light, they can break open brick walls. “Imagine that the brick walls are all the problems we have inflicted on our planet. Hundreds of thousands of roots and shoots, hundreds of thousands of young people around the world, can break through these WALLS 7E #!. CHANGE THE WORLD v

Pippa said one of the main points of Roots & Shoots is for kids to look at their own communities and see what needs to be done. Roots & Shoots groups can form everywhere there are kids. They might form through homeschooling, churches, temples, mosques, classrooms, Girl and "OY 3COUTS ( CLUBS OR A GROUP OF FRIENDS When kids join, they fill out a survey about their neigbhorhood. For example, kids think about how clean their water and soil are, how local animals are doing, and what dreams they have for their community.

Three goals Each year, every Roots & Shoots group does a project for the environment, a project for people and a project for animals.

Jane Goodall meets with Roots & Shoots 2010-2011 Youth Leader Pippa Biddle.

Meet Pippa Before becoming a Roots & Shoots youth leader, Pippa Biddle traveled to Tanzania with her school. While there, she taught at a local orphanage and helped build a classroom. She is now teaching people about Roots & Shoots, which is training young people to lead the way.

photo by Jodi Hilton

photo Š the Jane Goodall Institute

Dr. Jane Goodall is a scientist best known for her work studying chimpanzee behavior in Africa. She has also worked to save chimpanzees’ habitat and to improve the environment. As she carried her message to adults, kids kept telling her they wanted to help too.

Kids wanting to help

photo by Chase Pickering, the Jane Goodall Institute

The beginning

Roots & Shoots volunteers in Orlando, Fla., have fun during a tree planting activity. During one project, Roots & Shoots members planted more than 3,600 trees in the United States. They have raised more than $18,000 to support tree nurseries in Tanzania. Tanzania faces serious problems because so much of its forest has been destroyed.

photo courtesy the Jane Goodall Institute

Have you ever wanted to make a difference in the world around you, but weren’t sure how to get started? If so, you’re not alone. Kids all over the world want to help their community and also the planet. Twenty years ago, Jane Goodall and a group of students from Tanzania (tan-suh-NEE-uh), in Africa, started Jane Goodall’s Roots & Shoots. This group helps young people help others. The Mini Page talked with two Roots & Shoots members to learn more about this worldwide organization filled with great kids.

The city of Cambridge, Mass., gave an award to a Roots & Shoots group for their environmental work. In one project, they worked with the school board to turn lunch waste into garden compost for fertilizing gardens.

from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick

TM

Helping in So Many Ways Meet Shawn

photo by Melissa Ludtke

Shawn Sweeney started in Roots & Shoots when he was in college in Ohio. Now he works with groups around the world. One of his own group’s projects was to create “sacred spaces� for people of all faiths. They created areas that used nature to help people find their own peace. His group also worked with other groups on environmental and world peace issues. Their projects included putting on an eco-fashion show and touring a recycling plant.

All the following jokes have something in common. #AN YOU GUESS THE COMMON THEME OR CATEGORY

The Sprouts of Hope in Cambridge, Mass., helped teach kids about saving energy. They even published a book on the subject. In one event, they baked chocolate chip cookies in a toaster oven to show how you can save energy by not using a full-sized oven. When people came for the cookies, the kids taught them about ways to save energy.

Roots & Shoots volunteers fly giant peace puppets during a global summit, or meeting, in Florida. Volunteers make giant peace doves out of recycled material. They fly them throughout the world in celebration of peace.

The Mini Page Staff

N

!

I]Z B^c^ EV\Zœ

7dd` d[ HiViZh

The Mini Page’s popular series of issues about each state is collected here in a 156-page softcover book. Conveniently spiral-bound for ease of use, this invaluable resource contains A-to-Z facts about each state, along with the District of Columbia. Illustrated with colorful photographs and art, and complete with updated information, The Mini Page Book of States will be a favorite in classrooms and homes for years to come.

Ivan: What does the invisible baby drink in his bottle? Irene: Evaporated milk! Bro Bassetews The Nnd’s Hou

TM

from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick

wn

TRY ’N FIND

Words that remind us of Roots & Shoots are hidden in the block below. Some words are hidden backward or diagonally. See if you can find: AID, ANIMALS, BOYS, COMMUNITY, DIFFERENCE, ENVIRONMENT, GIRLS, IDEAS, KID, LEADERS, MAKE, PEOPLE, PLANT, SCHOOL, SERVICE, TANZANIA, TREES, TWENTY, VOLUNTEERS, WORLD, YOUTH. YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE!

P G L E A D E R S

B L I W O R L D S

Y S T N E M N O O O C Y T I N U A Y U H L S L A R N S T O S E R T L T H H O E L R A S D I K L I E I E K A M Y T E D E C N E R E S S R E E T N U

R M M V P D N F L

I M I I O E E F O

V O N C E A W I V

N C A E P S T D V

E T A N Z A N I A

from The Mini Page Š 2011 Universal Uclick

photo Š the Jane Goodall Institute

photo by Chase Pickering, Š the Jane Goodall Institute

In New Mexico, a group helped collect fur and hair to soak up oil after the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. )N #HICAGO A GROUP PICKED UP trash around their school.

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

EW

Ingrid: What kind of children would an invisible couple have? Ian: I don’t know, but they wouldn’t be much to look at!

Roots & Shoots

A sample of caring projects

Kids all over the planet find ways to help. Many Roots & Shoots members hold bake sales or sell lemonade to raise money for projects such as saving the polar bear. A group at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota worked to start community gardens and a farmers market. They gathered CHOKECHERRIES SO ELDERS OF THE ,AKOTA people could make a traditional dish with buffalo meat. ! #ALIFORNIA GROUP WROTE AND Shawn holds an Eurasian eagle owl illustrated a book about a rescue during a birds of prey show put on by dog in Haiti. Roots & Shoots seconda Roots & Shoots college meeting in graders illustrated it. They are Carmel, N.Y. selling it to raise the money needed to train a rescue dog. The Mini Page thanks Philippa (Pippa) Biddle In Michigan, 5- to 8-year-old and Shawn Sweeney, Jane Goodall’s Roots members sent candy to soldiers. They & Shoots, for help with this issue. hosted a movie night for kids at a Add` i]gdj\] ndjg cZlheVeZg id \Zi ^YZVh shelter. They learned to knit so they VWdji ]dl id ]Zae ndjg Xdbbjc^in# could knit hats for premature babies at the hospital. They hosted lunches Next week, The Mini Page is about poetry. and played bingo at a senior center.

Iris: How do we know the invisible woman has no children? Irma: Because she’s not apparent!

Ready Resources 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 WWW ROOTSANDSHOOTS ORG s WWW SCOUTING ORG s WWW GIRLSCOUTS ORG s WWW H ORG s WWW DOSOMETHING ORG At the library: s h4HE #HIMPANZEES ) ,OVE 3AVING 4HEIR 7ORLD AND Ours� by Jane Goodall

To order, send $15.99 ($19.99 Canada) plus $5 postage and handling for each copy. Make check or money order (U.S. funds only) payable to Universal Uclick. Send to The Mini Page Book of States, Universal Uclick, P.O. Box 6814, Leawood, KS 66206. Or call tollfree 800-591-2097 or go to www.smartwarehousing.com. Please send ______ copies of The Mini Page Book of States (Item #0-7407-8549-4) at $20.99 each, total cost. (Bulk discount information available upon request.) 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, March 23, 2011

CLASSIFIEDS

Legals

---------------------------------------Publish March 23, 30, 2011 FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF COURT CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE MATTER OF THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF Richard E. Mitchell, DECEASED. NO. PB-11-21 NOTICE TO CREDITORS The undersigned is Personal Representative of this estate. Creditors of the estate and all claimants of any nature must present their claims within 60 days after the date of 1st publication hereof or forever barred. s/Gretchen L. be Taylor, 710 Mission Arch Dr., Roswell, NM 88201. Tom Dunlap Lawyer, 104 N. Kentucky Ave., Roswell, NM 88203 623-2607, dunlaplawoffice@cableone.net

GARAGE SALES

DON ’T’ MISS A SALE BY MISSING THE 2:00 PM DEADLINE FOR PLACING YOUR ADS

003. East

USED FURNITURE sale. Including recliner, chairs, lamps, knick-knack shelves, TV, entertainment console and woman’s clothing and shoes. Also various smaller items. Saturday March 26, 9 to 12pm at the Roswell Elks Lodge, 1720 N. Montana. No early birds. For more information, Call Bob at 420-7500

005. South

1108 S. Richardson TuesdaySaturday lots of stuff, come look around.

006. Southwest

2306 PALOMAR Dr. Fri. & Sat. 7am-12pm Baby, toddler & adult clothing, electrical tools, house items. 12 SUNSHINE St. Tues. to Fri. 5pm. Washer, dryer, softener & odd furniture

007. West

611 WOODY Dr (for directions 575-444-7200), FriSun, 8a-2p. Big lot sale. Vehicles, auto parts, performance parts, motors, transmissions, boats, stainless steel restaurant equipment, camper shells, household items, & much more.

ANNOUNCEMENTS 015. Personals Special Notice

FOOD ADDICTS Anonymous 12 step fellowship offering freedom from eating disorders. Meeting on Thursdays at 7pm, 313 W. Country Club Rd. #5. For more information call 575-910-8178 PAY CASH all day long for household items. Top prices paid for furniture, antiques, appliances, collectibles, tools, saddles, plus everything else from A to Z, including personal estates. 627-2033 or 623-6608

025. Lost and Found

LOST FEMALE Miniature Pinscher, reddish brown, red collar, (Boobie), clipped ears & tail, lost on South Baylor, needs medical attention. (Reward) 623-1928 or 2209 S. Baylor LOST 2/24/11 male Boston Terrier REWARD 420-3782

FOUND 3/17/11. 9mo old Papillon puppy at carwash on Hobbs & Union. 9142012. Must have description of dog first. FOUND SMALL male dog at North Walgreens. Call 622-8842

LOST SM. female dog wearing a pink collar that says, “princess” she is brown short hair w/white & black on face please call 575-208-2010

INSTRUCTION

EMPLOYMENT

045. Employment Opportunities

FRESENIUS MEDICAL Care/Southeastern New Mexico Kidney Center is seeking a PCT. Full benefits, 401k, medical, vision, dental. PTO after 6 months. Other company benefits. Open Mon-Sat. Off Sundays.12 hour shifts. Competitive pay. Apply in person at 2801 N. Main St. Suite H. BUSY OPTOMETRIST office seeking Full Time Employee. Individual must be dependable, well organized and hard working. Experience and bilingual a plus. Please send resume to P.O. Box 1897, Unit 257, Roswell, NM 88202.

045. Employment Opportunities

FRESENIUS MEDICAL Care/Southeastern New Mexico Kidney Center is seeking 1 Staff RN. Full benefits, 401, medical, vision, dental. PTO after 6 months. Other company benefits. Open Mon-Sat. Off Sundays.12 hour shifts. Competitive pay. Apply in person at 2801 N. Main St. Suite H.

100 WORKERS Assemble crafts, wood items, sewing. Material provided. To $480+wk. Free information 24 hrs. 801264-4963 ADMIRAL BEVERAGE is hiring CDL driver position must be filled immediately, and only serious prospects need apply. Must have clean driving record. Great benefits, excellent pay, group health insurance. 1018 S. Atkinson

COMFORT KEEPERS NOW HIRING in Roswell & ARTESIA. Seeking SKILLED caregivers for IMMEDIATE work days, evenings and week-ends. Being a caregiver will be the best job you ever had! Call Carol @ 624-9999 and apply at 1410 S. Main St. Roswell or 502 W. Texas, Ste. C Artesia. www.beacomfortkeeper.com COUNSELING ASSOCIATES, INC. Seeking qualified individual to fill the position of a Behavioral Management Specialist. This job will be working with Severely Emotionally Disturbed Children/Adolescents. Full time position of 40 hours per week. Excellent fringe benefits. High School Diploma required. Salary DOE. An EOE. Please send your resume to: Counseling Associates, Inc Samantha Reed PO Box 1978 Roswell, NM 88202 DRIVERS Come join our team! Coastal Transport is seeking Drivers with Class (A) CDL. Must be 23 yrs old (X) Endorsement with 1 yr experience, excellent pay, home everyday! Paid Vacation, saftey bonus, company paid life inc. We provide state of the art training program. $2000 sign on bonus. For more information call 1-877-2977300 or 575-748-8808 between 8am & 4pm, Monday-Friday. ALL POSITIONS in collections, consumer lending, Rent-to-Own field a plus. Must have good CS & communication skills. Pay based on exp. Bonus, Insurance, and 401K. Fax resume to 505-275-7250 CDL DRIVER needed with Hazmat endorsement. Buddy’s Oil Field Delivery Service in Hobbs, NM. Call Mike at 575-631-6285. PERSONAL CARE by Design Now taking applications for weekend, Full time, Part time, Come by 217A N. Main St. for Applications No Phone Calls! Must be neat in appearance. Have reliable transportation and phone. GATEWAY CHRISTIAN SCHOOL is currently taking applications for part time teachers. We’re looking for Christian workers with high-energy and good people skills who love children. A GED or higher is needed, and experience working with children is also a requirement. Apply at 1900 N. Sycamore, no phone calls please. NEEDED PART time RN. Must be licensed in State of New Mexico. Available two days per week 8a-5p. Send resume to PO Box1897, Unit #258 Roswell, NM, 88202 ROSWELL HEATING and Air Inc. is hiring for an HVAC Tech/Installer Journeyman card and some experience are preferred. Please apply at 301 S. Main. Please call ahead 575-626-1315. ACCOUNTING PERSONNEL needed. Dealership experience a plus. Qualifying candidate must be detail oriented. Excellent benefits package offered, including health, dental, vision, & 401K. Fax resumes Attn: Office Manager (575) 622-5899. BEAUTY BAR Advisor Aggressive selling skills professional appearance able to perform make-overs Thur.-Sat. 20 hrs Plus addtional floor sales hrs. Apply in person at Bealls.

045. Employment Opportunities

STORE MANAGER, Valero, 3300 N. Main Location. Competitive salary, vacation pay, bonus potential, resume only to roadrunnerexpressjobs@ yahoo.com CUSTODIAN CENTRAL Valley Electric Cooperative has an opening for a full-time custodian. This position includes considerable maintenance of the facilities and grounds and other duties as assigned. For a complete position description and application form, go to our website at www.cvecoop.org and click on the employment tab. Application forms may be obtained at our offices located at 1505 N. 13th Street in Artesia, NM. AVON, Buy or Sell. Pay down your bills. Start your own business for $10. Call Sandy 317-5079 ISR. LOOKING FOR a highly motivated customer service representative to join the Fred Loya Insurance team! High school diploma or equivalent required. No experience necessary. Fluent in Spanish and English required. Please pick up application at 2601B N Main St. MEDICAL OFFICE POSITION: KYMERA

Independent Physicians Primary Care Clinic

Certified Medical Assistant (CMA): FT – 1-2 yrs exp. working in a medical office environment preferred. Applicants must possess the ability to work with multiple patients in a high volume office setting. Please fax resume with cover letter to: (575) 627-9520

FULL TIME Medical practice front office position. CMA only please. Must be familiar with front office procedures such as scheduling, billing, coding, and aging. Must have good knowledge of medical ethics & HIPPA requirements. Must be professional and friendly. 575-622-0821 HIRING FOR Housekeeping, PT, also FT. $7.50/hr. Budget Inn North, 2101 N. Main St. For Information call 623-6050 OPENING FOR a part time therapist for a local behavioral health agency that specializes in working with children who have psychological and behavioral issues. A current NM license as a LMST, LPCC, or LISW is required. Individuals with an LMHC may be considered with a supervision agreement. Please send your resume and we will contact you. PO Box 1897, Unit 259, Roswell, NM 88202. INGALLS HOLDINGS, LLC(radio stations KMOU, KSFX, KBCQ-FM and KBCQ-AM) seeks a dedicated marketing rep to present our stations to leading Roswell Businesses. The successful candidate wll have previous sales experience, preferably in media, will have a car with insurance and a flwless work and business ethic. To schedule an appointment to present your resume and qualifications call 575-622-6450. Ingalls Holdings is an equal opportunity employer.

NEED NEW Mexico License, Electrical Journeyman and Apprentice/Helpers for Artesia area. Fax resume to 505-899-3600 Sliverado Enterprises, Inc. 505-899-3500

SALES REPRESENTATIVE - The Las Vegas Optic is seeking applications for a full and part time position in sales. Successful candidates must have good people skills as well as the ability to sell advertising and help business grow, Experience isn't a requirement but a plus in consideration. Resumes should be mailed to the attention of Vincent Chavez, Optic advertising manager, PO BOX 2670, Las Vegas, NM 87701, or e-mail to vchavez@ lasvegasoptic.com

045. Employment Opportunities

JOURNEYMAN LEVEL painter with all tools and vehicle with minimum 15 yrs experience. Call for an appointment at 575627-6886. EASTERN NEW MEXICO UNIVERISTY – NOW HIRING: *Coordinator of Alumni Affairs* Head Women’s Basketball Coach* Kid’s College Lead Teacher* Police Officer: Jobs in Portales, NM 5755622115;agency.governmentjo bs.com/enmu . AA/EO/Title IX Employer

LAB ACCESSIONER/DATA Entry: Full-time 9-6 M-F. Excellent attention to detail and multi-tasking skills. Strong grammar, punctuation, spelling, and communication skills mandatory. Competitive salary and full benefits including health insurance, 401K, and profit sharing. Pre-employment testing will be performed. Please send cover letter with resume and three references to roswellscript@gmail.com. INSURANCE SPECIALIST/MEDICAL Billing for Pathology Laboratory: Full-time 8-5 M-F. Must be experienced with medical insurance billing, payment posting, CPT and ICD-coding. Insurance contracting a plus. Competitive salary and full benefits including health insurance, 401K, and profit sharing. Pre-employment testing will be conducted. Send cover letter with resume and three references to: medicalbillingroswell@ gmail.com. Applicants will be held in strictest confidence.

FORTUNE TRANSPORTATION has an immediate opening for a permanent part time driver to make local freight deliveries and trailer movements. Qualified applicants will hold a current Class-A CDL & medical card, be self motivated, organized, and work well with others. Apply in person at 3306 E. Grand Plains Rd in Roswell. Phone: 575 627-0645 Brenda DETENTION ADMINISTRATOR

Chaves County, Roswell, New Mexico is currently seeking an experienced Detention Administrator to supervise its Adult Detention 223 bed - 58 employee facility, Juvenile Detention 19 bed - 18 employee facility and Court Services 9 employee department. This is an appointed position and serves at the pleasure of the County Manager. Position requires five years corrections/detention experience. Applicant must reside in Chaves County or be willing to relocate, as a condition of employment. Salary range: $75,000 D.O.Q. plus a comprehensive benefit package. Chaves County is a drug free employer. All applicants for this position will be required to pass a background check and will be subject to post offer, preemployment drug test. Required application forms are available at the County's Job Posting Board located in the west wing of the County Administrative Center or by accessing the web site at www.co.chaves.nm.us. Applications may be returned to the County Manager's Suite #180, Chaves County Administrative Center, #1 St. Mary's PL, Roswell, NM 88203 or mailed by closing date to Human Resources, PO Box 1817, Roswell, NM 88202-1817. Applications will be accepted until 5:00 p.m., Friday April 1, 2011, EOE.

045. Employment Opportunities

HVAC SERVICE Tech Wanted. Must be experienced with residential and light commercial. Must pass background check and drug test. Please include current MVD report with resume. 401k and insurance available after trial period. Precision Air of Roswell 575-622-8600 or fax: 575-622-5810. SOUTHEAST NM Community Action Corporation

HUMAN RESOURCES DIRECTOR The responsibilities involve a wide range of personnel and related projects, duties and functions associated with the field of Human Resources. $45,000 - $55,000

FULL TIME POSITION 4 DAY WORK WEEK!!

POSITION LOCATED IN CARLSBAD, NM ATTRACTIVE BENEFIT PACKAGE

First Review Deadline ~ March 28, 2011 ~ Position Will Remain Open Until Filled ~

For more information visit your local NM Dept. of Workforce Connection or www.snmcac.org

SNMCAC is an EEOE Peppers Grill & Bar is accepting applications for all positions. Applications available between 2:00 and 4:00 pm, 500 N. Main NEEDED IMMEDIATELY: “Floor”-Person for busy Cleaning Service. Experience only. Good pay 622-3314 leave a message. NEED IN home care assistance must be able to work weekends. Call 6239045 for interview.

MAID NEEDED part time 1 year experience required 1716 W. Second St. Roswell.

NMMI CADET store now hiring for part time positions please come by for application 101 W. College Bates Hall. No phone calls please LOCAL BUSINESS requires carpenter with structural knowledge for construction of shipping containers. Send resume to PO Box 1751, Roswell, NM 88202

SERVICES

075. Air Conditioning

SWAMP COOLER service & repair professional & affordable. Free estimates. Frank 624-5370, 637-2211

105. Childcare

NEED CHILD care? Find the widest range of available childcare for your children and their needs. 1-800691-9067 or www.newmexic okids.org. You may also call us; Family Resource & Referral 6229000 and we can help you navigate the system.

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

HOUSEKEEPING- Home and/or office. Honest & dependable. 575-749-4900 or 575-578-1447 GENERAL CLEANING service over 10 years experience, references. Call 622-1209 - 420-1317 or leave message. SUNSHINE WINDOW Service. We do Windows Brite. Free estimates. Commercial and residential. 575-626-5458 or 575-626-5153.

Legals

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish March 23, 2011

The Board of Regents of New Mexico Military Institute will meet in open session at 10:00 A.M., Monday, 4 April, 2011, in McNally Conference Room on the second floor of Lusk Hall. This meeting is held for the purpose of discussing and deciding on an agenda items that include: Previous Meeting Minutes, Oath of Office to New Regents, Election of Officers, Committee Assignments, and a Legislative Wrap-Up. The agenda is subject to change until 24 hours prior to the meeting. An agenda will be available 24 hours before the meeting at the Superintendent's Office located on the second floor of Lusk Hall.

Every effort will be made to ensure that the meeting is held at a facility that is fully accessible to persons with mobility disabilities. Those who plan to attend the meeting and will need assistance or other special facilities relating to a disability should contact COL Frank Coggins, Chief of Staff, 505-624-8003, or CW3 Carl Hansen, 505-624-8011, at least 48 hours prior to the meeting date.

Roswell Daily Record

140. Cleaning

HOUSE/OFFICE Cleaning low prices. Excellent work call anytime. 575-973-2649 575-973-3592

185. Electrical ALLIANCE ELECTRIC Any size electrical job. Lic#367386. 575-840-7937

BIG HORN Electric Professional work, affordable price. 575-3178345 NM Lic#367662.

195. Elderly Care

ADVANCED HOME Care. All caregivers are licensed bonded & have passed federal criminal back-ground checks. Loving care since 1994. 6276256

200. Fencing

M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991 Fence Restoration, new installs, fast quote, lic#367947. BBB Member. 575-840-8395

220. Furniture Repair

REPAIR & Refinish furniture & build furniture. Southwest Woods. 1727 SE Main. 623-0729 or 626-8466 Hrs 7-3pm. Call before you come in case he’s out running errands. www.southwestwoods furniture.com.

225. General Construction

235. Hauling

MILLIGAN CONTRACTING Quality service for all your home improvement needs. Free Est. I show up & on time. Call Geary at 575-578-9353 Carpentry, Drywall, Painting, doors, windows, tile work. Lic., Insured, Bonded. 914-7002 Dean CALL B&B Enterprises for all your remodeling and construction needs. Local contractor with over 20 years experience. Licensed & Bonded 317-3366 TEE TIME Construction Commercial/Residential Construction - Spray foam insulation, framing, cement, roofing, drywalln painting, New Construction of Homes, Additions, Remodeling, and Metal Buildings. Licensed & Bonded. Call 575-626-9686

230. General Repair

T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Handyman for a day. Call John for all your misc. repairs. 317-1477

PROPERTY CLEANUPS Tear down old bldgs, barns, haul trash, old farm equip. 3470142/317-7738

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

HAVE EQUIPTMENT to handle large or small lawns. Commercial or Private. Also trash hauling & cleanup. Call Bob 575-4202670. WELLS LANDSCAPING Spring is approaching fast. Is your yard, garden or flower garden ready? If not then call us. We have experience in all forms of landscaping. Join the many who have acquired our services and get the best for your money. Call and ask for David 8404349. LAWN SERVICE & much more work at low price. 914-0803 or 914-1375

CALL (K) for all Spring clean ups- lawn, plant care, rototilling, trimming and fertilizing. 575-627-6513 or 575-993-3293 WE WORK Cut Lawns Lots - Trees - Haul & rototilling. Will 317-7402

Discount maintenance 25+ yrs exp. Ktchn, Bthrm, Flring specialist & all phases of Gen. repair insulation/Sheetrock, Texture Painting, Windows Doors, etc.) Ref. avail. 3177015

Legals

CHAVEZ SPRINKLER CO. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING AND SPRINKLER SYSTEM & REPAIRS, ROCK WORK, TREES, SHRUBS, TRACTOR & DUMP TRUCK WORK. FREE ESTIMATES. CALL HECTOR 420-3167

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish March 23, 2011 CITY OF ROSWELL RESOLUTION NUMBER 11-11

A RESOLUTION REQUIRING THE REMOVAL AND/OR DEMOLITION OF CERTAIN DAMAGED AND DILAPIDATED BUILDINGS, STRUCTURES OR PREMISES; PROVIDING THAT THE CITY SHALL HAVE A LIEN FOR THE COST OF REMOVAL; PRESCRIBING THE PROCEDURE INCIDENT TO SUCH REMOVAL AND/OR DEMOLITION AND DECLARING CERTAIN PROPERTY TO BE IN SUCH STATE OF DISREPAIR, DAMAGE AND DILAPIDATION AS TO CONSTITUTE A DANGEROUS BUILDING AND A PUBLIC NUISANCE PREJUDICE TO THE PUBLIC HEALTH, SAFETY AND GENERAL WELFARE.

WHEREAS, it is the opinion of the City Council of the City of Roswell, New Mexico, that those certain buildings or structures upon the premises located as follows and purportedly owned of record, or occupied by the parties hereinafter named, are and have become in such state of disrepair, damage and dilapidation as to be a menace to the public health, safety and general welfare of the inhabitants of the community; and further, that it is in the public interest to require the removal thereof, according to law, by reason of the condition or conditions set forth in Exhibit “A”.

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL, THE GOVERNING BODY OF THE CITY OF ROSWELL, NEW MEXICO:

1. That the buildings or structures set forth in Exhibit “A” are declared to be in such state of disrepair, damage and dilapidation as to constitute a dangerous building within the purview of Roswell Municipal code section 16-12, as well as being a public nuisance prejudicial to the public health, safety and general welfare. That such dangerous buildings or structures set forth, if any, cannot reasonably be repaired so that they will no longer exist in violation of the terms of the ordinance.

2. The owners, occupants, if any, or agent in charge of said premises be, and they hereby are orders and required to remove such dangerous buildings, or structures within a reasonable time thereafter not to exceed fifteen (15) days from the receipt of notice by certified mail or from date of publication of this resolution as hereinafter provided, and as the case may be. In the event such removal be not commenced by such owner, occupant or agent, or written objection thereto be filed with the City Clerk within ten (10) days after service of a copy of this resolution by certified mail or by publication, requesting a hearing, then and in such event, the City Manager is hereby authorization and directed to cause such dangerous buildings or structures to be removed at the sole cost and expense of the owner, owners or other parties having an interest in said properties, and further, that the reasonable cost of such removal shall be and become a subsisting and valid lien against such property so removed and the lot of parcel or land from which such removal was made and shall be foreclosed in the manner provided by law for the foreclosure of municipal liens. Alternatively, the City Manager may act pursuant to Article 3-18-5 (G) (NMSA, 1978), and cause the dangerous buildings or structures to be removed and give title to them or their components to the removing person or persons.

3. In the event the owner or other interested party aggrieved shall file his protest within the time herein provided, requesting a hearing, on the matter, the City Council shall fix a date for hearing, at which time said Protestants shall be entitled to be heard in person, by agent or attorney, and the City Council shall consider evidence whether or not its previous action should be enforced or rescinded. If it shall be determined that the removal order should be enforced, and the owner(s) shall fail or neglect to comply with said decision of the City Council, they shall have a right of appeal to a court of competent jurisdiction by giving notice of such appeal to the City Council within the (10) days after the date of the City Council decision, together with his petition for court review duly filed with the Clerk of the Court within thirty (30) days of the date of the decision complained of.

4. Upon the adoption of this resolution, it shall be the duty of the City Building Inspector to notify the owner, occupant or agent in charge of such building or structure of the adoption of this resolution by serving a copy thereof upon him by certified mail, return receipt requested; and in the event such owner, occupant or agent cannot be found or served within said City as herein above provided, such notice may be served by posting a copy of said resolution upon the premises complained of, followed by legal publication of said resolution one time in a newspaper of general circulation within the city. ADOPTED AND APPROVED the 10th day of March 2011.

CITY SEAL ____________________ Del Jurney, Mayor

ATTEST

_________________________ David A. Kunko, City Clerk

__________________________________________________________________ Resolution #11-11 Exhibit A March 10, 2011 Page 1

Name David Bennet Mary E. Simmons 43 E. Carmel Valley Rd. Apt. 2, Carmel Valley, CA 93924-9602 Raymond R. Romero Rudy Romero 1411 E. Hendricks Roswell, NM 88203

Hortencia B. R. Stephens 2904 W. Juniper St. Roswell, NM 88203

Location 1103 W. Eighth St. Riverside Heights Blk 11 Lot 1 W32.8’ E70.8’

Condition Dilapidated/deterioration open to public, inadequate maintenance

405 E. Bland (Rear Structure) South Roswell Blk 31 lot 8

Dilapidated/deterioration open to public, inadequate maintenance

701 S. Missouri Ave. Alameda Heights Blk 14 Lot 2 N50’

Dilapidated/deterioration open to public, inadequate maintenance


Roswell Daily Record 270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

305. Computers

PROFESSIONAL COMPUTER services at affordable prices. Call (575)3179930.

ORTEGA’S LAWN & Garden Services. Licensed, reliable, quality work, free estimates. Call James 575-444-8555, Connie 575-444-8519.

310. Painting/ Decorating

Roswell Lawn Service landscaping, rototill, mow, prune & cleanup 420-3278 Enchantment Landscaping

Professional lawn care, tree/hedge trimming sprinkler repair & much more 914-0260

MOLINAS YARD SVCS Let your yard reflect your personality with help from experienced hands. Call for free estimates for lawn mowing, tree pruning. 4200260 or 420-5517 Greenscapes Sprinkler Systems Lawn mowing, field mowing, gravel, sodhydro seed, pruning, tilling, For dependable & reliable service call 622-2633 or 910-0150. WEEKEND WARRIOR Lawn Service mowing, property cleanup, residential rain gutter cleaning, and much more 575-626-6121

NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 6264079 or 622-2552.

350. Roofing

Quality Painting! Interior, Exterior at prices you can afford. Mike 910-7012

Need A Roof?

Call R & R Construction 18 years in Roswell. 622-0072

PAINTING BIG or small, interior or exterior, local references. Ron 637-0434

RWC SHINGLE Roofings. Insurance. Hector (575)910-8397

TIME TO PAINT? Quality interior and exterior painting at affordable prices. Call 637-9108.

www.rancheroswelding.com

A & J Painting new homes, newly remodeled homes. Custom painting. Int./Ext. Free Est. affordable prices Licensed & Bonded. Adrian 317-4324

Guaranteed Shingle Roof jobs. Locally owned. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 6222552.

395. Stucco Plastering

312. Patio Covers

RWC Lath and Stucco. Insurance. Hector (575)9108397

M.G. HORIZONS Patio covers, concrete, decks & awnings Lic. 623-1991.

www.rancheroswelding.com

345. Remodeling

400. Tax Service

BERRONES CONSTRUCTION. Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing. Licensed, Bonded. Ray: 625-9924 / 626-4153.

285. Miscellaneous Services

345. Remodeling

ANAYA GRC & Tax Services. For all your tax needs. 508 W. 2nd. 623-1513 Our prices are the best in town. TAXES $30 & up for Federal and State returns, amended and previous years at the Roswell Adult Center 575-624-6718 to schedule an appointment.

THE NEW MEXICO SEED LOAN PROGRAM is available to small businesses owned by individuals with diabilities and provides low interest loans for the purchase of equipment and related supplies needed to expand or start a business. Contact the New Mexico Seed Loan Program at 1-800-8662253 or www.nmseedloans.org for more information. A low interest loan program of DVR State of New Mexico.

405. TractorWork

RWC Bobcat and Dump Works. Insurance. Hector (575)9108397. www.rancheroswelding.com

CLASSIFIEDS

405. TractorWork

LANGFORD TRACTOR work. Septic tanks installed/inspected. Blade work and backhoe work. Gravel, topsoil. 623-1407.

410. Tree Service

STUMP GRINDING. Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 623-4185 ALLEN’S TREE Service. The oldest tree service in Roswell. Million $ ins. 6261835 SUPERIOR SERVICES parking lot, landscaping, tree, service 20 yrs experience. 575-420-1873

435. Welding RWC On site repairs or fabrication. Insurance.

www.rancheroswelding.com

Hector (575) 910-8397

440. Window Repair

AQUARIUS GLASS For Less. Screens, Patio & Shower Drs., Table Tops & Mirrors. 623-3738.

FINANCIAL

485. Business Opportunities

FOR SALE FENCED COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 210x115 w/3200 SQFT SHOP & OFFICE IN & OUTSIDE PARKING. 100 N. PINE. CALL 575-910-2070. DO YOU earn $800 in a day? Your Own Local Candy Route! 25 Machines and Candy All for $9995. 877-915-8222 All Major Credit Cards Accepted! START YOUR own Nursery. Green houses and supplies for sale. 575-4201873

REAL ESTATE

490. Homes For Sale 3BR, 1BA, at the Base, $39,500, owner financing with $5000 down. 420-1352

PRICE REDUCED For Sale By Owner 1912 W. 4th St. 3 large bedrooms w/walk-in closet space. 2 full bathrooms. Close to the Spring River Golf Course & Walking Trail. Call 6227046 for appointment. $280,000

3 LINES OR LESS . . . ONLY $ 68 9 NO REFUNDS • Published 6 Consecutive Days

• Ads posted online at no extra cost

(includes tax)

MAIL AD WITH PAYMENT OR FAX WITH CREDIT CARD NUMBER Call (505)-622-7710 #45 --- 625-0421 Fax 2301 N. Main TO BUY-SELL-RENT-TRADE ANY AND EVERYTHING

CLASSIFICATION

PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE

NE 4 br, office or 5th br, 2 living areas. Over 2400 sq. ft, new roof, ref air, walk to Del Norte Elem. & Goddard High 2715 N Orchard. 575420-3606 for appt. HOUSE NEAR Darby Rd. East side. 2800 sq. ft. 3br, 2bt. In ground pool 3 acres $187k appraisal Asking $175k 575-420-5473 for showing. TWO HOMES 3br 1 bath & 2br, 1 bath 317 E. Forest $72k owner financing. Call for info. 910-1013 OPEN HOUSE Sunday 2-4pm, Price Reduced. Enchanted Hills 3/2.5/2 @ 3303 Shinkle Dr. Built in 2006. FSBO 8409572

490. Homes For Sale

3BR, UNDER construction, 2106 S. Penn., $175,000. 626-4079. NORTHSPRINGS TOWNHOME FSBO, 317 Sherrill Lane No. 16, $152,500, Fliers on Sherrill Lane. 575-317-4671 www.wix.com/sandynm1/ sherrill-lane

SINGLE WIDE mobile home for sale by owner. Must be financed through bank. 3br, 2ba, all appliances included. On 2 lots, storage + fenced back yard, $75,000. 575-4446314

INGROUND POOL 3br, 2ba FP, living rm, Fam rm, sprinklers f/b, mature trees, garage, new energy star windows, water softener, R/O. 306 E. Vista Pkwy. Call for showing 627-5545 or 910-3733. $139,500

NWR-CUSTOM Country 4/2/2 on 1 acre. 2333 sq. ft. +27x16 Morgan storage. $255k owner/agent call 575-317-6498

FSBO 3/2/1, 1400sf, newly remodeled, bathrooms w/cultured marble shower & vanity, new fixtures throughout, separate laundry room, 5x8 shed, fully landscaped front & backyard w/mature trees & sprinkler systems, located in desirable NE neighborhood on quiet street, close to schools & parks, 810 Trailing Heart. Motivated to sell, asking $130k. 928-274-6619 RENT TO own 601 Woody Dr., 2br/1ba, new carpet & paint, new wtr heater. Owner finance $5k dn, $600 mo. 623-0459

495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale

INVESTMENT GROUP wants low priced prairie land. Seller can leaseback. Principals only. Doug (714) 742-8374 RUIDOSO, NM AREA – 1 acre w/city water and city maintained roads near small fishing pond and golf course. Only $10,900. Financing avail. Call NMRS 1-866-906-2857. 6 PLUS acres in Buena Vida subdivision w/electricity, in phase 1 w/beautiful view. Possible owner financing. 626-9686

5.7 ACRES $38k with well & electricity. $9999 dn; $3500 now. Then $800 ± for 8 months; then $400; monthly payments #42 Wagon Trail, 575-622-5587

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

505. Investment/ Commercial/ Business Property

Restaurant bldg, $275K cash/trade for Ruidoso prprty, MTh 624-1331 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 40 ft x 100 ft, (4,000 sq/ft), 16 ft sidewall, red metal building, 2 each 20’ wide bay doors, 1 walk door on 150 ft x 150 ft, 8’ chain link fenced lot, 25’ sliding gate. Available immediately. 1706 S. Grand Ave. $105,000 cash. Call 622-1155.

515. Mobile Homes - Sale

SENIOR PARK Excellent condition, 16x80, 3br, 2ba, appliances, huge patio, storage, covered parking, mid 30s. 9104719

520. Lots for Sale

OWNER FINANCING for a limited time. Ready to build 5 acre lots w/ great views & good covenants. Located 9 miles West of Roswell @ the Club House Banquet Facility. Free land maps and at entrance. 575-623-1800. www.BuenaVidaLand.com READY TO build, 50’x120’ lot, all utilities on property at 1004 S. Mulberry. $7500 637-8499 or 637-4369 Mobile Home Lot size 60x134 $18,000. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. We Take Visa and Mastercard! 420-1352. COURT ORDERED Sale! 2704 S. Lea, asking 7k, 5 acres - 30 Townsend Tr. Lot 9, Cielo Vista Subdivision, has well, electric, great view of city, $60K. Call Jim 910-7969. PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, Owner will finance with 10% down, New Construction only (no mobile homes), , Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd. between Country Club & Berrendo Rd. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 6266791, 626-4337 FOR SALE single burial lot, South Park Cemetary, $800 obo. Call 627-6459 FOR SALE in Roswell 20 acres Good area $50k 910-1152 or 910-8839

RENTALS

535. Apartments Furnished

500. Businesses for Sale

WELL ESTABLISHED Laundromat for sale $39k for business $79k for business plus bldg. 420-5473 MOBILE SHAVED Ice Business 100% ready to operate, everything needed already included. Enclosed trailer, freezer, shaver, register, solar panel, generator, flavors, cups and much more. Call Cesar at 575-626-7951 BUSY RESTAURANT or sale owner financing. Call 627-5422

Dennis the Menace

1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 6241331 STUDIO APT. with kitchen & bath, refrigerated air, $300 month. 420-1005

540. Apartments Unfurnished

Town Plaza Apartments Utilities paid - Gas and Electric. New Owners, friendly new managers. New Remodeled EXTRA LARGE 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Each 2 & 3 bedroom is multi level, upstairs/downstairs w/ large closets, stove & refrigerator, private patios, and private parking. Complex has a pool, laundry room, and a quiet garden setting environment. Friendly managers on-site. Seniors 55yrs plus, law enforcement & military will receive discount. No HUD. Good credit? Pay less rent! 575-623-2735. 2nd year, 1 free month rent

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. 1&2Bd, wtr pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331

1 BD, all bills pd, no pets, no smoking, no HUD - 6236281

PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHAN TED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN. EFFICIENCY 1 br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348. EFFICIENCY 2 BR, downtown, clean, water paid. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD Call 623-8377

NOON - Two Days Prior To Publication. OPEN RATE $10.18 PCI NATIONAL RATE $11.26 PCI. _________________________________________ Contract Rates Available _________________________________________

LEGALS

11:00 AM Two Days Prior To Publication. _________________________________________ CONFIDENTIAL REPLY BOXES Replies Mailed $6.00 - Picked Up $3.50

www.roswell-record.com Add 12 word count to word ad for approved addressing directions.

JUST REDUCED 3br, 1.5ba, NE neighborhood, $875 mo., $600 dep., no pets or HUD. Now Avail. 420-5930 400 1/2 E 5th 1 bedroom stove, refrig., water paid, $325 mo. $200 dep. No HUD & No Pets. 910-9648

1br/1ba, very clean, 1 adult or couple, no HUD/pets, $450/$450 dep. 626-8302 or 420-4801 2 BD 1 ba 207 W. Mathews Apt. C $575 mo. $300 DD 317-6479

305 S. Evergreen, 2br/1ba, covered carport, appliances, shed, fenced backyard, pets w/fee, no HUD/smoking, $750/month, $500 deposit, avail. April 1. 575-405-0163, coLermL@q.com

2BR 1610 W First St. No pets. $525 + Utilities. 6379992

545. Houses for Rent-Furnished FLETC Homes for rent. Long & short term rentals. 5 minutes from FLETC. Brand new & beautiful! Visit our website: www.lgrentalhomes.com or Call 420-0519 or 910-7670 503 CHAMISAL, FLETC READY, 3BR 2BA, $2310 month, 515 Chamisal, FURNISHED, 3BR 2BA, $1000 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-622-4604. NOW AVAILABLE 2/2/1 CAR GARAGE. Fullyfurnished, all electric, newer duplex with all amenities. Xeriscape landscaping, fenced backyard, quiet, near shopping + schools. For showing call Eliot. (719) 237-4680.

4BR, 2BA, 2 living rooms, $775. Also 1br apt., $425. 347-0493

TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262 700 N. Lea, 5BR 2.5BA, $1800 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-622-4604. 1209 N. Richardson, 1BR 1BA, $500 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-622-4604. 207 PIMA, 3BR 2BA, $1400 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-622-4604. 4707 W. McGaffey, 3BR 2BA, $1300 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-622-4604. 2211 S. Union, 4BR 2BA, $1100 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-622-4604. 322 E. Bonney, 3BR 1BA, $550 month, 213 N. Michigan, 2BR 1BA, $675 month, 29 Cedar, 3BR 1BA, $750 month, 710 S. Aspen, 3BR 2BA, $750 month, 508 S. Aspen, 3BR 2BA, $800 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-622-4604. 1004 FERN, 3br, 2ba, 2 car garage, minimum up keep yards, heat pump, stove, fridge, washer & dryer, back patio, new paint throughout, $800 mo. Call Joyce 575-626-1821 or Tom 575-626-2128 to view. 1602 N. Kansas, 2br, 1ba, ref. air, fenced yard, $625 mo., $250 dep. 910-6162

To Place or Cancel an Ad

CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS

LOOKING FOR a place to rent? Let us help you!! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors, 501 N. Main. (575) 624-2262 Stop by to pick up a list of our available rentals or check them out online at www.roswellforrent.com!

2BR, 1 3/4ba townhouse for sale/rent. Located in Briar Ridge, $79k/$650. Evenings after 5:30pm.

WORD AD DEADLINE

POLICY FOR CLASSIFIED ADTAKING

LARGE HOUSE NE location 3 br, 3 ba. 2 car garage, many extras, 1yr lease, $1250 mo. $800 dep. 420-4535

1 BEDROOM apartment. Call 910-8170

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

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.

2&3 Bd, 1&2 Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331

403 N. Elm, remodeled, 3br, 2ba, 2 living areas, stove, refrig., w/d hookups, heat pump, no pets, $950 mo, $600 dep. 637-8234

EXPIRES ________

COMMERCIAL ACCOUNT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .NOON SUNDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .FRIDAY, 2:00 PM MONDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .FRIDAY, 2:00 PM TUESDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MONDAY, 2:00 PM WEDNESDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TUESDAY, 2:00 PM THURSDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .WEDNESDAY, 2:00 PM FRIDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .THURSDAY, 2:00 PM

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

2BR, 1BA duplex, $450 monthly, $300 deposit, no pets. Also rent to own 2br, 1ba mobile home & 3br, 2ba mobile home. 6242436

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

B7

Leprino Foods Job Fair Leprino Foods Company, the nation’s premier manufacturer of mozzarella cheese, is currently seeking qualified applicants for our Manufacturing positions. Successful candidates must be able to work in a 24/7 team environment, have a strong work history, and possess the ability to work safely in a fast-paced, continuously operating environment. Candidates should alsopossess a high school diploma or GED.

Roswell Convention and Civic Center March 29, 2011 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Leprino foods is an Equal Opportunity Employer offering a competitive benefit package to include medical, dental, vision, life, disability, tuition reimbursement, Only the first 100 applications will be accepted. profit sharing, 401(k), paid time off, incentive bonus and strong growth potential

Leprino Foods is an equal opportunity employer supporting a drug and tobacco free workplace M/F/D/V

3202 S. Sunset, 4br/2ba, appliances, fenced backyard, no smokers/HUD, pets w/fee, $1000 mo., $500 dep. avail. April 1st 575-405-0163, email colerml@q.com 3 BD 2.5 ba duplex a/c 1 car garage 205 E. 23rd Unit B $750 mo. $500 DD 317-6479

569. Mobile Home Spaces/Lots

EASY LIVING community - 1337 McCall Loop, Roswell. Long term RV’s welcome. 624-2436

570. Mobile Home Courts

SOUTH FORK. A 55 & above community w/large quiet and attractive lots for people that care. 624-1742 500 W Brasher Rd.


B8 Wednesday, March 23, 2011 580. Office or Business Places

OFFICE SPACE for Rent. Prime downtown area, 2,061 sq.ft. Please call 622-8711. EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITE for lease: Newly decorated, private rest room, covered parking at 1210 North Main. Contact David McGee, Owner / Broker 622-2401 Office Space For Lease. Excellent Down Town Location. Various size spaces available. Ownerpaid utilities. Building Located 200 West 1st. Suite 300 Petrolium Building. Please call 6225385 or come by.

212 W. 1st, office for lease, 1200sqft, A/C, $400 mo., $400 dep. 575-317-6479 INDIVIDUAL OFFICES for rent. Includes furniture, utilities and janitorial. $125 mo. Call EXIT Realty 6236200 or Dan Coleman 8408630 3000 sqft office space available,14 private offices 2 restrooms, 1 conference room, break room former doctors office. 2110 S. Main, $2500 mo. 626-7488 or 420-1352 BARBER SHOP for sale. 910-7552 or 623-5255. Business & Building. 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 4202546. LEVEL ENTRY rent all or part of large offices. Excellent North area with level entry. call 420-2100 for viewing and location.

MERCHANDISE

605. Miscellaneous for Sale NEED FURNITURE? Shop Blair’s Trading Post for the best prices in town for your household items. We buy & sell furniture, appliances, home decor, collectibles, electronics, saddles, jewelry, tools, fishing & camping items, movies plus everything else from A-Z. Including many hard to find items. Serving Roswell for 40 years. Open daily 9-5. Accept Visa & MC. 5611 Hummingbird Ln. 627-2033 Power wheelchair, walker, commode chair, hospital bed, Lift chair622-7638

J.JILL, ANN Taylor, Coldwater Creek, Chico’s ~ all your favorite designers at huge savings. Credit Cards accepted, no fee layaways, 100’s of new items each week. Once Again Consignment, 207 N Main, Open Mon-Sat 10-6, 627-7776, OnceAgainConsignment.co m OR Facebook.com/OnceAgain Roswell THE TREASURE Chest. Overstock Sale: Furniture, thrifts Bauer, Redwing, crocks jugs, Frankoma, Fenton antiques, Blue Willow. Unbelievable. 9141855, 1204 W. Hobbs. HOT TUB w/4 jets, cover included, $500. Call 575910-0801 REACH OVER 500,000 READERS in more than 30 newspapers across the state for one low price. Contact your local newspaper’s classified department or visit nmpress.org for details. PROM DRESSES for Sale one short, turquoise, size large, $30, short red/white, size large $30 ball gown, in good cond. Contact Jill White at 575-420-6101 REASONABLE RATES on repairing riding lawn mowers and also buying riding lawn mowers. 9108166

HTC EVO 4G for sale. Like new 2 mo. old. Too smart for it’s previous owner. $275 Includes phone case screen cover & car charger 622-5525 TWO NICE sectionals, armoire, refrigerator, twin bed, queen bed and queen bedroom set, small desk. 317-7908 after 5 PM TWIN ADJUSTABLE Craftomatic bed, raises up and down, messages, electric with remote $500 obo. 622-0456

Elderly walker w/wheels, raised toilet seat, shower seat $35 ea. 622-9722

LIKE NEW 21 cu. ft. frostfree refrigerator, 18 cu. ft. frostfree refrigerator, elec. range, washer/dryer set. (575)914-9933 RIDING LAWN mower 42” cut 22 HP, top condition, call M-Th 8a-4pm 624-1331

610. Garage Sales, Individuals

HOLLISTER, AMERICAN Eagle, Aeropostale, Bebe, Citizens, Ed Hardy ~ all your favorite designers at incredible savings. Credit Cards accepted, no fee layaways, 100’s of new items each week. Once Again Consignment, 207 N Main, Open Mon-Sat 10+-6, 627-7776, OnceAgainConsignment.com OR Facebook.com/OnceAgainRosw ell PROM FORMALS Affordable! Tiffany, Alyce, Scala, XCite, Flirt, Mori Lee, Jump, Sherri Hill and more! 100’s of dresses for sizes 0 to 28 slinky and poofy! Check us out first. Once Again Consignment, 207 N Main, Open Mon-Sat 10-6, 627-7776, OnceAgainConsignment.co m OR Facebook.com/OnceAgain Roswell

CLASSIFIEDS

620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous

745. Pets for Sale

PAY CASH all day long for household items. Top prices paid for furniture, antiques, appliances, collectibles, tools, saddles, plus everything else from A to Z, including personal estates. 627-2033 or 623-6608 PROM DRESSES wanted, cash now or make more by waiting until it sells. Once Again Consignment, 207 N Main, Open Mon-Sat 10-6. Call for your appointment, 627-7776. OnceAgainConsignment.co m OR Facebook.com/OnceAgain Roswell

635. Good things to Eat

RANCH RAISED, natural Angus Beef. No hormones or anti-biotics. Will sell by half or quarter. 575-355-7788

615. Coins, 650. Washers & Gold, Silver, Dryers Buy, Sell, Trade

U.S. & FOREIGN coins and currency, buy, sell or trade, gold and silver coins. 622-7239, 2513 W. 2nd TOP DOLLAR for gold and silver jewelry. New, old and broken. Also, silver coins. Call Ted 5780805.

WE BUY washers & dryers, working or not. Call 622-6846.

KENMORE 600 washer, cosmetic damage, works good, $250 obo. 330-5923582

715. Hay and Feed Sale

PUPPY LOVE Grooming Large Dogs Welcome, Cats also - 575-420-6655 Old Victorian Bulldoggie Pups! Ready To go 575495-1015 1 CHIHUAHUA, male, black, long hair, 12wks. old $200. 1 Chi/Scottish Terrier Cross, male, brindle/black, 3 1/2 mo. $100. 622-6190

FREE CATS! Older cats, some spayed, neutered, shy now but will be friendly, all need good homes. 626-4708. Yo-Yo Poos 5wks ready at 7wks, tails docked, dew claws, dewormed, 1st shot 1 female $650, 5 males $500 ea. Parents on site. 623-0777

FEMALE AMERICAN Bulldog, 8mos. old, NKC, ABRA registered, $500 obo. Serious inquiries only. Call 575-626-6121. MICRO SIZE, tiny Yorkies & Yorki-Poos, $800 & up. Call or text 575-308-3017.

T-CUP & Toy puppies for sale, $200-$500, Shih Tzu’s, Chihuahua’s, Chorkies, Maltese, MaltyPoos, Hybrid Min Pins, ChiWeenies. Full blooded & designer breeds. All registered, shots & papers. Call or text 575-308-3017.

Alfalfa Hay- sm. bales, oat hay & sudan all grades $4.50-$9.00 per bale. Big bales $90-$140 ea. Firewood. 8:00-5:30 MonSat.1:00-5:00 Sun. Graves Farm & Garden 622-1889 Credit Cards Accepted

Announcements Special Notice Card of Thanks Personals/Special Transportation Lost & Found

Instruction

030 Education 035 Music – Dance/Drama 040 Instructions Wanted 045 050 055 060

Employment

Employment Opportunities Salesperson/Agents Employment Agencies 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

4 TUXEDO kittens, spayed. Ready for “Barn Life”. Call 6230635 after 5:00pm.

3 BLACK Mini Dachshund pups ready now $350 ea. Contact 317-4881

ENGLISH BULLDOG for sale. 8 mos. old, papers, paid $1800 for him, asking $1300 obo. 420-0431

FULL BLOODED Boxer puppies $200. Tails docked and dew claws removed. 840-9756

JADG TERRIERS (Full grown) 4 males. Free to good home. 9107736

RECREATIONAL 765. Guns & Ammunition

POMERANIAN PUPS snow white or black & tan wormed. 575-420-2164

New Mexico concealed handgun course now being scheduled in Roswell. Call 622-4989

“LUSKY” AKC lab & full blooded Husky had 5 females & 3 male pups. 8 wks old ready for new home. Call 575-910-6546

775. Motorcycles & Scooters

2003 YAMAHA V-Star Classic 650, 3200 miles, $2900. Call 910-0492 or 420-2768.

2 males $550 ea. 3 female $600 ea. Golden Retrievers parents on site for more info please contact Cynthia 575-420-1150 or Gerald 575-317-6411 AKC BULLMASTIFF pups $400. 575-365-2982 or 575-513-3187 PUREBRED IRISH Setter pups born 12/11/10 $250 Leave message 575-7603811 or enmngterry@gmail.com

POSITION

440 441 445 450

Window Repair Window Cleaning Wrought Iron Services Wanted

455 456 460 465

Money: Loan/Borrow Credit Cards Insurance Co. Oil, Mineral, Water, Land Lease/Sale Investment: Stocks/Sale Mortgages for Sale Mortgages Wanted Business Opportunities

470 475 480 485

745. Pets for Sale

Financial

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

780. RV’s & Campers Hauling

MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. Your dealer of choice. Sales, parts, service, consignments, purchases, propane, dump station. 2900 West Second. 6221751, 1-800-929 0046

*GEARUP Coordinator Student Affairs Generalist

CLASSIFIEDS INDEX

005 010 015 020 025

745. Pets for Sale

Roswell Daily Record 780. RV’s & Campers Hauling

2000 TERRY Gooseneck trailer, 25ft w/center glide out, fully selfcontained, sleeps 6 easy, great camper, need to see to appreciate, $8000. Call 623-5295.

TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale

2004 DODGE Stratus, 61k miles, beautiful car in excellent condition, $5650, 4201352 CORVETTES WANTED 1953-1972, any condition, 1-800-850-3656 www.corvettebuyer.com

NICE DOVETAIL car trailer w/electric wench $1800. 626-7488 1977 FORD LTD.,red great condition $3000 OBO. Call 622-5880 MOVING 1991 Pontiac FireBird trade Pu small car 347-0260

795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans

2006 CHEVY Silverado 1500 crew cab LS 4WD 4.8L V8, 152k mi. excellent cond. $9500 See to appreciate 575-626-2971 1996 FORD Ecoline Van for sale. $4500, very good condition. 910-7552 or 6235255 2000 TOYOTA Tundra pickup, 4.7 V8, 4 wheel drive, automatic transmission, extended cab, excellent condition, well maintained, 69,300 miles, $11,000. 623-8607

99 DODGE RAM 1500 p/u 89k miles 5.9 magnum, power windows & locks viper alarm $6500 OBO. Call 575-578-9542 2010 CHEV 2500 HD nice truck. Call 575-420-1873 2006 DODGE 2500 Bighorn 4 door cummins 575-420-1873

796. SUVS

06 TOYOTA 4 runner FR5, silver, low miles well below KBB $19,900. 317-4626

EASTERN NEW MEXICO UNIVERSITY-ROSWELL Job Announcements

DEPARTMENT FInancial Aid Student Affairs

CLOSING DATE 03/25/11 03/25/11

SALARY

$23,784.95 $32,051.65-37,851.76

*This position is funded through an external grant. Continued employment beyond the fiscal year is contingent upon continued funding.

Specific information on the above positions may be obtained by calling (575) 624-7412 or (575) 624-7061 or our website www.roswell.enmu.edu TO APPLY: All applicants must submit an application for each job for which they are applying. A complete application packet consists of a letter of interest, resume, an ENMU-R Application form, and complete transcripts for those positions requiring a degree and/or if claiming college education. Failure to submit a complete application packet and all its requirements will invalidate your application. The ENMU-R application and job announcement(s) for the above position(s) are available in the Human Resources office at ENMURoswell, 61 University Blvd., Roswell, NM 88202 or on our website www.roswell.enmu.edu. Completed applications MUST be in the Human Resources office by 12:00 p.m. on Friday of the closing day, to be considered for this position. HR office hours are Monday – Thursday 7:30 – 6:00 and Friday from 8:00 – 12:00. Successful applicants will be subjected to a Background Investigation prior to appointment. Appointment will be conditional upon satisfactory completion of Background Investigation. New Mexico is an open record state. Therefore, it is the policy of the University to reveal to the public the identities of the applicants for whom interviews are scheduled. ENMU-Roswell reserves the right to cancel, change, or close any advertised position at any time. The decision to do so will be based upon the needs of the University and the final determination will rest with the President. ENMU-Roswell is an EOE/AA/ADA Employer


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.