Roswell Daily Record
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INSIDE NEWS
OBAMA SEES SEASON OF PROGRESS
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama celebrated a bipartisan “season of progress” on Wednesday at a year-end news conference a few hours after ... - PAGE A6
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ADENHART KILLER GETS 51 TO LIFE
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — A construction worker who killed a promising rookie pitcher for the Los Angeles Angels and two other people in a horrific drunken driving crash said Wednesday ...
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TODAY’S • Robert “Martin” Yriart
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THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY
December 23, 2010
THURSDAY
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Obama signs ‘don’t ask, don’t tell’ repeal
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama signed a new law Wednesday that will allow gays for the first time in history to serve openly in America’s military. And he urged those kicked out under the old law to re-enlist. Framing the issue as a matter of civil rights long denied, Obama said that “we are a nation that welcomes the service of every patriot ... a nation that believes that all men and women are created equal.” Repealing the 17-year old policy known as “don’t ask, don’t tell” in a ceremony that was alternately emotional and r ousing, the president said “this law I’m about to sign will strengthen our national security and uphold the ideals that our fighting men and women risk their lives to defend.” The new law ends a policy that forced gays to hide their sexual orientation or face dismissal. More than 13,500 people were dis-
charged under the rule since 1993. “I hope those ... who’ve been discharged under this discriminatory policy will seek to re-enlist once the repeal is implemented,” Obama said. “I hope so too,” agreed Zoe Dunning, a for mer naval officer now with the advocacy group Servicemembers Legal Defense Fund. “We are in two wars and we need qualified candidates,” Dunning said after the ceremony. She said it was unclear how many discharged under the old law might seek to rejoin and whether all “have completely healed ... trust the military is going to treat them fairly.” The question of reinstating those previously discharged was addressed in a months-long study done by the Pentagon earlier this year on how the
AP Photo
President Barack Obama signs the Don't Ask, Don't Tell Repeal Act of 2010, Wednesday at the Interior Department in Washington. From left are, Commander Zoe Dunning, Marine Staff Sgt. Eric Alva, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, of Calif.
State police seeking info Annual toy on whereabouts of Horton giveaway Friday See SIGNS Page A3
JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER
New Mexico State Police are seeking information on the whereabouts of Josefina Horton, 30. She is wanted in connection with the Sept. 2 stabbing that took place on Railroad Road northeast of Roswell, said Sgt. A.J. Fouratt of New Mexico State Police. Horton also goes under the name of “Weda.” A warrant was issued for her arrest on Sept.17, on the charges of aggravated battery and conspiracy to commit aggravated battery. According to the Affidavit for Arrest Warrant filed on Sept. 16, the stabbing victim was driven out to the country along Berrendo Street. He was told to get out of the car as two male subjects began to punch him. The female, known to the
Josefina Horton
victim as Weda, stabbed him and grabbed his ear and started cutting. The victim was stabbed a total of 11 times. He was taken to Eastern New Mexico Medical Center and then airlifted to Covenant Medical Center in Lubbock for treatment. Two other suspects, Rene Carillo and William Veraga, have already been apprehended in connection
with the crime, but Horton remains at large. Her last known address was 914 S. Mulberry Ave. Horton also uses the alias, Josefina Franco. Horton is also wanted by the Chaves County Metro Narcotics Task Force, for traf ficking a controlled substance and possession of drug paraphernalia. The search of a room rented by Horton at the Wester n Motel on the 2300 block of North Main Street yielded drug scales and a substance which, after analysis, was revealed to be a measurable amount of methamphetamine and amphetamines. People with information should contact Crime Stoppers, 1-888-594-TIPS (8477). Callers can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward up to $1,000. j.palmer@roswell-record.com
JONATHAN ENTZMINGER RECORD STAFF WRITER
In 1979, the Community Volunteer Program started a Christmas toy giveaway for the children of prisoners at local correctional facilities, according to program director Johnny Gonzales. “We started giving toys to ... inmates’ children that were incarcerated,” he said. “[Over the years] inmates [have] called me and said ‘Mr. Gonzales can you give a Christmas gift to my child?’ ... it started with 100 kids and...grew to 1,000.” On Friday, Dec. 24, the Community Volunteer Program will continue its 30-plus years of giving with its annual Children’s Christmas Party at the Yucca Center, 500 S. Richardson, at 7 p.m.
Gifts and refreshments will be given out to those who attend. Gonzales said this event is for parents struggling to purchase Christmas gifts for their children during tough economic times. He called the party’s purpose his ultimate payday. “The joy that you can bring to the heart of the parents and children that are in need ... that’s my pay.” On Wednesday, volunteers with the Chaves County Detention Court Services & Offender Supervision Program helped the Community Volunteer Program gather gifts for Friday’s Christmas party from their storage facility. To donate toys or volunteer at the Christmas party call 624-7579.
Helping Hands Student organization donates food, toys to The Roswell Refuge spreads holiday JONATHAN ENTZMINGER RECORD STAFF WRITER
Easter n New Mexico University-Roswell’s Respiratory Therapy Student Association made a donation of canned goods and Christmas gifts to families at The Roswell Refuge, 1306 W. College, Wednesday. “We thought that The
Roswell Refuge would be a great place to focus our attention,” Sonya Brooks, president of ENMU-R RTSA, said. “We’ve done some volunteer work [with them] ... we thought that a toy drive and canned food drive would be good for them. Sometimes when kids come to the [refuge] they have to leave all their toys and belongings behind, hope-
fully this will help [them] throughout the year.” The group began their food and toy drive on campus after the Thanksgiving holiday. “We put boxes throughout the campus,” Brooks said. “Students as well as faculty helped and we also gathered personal See REFUGE Page A3
j.entzmingerj@roswell-record.com
cheer to local family
EMILY RUSSO MILLER RECORD STAFF WRITER
Santa Claus came a few days early for one local family. Three firefighters and a few volunteers aboard two firetrucks hand-delivered presents right to the doorstep of a residence next to Nancy Lopez Elementary
School on East Bland Street, Wednesday evening. Edward Montantez and his five young children stood smiling on the front porch as the volunteers unloaded gift after gift from the red velvet Santa Sack. “It’s a blessing,” MontanSee HANDS Page A3
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CLASSIFIEDS..........B6 COMICS.................C4 ENTERTAINMENT.....A8 FINANCIAL .............B5 GENERAL ..............B2 HOROSCOPES ........B6 LOTTERIES ............A2 OPINION ................A4 SPORTS ................B1 WEATHER ..............A8 WORLD .................B4
INDEX
Jonathan Entzminger photo
From left, Doug Southern, director of clinical services at The Roswell Refuge, Tony Mosley, treasurer of ENMU-R Respiratory Therapy Student Association and Sonya Brooks, president of ENMU-R RTSA. RTSA donated food and toys to The Roswell Refuge Wednesday.
Emily Russo Miller Photo
Antonia Montantez, 23 months, receives presents from a local nonprofit called Helping Hands on the front porch of her house, Wednesday evening.
A2 Thursday, December 23, 2010
GENERAL
Senate ratifies nuke pact, delivering win to Obama
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Senate on Wednesday ratified an ar ms control treaty with Russia that reins in the nuclear weapons that could plunge the world into doomsday, giving President Barack Obama a major foreign policy win in Congress’ waning hours. Thirteen Republicans broke with their top two leaders and joined 56 Democrats and two independents in providing the necessary two-thirds vote to approve the treaty. The vote was 71-26, with Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., showing up just two days after cancer surgery. Obama praised the strong bipartisan vote for a treaty he described as the most significant arms control pact in nearly two decades. “This treaty will enhance our leadership to stop the spread of nuclear weapons and seek the peace of a world without them,” he told reporters at a White House news conference. The accord, which still must be approved by Russia, would restart onsite weapons inspections as successors to President Ronald Reagan have embraced his edict of “trust, but verify.” Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Moscow welcomed the vote but still
needed to study the accompanying Senate resolution. Vice President Joe Biden presided over the Senate and announced the vote. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton observed the vote from the Senate floor. Both former senators had lobbied furiously for the treaty’s approval. “The question is whether we move the world a little out of the dark shadow of nuclear nightmare,” Foreign Relations Committee Chairman John Kerry, DMass., said to his colleagues moments before the historic tally. Calling the treaty a national security imperative, Obama had pressed for its approval before a new, more Republican Congress assumes power in January. In recent days, he had telephoned a handful of wavering Republicans, eventually locking in their votes. The Obama administration has argued that the United States must show credibility in its improved relations with its former Cold War foe, and the treaty was critical to any rapprochement. The White House is counting on Russia to help pressure Iran over its nuclear ambitions. “A responsible partnership between the world’s two largest nuclear powers
Congress extends trade assistance for six weeks WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress on Wednesday passed a temporary trade bill that extends, for six weeks, assistance to workers who were laid off due to cheap imports and jobs that moved abroad. The House and Senate approved the legislation by voice vote and sent it to the president. Sponsors said they would work on a longer extension next year. The programs would have expired at the end of this year. While the bill would continue health care assistance and retraining for workers laid off due to international trade, the Senate dropped provisions for lower import duties on nearly 300 products used by U.S. manufacturers. Some
senators objected to tariff provisions related to products made in their states, according to Senate aides who were not authorized to be quoted by name. Community colleges and other educational institutions are expected to play a key role in the plan by developing retraining programs. The bill also gives a six-week extension for Andean countries as an alternative to drug production and trafficking. The 1991 program applies to Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru. Sen. Max Baucus, DMont., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, said, “These trade programs are absolutely critical for our economy and for jobs ... across the country.”
that limits our nuclear arsenals while maintaining strategic stability is imperative to promoting global security,” Clinton said in a statement applauding the vote. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said the vote bolstered Obama’s standing on the world stage. “That treaty was the standing of the United
States in the world community, and whether Barack Obama was a man who deserved the Nobel Peace Prize, a man who has so tur ned around American foreign policy,” Reid told The Associated Press in an interview. World leaders hailed the Senate vote, with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Kimoon calling it “a firm and clear message in support
of nuclear disar mament and nonproliferation.” The New STAR T treaty, signed by Obama and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev in April, would limit each country’s strategic nuclear warheads to 1,550, down from the current ceiling of 2,200. It also would establish a system for monitoring and verification. U.S. weapons inspections ended last year
with the expiration of a 1991 treaty. “STAR T” stands for Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty. Obama overcame the opposition of the Senate’s top two Republicans — Minority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky and Jon Kyl of Arizona, the GOP point man on the treaty. Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the leading Republican on the Armed Services Committee and Obama’s 2008 White House foe, also opposed the treaty. Peeved by the Democrats’ interruption of the eight days of treaty debate for other legislation, McConnell accused the White House earlier this week of politicizing the process. McConnell said national security was the main concern, “not some politician’s desire to declare a political victory and hold a press conference before the first of the year.” At his news conference, Obama said the bipartisan vote “sends a powerful signal to the world that Republicans and Democrats stand together on behalf of our security.” He praised Biden, Kerry and Sen. Richard Lugar of Indiana, the top Republican on the Foreign Relations panel, for their effort.
ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — Descendants of Old West lawman Pat Garrett and New Mexico Territorial Gov. Lew Wallace are outraged that Gov. Bill Richardson is considering a pardon for Billy the Kid, saying Wallace never offered a pardon, and a petition seeking one is tainted because it comes from a lawyer with ties to Richardson. Sheriff Pat Garrett’s grandson J.P. Garrett and Wallace’s great-grandson William Wallace submitted their objections after Richardson set up a website last week to take public comment on the possibility of a posthumous pardon for the Kid on a murder indictment. The governor said he will decide before his term ends Dec. 31. As of Tuesday, the governor’s office had received 370 e-mails and about 20 letters, with sentiment so far running slightly in favor of the pardon, said Eric Witt, Richardson’s deputy chief of staff. The issue centers on whether Lew Wallace, governor of the territory from 1878 to 1881, promised a
pardon in return for the Kid’s testimony in a murder case against three men. J.P. Garrett, of Albuquerque, who with other Garrett descendants met with Richardson in August to oppose a pardon, said there’s no proof Gov. Wallace offered one — and he may have tricked the Kid into testifying. “The big picture is that Wallace obviously had no intent to pardon Billy — even telling a reporter that fact in an interview on April 28, 1881,” he wrote Witt. “So there was no ‘pardon promise’ that Wallace broke. But I do think there was a pardon ‘trick,’ in that Wallace led Billy on to get his testimony.” William Wallace, of Westport, Conn., said his ancestor never promised a pardon and that pardoning the Kid “would declare Lew Wallace to have been a dishonorable liar.” Billy the Kid, also known as William Bonney, was shot to death by Sheriff Garrett in July 1881. J.P. Garrett said he wants to see written evidence of the promise cited by Albu-
querque attorney Randi McGinn, who submitted a petition for a pardon last week after reviewing historical documents. The Kid wrote Wallace in 1879, volunteering to testify in the murder case if Wallace would annul pending charges against him, including a murder indictment in the 1878 shooting death of Sheriff William Brady. McGinn said Wallace told the Kid he had the authority “to exempt you from prosecution if you will testify to what you say you know.” The Kid kept his end of the bargain, but Wallace did not, she said. J.P. Garrett told The Associated Press he believes Wallace never intended to follow through and never put a pardon in written form. He told Witt that when the Kid was awaiting trial in Brady’s killing, “he wrote four letters for aid, but never used the word pardon.” Garrett also contends Richardson should have designated an independent, impartial historian. He noted McGinn is married to Charles Daniels, whom
Richardson appointed to the state Supreme Court. William Wallace said she has “meager qualifications” and a possible conflict of interest. Garrett said the action suggests it’s a facade to allow Richardson to grant an “illegal pardon.” McGinn said her only tie to the administration is that she volunteered to look into the issue for free, knowing Richardson’s interest. She said he told her “he wasn’t promising anything.” Her pardon request focuses on Brady’s killing, and not on two deputies the Kid killed when he escaped from jail in April 1881 after being sentenced to hang for shooting Brady. Garrett told McGinn people of the time lived in fear of the Kid. “I don’t believe a thief, a liar, a terrorizer of the ordinary people and a multiple cop killer should ever be granted a pardon,” he wrote. McGinn said the point is not who was killed, but whether a government has to keep its promise.
AP Photo
Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton keeps her fingers crossed as she comes to see the vote on the New START Treaty, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday.
Garrett descendant objects to pardoning the Kid
LOTTERIES
Burglary
•Police were called to the Rib Crib, 4495 N. Main Street, Tuesday, to take a report of vehicle burglary. The victim returned to her vehicle and tried to start it, only to discover that the gas tank was empty. The victim reported that the tank had been filled earlier in the day. The locked fuel door had been pried open, causing $150 in damages. The vehicle still would not start after refueling and it is suspected that some sort of additive had been placed in the tank. •Police were dispatched to the 1900 of South Sunset Avenue, Tuesday, after the victim returned to the residence and found the front door had been forced
open. A 52-inch flat screen television, worth $900, was reported missing.
Anyone with information about these and any other crimes is asked to call Crime Stoppers, 1888-594-TIPS (8477). Callers can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward.
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GENERAL
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Signs
Continued from Page A1
ar med forces might go about implementing a repeal of don’t ask don’t tell. The study recommended that the Department of Defense issue guidance to all the service branches per mitting those previously separated on the basis of homosexual conduct “to be considered for re-entry, assuming they qualify in all other respects.” It said the fact that they were kicked out for gay conduct should not be held against them but added that if they received an “other than honorable” discharge for accompanying reasons, those reason should be considered. A beaming Obama signed the bill at the Interior Department, a location chosen to accommodate a larger than nor mal audience for a bill signing. “I say to all Americans, gay or straight, who want nothing more than to defend this country in unifor m, your country needs you, your country wants you, and we will be honored to welcome you into the ranks of the finest military the world has ever known,” Obama said. “No longer will tens of thousands of Americans in uniform be asked to live a lie, or look over their shoulder in order to serve the country that they love,” Obama said. As military leadership and advocacy gr oups have war ned in recent days, Obama also noted that the repeal will not immediately go into
Hands
Continued from Page A1
tez said. The early Christmas delivery was the work of Helping Hands, the nonprofit arm of Rio Pecos Medical Associates, LTD, a gynecology and obstetrics clinic in Roswell. Lily Vaillancour, the coleader of the nonprofit, said the group has been helping families in need since 1992. This year Helping Hands delivered gifts to two homes. “We try to brighten up their Christmases,” Vaillancour said. “This year I think
effect until the government goes through additional steps to roll back the old policy. Gay troops would still be vulnerable to being discharged until Pentagon officials first complete mandatory implementation plans — and the president, defense secretary and chairman of the joint chiefs certify to lawmakers that the move won’t damage combat readiness, as critics charge. Speaking to reporters later in the day, Obama said he spoke to the military service chiefs about readiness after Congress voted for repeal. “They have all said that we ar e going to implement this smartly and swiftly, and they are confident that it will not have an ef fect on our military effectiveness. So I’m very heartened by that,” Obama said. Opponents of the repeal have argued the move would har m unit cohesion, could prompt some to leave the services or not to sign up in the first place and remain a distraction at a time when the ar med forces are fighting two wars. But Obama said: “We are not going to be dragging our feet to get this done.” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said Obama thinks actual implementation of the new law will be “a matter of months.” Pentagon personnel chief Clif for d Stanley and his staf f have already started working to put together an action plan based partly on recommendations from the study. The plan will look
at a host of questions, fr om how to educate troops on the change to how sexual orientation should be handled in making barracks assignments. The president vowed during his 2008 campaign to repeal the law and faced pressure from liberals who complained he was not acting swiftly enough. For Obama, it was the second high-profile bill signing ceremony within a week following Friday’s signing into law a tax package he negotiated with Republicans that extended Bush-era tax rates for two more years, cut payr oll taxes and ensured jobless benefits to the unemployed for another year. The two events, however, could not have been more different in tone. The tax deal divided Democrats and forced Obama to accept extensions of tax cuts for the wealthiest, a step he had pr omised to not take. With Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell at his side during that bill signing, Obama seemed dutiful and subdued. By contrast, the emotion of Wednesday’s ceremony defined it; even the president himself said he was “overwhelmed” by the moment. Those attending the ceremony included Dunning, the son of a World War II veteran who was saved by a gay comrade during the Battle of the Bulge, and Marine Staff Sgt. Eric Alva, the first American wounded in the war in Iraq, a soldier who has since spoken out against the Pentagon policy.
Refuge
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donations from families and friends ... we [gathered] non-perishable foods as well as toys.” According to Doug Southern, clinical director at The Roswell Refuge, four families and six children will benefit from
Thursday, December 23, 2010 Wednesday’s donation. “I think it’s incredibly important ... Many times they come into shelter without anything,” he said. “It provides an emotional boost at a very difficult time of the year. For a lot of the kids — if it was not for groups like this — a lot of times these kids wouldn’t have very much for Christmas. It’s
an amazing thing to see people ... and help out others.” The Roswell Refuge, a United Way agency, provides couseling, shelter and other services to families and individuals going through domestic violence situations. For more infor mation about The Roswell Refuge call 6243222.
we definitely did pretty good considering the bad economy.” A neighbor, who is also a receptionist at Rio Pecos, nominated the Montantez family because Edward is a single father of five children, ages 13, 11, 8, 4 and 23 months. “He’s done such a good job with his kids,” Priscilla Salcido said. “I thought he could use the help.” Helping Hands does multiple fundraisers throughout the year to purchase the presents, co-leader Gabi Vargas said. “It was good to come out here and see all the smiling faces,” Vargas said. emiller@roswell-record.com
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A3
A4 Thursday, December 23, 2010
OPINION
Money, new governor drive legislative session
What’s going to happen during the legislative session, a friend asked the other day. No idea, I said, but here are a few observations on the obvious. The drivers of the session will be the Susana Martinez administration and the money. As of this writing, the incoming governor of Nevada has offered an outline of his legislative program. Gov.elect Martinez has not. A couple of specifics have been floated: Sell the state jet and ban issuance of driver’s licenses for illegal immigrants. Both were campaign promises. But ethics? Nary a word since the election, as of this writing. One source of substance will be the reconstituted Carruthers Gover nment Ef ficiency T ask Force. In its first incarnation, a year ago, the group found $129 million in savings in only a few meetings. The members are experienced policy people,
HAROLD MORGAN
NEW MEXICO PROGRESS
including Willard Lewis, Joe Stell, Ray Kysar and Harvey Yates. Lewis and Carruthers are the only holdovers from the year -ago group. I haven’t seen any output from the new group. Stay tuned. Reorganization will be a corollary to the spending choices. The Carruthers group raised the n o ti o n of c om b i n in g d e p ar tments. Again, I have no insight except to note that when the possibility of putting tourism back with economic development was floated last summer, the tourism folks needed about
Roswell Daily Record
15 seconds to broadcast their opposition. The tourism folks are wrong, of course, but the interests, always special, are entrenched. The real driver will be Martinez’s willingness to deliver “ bo l d c h an ge . ” M y a n a lo gy comes from a former boss who was made a senior executive in charge of the operating units that got the product to the customer. On day one of the new job, he relieved the manager of one of the units, a notorious slacker. The explanation from my ex-boss was that without taking action on the slacker, my e x- b os s w o u ld ha v e ha d no credibility in the new position. Keith Gardner, incoming chief of staff, spoke Dec. 14 to the Tax Research Institute conference. He provided no specifics, saying the focus is on getting the team in place. My impression, so far, is that Martinez is
making good choices, starting with Gardner and legislative chief Brian Moore. I n ce n ti ve s w i l l g e t a c l o s e look, as they should, starting with the movie kickback. I’m not convinced that incentives make a huge difference, except for three: industrial revenue bonds, the job training program a n d t h e of f se t t o th e g r o s s receipts tax for manufacturing e q u ip m en t . T h o s e t h r e e d o make a huge difference. The state’s retirement funds are well short of being able to meet their obligations. T ransportation is a mess financially, a problem the technical nature of which I don’t understand, having avoided finance in the business school. Also, transportation is about $250 million short of having the money to do what they think they need to do. Clearly the definition of transportation “needs”
must change. From the new administration I have three wishes. The first is for a constitutional convention. Our state government doesn’t work, so I believe we should rewrite the rules. The naysayers are out in force. “Too hard and it wouldn’t pass,” they say. But we have to try. Wish number two is for an independent commission to handle redistricting. Califor nia approved such an entity last month. It could be done here. To not pursue reinstituting the death penalty is my third wish. The issue is practicality, not policy. It’s not going to happen and would waste political capital. In a way, the death penalty offers a test of whether Martinez is going to reset government or travel the tired path of Republican redmeat issues. © New Mexico News Services 2010
EDITORIAL
Volt and the free market
General Motors has a smoking red-hot winner on its hands with the Chevy Volt. The extended-range electric vehicle is sending shock waves through the car buying market. Already, 250,000 potential buyers have expressed interest in the first 10,000 Volts GM plans to build in t h e n e x t y e a r. S o m e d e a l e r s h a v e s o many customers beating on the doors they plan to add a premium on to the sticker price. Last week, a Volt donated by GM to a Detroit Public Schools science program gar nered $225,000 at auction. That’s Rolls Royce territory. Just a few years ago, a previous generation Cadillac failed to recapture its sticker price when auctioned off at a local charity ball. There’s opportunity here for GM beyond the initial sales. It can use the intense demand for the Volt to shake off any remaining Government Motors threads from its image. Anticipating that the price of such vehicles would be prohibitive because of technology costs, the federal government and many states, including Michigan, offered subsidies to buyers that amount to roughly $7,500. That takes the Volt’s sticker to the $35,000 range. It’s obvious now that the high price tag isn’t a deterrent to sales, and that would-be buyers don’t think $42,000 is out of range. The premiums being tacked on by some dealers bring the out-thedoor cost of the Volt closer to the original price point, and still buyers are lining up. GM has proven it can build an electric car that excites the market. And consumers are showing they are willing to pay a very rich price for the opportunity to drive that vehicle. It’s the law of supply and demand at its finest. The government can and should step away now and let the market establish the sticker price. With demand outpacing supply by 25 to 1, that’s likely to be a price point very satisfying to GM’s profit prospects. Buyers find the Volt worth the money, and likely believe the savings in fuel costs make the premium sticker still a bargain. Early indications are that GM would have no trouble selling out its inventory at the full $42,000 sticker price. The government subsidy gives the Volt a stigma it doesn’t deserve, and the kickin isn’t necessary to move the product. That money would be better spent, if spent at all, on developing a charging infrastructure for an electric fleet. General Motors has done a remarkably good job of opening this new era of the automobile industry. With the reception the Volt is receiving, everyone should be confident that the free market can sustain it. Guest Editorial The Detroit News DEAR DR. GOTT: I am a 71-year -old female in good health. I take 40 milligrams of diltiazem, and my blood pressure is under good control. A recent blood test revealed my cholesterol to be 286, my HDL 82, LDL 188 and triglycerides 81. My doctor prescribed 40 milligrams lovastatin, but I would prefer not to take this medication. My total cholesterol has been 200 or higher since I was 40, and my HDL has been over 80. May I have your opinion? DEAR READER: High-cholesterol levels in the blood are considered to be a major risk factor in the development of coronary-artery disease, heart attack and stroke. When cholesterol accumulates in the
Beware campaign for war with Iran SHELDON RICHMAN THE FUTURE OF FREEDOM FOUNDATION
Despite the horror with which the war party has received the WikiLeaks dump of secret diplomatic cables, at least some of the revelations were cheered. Those who have been agitating for an attack on Iran were pleased to see cables apparently reporting that the heads of Arab states also favor war. As the New York Times put it, “The documents seemed to show several Arab nations, notably Saudi Arabia, Iran’s rival for influence in the Per-
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walls of the arteries and combines with cellular debris, plaque forms, impairing the flow of blood. Eventually, clots may form, the arteries become blocked, and problems occur. There are two primary types of cholesterol — good and bad. The good is known as the HDL (high-density lipoproteins), and the bad is LDL (low-density lipoproteins). According to
sian Gulf, displaying such hostility that King Abdullah repeatedly implored Washington to ‘cut off the head of the snake’ while there was still time.” This has created much relief in the “bomb Iran” community, since until now it appeared that Israel was the only foreign country lobbying for an attack. But, editorialized the Times, “As the cables show, the administration has been under pressure from both Israel and Arab states to attack Tehran’s nuclear program pre-emptively.” The Times at least should have written “alleged nuclear
the American Heart Association, total cholesterol of under 200 is desirable and puts a person at a substantially lower risk for heart disease. Levels between 200 and 239 are borderline, signifying a person has twice the risk than someone below 200. HDL levels for men lower than 40 and 50 for women signify a major risk factor for heart disease. Levels of 60 and higher are extremely good, with lower probability of heart disease. LDL readings lower than 100 are optimal. Triglyceride levels vary according to age and gender. Levels under 150 are considered to be normal. Levels beyond that are borderline to high. While your total cholesterol is higher than the recommend-
program,” since the International Atomic Energy Agency, which inspects Iran’s nuclear facilities (it is a signer of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty), has repeatedly certified that Iran has diverted none of its uranium to weapons production. Moreover, 16 U.S. intelligence agencies agree that Iran is not making weapons. Iran says it wants a civilian nuclear capability, but that has not stopped American politicians, pundits and reporters from routinely pretending that a weapons program is in progress. That inconvenient fact
ed figure, your HDL is exceptionally good. Your LDL puts you in a borderline-high bracket. Because extenuating factors such as family history come into play, your primarycare physician or cardiologist should make the decision as to the appropriate level for optimal health. If diet is to blame, this is relatively simple to modify. Cut out ice cream, butter and other high-fat foods. Reduce your consumption of cheese, eggs and whole milk. Stay away from tropical oils in cookies and pastries. If inactivity is to blame, speak with your physician about a program of exercise. If heredity See GOTT, Page A5
aside, what are we to make of the apparent endorsement of war against Iran by the heads of the Arab states? As we’ve come to expect with the war party’s propaganda, there’s less than meets the eye. Seasoned observers of the region say, the Times notwithstanding, that Arab leaders (not to mention the Arab people) fear an American war on Iran. “But a careful reading of all the diplomatic cables reporting the views of Saudi and other Gulf Arab regimes on Iran shows that the T imes’ account seriously distorted
25 YEARS AGO
See RICHMAN, Page A5
Dec. 23, 1985 • Dawn M. Clancey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Bean of Roswell, has been promoted to Air Force sergeant. Clancey is an administrative specialist at Davis Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz., with the 41st Electronic Combat Squadron. She is a 1980 graduate of Roswell High School. • Elisa Kisselburg of Goddard High School and Jason Tutor of Sierra Middle School won first chairs at the 1985-86 All District High School and Junior High School Band tryouts held recently in Clovis. Kisselburg, a freshman at Goddard, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Kisselburg. Tutor, an eighthgrader at Sierra, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Tutor.
LOCAL
Roswell Daily Record
Thursday, December 23, 2010
A5
GHS names its students of the month for December Banda
Fry
Duncan
Erika Marie Banda
Erika Marie Banda, daughter of John and Elvia Banda, was recently named the GHS Altrusa student of the month for December. She enjoys spending time with family and friends, going to the movies and traveling. She is a member of National Honor Society and Business Professionals of America; she also has a GPA above 3.5 and takes honors classes. She attends St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, where she volunteers as an altar server and for catechism classes. She plans to attend ENMU-R, then UNM, and will major in pediatric nursing or physician assisting.
Jeremy Fry
Jeremy Michael Fry, the son of Larry and Regena Fry, was recently named the GHS Elks student of the month for December. He enjoys basketball, golf, skiing, watching movies and hanging out with family and friends. He is a member of the basketball team, the German Club and National Honor Society. He maintains a 4.3 GPA. He attends First Church of the Nazarene, was a member of the Bible quiz team and participated in witness trips to Hungary and Peru, and is a member of Teen Community Bible Study. He works at Classics Frozen Custard. He plans to attend Point Loma Nazarene University or Texas Tech University and will major in business finance or architecture.
Andrew Duncan
Andrew Duncan, the son of Greggory D.
VISTAS POLICY
Continued from Page A4
comes into play, then you may be doing all you can without outside assistance. A number of over-the-counter cholesterol-reducing products are available. Ask whether a trial might be appropriate. If your physician has given you a statin drug to inhibit your liver’s natural production of cholesterol and you are opposed, make another appointment to discuss the matter. I don’t blame you for expressing concern. There has been a lot of controversy surrounding the side effects of statin drugs. Get answers, and be guided by what he or she says. Ultimately, the decision should be yours.
Garcia
and Natalie M. Duncan, was recently named the GHS Kiwanis Club student of the month for December. He enjoys singing and is a member of the Stargazers. the choir, the National Honor Society and was named to the New Mexico All-State Choir. He attends Grace Community Church and volunteers with Habitat for Humanity. He plans to attend Baylor University and will major in speech pathology.
William Hahn
William Joseph Hahn III, the son of Jay and Susie Hahn, was recently named the GHS Pecos Valley Rotary Club student of the month for December. William enjoys golfing, basketball and hanging out with friends. He plays on the GHS basketball team and played GHS baseball for two years. He is a member of Assumption Catholic Church. He plans to attend Texas Tech University and will major in material engineering.
Geovany Garcia
Goevany Garcia, the daughter of Luis and Maria Garcia, was recently named the GHS Roswell Rotary Club student of the month for December. She is a member of DECA and serves as the treasurer for the Business Professionals of America. She is a member of the Assumption Catholic Church youth group. She plans to attend ENMU-R and will major in dental hygiene.
Kielee L. Davis
Kielee L. Davis, the daughter of Phil and Wendolyn Davis, was recently named the GHS Las Lianas Silver Belle student of the
We try to publish all information about local events and achievements that we can, given time and space limitations. However, we have no legal or ethical requirement to publish everything we receive. Staff members make the final determination on when or if information is published. The Roswell Daily Record reserves the right to reject or edit announcements for any reason. We publish announcements only once, except in cases of error on our part. To submit an announcement for publication we require a typewritten, legible press release. The release should contain the date, time, location, subject and any other relevant information. Press releases must include a name and contact information, should we have questions regarding the notice. All e-mailed Around Town, Area Scene and Local Achievement items MUST be sent to the Vistas editor at vistas@roswell-record.com, at least FIVE days prior to the requested publishing date. Any other announcements of upcoming events must also be e-mailed or delivered to the RDR a minimum of FIVE business days before a desired publication date. Delivery or receipt of an item to the RDR after that time does not guarantee 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@roswell-record.com. E-mails should contain the message in plain text in the body of the message only. The Daily Record now charges for wedding, engagement and anniversary announcements. The charges will be $12 for the first 8 column inches of text and 18 cents a line thereafter. A photo is $5. Wedding, engagement and anniversary announcement forms are available at the RDR offices, 2301 N. Main St. Anniversary announcements for page C2 in Sunday editions are for couples celebrating their 25th anniversary and are then published in five-year intervals up to the 60th anniversary. Couples celebrating 60 or more years are eligible every year.
Gott
Hahn
To provide related information, I am sending you a copy of my Health Report “Understanding Cholesterol.” Other readers who would like a copy should send a self-addressed stamped No. 10 envelope and a $2 check or money order made payable to Newsletter and mailed to Newsletter, P.O. Box 167, Wicklif fe, OH 440920167. Be sure to mention the title or print an order form off my website at www.AskDrGottMD.com. 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.
Davis
Ramirez
Duran
month for December. She enjoys scrapbooking, playing the piano, singing, helping others and spending time with her family. She is a member of the National Honor Society and plays softball; she received the All-Academic Award. She volunteers at Books Again and is a leader in the youth group at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter -Day Saints. She also works part time at Wakefield Oil for her grandpa. She plans to attend Brigham Young University and will major in school psychology.
Gabriela Ramirez
Gabriela Ramirez, the daughter of Gumaro and Francisca Ramirez, was recently named the GHS Noon Optimist student of the month for December. She enjoys playing soccer, watching and playing sports and spending time with friends and family. She plays on the Lady Rockets soccer team for which she’s received several awards, and is a member of the National Honor Society. She is an altar server and a lector at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church. She plans to attend New Mexico State University and will major in psychology.
Kelsie Duran
Kelsie Duran, the daughter of Craig and Nikki Duran, was recently named the GHS Hispano Chamber of Commerce student of the month for December. She enjoys shopping, going to the movies, jogging and watchng “Law and Order: SVU,” with her best friend Maggie while eating massive amounts of junk food.
McConnell
Simitz
She is a member of BPA, DECA, the Mesa Club, Drama Club, Spanish Club and runs track. She is an active member of Assumption Catholic Church and has participated in “The Nutcracker” with Miss Minnie’s School of Ballet. She plans to attend ENMU and will major in criminal justice and political science, with a minor in psychology. She wants to attend law school after graduation.
Chantel McConnell
Chantel Amor McConnell, daughter of Ted W. and Raylinn McConnell, was recently named the GHS Roswell Sunrise Rotary student of the month for December. She enjoys spending time with friends and family, baking and photographing nature scenes. She is the senior vice president of the local BPA chapter and is an honors student, maintaining a GPA of 3.0 or higher. She is involved in the youth group at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter -Day Saints. She plans to attend ENMU and will major in communication disorders or special education.
Jordan Simitz
Jordan Thomas Simitz, son of John and Mignon Simitz, was recently named the Roswell Sertoma Club student of the month for December. He enjoys playinig golf, soccer and hanging out with friends. He plays on the varsity soccer team and is an active member of Assumption Catholic Church. He plans to attend New Mexico Tech and will major in materials engineering.
Cedar tree may be pruned safely now
Q. We have a large cedar tree and wish to trim off the lower branches and the longer branches that extend into the driveway. When is the safest time to prune and is there literature available on “how to”? A. In general it is best to prune evergreen trees and shrubs in the late winter or early spring just before new growth begins. This reduces the winter desiccation damage that can occur when branches that were protected by outer branches are removed. Of course, there are exceptions to this rule. One evergreen that should be pruned later is the pyracantha, because to prune it before new growth begins would be to remove the flowers and resulting fruit that are part of the beauty of the plant. However, you are asking about a cedar tree, one of the conifer trees. I am not sure if you are referring to a juniper, which is often called “cedar” in the Southwest, or to a true cedar, which looks more like a spruce tree. However, the pruning time is the same. Since you want to
Richman Continued from Page A4
the content — and in the case of the Saudis, ignored the context — of the cables released by Wikileaks,” write journalists Gareth Porter and Jim Lobe. “In fact, the cables show that most Gulf Arab regimes — including Saudi Arabia itself — have been seriously concerned about the consequences of a strike against Iran for their own security, in sharp contrast to Israel’s open advocacy of such a strike. They also show the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Kuwait expressing that concern with greater urgency in the past two years than previously.” Porter and Lobe report that the Bush-era cables, in fact, show a far more moderate line among the Arab officials, with the focus not on nuclear weapons but on Iranian influence in Iraq. (Once the U.S. military ended Saddam Hussein’s Sunni regime, it was a certainty that Iranian-allied Shi’a Iraqis would dominate any new government, such as U.S.- backed prime minister, Nouri al-Maliki.) Porter and Lobe write,“Even if (Saudi King) Abdullah had in fact offered explicit support for a military attack against Iran in the meeting with (Gen. David) Petraeus,
remove lower branches, which are often the protected branches, pruning now should cause little harm. In fact, many people do prune now so that they can use the greenery in Christmas wreaths and other holiday decorations. Minor pruning to collect the greenery will cause little harm. You want to prune lower branches and “nuisance/hazard” branches that interfere with traffic. This should be done whenever the hazard exists for safety (and sometimes legal) reasons. I recommend that you remove these branches now. Send your gardening questions to Yard and Garden, Attn: Dr. Curtis Smith, NMSU Agricultural Science Center, 1036 Miller Road, SW, Los Lunas, NM 87031. however, that would not be a reliable indicator of Saudi policy toward the issue, according to Chas Freeman, a veteran diplomat who served as Washington’s ambassador to Saudi Arabia from 1989 to 1992 and maintains contact with top Saudi officials. “Freeman told us that such a statement would ‘fit a pattern of communication with the United States of ingratiating themselves with their protector.’” According to Porter and Lobe, the WikiLeaks cables from the Obama years reflect even less interest in military action against Iran. Officials of the United Arab Emirates, for example, repeatedly expressed concern to U.S. representatives that an Israeli attack on Iran would destabilize the region, and asserted that the way to reduce Iranian influence would be for Israel and the Palestinians to reach a settlement. Those thirsting for war with Iran have left those facts out of their accounts. The American people were stampeded into war against Iraq through a shameless propaganda and disinformation campaign led by government officials and facilitated by prominent newspapers. We must not let the same thing happen with Iran. Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation (www.fff.org) and editor of The Freeman magazine.
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month for December A6 Thursday, December 23, 2010
GENERAL/WORLD
S. Korea holds massive new drills after North attack
SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — South Korea on Thursday mobilized hundreds of troops, tanks, helicopters and jet fighters for a massive military exercise aimed at sending North Korea a message of strength amid high tensions on the peninsula. The firing drills set for later in the day near the Koreas’ heavily armed land border signaled that South Korea is willing to risk further escalating tensions with North Korea, which shelled a southern island off the Koreas’ western coast on Nov. 23, killing four South Koreans and stirring fears of war. The attack was portrayed by Pyongyang as a retaliation for southern military exercises on Yeonpyeong Island that day. South Korea has conducted 47 military drills this year similar to the one planned for Thursday, which was scheduled in response to the North Korean attack, an army officer said on condition of anonymity citing department rules. Thursday’s drill will be the biggest-ever wintertime joint firing exercise that South Korea’s army and air force have staged, an army statement said. “We will completely punish the enemy if it provokes us again like the shelling of Yeonpyeong Island,” Brig. Gen. Ju Eun-sik, chief of the army’s 1st armored brigade, said separately.
South Korean forces are on high alert even though the North backed down from its threat to again retaliate over a separate firing drill the South held Monday on Yeonpyeong in disputed western waters. The two Koreas remain technically at war since their 1950s conflict ended in a cease-fire, not a peace treaty. The past month’s military tension, however, has been the worst in several years. The North has made conciliatory remarks in recent days — telling a visiting U.S. governor it might allow international inspections of its nuclear programs — but Seoul is mindful of past surprise attacks and still is bracing for possible aggression. The White House dismissed concern that South Korea’s exercises could lead to any escalation of the situation. “I think exercises that have been announced well in advance, that are transparent, that are defensive in nature, should in no way engender a response from the North Koreans,” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said in a briefing on Wednesday. South Korea’s navy also began annual four-day firing and anti-submarine exercises Wednesday off the country’s eastern coast. That area has been less tense
Roswell Daily Record
recently but in the past, the North has used eastern waters as a submarine route for communist agents to infiltrate South Korea. The Koreas’ recent military skirmishes, including last month’s artillery bombardment, have been in the tense western waters, where Pyongyang does not recognize the U.N.-drawn border. Thursday’s air force and army drills will involve 800 troops, F-15K and KF-16 jet fighters, K-1 tanks, AH-1S attack helicopters and K-9 self-propelled guns. They will take place in Pocheon, about 30 miles (45 kilometers) north of Seoul and about 21 miles (33 kilometers) south of the North Korean border. Seoul has relocated more artillery on Yeonpyeong island following last month’s shelling and plans to deploy Israeli-made Spike missiles there soon, Yonhap news agency reported, citing an unidentified military official. The Joint Chiefs of Staff declined to confirm the report. North Korea, meanwhile, indicated to visiting New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson that it was prepared to consider ways to work with the South on restoring security along the border. Richardson praised Pyongyang for refraining from retaliation and said his visit to the North provided an opening for a resumption
of negotiations aimed at dismantling North Korea’s nuclear program. North Korea pulled out of sixnation talks to provide Pyongyang with aid in exchange for disarmament in April 2009, but since has said it is willing to resume them. The White House, however, rejected the idea, saying Pyongyang needed to change its “belligerent” behavior first
and was not “even remotely ready” for negotiations. In Seoul, a senior South Korean government official said the military would remain prepared for the possibility of a “surprise” attack in coming days. He spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter. Separately, about 200 South Koreans attended a candlelight vigil Wednesday
evening for the four South Koreans killed by North Korea’s attack on the Yeonpyeong. They observed a moment of silence and placed flowers on a makeshift mourning site in central Seoul. “We, the survivors, should remember their sacrifice and make efforts to ensure that their sacrifice will not be in vain,” said Choi Hong-jae, a 42-year-old executive.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama celebrated a bipartisan “season of progress” on Wednesday at a year-end news conference a few hours after the Senate ratified an arms control treaty with Russia. In addition to cutting nuclear weapons and launchers, Obama said the pact will allow U.S. inspectors to “be back on the ground” in Russia. “So we’ll be able to trust but verify,” he said, quoting the late President Ronald Reagan in another in a string of bipartisan gestures of recent weeks. The president signed legislation earlier in the day
permitting openly gay members of the armed forces to serve openly, but said he does not currently favor legalizing gay marriage. “I struggle with this. I have friends, people who work for me who are in powerful, long-standing gay or lesbian unions,” he said. “I have said that at this point my baseline is a strong civil union that provides them protection and legal rights.” The president said that after midterm elections on Nov. 2, many “predicted Washington would be headed for more partisanship and more gridlock. Instead, this has been a season of progress for the American
people.” He added that the accomplishments of a postelection session of Congress demonstrate “we are not doomed to endless gridlock.” Obama spoke at a news conference a few hours after the Senate ratified the treaty he negotiated with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to reduce both nation’s nuclear arsenals, the final major action of a productive postelection Congress. In the six weeks since midterm elections he bluntly called a shellacking for his party, Obama has signed bipartisan legislation to prevent a spike in income
taxes, cut Social Security taxes for one year and extend long-term jobless benefits through the end of 2011. Obama will soon sign a measure strengthening the safety of the nation’s food supply. He also wrapped up a trade deal with South Korea. The Senate’s ratification of the arms control treaty was Obama’s top foreign policy priority of the postelection session of Congress, and a victory the administration ground out over the past few weeks by securing the votes of Republicans. The top two GOP senators voted against the pact, although it was not clear how hard they worked to prevent its ratification. Obama was flying to Hawaii later in the day, joining his wife and the couple’s two children for a year-end holiday. When he returns, it will be a few days before a new Congress convenes, with a House controlled by Republicans and a Senate with a shrunken Democratic majority. Despite Obama’s upbeat LETTERS reviews, he conceded disappointment with Congress’ failure to enact some of his other priorities. He said his biggest disappointment was failure of Congress to pass legislation giving young illegal immigrants a chance at citizenship if they go to college or serve in the military. The bill was blocked by Senate Republicans. “I am determined to get immigration reform done,” he added.
AP Photo
An elderly visitor looks out to North Korea with binoculars at the Imjingak Pavilion near the border village of Panmunjom in Paju, South Korea, Wednesday. South Korea vowed Wednesday to “punish the enemy” as hundreds of troops, fighter jets, tanks and attack helicopters prepared massive new drills near the heavily armed border a month after a deadly North Korean artillery attack.
Obama sees season of bipartisan progress Venezuela bars foreign funding for NGOs CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — A Congress dominated by Pr esident Hugo Chavez’s allies passed a law barring foreign funding for nongover nment organizations and political parties, adding to a series of measures that critics say aim to stifle dissent. The law approved by the National Assembly late Tuesday puts in jeopardy human rights groups and other organizations that get money from abroad, providing for fines up to double the amount received. It is one of many controversial laws Chavez’s government is pushing thr ough in the final weeks of an outgoing congress that had only a token opposition presence. A new legislature with a much larger opposition bloc takes office Jan. 5. Human Rights Watch condemned the “Law for the Defense of Political Sovereignty and National Self-determination,” saying it not only blocks fund ing for human rights activists but also “sever ely limits their ability to foster public dialogue with for eign experts who are critical of Chavez’s policies.” According to the language of the law, it targets groups that defend “political rights,” and establishes penalties for inviting foreigners who publicly give “opinions that offend institutions of the state” or highranking officials. Organizations can be fined for such statements, and political parties can be fined and barred from elections for five to eight years. Carlos Lusverti, who heads Amnesty International in Venezuela, said the law is vaguely worded and puts NGOs at risk. He said his branch r eceives much of its funding from chapters in other countries. “If we’re going to work only with what our local fundraising gives us ... our activities are going
to be severely reduced,” Lusverti said. Other warn that some groups could disappear altogether. Chavez has said the measures are needed to prevent foreign intervention, particularly by the U.S. gover nment and U.S.-based organizations. “How are we going to permit political parties, NGOs ... to continue to be financed with millions and millions of dollars from the Yankee empire?” Chavez asked last month. The U.S. Agency for International Development has provided millions of dollars to Venezuelan organizations for programs that it says aims to promote democracy. Other groups that have funded pr ograms in Venezuela include the National Endowment for Democracy, the International Republican Institute and the National Democratic Institute. The National Assembly also passed a law Tuesday that would allow for the suspension of lawmakers who leave their political party while in of fice. That aims to counter the kind of defections that have happened during the current legislative session, when about a dozen legislators broke with Chavez. “They’r e putting a straitjacket on the parliamentarians who are to come,” said Ismael Garcia, one of the defectors. Other r ecently approved laws impose regulations on the Internet, bar some kinds of online messages, make it easier for authorities to revoke the licenses of TV or radio stations and give the president powers to enact laws by decree for 18 months. Under one law, banks ar e declar ed to be of “public utility,” increasing the gover nment’s powers to intervene in the sector.
AP Photo
President Barack Obama gestures during a news conference in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building on the White House complex in Washington, Wednesday.
BUSINESS REVIEW
A7
Kymera Independent Physicians offer great care
Roswell Daily Record
Dr. Bagheri, family medicine, is performing a wellness check on a patient. Please call Kymera at 627-9500.
Kymeraʼs Phlebotomist Yvette is drawing lab work from a patient.
Dr. Masoud Khorsand, a Roswell resident and physician, began providing superior quality care to the community in 1998 when he opened his doors as Southeastern New Mexico Internal Medicine, Hematology and Oncology, providing cancer treatments and care for patients with blood disorders. By 2004 he had opened a cancer center in Carlsbad and in 2006 a cancer center in Hobbs. Then, in July 2008 the opportunity arose to expand into a full multispecialty medical group, resulting in a name change to Kymera Independent Physicians. Kymera provides Roswell, Carlsbad, Hobbs and Southeastern New Mexico with multidisciplinary medical care in the areas of Family and Internal Medicine, Endocrinology, Hematology, Oncology, Laboratory and Radiology services. The group employs approximately 90 staff members working with 14 providers in these communities. Kymera believes that the need for quality and timely health care is a prime concern for the residents in our community and will continue to expand our services to meet these needs. Mission Kymera Independent Physicians is dedicated to providing accessible, innovative, superior quality health care to the residents of Roswell, Carlsbad, Hobbs and the surrounding communities of Southeastern New Mexico. Kymera accepts private insurance, self pay, Medicare, Medicaid, Tricare and indigent. Vision Kymera Independent Physicians will introduce and establish a multi-specialty independent physician group that places the medical needs of the community first. The group will stabilize and enhance access to quality and timely health care in Southeastern New Mexico while providing
an environment for growth and expansion based on a financially viable physician practice. Goal Kymera Independent Physicians will strive to be a compassionate, responsive, ethical and efficient medical practice, devoted to the health care needs of the residents in our community. Primary Care Kymera Primary Care Centers are rapidly expanding to meet the medical needs of the surrounding community. This team is made up of superior physicians and mid-level practitioners with high levels of clinical expertise. The expanding group consists of Family Medicine and Internal medicine, providing timely care for pediatrics, adults, and geriatric patients. Endocrinology Kymera Independent Physicians provides much needed endocrinology care to the people of our community. Diabetes, thyroid disorders and other glandular diseases are being treated with current medical and technological advances. Our Endocrinologist places emphasis on disease awareness and education on how to manage certain endocrine disorders. Oncology (Cancer) and Hematology (Blood) At Kymera Cancer Treatment Centers, we understand that a cancer diagnosis affects all aspects of your life including family, home, and careers. Our patients appreciate the comfort and security of being able to stay home, continue to work, and be with their families during treatment. Our board certified hematologists and oncologists in Roswell, Carlsbad and Hobbs provide trusted, upto-date cancer care utilizing evidenced based treatment modalities which have been shown to improve patient
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Radiology Tech Rachael prepares a patient for an x-ray.
outcomes. They accommodate patients in a timely fashion, facilitating second opinions, and coordinating care with nationally recognized cancer facilities. Not having to travel for treatment, friendliness and warmth of the physicians and staff as well as personal attention to needs and concerns, have been significant factors in minimizing the stress and concerns of our patients. All of theses factors have combined to make Kymera Cancer Treatment Centers an outstanding option for cancer care in our community. Laboratory and Radiology The staff of Kymera's Laboratory and Radiology departments are professional and service oriented. They understand that quality and timely diagnostic information is vital to good medical care. To facilitate
patients, the registration process is minimal, convenient hours (7:30am-4:30pm Monday-Thursday and 8:00am-12:00pm Friday) are offered, and our facility is easy to access with wheelchair availability. Our Phlebotomists and Radiologist are experienced and provide test results in an efficient and timely manner. Our radiology department currently provides non-fluoroscopic xrays and bone density tests with plans to add CT Scans in the future. Kymera Independent Physicians is located at 402 West Country Club Road and the phone number is 627-9500.
Kymera Cancer Treatment Center is located at 407 West Country Club Road. The phone number is 6279110.
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A8 Thursday, December 23, 2010
WEATHER
Roswell Seven-day forecast Today
Tonight
Mainly cloudy
Patchy clouds
Friday
Sunny and cooler
Saturday
Sunday
Bright and sunny
Plenty of sunshine
Monday
Mostly cloudy
Tuesday
Low clouds
Roswell Daily Record
National Cities Wednesday
Mostly sunny and warmer
High 66°
Low 31°
56°/22°
53°/22°
58°/27°
60°/28°
55°/29°
60°/29°
VAR at 2-4 mph POP: 25%
VAR at 2-4 mph POP: 25%
VAR at 2-4 mph POP: 5%
VAR at 3-6 mph POP: 0%
NNE at 3-6 mph POP: 0%
SSE at 4-8 mph POP: 0%
SSW at 6-12 mph POP: 10%
SSW at 6-12 mph POP: 5%
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Almanac
New Mexico Weather
Roswell through 5 p.m. Wednesday
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Temperatures High/low ........................... 52°/34° Normal high/low ............... 55°/24° Record high ............... 76° in 1955 Record low ................... 8° in 1989 Humidity at noon ................... 50%
Farmington 47/30
Clayton 56/29
Raton 54/25
Precipitation 24 hours ending 5 p.m. Wed. 0.00” Month to date ....................... trace Normal month to date .......... 0.43” Year to date ....................... 15.18” Normal year to date ........... 13.18”
Santa Fe 48/28
Gallup 42/22
Tucumcari 58/28
Albuquerque 48/32
Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast
Clovis 60/29
Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading 66 0-50
51-100
Good
Moderate
Source: EPA
101-150
Ruidoso 55/36
151+
Unhealthy Unhealthy sensitive
T or C 56/31
Sun and Moon The Sun Today Fri. The Moon Today Fri. Last
Dec 27
Rise 6:59 a.m. 6:59 a.m. Rise 7:47 p.m. 8:55 p.m. New
Jan 4
First
Jan 12
Set 4:56 p.m. 4:56 p.m. Set 8:50 a.m. 9:29 a.m. Full
Jan 19
Alamogordo 63/26
Silver City 54/29
ROSWELL 66/31 Carlsbad 70/36
Hobbs 62/34
Las Cruces 60/32
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2010
Regional Cities Today Fri. 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
63/26/pc 48/32/sh 42/14/sh 71/38/c 70/36/pc 42/17/sf 56/29/c 52/23/c 60/29/pc 60/26/sh 47/31/sh 47/30/sh 42/22/sh 62/34/pc 60/32/sh 48/25/c 44/23/sh 55/25/sh 69/34/pc 64/28/pc 44/18/sh 54/25/c 40/11/sh 66/31/c 55/36/c 48/28/sh 54/29/sh 56/31/sh 58/28/pc 49/25/sh
55/24/s 51/30/s 43/11/s 58/28/s 59/26/s 45/5/s 42/22/s 48/7/s 49/21/s 58/26/s 50/29/s 47/21/s 51/14/s 56/24/s 57/33/s 44/19/s 46/15/s 54/31/s 58/25/s 53/21/s 49/15/s 48/17/s 40/7/s 56/22/s 51/29/s 49/25/s 56/28/s 55/28/s 52/20/pc 50/21/s
W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice
Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Boston Charlotte Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit El Paso Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Lubbock
Today
Fri.
Today
Fri.
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
10/-8/s 50/32/s 38/24/s 38/24/sn 47/24/s 32/22/c 32/22/sf 48/43/c 43/22/sn 32/18/pc 62/35/pc 80/70/pc 67/55/c 36/21/c 38/25/c 57/42/pc 62/48/pc 62/35/pc
9/-3/pc 54/35/pc 38/24/pc 36/24/pc 51/36/pc 31/19/sf 28/22/c 48/37/r 44/22/s 29/20/c 58/31/s 79/69/c 70/39/sh 34/19/c 34/20/sn 59/42/pc 66/50/s 46/23/s
74/59/s 60/40/pc 26/7/c 60/42/pc 37/28/pc 30/21/c 66/45/s 39/25/pc 63/46/pc 32/21/sf 45/35/r 44/26/s 36/27/pc 46/22/pc 58/48/pc 46/38/r 62/36/s 38/25/s
73/58/pc 57/24/s 21/4/c 63/50/pc 37/28/pc 29/15/sn 70/46/pc 38/25/pc 68/46/s 31/22/sf 43/37/r 47/35/pc 34/25/sn 42/22/pc 61/51/s 48/41/r 65/40/s 39/25/pc
U.S. Extremes
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
(For the 48 contiguous states)
State Extremes
High: 85°...............Edinburg, Texas Low: -20° .................. Poplar, Mont.
High: 70°.....................Alamogordo Low: 28°............................. Clayton
National Cities Seattle 46/38 Minneapolis 26/7
Billings 32/20
New York 37/28 San Francisco 55/46
Chicago 32/22
Denver 43/22
Detroit 32/18 Washington 38/25
Kansas City 38/25 Los Angeles 62/48 Atlanta 50/32
El Paso 62/35 Houston 67/55
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Miami 74/59
Fronts Cold
-10s
Warm
-0s
0s
Precipitation Stationary
10s
20s
Showers T-storms
30s
40s
50s
Rain
60s
Flurries
70s
80s
Snow
More than half age 25-29 only have cell phones
WASHINGTON (AP) — In a first for any age group, more than half of Americans age 25-29 live in households with cell phones but no traditional landline telephones. A report on phone use by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also found that the younger children are, the likelier they are to live in homes that only have wireless phones. That suggests that younger parents are showing increasing comfort relying only on cell phones even as they adjust from being single to a more settled family lifestyle, according to one of the report’s authors. Taken together, the figures released Tuesday provide the latest evidence of how young people are leading the nation’s evolution away from landline phones. “You could say that among that age group, wireless only is the new norm,” said Stephen Blumberg, a senior scientist at CDC and an author of the survey. The shift toward cell phones and away from
“You could say that among that age group, wireless only is the new norm,” said Stephen Blumberg, a senior scientist at CDC and an author of the survey.
landlines is having a wide impact, changing not only how people communicate but the telecommunications industry and the work of pollsters and others who collect data. The survey showed that overall, 27 percent of U.S. households had only cell phones in the first half of this year, up 2 percentage points since the last half of 2009. That number has been growing rapidly — in the first six months of 2007, just 14 percent of households relied only on wireless service, roughly half of current levels. Among 25- to 29-year olds, 51 percent lived in homes with only cell phone service in the first half of 2010. That was up 2 percentage points from the previous six-month period. For both age groups bracketing them — 18- to 24-year olds, and 30- to
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34-year -olds — 4 in 10 lived in cell-only households. After age 35, the likelihood that people live in homes with only wireless service falls off, with only 1 in 20 people age 65 and up living in homes that rely solely on cell phones. The study also found that among children under age 3, nearly 4 in 10 live in wireless-only households. That figure drops to about a third of children age 3 to 5, and less among older children. Blumberg said this is significant because it counters the perception — backed by previous data — that cell phone-only households are likelier to be comprised of young, unattached people. The latest numbers suggest that as young people used to living only with cell phones have families, they’re keeping their wireless-only habits.
“It’s a sign that wirelessonly is no longer strictly tied to a lifestyle of being young and restless,” Blumberg said. In addition to cell-only households, the survey found another 16 percent of households have landlines, yet get all or nearly all their calls on their cell phones. Their landlines are usually hooked into computers. Combined with wirelessonly homes, this means that to call 43 percent of American households, the only practical way to do it is to dial their cell phones. The study also found that: —The households likeli-
est to rely only on wireless phones consist of adults who are poor, renters, Hispanics or who live with unrelated housemates. Men were slightly more likely than women to live in homes with only cell phones. —Only 13 percent of households have landlines and no cell phones — down from 24 percent in early 2007. —Though people age 1829 are the heaviest cell phone users, they comprise only 40 percent of all wireless-only adults. That’s because young adults make up only about one-fifth of the total adult population. —Only 16 percent of
Ice
90s 100s 110s
Northeasterners live in cell phone-only homes, the lowest of any region. The highest frequency of wirelessonly households is in the South, where 29 percent live that way. —About 2 percent of households have no phone service at all, a figure that has changed little in recent years. The data for the study was compiled in the National Health Interview Survey, conducted by CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics. It is based on interviews with members of 17,619 households conducted from January through June this year.
Thursday, December 23, 2010
LOCAL MONDAY DECEMBER 27 HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL Goddard Holiday Classic Varsity Bracket 1 p.m. • Carlsbad vs. Los Alamos 3 p.m. • Robertson vs. Ruidoso 5 p.m. • Roswell vs. Gadsden 7 p.m. • Goddard vs. Santa Fe Junior Varsity Bracket 1 p.m. • Dexter vs. Grady 3 p.m. • Carlsbad JV vs. Gateway Chr. 5 p.m. • Goddard JV vs. Ruidoso JV 7 p.m.
LOCAL BRIEFS BASEBALL CLINIC SET FOR JAN. 8-9
The New Mexico School of Baseball will hold a pitching and catching clinic on Jan. 8-9 at Canutillo High School in El Paso. The camp for 9- to 13year-olds will run from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and the camp for 14to 18-year-olds will run from 2-4 p.m. Florida Marlins scout Sam Chavez and Colorado Rockies scout Darrell Carrillo will serve as instructors for the camp. The cost is $55 for both days or $35 for one day. The camp is limited to 30 players per age group. For more information, call 505-463-2122 or e-mail ddc22@msn.com.
SPORTS Roswell Daily Record
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — After a miserable start to the season in which he took shots at his players and himself, Larry Brown is out as coach of the Charlotte Bobcats in another messy exit in his well-traveled career. Former Charlotte Hornets coach Paul Silas, who has been out of the league since 2005, will direct the team for the rest of the season on an interim basis. Owner Michael Jordan announced Brown’s departure in a news release Wednesday, a day after the Bobcats were outscored 3112 in the fourth quarter in their fourth straight loss. “I met with Coach Brown two weeks ago about the team’s performance and what we could do to improve it,” Jordan said. “We met again this morning after practice. The team has clearly not lived up to either of our expectations and we both agreed that a change
was necessary.” The 70-year-old Brown, a Hall of Fame coach who was in the third season of his 13th professional and college head coaching job, had been upset with the makeup and effort of his team for weeks. The Bobcats (9-19) had lost three games by 31 or more points in 10 days before Tuesday’s fourthquarter meltdown against Oklahoma City. Brown, whose contract runs through the end of the 2011-12 season, didn’t immediately return a message on his cell phone seeking comment. But his agent, Joe Glass, said Brown will be back on the bench soon. “Larry is going to coach again,” Glass said. “He’s got a plenty of strength and energy.” Glass and Bobcats general manager Rod Higgins declined to discuss details of any buyout or if Brown will See BROWN, Page B2
AP Photo
Charlotte coach Larry Brown yells to his players in the fourth quarter of a loss to Atlanta, Friday. On Wednesday, Bobcats owner Michael Jordan announced that Brown was out and Paul Silas was in as the coach of Charlotte.
Rex says vids are personal matter
Newton garners another top award
NATIONAL OSU LOOKING INTO POTENTIAL NCAA VIOLATIONS
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Ohio State is investigating allegations that several football players traded autographs for tattoos, according to multiple reports. WBNS-TV and The Columbus Dispatch, both citing unidentified sources, reported on their websites Wednesday night that the school was looking into the possible NCAA violations just two weeks before the Buckeyes face Arkansas in the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 4. Quarterback Terrelle Pryor, not mentioned in either report, quickly responded on Twitter. “I paid for my tattoos. GoBucks,” he posted. The Associated Press left telephone, text and e-mail messages seeking comment from coach Jim Tressel, athletic director Gene Smith, the schoolʼs compliance director and other university officials. Asked by the AP to respond to the allegations, Ohio State associate athletic director Dan Wallenberg said in an e-mail, “No information to share.”
SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS 1935 — Paul Hornung is born in Louisville, Ky. The "Golden Boy" goes on to win the 1956 Heisman Trophy and the 1961 NFL MVP and is inducted into both the College Football and Professional Football halls of fame. 1962 — Tommy Brooker kicks a 25-yard field goal 17:54 into overtime, giving the Dallas Texans a 20-17 victory over Houston for the AFL title.
ON THIS DAY IN...
AP Photo
In this Oct. 16 file photo, Auburn quarterback Cameron Newton (2) dives in for a 1-yard TD run as Arkansas' Isaac Madison (6) looks on. The Heisman Trophy-winner added AP Player of the Year to his collection of honors, Wednesday.
Boise State triumphs
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Doug Martin shook Boise State out of its brief postseason funk with an 84-yard touchdown run in the second quarter, and the 10thranked Broncos dominated the rest of the way Wednesday night to beat No. 20 Utah 26-3 in the MAACO Bowl. Boise State had turned the ball over three times and was trailing 3-0 when Martin went up the middle and outran Utah defenders down the left side to give the Broncos a much-needed spark. From there, Boise State’s defense shut the
Utes out and Kellen Moore threw two touchdown passes as the Broncos cruised to an easy win. “It was a startup for our team,” Martin said. “A momentum changer.” The victory was small consolation for Boise State, which missed out on a possible Rose Bowl appearance on two missed field goals last month against Nevada. But the dominating win against a team that was at one time ranked No. 6 in the country was a reminder why the Broncos rode high in the See BRONCOS, Page B2
FLORHAM PARK, N.J. (AP) — New York Jets coach Rex Ryan says it’s a “personal matter” and declined to talk about a “foot-fetish” report posted by the sports website Deadspin that show four videos of a woman who bears a close resemblance to Ryan’s wife, Michelle. The videos show a woman displaying her toes to an off-screen cameraman who, in one video, sounds a lot like the coach. The two are having See PERSONAL, Page B2
AP Photo
Andrew Gallo reacts as he is sentenced to 51 years in prison in Santa Ana, Calif., Wednesday. At right is his attorney, Jacqueline Goodman.
Man who killed Adenhart gets 51 to life
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B
Larry Brown out as Bobcats coach Section
AP Photo
Boise State wide receiver Tyler Shoemaker catches a touchdown pass against Utah during the MAACO Bowl, Wednesday.
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — A construction worker who killed a promising rookie pitcher for the Los Angeles Angels and two other people in a horrific drunken driving crash said Wednesday he had all but ended his own life that night by getting behind the wheel after drinking. Andrew Gallo, 24, acknowledged his deadly mistake to the grieving relatives of his victims and said he expected to spend the rest of his life behind bars before a judge sentenced him to 51 years to life in prison. “I know whatever I say will not change anything or the way you think or feel about me,” said Gallo, who faced the judge
because he was not permitted to look at the courtroom audience. “You’re right. I am a horrible person, a drunk driver who took your beautiful kids away,” he said. Gallo was convicted in September of three counts of second-degree murder and single counts of drunken driving, hit-andrun driving, and driving under the influence of alcohol and causing great bodily injury. Judge Richard F. Toohey gave Gallo 15 years to life on each of the murder counts and six additional years for the other See GALLO, Page B2
B2 Thursday, December 23, 2010 Personal Continued from Page B1
an intimate chat about her feet. During his news conference Wednesday, R yan declined several times to discuss the situation. “I understand I’m going to get asked this question frontways, sideways, backways, and all this, but it is a personal matter,” he said. Asked if the NFL might
Brown
Continued from Page B1
be paid through the end of his original four-year contract. Brown leaves with an 88-108 mark with the Bobcats. His 1,327 victories in the ABA and NBA are nine shy of supplanting Don Nelson for the most all-time. “This was a difficult decision for both of us, but one that needed to be made,” Jordan said. “I want to thank Larry for everything he has done for our team. He has played a key role in this organization’s development including coaching us to our first-ever playoff appearance last season.” Higgins said they didn’t contact the 67-year-old Silas until late Wednesday afternoon and “both sides were OK” with Silas getting an interim label. “It allows us an opportunity to see how Paul does and see how he can get our team to a certain level,” Higgins said. “Paul has been out of it for a while.” Silas was a popular figure when he coached the Hornets through their move to New Orleans in
Basketball
National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Boston . . . . . . . . . . . .23 4 .852 — New York . . . . . . . . . .17 12 .586 7 Philadelphia . . . . . . . .11 18 .379 13 Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . .10 19 .345 14 New Jersey . . . . . . . . .9 21 .300 15 1⁄2 Southeast Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 9 .700 — Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . .19 12 .613 2 1⁄2 Orlando . . . . . . . . . . .16 12 .571 4 Charlotte . . . . . . . . . . .9 19 .321 11 Washington . . . . . . . . .7 20 .259 12 1⁄2 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Chicago . . . . . . . . . . .18 9 .667 — Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . .13 14 .481 5 Milwaukee . . . . . . . . .11 16 .407 7 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . .10 19 .345 9 Cleveland . . . . . . . . . .8 21 .276 11 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L San Antonio . . . . . . . .25 3 Dallas . . . . . . . . . . . . .23 5 New Orleans . . . . . . .17 12 Houston . . . . . . . . . . .13 15 Memphis . . . . . . . . . .12 17 Northwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21 9 Oklahoma City . . . . . .20 10 Denver . . . . . . . . . . . .16 11 Portland . . . . . . . . . . .15 14 Minnesota . . . . . . . . . .6 24 Pacific Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L L.A. Lakers . . . . . . . .21 8 Phoenix . . . . . . . . . . .13 14 Golden State . . . . . . .10 18 L.A. Clippers . . . . . . . .8 21 Sacramento . . . . . . . .5 21
Pct GB .893 — .821 2 1 .586 8 ⁄2 .464 12 .414 13 1⁄2 Pct GB .700 — .667 1 1 .593 3 ⁄2 1 .517 5 ⁄2 .200 15
Pct GB .724 — .481 7 1 .357 10 ⁄2 .276 13 .192 14 1⁄2
Tuesday’s Games Oklahoma City 99, Charlotte 81 Dallas 105, Orlando 99 Chicago 121, Philadelphia 76 New Jersey 101, Memphis 94 Golden State 117, Sacramento 109, OT Milwaukee 98, L.A. Lakers 79 Wednesday’s Games Atlanta 98, Cleveland 84 Detroit 115, Toronto 93 Chicago 87, Washington 80 Boston 84, Philadelphia 80 New York 112, Oklahoma City 98 Utah 112, Minnesota 107 New Orleans 105, New Jersey 91 San Antonio 109, Denver 103 Houston at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m. Thursday’s Games San Antonio at Orlando, 6 p.m. Milwaukee at Sacramento, 8 p.m. Miami at Phoenix, 8:30 p.m. Friday’s Games
TV SPORTSWATCH
TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press All times Mountain Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Thursday, Dec. 23 COLLEGE FOOTBALL 6 p.m. ESPN — Poinsettia Bowl, Navy at San Diego St. GOLF 1 p.m. TGC — Japan Golf Tour, Dunlop Phoenix, third round, at Miyazaki, Japan (same-day tape) MENʼS COLLEGE
look into the report, spokesman Greg Aiello said the league also considered it a personal matter. Jets general manager Mike Tannenbaum said in a brief statement that he and owner Woody Johnson met with R yan and the coach has their “full support.” Like everyone else, they considered it a personal matter. This isn’t the first time the Jets have turned up on Deadspin this season. 2002. He later was LeBron James’ first coach in Cleveland and has a home in the Charlotte area. Silas, who didn’t immediately return phone messages seeking comment, was busy working to put together a staff before Thursday’s practice. The Bobcats are off until Monday when they host Detroit. He’ll take over a team that’s in disarray, but yet sat only 2 1/2 games out of the final playoff spot in the Eastern Conference before Wednesday’s games. “Could I be naive? Maybe, but I firmly believe that this team has an opportunity to get back on track,” Higgins said. It won’t be with Brown, who has followed a familiar script in a career that includes quick turnarounds and then usually ugly divorces. The only coach to win NBA and NCAA titles had been out of coaching for two years following his dismissal after going 2359 in his only season in New York in 2005-06 when Jordan hired him to replace Sam Vincent in 2008. No games scheduled Saturday’s Games Chicago at New York, 10 a.m. Boston at Orlando, 12:30 p.m. Miami at L.A. Lakers, 3 p.m. Denver at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Portland at Golden State, 8:30 p.m.
Football
National Football League At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain AMERICAN CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct x-New England .12 2 0 .857 N.Y. Jets . . . . . .10 4 0 .714 Miami . . . . . . . . .7 7 0 .500 Buffalo . . . . . . . . .4 10 0 .286 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct Indianapolis . . . . .8 6 0 .571 Jacksonville . . . .8 6 0 .571 Tennessee . . . . .6 8 0 .429 Houston . . . . . . .5 9 0 .357 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct x-Pittsburgh . . . .10 4 0 .714 Baltimore . . . . . .10 4 0 .714 Cleveland . . . . . .5 9 0 .357 Cincinnati . . . . . .3 11 0 .214 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct Kansas City . . . .9 5 0 .643 San Diego . . . . . .8 6 0 .571 Oakland . . . . . . .7 7 0 .500 Denver . . . . . . . .3 11 0 .214
PF 446 295 239 273
PF 381 319 322 333
PF 307 324 252 281 PF 322 388 353 292
PA 303 259 261 353
PA 342 365 282 386
PA 220 253 271 362 PA 281 260 330 415
NATIONAL CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF PA Philadelphia . . . .10 4 0 .714 412 339 N.Y. Giants . . . . .9 5 0 .643 360 288 Washington . . . . .5 9 0 .357 268 343 Dallas . . . . . . . . .5 9 0 .357 354 396 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF PA x-Atlanta . . . . . . .12 2 0 .857 369 261 New Orleans . . .10 4 0 .714 354 270 Tampa Bay . . . . .8 6 0 .571 280 290 Carolina . . . . . . .2 12 0 .143 183 350 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF PA y-Chicago . . . . . .10 4 0 .714 293 242 Green Bay . . . . .8 6 0 .571 333 220 Minnesota . . . . . .5 9 0 .357 244 314 Detroit . . . . . . . . .4 10 0 .286 308 329 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF PA St. Louis . . . . . . .6 8 0 .429 258 295 Seattle . . . . . . . . .6 8 0 .429 279 363 San Francisco . . .5 9 0 .357 250 314 Arizona . . . . . . . .4 10 0 .286 255 370 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division
Thursday’s Game San Diego 34, San Francisco 7 Sunday’s Games Kansas City 27, St. Louis 13 Dallas 33, Washington 30 Tennessee 31, Houston 17
BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN2 — Georgetown at Memphis 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Diamond Head Classic, semifinal, teams TBD, at Honolulu NBA BASKETBALL 6:15 p.m. TNT — San Antonio at Orlando 8:30 p.m. TNT — Miami at Phoenix NFL FOOTBALL 6 p.m. NFL — Carolina at Pittsburgh
SPORTS
In October, the site reported that Minnesota Vikings quarterback Brett Favre sent racy text messages and photos to a former game hostess while he was the Jets’ quarterback in 2008. The NFL is still investigating the allegations. According to Deadspin, the woman in the video goes by the handle “ihaveprettyfeet.” A still photograph from one of the video clips was splashed across the front of the New York Daily
Gallo
Continued from Page B1
crimes. Prosecutors said Gallo, who was on parole for a felony DUI conviction, had a blood-alcohol level nearly three times the legal limit when he blew through a red light at 65 mph on April 9, 2009, and T -boned the car carrying pitcher Nick Adenhart and three friends. Also killed were 20year-old Courtney Stewart and 25-year -old Henry Pearson. A fourth passenger, Jon Wilhite had his spine separated from his skull by the impact and survived. “Enjoy your life in that cage in which you belong, because you are no longer here on Earth,” Wilhite said in a letter to Gallo that was read aloud in court. “I can assure you are headed to a much darker place.” Scores of people attended the hearing, including relatives of the victims who clutched giant, smiling photos of their loved ones. They pleaded with Toohey to sentence Gallo to life.
News and showed a woman with her feet hanging out of an SUV. She is approached by someone who is not on camera and he tells her that she has “really beautiful feet.” The other videos show the woman sitting on a couch, having a drink, reading a book and sitting on a porch and rubbing her feet. “My wife’s beautiful,” R yan said when asked about his wife. “We’ve been married for 23 years. She’s awesome.” “I am hollow inside. I will never be the same,” said Stewart’s mother, Carrie Stewart-Dixon. “I pray to God every day to bring her back.” Adenhart’s family sent a letter saying his parents hoped the sentence would bring some peace to their dead son, but justice could never be achieved. “There is no balancing of the scales. There is no justice so long as Mr. Gallo is drawing breath,” the letter said. Prosecutors said Gallo drank beer and shots at three different bars with his stepbrother before driving off in the family minivan. Jurors saw a videotaped interview in which he told police he didn’t remember driving that night and apologized to the victims’ families. Defense attor ney Jacqueline Goodman had asked that Gallo be given just one sentence of 15 years to life, saying he never intended to hurt anybody. “I don’t think he should be treated like a cold-blooded killer,” she said after the hearing. “I don’t think he’s irredeemable.”
SCOREBOARD
Carolina 19, Arizona 12 Philadelphia 38, N.Y. Giants 31 Detroit 23, Tampa Bay 20, OT Cincinnati 19, Cleveland 17 Buffalo 17, Miami 14 Indianapolis 34, Jacksonville 24 Baltimore 30, New Orleans 24 Atlanta 34, Seattle 18 Oakland 39, Denver 23 N.Y. Jets 22, Pittsburgh 17 New England 31, Green Bay 27 Monday’s Game Chicago 40, Minnesota 14 Thursday, Dec. 23 Carolina at Pittsburgh, 6:20 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 25 Dallas at Arizona, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 26 Tennessee at Kansas City, 11 a.m. San Francisco at St. Louis, 11 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Chicago, 11 a.m. Baltimore at Cleveland, 11 a.m. New England at Buffalo, 11 a.m. Detroit at Miami, 11 a.m. Washington at Jacksonville, 11 a.m. Indianapolis at Oakland, 2:05 p.m. Houston at Denver, 2:05 p.m. San Diego at Cincinnati, 2:05 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Green Bay, 2:15 p.m. Seattle at Tampa Bay, 2:15 p.m. Minnesota at Philadelphia, 6:20 p.m. Monday, Dec. 27 New Orleans at Atlanta, 6:30 p.m. ————— Bowl Glance By The Associated Press Subject to Change All Times Mountain Saturday, Dec. 18 New Mexico Bowl At Albuquerque BYU 52, UTEP 24 Humanitarian Bowl At Boise, Idaho Northern Illinois 40, Fresno State 14 New Orleans Bowl Troy 48, Ohio 14 Tuesday, Dec. 21 Beef ’O’ Brady’s Bowl At St. Petersburg, Fla. Louisville 31, Southern Mississippi 28 Wednesday, Dec. 22 MAACO Bowl At Las Vegas Boise State 26, Utah 3 Thursday, Dec. 23 Poinsettia Bowl At San Diego San Diego State (8-4) vs. Navy (9-3), 6 p.m. (ESPN) Friday, Dec. 24 Hawaii Bowl At Honolulu Hawaii (10-3) vs. Tulsa (9-3), 6 p.m. (ESPN) Sunday, Dec. 26 Little Caesars Pizza Bowl At Detroit Toledo (8-4) vs. Florida International (6-6), 6:30 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Dec. 27 Independence Bowl At Shreveport, La. Georgia Tech (6-6) vs. Air Force (8-4), 3 p.m. (ESPN2) Tuesday, Dec. 28 Champs Sports Bowl At Orlando, Fla. North Carolina State (8-4) vs. West Virginia (9-3), 3:30 p.m. (ESPN) Insight Bowl At Tempe, Ariz. Missouri (10-2) vs. Iowa (7-5), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Wednesday, Dec. 29 Military Bowl At Washington East Carolina (6-6) vs. Maryland (8-4), 12:30 p.m. (ESPN) Texas Bowl At Houston Baylor (7-5) vs. Illinois (6-6), 4 p.m. (ESPN) Alamo Bowl At San Antonio Arizona (7-5) vs. Oklahoma State (10-2), 7:15 p.m. (ESPN) Thursday, Dec. 30 Armed Forces Bowl
At Dallas SMU (7-6) vs. Army (6-6), 10 a.m. (ESPN) Pinstripe Bowl At Bronx, N.Y. Syracuse (7-5) vs. Kansas State (7-5), 1:30 p.m. (ESPN) Music City Bowl At Nashville, Tenn. North Carolina (7-5) vs. Tennessee (6-6), 4:40 p.m. (ESPN) Holiday Bowl At San Diego Nebraska (10-3) vs. Washington (6-6), 8 p.m. (ESPN) Friday, Dec. 31 Meineke Bowl At Charlotte, N.C. Clemson (6-6) vs. South Florida (7-5), 10 a.m. (ESPN) Sun Bowl At El Paso, Texas Notre Dame (7-5) vs. Miami (7-5), Noon (CBS) Liberty Bowl At Memphis, Tenn. Georgia (6-6) vs. UCF (10-3), 1:30 p.m. (ESPN) Chick-fil-A Bowl At Atlanta South Carolina (9-4) vs. Florida State (9-4), 5:30 p.m. (ESPN) Saturday, Jan. 1 TicketCity Bowl At Dallas Northwestern (7-5) vs. Texas Tech (7-5), 10 a.m. (ESPNU) Capital One Bowl At Orlando, Fla. Michigan State (11-1) vs. Alabama (9-3), 11 a.m. (ESPN) Outback Bowl At Tampa, Fla. Florida (7-5) vs. Penn State (7-5), 11 a.m. (ABC) Gator Bowl At Jacksonville, Fla. Michigan (7-5) vs. Mississippi State (8-4), 11:30 a.m. (ESPN2) Rose Bowl At Pasadena, Calif. TCU (12-0) vs. Wisconsin (11-1), 3 p.m. (ESPN) Fiesta Bowl At Glendale, Ariz. Connecticut (8-4) vs. Oklahoma (11-2), 6:30 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Jan. 3 Orange Bowl At Miami Stanford (11-1) vs. Virginia Tech (11-2), 6:30 p.m. (ESPN) Tuesday, Jan. 4 Sugar Bowl At New Orleans Ohio State (11-1) vs. Arkansas (10-2), 6:30 p.m. (ESPN) Thursday, Jan. 6 GoDaddy.com Bowl At Mobile, Ala. Miami (Ohio) (9-4) vs. Middle Tennessee (66), 6 p.m. (ESPN) Friday, Jan. 7 Cotton Bowl At Arlington, Texas Texas A&M (9-3) vs. LSU (10-2), 6 p.m. (FOX) Saturday, Jan. 8 BBVA Compass Bowl At Birmingham, Ala. Pittsburgh (7-5) vs. Kentucky (6-6), 10 a.m. (ESPN) Sunday, Jan. 9 Fight Hunger Bowl At San Francisco Boston College (7-5) vs. Nevada (12-1), 7 p.m. (ESPN) Monday, Jan. 10 BCS National Championship At Glendale, Ariz. Auburn (13-0) vs. Oregon (12-0), 6:30 p.m. (ESPN) ————— NCAA Football Championship Subdivision Playoff Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain First Round
Roswell Daily Record A few weeks ago, before the Jets played New England, Ryan compared his wife to Giselle Bundchen, who is married to Patriots quarterback Tom Brady. R yan said he was “also married to a supermodel.” “I don’t want to say that I probably shouldn’t have done that,” Ryan said. While the Jets have a big game coming up against the Bears in which they can clinch a postseason berth if they win, the focus again is on the team’s offfield issues.
Broncos
Continued from Page B1
polls before suffering their only loss in two years. “Boise State is a heck of a football team,” Utah coach Kyle Whittingham said. “When you play a team the caliber of Boise State you have to play better than we did tonight.” Martin’s run came after a mistake-prone first quarter in which Boise State kept giving the ball away and making costly errors. Utah wasn’t much better, and when the Broncos began finding their stride the game quickly turned one-sided. Moore, who fumbled on the third play of the game and threw an interception later in the first quarter, rebounded with a 25-yard touchdown pass to Tyler Shoemaker in the closing seconds of the first half to give Boise State a 16-3 lead. He added another 18-yard TD pass to Austin Pettis in the third quarter in a game that was more lopsided than the final score. Boise State (12-1), which had been ranked as high as No. 2 in The Saturday, Nov. 27 Western Illinois 17, Coastal Carolina 10 Lehigh 14, Northern Iowa 7 Georgia Southern 41, South Carolina State 16 North Dakota State 43, Robert Morris 17 Second Round Saturday, Dec. 4 Appalachian State 42, Western Illinois 14 Wofford 17, Jacksonville State 14 Delaware 42, Lehigh 20 New Hampshire 45, Bethune-Cookman 20 Georgia Southern 31, William & Mary 15 North Dakota State 42, Montana State 17 Villanova 54, Stephen F. Austin 24 Eastern Washington 37, Southeast Missouri State 17 Quarterfinals Friday, Dec. 10 Delaware 16, New Hampshire 3 Saturday, Dec. 11 Villanova 42, Appalachian State 24 Georgia Southern 23, Wofford 20 Eastern Washington 38, North Dakota State 31, OT Semifinals Friday, Dec. 17 Eastern Washington 41, Villanova 31 Saturday, Dec. 18 Delaware 27, Georgia Southern 10 Championship Friday, Jan. 7 At Pizza Hut Park Frisco, Texas Eastern Washington (12-2) vs. Delaware (12-2), 5 p.m.
Golf
Woods has cortisone shot in right ankle
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — Tiger Woods had a cortisone shot in his right ankle 10 days ago to relieve lingering soreness. By Tuesday, he was back to work hitting balls and filming a commercial. Mark Steinberg, his agent at IMG, said Woods had intended all along to have the shot after the Chevron World Challenge, which ended Dec. 5. Woods has nearly two months off before his next tournament at Torrey Pines. “This was always the plan,” Steinberg said. “He’s looking at 2011 as a big year for him.” At this year’s Masters, Woods revealed he ruptured the Achilles’ tendon in his right leg in December 2008 while recovering from knee surgery. Steinberg says it still causes soreness, prompting the cortisone shot. Steinberg spoke in response to Internet chatter that Woods had torn his Achilles while skiing. He said Woods has not skied in more than three years. Woods posted two tweets Tuesday of photos from his EA Sports shoot at Isleworth, referring to one as a “tough day at the office.” Woods is coming off the first winless season of his career, although he showed strong signs of turning his game around at the Chevron World Challenge. He lost a four-shot lead on the final day and was beaten by U.S. Open champion Graeme McDowell in a playoff.
Transactions
Wednesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League BOSTON RED SOX—Named Arnie Beyeler manager of Pawtucket (IL), Kevin Boles manager of Portland (EL), Bruce Crabbe manager, Kevin Walker pitching coach and Alex Ochoa hitting coach for Salem (Carolina), Dick Such pitching coach at Greenville (SAL), Carlos Febles manager and Paul Abbott pitching coach for Lowell (N.Y.-Penn), George Lombard manager and Dave Tomlin pitching coach for Gulf Coast Red Sox. KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Assigned INF Joaquin Arias and INF Lance Zawadzki outright to Omaha (AAA). TAMPA BAY RAYS—Named Dave Eiland as a special assistant. National League HOUSTON ASTROS—Agreed to terms with LHP Gustavo Chacin on a minor-league contract. MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Agreed to terms
“We’re going to be ready to play Chicago,” R yan said. “I am ready. This is my job and I’m focused on the job at hand.” Most players declined comment on the foot-fetish report, but star cor nerback Darrelle Revis supported his coach. “Foot fetish? Whatever,” Revis said. “I mean, that’s his wife. At the end of the day, that’s his wife and he can do whatever he wants with his wife. It’s not like he’s out committing adultery or anything negative.” Associated Press Top 25 poll this year and once seemed headed for a New Year’s Day bowl, came into the game a 17-point favorite but early on looked little like the team that was everyone’s favorite BCS buster. That changed with Martin’s run, with the Broncos taking control on both sides of the ball against a team that was a BCS team itself two years ago and had won nine straight bowl games. Moore, who finished fourth in Heisman voting earlier this month, finished with impressive numbers despite his rocky start. He completed 28 of 38 passes, including 12 to Pettis, who was playing the final game of a college career in which his team won 51 of 53 games. The game was the last for Utah (10-3) before going into the Pac-12 Conference, where the Utes can play for an automatic big bowl bid. Boise State is also switching conferences, heading to the Mountain West where the Broncos still will have to impress both voters and computers to get a Bowl Championship Series bid. with RHP Sean Green and INF Craig Counsell on one-year contracts. PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Designated RHP Joe Martinez for assignment. Named Dean Treanor manager of Indianapolis (IL), P.J. Forbes manager of Altoona (EL), Carlos Garcia of Bradenton (FSL), Gary Robinson manager of West Virginia (SAL), Dave Turgeon manager and Justin Meccage pitching coach for State College (NY-Penn), Brad Fischer advisor-player development, Frank Kremblas coordinator of instruction, Jeff Livesey hitting coordinator, Gary Green infield coordinator, Luis Dorante, Latin America field coordinator and Scott Mitchell assistant pitching coordinator. SAN DIEGO PADRES—Named John Abbamondi vice president of strategy and business analysis. WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Assigned LHP Matt Chico outright to Syracuse (IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CHARLOTTE BOBCATS—Announced the resignation of coach Larry Brown. LOS ANGELES CLIPPERS—Signed F Ike Diogu. FOOTBALL National Football League ARIZONA CARDINALS—Placed WR Early Doucet on injured reserve. Signed LB Curtis Gatewood from the practice squad. BUFFALO BILLS—Signed DB Brett Johnson to the practice squad. CAROLINA PANTHERS—Signed FB Rashawn Jackson from the practice squad. CINCINNATI BENGALS—Claimed TE Garrett Mills off waivers from Philadelphia. CLEVELAND BROWNS—Placed TE Evan Moore on injured reserve. DENVER BRONCOS—Placed FB Spencer Larsen on injured reserve. Signed G Stanley Daniels. GREEN BAY PACKERS—Signed G Adrian Battles and S Michael Greco to practice squad. Placed WR Terrance Smith on practice squad-injured reserve. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS—Placed WR Austin Collie on injured reserve. MINNESOTA VIKINGS—Signed QB Rhett Bomar from the New York Giants practice squad. Waived QB R.J. Archer. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS—Signed DL Landon Cohen. Released DL Louis Leonard. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—Signed LB Michael Johnson from the Kansas City the practice squad. Signed LB Vuna Tuihalamaka to the practice squad. Placed DE Derek Walker on practice squad-injured reserve. ST. LOUIS RAMS—Promoted LB Curtis Johnson from the practice squad. Signed WR Joe West to practice squad. WASHINGTON REDSKINS—Placed DL Ma’ake Kemoeatu and DL Phillip Daniels on injured reserve. Signed LB Rob Jackson from the practice squad. Signed DL Darrion Scott. Signed DL Rashaad Duncan and OT Xavier Fulton to the practice squad. Released OT Jacob Bender from the practice squad. HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS—Reassigned LW Josh Green to Syracuse (AHL). NEW YORK ISLANDERS—Recalled F Josh Bailey from Bridgeport (AHL). NEW YORK RANGERS—Recalled F Mats Zuccarello from Connecticut (AHL). PHOENIX COYOTES—Recalled LW Mikkel Boedker from San Antonio (AHL). Placed LW Taylor Pyatt on injured reserve. SOCCER Major League Soccer D.C. UNITED—Signed MF Andy Najar to a multiyear contract. PHILADELPHIA UNION—Signed MF Zach Pfeffer. Women’s Professional Soccer SKY BLUE FC—Signed M Therese Sjogran. COLLEGE SKYLINE CONFERENCE—Named Linda Bruno commissioner. CARTHAGE—Named Sarah Johnson women’s soccer coach. GREENSBORO—Announced the addition of women’s golf and men’s swimming programs, beginning with the 2011-12 academic year. JACKSONVILLE STATE—Named Chris Boone defensive coordinator. MIAMI—Named Brennan Carroll tight ends coach and national recruiting coordinator. NORTH CAROLINA STATE—Named Kelly Findley men’s soccer coach. UNLV—Named Cindy Fredrick volleyball coach.
NATION/OBITUARY
B3
Congress passes aid package for 9/11 responders Roswell Daily Record
Thursday, December 23, 2010
WASHINGTON (AP) — After a last-minute compromise, Congress passed legislation Wednesday to provide up to $4.2 billion in new aid to survivors of the September 2001 terrorism attack on the World Trade Center and responders who became ill working in its ruins. The House passed the bill on a 206-60 vote Wednesday about two hours after the Senate cleared it on a voice vote as lawmakers raced to wrap up their work before Christmas. President Barack Obama has said he is eager to sign the measure, though some supporters of the bill have criticized him for not getting more involved in the fight. The package provides $1.5 billion to monitor the health rescue and cleanup workers and treat illnesses related to ground zero. It also reopens a victims’ compensation fund with $2.7 billion. Rep. Carolyn Maloney, DN.Y., said the measure was long overdue. “It’s the right thing to do, and it’s the right time to do it,” she said. The bill was a product of a compromise involving Democratic Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Republican Sens. Tom
Coburn of Oklahoma and Mike Enzi of Wyoming. New York members of Congress had sought $2 billion more for the overall bill. They accepted the smaller amount in exchange for GOP critics dropping their opposition. “The Christmas miracle we’ve been looking for has arrived,” Schumer and Gillibrand said in a joint statement. Schumer and Gillibrand had sought $6.2 billion and keeping the compensation fund open for 10 years. “Every American recognizes the heroism of the 9/11 first responders, but it is not compassionate to help one group while robbing future generation of opportunity,” said Coburn, who led a GOP blockade against the bill. “This agreement strikes a fair balance.” The bill gained momentum with help from cable TV personalities. Among the biggest supporters of the package were Fox News anchor Shepard Smith and comedian and activist Jon Stewart, who championed the bill and lashed its GOP foes on his Comedy Central TV program “The Daily Show.” New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg praised Congress
for finally working out a bill. “As we look forward to the 10th anniversary of the September 11th attacks, I am encouraged that our elected representatives in Washington came together and stood by those who were there for America in its hour of greatest need,” Bloomberg said. The compromise was reached after Democrats scheduled a showdown test vote for Wednesday afternoon and Republicans countered by threatening to run a 30-hour clock before allowing final Senate and House votes on the bill. That would have required keeping both the Senate and House in session for votes on Christmas Eve. Backers worried that the bill would face a much tougher fight in the new, more fiscally conservative Congress where Republicans will have a stronger hand. “Any single senator can hold this up way past Christmas and we know that can kill the bill,” Schumer said on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” program Wednesday. Nearly 16,000 responders and 2,700 people living near ground zero are currently sick and receiving treatment, supporters of the bill
said. More than 40,000 responders are in medical monitoring, backers said. The bill would be paid for with a fee on some foreign firms that get U.S. government procurement contracts. The bill also calls for extending fees on certain firms that rely on H-1B and L-1 visas. Researchers have found that people exposed to the thick clouds of pulverized
building materials at the trade center site have high rates of asthma and sinus problems. Many firefighters also suffered a reduction in lung power. Doctors aren’t sure, though, exactly how many people are ill, and scientific doubt persists about just how many of the hundreds of illnesses are actually linked to the trade center dust. Doctors still don’t
know whether there is any connection between the dust and potentially fatal illnesses like cancer. The legislation is named for James Zadroga, a police detective who died at age 34. His supporters say he died from respiratory disease contracted at ground zero, but New York City’s medical examiner said Zadroga’s lung condition was caused by prescription drug abuse.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama said Wednesday his administration is trying to figure out what to do with detainees at the military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, who can’t be prosecuted but are too dangerous to be released. Earlier in the day the White House acknowledged that administration officials are drafting an executive order to set up a review process for detainees held indefinitely at Guantanamo. Such an order would be further acknowledgment by Obama that his campaign pledge to close Guantanamo Bay will remain unfulfilled for the foreseeable future. The president
has long said that some terrorist suspects would be held indefinitely, but he has hoped for that to be on U.S. soil. During a news conference touting a series of end-ofthe-year legislative victories including the repeal of the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy on gay service members, Obama showed little interest in discussing the island prison. Without discussing details of the proposed executive order, which has not been sent to him, Obama said some detainees can’t be prosecuted because evidence against them was tainted during their apprehension or detention before they were
moved to Guantanamo. Some were subjected to harsh interrogation tactics, including waterboarding, a simulated drowning technique. Still, Obama said some of the detainees are simply too dangerous to be released. “When I get that report I’m sure I will have more comments on it,” Obama said. “Striking this balance between our security and making sure we are consistent with our values is not easy.” The president said creating a system of reviews, including providing lawyers for detainees who want to challenge their detention, will ultimately show the world “we stand for some-
thing beyond just our economic power and our military might. That we have these values, that’s one of our most power ful weapons.” White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said earlier in the day that the executive order is in line with procedures Obama broadly described in a May 2009 speech about detainees who would be held indefinitely at that military prison. “We must have clear, defensible and lawful standards for those who fall in this category,” Obama said at the time. “We must have fair procedures so that we don’t make mistakes. We must have a thorough
process of periodic review, so that any prolonged detention is carefully evaluated and justified.” The draft was first reported Tuesday night in a story posted on the website of The Washington Post. By setting up a review process for detainees at Guantanamo by executive order, the president could make indefinite detention somewhat more palatable to liberal voters who adamantly oppose it. An executive order also would allow Obama to avoid Congress, which has shown increasing reluctance to follow Obama’s lead on Guantanamo issues. Both the House and Senate have approved legisla-
tion that would bar Guantanamo detainees from being brought to the United States for trial. Reports of the plan to hold some detainees indefinitely drew swift opposition from rights groups. The Center for Constitutional Rights argued that Guantanamo detainees need to be tried in federal court or released. “There is no legitimate third category of individuals who can be held indefinitely without perpetuating the egregious abuses of that island-prison, further damaging our democratic institutions and threatening our collective safety,” the group said in a statement.
tor Rick Hale officiating. Martin passed away Monday, Dec. 20, 2010. Robert “Martin” Yriart was bor n on April 8, 1930, to Lucille Rose Yriart and Graciano Yriart. He married Vivian Morgan Yriart on May 27, 1951. They ranched northwest of Rosw ell since 1952. They have one daughter, Patricia Yriart 0’Meara. Martin attended school on the Asprus for the first five years and then attended school in Roswell at Washington Avenue for sixth grade, junior high and high school at Roswell High, graduating in 1948. He attended college at New
Mexico A&M and Arkansas State University. He then lived and worked on the family ranch. In 1954, he joined the Army and was asked to be on the Army Pistol Team. He shot the regimental match and Big T eam matches while in the Ar my. He was then asked to be on the 2nd Division Pistol Team from July 1955 thr ough November 1955. Succeeding on that team, he won a spot on the 6th Army Pistol Team, traveling around to many matches. He was discharged in 1956. He was a member of Grace Community Church, on the board
of dir ectors for Wool Growers, Cattle Growers, Farm Bureau, Eagles, was a life member of Elks, Sheep Man of the Year 2003 and Cowbells Man of the Year 2000. He was an avid boat racer and water skier. He enjoyed spending time at “Happy Acres” building windmills, whittling sheep and tending to his many trees and garden. He also loved chuck wagon cooking and restored an old chuck wagon. He cooked meat for the New Mexico Ag Fest for many years. He would also cook the meat for the yearly wool sale at the Roswell Wool and Mohair. He prepared
meat for many large community gatherings throughout the years. Those left behind to cherish his memory are his wife, Vivian Elizabeth Morgan Yriart, of the family home; his daughter, Patricia Yriart 0’Meara, and husband, Mike; two granddaughters Amy 0’Meara and Kari McKee and husband, Kurt; two great-grandchildren, Kaylee McKee and KoIt McKee; his sister, Susie Naylor and husband, Bob; nephews: Ross, John and Scot Naylor, and Brad, Kirk and Scot Hays; a niece, Val Hays; and a sister-in-law, Alice Granberry.
He was pr eceded in death by his parents, Graciano and Lucile Yriart, and a gr eat-nephew, Brynn Naylor.
AP Photo
Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., left, fist bumps John Feal after a news conference, on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, after Senate passage of a bill to assist 9/11 first responders.
Executive order for detainee reviews being drafted
OBITUARY
Robert “Martin” Yriart
Memorial services for Robert “Martin” Yriart, 80, of Roswell will be held Thursday, Dec. 23, 2010, at 2 p.m., at Grace Community Church with Pas-
Honorary pallbearers will be Fred Schrimsher, Ted Schrimsher, Bob Naylor, John Lackey, Scot McNally, Kap Kelly, Pat Joyce, and Mike Corn.
Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com. Services are under the dir ection of AndersonBethany Funeral Home & Crematory.
The Roswell Daily Record will publish a newspaper on Christmas Day, however, our offices will be closed on Christmas Eve.
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B4 Thursday, December 23, 2010
WORLD
Belarus: 7 pres. candidates face 15 years MINSK, Belarus (AP) — Seven presidential candidates who ran against the country’s authoritarian leader could face up to 15 years in prison and one was beaten so badly in the election’s aftermath he is unable to walk, his lawyer and a human rights organization said. Pavel Sapelko said Wednesday he suspects his client, Andrei Sannikov, has a broken leg, yet he was refused an X-ray. “He feels very bad and looks very bad,” Sapelko told The Associated Press. Sannikov received the most votes among the opposition candidates — 2.4 percent, compared with winner Alexander Lukashenko’s 79.6 percent. Sannikov is one of among seven candidates who could face up to 15 years in prison in the wake of postelection violence and massive arrests, Belarusian human rights organization Vesna said Wednesday. Lawyer Tamara Sidorenko said her client Vladimir Neklyayev, another prominent challenger, was also beaten as he tried to lead a column of supporters to the protest in central Minsk on Sunday night. He was taken to a hospital, and an aide said men in civilian clothing wrapped him in a blanket on his hospital bed and car-
ried him away as his wife screamed. Sidorenko said she has not been allowed to visit him since. The former Soviet state’s security service, which is still called the KGB, has filed charges against 20 top opposition figures, including the seven candidates, for organizing mass disturbances, said Ales Belyatsky of Vesna. KGB spokesman Alexander Antonovich declined comment. Overall, some 700 people were arrested after Sunday’s election that returned Lukashenko to a fourth term in office. International monitors called the election fraudulent. Two of the arrested candidates were later released, but both of them — Grigory Kostusyev and Dmitry Uss — were summoned to KGB offices for further questioning on Wednesday. Lukashenko, often called Europe’s last dictator, has been in power in Belarus for more than 16 years. He exercises overwhelming control over the politics, industry and media in this nation of 10 million, which borders Russia, Ukraine, Poland and the Baltic nations. The repression has been an embarrassment to the European Union, which had offered 3 billion euros ($3.9 bil-
lion) in aid if the elections were judged to be free and fair. In a brief telephone interview with The Associated Press, Kostusyev said “the regime has shown its true essence.” “We’ve been thrown 10 years into the past,” he added. Others charged include Sannikov’s wife, Irina Khalip, and the editor of an opposition website affiliated with Sannikov, Nataliya Radina, according to Vesna. The other arrested candidates are Nikolai Statkevich, Vitaly Rymashevsky and Ales Mikhalevich. At least 25 journalists were also detained during or after the Sunday’s rally, and several of them were sentenced to up to 15 days in prison for “participation in an illegal demonstration,” a press freedom group said Wednesday. Reporters Without Borders said two of the detained reporters face charges of “organizing or participating in a public order disturbance” punishable by up to 15 years in jail. Also Wednesday, the Belarusian parliament ratified an agreement to create a “unified economic space” with Russia and Kazakhstan in what some observers regard as Moscow’s attempt to shore up influence among neighboring countries.
Roswell Daily Record
AP Photo
Relatives and supporters of people detained in Sunday’s Belarus' opposition protests light candles and wait outside the prison's walls in the Belarusian capital, Minsk, Tuesday.
Preliminary agreement on the zone was reached 10 days before the election. As part of that agreement, Russia said it would drop tariffs on oil exported to Belarus, a concession that significantly strengthened Lukashenko’s hand. Belarus’ quasi-Soviet statedominated economy depends on below-market Russian oil and gas.
Jamaica mayor turned to Coke to fight crime
AP Photo
Spy Anna Chapman joins Putin’s Russian youth group
Anna Chapman, who was deported from the U.S. on charges of espionage, on stage with the leaders of Young Guards, a pro-Kremlin youth movement she joined, in Moscow, Russia, Wednesday.
MOSCOW (AP) — Former spy Anna Chapman publicly reaffirmed her allegiance to Russia and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on Wednesday by joining the youth wing of his United Russia party. Chapman was exposed in the United States along with nine other so-called sleeper agents in the biggest spy swap since the Cold War and deported back to Russia this summer. Rather than recede into anonymity like the other agents, she has reveled in the fame, appearing at the launch of a Russian spacecraft and stripping to her underwear for a men’s magazine, among other things. She also agreed to become the public face of a bank that serves the space industry. At Wednesday’s meeting of the Young Guards, the redhaired 28-year-old Chapman was in beauty pageant mode, even mouthing the kind of banalities usually saved for such occasions. “Let’s dream about the boldest things,” said Chapman, wearing a red dress and heavy makeup, her flaming hair carefully styled. “Let’s start changing the country by changing ourselves first. “There would be less negativity in society if each of us woke up with a smile,” she continued. “If each of us greets each day with joy, then you can create something new and useful.” Chapman later refused to answer questions about her duties at the Young Guards and left a press conference
with her bodyguard. The youth group’s leader, Timur Prokopenko, also could not specify her job, saying that she simply was “the heroine of her generation.” Chapman is “an example of unconditional patriotism,” Young Guards spokesman Andrei Tatarinov said in a statement. “She is a good example for the new generation.” The Young Guards is known for its anti-U.S. rhetoric and violent pranks against Kremlin critics. It was among several youth groups formed in the mid2000s to counter anti-Kremlin groups and prevent uprisings similar to the “color revolutions” in Georgia and Ukraine that brought pro-Western politicians to power. The Young Guards staged mass rallies involving thousands of activists, including a 2006 demonstration dubbed “the world’s Independence Day from America” that featured anti-U.S. posters and slogans accusing the White House of meddling in Russian politics with “guns and burgers.” A former Young Guards leader told the Associated Press in January that the group has hired soccer fans and neoNazis to assault opposition leaders. In recent months, the group has been roiled by widely publicized scandals and reprimands from its Kremlin mentors. One of its leaders resigned after faking photos of himself helping extinguish forest fires around Moscow this summer. The group also called for action against a journalist who challenged government policies.
UN increases troops in Somalia by 50 percent
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Moving to better protect Somalia’s weak, U.N.-backed government from armed opposition groups, the Security Council unanimously agreed Wednesday to increase the peacekeeping force there by 50 percent, from 8,000 to 12,000 troops. Council members also authorized the African Union to extend its deployment of the peacekeeping force known as AMISOM through Sept. 30, 2011, calling the move “vital for the long-term stability of Somalia.” Uganda said it would contribute the additional 4,000 troops. The resolution approved by council members said the extended deployment and the troop increase are necessary to support Somalia’s so-called Transitional Federal Government and civilians from attacks by al-Shabab and other opposition groups.
In recent years, Lukashenko had quarr eled with Moscow over its raising hydrocarbon prices and in the presidential campaign period he frequently criticized Russia. However, after the dropping of the oil tariffs — an agreement estimated to be worth some $4 billion a year — his tone changed markedly.
Al-Shabab and the other largest armed group in the country, Hizbul Islam, announced in recent days they would drop their feud and merge forces to concentrate on fighting the Mogadishu-based government and the African Union troops who protect it. Al-Shabab has publicly pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden and counts several hundred foreign fighters in its ranks. Considered Somalia’s most dangerous armed group, al-Shabab practices a harsh, conservative brand of Islam that bans television and movies. Its punishments include the chopping off of hands of thieves and death by stoning of adulterers. The council also repeated its worries about the worsening humanitarian situation in Somalia, and condemned attacks by armed groups on aid workers and their obstruction of aid shipments.
KINGSTON, Jamaica (AP) — A U.S. diplomatic cable leaked Wednesday says the mayor of Jamaica’s biggest city acknowledged forging an alliance of convenience with an alleged drug baron to reduce crime in a sprawling patchwork of gritty slums. The September 2009 cable says that Kingston Mayor Desmond McKenzie told a U.S. Embassy officer that his administration collaborated for years with Christopher “Dudus” Coke to fight crime, particularly in the powerful slum leader’s stronghold of West Kingston, the home constituency of Prime Minister Bruce Golding. McKenzie, an influential figure in the ruling Jamaica Labor Party, warned of a doomsday scenario if Washington continued to push for the extradition of Coke, according to the memo, which apparently was written by Isiah L. Parnell, the embassy’s deputy chief of mission. It was released by WikiLeaks and published by the British newspaper The Guardian. Coke was the alleged crime “don” of Tivoli Gardens, providing services and a lawless, violent sort of order in the slums. McKenzie “predicted that there would be ‘severe repercussions’ and ‘collateral damage’ if Coke were arrested, and that this would “risk destroying everything the government was trying to do on the economy and crime,”’ the leaked U.S. communique said. In fact, at least 70 people died in battles between drug gangs and authorities after Prime Minister Bruce Golding finally agreed to extradite Coke after fighting the U.S. request for nine months — even to the point of hiring a U.S. lobbyist to oppose it. The diplomatic cable was written in August 2009, days after the U.S. first asked Jamaica to extradite Coke to face federal drug and weapons-trafficking charges in New York. The U.S. indictment accused Coke of leading the “Shower Posse” — a gang with agents in Jamaica and the United States that was named for its tendency to spray victims with bullets. Jamaica has a long history of politicians forging alliances with gangsters in vote-rich ghettoes. The political parties built the gangs: Dons received government contracts, and in exchange delivered the votes of their people. Slum dwellers were caught in the middle. Still, the image of a powerful Jamaican mayor working for years on crime-fighting strategies with a man portrayed by the U.S. Justice Department as one of the world’s most dangerous drug kingpins is stark, especially since Kingston is a city with one of the highest homicide rates in the Western Hemisphere. McKenzie’s main office line at the Kingston and St. Andrew Corporation went unanswered Wednesday. The government’s information minister, Daryl Vaz, did not immediately provide comment about the WikiLeaks cable. Washington’s extradition request for Coke immediately became a problem for the Jamaican government because the reputed gang leader was widely known for loyalty to the governing party. The U.S. cable says that Coke was reputedly close to leading figures within Golding’s Jamaica Labor Party, including McKenzie. In the cable, McKenzie apparently warned the U.S. embassy officer that his “contacts in the communities” had told him personally that they “would not take this (Coke’s extradition) lying down.” The leaked cable said that McKenzie’s fears of repercussions were not groundless. “He is easily the highest profile figure whose extradition has been requested in many years, and his long-standing ties to the JLP have put McKenzie, Golding, and other leading party figures in an extremely awkward position,” said the cable. It also stated that “Coke’s gang provides social and welfare services and turns out the JLP vote in elections, while his business interests profit from lucrative government contracts.” In another leaked U.S. cable that first appeared Wednesday on the website of the British newspaper The Guardian, Golding’s wife told a U.S. Embassy official that she believed U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was under the “pernicious influence” of New York Representative Charles Rangel regarding the extradition request for Coke.
FINANCIAL
Roswell Daily Record
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
Div Last Chg DrxFBull s ... 27.84 +.89 DirxSCBull4.77eu74.20 -.11 A-B-C DirxLCBear ... d8.79 -.08 ABB Ltd .48e 22.24 +.29 Discover .08 18.20 -.03 .40f 37.95 +.62 AES Corp ... 12.36 +.24 Disney AFLAC 1.20 57.23 +.63 DoleFood ... u13.10 +.15 DomRescs 1.83 42.92 -.04 AK Steel .20 16.69 +.05 AMR ... 7.95 -.10 DoralFncl ... 1.26 -.03 1.10 u58.96 +1.52 AT&T Inc 1.72f 29.13 +.06 Dover AbtLab 1.76 47.84 -.16 DowChm .60 34.37 +.29 AberFitc .70 u56.97 -1.17 DuPont 1.64 49.80 -.17 Accenture .90f 48.64 -.09 DukeEngy .98 17.76 -.01 AMD ... 8.11 -.03 DukeRlty .68 12.19 +.29 Aeropostl s ... 24.39 -.55 Dynegy rs ... 5.89 +.04 Aetna .04 30.73 +.54 ECDang n ... 24.76 +1.05 ... 22.89 -.04 Agilent ... 41.06 +.23 EMC Cp ... 5.92 +.25 Airgas 1.00 61.44 -1.78 EKodak AirTran ... 7.38 -.04 EVTxMGlo 1.14 10.24 +.15 EdisonInt 1.28f 38.67 -.17 AlcatelLuc ... 2.88 -.06 Alcoa .12 15.14 +.25 ElPasoCp .04 13.60 -.01 AldIrish ... 1.09 -.06 EldorGld g .05 17.98 -.25 Allstate .80 31.97 +.10 EmersonEl1.38f 58.02 -.25 AlphaNRs ... 55.59 +.49 EnCana g .80 28.87 +.19 Altria 1.52 25.26 +.01 EqtyRsd 1.47e 51.48 +.40 Amdocs ... 26.91 +.23 Exelon 2.10 41.86 +.56 AMovilL 1.29e 56.86 ... ExxonMbl 1.76 u72.80 +.08 AmAxle ... 12.85 -.42 FibriaCelu ... 16.15 +.61 AEagleOut .44a 14.46 -.31 FstBcpPR ... .40 +.02 AEP 1.84f 35.96 +.16 FstHorizon .72t 11.75 +.47 AmExp .72 42.81 -.42 FirstEngy 2.20 36.86 +.23 AmIntlGrp ... u55.76 +.58 FlagstB rs ... 1.57 +.02 .50 u66.06 +1.15 Ameriprise .72 u57.96 +.35 Fluor AmeriBrgn .40f u34.14 +.40 FootLockr .60 u19.54 -.27 FordM ... 16.99 ... Anadarko .36 67.75 -.36 AnalogDev .88 37.58 -.40 ForestLab ... 32.01 -.43 Fortress ... u5.74 +.31 Annaly 2.65e 18.32 +.02 Anworth .88m 7.18 ... FrankRes 1.00f 109.97 -1.93 Aon Corp .60 u45.95 +.22 FMCG 2.00a 116.39 +.19 Apache .60 118.22 +.06 FrontierCm .75 9.49 +.04 ArcelorMit .75 37.89 -.27 G-H-I ArchCoal .40 u34.41 -.46 ... 5.48 +.12 ArchDan .60 30.59 +.44 GMX Rs ArvMerit ... 21.56 +.08 Gafisa s .14e 13.82 +.03 AssuredG .18 17.89 -.73 GameStop ... 21.70 +.06 AstoriaF .52 14.15 +.84 GamGld g ... 7.62 -.23 Avon .88 29.11 +.10 Gannett .16 15.48 +.30 .40 21.20 +.04 BB&T Cp .60 26.49 +.31 Gap BP PLC ... 43.61 +.07 GenElec .56f 18.06 +.30 BakrHu .60 56.76 +.04 GenGrPr n ... 15.78 -.18 Baldor .68 63.17 -.12 GenMarit .04m 3.51 +.22 BcoBrades .82r 19.82 +.49 GenMills s 1.12 35.61 +.18 BcoSantand.80e 10.79 -.07 GenMot n ... 34.92 +1.07 BcoSBrasil .33e 13.20 +.18 GenOn En ... 3.88 +.14 BcpSouth .88 16.11 +1.53 Genworth ... 13.41 +.39 BkofAm .04 13.38 +.40 Gerdau .32e 14.00 +.08 BkIrelnd 1.04e 2.53 -.07 GoldFLtd .16e 17.38 -.18 BkMont g 2.80 57.03 +.23 Goldcrp g .36 44.69 -.23 BkNYMel .36 30.52 +.73 GoldmanS 1.40 169.60 +1.37 BankAtl A ... 1.29 +.24 Goodyear ... 12.00 +.06 Bar iPVix rs ... d36.62 -.20 GpTelevisa.52e u26.51 +.25 .80f 47.14 -1.90 BarrickG .48 51.22 -.46 Guess Baxter 1.24f 50.64 +.50 HCP Inc 1.86 36.00 +.40 Hallibrtn .36 40.41 +.12 BeazerHm ... 5.48 +.06 BerkH B s ... 80.14 -.35 HartfdFn .20 27.43 +.32 BestBuy .60 33.52 +.06 HltCrREIT 2.76 47.21 +.55 ... 9.48 -.04 Blackstone .40 14.30 +.22 HltMgmt ... 10.74 -.19 BlockHR .60 12.90 +.06 HeclaM Heinz 1.80 49.73 +.10 Boeing 1.68 64.61 +.42 .20 6.60 +.05 BostonSci ... 7.71 -.14 Hersha ... 14.37 -.18 BoydGm ... 9.89 +.02 Hertz .40 u76.18 +.17 Brandyw .60 11.32 +.43 Hess Brinker .56 21.27 +.07 HewlettP .32 41.48 -.43 BrMySq 1.32f 26.34 -.02 HomeDp .95 35.18 +.10 CB REllis ... 21.28 -.03 HonwllIntl 1.33f u53.72 +.19 CBS B .20 u19.59 +.32 HostHotls .04 u17.76 -.04 CF Inds .40 128.83 -.35 HovnanE ... 4.25 -.11 CIGNA .04 36.65 -.35 IAMGld g .08f 17.72 -.11 ... 9.67 -.06 CIT Grp ... u45.39 +.45 ING CMS Eng .84f 19.14 -.01 ION Geoph ... u8.63 +.11 iShGold s ... 13.52 -.03 CNO Fincl ... u6.99 +.12 CSX 1.04f 63.98 -.01 iSAstla .82e 25.09 +.15 CVS Care .35 34.95 +.47 iShBraz 2.33e 74.59 +.75 .50e 30.34 +.12 CablvsnNY .50 34.24 -.39 iSCan Calpine ... 13.71 +.13 iShGer .30e 24.04 -.03 iSh HK .45e 18.98 +.06 CampSp 1.16f 34.33 -.23 CdnNRs gs .30 u43.79 +.65 iShJapn .14e 10.76 +.04 CapOne .20 42.54 +.36 iSh Kor .39e 58.80 +.17 CapitlSrce .04 u6.98 +.03 iShSing .43e 13.30 +.03 CardnlHlth .78 u39.11 +.41 iSTaiwn .29e 15.01 +.01 ... 28.57 -.07 CarMax ... 32.30 -.87 iShSilver Carnival .40 u46.59 +1.41 iShChina25.63e 43.15 -.12 iSSP500 2.34eu126.88 +.45 Caterpillar 1.76 94.57 -.06 Cemex .43t 10.73 -.14 iShEMkts .61e 46.66 +.16 Cemig pf 1.19e 16.35 -.29 iShB20 T 3.86e 93.12 -.67 CenterPnt .78 15.88 ... iS Eafe 1.42e 57.75 +.11 CntryLink 2.90 46.46 -.34 iSR1KV 1.28e u64.82 +.43 ChesEng .30 25.41 +.03 iSR1KG .72e 57.37 +.05 Chevron 2.88 u89.92 +.69 iShR2K .79e 78.82 -.02 Chicos .16 11.94 -.11 iShREst 1.88e 55.22 +.39 Chimera .69e 4.18 -.07 iShSPSm .58e u69.53 +.02 ... 7.55 +.07 Chubb 1.48 u60.23 +.99 iStar 1.36 53.62 +.55 CinciBell ... 2.38 +.03 ITW Citigrp ... 4.73 -.01 IndiaFd 3.87e 38.90 +.38 CliffsNRs .56 u78.63 -1.35 IngerRd .28 47.09 -.05 2.60 145.95 +.21 CloudPeak ... 21.49 +.07 IBM ... 7.19 -.16 Coach .60 56.21 -1.82 Intl Coal IntlGame .24 17.32 -.08 CocaCE .48f 25.00 -.03 .50 26.99 +.19 CocaCl 1.76 65.59 +.10 IntPap ColgPal 2.12 80.92 +1.02 Interpublic ... 10.78 -.13 .44 23.75 +.16 Comerica .40f 42.73 +.04 Invesco CmclMtls .48 16.86 -.68 ItauUnibH .65e 23.54 +.51 ... 24.07 -.03 ComScop ... 31.23 ... IvanhM g ConAgra .92 22.49 +.09 J-K-L ConocPhil 2.20 u67.03 +.40 ConsolEngy .40 46.16 +.56 JPMorgCh .20 42.16 +1.16 .28 u20.11 +.56 ConstellA ... 21.98 ... Jabil ConstellEn .96 30.75 +1.13 JacksnHew ... 1.72 -.22 Corning .20 19.43 +.19 JacobsEng ... 46.32 +2.17 Covidien .80f 46.26 +.88 JanusCap .04 13.11 +.38 JohnJn 2.16 62.02 -.32 D-E-F JohnsnCtl .64f 38.64 -.42 DCT Indl .28 5.44 +.06 JnprNtwk ... u37.90 +.29 DR Horton .15 12.28 +.37 KB Home .25 14.21 +.39 .23e u14.53 +.04 DanaHldg ... 17.42 -.23 KKR n Danaher s .08 u47.13 -.24 KKR Fn .56f 9.37 +.16 ... 13.11 -.18 Darden 1.28 47.20 -.34 KeyEngy DeanFds ... 8.34 +.15 Keycorp .04 8.64 +.15 .72f 17.41 -.02 Deere 1.40f 83.95 -.51 Kimco DelMnte .36 18.76 +.02 KingPhrm ... 14.05 -.04 DeltaAir ... 12.43 -.22 Kinross g .10 18.33 -.02 ... 53.78 -.33 DenburyR ... 19.36 -.09 Kohls 1.16 31.88 +.04 DevelDiv .08 13.81 +.11 Kraft DevonE .64 76.02 +1.62 KrispKrm ... 7.57 -.45 .42f 21.78 +.07 DiaOffs .50a 64.91 +.73 Kroger DrSCBear rs ... d15.30 +.01 LDK Solar ... 10.45 -.10 LSI Corp ... 6.09 +.05 DirFnBear ... d9.47 -.33 Name
Name Sell Chg Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst x19.48 -.16 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv x18.52 -.10 Amer Century Inv: EqInc 7.27 +.02 GrowthI 25.94 ... Ultra 22.76 ... American Funds A: AmcpA p 18.87 +.06 AMutlA px 25.31 -.11 BalA p 17.96 +.04 BondA p 12.14 -.01 CapIBA p 49.64 +.10 CapWGA p35.61 +.05 CapWA p 20.44 +.02 EupacA p 41.60 ... FdInvA p 36.63 +.13 GovtA p 14.38 ... GwthA p 30.42 +.08 HI TrA p 11.25 +.01 IncoA p 16.75 +.03 IntBdA p 13.41 -.01 IntlGrIncA p31.45 +.01 ICAA p 28.32 +.08 NEcoA p 25.45 +.08 N PerA p 28.75 +.02 NwWrldA 54.81 +.07 STBFA p 10.07 ... SmCpA p 39.14 +.12 TxExA p 11.83 ... WshA p 27.19 +.09 American Funds B: GrwthB t 29.53 +.07 Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 30.42 +.02 IntlEqA 29.63 +.02 IntEqII I r 12.60 ... Artisan Funds: Intl 21.59 +.04
MidCap 34.06 -.05 MidCapVal20.12 +.05 Baron Funds: Growth 51.36 -.09 SmallCap 23.89 ... Bernstein Fds: IntDur 13.69 ... DivMu 14.27 ... TxMgdIntl 15.58 +.02 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 17.48 +.06 GlAlA r 19.25 +.05 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 17.98 +.04 BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 17.51 +.06 GlbAlloc r 19.32 +.04 CGM Funds: Focus n 34.72 -.01 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 53.66 +.05 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 29.35 +.01 DivEqInc 10.08 +.05 DivrBd 4.98 ... Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 30.30 +.01 AcornIntZ 40.10 +.04 ValRestr 49.80 +.20 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 9.11 +.04 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq n11.11 +.02 USCorEq2 n11.00+.04 DWS Invest S: MgdMuni S 8.70 +.01 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 34.27 +.15 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 34.61 +.15 NYVen C 33.15 +.15
NEW YORK(AP) - Cattle/hogs futures on the Chicago Merchantile Exchange Friday: low settle
CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Dec 10 103.95 104.67 101.90 104.12 Feb 11 107.15 108.80 105.55 107.55 Apr 11 110.92 112.07 109.05 110.95 Jun 11 107.92 109.80 106.60 108.27 Aug 11 108.60 109.90 107.17 108.90 Oct 11 110.10 110.80 109.60 110.80 Dec 11 111.10 112.60 110.50 112.30 Feb 12 112.20 112.45 111.80 112.45 Apr 12 112.90 113.00 112.90 113.00 Last spot N/A Est. sales 35165. Tue’s Sales: 31,961 Tue’s open int: 325371, off -1094 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Jan 11 121.50 122.47 120.62 121.67 Mar 11 123.30 124.15 122.10 123.62 Apr 11 123.55 124.40 122.50 124.10 May 11 123.80 124.65 122.62 124.50 Aug 11 124.52 125.00 122.95 124.72 Sep 11 123.50 123.80 122.90 123.70 Oct 11 122.50 123.00 122.00 122.70 Nov 11 121.90 121.90 121.80 121.80 Last spot N/A Est. sales 5841. Tue’s Sales: 6,586 Tue’s open int: 43851, up +1232 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 78.65 78.95 75.90 78.87 Apr 11 82.67 83.00 80.40 82.90 May 11 87.40 89.50 87.40 89.50 Jun 11 91.00 91.40 89.60 91.37 Jul 11 89.30 90.70 89.30 90.67 Aug 11 88.90 89.80 88.90 89.72 Oct 11 79.35 80.37 79.35 80.30 Dec 11 76.50 76.95 76.50 76.95 Feb 12 78.20 78.70 78.20 78.70 Apr 12 79.30 79.50 79.30 79.50 May 12 82.00 82.50 82.00 82.50 Jun 12 84.50 Last spot N/A
chg.
+1.27 +1.75 +1.43 +1.15 +1.25 +.68 +1.10 +.15 +.50
+.32 +.65 +.65 +.73 +.70 +.50 +.40 +.40
+2.90 +2.50 +2.48 +1.77 +1.47 +1.12 +.98 +.55 +.55 +.45 +.90
M-N-0
MBIA ... 9.90 -.09 MEMC ... 11.02 +.09 MF Global ... 8.50 +.12 MFA Fncl .90f 8.17 ... MGIC ... 10.47 +.10 MGM Rsts ... 14.73 -.16 MI Devel .40 u27.69 +8.63 MPG OffTr ... 2.75 +.05 Macys .20 25.49 -.49 MagnaI gs .72 52.11 -.47 Manitowoc .08 13.35 +.14 Manulife g .52 17.15 +.12 MarathonO1.00 u36.53 +.34 MktVGold .11p 59.84 -.71 MktVRus .08e u37.65 +.15 MktVJrGld ... 40.71 -1.43 MarIntA .35f 42.20 -.18 MarshIls .04 6.82 +.03 Masco .30 13.00 -.06 MasterCrd .60 217.40 -2.38 McDnlds 2.44f 77.01 +.15 McGrwH .94 36.29 +.23 McMoRn ... 17.29 +.25 McAfee ... 46.30 -.08 MedcoHlth ... 61.67 -.17 MedProp .80 10.31 +.09 Medtrnic .90 36.81 -.11 Merck 1.52 36.22 +.04 MetLife .74 44.73 +.19 MetroPCS ... 12.60 -.12 MitsuUFJ ... 5.28 +.04 MobileTel s ... 20.47 +.26 Molycorp n ... 43.34 -1.09 Monsanto 1.12 66.45 +.15 MonstrWw ... 23.89 -.58 Moodys .46f 26.38 +.11 MorgStan .20 27.40 +.54 Mosaic .20 69.21 +.05 Motorola ... u9.09 +.09 MotMob wi ... u29.42 +1.68 NFJDvInt 1.80f u17.60 +1.19 NRG Egy ... 19.10 +.41 Nabors ... 22.35 -.02 NBkGreece.29e 1.70 -.04 NOilVarco .44f 65.75 +.37 NatSemi .40 13.81 +.02 NatwHP 1.88f 34.90 -.02 Navistar ... 57.17 -2.00 NY CmtyB 1.00 u18.85 +.50 NY Times ... 10.00 +.15 Newcastle ... u6.92 +.79 NewellRub .20 18.32 -.03 NewfldExp ... u73.00 -.04 NewmtM .60 59.31 -.73 Nexen g .20 21.98 +.48 NextEraEn 2.00 52.07 +.95 NiSource .92 17.52 +.11 NikeB 1.24f 86.95 -5.35 NobleCorp .90e 34.52 -.15 NokiaCp .56e 10.26 +.07 Nordstrm .80 42.85 -.33 NorthropG 1.88 65.13 +.63 Novartis 1.99e 59.17 +.27 Nucor 1.45f 44.50 -.07 OcciPet 1.52 u97.76 +1.13 OfficeDpt ... 5.28 +.44 OilSvHT 2.40e 138.52 +.21 Omncre .13 25.01 +.76
P-Q-R
PMI Grp ... 3.43 -.01 PNC .40 60.62 +.51 PPL Corp 1.40 26.33 +.14 PatriotCoal ... 18.39 -.32 PeabdyE .34f 63.58 -.16 PennWst g 1.08 23.72 +.60 Penney .80 32.74 -.98 PepcoHold 1.08 18.37 +.15 PepsiCo 1.92 65.68 +.28 Petrohawk ... 18.61 -.59 PetrbrsA 1.20e 30.94 +.36 Petrobras 1.20e 34.11 +.33 Pfizer .80f 17.56 +.18 PhilipMor 2.56 58.87 +.39 PitnyBw 1.46 24.65 +.07 PlainsEx ... 31.44 +.88 Potash .40 141.89 -.06 PS Agri ... u31.87 +.34 PS USDBull ... 23.27 -.02 PrinFncl .55f u33.32 +.38 ProShtQQQ ... d34.43 ... PrUShS&P ... d23.78 -.18 ProUltQQQ ... u82.73 +.08 PrUShQQQ ... d11.45 -.01 ProUltSP .43e u48.01 +.31 ProUShL20 ... 38.20 +.47 ProUSRE rs ... 18.68 -.22 ProUShtFn ... d15.72 -.36 ProUFin rs .09e 66.26 +1.38 ProUSR2K ... d12.38 ... ProUSSP500 ... d19.42 -.21 ProUltCrude ... 12.27 +.22 ProctGam 1.93 64.95 +.08 ProgrssEn 2.48 43.59 +.10 ProgsvCp 1.16e 19.82 +.01 ProLogis .45m 14.31 +.05 Prudentl 1.15f 59.95 +.39 PSEG 1.37 31.60 +.36 PulteGrp ... 7.64 +.30 QuantaSvc ... 20.12 +.19 Quiksilvr ... 5.20 +.07 QwestCm .32 7.68 -.03 RAIT Fin ... 2.22 -.09 RadianGrp .01 8.13 +.07 RangeRs .16 44.70 +.50 Raytheon 1.50 45.60 +.65 RedHat ... 46.70 -1.18 RegalEnt .84a 12.31 -.24 RegionsFn .04 6.91 +.46 ReneSola ... 8.40 -.09 RepubSvc .80 30.02 +.04 RetailHT 1.71e 106.61 +.38 RiteAid ... .90 -.02
Rowan RylCarb
... 34.28 -.63 ... u46.30 -.33
S-T-U
SAIC ... 15.77 +.03 SLM Cp ... 13.05 +.07 SpdrDJIA 2.43eu115.58 +.27 SpdrGold ... 135.05 -.27 SP Mid 1.51eu165.65 +.44 S&P500ETF2.31eu125.78 +.39 SpdrHome .12e 17.65 +.09 SpdrKbwBk.11e 26.07 +.58 SpdrLehHY4.13e 40.22 -.06 SpdrKbw RB.30e 26.88 +1.02 SpdrRetl .49e 48.03 -.03 SpdrOGEx .20e u52.17 +.09 Safeway .48 22.24 +.19 StJude ... 42.50 +.13 Saks ... 10.98 -.34 Salesforce ... 135.53 -3.50 SandRdge ... 7.28 +.19 SaraLee .46f 17.50 -.03 Schlmbrg .84 82.81 +.37 Schwab .24 17.08 +.13 SeadrillLtd2.31e 33.18 -.48 SemiHTr .56e 32.51 -.14 SiderNac s .58e 16.18 -.04 SilvWhtn g ... 36.43 -1.22 SilvrcpM g .08 12.23 -.38 SimonProp 2.40 98.64 +.02 Skechers ... 19.41 -.19 SmithfF ... 21.05 +.25 SouthnCo 1.82 38.24 -.10 SwstAirl .02 13.09 -.01 SwstnEngy ... 35.93 +.43 SpectraEn 1.00 u25.12 +.18 SprintNex ... 4.21 -.10 SP Matls 1.05e u38.04 -.02 SP HlthC .58e 31.67 +.09 SP CnSt .77e 29.39 +.13 SP Consum.43e 37.79 +.05 SP Engy 1.00e u67.22 +.23 SPDR Fncl .16e 15.98 +.18 SP Inds .60e u34.89 +.08 SP Tech .31e 25.22 -.03 SP Util 1.27e 31.34 +.14 StdPac ... 4.69 +.36 StarwdHtl .30f u61.84 -.57 StateStr .04 47.77 +1.09 StillwtrM ... 20.71 -.02 Suncor gs .40 37.85 +1.00 Suntech ... 8.12 -.06 SunTrst .04 28.85 +.99 Supvalu .35 9.26 +.41 SwiftTrns n ... u12.61 +.50 Synovus .04 2.65 +.10 Sysco 1.04f 29.20 -.13 TCF Fncl .20 14.38 ... TJX .60 44.36 +.15 TaiwSemi .47e 12.30 -.09 Talbots ... 8.48 +.13 TalismE g .25 u21.84 +.13 Target 1.00 u60.03 +.33 TataMotors.32e 30.64 -.04 TeckRes g .60f 57.44 -.17 TenetHlth ... 6.80 -.03 Teradata ... 42.10 -.96 Teradyn ... 14.06 -.15 Terex ... u30.61 +.09 Tesoro ... u18.57 +.11 TexInst .52f 32.47 +.03 Textron .08 23.31 -.18 3M Co 2.10 86.72 +.19 Tiffany 1.00 64.20 -1.24 TW Cable 1.60 65.51 -.32 TimeWarn .85 32.27 +.43 TitanMet ... 17.00 -.33 TollBros ... 19.96 +.53 Total SA 3.13e 53.21 -.02 Transocn ... 69.28 -.30 Travelers 1.44 55.85 -.02 TycoIntl .86e 41.51 -.11 Tyson .16 17.65 +.14 UBS AG ... 16.54 +.29 UDR .74 23.18 +.26 US Airwy ... 10.32 -.20 USEC ... 6.13 +.07 UtdContl ... 24.41 +.10 UPS B 1.88 72.86 -.02 US Bancrp .20 26.95 +.39 US NGsFd ... 5.64 +.04 US OilFd ... 38.64 +.35 USSteel .20 58.66 -.26 UtdTech 1.70 u79.52 +.17 UtdhlthGp .50 35.84 +.51 UnumGrp .37 24.58 +.24
V-W-X-Y-Z
VF Cp 2.52f 86.85 -1.94 Vale SA .76e 34.55 +.35 Vale SA pf .76e 30.48 +.47 ValeantPh .38a 28.79 -.29 ValeroE .20 u22.72 -.08 VangTSM1.25e 64.93 +.25 VangEmg .55e 47.05 +.19 Ventas 2.14 51.77 +.73 VerizonCm1.95f u35.18 +.24 ViacomB .60 39.40 +.57 VimpelC n .46p 14.94 +.18 Visa .60f 68.55 +.50 VishayInt ... 14.93 -.20 Vonage ... 2.47 +.02 WalMart 1.21 53.31 -.34 Walgrn .70 u38.85 +2.02 WsteMInc 1.36f 36.49 +.09 WeathfIntl ... u22.65 -.22 WebsterFn .04 19.48 +.86 WeinRlt 1.04 23.39 +.03 WellPoint ... 57.12 +.56 WellsFargo .20 31.31 +.49 WendyArby .08f 4.65 -.01 WDigital ... 33.80 +.30 WstnRefin ... 10.31 +.11 WstnUnion .28f 18.47 +.08 Weyerh .60f 18.44 +.03 WmsCos .50 u24.64 +.09 WilmTr .04 4.36 +.07 Wyndham .48 u31.02 -.06 XL Grp .40 21.95 +.35 XcelEngy 1.01 23.48 -.07 Xerox .17 11.76 -.13 Yamana g .12f 12.31 -.16 YingliGrn ... 10.09 -.06 YumBrnds 1.00 50.09 +.07
Est. sales 17258. Tue’s Sales: 12,225 Tue’s open int: 194321, up +1565 PORK BELLIES 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 106.00 Mar 11 106.70 May 11 106.70 Jul 11 103.50 Aug 11 102.50 Last spot N/A Tue’s Sales: Tue’s open int: 3, unch
COTTON
NEW YORK(AP) - Cotton No. 2 futures on the N.Y. Cotton Exchange Friday: Open high low settle COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Mar 11 154.12 155.94 154.12 154.12 May 11 139.69 143.48 139.69 139.69 Jul 11 126.35 128.50 126.35 126.35 Oct 11 105.60 Dec 11 95.59 97.25 92.47 94.94 Mar 12 89.20 89.50 87.40 89.50 May 12 88.67 Jul 12 87.35 87.67 87.35 87.67 Oct 12 81.67 Dec 12 81.94 82.84 81.94 82.47 Last spot N/A Est. sales 236375. Mon’s Sales: 317,951 Mon’s open int: 817116, up +4096
chg.
-5.00 -5.00 -5.00 -5.00 -2.53 -2.90 -3.30 -3.21 -2.88 -3.00
GRAINS
CHICAGO(AP) - Futures trading on the Chicago Board of Trade Thursday: Open high
low settle
chg.
WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Mar 11 783 785ü 756 783ø +18ø May 11 810ü 810ø 783fl 809fl +17ü Jul 11 821ø 823ø 797ø 822ø +16ü
MARKET SUMMARY
NYSE
AMEX
NASDAQ
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name Vol (00) Last Citigrp 5044140 4.73 BkofAm 2354073 13.38 SPDR Fncl 699728 15.98 S&P500ETF687657125.78 JPMorgCh 467736 42.16
Chg -.01 +.40 +.18 +.39
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
%Chg +45.3 +21.7 +12.9 +10.5 +10.1
Name Vol (00) CAMAC En 83960 RareEle g 48763 GoldStr g 47745 Hyperdyn 39595 ParaG&S 35155
Last 2.07 10.17 4.53 5.00 3.36
Chg -.57 -.11 -.29 +.69 -.10
%Chg +16.6 +16.0 +12.7 +7.4 +5.8
Name SiriusXM Intel HuntBnk Microsoft Cisco
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Vol (00) 1117163 475608 432515 418581 414308
Last 1.60 20.89 6.85 28.19 19.56
Chg +.13 -.21 +.15 +.12 +.030
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name MI Devel OxfordInds Newcastle BcpSouth AegeanMP
Last 27.69 26.97 6.92 16.11 10.04
Chg +8.63 +4.80 +.79 +1.53 +.92
Name Crossh g rs Hyperdyn SondeR grs ChinaNutri PacBkrM g
Last 2.04 5.00 3.38 2.90 9.70
Chg +.29 +.69 +.38 +.20 +.53
Name Lindsay CPI ProsHldg NikeB Orbitz
Last 62.00 20.84 11.06 86.95 6.07
Chg %Chg Name -5.55 -8.2 CAMAC En -1.65 -7.3 NewConcEn -.76 -6.4 GrtBasG g -5.35 -5.8 AvalRare n -.37 -5.7 GoldStr g
Last 2.07 3.38 2.75 4.47 4.53
Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg -.57 -21.6 BioanlySys 2.05 -.53 -20.5 -.54 -13.8 AcuraPh 3.26 -.49 -13.1 -.21 -7.1 NaturlAlt 5.29 -.71 -11.8 -.33 -6.9 LRAD 2.33 -.29 -11.1 -.29 -6.0 VlyNBc wt 2.40 -.30 -11.0
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
DIARY
1,870 1,178 111 3,159 214 14 3,598,397,034
52-Week High Low 11,549.12 9,614.32 5,114.69 3,742.01 413.75 346.95 7,912.80 6,355.83 2,177.58 1,689.19 2,669.01 2,061.14 1,255.82 1,010.91 13,342.44 10,596.20 790.67 580.49
Name
Div
Name Last Chg %Chg LegacyBcp 12.65 +4.05 +47.1 ZoomTech 5.02 +1.19 +31.1 WhitneyH 14.00 +3.13 +28.8 Rdiff.cm 4.92 +1.07 +27.8 ChinaNet 4.32 +.76 +21.3
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
DIARY
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
280 205 36 521 18 16 Lows 128,808,78354
INDEXES
Name Dow Jones Industrials Dow Jones Transportation Dow Jones Utilities NYSE Composite Amex Index Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
Last 11,559.49 5,098.82 405.40 7,931.76 2,163.71 2,671.48 1,258.84 13,371.96 790.59
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume Net Chg +26.33 +3.69 +1.97 +25.66 -.57 +3.87 +4.24 +40.10 +.07
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
PE Last
Chg
YTD %Chg Name
Div
DIARY
1,402 1,254 140 2,796 208 26naNutri 1,589,595,954
% Chg +.23 +.07 +.49 +.32 -.03 +.15 +.34 +.30 +.01
PE Last
YTD % Chg +10.85 +24.37 +1.86 +10.39 +18.56 +17.73 +12.89 +15.79 +26.42
52-wk % Chg +10.44 +21.88 +1.15 +9.90 +19.13 +17.71 +12.34 +15.20 +25.30
Chg
YTD %Chg
BkofAm
.04
20
13.38 +.40
-11.2 ONEOK Pt
4.52f
24
78.70 +.68
+26.3
Chevron
2.88
11
89.92 +.69
+16.8 PNM Res
.50
32
13.08 -.03
+3.4
CocaCl
1.76
20
65.59 +.10
+15.1 PepsiCo
1.92
17
65.68 +.28
+8.0
Disney
.40f
19
37.95 +.62
+17.7 Pfizer
.80f
9
17.56 +.18
-3.5
EOG Res
.62
46
92.20 +.55
-5.2 SwstAirl
.02
24
13.09 -.01
+14.5
...
9
+69.9 TexInst
.52f
14
32.47 +.03
+24.6
FordM
16.99
...
HewlettP
.32
11
41.48 -.43
-19.5 TimeWarn
.85
14
32.27 +.43
+10.7
HollyCp
.60
45
39.53 +.28
+54.2 TriContl
.25e
...
13.64 +.02
+18.4
Intel
.72f
11
20.89 -.21
+2.4 WalMart
1.21
13
53.31 -.34
-.3
IBM
2.60
13 145.95 +.21
+11.5 WashFed
.24f
16
16.70 +.60
-13.7
Merck
1.52
18
.20
12
31.31 +.49
+16.0
23.48 -.07
+10.7
Microsoft
.64
36.22 +.04
-.9 WellsFargo
HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW 7
28.19 +.12
-7.5 XcelEngy
1.01
14
Here are the 525 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, the 400 most active on the Nasdaq National Markets and 100 most active on American Stock Exchange. Mutual funds are 450 largest. Stocks in bold changed 5 percent or more in price. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name Div Last Chg (not its abbreviation). Company names made up of initials appear at Name the beginning of each letters’ list. AAR .48 12.88 # Div: Current annual dividend rate paid on stock, based on latest quar- ACMIn 1.10 9.75 +.13 ACM Op .80 7.25 # terly or semiannual declaration, unless otherwise footnoted. ACM Sc 1.10 8.50 -.13 Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. ACMSp .96 7.50 # Chg: Loss or gain for the day. No change indicated by ... mark. Fund Name: Name of mutual fund and family. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold. Chg: Daily net change in the NAV.
Name Sell AAL Mutual: Bond p 9.49 CaGrp 14.47 MuBd 10.43 SmCoSt 9.73
Chg
-.03 Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. d – New 52-.01 wk low during trading day. g – Dividend in Canadian $. Stock price in U.S.$. n – -.05 New issue in past 52 wks. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. s – Split 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 e 12.31 -.27 IntBd n 10.53 -.01 First Eagle: 46.03 +.01 Diver Inc pe 9.17 -.37 Fidelity Advisor I: IntmMu e n10.03 -.05 GlblA Dimensional Fds: NwInsgtI n 20.19 ... IntlDisc n 32.79 +.09 OverseasA22.37 +.02 EmMCrEq n21.66 +.06 Fidelity Freedom: InvGrBd n 11.37 -.01 Forum Funds: EmMktV 35.31 +.07 FF2010 n 13.82 +.01 InvGB n 7.37 ... AbsStrI r 10.85 +.01 IntSmVa n 16.79 +.03 FF2015 n 11.53 +.01 LgCapVal 11.80 +.06 Frank/Temp Frnk A: LargeCo 9.91 +.03 FF2020 n 14.02 +.02 LatAm 57.58 +.15 CalTFA p 6.75 ... USLgVa n 20.08 +.14 FF2020K 13.39 +.02 LevCoStk n28.35 +.04 FedTFA p 11.38 ... US Micro n13.88 -.01 FF2025 n 11.70 +.02 LowP r n 38.17 +.13 FoundAl p 10.68 +.04 US Small n21.53 +.01 FF2030 n 13.98 +.03 LowPriK r 38.14 +.12 HYTFA p 9.67 ... US SmVa 25.71 +.08 FF2030K 13.80 +.03 Magelln n 71.64 +.14 IncomA p 2.17 +.01 IntlSmCo n16.76 +.01 FF2035 n 11.63 +.03 MidCap n 28.92 +.06 NYTFA p 11.25 ... Fixd n 10.32 ... FF2040 n 8.13 +.02 MuniInc e n12.29 ... StratInc p 10.40 +.01 IntVa n 18.24 +.03 Fidelity Invest: NwMkt r n 15.62 +.03 USGovA p 6.74 ... Glb5FxInc n10.86 -.01 AllSectEq 12.67 +.05 OTC n 55.39 +.01 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: 2YGlFxd n 10.14 ... AMgr50 n 15.38 +.04 100Index 8.74 +.04 GlbBdAdv p ... ... Dodge&Cox: AMgr20 r n12.76 +.01 Ovrsea n 32.32 +.07 IncmeAd 2.16 +.01 Balanced 70.33 +.20 Balanc n 18.22 +.04 Puritn n 17.91 +.03 Frank/Temp Frnk C: Income 13.19 ... BalancedK18.22 +.04 RealE n 25.33 +.16 IncomC t 2.19 +.01 IntlStk 35.46 +.09 BlueChGr n45.53 +.03 SCmdtyStrt n12.35 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: Stock 108.06 +.42 Canada n 56.94 +.12 +.06 SharesA 20.72 +.08 Dreyfus: CapAp n 25.41 -.02 SrsIntGrw 11.22 +.03 Frank/Temp Temp A: Aprec 38.55 +.15 CpInc r n 9.39 +.01 SrsIntVal 9.90 +.02 ForgnA p 6.93 +.02 Eaton Vance A: Contra n 67.88 -.01 StIntMu e n10.61 ... GlBd A p 13.48 +.02 LgCpVal 18.24 +.11 ContraK 67.85 ... STBF n 8.45 ... GrwthA p 17.78 +.05 NatlMunInc 8.95 ... DisEq n 22.59 +.02 SmllCpS r n19.67 +.03 WorldA p 14.79 +.03 Eaton Vance I: DivIntl n 29.97 +.06 StratInc n 11.02 +.01 Frank/Temp Tmp FltgRt 8.95 ... DivrsIntK r 29.94 +.06 StrReRt r 9.48 +.01 B&C: GblMacAbR10.27 +.01 DivGth n 28.40 +.08 TotalBd n 10.69 ... GlBdC p 13.50 +.01 LgCapVal 18.29 +.10 EmrMk n 25.87 +.10 USBI n 11.30 -.02 GE Elfun S&S: FMI Funds: Eq Inc n 44.19 +.28 Value n 68.85 +.36 S&S PM 40.97 +.20 LgCap p 15.63 +.04 EQII n 18.23 +.13 Fidelity Selects: GMO Trust III: FPA Funds: Fidel n 32.27 +.15 Gold r n 51.57 -.44 Quality 20.14 +.02 NwInc 10.83 ... FltRateHi r n9.78 +.01 Fidelity Spartan: GMO Trust IV: FPACres n26.73 +.09 GNMA n 11.46 ... ExtMkIn n 38.28 +.07 IntlIntrVl 21.67 +.02 500IdxInv n44.51 +.15 Fairholme 35.21 +.25 GovtInc 10.41 -.01 GMO Trust VI: Federated Instl: GroCo n 83.72 -.21 IntlInxInv n34.94 +.04 EmgMkts r 14.35 +.04 KaufmnK 5.46 ... GroInc n 18.35 +.08 TotMktInv n36.47 +.12 IntlCorEq 28.79 +.03 TotRetBd 11.12 -.01 GrowthCoK83.69 -.21 Fidelity Spart Adv: Quality 20.14 +.02 HighInc r n 8.91 ... 500IdxAdv n44.51+.15 Goldman Sachs A: Fidelity Advisor A: NwInsgh p 20.00 -.01 Indepn n 24.46 -.03 TotMktAd r n36.47+.12 MdCVA p 35.98 +.08
CATTLE/HOGS
Open high
LVSands ... 46.04 -1.35 LennarA .16 18.96 +.44 LexRltyTr .46f 7.95 -.02 LillyEli 1.96 35.20 +.06 Limited .60a 31.06 -.67 LincNat .20f 28.92 +.17 LizClaib ... 7.75 +.06 LockhdM 3.00f 69.35 -.45 LaPac ... 9.97 +.23 Lowes .44 25.67 -.01 LyonBas A ... u32.95 +.40
Thursday, December 23, 2010
MUTUAL FUNDS
-.01
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
Goldman Sachs Inst: HiYield 7.27 +.01 HYMuni n 8.19 ... MidCapV 36.23 +.08 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.03 ... CapApInst 36.95 -.08 IntlInv t 59.46 +.17 Intl r 60.00 +.18 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 34.54 +.17 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI n 34.55 +.17 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 42.54 +.17 Div&Gr 19.46 +.09 Advisers 19.27 +.03 TotRetBd 10.85 ... Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 12.35 -.05 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r16.64 ... Invesco Funds A: CapGro 13.45 -.01 Chart p 16.15 +.03 CmstkA 15.72 +.09 EqIncA 8.56 +.04 GrIncA p 19.14 +.13 HYMuA 8.99 ... Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 23.68 +.02 AssetStA p24.36 +.02 AssetStrI r 24.56 +.02 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.48 -.01 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd n 11.47 -.01 HighYld n 8.15 ... IntmTFBd n10.79 ... ShtDurBd n10.97 ... USLCCrPls n20.65
Sep 11 834ü 837ü 811ø 836ü Dec 11 849 851fl 827 850ø Mar 12 855 859 840 858 Last spot N/A Est. sales 91756. Tue’s Sales: 36,469 Tue’s open int: 480241, up +586 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Mar 11 609 609fl 600 609 May 11 614ø 617ø 608ü 617 Jul 11 617ø 621fl 612fl 621ü Sep 11 571fl 574ü 568 573ü Dec 11 548fl 551ø 543ü 550 Mar 12 556ü 558fl 552 558 Last spot N/A Est. sales 340384. Tue’s Sales: 120,757 Tue’s open int: 1518419, up +2405 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Mar 11 392ø 397 387 391fl May 11 396fl 400ø 392 395ø Jul 11 400ø 403 396 396ø Sep 11 352ø 352ø 351ø 351ø Dec 11 347 347 345ø 346ø Mar 12 355ø 355ø 355ø 355ø Last spot N/A Est. sales 1534. Tue’s Sales: 537 Tue’s open int: 11771, up +148 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jan 11 1328 1333 1317ø 1328fl Mar 11 1337 1343fl 1328ø 1339fl May 11 1347ü 1350ø 1336fl 1346fl Jul 11 1349fl 1353 1337ø 1349 Aug 11 1324ø 1325ü 1322ü 1323ø Sep 11 1289 1289ü 1285 1285 Nov 11 1248 1255ü 1243 1248ø Jan 12 1254ø 1257fl 1249fl 1251fl Mar 12 1249fl 1255fl 1247fl 1249ø May 12 1242ø 1245 1240ü 1242 Jul 12 1242 1247ø 1239 1241ø Aug 12 1219fl 1219fl 1217fl 1217fl Sep 12 1199ø 1199ø 1197ø 1197ø Last spot N/A Est. sales 292175. Tue’s Sales: 186,406 Tue’s open int: 660863, up +3931
+16ü +15fl +14fl
+.10 Janus S Shrs: Forty 33.37 +.09 Janus T Shrs: BalancdT 25.06 +.02 OvrseasT rx50.29 +.19 PrkMCVal T22.51 +.10 Twenty T x65.85 +.04 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggr 12.46 +.02 LSBalanc 13.14 +.02 LSGrwth 13.15 +.02 Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p25.16 +.02 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.56 +.05 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p21.89 +.06 Legg Mason A: WAMgMu p15.13 ... Longleaf Partners: Partners 28.49 +.12 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.10 ... StrInc C 14.69 -.01 LSBondR 14.05 ... StrIncA 14.61 ... Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdA p12.31 ... InvGrBdY 12.31 -.01 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 11.56 +.08 BdDebA p 7.78 ... ShDurIncA p4.60 ... Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t4.63 ... MFS Funds A: TotRA 14.11 +.04 ValueA 22.84 +.12
FUTURES
MFS Funds I: ValueI 22.93 +.11 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBA 5.86 ... Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 8.54 +.03 Matthews Asian: AsianGIInv17.72 +.03 China Inv 29.47 +.01 PacTgrInv 22.97 +.05 MergerFd 16.05 -.01 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.36 ... TotRtBdI 10.35 -.01 MorganStanley Inst: IntlEqI 13.55 -.01 MCapGrI 37.61 -.02 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 29.35 +.09 GlbDiscZ 29.69 +.09 QuestZ 17.74 +.09 SharesZ 20.87 +.08 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 46.20 +.07 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 47.89 +.08 Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.26 ... MMIntEq r 9.80 ... Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 27.74 +.07 Intl I r 19.42 +.04 Oakmark r 41.41 +.20 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.66 +.01 GlbSMdCap15.40+.02 Oppenheimer A: CapApA p 43.72 +.02 DvMktA p 35.62 +.21 GlobA p 60.54 +.05 GblStrIncA 4.25 +.01
OIL/GASOLINE/NG
NEW YORK(AP) - Trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange Friday: Open high
+6fl +6fl +7 +5 +4ü +4ü
-2ø -3 -5 +13ü +2
+2ø +2ü +2ü +2fl +1ü -ø -1ü -2 -2 -1fl -2 -2 -2
low settle
LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. Feb 11 90.23 90.83 89.83 90.48 Mar 11 90.98 91.58 90.67 91.21 Apr 11 91.62 92.15 91.21 91.81 May 11 92.06 92.57 91.75 92.25 Jun 11 92.33 92.90 92.01 92.52 Jul 11 92.51 92.91 92.31 92.73 Aug 11 92.62 93.02 92.41 92.84 Sep 11 92.73 93.11 92.45 92.91 Oct 11 92.71 93.13 92.54 92.95 Nov 11 92.82 93.15 92.60 92.99 Dec 11 92.86 93.21 92.61 93.04 Jan 12 92.75 93.02 92.63 92.97 Feb 12 92.65 92.91 92.54 92.88 Mar 12 92.54 92.78 92.46 92.78 Apr 12 92.41 92.68 92.37 92.68 May 12 92.49 92.58 92.29 92.58 Jun 12 92.27 92.54 92.21 92.49 Jul 12 92.31 92.40 92.11 92.40 Aug 12 92.03 92.32 92.03 92.32 Sep 12 92.25 Oct 12 92.21 Nov 12 91.93 92.19 91.93 92.19 Dec 12 92.00 92.25 91.71 92.18 Last spot N/A Est. sales 362320. Tue’s Sales: 359,970 Tue’s open int: 1369544, up +9762 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Jan 11 2.4157 2.4260 2.3061 2.4245 Feb 11 2.4000 2.4100 2.3912 2.4069 Mar 11 2.3948 2.4050 2.3867 2.4023 Apr 11 2.4867 2.4941 2.4818 2.4927 May 11 2.4905 2.4971 2.4742 2.4952 Jun 11 2.4881 2.4962 2.4843 2.4924 Jul 11 2.4773 2.4827 2.4744 2.4820 Aug 11 2.4633 2.4719 2.4590 2.4675 Sep 11 2.4465 2.4521 2.4431 2.4495 Oct 11 2.3401 2.3435 2.3365 2.3405 Nov 11 2.3211 2.3254 2.3200 2.3225
chg.
+.66 +.57 +.54 +.53 +.51 +.49 +.47 +.45 +.42 +.40 +.37 +.35 +.34 +.32 +.31 +.29 +.28 +.28 +.29 +.30 +.31 +.32 +.32
+.0260 +.0253 +.0232 +.0215 +.0199 +.0171 +.0158 +.0147 +.0135 +.0109 +.0099
Gold p 47.92 -.78 IntBdA p 6.50 +.02 MnStFdA 32.47 +.17 Oppenheimer Roch: LtdNYA p 3.22 ... RoMu A p 15.34 -.01 RcNtMuA 6.68 ... Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 35.22 +.20 IntlBdY 6.50 +.02 PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 10.79 -.01 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r10.90 ... AllAsset 12.52 +.01 ComodRR 9.26 +.05 HiYld 9.26 ... InvGrCp 10.41 -.02 LowDu 10.35 ... RealRtnI 11.34 -.02 ShortT 9.86 ... TotRt 10.79 -.01 TR II 10.33 -.01 TRIII 9.53 ... PIMCO Funds A: LwDurA 10.35 ... RealRtA p 11.34 -.02 TotRtA 10.79 -.01 PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 10.79 -.01 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 10.79 -.01 PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 10.79 -.01 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 45.25 +.09 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 41.03 +.17 Price Funds: BlChip n 38.37 +.01 CapApp n 20.31 +.08
NASDAQ NATIONAL MARKET
... 37.38 +.06 Div Last Chg Copart CorinthC ... 4.63 +.13 A-B-C Costco .82 72.27 -.05 ... 66.82 +.47 A-Power ... 5.12 -.14 Cree Inc ... 18.69 -.67 ASML Hld .27e u38.31 +.33 Crocs ATP O&G ... 16.15 +.53 Ctrip.com s ... 42.21 +1.25 Cyclacel ... 1.53 -.08 AVI Bio ... 2.04 -.03 ... u18.05 -.04 AcadiaPh h ... 1.10 +.18 CypSemi AcmePkt ... 54.55 -1.80 Cytokinet ... 2.08 -.05 ... 5.41 -.48 ActivsBliz .15 u12.54 +.31 Cytori AdobeSy ... 30.65 -.28 D-E-F Adtran .36 35.86 +.19 ... 13.88 +.04 AEterna g ... 1.78 -.04 Dell Inc AkamaiT ... 48.79 -1.60 DeltaPtr h ... .79 ... ... 37.38 -.40 Alexza ... 1.25 +.04 Dndreon AllosThera ... 4.53 +.04 DirecTV A ... 39.66 +.30 AllscriptH ... 19.37 -.11 DiscCm A ... 42.78 +.07 AlteraCp lf .24 36.02 +.21 DiscCm C ... 37.01 -.10 Amazon ... 184.76 +.01 DishNetwk ... 19.25 +.19 ACapAgy 5.60e 29.79 -.16 DonlleyRR 1.04 17.51 +.28 AmCapLtd ... u8.09 +.10 DressBarn ... 26.27 -.10 ... 2.23 +.03 AmSupr ... 28.57 -.84 drugstre ... 5.93 -.05 Amgen ... 56.95 -.44 DryShips ETrade rs ... 16.03 ... AmkorT lf ... 7.41 -.07 ... 28.57 -.08 Amylin ... 15.21 +.13 eBay ... 7.72 +.11 Anadigc ... 7.18 -.07 eResrch AnadysPh ... 1.10 +.07 EagleBulk ... 4.92 -.05 Angiotc gh ... .22 -.00 ErthLink .64 8.56 ... A123 Sys ... 9.71 +.27 EstWstBcp .04 19.94 +.62 ... 15.98 +.05 ApolloGrp ... 38.96 +.44 ElectArts ... 1.23 -.36 ApolloInv 1.12 11.31 +.02 Emcore Apple Inc ...u325.16 +.96 EndoPhrm ... 35.16 +.02 ApldMatl .28 14.00 +.09 EngyConv ... 4.84 +.04 ... 7.47 -.23 AMCC ... 10.60 -.26 Entegris ApldSig .50 37.80 +.02 EntropCom ... 11.73 -.20 EnzonPhar ... u12.50 +.29 ArenaPhm ... 1.80 -.24 ... 80.65 -.78 AresCap 1.40 16.73 -.07 Equinix AriadP ... 5.21 +.01 EricsnTel .28e 11.41 -.18 Ariba Inc ... 23.72 -.24 EvrgrSlr h ... .57 +.00 ... 8.67 -.41 ArmHld .12e u20.43 +.65 Exelixis ... 9.48 +.20 Arris ... 11.06 -.02 ExideTc ArtTech ... 5.98 ... Expedia .28 26.62 -.57 ArubaNet ... 22.15 -.43 ExpdIntl .40 55.53 -.43 AsiaInfoL ... 17.06 +.26 F5 Netwks ... 136.17 -.47 ... 29.69 +.69 AsscdBanc .04 15.35 +.44 FLIR Sys ... 4.65 +.41 Atheros ... 35.94 +.09 FSI Intl AtlasEngy ... 43.40 -.05 FifthThird .04 14.71 +.41 Finisar ... 28.98 -.42 Atmel ... 12.20 +.01 Autodesk ... u39.62 -.03 FinLine .16 17.45 -1.34 .04 11.49 +.42 AutoData 1.44f 46.91 +.06 FMidBc AvagoTch .07p 28.14 +.26 FstNiagara .60f 14.01 +.18 ... 131.66 -1.37 AvanirPhm ... 4.20 -.02 FstSolar Axcelis ... u3.60 -.08 FstMerit .64 19.91 +.26 ... 59.00 -.47 BGC Ptrs .48e 8.51 -.09 Fiserv ... 7.81 -.08 BMC Sft ... 47.80 -.41 Flextrn FocusMda ... 22.09 -.55 BSD Med ... 4.79 +.39 ... 8.96 -.04 BannerCp .04 2.05 +.25 FormFac FosterWhl ... u34.70 -.30 BedBath ... 47.67 +.12 Biodel ... 1.89 +.09 FresKabi rt ... .04 -.00 FuelCell ... 2.02 +.12 BioFuelEn ... 1.66 -.33 BiogenIdc ... 67.70 -.52 FultonFncl .12 10.46 +.51 BonaFilm n ... d5.92 -.11 G-H-I BostPrv .04 7.02 +.42 BrigExp ... 27.38 -.32 GT Solar ... 9.07 +.52 Broadcom .32 43.92 -.18 Garmin 1.50f 30.57 -.68 .44 29.55 -.07 BrcdeCm ... 5.44 -.05 Gentex Bucyrus .10 89.40 -.05 Genzyme ... 71.52 +.02 GeronCp ... 5.09 -.05 CA Inc .16 24.65 -.08 CH Robins1.16f 79.91 -.12 GileadSci ... 36.34 -.22 Globalstr h ... 1.45 +.06 CNinsure .26e 16.49 +.04 ... 605.49 +2.42 CVB Fncl .34 9.03 +.44 Google Cadence ... 8.42 +.04 HampRB h ... .47 -.03 HancHld .96 34.58 -2.46 CapFdF rs ... 11.65 -.03 CpstnTrb h ... .96 -.06 HanmiFncl ... 1.13 +.04 HansenNat ... 53.98 +.14 CareerEd ... 20.26 +.40 Carrizo ... 32.91 +.51 Harmonic ... 8.61 -.01 CathayGen .04 u16.33 +.11 HercOffsh ... 3.43 -.14 ... 19.00 +.31 Celgene ... 59.45 +.34 Hologic CentEuro ... 23.40 -.06 HotTopic .28a 6.49 -.08 HudsCity .60 12.93 +.23 CentAl ... 15.93 -.08 ... 24.63 +.36 Cephln ... 64.46 -.28 HumGen HuntJB .48 u40.79 +.46 CerusCp ... 2.49 +.01 CharterCm ... 38.50 +.28 HuntBnk .04 6.85 +.15 ... 3.69 +.44 ChkPoint ... u45.90 +.12 HutchT Cheesecake ... 31.53 -.58 iSh ACWI .64e 46.39 +.09 ... 19.93 -.33 ChildPlace ... 49.15 -.83 IconixBr ... 64.00 -.30 ChinaCEd ... 7.29 +.20 Illumina ChinaLdg n ... 21.89 +.87 Imax Corp ... 25.79 -.52 ... 17.01 +.58 ChiValve ... 10.36 -.74 Incyte CienaCorp ... 20.81 -.67 IndBkMI rs ... 1.54 +.01 ... 10.42 -.29 CinnFin 1.60 32.22 +.34 Infinera ... u8.49 +.15 Cintas .49f 28.30 -.90 InspPhar ... 6.70 +.06 Cirrus ... 16.26 +.04 IntgDv Intel .72f 20.89 -.21 Cisco ... 19.56 +.03 InterMune ... 36.30 +2.54 CitrixSys ... 68.45 -1.30 .48 15.17 +.02 CleanEngy ... 14.54 +.03 Intersil ... 49.91 -.17 Clearwire ... 5.19 +.09 Intuit ... 10.51 +.19 CognizTech ... 72.82 -.03 Isis Itron ... 53.85 -.38 Coinstar ... 58.46 -1.97 ... 17.47 -.74 ColdwtrCrk ... 2.90 +.03 Ixia Comcast .38 22.20 -.05 J-K-L Comc spcl .38 20.83 -.08 ... 6.92 -.09 CmcBMO .94b 39.72 +.12 JA Solar JDS Uniph ... u14.36 -.27 Compuwre ... u11.83 +.10 Conexant ... 1.61 -.02 JamesRiv ... u24.85 -.31
Name
Name
JetBlue ... 6.64 -.04 JoyGlbl .70 86.75 -.84 KLA Tnc 1.00 39.68 +.05 Kulicke ... 7.47 -.05 L&L Egy n ... 10.06 +.03 LamResrch ... 52.71 +.15 Lattice ... 5.84 -.09 LeapWirlss ... 12.59 +.32 LegacyBcp .20 u12.65 +4.05 Level3 h ... .98 +.02 LexiPhrm ... 1.59 ... LibGlobA ... 35.06 +.52 LibtyMIntA ... 15.99 -.01 LibMCapA ... 62.24 +2.83 LifeTech ... 55.46 +.33 LimelghtN ... 6.01 -.21 LinearTch .92 34.72 -.21 LinnEngy 2.64f 37.11 +.38 Logitech ... 19.71 +.13 lululemn g ... 71.70 -1.81
M-N-0
MIPS Tech ... 14.68 -.38 MagicSft .50e 7.07 -.07 Magma ... u5.02 -.03 MannKd ... 8.52 +.19 Martek ... 31.56 -.11 MarvellT ... 18.88 -.19 Masimo 2.75e 29.70 -.58 Mattel .83f u26.23 +.36 MaximIntg .84 23.69 +.03 MelcoCrwn ... 6.35 +.06 MercadoL ... 69.25 +.26 MercerIntl ... u7.65 +.45 Microchp 1.38f 34.34 -.13 Micromet ... 8.03 +.07 MicronT ... 8.28 +.14 Microsoft .64 28.19 +.12 Micrvisn ... 1.88 +.14 Mindspeed ... 5.77 +.08 Motricity n ... 20.75 -1.13 Mylan ... 21.41 +.20 NGAS Rs h ... .39 -.01 NII Hldg ... 45.31 +.09 NXP Sem n ... u20.25 +1.00 NaraBncp ... 9.37 +.10 NasdOMX ... 24.16 ... NatPenn .04 8.42 +.37 NaturlAlt ... d5.29 -.71 NetLogic s ... 31.81 -.25 NetApp ... 55.05 -.26 Netflix ... 185.35 -.89 Neurcrine ... u8.44 +.02 NewsCpA .15 14.95 +.46 NewsCpB .15 16.62 +.42 NorTrst 1.12 55.73 +.83 NwstBcsh .40 11.73 +.13 NovtlWrls ... 10.02 +.28 Novell ... 6.01 -.01 Novlus ... 32.60 -.04 NuVasive ... 26.02 +.48 NuanceCm ... 18.27 -.11 Nvidia ... 15.03 +.16 OReillyA h ... 61.21 -.72 OceanFr rs ... .93 -.02 Oclaro rs ... 12.35 -.15 OmniVisn ... 30.25 -.44 OnSmcnd ... 9.28 +.03 Oncothyr ... 3.89 +.44 OnyxPh ... u37.02 +.70 optXprs 4.50e 21.00 +.28 Oracle .20 31.66 -.10 Orexigen ... 8.24 -.16 Oritani s .40f u12.55 +.24 Oxigene h ... d.21 -.03
P-Q-R
RF MicD ... 7.81 -.10 Rambus ... 19.64 +.03 Rdiff.cm ... 4.92 +1.07 RschMotn ... 58.69 +.45 RetailOpp .24 9.60 -.05 RosettaR ... 36.74 -.17 RossStrs .64 63.36 +.25 Rovi Corp ... 58.36 +.60
S-T-U
SEI Inv .20 24.07 -.11 STEC ... 17.14 -.22 SVB FnGp ... u54.24 +1.40 SanDisk ... u51.01 -.63 SangBio ... u6.97 +.09 Sanmina ... 11.68 -.13 Sapient .35e 12.26 +.10 SavientPh ... 11.93 -.20 SciClone ... 4.26 +.16 SciGames ... 9.91 +.10 SeagateT ... 14.85 +.09 Sequenom ... 7.72 +.45 SifyTech ... 2.20 +.24 SigaTech h ... 13.32 -.43 SilicnImg ... 7.08 -.01 SilvStd g ... 27.35 -.17 Sina ... 71.00 -2.70 SinoCEn rs ... 5.69 +.02 SiriusXM ... 1.60 +.13 SkywksSol ... 28.10 -.14 SmartM ... 5.62 -.01 SmithWes ... 3.77 +.04 Sohu.cm ... 65.13 -1.37 Solarfun ... 8.41 -.04 SonicCorp ... 10.90 +.01 SonicSolu ... 11.21 -.20 Sonus ... 2.59 -.01 SpectPh ... 6.26 -.10 Spreadtrm ... u18.65 -.26 Staples .36 22.57 +.29 StarScient ... 1.94 -.01 Starbucks .52 u32.93 +.07 StlDynam .30 18.29 +.07 StemCells ... 1.09 -.02 SterlBcsh .06 u7.12 +.27 SuccessF ... 30.50 -.21 SunOpta ... 8.08 -.38 SunPowerA ... 13.34 -.13 SusqBnc .04 10.11 +.60 Symantec ... 16.71 +.01 Synopsys ... 27.25 +.01 TD Ameritr .20 18.94 +.10 TFS Fncl ... 8.69 +.19 THQ ... 6.17 -.12 tw telecom ... 17.44 +.26 TakeTwo ... 12.57 +.01 TalecrisBio ... 23.02 +.23 Taleo A ... 27.71 -.31 Tekelec ... 11.72 +.21 Tellabs .08 6.71 -.05 TeslaMot n ... 32.63 +.37 TevaPhrm .75e 51.20 +.10 TexRdhse ... 17.32 -.23 TibcoSft ... u20.24 -.94 TiVo Inc ... 8.70 -.03 TowerSemi ... 1.36 -.02 TransGlb ... 15.79 +.59 TridentM h ... 1.82 +.08 TrimbleN ... 40.28 ... TriQuint ... 11.54 -.05 TuesMrn ... 5.50 +.11 UltaSalon ... 34.49 +1.08 Umpqua .20 12.13 +.18 UtdCBksGa ... 2.45 +.37 UrbanOut ... 36.06 -.73
V-W-X-Y-Z
PDL Bio 1.00e 6.38 ... PMC Sra ... 8.46 +.02 Paccar .48a 57.18 +.05 PacerIntl ... 6.75 -.10 PacCapB h ... .31 -.01 PacSunwr ... 5.51 -.11 PanASlv .10f 39.59 -.41 Patterson .40 31.00 -.02 PattUTI .20 21.60 -.09 Paychex 1.24 31.05 +.38 PeopUtdF .62 13.95 +.28 Perrigo .28f 65.52 -.37 PharmPdt .60b 27.80 +.54 Polycom ... 40.13 +.41 Popular ... 3.07 +.13 Power-One ... 10.67 -.33 PwShs QQQ.33eu54.89 -.01 Powrwav ... 2.56 -.10 PriceTR 1.08 u65.37 +1.10 priceline ... 416.17 +9.17 PrivateB .04 15.02 +.48 ProgrsSoft ... u43.38 +2.21 ProspctCap1.21 10.73 +.08 QIAGEN ... 19.44 +.25 QiaoXing ... 1.82 +.04 QlikTech n ... u26.80 -.90 Qlogic ... 16.97 -.18 Qualcom .76 49.99 ...
VeecoInst ... 41.51 +1.15 Verigy ... 12.63 -.33 Verisign 3.00e 33.61 -.31 VertxPh ... 35.11 -1.21 VirgnMda h .16 26.27 -.01 Vivus ... 9.59 -.16 Vodafone 1.33e 26.38 -.10 WarnerCh s8.50e22.27 +.02 WashFed .24f 16.70 +.60 WetSeal ... 3.77 +.01 WhitneyH .04 14.00 +3.13 WholeFd .40 u51.10 -.25 Windstrm 1.00 14.23 +.06 Winn-Dixie ... 6.79 -.03 WonderAuto ... 8.21 +.01 Wynn 1.00a 104.00 -1.91 XOMA rs ... 4.50 +.45 Xilinx .64 28.63 +.24 XinhuaSp h ... .17 -.01 YRC Ww rs ... 3.84 +.13 Yahoo ... 16.63 +.03 Zagg ... 7.49 -.42 Zalicus ... 1.50 +.03 ZionBcp .04 23.68 +.66 Zoltek ... 11.13 +.38
LongweiPI MadCatz g MagHRes Metalico Minefnd g NIVS IntT Nevsun g NDragon NwGold g NA Pall g NthnO&G NthgtM g NovaGld g Oilsands g OpkoHlth OrientPap ParaG&S PhrmAth PionDrill PlatGpMet PolyMet g ProceraNt PudaCoal RadientPh RareEle g RegeneRx
Rentech ... RexahnPh ... Rubicon g ... SamsO&G ... SearchM wt ... SinoHub ... SondeR grs ... SulphCo ... TanzRy g ... Taseko ... TimberlnR ... TrnsatlPet ... TriValley ... TwoHrbInv1.48e US Geoth ... Uluru ... Ur-Energy ... Uranerz ... UraniumEn ... VantageDrl ... VirnetX .50e VistaGold ... WidePoint ... YM Bio g ...
AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE
Div Last Chg ClaudeR g ... CrSuiHiY .32 AbdAsPac .42 6.68 +.01 Crossh g rs ... AdeonaPh ... .97 +.03 Crystallx g ... Advntrx rs ... 2.92 -.07 Cytomed ... AlexcoR g ... 7.16 -.12 DejourE g ... AlldNevG ... 25.86 -1.28 DenisnM g ... AlmadnM g ... 4.80 -.08 EV LtdDur 1.39 AmApparel ... 1.67 +.02 EVMuniBd .92 AntaresP ... 1.70 +.01 EndvSilv g ... ArcadiaRs ... .31 +.02 EntreeGold ... ArmourRsd1.44 7.64 -.05 ExeterR gs ... Aurizon g ... 6.97 -.31 Fronteer g ... AvalRare n ... u4.47 -.33 GabGldNR 1.68 Banks.com ... .30 +.02 GascoEngy ... BarcUBS36 ... u47.99 +.27 Gastar grs ... BarcGSOil ... 25.38 +.24 GenMoly ... Brigus grs ... 1.88 -.02 GoldStr g ... CAMAC En ... d2.07 -.57 GranTrra g ... CanoPet ... .29 -.01 GrtBasG g ... Cardero g ... 1.68 -.04 Hyperdyn ... CardiumTh ... .47 +.02 ImpOil gs .44 ... CelSci ... .85 +.01 IndiaGC CFCda g .01 19.87 -.12 IntTower g ... CheniereEn ... 5.47 -.21 KodiakO g ... ChinaShen ... 4.23 -.12 LadThalFn ...
EmMktS n 34.74 +.08 EqInc n 23.65 +.13 EqIndex n 33.89 +.12 Growth n 32.31 +.01 HiYield n 6.77 ... IntlBond n 9.72 +.03 Intl G&I 13.20 +.01 IntlStk n 14.07 +.04 LatAm n 55.23 +.21 MidCap n 58.83 -.06 MCapVal n23.66 +.10 N Asia n 18.89 +.04 New Era n 51.47 +.15 N Horiz n 33.70 ... N Inc n 9.46 ... R2010 n 15.29 +.02 R2015 n 11.86 +.03 R2020 n 16.40 +.04 R2025 n 12.02 +.03 R2030 n 17.25 +.04 R2035 n 12.21 +.03 R2040 n 17.39 +.05 ShtBd n 4.84 -.01 SmCpStk n34.66 +.03 SmCapVal n36.35+.08 SpecGr n 17.70 +.05 SpecIn n 12.30 +.01 Value n 23.28 +.16 Principal Inv: LT2020In 11.88 +.02 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 13.53 +.08 MultiCpGr 50.79 +.07 VoyA p 23.77 +.08 Royce Funds: LwPrSkSv r18.13 -.06 PennMuI r 11.73 ... PremierI r 20.48 +.01 TotRetI r 13.24 +.01 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 37.21 +.12
Dec 11 2.3100 2.3200 2.3073 2.3150 Jan 12 2.3220 2.3250 2.3220 2.3250 Feb 12 2.3320 2.3385 2.3320 2.3385 Mar 12 2.3445 2.3515 2.3445 2.3515 Apr 12 2.4465 May 12 2.4440 Jun 12 2.4378 2.4390 2.4378 2.4390 Jul 12 2.4305 Aug 12 2.4200 Sep 12 2.4040 Oct 12 2.3025 Nov 12 2.2910 Dec 12 2.2918 2.2918 2.2895 2.2895 Last spot N/A Est. sales 107302. Tue’s Sales: 92,281 Tue’s open int: 282834, off -905 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Jan 11 4.125 4.167 3.988 4.152 Feb 11 4.156 4.196 4.018 4.188 Mar 11 4.161 4.200 4.028 4.196 Apr 11 4.157 4.194 4.029 4.191 May 11 4.193 4.230 4.066 4.229 Jun 11 4.246 4.280 4.126 4.280 Jul 11 4.312 4.347 4.198 4.347 Aug 11 4.360 4.389 4.238 4.388 Sep 11 4.368 4.400 4.250 4.399 Oct 11 4.435 4.472 4.318 4.470 Nov 11 4.627 4.667 4.538 4.665 Dec 11 4.885 4.925 4.803 4.923 Jan 12 5.046 5.083 4.961 5.083 Feb 12 5.034 5.050 4.928 5.050 Mar 12 4.931 4.949 4.834 4.949 Apr 12 4.740 4.756 4.669 4.756 May 12 4.736 4.763 4.736 4.763 Jun 12 4.742 4.798 4.742 4.798 Jul 12 4.840 4.841 4.767 4.841 Aug 12 4.874 4.876 4.874 4.876 Sep 12 4.885 4.889 4.830 4.889 Oct 12 4.910 4.962 4.910 4.962 Nov 12 5.149 5.149 5.080 5.140 Dec 12 5.390 5.391 5.292 5.380 Jan 13 5.495 5.535 5.495 5.535 Feb 13 5.470 5.490 5.470 5.490 Last spot N/A Est. sales 233461. Tue’s Sales: 229,782 Tue’s open int: 784807, off -479
2.02 2.89 u2.04 .30 .47 .30 3.29 15.80 11.26 6.75 3.13 5.89 11.33 18.50 .39 4.25 5.54 4.53 7.92 2.75 u5.00 39.42 .57 9.66 u6.67 1.19
-.12 -.01 +.29 -.00 -.01 +.00 -.04 +.04 +.08 -.29 -.08 -.14 -.49 ... +.07 +.08 -.05 -.29 -.12 -.21 +.69 -.24 +.04 -.56 -.05 -.04
B5
... 2.33 ... .97 ... 6.26 ... 5.64 ... 10.51 ... 2.24 ... 6.85 ... .05 ... 9.12 ... 6.48 ... u27.26 ... 2.98 ... 14.05 ... .42 ... 3.84 ... 6.40 ... u3.36 ... 3.89 ... 8.43 ... 2.40 ... 2.03 ... .62 ... 11.93 ... .74 ... 10.17 ... .23
... -.03 -.05 -.02 -.20 -.04 -.34 +.01 -.21 +.07 +.14 -.08 -.52 ... -.01 +.09 -.10 -.01 +.21 +.02 -.03 +.04 -.01 +.08 -.11 -.03
1.26 1.21 5.45 1.10 d.20 2.57 u3.38 .18 7.08 5.00 .88 3.37 .49 9.72 1.18 .09 2.40 3.29 5.75 2.05 13.67 2.47 1.37 2.20
-.02 -.03 -.17 -.02 +.01 -.06 +.38 -.01 +.08 -.04 +.03 -.03 +.04 +.05 +.03 +.00 +.05 +.12 -.16 ... +.28 -.03 +.12 +.12
S&P Sel 19.58 +.07 LtdTrAd n 11.00 ... PrecMtls r n25.99 -.08 DevMkInst n10.17+.01 LTGrAdml n9.21 -.03 PrmcpCor n13.91 ... ExtIn n 41.87 +.08 Scout Funds: Intl 32.10 +.05 LT Adml n 10.70 ... Prmcp r n 65.75 +.01 MCpAdml n93.57 +.22 SelValu r n19.05 +.07 FTAllWldI r n92.49 Selected Funds: AmShD 41.32 +.17 MuHYAdm n10.11 ... STAR n 19.32 +.02 +.16 AmShS p 41.36 +.17 PrmCap r n68.22 +.01 STIGrade n10.76 -.01 Sequoia n 130.30 -.29 ReitAdm r n78.19 +.48 StratEq n 18.69 +.01 GrwthIst n 31.76 +.03 STsyAdml n10.82 -.01 TgtRetInc n11.36 ... InfProInst n10.52 -.01 St FarmAssoc: Gwth 53.08 +.16 STBdAdml n10.58-.01 TgRe2010 n22.78+.02 InstIdx n 115.67 +.41 ShtTrAd n 15.87 +.01 TgtRe2015 n12.68 TCW Funds: InsPl n 115.68 +.41 TotRetBdI 10.21 ... STFdAd n 10.85 -.01 +.02 STIGrAd n 10.76 -.01 TgRe2020 n22.50+.03 InsTStPlus n28.72+.09 Templeton Instit: TgtRe2025 n12.84 SmCAdm n35.38 +.05 ForEqS 20.37 +.03 MidCpIst n 20.68 +.04 TtlBAdml n10.61 -.02 +.02 Third Avenue Fds: ValueInst 51.29 +.38 TStkAdm n31.61 +.10 TgRe2030 n22.03+.05 SCInst n 35.40 +.05 WellslAdm n52.32 ... TgtRe2035 n13.34 Thornburg Fds: TBIst n 10.61 -.02 IntValA p 27.90 +.11 WelltnAdm n53.93+.14 +.04 TSInst n 31.61 +.10 IntValue I 28.53 +.11 Windsor n 45.67 +.20 TgtRe2040 n21.86 WdsrIIAd n46.04 +.27 +.05 Tweedy Browne: ValueIst n 20.92 +.13 TgtRe2045 n13.80 GblValue 24.20 +.07 Vanguard Fds: Vanguard Signal: AssetA n 24.40 +.05 +.03 VALIC : StkIdx 24.82 +.09 CapOpp n 33.31 +.04 Wellsly n 21.60 ... 500Sgl n 96.18 +.34 DivdGro n 14.53 +.02 Welltn n 31.22 +.08 Vanguard Admiral: BalAdml n 21.50 +.04 Energy n 63.95 +.27 Wndsr n 13.53 +.06 STBdIdx n 10.58 -.01 CAITAdm n10.72 ... Explr n 73.43 -.06 WndsII n 25.94 +.15 TotBdSgl n10.61 -.02 CpOpAdl n76.94 +.09 GNMA n 10.94 ... Vanguard Idx Fds: TotStkSgl n30.51 +.10 EMAdmr r n39.00 +.09 GlobEq n 18.03 +.05 500 n 116.40 +.41 Energy n 120.07 +.51 HYCorp n 5.67 ... DevMkt n 10.24 +.01 Waddell & Reed Adv: ExplAdml n68.32 -.06 HlthCre n 122.68 +.26 EMkt n 29.68 +.07 AssetS p 9.31 +.01 ExtdAdm n41.84 +.07 InflaPro n 13.14 -.02 Extend n 41.79 +.07 500Adml n116.43 +.41 IntlGr n 19.14 +.03 Growth n 31.74 +.03 Wells Fargo Adv C: GNMA Ad n10.94 ... IntlVal n 32.49 +.07 MidCap n 20.60 +.05 AstAllC t 11.70 +.01 GrwAdm n 31.75 +.02 ITIGrade n 10.07 -.02 SmCap n 35.32 +.05 HlthCr n 51.77 +.11 LifeCon n 16.46 +.01 SmlCpGth n22.17 -.05 Wells Fargo Instl: HiYldCp n 5.67 ... LifeGro n 22.28 +.05 SmlCpVl n 16.36 +.08 UlStMuIn p 4.81 ... InfProAd n 25.82 -.03 LifeMod n 19.80 +.02 STBnd n 10.58 -.01 ITBdAdml n11.24 -.02 LTIGrade n 9.21 -.03 TotBnd n 10.61 -.02 Western Asset: ITsryAdml n11.52 -.02 Morg n 18.19 -.01 TotlIntl n 15.77 +.02 CorePlus I 10.77 -.01 IntGrAdm n60.90 +.10 MuInt n 13.28 ... TotStk n 31.60 +.10 Yacktman Funds: ITAdml n 13.28 ... MuLtd n 11.00 ... Vanguard Instl Fds: ITGrAdm n10.07 -.02 MuShrt n 15.87 +.01 BalInst n 21.50 +.03 Fund p 17.23 +.10
+.0098 +.0085 +.0080 +.0070 +.0050 +.0030 +.0015 +.0015 +.0015 +.0015 +.0015 +.0015 +.0015
+.093 +.104 +.100 +.094 +.091 +.085 +.079 +.077 +.076 +.075 +.066 +.059 +.058 +.058 +.057 +.051 +.051 +.051 +.051 +.051 +.051 +.049 +.047 +.045 +.043 +.040
METALS NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Wed. Aluminum -$1.0783 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$4.2677 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper $4.2705 N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Lead - $2465.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.0411 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1387.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1388.20 troy oz., NY Merc spot Tue. Silver - $29.375 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $29.376 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Platinum -$1730.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1721.90 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. n.q.-not quoted, n.a.-not available r-revised
B6 Thursday, December 23, 2010 JACQUELINE BIGAR YOUR HOROSCOPE
The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19) Open your eyes to a kid’s mind-set. You will breeze through work and play with more spontaneity and happiness. Should someone toss a snafu in your path, it won’t have an impact. Tonight: Get into the spirit. Go caroling, help decorate a tree or sip eggnog.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might opt to finish up holiday details. At the last minute, you could take on a new project or rush out the door. Did you forget someone? Or is this dash the result of forgetting a work-related matter? Tonight: Close to home.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Finally, you have the right words and others can hear you. Or do they? Someone quite close could act as if he or she hasn’t heard you, but you can be sure that you hit the bull’s-eye. You don’t need to hammer in an opinion. Tonight: Start a round of gift-giving.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Those impulses that encourage you to go out and spend might attack again. Be sure this is what you really want to do. Pressure from a loved one or family member might be dealt with in another manner. Be creative. Tonight: Your treat.
Legals
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish December 23, 30, 2010, January 6, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., Plaintiff,
v.
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, OR LEGATEES OF ALICE P. DAY, DECEASED; OCCUPANTS, WHOSE TRUE NAMES ARE UNKNOWN, IF ANY; THE UNKNOWN SURVIVING SPOUSE OF ALICE P. DAY, IF ANY, Defendants. NOTICE OF SUIT
STATE OF NEW MEXICO to the above-named Defendant The Unknown Heirs, Devisees, or Legatees of Alice P. Day, Deceased. GREETINGS: You are hereby notified that the above-named Plaintiff has filed a civil action against you in the above-entitled Court and cause, the general object thereof being to foreclose a mortgage on property located at 1600 S. Cottonwood, Roswell, NM 88201, Chaves County, New Mexico, said property being more particularly described as: LOT 12 IN BLOCK 15 OF FRUITLAND PARK SUBDIVISION NO. 1, IN THE CITY OF ROSWELL, COUNTY OF CHAVES AND STATE OF NEW MEXICO, AS SHOWN ON THE OFFICIAL PLAT FILED IN THE CHAVES COUNTY CLERKʼS OFFICE ON FEBRUARY 28, 1962 AND RECORDED IN BOOK D OF PLAT RECORDS, AT PAGE 3.
Unless you serve a pleading or motion in response to the complaint in said cause on or before 20 days after the last publication date, judgment by default will be entered against you. Respectfully Submitted, CASTLE STAWIARSKI, LLC
Steven J Lucero___ Elizabeth Mason Keya Koul Steven J. Lucero 20 First Plaza NW, Suite 602 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Attorney for Plaintiff (800) 286-0013; (505) 848-9500
WITNESS the Honorable CHARLES C. CURRIER, DISTRICT COURT JUDGE, of the Fifth Judicial District of New Mexico Judicial District Court, Chaves County, New Mexico, this ____30__ day of ____November____, 2010. Kennon Crowhurst CLERK OF COURT
By: 10-3161 FC01
THE
DISTRICT
Catalina D. Ybarra___ Deputy
IN PRINT OR ON LINE
---------------------------------------Publish Dec. 16, 23, 2010 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT
Case No. D-504-CV-201000975
By:
Legals
www.roswell-record.com
IN THE MATTER OF PERSONS WHO ARE INCAPACITATED No. PQ-2010-29
NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION
STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO: John Doe, father of K.M.G., upon whom constructive service of process is hereby sought by publication. GREETINGS: You and each of you are hereby notified that there is now pending in the District Court of Chaves County, New Mexico, Cause No. PQ-2010-29, wherein Kandi Overstreet is Petitioner and John Doe is one of the Respondents The general object of this action is to appoint Kandi Overstreet as Guardian and Conservator of the minor child, K.M.G. Notice is further given that unless you plead in said cause on or before January 23, 2011, judgment by default will be entered against you in conformity with the allegations of the Petition for Order Appointing Guardian and Conservator. The name and address of Petitionerʼs attorney is: Timothy J. Cusack of Cusack, Associates, Jaramillo & P.C., P.O. Box 250, Roswell, New Mexico, 88202-0250. WITNESS my hand and seal of said District Court on this 24th day of November, 2010. KENNON CROWHURST, Clerk of the District Court (SEAL)
CUSACK, JARAMILLO & ASSOCIATES, P.C. s/Timothy J. Cusack Attorney for Petitioner P.O. Box 250 Roswell, NM 88202-0250 (575) 622-3542
CLASSIFIEDS
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Note a new sense of direction when you wake. Follow your instincts. Naturally, you seem to make an adjustment in problem situations, eliminating issues. Your personality and intellect meld. Others respond to your magnetism. Tonight: All smiles.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be willing to observe. If you feel out of sorts or hurt by another person’s comments, consider that you could be unusually sensitive. How much are you playing out an old wound? A child or loved one seeks you out. Tonight: Surround yourself with music.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Once more, pressure mounts. How much of this feeling is coming from your own judgments of what you need to do? No one else is pressuring you but you. In that context, you can make another choice. Friends help you let go. Tonight: And the party goes on.
Legals ---------------------------------Publish Dec. 16, 23, 2010 FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF PAT MARIE BULLOCK, Deceased. NO. PB-10-68
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed Personal Representative of the referenced Estate. All persons having claims against the Estate are required to present their claims within two months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or their claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned Personal Representative or filed with the Chaves County District Court, 400 North Virginia, Roswell, Chaves County, New Mexico 88201. DATED this 13th day of December, 2010.
/s/ Donald Douglas Bullock Donald Douglas Bullock 603 Tierra Berrenda Roswell, NM 88201
Steven P. Fisher SANDERS, BRUIN, COLL & WORLEY, P.A. Attorneys for the Estate P.O. Box 550 Roswell, New Mexico 88202-0550 (575) 622 - 5440
GARAGE SALES
DON’T’ MISS A SALE BY MISSING THE 2:00 PM DEADLINE FOR PLACING YOUR ADS
ANNOUNCEMENTS 015. Personals Special Notice VIOLIN SOLO music for your Holiday Party or event! Professional Musician. Violin lessons for you! 818-256-9221 jose_berrones@hotmail.com
Professional Violinist Violin Solo music for your Holiday Party or event! Violin Lessons for you! 818-256-9221
jose_berrones@hotmail.com
Roswell Daily Record SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Be aware of an older relative and his or her expectations. Communication affects your plans. Understanding evolves between you and others. Remember, you are going through a similar experience. Tonight: A must appearance.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Stop. Take five minutes to reflect on what must be done before Christmas, both personally and perhaps professionally. Don’t forget someone who is often in your thoughts but not present. Tonight: Use your imagination.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) A partner’s or dear friend’s approach touches you. Let this person know how much you appreciate his or her support and caring. It is a good time to stop and share on a deep level. Tonight: Be as open as you can be.
025. Lost and Found FOUND 12/18/10 female Boston Terrier, older. 420-3782
LOST 2 dogs near Sycamore/2nd St., Sycamore/Country Club, 1 brown lab & 1 black lab cross. Reward. Call 623-5880. FOUND BLACK dog North of Roswell. 575-626-6366
045. Employment Opportunities DELIVERY/IN-STORE PT permanent position Accent Flowers 3110 N. Main DRIVERS Come join our team! Coastal Transport is seeking Drivers with Class (A) CDL. Must be 23 yrs old (X) Endorsement with 1 yr experience, excellent pay, home everyday! Paid Vacation, saftey bonus, company paid life inc. We provide state of the art training program. $2000 sign on bonus. For more information call 1-877-297-7300 or 575-748-8808 between 8am & 4pm, Monday-Friday. COMFORT KEEPERS NOW HIRING in Roswell & Artesia. Seeking reliable, experienced caregivers for immediate F/T or P/T work days or week-ends. This will be the best job you ever had! Call Carol @ 624-9999 and apply at 1410 S. Main St. Roswell www.beacomfortkeeper.com.
PYRAMID SERVICES at FLETC Artesia, NM is seeking qualified personnel to act as Spanish Speaking Role Players in Part Time positions.
Role Players assume characters associated with various given scenarios. Duties and Responsibilities: • Able to understand both written and spoken English • Able to adapt to varying environmental conditions • Able to dress according to prescribed role/scenario • Able to take directions Physical Requirements: • Good Physical Condition • Able to climb stairs • Able to pass drug/alcohol test and criminal background check
For applications contact the Department of Workforce Solutions, or fax resumes to 575.748.7395.
Pyramid Services, Inc. is an equal opportunity employer who values diversity in the workplace. Please visit our website at www.pyramidservicesinc. com.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You give friendship to
045. Employment Opportunities CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE/ ROUTE DRIVER Requisition Number 102577 High School Diploma/GED, experience with Route Sales desired, ability to work directly with our customers, build relationships with our customers by providing resolution to problems and/or complaints, conduct customer satisfaction reviews, clean driving record, ability to lift up to 50 lbs, and ability to pass a Department of Transportation Drug Screen and physical. Competitive salary and benefits. Application available at 515 N. Virginia, Roswell, NM 88201 from 12/10/10 to 01/07/11. EOE EMPLOYER
COUNSELING ASSOCIATES, Inc. is seeking to fill the full-time position of Safe and Stable Families Practitioner. This is an in-home service program working with children and families who are or have been involved with Child Protective Services. If you are an energetic person and want a rewarding career in the mental health field come be a part of our team. Bachelors degree in Human Services, Education or related field required. Salary DOE. An EOE. Bilingual (English/Spanish) a plus. Please send resume to: Counseling Associates, Inc. Attn: Samantha Reed PO BOX 1978 Roswell, NM 88202. PUBLIC RELATIONS & TRAINING MANAGER
PVT has an opening for an experienced Public Relations and Training Manger. This person would be responsible for public communications in all service PVT service areas and training of services and products. The position is based at Headquarters in Artesia. PVT provides a competitive wage, sales commission and benefits package.
Preference given for bachelor's degree in public relations, marketing, communications or closely related field with a minimum 2 years' experience in related field. Previous experience with filming and production required. Applications with background check forms may be obtained at Headquarters or on webpage www.pvt.com. Resumes and applications, including wage history, may be sent to Peñasco Valley Telecommunications, H. R. Dept., 4011 W. Main, Artesia, NM 88210. E-mail to: janiceb@pvt.com Fax to: 575.736.1376. Equal Opportunity Employer
those you care about. They in return express loyalty and deep caring. Don’t fight this open exchange between you and others. You discover the true purpose of this situation. Tonight: In the whirlwind of living.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Listen to what is being shared between you and those who are part of your day-to-day life. Take time today to express your authentic feelings. That might be more important than the Christmas-present ritual. Tonight: Join a co-worker or friend for some holiday cheer.
BORN TODAY Actress Susan Lucci (1946), French first lady Carla Bruni (1967), actor Harry Shearer (1943)
R O S W E L L D A I LY R E C O R D
622-771 0
045. Employment Opportunities THE ROSWELL Daily Record is currently accepting applications for the position of Pressman. This is a Part-time graveyard position, with weekend shifts. Applicants should be flexible with their schedule. For more information, and an application, please stop by the Roswell Daily Record Monday thru Friday 8am - 5pm.
No Phone Calls Accepted.
PART TIME Independent Contractor Position to complete commercial and personal lines Insurance Inspections and Premium Audits in Roswell and surrounding area. Position is immediately available. Prior insurance related loss control or premium audit experience required. Volume of work varies but is steady and is a great supplemental income. Some overnight travel could be required. Qualified contractors must be able to complete all assignments timely and have computer with high speed internet, dependable transportation. Confidential resume along with references can be submitted by email to rkelly@pcs-sw.com. BETWEEN HIGH School and College? Over 18? Drop that entry level position. Earn what youʼre worth!!! Travel w/Successful Young Business Group. Paid Training. Transportation, Lodging Provided. 1-877-646-5050 PHLEBOTOMY CERTIFICATION Class January 22 & 23. Fairfield Inn, Roswell, 1201 North Main $300 To register call 505-620-3025 or 505-410-9559 or swphlebotomy.com MEDICAL OFFICE POSITION:
KYMERA Independent Physicians
Full Time Medical Billing Supervisor 2-4 yrs Medical Billing-Coding exp; 2-4 yrs supervisory exp; and communication, critical thinking & people skills required. Knowledge of EMR systems and accounting experience or degree preferred. Please fax resume with cover letter to: (575) 627-9520
DRIVER-SINGLE SOURCE Dispatch. LOTS OF FREIGHT. Daily or Weekly pay. Flexible schedule. Newer Equipment. Van and Refrigerated. CDL-A, 6 months recent experience. 800-414-9569. www.driveknight.com AVON, Buy or Sell. Pay down your bills. Start your own business for $10. Call Sandy 317-5079 ISR.
045. Employment Opportunities MEDICAL OFFICE Position: KYMERA Independent Physicians Primary Care Clinic Is seeking a Qualified Applicant for: Full-Time RN/BSN:
Experience in Family Practice/Internal Medicine required. 2 - 3 years working in a medical office setting preferred. Please fax resume with cover letter to: (575) 627-9520
WANTED FULL-TIME and Part-time EMTʼs for night positions at Chaves County Detention Center Medical Services. Days and weekends, competitive salary & benefits. Contact Susan at 627-4322 CANDLEWOOD SUITES Front Desk/Night Audit Part-time 2 nights a week. Customer service experience preferred. Apply in person at 4 Military Heights Dr.
DEAN BALDWIN Painting has immediate openings for permanent/FT Lic. A & P Mechanics. Commercial a/c exp preferred. Pay rates $18-$22/hr based on past exp. Exc benefits. EOE. Call 575-347-4168 Mari Ext 23, email resumes deanbaldwinpainting.com. EXPERIENCED CHEF or line cook, apply in person at Roswell Country Club, serious inquiries only. 2601 N. Urton Rd, ask for John. Tues.-Fri. from 9am-4pm.
SERVICES
105. Childcare
NEED CHILD care? Find the widest range of available childcare for your children and their needs. 1-800-691-9067 or www.newmexic okids.org. You may also call us; Family Resource & Referral 622-9000 and we can help you navigate the system.
140. Cleaning
JD CLEANING Service, Licensed and bonded. References. 623-4252. HOUSEKEEPING SERVICES Home and/or Office. Attention to detail, highly dependable & honest. 578-1447 or (575)749-4900 HOUSE CLEANER 20 yrs experience. 623-8563 ONLY 3 days left until Christmas. If you need any house cleaning done please call Connie at 627-0416.
185. Electrical BIG HORN Electric Great work, affordable price. 575-317-8345 NM Lic#367662
CLASSIFIEDS
Roswell Daily Record 195. Elderly Care
ADVANCED HOME Care. All caregivers are licensed bonded & have passed federal criminal back-ground checks. Loving care since 1994. 627-6256
200. Fencing M.G. Horizons free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block 575-623-1991
Rodriguez Construction FOR WOOD, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100
210. Firewood/Coal SEANSONED MOUNTAIN wood $100 1/2 cord. Free delivery/stack. 626-9803.
RANCH MIX, cedar, pinon, juniper seasoned & split, delivered & stacked $250, full cords only. 575-653-4140
GRAVES FARM oak and elm. Cord and 1/2 cord delivered. 622-1889
5 CORDS cedar/pinon mix $220 a cord, $110 a half, delivered & stacked. 625-0105 FIREWOOD Seasoned cedar & juniper: split, stacked & delivered, 1/2 cord $125, full $225. 575-910-4842
220. Furniture Repair REPAIR & Refinish furniture, build furniture, firewood. Southwest Woods. 1727 SE Main. 623-0729 or 626-8466 By appointment only.
225. General Construction
Carpentry, Drywall, Painting, doors, windows, tile work. Lic., Insured, Bonded. 914-7002 Dean TEE TIME Construction Commercial/Residential Construction - 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. Call John 317-1477
232. Chimney Sweep CHIMNEY SWEEP Have your woodstove or fireplace inspected and cleaned. Dust free Guarantee. 35 years Experience, Licensed, Insured. Bulldog Janitorial Services 575-308-9988
Cordova Chimney 623-5255 or 910-7552
235. Hauling
PROPERTY CLEANUPS Will tear down old buildings, barns, haul trash, old farm equipment. 347-0142 or 317-7738
270. Landscape/ Lawnwork
Roswell Lawn Service rake leaves, trim trees, general cleanup, 420-3278
MOWING EDGING clean garden spots, trim bushes, sm. trees rototill & pick pecans on 1/2ʼs prompt/good work. Call Kay 627-6513, 993-3293 WEEKEND WARRIOR Lawn Service mowing, property cleanup, residential rain gutter cleaning, and much more 575-626-6121
Greenscapes Sprinkler Systems Lawn mowing, field mowing, gravel, sod-hydro seed, pruning, tilling, For dependable & reliable service call 622-2633 or 910-0150.
LAWN SERVICE & much more work at low price. 914-0803 or 914-1375
MOW GRASS, Trim Bushes, Flower Beds, Clean Ups, Pull Weed, Leaf Raking, Pecan pick up, Tree Pruning, Rock Yards. Call Pedro or Virginia 575-910-5247 or 623-1826
285. Miscellaneous Services 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 need to expand or start a business. Contact the New Mexico Seed Loan Program at 1-800-866-2253 or www.nmseedloans.org for more information. A low interest loan program of DVR State of New Mexico.
285. Miscellaneous Services DOCUMENT PREPARATION, desktop publishing, proofreading, writing services and much more! TypeTech Assistant Services 575-308-1236
305. Computers COMPUTER DOCTOR Microsoft Certified 50% off any repair (Labor only) 575-208-9348 Call Billy
310. Painting/ Decorating PAINTING 20YRS experience, Int-Ext, quality work. Call 420-4114.
345. Remodeling
BERRONES CONSTRUCTION. Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing. Licensed, Bonded. Ray: 625-9924/ 626-4153. NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552.
350. Roofing Guaranteed Shingle Roof jobs. Locally owned. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 622-2552.
T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Call John 317-1477
395. Stucco Plastering
For stucco traditional or synthetic, also block, brick & stone work. Rodriguez Const. 420-0100
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 ALLENʼS TREE Service. The oldest tree service in Roswell. Million $ ins. 626-1835
435. Welding RANCHEROʼS WELDING and Construction On site repairs or fabrication. Pipe fencing, Wrought iron, Work, Roofs, Shingle, Metal, Stone, Concrete, Drywall, Tape, Frame, Block, Lath, Stucco, Tile. Bobcat Work Services. More Info www.rancheroswelding.com
Hector (575) 910-8397
440. Window Repair AQUARIUS GLASS For Less. Screens, Patio & Shower Drs., Table Tops & Mirrors. 623-3738.
T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Call John 317-1477
FINANCIAL
485. Business Opportunities DO YOU earn $800 in a day? Your Own Local Candy Route! 25 Machines and Candy All for $9995. 877-915-8222 All Major Credit Cards Accepted!
REAL ESTATE
490. Homes For Sale EQUAL HOUSING NOTICE All real estate advertised in the Roswell Daily record is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion or sex, family status and handicap or national origin or an intention to make any such preference limitation or discrimination. The Roswell Daily Record will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
490. Homes For Sale
505. Investment/ Commercial/ Business Property
ADVERTISE YOUR HOME ALL OVER NEW MEXICO. CALL THE DAILY RECORD FOR DETAILS. 622-7710 3BR 1 bath at the base in culdesac 70 Vanderslice $38,000 $5k down owner financing. Available January 1st 420-1352 OPEN HOUSE Call 622-7010/910-6104. 3305 Riverside, 2222 sq. ft., 4/3/2, will negotiate 1% finders fee.
Restaurant bldg, $275K cash/trade for Ruidoso prprty, M-Th 624-1331
540. Apartments Unfurnished
5.26 ACRES commercially zoned, east of Allsupʼs at RIAC entrance. $60,000. $7,000 down/$745 mo. @ 8% int. for 8 yrs. John Owen, Inc., Owner/Broker 623-3322.
515. Mobile Homes - Sale
3 for 1 (49,900) Capitan property Sierra Blanca view 3 lots 2 homes large shop paved access, city water. 317-2285.
1997 MOBILE home, all set in nice adult park, nearly new, refrig. air. Call 575-317-6489.
3 BR,1 bath 1 car garage 210 E.Ballard, $85,000 420-9072
WE BUY used mobile homes. Single & double wides. 575-622-0035 D01090.
2 HOUSES-2BR/1BA, $60k each , owner will finance w/$6k down. 623-0459
520. Lots for Sale
4Bd, 1 Ba, new paint, carpet, doors,fncd yrd, $59,500, M-Th 624-1331 Best offer or $103,000, Brokers welcome. #3 Forest Dr. OPEN HOUSE DAILY 1PM TO 6PM, 2050 square feet. 4 Bedroom, 1 3/4 bath. Esquibel Real Estate. 575-626-7550 CISCO 575-312-3529 REDUCED Must sell charming 2/1, located at 601 S. Missouri. Basement, huge lot, new fencing. $64,900, owner financing avail. 637-5530
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
917 W. Forest. 3 bdrm, 1 1/2 bth, refrigerated air, new carpet, stove, microwave, dishwasher, disposal. Bonus room. $80,000-owner financing to qualified buyer with $4,000 down. 623-4416
495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale 3.3 acres corner Pine Lodge Rd. and Brenda Rd $35,000; terms, $3,500 dn, 0% int., $350 mo. (575)361-3083/887-5915.
1 BD, all bills pd, no pets, no smoking, no HUD 623-6281 1&2Bd, wtr pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331 Town Plaza Apartments New Owners, friendly new managers. New Remodeled EXTRA LARGE 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Each 2 & 3 bedroom is multi level, upstairs/downstairs w/ large closets, stove & refrigerator, private patios, and private parking. Complex has a pool, laundry room, and a quiet garden setting environment. Friendly managers on-site. Seniors 55yrs plus, will receive discount. No HUD. Good credit? Pay less rent! 575-623-2735 1BR APARTMENT all bills pd, 1506 W. 2nd, 637-2753 2 BED, 2 ba, 1 car garage, central air, fenced yard, 26-A Bent Tree Rd, $700/mo, $700/dep., 627-9942
Mobile Home Lots for Sale $18,000. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. We Take Visa and Mastercard! 625-9746 or 420-1352.
PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, Owner will finance with 10% down, New Construction only (no mobile homes), , Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd. between Country Club & Berrendo Rd. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 626-6791, 626-4337
RENTALS
535. Apartments Furnished
5 ACRE land for sale w/1500 sq. ft. shop, mountain view/city view, #40 Tamarish Rd (West on Pine Lodge to Tamarish). $45k Call 910-0115.
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, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331
PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHANTED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN.
Thursday, December 23, 2010
Dennis the Menace
540. Apartments Unfurnished
B7
BEST VALUE IN TOWN 3br/2ba, $559+elec, newly remodeled, only a few apts left, 1br $380, 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
EFFICIENCY 2 BR, downtown, clean, water paid. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD Call 623-8377 EFFICIENCY 1 br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348.
HISTORIC DISTRICT 612 W. 3rd 2 bd duplex Hardwood floors, water pd washer & dryer $725 avail. 01/15/11 575-937-8658. 510 S. Sycamore. 3 bd/2 ba. 1 car garage. Laundry room. 910-4225. CUTE 2br/1ba, all electric, w/d hookup, $575/$350. 910-0827
SPACIOUS 2br/2ba, all electric, w/d hookup, pets ok $600/$350. 910-0827
LARGE 3/2, unfurnished w/ref. air, 1212 N. Washington, no HUD. 623-8240 SUPER NICE 2/2 central Ht-master suite-recent remodel $595 317-1078
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
545. Houses for Rent-Furnished
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished
COZY COWBOY Rentals can house you! Bills paid, 30-days minimum. Credit cards, pets, workers, FLETC welcome. 575-624-3258, 626-4822, 626-4848. www.cozycowboy.com
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!
5404 CACTUS Ave., North of Mall, Clean Sm. Furnished 2 BR, 1BA, W/D, Utilities Paid, Yard Care, Carport, Couple or Single, No HUD, No Pets, $700/mo, $500/dep. 625-0684 or 626-2545
3 BR 1 bath garage located at 4 W. Eyman Hud OK $595 mo. $500 dep. 575-623-1800 or 420-5516 NO PETS, No HUD, 3br, $650 mo., $500 dep. 914-0101
DARLING 2/2 casita in NW location close to hospitals/shopping. W/D, utilities & alarm system pd. $1200 mo., ref. required. Owner/broker 626-7663.
VISIT US ONLINE RDRNEWS.COM
ALL BILLS PAID 3br, 2ba, $680 mo., brand new everything. 1br $480. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, 930 sf, $559 plus electric. 502 S. Wyoming. 2 bedroom, 1 bath $480 or 1 bedroom $380. Call 622-4944. 1BR, 650 sq ft, $380 + elec. Central heating, ref air, new carpet, paint & tile. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
ROSWELL-RECORD.COM INTERNET DIRECTORY
ACCOUNTANTS
Published every Thursday in the Roswell Daily Record
Gilmore, Gannaway, Andrews, Smith & Co., LLC 2724 Wilshire Boulevard • 622-5200
http://www.ggas.com
AUTO
Roswell Ford-Lincoln-Mercury 821 N. Main • 623-3673
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FINANCIAL
Pioneer Bank 3000 N. Main • 306 N. Pennsylvania • 300 S. Sunset 3301 N. Main • 2 St. Mary’s Place 624-5200 • 627-4400
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Roswell Credit Union 2514 N. Main St. • Branch: 110 W. College Blvd., Ste G 575-623-7788 • 1-877-623-7788 Wells Fargo Bank
FUNERAL HOMES
Ballard Funeral Home & Crematory 910 S. Main St. • 575-622-1121
http://www.roswellcu.org
http://www.wellsfargo.com
Suzanne Cloud Agency http://www.farmersinsurance.com 400 N. Penn, Ste 230 • 623-1111 or 877-626-8682 Alex Pankey 501 N. Main • 1-800-806-7653 • 626-5006 • 622-0875 Kimble Hibbard 501 N. Main • 622-0875 • 420-1194 Taylor & Taylor Realtors, Ltd. 400 W. 2nd St. • 622-1490 Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 501 N. Main • 622-0875 Ruth E. Wise 614 N. Main • 575-317-1605 • 575-625-6935
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Bill Davis http://www.billdavis-roswellrealestate.com 501 N. Main St., 575-622-0875, 575-420-6300 Shirley Childress http:\\www.shirleysellsroswell.com 110 E. Country Club • 575-622-7191 • 575-317-4117
TRAVEL AGENCIES
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• Published 6 Consecutive Days
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B8 Thursday, December 23, 2010 550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 2BR, 1ba, Stove, Frig, Carport, w/d hookups heat pump. By Cahoon Park. No pets/smoking. References Required. $680/mo, $600/dep. 410 N. Kansas Ave. 623-8186
200 S. Washington Ave. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, detached garage on an extra large lot. $700.00 per month with 1 month security deposit. Renter pays all utilities. No indoor pets, no smokers. Available Jan. 1, 2011. Call 575-317-5322 or 575-625-8627. TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262
409 LA Fonda - Nice and Clean 3 bedroom, 2 bath, one car garage - $1,100 a month. Call 627-7595 or 840-7411. LARGE 3 bedrooms 2 bath w/d hook ups appliances. No pets or HUD $700 mo. $500 dep. 840-8630 or 623-6200 Dan, 914-0531
GOOD LOCATION Large 2 bedroom - appliances, w/d hookups, $550 mo., $450 dep. HUD ok, no pets. 623-6200 or 840-8630, 914-0531 CALL AFTER 6pm 818-235-3904. 2/1ba, adults only, $600/$500, 3/2ba, kids ok, $900/$500, stove, fridge, w/d hookup, wtr pd.
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 5 HOMES rent-sale $500 + $1k dn + $250dep. Al 703-0420, 202-4702
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 2&3 Bd, 1&2 Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331
2 BR 1 3/4 bath, basement $650 mo. $500 dep. Terry 420-5111
705 S. Union, 3br, garage, w/d hookups, heat pump, no pets, $750 mo., $500 dep. 637-8234 504 W. Albuquerque, 2br, w/d hookups, heat pump, no pets, $550 mo., $500 dep. 637-8234
3/2, REFRIGERATOR, stove, w/d hookups, lots of upgrades, 1108 Purdue, $900 mo., $800 dep. Call Jim 910-7969
3/2, REFRIGERATOR, stove, w/d hookups, over 2000 sq. ft., all wood floors in this Historic home @ 709 N. Pennsylvania, $1100 mo., $700 dep. 910-7969 114 W. Oliver St. 3 bdrm/2bth, $1100 mo. $500 dep. newly remodeled, new appliances,Granite counter tops, ref. air, hot tub, sky lights. NO SMOKING,NO PETS! Leroy (702)232-7578
BEAUTIFUL MODERN country house, 3br, 3ba, heat pump, North of town, computer room, all electric. 6033 N. Atkinson, $1000 mo., $1000 dep. 575-420-3167 or 420-4038 3 BR nice home $850 mo. $300 dep. 1600 N. Kansas Hud ok 624-6770 #142 3 BD/1 ba. 1 car gar. 66 G St., ref air, RIAC $650 mo., $650 dep. 627-9942.
AVAIL. JAN. 1st, 3br, 2ba, new carpet & tile, $900 mo., $600 dep., no HUD, no pets. 420-5930
3/2/2, DW, fridge, micro, all elec., quiet neighborhood, $1050 mo., $500 dep. 403 Saucedo, 626-5252
3 BR 2 bath $650mo. $300 dep. No bills paid. No Hud N. Michigan 420-5604
3 BR 1 ba 1 car garage 210 E. Ballard no Hud $400 dep. $700 mo. 420-9072
555. Mobile Homes for Rent
3BR, 1BA, den, large fenced yard in back. 910-3351, $695/$500 dep.
569. Mobile Home Spaces/Lots
2BR, 1BA, W. Tilden, no appl., no HUD, $500 mo. 420-5604
2BR 1ba, stove, frig, w/d hkup, fenced, storage. 1710 N. Maryland $475mo $475 dep. 626-0935
2BR, 1BA, $500 mo., $400 dep. Call 575-623-3105 for details.
EASY LIVING community - 1337 McCall Loop, Roswell. Long term RVʼs welcome. 624-2436
CL A SS IF IE DS INDEX
005 010 015 020 025
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
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
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
CLASSIFIEDS
570. Mobile Home Courts
SOUTH FORK. A 55 & above community w/large quiet and attractive lots for people that care. 624-1742 500 W Brasher Rd.
580. Office or Business Places OFFICE SPACE for Rent. Prime downtown area, 2,061 sq.ft. Please call 622-8711.
JUST IN time for Christmas. Booths for rent at Blairs Monterey Flea Market 1400 W. 2nd. Inside starting at $50 per mo. Call Debbie 910-1536 SMALL BUSINESS office for $185.00 per month, 200 sq. ft. Call 420-2100 or 622-7163
MEDICAL OFFICE or related Medical business 207 N. Union Suite A. 1780 sq. ft., $550 per month. 420-2100 or 622-9173
EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITE for lease: Newly decorated, private rest room, covered parking at 1210 North Main. Contact David McGee, Owner / Broker 622-2401 STOREFRONT/Retail/ 2500 sqft 58 ft frontage at 3106 N. Main 1200/month 627-9942
FOR LEASE - Space in Sunwest Centre aka the Bank of America Building. Various size spaces available. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 623-1652 or mobile 420-2546. STOREFRONT - Retail Or Customized professional office suite. Everything new inside & out, 105 W. 6th, across from Peppers. 575-420-6050
MERCHANDISE
605. Miscellaneous for Sale
ROLL ENDS. Use for packing, mulch, art projects and other uses. Buy day old paper by the bundles, also boxes 15x12x10. Roswell Daily Record Circulation Department. 622-7710.
605. Miscellaneous for Sale NEED FURNITURE? Shop Blairʼs Trading Post for the best prices in town for your household items. We buy & sell furniture, appliances, home decor, collectibles, electronics, saddles, jewelry, tools, fishing & camping items, movies plus everything else from A-Z. Including many hard to find items. Serving Roswell for 40 years. Open daily 9-5. Accept Visa & MC. 5611 Hummingbird Ln. 627-2033 ATTENTION ROCKHOUNDS I have quality rocks and fossils at discount prices. 622-8945
NEW QUEEN rust color sofa sleeper, 6ʼx6ʼ oak entertainment center, china cabinet, Amish heat surge heater, dining table, chairs. Call for appointment 910-1277 3 BATTERY powered wheelchairs, wheelchair lift, comode chair 622-7638 CEMETERY PLOT for sale. Contact Richard 830-249-7338 MAYTAG & Kenmore washers & dryers. Reasonably priced. 626-7470 KENMORE WASHER & Whirlpool dryer. Large capacity, elec., pair $250. Call 317-6069. CARD TABLE, greenhouse 18” chainsaw, 115 welder SKS. 317-1313 BED, DOUBLE, includes mattress set, frame, head & foot board, $200; Wing back upholstered chair $125; Marble top coffee table $35. All excellent condition. Negotiable, cash only. 622-6543 REACH OVER 500,000 READERS in more than 30 newspapers across the state for one low price. Contact your local newspaperʼs classified department or visit nmpress.org for details. PAINTBALL GUN Package, Bob Long semi with 2 bbls, 2 bottles, coiled remote, light use, $150 cash, 317-5936.
Roswell Daily Record 605. Miscellaneous for Sale
635. Good things to Eat
RED CHILE & corn husk new crop, 16 oz., $3.00. 222 E. McGaffey 627-6436
21 LIVE pecan trees, range in age 6-10 yrs. for sale in Cottonwood area. Please call 575-365-2700
715. Hay and Feed Sale
DOGHOUSES, PLAYHOUSES & swings. Call or come by, 339 Capitan Rd, 317-1014. PLAZA MOVIE Center, 301 W. McGaffey, 623-4816. Mon-Sat, 2-8pm. New releases every Tuesday.
CHILDʼS CAR seat $40, high chair $20, exercise bike $50, treadmill $10 obo. 623-1096
615. Coins, Gold, Silver, Buy, Sell, Trade U.S. & FOREIGN coins and currency, buy, sell or trade, gold and silver coins. 622-7239, 2513 W. 2nd
620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous WE BUY Home furnishings, furniture, appliances, collectibles, tools and everything else from A-Z including personal estates and whole house fulls. 627-2033 or 623- 6608
ALFALFA - EXCELLENT quality: Small & Large square bales and round bales. Occasional availability for striped or cow quality. Also wheat hay. Roswell, NM. The Hay Ranch 575-973-2200 Alfalfa Hay- small bales, oat hay & sudan all grades $4.50-$9.50 per bale. Big bales available $110-$140 each. Open 8:00-5:30 MonSat.1:00-5:00 Sunday, Graves Farm & Garden 622-1889 Credit Cards Accepted
745. Pets for Sale OLD VICTORIAN Bulldogge Pups! Ready Now! 575-495-1015
GERMAN SHEPHERD pups ckc registered ready Dec. 1st $500 males, $550 females. 575-626-9122
WE BUY PECANS Top Prices Paid. On Grand Ave. between 4th & 5th St. Behind Courthouse. SELL THOSE Pecans Haley Farms paying up to $1.75 per pound for your pecans. Monday-Friday 2:00 to 5:00 Sat. 9:00-2:00 5018 W. Country Club Rd. BUYING PECANS N. Main & Berrendo Rd. Mon. & Weds. 575-399-2212
WANTING USED moveable mobile home 575-622-4999
635. Good things to Eat GRAVES FARM & Garden Frozen green chile, extra hot, regular hot, big Jim & mild. Dried red chile pods. New crop in January. Convenient store items available. We accept EBT, Credit cards and debit cards, we ship anywhere. 7 1/2 miles South on old Dexter Hwy. 622-1889 hours Monday thru Saturday 8-5:30 Sunday 1-5
The Roswell Daily Record will publish a newspaper on Christmas Day, however, our offices will be closed on Christmas Eve.
Monday, December 20: 11:00am: for Legals for Wed, Dec 22 & Thur, Dec 23 Noon: for all Display Adv. for Wed, Dec. 22 & Thur, Dec 23 Tuesday, December 21: 11:00am: for Legals for Fri, Dec 24 & Sat, Dec 25 Noon: for all Display Adv. for Fri, Dec 24 & Sat, Dec 25 Wednesday, December 22: 11:00am: for Legals for Sun, Dec 26 Noon: for all Display Adv. for Sun, Dec 26 Thursday, December 23: 11:00am: for Legals and all Display Adv. for Tues, Dec 28 11:00am: for Class Line ads for Fri, Dec 24, Sat, Dec 25 & Sun, Dec 26
AKC GERMAN Shepherd puppies. 910-1730 or 622-9983 FREE CATS! Some young, old, some spayed, neutered, most are loving & friendly, some wild barn cats, all need good homes. 626-4708. YORKSHIRE TERRIER puppies, 8 wks, 4 boys, 1 girl. 575-420-6655
PUPPY LOVE Grooming Large Dogs Welcome, Cats also - 575-420-6655 1 YR old Rottweiler $200 call Richard 317-6045 or 347-2051
WHITE TOY female, mini Schnauzer, 8 mo., house trained, $250. 317-1313 AKC GOLDEN Retriever puppies. Pick one for Christmas. 4 wks. old, $500. Ready to go mid January. 627-7282
CHOTTIES READY Christmas Eve. Small (8-10lbs.), fuzzy cuteness $100. 622-6190 CHIHUAHUA PUPPY, male, 7wks, 1st shots, $150. Also 4mo. females $200. 623-2897
745. Pets for Sale JUST IN time for Christmas! Full blooded yellow labs. $100 avail. 12/23 575-420-4130, 420-3843
TINY CHORKIES, Chihuahua/Yorkie $500, registered & shots 308-3017 text 4 pics. SHI TZUS $600, only 2 left, registered & shots, 308-3017 text 4 pics. FREE CHRISTMAS GIFTS (6) kittens, seven weeks old, Trained to litter box 3 Tabby, 1 Calico, 2 Grey Please call 575-627-6763
2 FEMALE Hybrid Min Pins, $400, 1 black & 1 chocolate, registered & shots, 308-3017 text 4 pics.
YORKIE POOS $800, look like Yorkies! Registered & shots, 308-3017 text 4 pics. TINY WHITE fluffy Maltese, $950, hybrid Maltese (Morkies) $800, registered & shots, 308-3017 text 4 pics. TINY RED mini daushund, $400, registered, shots, 308-3017 text 4 pics
CHIHUAHUAS, TINY T-Cup & Toy, long haired & short haired, 6wks up to 6mo. $150-$500. All colors, registered, shots, health guaranteed & potty pad trained, payment plan, credit cards/paypal. 308-3017 text 4 pics. FREE OLDER adult outdoor Beagles, 703-5893 or 575-687-4187. “CATS & kittens” of all colors to a good home. 910-6052
RECREATIONAL 765. Guns & Ammunition
WINCHESTER MODEL 1400 12 gauge shotgun, Poly choke, synthetic stock, good condition. $225 cash 317-5936.
775. Motorcycles & Scooters 2007 SCOOTER 150cc, price reduced. 623-0750, 637-9783 FOR SALE 2002 Yamaha R1
Custom Paint Molded Fenders Steering Dampener Upgraded Exhaust Rear View Camera Suede Driver and Passenger Seats Runs like a dream, 30k Miles.
Must provided license with endorsement & proof of insurance to test ride.
$3500 OBO
Call 575.405.7127 AFTER 5PM
780. RV’s & Campers Hauling
MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. Your dealer of choice. Sales, parts, service, consignments, purchases, propane, dump station. 2900 West Second. 622-1751, 1-800-929 0046
5X8 BIG Tex Trailer & other trailers. 420-1873
FOR SALE or trade, 1977 Dodge motor home, 32ft long, $5000 or will trade for smaller RV or travel trailer. 626-7550 or 575-312-3529
TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale
FULLY LOADED 2006 Pontiac Solstice Roadster 21500 mile only one owner, $13k 575-613-2566 1997 KIA Sportage, $2500 obo. 317-0958
CLASSIC 1970 Ford Bronco V8-302, runs great. Asking $6000 obo. 626-9894 1994 BUICK L, 80k miles, very good condition, $2000. Call Jim 910-7969 FORD CONTOUR 83k miles, runs great, $2850, no financing. 420-1352
795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans 2004 KIA Sedona sliding rear doors, 3rd seat, 84k mi, excellent cond. $3650 w/1k down owner finance. 420-1352
800. Auto. Antique/Classic 1970 LINCOLN Mark 111 $4800. Call 575637-4400. Obtained from an estate.
810. Auto Parts & Accessories 20-INCH WELD Racing Wheels. Fits GM 8-lug SUV & trucks 2000+. Dodge 8-lug 2002+. Set of 4. $1,700. Call (575)637-4400.
Roswell Daily Record
Thursday, December 23, 2010
“Hometown Proud”
C1
We want to wish the Roswell Community a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! We thank GOD for the greatest gift ever, and we also want to thank all of our Service Men and Women that are serving and have served our Great Nation! Thank you for our Freedom that we enjoy today!
THANK YOU ROSWELL COMMUNITY
Lawrence Brothers wants to THANK EVERYONE in the Roswell community that helped MAKE A DIFFERENCE in our COMMUNITY FOOD DRIVE! Second year in a row we have collected over 5 TONS of GROCERIES During our FOOD DRIVE for the FOOD PANTRIES AND VARIOUS ORGANIZATIONS. HERE ARE SOME OF THE RECIPIENTS
We will be closing at 6 pm Christmas Eve, and will be closed Christmas Day so that our employees can enjoy this special day with their families! We will re-open Sunday morning Dec. 26, at 7 am.
THIS WEEK’S SPECIALS GOOD TUES. - FRI. DEC. 21ST- 24TH
ROSWELL STORE ONLY WHILE SUPPLIES LAST ONE DOZEN LARGE 12 PK 12OZ CANS PRIME RIB ROAST PORK BUTT ROAST COCA COLA PRODUCTS BEST CHOICE EGGS
4
$
99 LB.
BANANAS
3 1 $
LBS.
BEST CHOICE 8 OZ
CREAM CHEESE
2
$
99
88
¢
CHICKEN, CELERY & MUSHROOM
SPIRAL SLICED
99
¢
LB.
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
COOK’S SMOKED HAMS BEST CHOICE CREAM SOUPS BUTTERBALL TURKEYS
2 1 89
¢
$
1
$ 99 LB.
LB.
FOR
8 OZ SELECT VARIETIES
KRAFT COOL WHIP
QUARTERS BLUE BONNET
MARGARINE
4 LB BAG
BEST CHOICE SUGAR
2 1 5 5 2 1 99 $
FOR
$
FOR
$
FOR
¢
GREAT SELECTION OF LAST MINUTE GIFTS AND FRUIT BASKETS READY TO GO
Limit 1 w/ coupon & additional $10 purchase thereafter $1.99
Don’t Forget Our Convenient Drive-Thru Window In Our Pharmacy 900 W. Second St Roswell, NM Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 7am till 9pm • Fri. & Sat. 7am -10pm
Pharmacy Hours: 9am-6pm Mon-Fri • 9am-4pm Sat. Closed Sundays
C2 Thursday, December 23, 2010
Roswell Daily Record
Roswell Daily Record
Thursday, December 23, 2010
C3
C4 Thursday, December 23, 2010
Jumble
Family Circus
COMICS
Garfield
Beetle Bailey
DEAR ABBY: I am writing about the letter from “Turkey Eater in Texas” (Nov. 12), who resented having a vegan Thanksgiving to accommodate two family members. I think your answer missed what being a gracious host is about. The entire meal shouldn’t have to consist of vegan items. However, it wouldn’t be a big deal to serve a vegan main dish and have those individuals also bring their favorite items. Making them bring a complete meal excludes them from a family gathering, and what fun is that? After your column ran, my father called to tell me that holiday dinners would no longer accommodate my daughter’s celiac disease. She’s 9 and struggles with being “different.” When she ingests gluten, she has cramps and vomiting, loses weight and risks significant long-term consequences. Next year, we will host the holiday dinners. Our extended family can join us — or not. The bottom line is that if you exclude family (for being vegan or having celiac disease), you’ve done the opposite of what holidays are about. KAYE IN ALABAMA DEAR KAYE: That’s true. What bothered me about the letter from “Turkey Eater” was the idea that his brother expected him to
Dear Heloise: I had some YELLOW STAINS on the arms of a white, longsleeved cotton shirt and I found a good way to remove them. I used hydrogen peroxide and some cotton balls first, but that only got the stains off one sleeve (the stains on the other sleeve were a little worse). I mixed one part hydrogen peroxide, one part water, and one part baking soda, and with that solution scrubbed the stains a little harder. The yellow is gone; my shirt is as good as new! Heather in Texas How smart, and I hope others will benefit from your hint. Just be aware that hydrogen perox-
DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE
cater the entire Thanksgiving dinner to his nieces’ preference to eat vegan. If the writer had said he had been asked to ensure there were dishes that would not inflame (literally) his nieces’ serious medical condition, I would have answered differently. What has surprised me about the comments I have received from readers about that letter has been the amount of prejudice and anger expressed against vegetarians by more than a few. But read on for some responses from vegans:
DEAR ABBY: I am a vegan in a meat and potatoes family. For 15 years I have spent every holiday and family gathering listening to them degrade my food choices and try to “convert” me back to my “senses.” I have never expected them to cook for me. I always pack my own foods since
HINTS
FROM HELOISE
KING FEATURES SYNDICATE
ide acts like a slower, milder bleaching agent. So you should test a spot, particularly on colored material. Heloise
Dear Heloise: My way of cleaning those dirty metal miniblinds: Put some
Today’s Crossword Puzzle
they are unwilling to branch out and try new foods. When I have brought a dish, they all loved it, as long as they didn’t know it was vegan and that I had prepared it. I find many people are resentful if we host a dinner party with only vegan food. They expect us to accommodate them by cooking meat, but feel we should fend for ourselves at a function they hold. I encourage people to please get over the stigma of vegan/vegetarian and sample something new once in a while. If I can endure every family gathering taking place at a steakhouse, I don’t think it’s unreasonable to have one night when they experience how tasty food without meat in it can be. RACHEL IN SEATTLE
DEAR ABBY: I am 31 and have been a vegetarian my entire life. I come from a meat-loving family and have never insisted they change an entire meal to accommodate my eating habits. Instead, I take food I know I will eat and share it with everyone else. “Turkey Eater’s” vegan relatives should realize they’re in the minority. If they each brought a veganfriendly dish or two, they’d have three to six things to choose from — and that’s plenty. EATING WELL IN NEW MEXICO
laundry detergent (about 1/4 cup — Heloise) and a scoop of oxygen cleaner in the bathtub, add warm to hot water and soak for about 30 minutes. Lift them up and down in the water several times. Rinse in the tub, or hang on a clothesline, if possible. Phyllis, via e-mail Phyllis, cleaning never takes a break, even in the winter! I have compiled some of my favorite cleaning solutions in a handy pamphlet. Readers, if you would like to receive one, send $5 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (61 cents) envelope to: Heloise/Cleaning Solutions, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. Clean your window while your blinds are off using 1/2 cup of white or applecider vinegar and 1/2 cup of water. Spray on and wipe to a shine with newspaper. Heloise
Dear Readers: How to repurpose cloth drawstring bags that cheeses come in? * Use to carry makeup in your handbag. * Hold loose CDs in the car. * Make a small first-aid kit with bandages, tape, gloves and small scissors. * Store a portable GPS or cell phone in one. * Store markers in for kids to use at a restaurant. Heloise Dear Heloise: Cleaning the racks in the oven has always been very hard for me, but then I came up with this idea. I put a large towel on the garage floor and placed the rack on it. I poured baking soda with water over the rack, folded the towel and left it until morning. All I had to do then was use a soft brush. The gunk came off, easy as pie. I won’t dread this job anymore! S.O. in Kansas
Dear Heloise: Last year, I had a bathtub reglazed to cover up an awful and outdated color. The contractor left me with a full page of do’s and don’ts, but the best information he gave me was this: To keep a tub clean without using any cleanser, take an old towel or terry washcloth and, immediately after a shower, give the tub a good wipe while the soap scum is still soft. After months of following his advice, my bathtub still looks sparkling new. Carole in Staten Island, N.Y.
Hagar the Horrible
Blondie
Zits
Snuffy Smith
Dilbert
The Wizard of Id
For Better or For Worse
Roswell Daily Record