newspaper

Page 1

Roswell Daily Record

Authorities thwart terror plot

Vol. 119, No. 260 50¢ Daily / $1 Sunday

INSIDE NEWS

WILDFIRES BURN NEAR BOULDER

BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Two wildfires burning in Colorado on Friday prompted the evacuations of the homes of 1,700 people as well as more in neighboring foothills where dozens of houses were burned in a blaze last month. Nearly 140 homes in three subdivisions in the Boulder County foothills .... - PAGE A3

WASHINGTON (AP) — Authorities on three continents thwarted multiple terrorist attacks aimed at the United States from Yemen on Friday, seizing two explosive packages addressed to Chicago-area synagogues and packed aboard cargo jets. The plot triggered worldwide fears that al-Qaida was launching a major new terror campaign. President Barack Obama called the coordinated attacks a “credible terrorist threat,” and U.S. officials said they were increasingly confident that al-Qaida’s

THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

October 30, 2010

SATURDAY

www.roswell-record.com

Yemen branch, the group responsible for the failed Detroit airliner bombing last Christmas, was responsible. One of the packages was found aboard a cargo plane in Dubai, the other in England. Preliminary tests indicated the packages contained the power ful industrial explosive PETN, the same chemical used in the Christmas attack, U.S. officials said. The tests had not been confirmed. In the U.S., cargo planes were searched up and down the Easter n Seaboard, and an Emirates

Way too spooky

Airlines passenger jet was escorted down the coast to New York by American fighter jets. No explosives were found aboard those planes, though the investigation was continuing on at least two. Obama’s sobering assessment, delivered from the White House podium, unfolded four days before national elections in which discussion of terrorism has played almost no role. The president went ahead with See TERROR, Page A6

AP Photo

Cargo from an Emirates commercial passenger jet sits next to the plane on the tarmac at John F. Kennedy International Airport, Friday.

NMMI hosts drill meet

TOP 5 WEB For The Past 24 Hours

• Haunts of Roswell • Roswell win forces one-game playoff • Fry gets manager nod • RHS, GHS to get science labs • Eloy Ortega wants to return to Chaves ...

JONATHAN ENTZMINGER RECORD STAFF WRITER

INSIDE SPORTS

Mark Wilson Photo

Sarah Madrid reacts to a scary costumed character at the Roswell Boys & Girls Club Friday afternoon during a Halloween party.

PANTHERS ADVANCE TO SEMIS

LAKE ARTHUR — Most coaches will tell you that a quick start is key to any victory. Lake Arthur coach Jose Cruz Porras was no different, as he preached all week to his Panther squad the importance of putting the game away early. Message delivered. Lake Arthur, the defending 6-Man state champions, jumped out to a 30-0 lead and never looked back as they trounced the visiting Elida Tigers, 62-22. In the teams’ first meeting this season, the Tigers ... - PAGE B1

TODAY’S OBITUARIES

There are no obituaries today, Oct. 30, 2010.

HIGH ...88˚ LOW ....47˚

Trujillo seeks to serve Sunset marks Red Ribbon Week larger constituency MATTHEW ARCO RECORD STAFF WRITER

After nearly eight years of serving on the Chaves County Commission, Michael T rujillo says he hopes to serve a larger number of constituents by being elected to the state House of Representatives. The Democratic candidate says overspending and state regulations have gone too far and he wants to work with other lawmakers to put New Mexico in the right direction. “We’re in a big mess right now,” he said. “We’ve got to get things back in control.” The two-term commissioner says he plans to work hard to bring jobs to

See NMMI, Page A6

JOE D. MOORE RECORD STAFF WRITER

Michael Trujillo

southeast New Mexico, focus his attention on education and fight for veterans, if elected. “We have to support the businesses that support

High above the students, teachers, parents and community leaders, the red balloons, each adorned with a student’s personalized pledge to say “no” to drugs, swept high into the clear afternoon sky. The release of the 500 balloons and the preceding brief comments from Mark Wilson Photo various community stakeholders culminated Sun- Students from Sunset Elementary walk down South Main set Elementary’s celebra- Street, Friday afternoon, during a Say No To Drugs march tion of Red Ribbon Week. during Red Ribbon Week. In advance of the event, Ivonne Nieto, a firstMireya T rujillo, the And that all of us are school’s first-year princi- here for their develop- grade teacher at Sunset pal, said, “We want kids ment and [to support and parent of two Sunset to see that ... the commu- them] making good choicnity is here to support us. es.” See SUNSET, Page A6

A mysterious, kelp-yielding artist passes through Roswell See TRUJILLO, Page A6

TODAY’S FORECAST

CLASSIFIEDS..........C1 COMICS.................B7 ENTERTAINMENT.....C8 FINANCIAL .............B6 GENERAL ..............A2 HOROSCOPES ........C7 LOTTERIES ............A2 OPINION ................A4 SPORTS ................B1 WEATHER ..............A8 THE WEST ............A3

New Mexico Military Institute is hosting its 24th annual Drill Meet Friday and today on NMMI’s campus. More than 25 teams will compete and represent high schools from Arizona, New Mexico, Texas and Utah. “There’s 34 schools coming and approximately 1,000 patricians [will attend]. ... [We’re] very excited to have [the teams] on campus,” Silvia Hernandez, JROTC administrative

INDEX

Emily Russo Miller Photo

Artist Richard List holds up his creation, a Happy Kelpie.

EMILY RUSSO MILLER RECORD STAFF WRITER

A museum attendant wearing a dark blue jump-

suit standing in the foyer of the Roswell Museum and Art Center pulls out a magnifying glass and a flashlight to inspect an uniden-

tifiable object. “It’s greasy and it had oils on it,” he observes, holding the hollow cylindrical artifact in his hand. “It almost looks like bone on the inside.” His colleague, Betty Ann Heck, takes a tur n. She observes the color —a dull, muted brown — and feels the texture of the interior with her fingers. “It looks like...” She pauses. “It looks like some plant that’s really been dried out. It’s really dehydrated.” They both then look to the artist, Richard List, who bequeathed the mysterious object to them, with eyes asking, “What is it?” He smiles slyly, but remains mum. “Is it from the ocean?” the attendant asks. “No, it’s from the desert!” Heck

cried. “It’s otherworldly, one might say,” he tells them. He slips out the front door unnoticed when the

publicity seeker, has been making headlines for various art-related antics and pranks. His biggest claim to fame

two are distracted by a couple signing the museum registry. “A little mystery is a good thing,” he explained later. It’s mischievous ploys such as this that make List’s blue eyes sparkle — it’s his raison d’être. For years, the 64-year -old artist and professional landscaper from Berkeley, Calif., a self-proclaimed

was the controversy surrounding his “plop art.” The Plop Art movement, a variation of public art and a play on the phrase Pop Art, became popular in the late 1960s when participating artists seemingly thoughtlessly “plopped” sculptures in public venues. List first made the front pages of his See SPOTLIGHT, Page A6


A2 Saturday, October 30, 2010

GENERAL

Roswell Daily Record

More than half CCDC inmates have mental health isssues JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER

According to Detention Administrator for Chaves County, Alfonso Solis, 51 percent of the people at Chaves County Detention Center arrive with some sort of mental health issue. The CCDC sees the full range of behavioral disorders, psychosis, depression and anxiety disorders. CCDC Nurse Administrator Susie Caley clarified, “About 75 to 80 percent of people treated here have some for m of psychosis. The most frequently treated disorder is bipolar disorder. Most people with depression are also bipolar. Schizophrenia is number two, while schizoaffective disorder comes in third.” If one adds substance abuse to other mental

health disorders, then 75 percent of all people at the detention center are suffering from some sort of psychological or behavioral disorder. “The best thing we can do here is stabilize them,” said Solis. “When people are released, their medications go with them, but they can get forgetful, or stop taking their medications.” Solis expressed concern over gover nmental cutbacks. Due to shortages in funding, Counseling Associates, who provides aftercare, has had to cut back on home visits. “We have some individuals where it’s like a revolving door. One person who has psychosis has been in and out of the facility between 60 and 70 times since I came here. He has

no support system, no family, no friends. He is alone. I sympathize with him. When he comes in here, we have set something up so he gets paid for cleaning his cell. It gives him a sense of pride,” said Solis. Often the additional stress of incarceration will push people over the edge. The CCDC has set up 5minute and 10-minute suicide watches. Solis feels that New Mexico has a problem with the mentally ill and how it handles them. “There’s only one mental health institution in the state that will take the indigent, and that’s in Las Vegas. Sunrise will not admit anyone who has been charged with a crime.” Roswell, or the state, or at least the southeast region needs a secure men-

Kintigh hosts 3rd town hall Any question or topic was up for discussion at the Roswell Adult and Senior Center Friday night, during a town hall meeting with the city’s top police commander. Chief Dennis Kintigh hosted his third town hall meeting since being named interim police chief in August. About 15 residents attended the nearly two-hour -long open discussion. Kintigh says the informal meetings are a way to promote communication between residents and

the Roswell Police Department. Topics discussed ranged from bicycle safety and traf fic enforcement to inquiries about the times at which the most criminal activities occur. Residents learned that more calls for police response are made during the day and that although, generally, the middle of the night can be the quietest time for emergency calls, if something does happen it tends to be a more serious matter.

The chief read to the group examples of the RPD’s Sergeant Logs, which detail the police activity and calls over the period of a shift. Also discussed was the issue of sexual predators who target minors. One resident advised the others to use the website, familywatchdog.us, to look up the addresses of sexual predators before trick-or-treating this Halloween. Anyone interested in having Kintigh host an event should contact the RPD at 624-6770.

Dog owner threatens Animal Control

Police were called to Roswell Animal Control, 705 E. McGaf fey St., Thursday, in regards to threats made to animal control officials who had gone to a residence to give 48-hour notices following a complaint about dog with ringwor m. The subject threatened to shoot the next officer who came onto his property.

Burglary

•Several residents in the 300 to 600 blocks of Broken Arrow Road were hit by a series of vehicle burglaries, Wednesday night. Police received reports from or were called to different locations, Thursday. In one incident a Glock 0.40 caliber handgun was removed from a vehicle. Elsewhere, someone broke into a New Mexico Land Office truck and took an HP laptop computer and two pair of binoculars. Total estimated value of missing items was $1,830. In the remaining two incidents, the glove box and console were opened and rifled, but nothing was

LOTTERY NUMBERS Mega Millions 4-19-26-28-39 Mega Ball: 14 Roadrunner Cash 1-10-16-17-32 Pick 3 9-2-3

reported stolen. •Police were dispatched to the 100 block of East Linda Vista Boulevard, Thursday, where a gray Vera Wang bag, worth $200, along with its contents, including two bank cards, Social Security cards and spare keys, were removed from the vehicle. •Police were called to the Mesa Verde Apartments, Thursday, where one unoccupied unit had been broken into. About $300 worth of copper tubing was removed from the plumbing and four apartments were damaged from leaking water. •Police were dispatched to H street, on Thursday, for a residential burglary where a Playstation and Xbox with controllers and 10 Playstation games were reported stolen. Total value of missing items is estimat-

Mom, Remembering you is easy, we do it everyday, but there’s an ache in our hearts that will never go away. You will always live in our hearts and continue to be our strength, the rock on which we stand. You are missed dearly. Happy Birthday 10-30-38 to 6-3-09

ed at $1,290. •Police were called to the 2100 block of North Prairie Avenue, Thursday, to take a report of an aggravated burglary. A Hi-point 9 mm, with loaded magazine and nylon holster, and a fully loaded Glock 36 .45 mm handgun and holster were stolen. Total value of the guns and ammunition is estimated at $750.

to 220 to 230. Solis estimates that it would take about $30 million for building a brand new facility from the ground up. “The figure is based on what I know is the going rate for secure beds nationwide,” said Solis. The county is about to embark on a study with a company to do a needs assessment based on historical data and other factors. “We would probably be projecting at least 10 years out to see what our needs would be then. Based on this study, we would then determine what to do next, add on to the exiting facility, try new programs, or building,” said Solis. He suggests that Chaves County create an assessment center similar to one found in San Juan County.

j.palmer@roswell-record.com

WASHINGTON (AP) — Immigrants are returning to work quicker than their U.S.-bor n counterparts, but are earning significantly less than before the economic downtur n, a Pew Hispanic Center study reported Friday. Immigrants in the U.S. have gained 656,000 jobs since the Great Recession ended in June 2009. By comparison, U.S.-bor n workers lost 1.2 million jobs. The unemployment rate for immigrants fell over the same period to 8.7 percent from 9.3 percent. For American-born workers, the jobless rate rose to 9.7 percent from 9.2 percent. Foreign-bor n workers “did better in the first year of the recovery, but not so much better that they have recovered the losses they suffered beforehand,” said

Rakesh Kochhar, Pew Hispanic’s associate director for research. Immigrants — who make up 15.7 percent of the labor force — began losing their jobs about a year before U.S.-born workers, he said. The study said immigrant wages fell sharply in the last year, and that Latinos experienced the largest wage drop of any group. From 2009 to 2010, the median weekly earnings of foreign-born workers fell 4.5 percent compared to a loss of less than 1 percent for U.S.-born workers. In the second quarter of 2010, the median weekly earnings for U.S. workers was $653, compared to $525 for foreign-born workers, Pew said. Hispanic workers, U.S.born and immigrants, fared worst of all. They are the

only group whose wages fell two years in a row, Kochhar said. Median weekly wages for all Hispanic workers fell to $480 in the second quarter from $504 two years earlier. The Pew Hispanic Center defined foreign-born workers as all immigrants who arrived legally and illegally in the U.S., naturalized U.S. citizens and people born in Puerto Rico, who are U.S. citizens at birth. The center said the reasons immigrant unemployment is decreasing are unclear. But foreign-born workers are more mobile, they exit and enter the labor market more frequently, and are less likely to get unemployment benefits — so they may have to find jobs sooner, even if the jobs they are taking are worse.

Immigrants return to work quicker

Rollover on County Club Road

Larceny

Police went to Roswell Refuge, Thursday, after four video cameras were removed from the outside of the building. Two cameras remain. The Refuge obtained video footage of two men as they took down the security cameras.

Anyone with information about these or any other crimes is asked to call Crimestoppers, 1888-594-TIPS (8477). Callers can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward.

Jessica Palmer Photo

A Chevy Silverado collided with a silver Honda at the intersection of Country Club and Urton roads, around 7 p.m., Friday. As the driver of the Honda was making a left turn onto Country Club, the Silverado traveling in the same direction at a high rate of speed attempted to pass. It dealt the Honda a glancing blow and spun out of control, taking a large portion of the Roswell Country Club's fence. The driver of the Silverado sustained minor injuries. The driver of the Honda was uninjured. While officials at the scene said citations will be issued, they were unable to say which ones. ALL SEATS BEFORE 6 PM $6.00 (*) No Pass or Discount

*LEGEND OF THE GUARDIANS (PG) (12:00) 2:20 4:30 7:00 9:20 *RED (PG13) (11:30) 2:05 4:35 7:15 9:50 *JACKASS IN 3D (PG) (12:00) 2:20 4:40 7:10 9:30 $2 3D SURCHARGE APPLIES

SECRETARIAT (PG13) (11:15) 2:00 4:40 7:20 10:00

THE SENIOR CORNER RETIREMENT LIVING

Email Fredda at: askfredda@yahoo.com your source of retirement living answers.

Love Cynthia, Barbie, William, & all your children & grandchildren

4501 N.MAIN

MATINEES INDICATED BY( ) GOOD SAT & SUN

Register at allentheatresinc.com for e-mail specials & info

Everything you always wanted to know about

Dad, Happy Birthday and we thank God for the many years he has given you to us to enjoy with you. May you enjoy many more to come. 11-1-24

“We need to set up a system of prevention to deal with mental health issues before the police have to arrest them. What I envision is something like onestop shopping; a place where any law enforcement agency could bring someone who is posing a danger to himself, herself or the community. This individual could then be assessed by experts who would determine if this person needs to go to jail, hospital, shelter or elsewhere. “This assessment crisis center would need to be manned by medical personnel, law enforcement, social services, juvenile justice personnel, district attorney’s of fice, county and city. This doesn’t mean 24/7, but the intake person needs to have access to all these agencies,” said Solis.

tal health facility. Solis would prefer that it be a separate facility run by the state or some other entity. “However, if the security of the facility is an obstacle, I believe Chaves County might entertain the possibility of providing security.” He believes a separate secure facility could serve the entire community. It would have to accept patients who have charges pending. “That presents a problem to the detention center because anyone coming to us has a charge. Most have misdemeanor charges, with the number one charge being failure to appear,” Solis said. A shortage of space is also an issue. The facility was built to house around 200 people. Census runs about 208, but can run up

Linda Asked: Why are some senior living facilities cutting their prices? Will the prices stay low? When will the prices increase? Cutting the initial price is generally a marketing ploy to get seniors to look at the facility and move in. The problem is that if a senior facility is cutting the prices, chances are there are underlying problems that have caused the facility to have vacancies. When you are making a decision on a retirement community it is important to visit the facility, look at the programming, talk to the people that live there, check out the food. Spend some time in the apartments and see if they feel like home. If the facility is offering low prices you need to be very careful, look at the contract carefully, most of them will say when the prices are set to go up. The price may change after the third month, sixth month, or after a year, but if the rate is not guaranteed in the contract the company can increase the rate at any time. Some have done the rate increase as early as thirty days after the initial date of signing. Usually rate increases are 3-5%, but in this case they usually go to the original price and in that case can and will be hundred’s of dollars. If, the community is really on the up and up ask them to add it to the contract that the quoted rate can not increase for a period of 36 months or even 60 months. Keep in mind that the cost of running this kind of community is basically the same for all facilities, so the prices should be close when it comes to the cost to the resident. If you are looking at a facility that is offering a deal that seems to be dramatically lower than the others then it would be a good idea to research the history of the facility, and research at what rate the price will be going up. Pay for quality of living in a place that makes you feel like home. Be careful of the great deal, it may really cost you in the end. Fredda

*SAW 3D (R) (11:50) 2:20 4:45 7:15 9:45

$2 3D SURCHARGE APPLIES

LET ME IN (R) (11:40) 2:15 4:50 7:25 10:00 LIFE AS WE KNOW IT (PG13) (11:30) 2:05 4:35 7:20 9:55 *PARANORMAL ACTIVITY 2 (R) (12:15) 2:45 4:55 7:00 9:15

COMING SOON: DUE DATE, MEGAMIND 3D, COLORED GIRLS

Roswell Daily Record

USPS No 471-200

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

Charles Fischer Publisher

cfischer@roswell-record.com

Andrew Poertner Editor

editor@roswell-record.com

R. Cory Beck Publisher (1987-2006)

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

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

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


Eileen Grooms, board member, from the Community Foundation of Chaves County.

THE WEST/RECORDS

A3

2 wildfires prompt evacuations in Boulder, Colo. Roswell Daily Record

BOULDER, Colo. (AP) — Two wildfires burning in Colorado on Friday prompted the evacuations of the homes of 1,700 people as well as more in neighboring foothills where dozens of houses were burned in a blaze last month. Nearly 140 homes in three subdivisions in the Boulder County foothills were evacuated Friday morning shortly after the wildfires were first reported, and authorities issued emergency phone calls to 181 numbers. Of ficials later ordered evacuations for a portion of Boulder’s west side. Public buildings including a senior center, a court house and two medical buildings were also evacuated. Michelle Kelly of the Boulder County incident management team said at least 150 firefighters were battling the fires that merged, growing to about 144 acres by Friday evening. Two planes made more than 20 drops of water and

slurry on the blaze before dark. About 60 firefighters were set to work through the night. Boulder County sheriff’s Cmdr. Rick Brough said the evacuations were more precautionary than anything else because heavy winds prompted fears the fire could quickly spread. He said no homes were immediately threatened. The winds died down by night and humidity increased, boosting hopes that crews could get the upper hand on the fire. Officials said 200 firefighters would be on the lines Saturday and an airplane and helicopter would be used. Brough said investigators believe the first fire was human caused because it started in city open space and that the second one was sparked by embers from the first. Marjorie Leidig first saw the smoke and then the flames from her home in Sunshine Canyon west of Boulder. Soon, she was

grabbing important personal possessions and fleeing a wildfire for the second time in seven weeks. “The process is very traumatizing,” Leidig said. “You literally have a half hour to put everything in your car and get out of there.” Leidig was forced out of her home for four days by the fire in September, and doesn’t know how long the evacuation will be this time. “It’s getting old,” she said. Still, Leidig, a clinical psychologist who has lived in the area for 37 years, said she “loves living in the mountains.” For 49-year-old engineer Joe Paulson, a city evacuation alert to his cell phone was enough to send him back to his two-story house in the evacuation area. He threw papers and photos in a suitcase while friends helped remove his five bicycles. “I just started grabbing stuff and flinging it,” Paulson said. “I’ll wait to panic later.”

Third-grade teacher Kalan Orobona, 28, raced home after getting a call from his brother at school. His wife had already left with their dog but Orobona stayed behind to rake leaves away from the house. “I had to leave the kids behind for the Halloween party,” said Orobona, who said a student teacher took over his class. An air tanker buzzed over the neighborhood as Orobona raked leaves in his flip-flops and officers went door to door as neighbors packed up their cars. The fires are closer to the city than the wildfire that destroyed more than 160 houses in the foothills last month. That fire was the most destructive in Colorado history in terms of property damage. Fire of ficials said the blaze isn’t as dangerous as the September wildfire that burned 10 square miles, because of the calmer winds. “A lot’s going to depend

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — New Mexico’s unemployment rate dipped slightly in September to 8.2 percent, down from 8.3 percent in August. The state Department of Workforce Solutions released its monthly employment report Thursday. It shows the state’s over -the-year job growth was negative 0.3 percent, meaning the state has lost about 2,400 jobs. State labor officials say New Mexico is now several months into a slow recovery and the extent of the job losses is far less than earlier in the year. Officials say if the trend continues, the state could expect to see a net gain in jobs before the end of the year. The educational and health services industry added the most jobs, up 3,300 since this time last year. The leisure and hospitality industry also added jobs.

domestic use wells and can’t reject a per mit because of concerns how the well might affect the water rights of other users. The district judge had ruled that the state engineer must treat domestic well applications the same as other types of water rights applications, which are subject to protests and reviews. The Appeals Court said the domestic well law does not violate the state’s doctrine of giving priority to senior water rights.

quality fell below FDA standards.

outspent Democrat Ray Powell by 4-to-1 in New Mexico’s race for land commissioner during the past three weeks. The latest campaign finance report shows Rush spending $115,400 since early October, with 90 percent going for advertising. Powell had expenditures of $28,400. Rush raised $62,000, including $25,000 from the state Republican Party and $10,000 from Stanley and Linda Harper of Mansfield, Texas. Powell collected $31,600, including $5,000 from Albuquerque lawyer Turner Branch. Conservation Voters of New Mexico’s political action committee made $10,600 in monetary and in-kind contributions. Powell had cash-on-hand of $50,800 with a week to go to the election, and Rush had $9,800. •SANTA FE (AP) — State Auditor Hector Balderas spent $180,000 on his reelection campaign during the past three weeks as he began to air television advertising. The latest campaign finance reports show the Democratic incumbent with a large financial advantage over Republican challenger

Saturday, October 30, 2010

AP Photo

Flames shoot up from the Dome Fire from Boulder (Colo.) Canyon on Friday.

on the weather at this point,” Brough said. There were no immediate reports

of power outages, injuries or damage to buildings, he said.

Erroll Chavez. Advertising accounted for 90 percent of Balderas’ expenditures. Chavez spent about $1,500 since early October and raised $300. Chavez has been diagnosed with a brain tumor, but has remained in the race. Balderas raised $41,800, including a $20,000 personal loan. He had a campaign balance of $11,800 with a week to go to the election and Chavez had cash-on-hand of $13,600.

hoe, snowblower and aerator. Some funds went for turf rehabilitation. The national cemetery was established in 1875. More than 47,000 veterans and their relatives are buried there or have their ashes stored in a wall vault.

New Mexico jobless rate drops slightly in September

Domestic well law

LAS VEGAS, N.M. (AP) — Legislative leaders have been looking at the growing number of satellite campuses for New Mexico universities as a place to trim the state budget. Now, a member of the Highlands University regents says he agrees. Regent Jesus Lopez calls the situation “ridiculous” and says lawmakers have a legitimate concern. Highlands has seven offcampus sites in Rio Rancho, Santa Fe, Albuquerque, Espanola, Raton, Farmington and Roswell. Highlands reports that this semester, 2,361 students are attending the main campus in Las Vegas, N.M., and 1,394 at the other sites. Legislative leaders are concerned about duplication in services offered by universities.

Large Jack O Lantern

$6.99

Limited Time Offer 622-9300

K16AA

$3 OFF

Any Pizza, Any Size Receive $3 off any regular menu priced item. 622-9300

K16BA

Limit 3. Not valid with any other offer

Expires 11/15/10

Coupon Must Be Presented

Accidents Oct. 28 11:28 a.m. — 2800 N. Main St.; drivers — Jef f Smith, 47, Dexter, and Lou Olson, 63, Roswell 12:02 p.m. — Sunset Avenue; drivers — Michael A. Garcia, 27, and Lloyd H. Otero, no age given, both Roswell 4 p.m. — 800 W. Hobbs St.; vehicle owned by Maria Jimenez, Dexter 6:23 p.m. — 19th and Main streets; drivers — Mark Dent, 77, and Desarae Lucero, 21, both Roswell, and Rigo Chavez, 37, Dexter

Branch campuses

Limit 3. Not valid with any other offer

Expires 11/15/10

Marriage Licenses Oct. 29 Lance C. Housewright, 20, Roswell, and Debora C. Munoz, 20, Dexter Jesus J. Vazquez, 38, and Magaly I. Fierro, 35, both Roswell

SANTA FE (AP) — The national cemetery on Santa Fe’s north side has received $730,000 in federal stimulus funds for maintenance projects. Much of the work involved raising and realigning the rows of white marble upright headstones, as well as work to keep flat grave markers level and in their prescribed position — with their tops no more than 1 inch above the soil. The cemetery also paid for $500,000 worth of new paving on roads and replacement curbs and drains, as well as new equipment such as a back-

Coupon Must Be Presented

Births Roswell Regional Oct. 26 To Margie and John Preston Miller, a girl

Veterans cemetery

Expires 10/31/10

PUBLIC RECORDS

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — New Mexico Attorney General Gary King says pharmaceutical manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline will reimburse more than $194,000 to New Mexico’s Medicaid program to settle allegations of selling adulterated medications. The federal government and the National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units reached an agreement with the manufacturer to pay states and the federal gover nment $600 million in civil damages and penalties for Medicaid and other federally funded health care programs. King’s of fice says the allegations involved Paxil CR, Avandamet, Kytril and Bactroban. The drugs’ strength, purity and-or

•SANTA FE (AP) — Republican Dianna Duran is outspending incumbent Democrat Mary Herrera in New Mexico’s race for secretary of state. Duran spent about $130,500 during the past three weeks and Herrera had expenditures of $78,800. Advertising accounted for most of the spending. Campaign finance reports filed Thursday show Duran raised $77,600 and Herrera collected about $41,200. The state Republican Party gave $25,000 to Duran and Foster Friess, an investor from Jackson, Wyo., contributed $5,000. Friess has been a large donor to GOP gubernatorial candidate Susana Martinez. The Democratic Association of Secretaries of State contributed $20,000 to Herrera. Duran, a state senator from Tularosa, had cashon-hand of $32,100 as of Tuesday, and Herrera had $13,800. •SANTA FE (AP) — Republican Matt Rush has

Coupon Must Be Presented

SANTA FE (AP) — The state Court of Appeals has ruled that New Mexico’s domestic well law is constitutional. The court’s unanimous decision on Friday overturned a 2008 ruling by a state district judge in Silver City. Under New Mexico law, the state engineer must grant per mits for new

Glaxo settlement

Campaign spending

Cheesy Bread K16CA OR Cookie Dough

FREE

...with the purchase of any Size Pizza at regular menu price 622-9300

Limit 3. Not valid with any other offer

NOW LEASING

1100 S. Main Ste B Roswell, NM 88203 (575) 627-2277

SPACE AVAILABLE 900 - 2100 SQ. FT. (505) 823-6689

CALL FOR MORE DETAILS

Main & McGaf fey Square


A4 Saturday, October 30, 2010

OPINION

Acting like a child left in an ice cream parlor

Chico Marx, disguised as one of the “three greatest aviators in the world,” described how they finally came to the United States in “A Night at the Opera”: “So now I tell you how we fly to America. The first time we started we got-a half way there when we run out a gasoline, and we gotta go back. Then I take-a twice as much gasoline. This time we’re just about to land, maybe three feet, when what do you think: we run out of gasoline again. And-a back-a we go again to get-a more gas. This time I take-a plenty gas. Well, we get-a half way over, when what do you think happens: we forgot-a the airplane. So, we gotta sit down and we talk it over. Then I get-a the great idea. We no take-a gasoline, we no take-a the airplane. We take steamship, and that friends, is how we fly across the ocean.”

JEFFRY GARDNER RIGHT

FOR A

REASON

If you understand the above, you’ve pretty much got the picture of how we’ve arrived at this point: trillions in debt, nearly $1.4 trillion deficit, 10 percent unemployment. And that’s at the national level. From one white foamy ocean to the other, states are in deep trouble as well. Some of it’s not their own making, to be sure. For decades now, we have collectively begged Congress to solve every problem from hangnails to child care.

Roswell Daily Record

In response, Congress did what a body of 535 politicians working overtime to keep their jobs would do — they gave us all we wanted. In fact, they ginned up legislation — mainly around welfare, health, and education issues — that legally required states to comply with their wishes. Which was their way of complying with our wishes. It’s a vicious circle, yes? The catch-22? Congress didn’t fund a lot of it; thus the term “unfunded mandates.” Of course, there was no mandate to build a train from Belen to Santa Fe, or even a big spaceport for rich people to ride into the dark of night. But, we get what we vote for, and Election Day is nearly upon us. The driving force that has made this mid-ter m election more engaging than any since

1974 — the post-Watergate midterm that brought such leading lights as Califor nia Rep. Henry Waxman and Senators Tom Harkin and Christopher Dodd — is liberalism run amok. Only Nixon could go to China, as the phrase goes. And only the greatest advancement of “progressive” government since Lyndon Johnson’s Great Society could have stirred so many people who have never had a political notion to take to the streets and form something called the Tea Party. It’s the debt and spending, to be sure. It’s also an electorate tired of watching bad ideas blossom into worse ideas and receive endless funding because no one in the White House or in the party in power has the stones to shut it down. Virtually every “issue” we’re

discussing today is a result of a liberal program sent aloft in the 1930s or the 1960s — the products of FDR or LBJ, respectively. Said programs were likely well intentioned — Social Security or welfare or Medicare, for example. The problem, though, is that progressive policy is akin to placing a kid in an ice cream shop and saying, “Enjoy.” The kid digs in without a thought of the consequences. It’s all fun and games until we get the check. Liberals have taken hundreds of flights that get us half-way across the ocean because we’ve let them. We’ve even let them fly back and refund these failed programs over and over. Basically, we’ve been the kids in the ice cream shop, the check’s arrived, and we’re more than a little sick about it. Finally. © New Mexico News Services 2010

EDITORIAL

World Opinion Haiti still needs help

When an earthquake struck Haiti in January, the world hoped that, having plumbed the depths, the lot of this dirt-poor, malgoverned republic could only improve. Over nine months later, that hope has barely been realized, the latest symbol of failure being an outbreak of cholera which is threatening the capital, Port-au-Prince. Hundreds of thousands of people are still in tented camps and tons of rubble have still to be cleared. Only a small fraction of the aid promised by donors has come through, with the U.S. Senate proving particularly recalcitrant. Both within and outside Haiti, the record has been dire. The main bar to recovery has been the incapacity of the Haitian state, already weak before many of its officials were killed. Public anger has been directed primarily at President Rene Preval, who is due to step down early next year. The United Nations, which has pressed for presidential and parliamentary elections to be held in November, despite huge logistical problems, is evidently hoping that a new head of state will provide fresh impetus to reconstruction. Patience and persistence are, therefore, the watchwords. Much more of the pledged aid must be disbursed, whether for providing proper homes for those displaced or creating jobs in a country heavily dependent on an agricultural economy wrecked by slash-and-burn methods. Conditions in Haiti remain a disgrace both to the government in Port-au-Prince and to those foreign states which have promised to help lift the country from its nadir. Guest Editorial The Telegraph, London

Rebalancing via reform

By agreeing to give under -represented emerging market countries more power in the International Monetary Fund, finance ministers from the Group of 20 have given the fragile global recovery a much-needed and surprising shot in the arm during their weekend meeting in South Korea. While applauding the joint effort by big industrialized and developing economies to enhance the fairness and legitimacy of the IMF, we are urging the international community to build on the historic agreement to rebalance the world economy through different necessary domestic reforms. The shift of 6 percent of IMF voting power away from the richest countries toward “dynamic emerging-market developing countries” will surely, at least for the moment, put an end to the discussion about the legitimacy of this international institution. Sluggish reform on power sharing between developed and developing economies once significantly crippled the IMF’s ability to reflect and respond to the dramatic changes in the world economic landscape. At a time when the global recovery is increasingly threatened by tensions over trade imbalance and exchange rate issues, some sort of breakthrough is badly needed to avoid a widening of the gulf between emerging and developed nations. Guest Editorial China Daily, Beijing DEAR DR. GOTT: My husband’s parents both died of pancreatic cancer. Is there any test my husband and his siblings could get during their regular checkups to screen for this cancer? DEAR READER: Pancreatic cancer is a quiet, fastspreading disease. According to the National Cancer Institute, in 2010, about 43,000 people will be diagnosed and just under 6,000 will survive. Often, symptoms are not present until very late, when it has spread to other areas and surgical removal is impossible. Those who are diagnosed early have about a 22.5 percent five-year survival rate compared to those with late-stage disease at the

Fired up and ready to throw the bums out During his barnstorming around the country in the final frantic lead-up to Election Day, President Obama landed on several college campuses to try and get young voters fired up once again and ready to go to the polls. He would have done better to spend his time in senior centers. That is where the voters are (especially in off-year elections) and they’re the ones who are fired up this year. But it’s not clear where they want to go. Energized and angry — senior voters are ready to throw out Democratic candidates, but not ready to embrace Republican pro-

Doonesbury

ASK DR. GOTT UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE

time of diagnosis who have a less than 2 percent five-year survival. There are two types of pancreatic cancer. The first forms in the ducts of the pancreas. This type of tumor is known as adenocarcinoma or an exocrine tumor. Most cases of pancreatic cancer are of this sort. The second forms in the hor mone-producing cells.

COKIE AND STEVEN ROBERTS

SYNDICATED COLUMNISTS

grams. In a recent ABC News poll, 80 percent of voters over the age of 65 said they are certain to vote this year — compared to just over 50 percent of the 18- to 29-year -old voters — and that’s not good news for Democrats. In one poll, older voters favored a Republican congress by 18 points. More

This type is also known as endocrine cancer and is very rare. Risk factors for developing pancreatic cancer include being overweight or obese, having pancreatitis (chronic inflammation of the pancreas), being a smoker, having a family history of pancreatic cancer, having diabetes and a family history of genetic syndromes that increase cancer risk and age, especially in those over age 60. Symptoms can include loss of appetite, jaundice (yellowing of the skin and eyes), unexplained weight loss, blood clots, depression and upper abdominal pain that radiates to the back.

than any other age group, those over age 65 say they are more likely to vote for someone who has never held elective office. So much for experience, something you might expect seniors to value. This is a “throw the bums out, bring in the new guys” crowd. Listen to Chris Bollenbacher, who owns Fred’s Breakfast in New Hope, Pa., talking to NPR’s Scott Simon: “We should go to Nebraska and get 70 guys that have a lot of calluses on their hands and have been working their whole lives for everything they have and draft them — put them in the White House and tell them,

Treatment depends on the stage of cancer and which part of the pancreas is affected when first detected. In the early stages, surgical removal of part or all of the organ may be beneficial. As the disease spreads, this may not be an option. Chemotherapy and radiation therapy are often used before or after surgery or when surgery is not an option. In advanced cases, chemotherapy may be combined with targeted drug therapy. There are clinical trials available for individuals with pancreatic cancer in order to study/test new therapies, but these trials are not a guaranSee GOTT, Page A5

‘You’re now in charge of the country.’” Bollenbacher and millions like him hope new blood in Washington will fix things. And seniors, who are much more pessimistic about the direction of the country than the young, definitely think things need fixing. While less than half of voters under age 30 told the Pew Research Center that they were dissatisfied with national conditions, almost three-quarters of those over 65 expressed dismay. Their age is the source of their frustration. People who

25 YEARS AGO

See ROBERTS, Page A5

Oct. 30, 1985 • Six members of the Greenhand class of the Goddard High School chapter of Future Farmers of America were recently selected to represent their class. The 1985-86 officers are: Laura Stowe, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Terry Stowe, president; Kevin Floyd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Troy Floyd, vice president; Cathy McCarthy, daughter of Virginia McCarthy, secretary; Anisa Kasuboski, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Kasuboski, treasurer; Scott Martin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Martin, reporter; and Vernon Jines, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Jines, sentinel. • Three members of the Roswell High School chapter of Future Farmers of America received State Farmer Degrees recently at the state FFA convention in Las Cruces. They are: Adam Daughter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kearns; Bari Harris, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Harris; and Andy Morley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Morley.


LOCAL

Roswell Daily Record

Courtesy Photo

Kids' Closet volunteers Willie Duran, Carol Tingley, Carolyn Adair and Cheryl Hughes, Kids' Closet director, aceept a $650 grant check from Susie Russell, executive director, and Eileen Grooms, board member, from the Community Foundation of Chaves County.

Kids’ Closet receives donation

The Community Foundation of Chaves County presented The Kids’ Closet with a $650 grant recently to purchase winter coats for children in need in Chaves County. Additional coats were contributed to The Kids’ Closet by Lawrence Brothers IGA of Roswell through a coat drive organized by Blake Meek, store manager, and All American Cleaners donated the cleaning services. The Kids’ Closet provides new and gently worn clothing, underwear, socks, shoes and essentials to qualified low-income children of Chaves County at no cost to the

Roberts

Continued from Page A4

expected to be able to retire with a nice little nest egg in their retirement accounts or in the value of their homes are now finding that they have to keep working. And they are terrified that if they lose their jobs they will never get another one. They worry that the economy won’t turn around in time to help them, and they’re not at all sure that times will ever be as good as they once were. An AARP survey of its membership revealed that two-thirds don’t believe their children will be better off than they are. One big reason for this sour mood among seniors? The size of the federal deficit, which seniors say they don’t want to pass on to their children and grandchildren. Listening to these voters, Republicans would have reason to believe they have a mandate to tackle that deficit. Good luck. Seniors still balk at any changes to Social Security and Medicare, the enormous entitlement programs they benefit from. That’s the reason older voters oppose the new health-care law — they’re convinced it will cause cutbacks in Medicare, and the over 65ers are joined by that huge cohort of baby boomers now about to cash in on the program they’ve paid into all these years.

Gott

Continued from Page A4

tee of cure. Clinical trials are simply studies to determine whether a new drug is effective and safe. To date, there are no screening tests available to the general population. According to the Johns Hopkins website, researchers there are working on developing new tests to screen and detect pancreatic cancer in its earliest stages. It is hoped that these new tests will be ef fective, especially for those with increased risk, such as those with a strong family history. Currently, the best available tumor marker for cancer of the pancreas is the CA19-9 test. Unfortunately, it is only 80 percent accurate in identifying patients with this type of cancer and cannot identify early disease. Because both your husband’s parents had pancreatic cancer, he is at a higher risk for developing it as well. Sadly, I cannot offer you much hope about this disease other than the fact that the medical community now knows much more about it than in the past. Perhaps he should look into genetic testing or even contact the lab at

family. The Kids’ Closet is dedicated to its mission “to help when help is needed and to promote equality and dignity of self.” The Community Foundation of Chaves County’s grant program supports community development, health and human services, arts and humanities and other nonprofit organizations’ projects designed to improve the quality of life in Chaves County. For more information about the Community Foundation of Chaves County call 622-8900. Obama voter Ron Fraatz, who’s 61, told USA Today that the health care law is the reason he’s voting Republican for congress: “I’m getting up to where in another couple of years I’ll be in Medicare. So why are they messing around with it and how much is it going to cost?” Of course it’s the cost of Medicare right now that’s one of the big drivers of the federal deficit but any attempts to get a handle on that cost, including Republican proposals to provide vouchers for health care in place of Medicare, meet with hostility from older voters. In fact none of the trial balloon policies Republicans have floated this election year garnered a majority from the over 65 set in a Pew survey. So what’s a Congress to do? If Republicans win, how are they supposed to interpret that victory in terms of policy? To get anything done, they would have to compromise with the White House — a dangerous tactic in an election year during which aisle crossers lost their primaries. What do seniors think about that? Unlike voters in every other age group, they say they are less likely to support candidates who are willing to compromise. They might be about to get what they wish for. Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by e-mail at stevecokie@gmail.com. ©2010, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.

Johns Hopkins that is developing these tests. They may need people to determine whether the tests are safe, effective and accurate. You can learn more about this at www.pathology.jhu.edu/pc /. You may wish to look into similar programs at other teaching hospitals, primarily those closest to your home. DEAR DR. GOTT: I saw your column about cluster headaches and wanted to tell you about my husband’s experience. He suffered with these for many years. He was on medication, hospitalized, and even had sinus surgery, but nothing worked. I began researching and found that he was most likely suffering from cluster headaches, something his doctors hadn’t told us. I also found that ginseng might help. He now takes ginseng tablets daily and has not had a headache since. The only kind that doesn’t seem to work is American ginseng, and the brand does not seem to matter, either. I hope this helps some of your readers. DEAR READER: Thank you for writing. I have printed your letter in the hopes that it will in fact reach those readers who need it most. However, I do have a few issues. First, cluster headaches

are fairly easy to diagnose because they follow a pattern, so I am surprised to hear that your husband underwent all this treatment for something that his doctors either couldn’t diagnose or wouldn’t tell him. Second, you did not provide any dosing information. How much ginseng is your husband currently using daily? I ask that you or any other readers familiar with this write to let me know so I can pass it on to others. Thank you. To provide related information, I am sending you a copy of my Health Report “Headaches.” Other readers who would like a copy should send a self-addressed stamped envelope and a $2 check or money order payable to Newsletter and mailed to Newsletter, P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH 44092. 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.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

A5


A6 Saturday, October 30, 2010 Terror

Continued from Page A1

weekend campaign appearances. The terrorist ef forts “underscore the necessity of remaining vigilant against terrorism,” the president said. While he said both packages that contained explosives originated in Yemen, he did not explicitly assign blame to al-Qaida, which is active in that Arab country and long has made clear its goal of launching new attacks on the United States.

Spotlight

Continued from Page A1

hometown newspaper, the Oakland Tribune, in 1994 when the Berkeley police tore apart his whale sculpture that he had plopped in the Berkeley Marina without permission from city officials. In the photograph that accompanied the story, he is wearing a tie-dye Tshirt and sitting crosslegged in the sand next to the sculpture and a bearded artist friend named B.N. Duncan. Four years later, the same paper picked up a story about a gold spray painted bicycled sculpture, which he plopped in front of Berkeley City Hall, once again without proper permission. Various other publications reference miscellaneous stunts over the years: he was arrested in 1993 for attempting to hang toilet seats from lamps in the front entrance to San Francisco’s Museum of Modern Art; he once covered a public statue with a plastic sheet with a sign that said “Wear a Condom”; he opened up his own museum called the “New Sense (nuisance) Museum” in a vacant lot in Berkeley where he created a graveyard of painted toilet seats and old TVs with political messages written on them; he once put pillows through the city of Concord’s spirit poles so it looked like pierced marshmallows roasting over a fire.

Trujillo

Continued from Page A1

the jobs we have right now,” said Trujillo, citing agriculture and the oil and gas industry. “Businesses are hurting.” He says it’s unacceptable that local veterans are forced to travel to Albuquerque for medical treatment under their federal coverage. Trujillo says that although rules regulating the process are on the federal level, there should be action taken by state lawmakers to make the process less burdensome. “A World War II veteran has to travel 200 miles one way just to see a doctor,” he said. “It’s not a federal issue ... (and) we have to take care of those veterans.” While serving on the

GENERAL Authorities in Dubai intercepted one explosive device. The second package was aboard a plane searched in East Midlands, north of London, and officials said it contained a printer toner cartridge with wires and powder. Brennan said the devices were in packages about the size of a breadbox. While Obama didn’t specifically accuse Yemen’s al-Qaida branch, Brennan called it the most active al-Qaida franchise and said anyone associated with the group was a subject of concern. If you ask List who he is, he will answer, “Great question,” and talk for 10 minutes about the difference between self-deception and self-delusion and how you can only really be happy if you know who you are. He’ll pause midsentence to watch a bird fly by and will become distracted by pedestrians. He’ll quote Mark Twain and make wild hand gestures while never really answering the question. After all, a little mystery is a good thing. A friend recently urged him to see the Carlsbad Caverns, so he drove his white Toyota truck to Southeastern New Mexico to see the bats that haven’t yet migrated south for the winter. He spent the past three weeks in Carlsbad and Roswell camping out in his truck. He says it’s hard to break frugal habits, plus, he enjoys camping. “Sometimes there’s not a sound,” he said of the nights sleeping alone in the desert. List is the first to admit he has seen some rough times, but he smiles when he talks and is a people person. He says he seeks refuge in humor and joy in pranks, all of which is reflected in his art. Take the little alien sculptures that puzzled the RMAC staf fers, for instance. At first glance, the sculpture looks like a dusty hollow bone, but upon closer inspection, you’ll notice there are little eyes and a gaping mouth carved out of the County Commission, Trujillo says he was able to work across party lines to accomplish whatever work is needed for his constituents. “As a Democrat, I’ve learned that this is not ... a left and right thing, it’s a ‘we’ thing,” he said. “My district comes first before anything else. ... I don’t care if it’s Republican or Democrat, my district comes first.” Trujillo is the thirdgeneration owner of El Charro, a tortilla factory and Mexican food store. He served 23 years in the National Guard and did tours in Iraq in 2005 and 2006. He represents District 1 on the Chaves County Commission. He is running against incumbent Rep. Candy Spence Ezzell, R-Roswell.

mattarco@roswell-record.com

The radical U.S.-born Muslim cleric Anwar alAwlaki, who now is in hiding in Yemen, is believed to have helped inspire recent attacks including the Fort Hood shooting, the Times Square bombing attempt and the failed Detroit airliner bombing last Christmas Day. Another American hiding in Yemen, Samir Khan, has declared himself a traitor and has helped produce al-Qaida propaganda. Most of the of ficials spoke on condition of anonymity, citing the ongoing investigation. bulbous head. They are about the size of a large dog bone and are made out of dried kelp. The au natural Happy Kelpies, as he calls them, look ominous, but when he puts hair on the top of their heads, they all of a sudden become inherently hysterical and ridiculous. “They’re a hot ticket,” said Kathleen Ousley, general manager of an art gallery in Summerland, Calif., that sells the kelpies. “People love them. Each one has a little personality.” List will donate 100 of the sculptures to the Roswell Visitor Center after they were met with praise from executive director Suzy Wood. “I just love it,” she said, noting they would be added to the collection of unique items artists give the center, like UFO rocks from Utah. “They’re really unique items because they’re not really items you can buy anywhere else.” List says he plans to leave Roswell this afternoon though his sculptures will likely stay behind with Wood. He happened to run into the RMAC attendant, Mark Simon, a second time and learned he was actually an archeologist. List said when he told him the sculpture was made out of seaweed, Simon said, “I knew it wasn’t from the Chihuahuan Desert.” emiller@roswell-record.com

Intelligence personnel had been monitoring a suspected plot for days, officials said. The packages in England and Dubai were discovered after Saudi Arabian intelligence picked up information related to Yemen and passed it on to the U.S., one official said. U.S. intelligence officials warned last month that terrorists hoped to mail chemical and biological materials as part of an attack on America and other Western countries using the mail. The alert came in a Sept. 23 bulletin from the Homeland Secu-

Sunset

Continued from Page A1

students, thinks the week’s activities have been ef fective. “We’re teaching them how to say ‘no,’” she said. Delma Rey, a fourthgrade teacher and grandparent of a Sunset student, was impressed with her students’ maturity. “I’m really happy with the students with the way they received [the activities] and reacted,” she explained. Earlier in the week, the Roswell Police Department provided Sunset’s third- through fifth-

NMMI

Continued from Page A1

Roswell Daily Record rity Department and obtained by The Associated Press. In the hours following the discoveries, Yemeni officials and Scotland Yard were investigating and the U.S. issued a 72-hour ban on all cargo from Yemen. U.S. authorities conducted searches of aircraft in Philadelphia, Newark, N.J., and New York City. Since the failed Christmas bombing of a Detroitbound airliner, Yemen has been a focus for U.S. counterterrorism officials. Before that attack, the U.S. regarded al-Qaida’s branch in Yemen as primarily a threat in the graders with lessons on staying away from drugs and other safety concerns. Several other community groups got involved on Friday. The Roswell Fire Department escorted the walking students, teachers and parents to a nearby greenbelt, where Mayor Del Jur ney and Cindy Blake, the mother of a DWI victim, both spoke. Diane Taylor and her team of DWI program supporters blew up 500 balloons and prepared goodie bags for students. Sherif f deputies and emergency medical technicians lent hands, too.

region, not to the United States. The Yemen branch known as al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula has since become a leading source of terrorist propaganda and recruiting. Authorities believe about 300 al-Qaida members or cells operate in Yemen. The Yemeni government has stepped up counterterrorism operations, with help from the U.S. military and intelligence officials. Mohammed Shayba, general-director of the state airline’s cargo department, said the gover nment is conducting an investigation. T rujillo was quick to acknowledge the community-wide support. With help from the community, she thinks Sunset can do more with its students than make academic gains. “We’re building students’ character,” she says, “and helping them make good choices.” On the walk back to school, Nathan Monnroy, a fifth-grader and the school’s student council president, corroborated Trujillo’s claim. Asked what he learned during Red Ribbon Week, he replied, “If a stranger comes by, you just say “no” and walk away.”

assistant said. Participants will perform as individuals and teams in various categories. The drill meet will conclude with a drill down competition among all teams. Brig. Gen. Richard V. Geraci, commandant of cadets, said in a press release that the competition brings out the best in our young men and Mark Wilson Photo women. “Under pressure, they New Mexico Military Institute cadets practice their skills must perform not only for during the 24th annual NMMI Drill Meet, Friday afternoon. themselves, but for their stands up under stress,” teammates,” Geraci said. every one of them.” “We look forward to Maj. Gen. Jerry Grizzle, “Every coach, mom and dad and school classmate many more meets, where NMMI superintendent can be very proud of our young men and said. Awards for the drill these young men and women can come together women. They will meet and in a very demanding meet will be presented at every challenge with activity that requires 5:30 p.m. today in Bates everything they have and teamwork, focus, and an Hall. come away winners — athletic ability that j.entzminger@roswell-record.com


GENERAL

Spirits, mists abound year ’round Roswell Daily Record

JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER

Above and beyond the call, the police often find themselves confronting things otherworldly as they go into abandoned or empty buildings to secure them. In one incident, officers entered an unoccupied dwelling on Union Avenue. As required by standard operating procedures, they left their recorders running. Nothing out of the ordinary happened inside the building, but when the officers left the residence and checked their recorders, the audio did not match. Despite the fact that they were inside the same building, observing the same scene and hearing the same sounds, each of one their recorders picked up something quite different. The old library building is alleged to be the home of a ghostly baby. During one of their checks, police found tiny footprints in the dust on the floor of what should have been a locked and unoccupied building.

Alice Eppers freely admits her home on North Kansas Avenue has a resident apparition. Twice she has witnessed a phantom mist inside the house that soon dissipates. The house was built in 1938. Alice’s mother-in-law would often call the police in because she thought she heard someone walking around inside the house. Eventually Alice moved into the home. “I’ve heard it, too. The old floorboards creak. It’s a distinctive sound.” Employees at the Roswell Livestock and Farm Supply have had several ghostly encounters with a homeless man who died in the warehouse. People who put fully loaded pallets in a certain location will return to find that the pallet has moved. At first, such incidents were dismissed as forgetfulness on the employees’ part, and the pallet would be replaced. However when the employee returned, he would discover the pallet had been destroyed, the sacks of grain torn up, the contents

DANCE DANCE DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF THE “NEW” COUNTRY CHARM OCTOBER 30TH FROM 7:00 TO 10:00 PM

LOCATION - THE HALL 1211 W. FIRST STREET (FORMERLY THE ODD FELLOWS) COST = $5 PER PERSON LOTS OF REFRESHMENTS DOOR PRIZES & FUN, FUN & MORE FUN

FOR INFORMATION CALL 575-840-6565

spilled on the floor. Other employees have reported that they have seen an old man sitting high up in the rafters. The individual is asked if he needs help. He vanishes when the workers go up to investigate. A home on Washington Avenue has a ghost that did not welcome female occupants. A man and wife moved into the home. Doors opened and closed, but only when the woman was by herself. Often the woman found the doors were blocked. The husband reported the spectral resident would often take loose change and money left on dressers and hide it. On Alameda Street, a house is occupied by the spirit of a little girl who plays with the hair of the current residents. Another spectre has found its home on Wells Street. A former resident has reported hearing dishes rattling inside the cupboard, and the garage door slamming closed, but when the rooms and doors are checked, nothing has been

moved. The young mother said that her son would get up in the mor ning complaining that his toys had kept him awake, playing by themselves. The Yucca Recreational Center is reputed to have a ghost, the spirit of a little girl. There have been sightings of ghostly bears, sometimes reported as white, sometimes as black, along the highways coming into town. In one incident the animal was allegedly hit, but vanished when the people went back to check it. In a local version of a well-traveled tale, La Llorona (the weeping woman) drowned her children in the Hondo River. When she realized what she had done, she killed herself. It is said you can still hear her crying after the rains when the Hondo fills with water. Do you have ghostly tales you would like to share?

j.palmer@roswell-record.com

Saturday, October 30, 2010

A7

‘Haunted’ Halloween AURORA, Colo. (AP) — When Pandora Rose moved with her husband and two daughters to a home in southeaster n Aurora more than a year ago, they had very specific questions to ask their local homeowners’ association. How would the neighbors feel about towering, wrought-iron fences? How about hulking, humanoid pumpkin creatures standing on the front yard? Any hang-ups about giant cauldrons glowing with green light and spitting fog? For the fourth year in a row, Rose and her family have transfor med their home for the Halloween holiday, turning their yard into a free haunted house for trickor -treaters of any age. The Darkrose Manor is an eerie tableau that includes a meticulously constructed witch’s shack, a gallery of nightmarish creatures and a towering fence that surrounds the entire property.

Turning a single-family home into a gothic attraction requires such inspiration, Rose said. The search for materials — irrigation tubing, spare lumber and countless set pieces and baubles — starts long before Halloween. Pandora Rose insists the mission of Darkrose Manor is distinct from professional haunted houses that run during the season. There are no costumed teenagers hiding in crooks and crannies, waiting to jump out and scare visitors. No one wielding a chain saw will chase trick-or treaters off the property. Instead, the goal is to create a visceral sense of mood and place, to offer a seasonal atmosphere that boasts a more subtle effect. “We don’t do the startles and scares, we don’t do the blood and guts,” Rose said. “What we hope to leave people with is that sense of ‘eww,’ something that you’ll think about as you go to bed.”


A8 Saturday, October 30, 2010

WEATHER

Roswell Seven-day forecast Today

Tonight

Sunshine

Clear

Sunday

Mostly sunny

Monday

Tuesday

Sunny and not as warm

Sunny and not as warm

Wednesday

Bright sunshine

Thursday

Sunny and pleasant

Roswell Daily Record

National Cities Friday

Bright and sunny

High 88°

Low 47°

86°/43°

77°/38°

66°/34°

67°/36°

72°/36°

71°/43°

NNW at 6-12 mph POP: 0%

NNW at 3-6 mph POP: 0%

VAR at 3-6 mph POP: 0%

SSW at 4-8 mph POP: 5%

SSW at 7-14 mph POP: 0%

NW at 10-20 mph POP: 5%

SW at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

ENE at 3-6 mph POP: 10%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

New Mexico Weather

Roswell through 5 p.m. Friday

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

Temperatures High/low ........................... 75°/36° Normal high/low ............... 72°/41° Record high ............... 89° in 2003 Record low ................. 25° in 1993 Humidity at noon ................... 20%

Farmington 70/35

Clayton 82/44

Raton 77/34

Precipitation 24 hours ending 5 p.m. Fri. .. 0.00” Month to date ....................... 1.02” Normal month to date .......... 1.23” Year to date ....................... 15.18” Normal year to date ........... 12.16”

Santa Fe 72/36

Gallup 69/33

Tucumcari 86/46

Albuquerque 73/45

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Clovis 82/46

Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading

Ruidoso 76/55

T or C 81/46

Source: EPA

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

Oct 30

Rise 7:15 a.m. 7:15 a.m. Rise none 1:03 a.m. New

Nov 5

First

Nov 13

Set 6:08 p.m. 6:07 p.m. Set 1:51 p.m. 2:27 p.m. Full

Nov 21

Alamogordo 81/46

Silver City 78/44

ROSWELL 88/47 Carlsbad 90/54

Hobbs 89/51

Las Cruces 79/48

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2010

Regional Cities Today Sun. 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

81/46/s 73/45/s 64/25/s 90/55/s 90/54/s 63/27/s 82/44/s 66/37/s 82/46/s 82/41/s 72/44/s 70/35/s 69/33/s 89/51/s 79/48/s 78/41/s 66/35/s 76/39/s 89/51/s 84/45/s 70/30/s 77/34/s 59/24/s 88/47/s 76/55/s 72/36/s 78/44/s 81/46/s 86/46/s 71/38/s

74/38/s 68/42/s 59/23/s 87/49/s 90/49/s 59/22/s 67/36/s 63/20/s 76/37/s 76/38/s 67/41/s 61/31/s 62/25/s 86/43/s 73/46/s 68/31/s 62/27/s 72/42/s 85/46/s 80/37/s 64/24/s 64/28/s 55/20/s 86/43/s 69/45/s 65/32/s 71/41/s 74/42/s 78/37/s 66/30/s

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

NBA’s Dwight Howard tries to score with kids’ CD

NEW YORK (AP) — Dwight Howard may be the NBA’s Superman, but when it comes to making music, he’ll admit to having at least one flaw. “I’m not good at rapping, I’ll say that,” he says. “But singing, I can hold a note. I’m pretty good. If I had to sing in front of a big crowd, I don’t think I’d be that shy.” There’s nothing timid about the Orlando Magic star’s musical CD debut. This week, as the league opened the NBA season, he released “Shoot for the Stars,” a CD for kids that has the center singing songs by Michael Jackson, Harry Belafonte and the Black Eyed Peas and even rapping MC Hammer’s “U Can’t Touch This.” By releasing a CD, Howard follows in the footsteps of NBA stars like Ron Artest and the league’s original Superman, Shaquille O’Neal, who has a platinum disc to go along with his championship rings. Howard says he didn’t intend to follow their path. “I didn’t want to do the normal thing with everybody getting an album and all that stuff,” he says. “I always wanted to have a production company, being involved in music, but not as far as me singing or rapping or doing any of that stuff.” But he got more interested when he found out a portion of the funds from the CD, put out by Razor & Tie’s Kidz Bop series, would go to the BETA center, a foundation dedicated to supporting families in Orlando, Fla. That’s why most of the songs are either upbeat or uplift-

ing, he said. “All of the songs are very inspirational, just being together, being a family, things that bring people together,” he says. “It’s just inspiring kids to do more, be more and dream big.” The CD has at least one fan in his toddler son: “He wants to dance, so I just try and play music that he can dance to,” Howard says. Howard has already played the album for a couple of teammates and said he got positive feedback. But he knows he’s in for a ribbing if the songs ever get played during a game at the Amway Center.

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

Today

Sun.

Today

Sun.

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

34/26/c 72/48/s 60/40/s 57/45/pc 67/41/s 59/38/s 60/41/pc 78/49/s 74/37/pc 59/36/pc 84/53/s 86/71/pc 76/50/s 62/40/s 68/42/s 71/52/pc 70/54/pc 86/48/s

34/27/sf 72/55/s 62/37/s 54/36/s 72/43/s 55/38/pc 50/35/pc 84/55/s 65/34/s 52/34/pc 79/46/s 85/71/pc 83/63/s 61/38/s 63/38/s 70/52/s 68/54/s 79/41/s

83/70/pc 81/49/s 48/31/s 76/58/s 57/46/pc 64/34/s 82/59/s 60/44/s 86/59/s 60/39/s 55/48/r 65/41/s 70/46/s 56/39/sh 67/58/pc 55/47/r 86/53/s 62/45/s

83/71/s 85/44/s 48/29/s 80/63/s 55/39/s 57/30/pc 84/61/s 60/36/s 81/59/s 52/33/s 59/50/sh 72/46/s 65/44/s 53/35/pc 66/55/s 55/48/sh 80/49/s 63/40/s

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: 95°.................Chandler, Ariz. Low: 13°................. Alamosa, Colo.

High: 78°............................ Clayton Low: 18°.........................Angel Fire

National Cities Seattle 55/47

Billings 56/39 San Francisco 63/54

Minneapolis 48/31

Detroit 59/36

Denver 74/37

Chicago 59/38

Washington 62/45

Kansas City 68/42 Los Angeles 70/54

Atlanta 72/48

El Paso 84/53

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

Houston 76/50

Miami 83/70

Fronts Cold

-10s

Warm

-0s

0s

New York 57/46

Precipitation Stationary

10s

20s

Showers T-storms

30s

40s

50s

Rain

60s

Flurries

70s

80s

Snow

Ice

90s 100s 110s

Fox, Dish agree to end blackout LOS ANGELES (AP) — Broadcaster Fox and satellite TV provider Dish came to terms on Friday, ending a blackout of several cable channels including FX and 19 regional sports networks to 14.3 million Dish customers that began at the start of the month. The deal between the unit of News Corp. and Dish Network Corp. comes two days before their agreement for Fox’s broadcast signals expired. The agreement means Dish customers will be able to watch baseball’s World Series on their own TV sets.


Saturday, October 30, 2010

LOCAL SCHEDULE SATURDAY OCTOBER 30 COLLEGE BASEBALL 9:30 a.m. • NMMI vs. Clarendon College, at Midland, Texas 1 p.m. • NMMI vs. New Mexico JC, at Odessa, Texas COLLEGE CROSS COUNTRY 10 a.m. • NMMI at NJCAA Region V Championships, at Levelland, Texas COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL 2 p.m. • Frank Phillips College at NMMI

LOCAL BRIEFS YUCCA REC BASKETBALL SIGN-UPS START NOV. 1

Sign-ups for the Yucca Recreation Center basketball league begin Nov. 1 and run through Nov. 30 for boys and girls in grades 4th through 8th. The cost is $30 for the first child and $25 for each additional child in the same family. First-time players must present a birth certificate to verify age. For more information, call 624-6719.

RTA MEETING SET FOR NOV. 4

The Roswell Tennis Association will hold its November board meeting on Nov. 4 at 11:30 a.m. at Peppers Grill. For more information, call 623-4033.

SPORTS Roswell Daily Record

KEVIN J. KELLER RECORD SPORTS EDITOR

They ran, they passed and they scored on defense. The Goddard Rockets essentially did it all on Friday night, including beating crosstown rival Roswell for the 10th straight time. Goddard ran for 311 yards, passed for 117 yards and scored 21 points in each half to cruise to a 420 win over the Coyotes in front of a Wool Bowl that was filled to nearly 90 percent capacity. “I have no explanation for it,” said Goddard senior Said Fuentes, who goes out of the rivalry with a perfect 4-0 mark against Roswell in his high-school career. “It feels good for me and my other fellow seniors. “It feels good, it means a lot for us to beat them.” While Fuentes said it feels good to beat Roswell, he, along with fellow senior Dustin Levario, still looked at the game from a “taking care of business” perspective. “It’s just another game. I want to get to that game,” Levario said, talking about the state championship, where Goddard is hoping to get for the fifth straight season.

Steve Notz Photo

Goddard’s David Anaya, left, looks for a way around Roswell’s Kevin Kelly on his way to a 32-yard touchdown during Goddard’s 42-0 win over the Coyotes at the Wool Bowl, Friday. It was the 10th straight win by the Rockets over their crosstown rivals. The win moved Goddard within one win of the program’s first undefeated regular season, but both Fuentes and Levario said that getting to 9-0 just means they’re one game

closer to their ultimate goal. “It means we’re doing a pretty good job,” Levario said about what it meant to get to 9-0. “Nine wins, that’s all it

Broncos hold clinic at All Saints

means, is nine wins,” said Fuentes. “One more week to go, that’s all it means.” Getting that ninth win or beating Roswell for the 18th time in school history was never really in doubt

• More briefs on B2

BRIEFS

FAVRE LISTED AS QUESTIONABLE

Courtesy Photo

New Mexico Military Institute basketball players Jon Marsh, back left, and Pat Moore hosted a basketball clinic last week for 4th- through 6th-graders at All Saints School. Marsh, Moore and the Broncos open the 2010-11 season on Monday against Pulaski Technical College at the Thunderbird Classic in Hobbs.

Hondo gets win

See GHS-RHS, Page B3

HONDO — Valley Christian let a 30-28 halftime lead slip away and lost in a shootout, 92-74, to No. 4 Hondo Valley on Friday in the quarterfinals of the 6Man state playoffs at Eagle Stadium in Hondo. The Lions went down in the third quarter by 10 points and Hondo (5-4) took advantage by outscoring the fourth-seeded Lions 64-44 in the second half to advance into the semifinals against top-seeded Clovis Christian next week. “We ran out of players and steam,” said Lion coach Brent Green after the game. “Daniel La Volpa got hurt the first play of the game and Matthew Straley was hurt ... it’s tough, four or five guys didn’t come off the field. “(Hondo Valley) did a good

Lake Arthur beats Elida, advances in playoffs LAWRENCE FOSTER RECORD SPORTS REPORTER

COMMENT OR IDEA?

E-mail • sports@roswell-record.com Twitter • www.twitter.com/rdrsports Phone • 575-622-7710, ext. 28 Fax • 575-625-0421

on Friday. The Rockets (9-0, 2-0 District 4-4A) scored on their first possession on a

RECORD STAFF REPORTS

NATIONAL

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. (AP) — Brett Favre’s healing ability has been tested before. It’s headed for another down-to-thewire finish. The latest will-he-orwon’t-he drama in Favre’s 20-year career continued Friday when Minnesota listed him as questionable for Sunday’s game at New England. The Vikings will wait until the very end to answer the burning question whether their injured 41-year-old quarterback will play. Favre was on the field for drills Friday, with limited participation in practice for the first time this week. He wore a wrap on his left ankle, which has two fractures that have threatened his NFL-record streak of 291 straight games started. Coach Brad Childress said he “probably will” wait until the last hours before kickoff to decide. He didn’t directly answer a question if he’ll base the decision on Favre’s recent rough performances or strictly on his health. Earlier this week, Childress said he won’t consider the streak when he decides. “Can he protect himself? And what gives us the best chance to win?” Childress said in response to a question about whether he wants Favre to start. If he doesn’t, Tarvaris Jackson will take over.

B

Rockets roll past Coyotes, 42-0 Section

Lawrence Foster Photo

Lake Arthur’s Domingo Pisana rolls into the end zone for a Panther score during his team’s 6222 win over Elida in the 6-Man playoffs, Friday.

LAKE AR THUR — Most coaches will tell you that a quick start is key to any victory. Lake Arthur coach Jose Cruz Porras was no different, as he preached all week to his Panther squad the importance of putting the game away early. Message delivered. Lake Arthur, the defending 6-Man state champions, jumped out to a 30-0 lead and never looked back as they trounced the visiting Elida Tigers, 62-22. In the teams’ first meeting this season, the Tigers were the ones to jump out to an early lead and the Panthers were forced to come back in the second half. That’s what made getting that early lead so important for Lake Arthur (7-3). “Getting that early lead was pretty big,” Panther senior Angelo Rivera said. “We came into this game and we knew what we had to do. That wasn’t us when we played them at the start of that last game. We knew that we had to come in here and get a big lead. This week, we did what had

See VCA FALLS, Page B3

to be done.” The Tigers (5-5) got the first possession of the game, but fumbled the ball at the Panther 28 and Gerardo Rubio recovered the ball for Lake Arthur. All it took for the Panthers to score was two runs by Rivera, the last being a 27-yard scamper around left end for a touchdown that gave his team an 8-0 lead. Near the end of the first quarter, the Panthers increased their lead as Chance Ortiz hit Domingo Pisana on a 12-yard touchdown pass that gave Lake Arthur a 16-0 lead. On the Tigers’ first play of the ensuing drive, Rivera intercepted a pass by Jordyn Tivis at the Panther 4. Lake Arthur took advantage of the turnover, driving 76 yards in six plays. The scoring drive was capped by a 1-yard touchdown dive by Michael Rubio, or “Meatball” as he’s affectionately known to just about every Lake Arthur resident. Just 13 minutes into the game, the Panthers had a commanding lead, just what Porras wanted. “That was really big,” he See PLAYOFFS, Page B3


B2 Saturday, October 30, 2010 LOCAL BRIEFS FIRST TEE TO HOLD AUCTION ON NOV. 6

The First Tee of The Pecos Valley will hold a silent auction on Saturday, Nov. 6, at NMMI Golf Course. The auction will run from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. Items up for auction include gift baskets, gift certificates to local restaurants and businesses, hotel and golf packages, golf packages to courses in New Mexico and golf equipment. All proceeds benefit The First Tee of The Pecos Valley. For more information, call 6234444.

TWO-LADY FORE-PLAY GOLF TOURNEY IS NOV. 13

The Two-Lady Fore-Play golf tournament will be held on Saturday, Nov. 13, at NMMI Golf Course. The two-lady scramble will begin with a shotgun start at 10 a.m. The fee for the tournament is $70 per player, which includes breakfast, lunch, green fees, cart fee, range balls and a mulligan. For more information, contact Kathy Jorgensen at 627-8452 or NMMI Golf Course at 622-6033.

BRUCE RITTER MEMORIAL RUN SET FOR NOV. 13

The inaugural Bruce Ritter Memorial Run, sponsored by the Roswell Runners Club, Ritter & Company and the Roswell Parks & Recreation Department, will be held on Nov. 13. The event will consist of a 20K run, a 10K run, a 2-mile run, a 2mile walk and a 10K walk. The cost is $15 if registered by Nov. 8 and $20 thereafter until race day. For more information, call 6246720.

High School

Friday’s Scores By The Associated Press PREP FOOTBALL 6-Man Quarterfinals Lake Arthur 62, Elida 22 Hondo Valley 92, Valley Christian 74 Regular Season Artesia 51, Portales 0 Belen 20, Valencia 8 Bernalillo 42, Santa Fe 14 Capitan 42, Carrizozo 0 Carlsbad 42, Hobbs 22 Estancia 53, Laguna-Acoma 0 Eunice 26, Loving 7 Farmington 37, Piedra Vista 14 Fort Sumner 51, Jal 15 Gallup 28, Grants 26 Goddard 42, Roswell 0 Hagerman 48, Cloudcroft 13 Hot Springs 28, Cobre 7 La Cueva 35, Eldorado 7 Lovington 55, Ruidoso 14 Mayfield 42, Onate 7 NMMI 12, Dexter 7 Questa 52, Bataan Military Academy 0 Ramah 42, Navajo Pine 28 Raton 57, West Las Vegas 20 Robertson 56, Taos 12 Santa Rosa 27, Tucumcari 0 St. Pius 28, Moriarty 6 Tatum 34, Melrose 22 Texico 38, Clayton 6 Tularosa 21, Lordsburg 0 Valley 49, Rio Grande 14 Zuni 52, Tohatchi 0

Baseball

Lewis ready to take the ball for Rangers, down 2-0

ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — During two seasons in Japan, Colby Lewis became accustomed to pitching nearly every night in front of raucous, sellout crowds. He points to those experiences in 2008 and ’09 with the Hiroshima Carp in helping him gear up for the pressures of the postseason. The 31year-old Lewis twice pitched the Texas Rangers to victories after their losses to the defending champion Yankees in the AL championship series. The Rangers now turn to Lewis to lead them in Game 3 of the World Series on Saturday night, trailing the San Francisco Giants 2-0 as the scene shifts to Rangers Ballpark in Arlington. “We’ve got to win either way. That’s just the way it is,” Lewis said Friday. “We have to win four out of five. So, there’s no room for error. It’s just a situation where we’re back at home and we played really well here. I’m looking forward to it.” Jonathan Sanchez takes the ball for the Giants, hoping to bounce back from a rough outing in his team’s Game 6 NLCS clincher against the Phillies last Saturday. The left-hander was done after two innings. Despite the importance of Lewis’ next start, he reminds himself to treat each outing on the big stage like it’s any other during the course of a season. “I want to try to keep the same mindset,” Lewis said. “If you try to get too amped or too overly confident, I think you get yourself in trouble.” WILSON’S BLISTER: C.J. Wilson has spent much of the year dealing with an annoying blister on the middle finger of his pitching hand. Enough so that he can make light of the situation to some degree, even a day after the Texas lefty took the 9-0 loss in Game 2 of the World Series against the San Francisco Giants. “I think this offseason I’ll do a lot of woodwork, soak my hands in pine tar and take a lot of batting practice,” Wilson quipped Friday in the clubhouse. “I need to learn to throw a spitball this offseason so I can effectively pitch with blood on my fingers.” Wilson left the game Thursday night accompanied by a trainer following a leadoff walk in the seventh. At times, the blister becomes brittle and cracked — that’s the case right now — and other times the finger tip fills with blood and turns purple. Wilson carries a needle around in case he has to drain the finger between innings and get rid of the blood. The blister affects Wilson’s fastball velocity and ability to locate his pitches. But he has gotten used to it. “It’s been a six-month process and every day I’ve been dealing with it,” Wilson said. “It’s

SPORTS

Olesinski wins fourth straight district crown

Roswell Daily Record

JOE D. MOORE RECORD STAFF WRITER

At the three-team 4A district cross country meet Friday, continued individual excellence and a dominating team performance were the salient stories. On a winding course amid the rolling hills east of North Moore Avenue, Anna Olesinski won her fourth consecutive district title, while the Artesia Bulldogs ran away with the boys and girls team titles. After the race, the standout Coyote, who has recently suffered from tendonitis in her knees recapped the race. “I started off a little too fast, and the hills killed me at the end,” Olesinski said. Jack Batson, Roswell’s cross country coach, thought, given her injury, Olesinski’s time of 19 minutes, 54 seconds for the 3.05-mile course was as good as could be expected. While the girls’ individual champion was never in question, Batson was very doubtful about his girls team’s chance of beating its crosstown rivals, the Goddard Rockets. “I didn’t think we were in it,” he said after the race. In the end, however, his girls edged their opponents in blue by one point, 43 to 44, to secure second place. For Goddard’s girls, perhaps the brightest spot was Jordan Hickerson’s perseverance through the last three miles of a race in which she fell at the first turn. In the afternoon’s second race, Vernon Dyer, the something I’ve been pitching around for a while.” WASHINGTON’S LITTLE LOOKALIKE: Ron Washington could hardly believe a now famous 7-year-old second-grader named Liam Roybal thought to dress up as the Rangers manager for career day, which replaced a Halloween party at the boy’s elementary school in nearby Keller. Roybal became an instant Internet sensation for his creative and timely getup — with the Rangers back in town for the World Series. He already wears glasses, but shaved his head and added a stick-on mustache and red Rangers T-shirt with his baseball pants. “It’s very flattering,” Washington said Friday as his team returned home to prepare for Game 3 on Saturday. “You know, the kid must love baseball, and he must love energy. He must love caring. And that’s my personality. And it’s nice that there could be someone that wants to imitate Ron Washington. I never in all my wildest dreams thought that. He might want to imitate some other star. I certainly don’t consider myself a star, I’m just a baseball man. But it’s nice that young kid could watch a baseball game and want to be Ron Washington. That means a lot.” Washington’s players got a kick out of Roybal, too. The boy was shown on clubhouse televisions before Friday’s workout. “It’s so good. It’s like the hottest e-mail,” pitcher C.J. Wilson said. “It’s great. He’s doing the claw.” A LITTLE CHEAPER: The average asking price for Game 3 tickets dropped to $1,209 lateafternoon Friday, down from $1,655 a day earlier, according to fansnap.com The average asking price dropped to $1,133 from $1,340 for Game 4 and remained at $1,164 for Game 5. If the Series shifts back to San Francisco, the average is $1,320 for Game 6 and $1,642 for Game 7. PLAYERS’ HONORS: Colorado outfielder Carlos Gonzalez was selected player of the year in a vote by the players’ association, and Detroit infielder Brandon Inge was voted Marvin Miller man of the year. Gonzalez won the NL batting title with a .336 average, was second in RBIs with 117 and fourth in home runs with 34. Inge receives an award given to a player whose on- and off-field work inspires others. He visits children in area hospitals and three years ago he and his wife Shani made a $100,000 donation to Mott Children’s Hospital to help fund a pediatric cancer infusion center.

Basketball

National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times EDT EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB New Jersey . . . . . . . . . .1 0 1.000 — New York . . . . . . . . . . . .1 0 1.000 — Boston . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 1 .500 1/2 Philadelphia . . . . . . . . . .0 1 .000 1 Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 1 .000 1 Southeast Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 0 1.000 — Orlando . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 0 1.000 — Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 1 .500 1/2 Charlotte . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 1 .000 1 Washington . . . . . . . . . .0 1 .000 1 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Cleveland . . . . . . . . . . . .1 0 1.000 — Chicago . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 1 .000 1 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 1 .000 1 Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 1 .000 1 Milwaukee . . . . . . . . . . .0 1 .000 1 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Dallas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 New Orleans . . . . . . . . .1 San Antonio . . . . . . . . . .1 Memphis . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 Houston . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 Northwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Portland . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Denver . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Oklahoma City . . . . . . . .1 Minnesota . . . . . . . . . . . .0 Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 Pacific Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Golden State . . . . . . . . .1 L.A. Lakers . . . . . . . . . . .1

L 0 0 0 1 2

Pct GB 1.000 — 1.000 — 1.000 — .000 1 .000 1 1/2

L 0 0 0 1 2

Pct GB 1.000 — 1.000 1/2 1.000 1/2 .000 1 1/2 .000 2

L Pct GB 0 1.000 — 0 1.000 —

Joe D. Moore Photo

From left, Roswell’s Gustavo Sierra, Goddard’s Andrew Martin and Artesia’s Kory Mauritsen turn the corner during the District 4-4A Cross Country Championships, Saturday. coach of the Rockets, was pleased with his runners’ effort as his team took second. He singled out Peter Zulowski, the third-place finisher for the team, as a young man who, on the day, ran particularly well. Batson similarly raved about his third man, Gavinol Alvarado, for running 1:30 faster than his previous best time on the course. With just three runners, the Coyotes did not field a full five-runner team for the district meet. Artesia’s Alex Bradbury finished first with a time of 16:34.

Marcos Morillon, the Artesia coach, was clearly content with his teams’ solid first-place performances. “Our goal every year is to run our best races at the end of the season, and that’s exactly what we’ve done so far,” he stated. And what about his “huge goals” for next week at the state cross country meet in Rio Rancho? “For girls,” he replied, “we’d like to finish in the top 10. And, for guys, we’re hoping to be in the top three.” Goddard’s Dyer is hopeful that his boys can do better

SCOREBOARD

Sacramento . . . . . . . . . .1 Phoenix . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 L.A. Clippers . . . . . . . . .0

0 1.000 — 1 .500 1/2 1 .000 1

Thursday’s Games Orlando 112, Washington 83 Phoenix 110, Utah 94 Friday’s Games Indiana at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Sacramento at New Jersey, 5 p.m. Atlanta at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Cleveland at Toronto, 5 p.m. New York at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Milwaukee at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Denver at New Orleans, 6 p.m. Oklahoma City at Detroit, 6 p.m. Orlando at Miami, 6 p.m. Memphis at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Phoenix, 8:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Washington at Atlanta, 5 p.m. Sacramento at Cleveland, 5:30 p.m. Portland at New York, 5:30 p.m. Minnesota at Memphis, 6 p.m. Detroit at Chicago, 6 p.m. Philadelphia at Indiana, 6 p.m. Denver at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Charlotte at Milwaukee, 6:30 p.m. New Orleans at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Miami at New Jersey, 11 a.m. Dallas at L.A. Clippers, 1:30 p.m. Utah at Oklahoma City, 5 p.m. Golden State at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m.

Football

National Football League At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain AMERICAN CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L N.Y. Jets . . . . . . . . .5 1 New England . . . . . .5 1 Miami . . . . . . . . . . .3 3 Buffalo . . . . . . . . . . .0 6 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Tennessee . . . . . . . .5 2 Houston . . . . . . . . . .4 2 Indianapolis . . . . . . .4 2 Jacksonville . . . . . . .3 4 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pittsburgh . . . . . . . .5 1 Baltimore . . . . . . . . .5 2 Cincinnati . . . . . . . .2 4 Cleveland . . . . . . . .2 5 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Kansas City . . . . . . .4 2 Oakland . . . . . . . . . .3 4 San Diego . . . . . . . .2 5 Denver . . . . . . . . . .2 5 NATIONAL CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L N.Y. Giants . . . . . . .5 2 Washington . . . . . . .4 3 Philadelphia . . . . . .4 3 Dallas . . . . . . . . . . .1 5 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . .5 2 Tampa Bay . . . . . . .4 2 New Orleans . . . . . .4 3 Carolina . . . . . . . . . .1 5 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Chicago . . . . . . . . . .4 3 Green Bay . . . . . . . .4 3 Minnesota . . . . . . . .2 4 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . .1 5 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Seattle . . . . . . . . . . .4 2 Arizona . . . . . . . . . .3 3 St. Louis . . . . . . . . .3 4 San Francisco . . . . .1 6

T 0 0 0 0

Pct PF PA .833 159 101 .833 177 136 .500 111 135 .000 121 198

T 0 0 0 0

Pct PF PA .714 199 117 .667 153 167 .667 163 125 .429 130 209

T 0 0 0 0

Pct PF PA .833 137 82 .714 149 129 .333 132 141 .286 118 142

T 0 0 0 0

Pct PF PA .667 150 112 .429 179 165 .286 177 149 .286 138 199

T 0 0 0 0

Pct PF PA .714 175 153 .571 130 133 .571 172 157 .167 137 152

T 0 0 0 0

Pct PF PA .714 169 133 .667 98 128 .571 147 138 .167 75 130

T 0 0 0 0

Pct PF PA .571 126 114 .571 167 136 .333 111 116 .167 146 140

T 0 0 0 0

Pct PF PA .667 120 107 .500 98 160 .429 120 131 .143 113 162

Sunday’s Games Denver vs. San Francisco at London, 11 a.m. Washington at Detroit, 11 a.m. Buffalo at Kansas City, 11 a.m. Carolina at St. Louis, 11 a.m. Miami at Cincinnati, 11 a.m. Jacksonville at Dallas, 11 a.m. Green Bay at N.Y. Jets, 11 a.m. Tennessee at San Diego, 2:05 p.m. Minnesota at New England, 2:15 p.m.

than usual and crack into the top nine teams in 4A next week at Rio Rancho. Back on the girls’ side, Olesinski hopes she can finish among the top 20 and beat her personal best on the state course — 18:44.

NMMI runs away from competition

In almost perfect fashion, the NMMI boys won their 1A-2A district cross country meet on Friday. Competing against Mesilla Valley Christian, Cloudcroft and Carrizozo, NMMI runners took the top four Knost leads the field in driving accuracy, hitting 24 of 28 fairways. “We all have the same goal,” Knost said. “If you say you’re not nervous, you’re lying. It’s a big deal to get to the next level and I want to get back.” He had eight birdies, five bogeys and five pars. Steele said it was difficult to not think about the money list. “I’ve really done a good job working with my caddie on keeping my head away from what all is going on,” he said. “Staying focused on ours targets and yardages is all we can really do.” Kevin Kisner (67), J.J. Killeen (68) and David Hearn were a stroke back. Jamie Lovemark, No. 1 on the money list, was 3 under after a 72. Scott Gardiner, No. 22 on the money list, was 1 under after a 75. No. 23 B.J. Staten (71) was 2 over, No. 24 Nate Smith (75) 4 over, No. 25 Chris Nallen (74) even par, No. 26 Brandt Jobe (73) 3 over, and No. 27 Hearn was tied for fourth. No. 28 Jon Mills (76) was 5 over.

spots, missing only the crucial fifth runner to sweep the race with the minimum possible, 15 points. The Broncos, who won with just 17 points, thus qualified for next week’s state competition. Bronco Marchez Coriz won the race with a time of 18:39. In the girls race, none of the four teams had enough competitors to fill out a full five-person team. Of the nine finishers, NMMI took fourth and sixth. jdmoore@roswell-record.com

CHARLESTON, S.C. (AP) — Colt Knost shot a 3-under 69 in windy conditions Friday for a share of the second-round lead with Joe Affrunti and Brendan Steele in the Nationwide Tour Championship, the last chance for all three to earn 2011 PGA Tour cards through the developmental circuit money list. Joe Affrunti and Brendan Steele shot 71s to match Knost, the 2007 U.S. Amateur champion, at 7-under 137 on the Daniel Island Club’s Ralston Creek course. The top 25 on the money list after the tournament will earn PGA Tour cards. Steele is 30th on the money list, Affrunti 34th and Knost 36th. “My ball-striking was there today,” Affrunti said. “The conditions were tough today with the wind. I can’t complain. Obviously, I’d always like to make a few more putts, but we have 36 holes left.”

Friday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League CLEVELAND INDIANS—Sent C Chris Gimenez and RHP Anthony Reyes outright to Columbus (IL), making them free agents. Sent RHP Hector Ambriz outright to Columbus. KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Named Dave Iannicca trainer for Northwest Arkansas (Texas) and Mark Stubblefield trainer for Wilmington (Carolina). Named Vance Wilson manager, Jim Brower pitching coach and James Stone trainer for Kane County (MWL). Named Jerry Nyman pitching coach and Omar Ramirez hitting coach for Idaho Falls (Pioneer). Named Carlos Martinez pitching coach, hitting coach Julio Bruno and Tony Medina trainer for the Royals (Arizona). Named Rusty Kuntz special assistant to general manager/player development, Tony Tijerina minor league field coordinator, Mark Davis minor league pitching coordinator,Bill Fischer senior pitching advisor. MINNESOTA TWINS—Exercised the 2011 contract option on OF Jason Kubel. Declined the club option for INF Nick Punto. NEW YORK YANKEES—Signed manager Joe Girardi to a three-year contract. National League ATLANTA BRAVES—Named Larry Parrish hit-

ting coach. NEW YORK METS—Named Sandy Alderson general manager. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA—Suspended Orlando G Jason Williams one game for making contact with a game official following an ejection during an Oct. 28 game against Washington. HOUSTON ROCKETS—Exercised the secondyear option on the contract of F/C Jordan Hill and third-year option on the contract of G Courtney Lee. FOOTBALL National Football League NFL—Fined Minnesota WR Randy Moss $25,000 for failing to cooperate with the news media on several occasions. Fined Minnesota OT Phil Loadholt $20,000 for a facemask against Green Bay LB Clay Matthews. Fined Arizona DT Darnell Dockett $15,000 for a late hit on Seattle WR Mike Williams. Fined Washington Albert Haynesworth $7,500 for striking Chicago OL J’Marcus Webb away from the play. ATLANTA FALCONS—Signed TE Marquez Branson to the practice squad. Placed TE Robbie Agnone on injured reserve. CINCINNATI BENGALS—Signed S Rico Murray from the practice squad. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEERS—Waived G Keydrick Vincent. Promoted OT Will Barker from the practice squad. HOCKEY National Hockey League ATLANTA THRASHERS—Recalled G Ondrej Pavelec from Chicago (AHL). Reassigned G Peter Mannino to Chicago. CALGARY FLAMES—Signed D Mark Giordano to a five-year contract extension. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Recalled F Ben Smith from Rockford (AHL). NASHVILLE PREDATORS—Recalled F Linus Klasen from Milwaukee (AHL). NEW JERSEY DEVILS—Placed D Mark Fraser on injured reserve. NEW YORK ISLANDERS—Assigned F Rob Schremp to Bridgeport (AHL). TAMPA BAY LIGHTNING—Assigned D Mike Vernace to Norfolk (AHL). COLLEGE VIRGINIA—Named Zee French associate athletics director of strategic ticketing. WEST VIRGINIA—Suspended freshman G Noah Cottrill indefinitely from the men’s basketball team. WRIGHT STATE—Named Lynn Curylo softball coach.

TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press (All times Mountain) Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Saturday, Oct. 30 AUTO RACING 10 a.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole qualifying for Amp Energy 500, at Talladega, Ala. 2 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Truck Series, Mountain Dew 250, at Talladega, Ala. 11 p.m. ESPN2 — NHRA, qualifying for Las Vegas Nationals (delayed tape) BOXING 9 p.m. FSN — Raul Garcia (28-1-1) vs. Luis de la Rosa (14-0-1), for interim WBO minimum flyweight title, at Cartagena, Colombia (same-day tape) COLLEGE FOOTBALL 10 a.m. ESPN — Miami at Virginia ESPN2 — Purdue at Illinois FSN — Oklahoma St. at Kansas St. 12:30 p.m.

NBC — Tulsa at Notre Dame 1:30 p.m. ABC — Split national coverage, Michigan St. at Iowa or Missouri at Nebraska CBS — National coverage, Georgia vs. Florida, at Jacksonville, Fla. ESPN — Regional coverage, Missouri at Nebraska or Michigan St. at Iowa FSN — Arizona at UCLA 4 p.m. ESPN2 — Auburn at Mississippi 5 p.m. FSN — Baylor at Texas VERSUS — Stanford at Washington 6 p.m. ESPN — Michigan at Penn St. 6:07 p.m. ABC — Split national coverage, Oregon at Southern Cal or Ohio St. at Minnesota 7:15 p.m. ESPN2 — Colorado at Oklahoma GOLF 7 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Andalucia Masters, third round, at Sotogrande, Spain

10 a.m. TGC — LPGA, Hana Bank Championship, second round, at Incheon, South Korea (same-day tape) Noon TGC — Nationwide Tour Championship, third round, at Charleston, S.C. 2:30 p.m. TGC — Champions Tour, AT&T Championship, second round, at San Antonio 5:30 p.m. TGC — Asia Pacific Classic Malaysia, third round, at Selangor, Malaysia (sameday tape) MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 4:30 p.m. FOX — World Series, Game 3, San Francisco at Texas SOCCER 7:55 a.m. ESPN2 — Premier League, Chelsea at Blackburn UNITED FOOTBALL LEAGUE 9 p.m. VERSUS — Hartford at Sacramento

Seattle at Oakland, 2:15 p.m. Tampa Bay at Arizona, 2:15 p.m. Pittsburgh at New Orleans, 6:20 p.m. Open: N.Y. Giants, Philadelphia, Chicago, Atlanta, Baltimore, Cleveland Monday’s Game Houston at Indianapolis, 6:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 7 Chicago vs. Buffalo at Toronto, 11 a.m. N.Y. Jets at Detroit, 11 a.m. Miami at Baltimore, 11 a.m. San Diego at Houston, 11 a.m. Tampa Bay at Atlanta, 11 a.m. New Orleans at Carolina, 11 a.m. New England at Cleveland, 11 a.m. Arizona at Minnesota, 11 a.m. N.Y. Giants at Seattle, 2:05 p.m. Kansas City at Oakland, 2:15 p.m. Indianapolis at Philadelphia, 2:15 p.m. Dallas at Green Bay, 6:20 p.m. Open: Denver, Washington, St. Louis, Jacksonville, San Francisco, Tennessee Monday, Nov. 8 Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, 6:30 p.m.

Golf

Three tied for lead in Nationwide Tour Championship

TV SPORTSWATCH

Transactions


Roswell Daily Record

GHS-RHS Continued from Page B1

3-yard run by David Anaya with 6:51 left in the first. They punted on their next possession, but on the first play of Roswell’s ensuing possession, David Strickland scooped up a botched Coyote pitch and went 37 yards for a score to make it 14-0. Another Coyote fumble on the second play of the

next drive then led to another Goddard score and a 21-0 Rocket lead. Bishop Whiteside recovered the Kevin Kelly fumble and, seven plays later, Greene was diving into the end zone for a 1-yard touchdown with 9:04 left in the second quarter. To that point, Roswell never advanced past the 50 and already had two turnovers. The turnovers, according to Coyote coach Robert Arreola, is what took his

Steve Notz Photo

Roswell senior Kevin Kelly, left, breaks a tackle attempt by Goddard’s Sean Lewis, Friday.

SPORTS

team out of the game. “That’s something we talked all week long about,” the third-year coach said. “We have got to take care of the ball. Any time you’re playing a team like Goddard, they’ll make you pay for it. “And it showed that they did. Every mistake we made, they capitalized on it. You can’t do that against good teams and Goddard is a good team.” Roswell got into Goddard territory on the next drive following Greene’s TD run, but a fourth-down pass from James Singleton to Richard Medrano fell incomplete to end the threat at the Rocket 26. Roswell would never get any deeper into Rocket territory the rest of the night. In fact, Roswell crossed the 50 just two more times in the game. Goddard scored on its first possession of the second half with a 49-yard drive that started after Roswell tried an onside kick coming out of halftime. Roswell appeared to recover the onside try, but it was ruled that a Coyote touched the ball before it went the mandatory 10 yards. The Rockets scored seven plays later on a 9-yard pass from Greene to Brandon Youngblood — who had two catches for 38 yards — to

Saturday, October 30, 2010

B3

Steve Notz Photo

Goddard’s Said Fuentes turns up the field and looks for a hole in the Roswell defense during the Rockets’ 42-0 blanking of the Coyotes, Friday. make it 28-0. Roswell (5-4, 0-1) committed its third turnover on the night on the next possession when Greene picked off a Singleton pass. Anaya scored on the ensuing play with a 32-

yard run to make it 35-0. Greene added the final Rocket TD on an 8-yard run with 9:26 left in the game and finished with 68 yards on 11 carries. The junior also completed 10 of 13 passes for 117

yards. Anaya led Goddard with 153 yards on 20 rushes. Goddard held Roswell to 126 total yards on the night. Kelly had 17 carries for 58 yards to lead the Coyotes.

Roswell topples Los Lunas, moves on in state tourney LOS LUNAS — The Roswell girls soccer team, the No. 9 seed in the 4A soccer tournament, beat No. 8 Los Lunas 2-0 on Friday. The Coyotes grabbed the lead early as Mary Romero set up Micah Lawson for a goal in the 2nd minute. Romero put one home herself in the 30th minute to give Roswell a 2-0 cushion. “They were excited,” Roswell interim coach Daniel

Garcia said. “None of these kids have been this far before. They were loose going into the game and they were confident. They knew they could win.” Garcia briefly unveiled a new offensive set, but he didn’t want to use it too much against Los Lunas. “We actually did use it today,” he said of the new set. “Monday we put in a motion style offense where everybody is moving and shuffling around. It keeps the

VCA falls

job, they had a good game plan. I think you always play better at home, we at least did,” Green said in reference to the fact that Valley Christian had to travel as the No. 5 seed despite beating the Eagles during the regular season. Logan Rader led Valley Christian (4-5) with 160 yards and three TDs on the ground and 330 yards and six TDs through the air. Gus Gray had 11 catches for 299 yards and five scores. Gray also had a rushing touchdown and Garrett Messer had a touchdown catch. “(The kids) did a great job. Coming from 1-4, they could have folded up real easy,” Green said. “They did a great job, came back and won three in a row. I’m proud of them.”

wrapped up the outright District 2-1A championship with a 3-0 mark in district play. “It was a great way to end the year,” said Hagerman coach Randy Montoya after the game. “We’re excited. We’re exactly where we wanted to be, now we just have to stay focused because we have three more weeks of football left. “We’re excited the season ended the way it did, but now we focus on next week.” For the Bobcats, R yan Gomez had two rushing TDs and threw a TD pass to Damien Hamilton. Jesus Magallanes, who filled in for Isaac Bejarano for the second straight week as Bejarano rested his pulled hamstring, caught a twopoint conversion pass. Freshman Jesse Rodriguez capped the Bobcat scoring with a touchdown run.

HAGERMAN — Bobcat linemen Dylan Sant and Jose Medrano each had touchdown runs and Hagerman capped a nine-win season with a drubbing of Cloudcroft on Friday at Bobcat Stadium. The Bobcats finished the year 9-1 overall and

DEXTER — NMMI kept its slim playoff hopes alive on Friday, beating the host Demons for their fourth victory of the year at Demon Stadium in Dexter. The Colts (4-6, 2-1 District 4-2A) got on the board first in the second quarter when Rolando Leon scampered to paydirt on a 6-yard run and then tacked on the

Continued from Page B1

Hagerman 48, Cloudcroft 13

Lawrence Foster Photo

Lake Arthur’s Angelo Rivera looks for a hole in Elida’s defense during his team’s win over the Tigers, Friday. Rivera led the Panthers to a win by rushing for 225 yards and three TDs.

Playoffs

Continued from Page B1

said. “Jumping out on them early just secured the fact that, ‘Guys, this is the type of ball you are capable of playing.’ The start was really crucial to how the game went. I don’t know, it’s just that mindset when you get down in the first half and it seems like nothing is going right or clicking. “The last game we played against them that’s how it was for us. That first half we couldn’t get anything going. The tables turned in this one. This is exactly what we were practicing and playing for, getting that early lead and holding it.” Hold it the Panthers did, thanks in large part to a defense that forced five

T iger tur novers, two of which were returned for touchdowns. The first defensive touchdown came in the second quarter when Jacob LeBlanc scooped up a fumble and retur ned it 33 yards for a touchdown. Rivera provided the other defensive score when he picked of f a pass and returned it 11 yards for a touchdown. Rivera had a monster game, running 225 yards and three touchdowns. He also had two interceptions and 88 yards passing. Lake Arthur, the No. 3 seed, will next face the No. 2 seed, Roy. In the Panthers’ previous meeting with the Longhorns, they fell 71-52. Porras said his team has to recuperate before the rematch.

“This weekend and Monday we have to get healed,” he said. “We have some bumps and bruises that we have to heal up. Just like last week, we have to have a good week. Roy is a good team and they like to pass the ball. “I expect it to be a good game. Last time we played them, I can say this much; going into halftime it was 28-26 I believe and, in the third quarter, we had one of those ‘we didn’t show up’ quarters. We decided to score 32 in the fourth and try to eek back, but couldn’t overcome the deficit. “Playing the whole game and having everybody healthy and on the field it should be a lot ...” The coach then paused and added, “I am not predicting anything, but we’re not going up there to lose.” l.foster@roswell-record.com

defense on its toes. We only ran it in spurts though. “We used it for about five minutes in the first half and about 15-20 minutes in the second. The whole key is to move and control the ball and we did a good job of that.” The win advanced the Coyotes to the quarterfinals where they will square off against No. 1 Albuquerque Academy Thursday at 11:30 a.m.

NMMI 12, Dexter 7

PAT for a 7-0 lead. That’s how it would stay until the fourth quarter, when the Colts’ Chance Cavin blocked an Amador Amaya punt out of the back of the end zone for a safety to make it 9-0. On the ensuing possession, NMMI drove down to the Demon 2, but Dexter (010, 0-2) held the Colts out of the end zone and forced a 19-yard field goal by Leon. NMMI forced a turnover on downs on the next Demon drive, but fumbled on the first play of its possession to give the Demons the ball at the Colt 31. Two plays later, Clay Garnett hit Jordan Steeler for a 29-yard touchdown to make it 12-6. Amador Amaya nailed the PAT to make it 12-7. After getting the ball back from the Colts, Garnett’s pass on fourth down at the Colt 43 fell incomplete to end the game. Garnett finished the game 13 of 29 for 148 yards and a TD through the air and had 13 carries for 33 yards to lead Dexter’s rushing attack. Shane Wallace recorded his second straight 100yard game on the ground for the Colts, rushing for 112 yards on 23 carries. Leon finished with 63 yards on eight carries for the Colts.

Bruce: It’s going to feel good

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Isaac Bruce put up some big numbers with the Greatest Show on Turf. The St. Louis Rams will honor him for that Sunday, retiring his No. 80 jersey in a pregame ceremony. It’s something the normally shy Bruce said he is looking forward to celebrating. “It’s going to feel good,” Bruce said Friday at Rams Park. “I’m going to have my family here and former teammates here. So, it’s going to be a good time. It doesn’t happen to many people. I’m very grateful it’s happening to me.” Bruce spent 14 seasons with the Rams after being drafted by Los Angeles in the second round (33rd overall) in 1994. He holds every major receiving record in team history, including most career receptions (942), career receiving yards (14,109) and receiving touchdowns (84). Bruce was a four-time Pro Bowl selection. In a career that included his final two years with San Francisco, Bruce amassed 15,208 receiving yards (third all-time). He

also won a Super Bowl with the Rams in 2000, catching the game-winning 73-yard pass from Kurt Warner. But that’s not his favorite memory of being a Ram. “My all-time favorite play was in the NFC championship. Ricky Proehl in the corner of the end zone making that big play sending us to the Super Bowl,” Bruce said. Among those returning for the ceremony are Mike Martz, the offensive coordinator for the Chicago Bears, who have a bye this weekend, and former Rams coach Dick Vermeil. Martz will introduce Bruce 30 minutes before the Rams put on their throwback uniforms from 1999 and play the Carolina Panthers. “I am really biased towards those uniforms,” Bruce said. “I don’t think they should have changed. I always looked good in it. I thought my shirt fit me well and my pants fit me well and I had the stripe going down the side. So, I liked that.”


CHURCHDEVOTIONAL&DIRECTORY

B4 Saturday, October 30, 2010

Roswell Daily Record

This Devotional & Directory is made possible by those businesses who encourage all of us to attend worship services. JEALOUSY

The eighth of the works of the flesh mentioned by Paul in his epistle to the Galatians is jealousy, which is a translation of the Greek word "zelos." The word "zelos" can be translated as jealousy, envy, or zeal, and can have both a good and a bad sense. In a good sense, we can be zealous for God and all things holy, but in a bad sense, we can envy the success of others or be jealous about our loved ones spending time with others. In Exodus 20:4-5 we are told to avoid making graven images or bowing down to anything other than God "for I the Lord your God am a jealous God." As human beings, the only proper zeal we should have is for God and goodness. Jealousy and zeal which leads to bitterness and divisiveness is obviously the bad type of jealousy, or misplaced zeal. The original meaning of the word "zelos" was "to boil." Indeed, jealousy has a way of "making our blood boil," and making us "boil over." When this zeal is holy and properly directed that is a good thing; when it is focused on our own selfish needs and desires it is not. We should reflect on what we are zealous about and try to focus our zeal on God and God alone. Love is patient and kind; love is not jealous or boastful; it is not arrogant or rude. R.S.V. 1 Corinthians 13.4-5

ANGLICAN

ST. FRANCIS ANGELICAN CHURCH (@ Church of God Seventh Day) 18th & Kansas, 420-3573, Bob Jordan Min.; W.S. 10:00 a.m., Wed. 6:00 pm ST. STEPHEN’S 1500 S. Main (Chapel @ 1st Christian Church); 9109706; Fr. Bob Tally, Min; W.S. 9:00 a.m.

ASSEMBLY OF GOD

FIRST ASSEMBLY OF GOD, 1224 W. Country Club, 622-2171, Melvin Suttle, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:45 a.m. & 6:00 pm., Wed. 7:00 pm. MIDWAY ASSEMBLY OF GOD 63 Yakima Rd., 3475309, S.S. 9 a.m.; W.S. 10:15 a.m. & 6 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m

TEMPLO BETAL ASSEMBLY OF GOD 221 E. Jefferson, 623-6852, Paul & Toni Herrera, Mins. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 5 p.m. Tues. & Wed. 6 p.m.

TEMPLO LA HERMOSA FIRST SPANISH ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1305 South Garden, 625-0885, Oscar Guerrero, Min. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 5 p.m. Tues. & Wed. 7 p.m.

BAPTIST

BERRENDO BAPTIST 400 W. Berrendo Rd., 6221372, Troy Grant, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:30 a.m. & 5:30 p.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m.

BETHEL BAPTIST N. Garden & East Country Club Rd., 622-8182 Richard Grisham, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:40 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. 6 p.m. BYKOTA BAPTIST 2106 E. Pine Lodge Rd., 622-3399 Don Johnson, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m. CALVARY BAPTIST 1009 W. Alameda,Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:45 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. 6 p.m. FIRST BAPTIST 500 N. Pennsylvania, 623-2640; Matt Brooks, Min., S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 11:00 a.m. FIRST BAPTIST – HAGERMAN 211 N. Cambridge, Hagerman, S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 7 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

FIRST BAPTIST OF DEXTER 101 W. 3rd St., Dexter, 734-5673, Jackie Thomas, Min., S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 5:30 p.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m. GALILEE BAPTIST 513 E. Matthews St., 662-8534, W.W. Green, Min. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 7 p.m.

HIGHLAND BAPTIST 2001 S. Lea, 622-9980, Dr. Ed Meyers, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:30 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m.

IGLESIA BAUTISTA EL CALVARIO 600 E. Tilden, 623-8135, Roberto Mancillas, Min. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. 6 p.m. MIDWAY BAPTIST 134 Yakima Rd., Leo Pennington, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:30 a.m. & 7 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

MORNING STAR BAPTIST 1513 Mulberry Ave., W.F. Wagoner, Min. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 7:30 p.m. Wed. 7:30 p.m. MOUNTAIN VIEW BAPTIST 206 E. Charleston, 622-1019, Richard Smith, Interim Min. S.S. 9 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m. & 5 p.m. Wed. 6:00 p.m.

MT. GILEAD MISSIONARY BAPTIST 700 E. Summit, 623-0292 Pastor Allen. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 11:00a.m. PRIMERA BAPTIST 417 East Wildy, 623-5420 S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 5 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m. PRIMERA IGLESIA BAUTISTA OF DEXTER 388 South Lincoln. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 5 p.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m.

ROSWELL BAPTIST TEMPLE700 E. Berrendo, Bill Whitehead, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 am. & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m. SOUTH MANOR BAPTIST 1905 S. Main, 622-6072, Butch Neal, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:45 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed 6 p.m. TABERNACLE BAPTIST 115 W. 11th, 622-7912, S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

THE FRIENDSHIP MISSIONARY BAPTIST 1220 Johnson St., 623-6484, Michael K. Shelton, Sr., Min.S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. Wed.7 p.m. TRINIDAD COMMUNITY BAPTIST 1707 W. Juniper. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. Wed. 6 p.m.

VICTORY BAPTIST 1601 W. McGaffey, 622-0114, Dan Holt, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m. WARE TABERNACLE MISSIONARY BAPTIST 900 E. Deming, 622-0546, Richard Gorham, Min. S.S. 9 a.m.; W.S. 10 & 11 a.m., Wed. 6 p.m.

WASHINGTON AVE. BAPTIST 1400 North Washington Ave., 840-1144, Randy Reeves, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:30 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m.

CATHOLIC

ASSUMPTION CATHOLIC 2808 N. Kentucky, 6229895, Bill McCann, Min. Masses: Sat. Mass 9:30 a.m. & 5:30 p.m.; Sun. Mass 9 a.m. & 11 a.m.; Mon-Fri Mass 12:10 p.m.; Thurs Mass 8 a.m. IMMACULATE CONCEPTION PARISH Dexter, Sat. Mass 6 p.m., Sun. Mass 11 a.m.

OUR LADY OF GUADALUPE Lake Arthur, Sun. Mass 8 a.m. ST. CATHERINE’S Hagerman, Sun. Mass 9:30 a.m.

ST. JOHN’S CATHOLIC 506 S. Lincoln, 622-3531, Juan Antonio Gutierrez, Min.; Sat. English Mass 5:30 p.m., Spanish Mass 7 p.m.; Sun. English Mass 10 a.m., Spanish Mass 8 a.m. & Noon.

ST. PETER CATHOLIC 805 S. Main, 622-5092, Charlie Martinez, Min.; Sat. Mass 6 p.m. Sun. Mass 8 a..m. & 11 a.m.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST 101 S. Lea, S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m., Wed. 7:30 p.m

CHURCH OF CHRIST

CHURCH OF CHRIST 114 E. Hobbs, W.S. 10:30 a.m. & 5 p.m.

CHURCH OF CHRIST 1212 N. Richardson, S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 10:50 a.m. & 6 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m.

CHURCH OF CHRIST 1500 S. Elm, 622-4675; John Early Cannon, Min. S.S. 9 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m. & 6 p.m., Wed. 6 p.m. CHURCH OF CHRIST 1512 South Main St., 6224426 S.S. 10:30 a.m.; W.S. 9 a.m., Wed. 6:30 p.m. CHURCH OF CHRIST 700 W. Country Club Road, 622-1350, Doug Austin, Min. S.S. 9 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m. & 5 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m. CHURCH OF CHRIST West Alameda & Balsam, 622-5562 W.S. 10:30 a.m. & 6 p.m., 2nd Sun. 1:30 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m.

CHURCH OF CHRIST 200 S. Union, Suite C, 3472628; S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 6 p.m.; Wed. 7 p.m. IGLESIA DE CRISTO 801 N. Washington, Horoaio de Servicios: Domingo 9:30 & 11:30 a.m. & 6 p.m., Miercoles 6 p.m.

SPANISH CHURCH OF CHRIST 3501 W. College, 622-3618 S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:30 a.m. & 6 p.m., Wed. 7 p.m.

Prosthetics

Diabetic Shoes

New Mexico Prosthetic-Orthotic Center, Inc. Adam Dutchover, CPO, FAAOP Certified Orthodtist and Prosthetist 2515 N. Kentucky • 575-623-0344

SPANISH CHURCH OF CHRISTMulberry & Buena Vista, Joe Villa, Min. W.S. 9:30 a.m. & 6 p.m., Wed. 6 p.m.

CHURCH OF GOD

NEW COVENANT FELLOWSHIP CHURCH OF GOD 2200 N. Garden, 6241958,S.S. 9:30 a.m. W.S. 10:45 a.m. & 5:30 p.m.

CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST IMMANUEL CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST 1000 N. Union, 622-6352, Louis Accardi, Min., S.S. 10:30 a.m.; W.S. 11:30 a.m.; Wed. 6 p.m.

ST. PAUL CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST 321 E. McGaffey, 623-1568, Joe L. Dawson, Min. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m., Tues. & Fri. 8 p.m.

DISCIPLES OF

CHRIST

DISCIPLES OF CHRIST Christian Fellowship, 1413 S. Union, 627-0506, Mark E. Rowland, Int. Min.; W.S. 1:30 pm.

EPISCOPAL

ST. ANDREW’S EPISCOPAL 505 N. Penn. 622-1353 Father Frank Wilson Min. Principal Service. 9 a.m. 11:00 a.m.; in church Wed. 7 a.m. in the prayer garden. http://standrews roswell.org

JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES Kingdom Halls 205 W. Gayle

Mesa Park Cong. Sun. 10 am; Tues. 7 p.m. Buena Visa Cong. (Spanish) Sun. 1:30 p.m.; Wed. 7 p.m.

1718 N. Atkinson

Mountain View Cong. Sun. 1 p.m.; Wed. 7:30 p.m. Spring River Cong. Sun. 10 a.m.; Tues 7:30 p.m.

1421 S. Garden

Rio Pecos Cong. Sun. 10 am; Tues. 7 p.m.

Dexter- 411 S. Lincoln Dexter Cong. Sun. 10 a.m.; Thurs. 7 p.m.

Lic. #365901 575-623-2011

Reading Plumbing Heating & Air Conditioning, Inc. 217 E. McGaffey


Roswell Daily Record

Victims: child sex abuse is crime against humanity

ROME (AP) — People who were raped and molested by priests are gathering in Rome this weekend to launch a petition demanding the United Nations designate systematic sexual abuse of children as a crime against humanity. Organizers said the Sunday gathering would mark the first time that abuse survivors from around the world will gather for a day of healing and to demand greater accountability from the Vatican. A few hundred people from a dozen countries are expected. Organizers had hoped to stage the demonstration in St. Peter's Square, but said they had to move it a few hundred meters (yards) away because the Holy See declined to give them access. Organizer Gary Bergeron, abused as an altar boy by a Boston-area priest, said Friday the issue needs to be treated as a global one.

Saturday, October 30, 2010

B5

“If it can happen in an institution like the Catholic Church, it can happen anywhere,” he told reporters at the Foreign Press Association. "If it can happen to me, it can happen to anyone.” Bergeron and co-organizer Bernie McDaid, also abused by a Boston-area priest starting in the sixth grade, were two of the more prominent survivors of clerical abuse to emerge after the sex abuse scandal erupted in Boston in 2002. In 2003 they met with the Vatican No. 2 in Rome and five years later McDaid became the first victim to meet with Pope Benedict XVI during the pontiff's trip to the United States. Eight years after the U.S. scandal erupted, however, they said the Vatican hasn't taken sufficient responsibility, hasn't reached out to victims or put in place universal prevention programs.

CHURCHDEVOTIONAL&DIRECTORY

This Devotional & Directory is made possible by those businesses who encourage all of us to attend worship services. JEWISH

CONGREGATIONAL B’NAI ISRAEL 712 N. Washington, 622-7295, W.S. 2nd & 4th Fri. 7 p.m.

LUTHERAN

IMMANUEL LUTHERAN 1405 N. Sycamore at College, 622-2853Daniel Praeuner, Min., S.S. 10:20 a.m.; W.S. 9 a.m.

REDEEMER LUTHERAN 2525 N. Spruce Ave., 6277157; W.S. 10 a.m.

ST. MARK EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN 2911 N. Main St., 623-0519, Bill Bruggeman, Min.; S.S. 9:15 a.m.; W.S. 10:15 a.m.

METHODIST

ALDERSGATE UNITED METHODIST 915 W 19th St, 625-2855, Jim Bignell, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 9 a.m.

DEXTER UNITED METHODIST 112 W. 3rd St., Dexter, 734-6529, Jim Bignell, Min. S.S. 9:30a.m.; W.S. 11:00 a.m. FIRST UNITED METHODIST 200 N. Pennsylvania, 6221881 Gorton Smith, Sr., Min.; S.S.9:15 a.m.; W.S. 10:30 a.m.

IGLESIA METHODISTA UNIDA 213 E. Albuquerque; Raul Dominguez, Min.; W.S. 8:30 a.m.; Tues. 6:30 p.m.

TRINITY UNITED METHODIST 1413 S. Union, 622-0119, Ruth Fowler, Min.; S.S. 10 a.m.; WS. 9 a.m. & 11 a.m.

MORMON

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS 2201 West Country Club Rd. First Ward: Hank Malcom, Bishop 623-2777; W.S. 9 a.m.; S.S. 10:10 a.m.

Second Ward: Ignacio Luevano, Bishop, 623-4492 W.S. 11 a.m.; S.S. 12:10 p.m. 3ra Rama (en Español): Presidente McClellan; W.S. 2:15 p.m.; S.S. 12:15 p.m.

NAZARENE

CENTRAL CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 901 E. Country Club, 420-2907 Randy Elftman, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:30 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 501 N. Sycamore, 624-2614; Steve Sanchez, Min. S.S. 10:45 a.m.; Sun. 6 p.m.; Sat. & Wed. 6:30 p.m.

THE NEIGHBORHOOD CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 1019 S Lea; 623-0201; Hector Torres, Min.; S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m.; Spanish Service 12:30 p.m.; Wed. 6:30 p.m.

PENTECOSTAL

APOSTOLIC ASSEMBLY OF THE FAITH IN JESUS CHRIST 1721 N. Maryland, 624-2728, Ismael Chavarria, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 5 p.m. Thurs. 7 p.m. APOSTOLIC BIBLE 2529 West Alameda, 625-8779, Rod Foster, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 6:30 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

APOSTOLIC FAMILY WORSHIP CENTER 1103 N Union; Joel Martinez, Min., 627-2258; W.S. 10 a.m.; Wed. 7 p.m. FIRST UNITED PENTECOSTAL 602 S. Mississippi, 347-2514, J.E. Shirley, Min. W.S. 11 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m. GOD’S MESSENGER 3303 W Alameda; 625-0190; R. Dixon, Sr., Min.; S.S. 8:45 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m.; Wed. Noon HOUSE OF PRAYER 412 E. Matthews, 746-6699, Mike Valverde, Min. W.S. 5 p.m. Wed. & Fri. 7 p.m.

IGLESIA DE DIOS 317 East Wildy, 627-6596, Catarino Cedillo, Min. Escuela Dominical 9:45 a.m., Servicio de Domingo por la tarde 5 p.m. Martes: Oracion y Estudio Biblico 7 p.m., Jueves: Servicio Ninos, Jovenes, Damas, Varones 7 p.m. LIFE MINISTRIES FOURSQUARE CHURCH 409 W. 16th, 622-3383; Wayne & Janice Snow, Mins.; W.S. 10:30 am,Wed. 7:00 p.m. NEW APOSTOLIC 813 N. Richardson, Ste. A, W.S. 10 a.m.

NEW LIFE APOSTOLIC 1800 W. Bland, 622-2989, Emnauel Norfor, Min.; S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 5 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN DEXTER 201 West Fifth St., 734-5797, Stephen C. Deutsch, Min. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN HAGERMAN 310 N. Cambridge, 743-5797 Stephen C. Deutsch, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 9:30a.m.; Mon. 4:30 p.m.

IGLESIA PRESBITERIANA HISPANA 300 North Missouri, 622-0756, Adam Soliz, Min. W.S. 11 a.m.

WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN 2801 W. 4th St., 622-2801; Dr. Harry A. Cole, Int. Min..; S.S. 10:45 a.m.; W.S. 9:30 a.m.

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST

BEULAH SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST 106 S. Michigan Ave., 243-6203; Alex Horton, Min. Sat. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. Wed. 6 p.m.

IGLESIA ADVENTISLA DEL 7 DIA 500 S. Cedar, 9106527, Noel Dominguez, Min. Sat. S.S. 11 a.m.; W.S. 9:30 a.m. Wed. 7 p.m. ROSWELL ENGLISH SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST Jaffa & S. Union, 623-4636, Ken Davis,Min. Sat. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 am. Wed. 7 p.m.

OTHER

ALBUQUERQUE/ ROSWELL FAMILY 501 Cagua S.E., 266-4468, Fritz Schneider, Min.

GRACE COMMUNITY 935 W. Mescalero, 623-5438 Rick Hale,Min.; W.S. 9 a.m. & 10:45 a.m.

GREATER FAITH WORSHIP CENTER 2600 S. Union Ave., 317-7629; Larry D. Mills, Min.; S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 7 p.m.

H.I.S. HOUSE 300 W. 3rd, Dexter, 734-6873 Ron & Jeri Fuller, Mins. W.S. 10 a.m. Wed.6 p.m.

NARROW WAY 2200 N. Sycamore, 623-2511, Lyman Graham, Min. W.S. 2 p.m. ORTHODOX BAHA’I FAITH obfusa@rt66.com 622-5729 ROSWELL CHRISTIAN OUTREACH MINISTRIES 412 E. Mathews; Joe Diaz, Min. W.S. 11 a.m. Wed. & Fri. 7 p.m.

ROSWELL PRAYER CENTER 622-4111/317-3867; Sat. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Weekdays 6:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m., 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., 6 p..m. to 9 p.m. SALVATION ARMY 612 W. College, 622-8700 Beau & Mandy Perez, Mins. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:45 a.m.; B.S. Thurs. 6:30 p.m.

THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY 2322 N. Sherman; Lawrence S. Sanchez, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

CHRIST’S CHURCH 2200 N. Sycamore, 623-4110 S.S. 8:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:00 am.

WASHINGTON CHAPEL CHRISTIAN 110 S. Michigan St., 623-3511 Rev. Abukusumo, Min.; S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m.; Wed. 7 p.m.

CALVARY CHAPEL OF ROSWELL 2901 W. 4th, 623-8072, W.S. 8:30 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m.

CHRISTIAN COWBOY FELLOWSHIP 3103 W. Alameda John Sturza, 6250255, 2nd and last Friday

PRESBYTERIAN

THE UNITED CHURCH OF ROSWELL 123 W. 3rd. St. Service 10 am Bob Maples, Pastor

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN 400 W. 3rd St., 622-4910, Hugh Burroughs, Min. S.S. 8:30 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m. 24-Hr Daily Inspiration Hotline 623-5439

GATEWAY 1900 Sycamore Ave., 623-8670, Rick Rapp, Min. W.S. 10:30 a.m.; Wed. 7 p.m.

BEOD MOED HEBRAIC BIBLE CENTER 928 W. McGaffey, 840-6120, Sat. Hebraic Dance 1 p.m.; Torah Study 2 p.m.; Wed. Pray & Dance Practice 6 p.m.

TRINITY APOSTOLIC FAITH 611 W. 17th, 6241910, Frank & Pearl Moser, Min. W.S. 11 a.m.

TRINITY HOUSE OF PRAISE PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF GOD 510 S. Montana, 623-2710, Bobby Barnett, Min. W.S. 9:45 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m.

FIRST CHRISTIAN 1500 S. Main, 622-2392, S.S. 9 a.m.; W.S. 10:15 a.m. Wed. 6 p.m.

CHURCH OF GOD 7TH DAY 1722 N. Kansas, 6237295, Sat. W.S. 9:45 a.m.

CHURCH ON THE MOVE 901 W. Brasher Rd., 6227011, Troy Smothermon, Min. W.S. 9 & 11 a.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

THE DOOR 129 E. 3rd St. 781-0360; Gabriel Rubi, Min.; W.S. 10:30 am & 6 pm. Wed. 7 pm

WAYMAKER 202 S. Sunset, 627-9190 Mike & Twyla Knowlton, Mins.; W.S. 10 a.m.; J12 (8-12 yr. olds) 4 p.m.; Revolution Youth Service 6 p.m.; Wed. Core Home Groups 7 p.m.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST 101 S. Lea, S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m., Wed. 7:30 p.m


B6 Saturday, October 30, 2010

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

Div Last Chg DrSCBear rs ... 22.61 -.17 DirFnBear ... 12.59 +.03 A-B-C DrxFBull s ... 22.18 -.07 ABB Ltd .48e 20.69 -.32 DirxSCBull4.77e 52.63 +.37 AES Corp ... 11.94 -.02 DirxLCBear ... 10.96 -.04 AFLAC 1.20 55.89 -.33 DirxEnBull5.06e 38.28 -.11 AK Steel .20 12.59 +.27 Discover .08 17.65 +.20 .35 36.13 -.39 AMR ... 7.89 -.09 Disney AT&T Inc 1.68 28.52 +.02 DomRescs 1.83 43.46 -.49 AbtLab 1.76 51.32 -.43 DowChm .60 30.84 -.02 AberFitc .70 42.86 +.15 DresserR ... 34.22 -2.69 Accenture .90f 44.71 -.20 DuPont 1.64 47.28 +.25 AMD ... 7.34 -.29 DukeEngy .98 u18.21 +.14 Aeropostl s ... 24.40 -.47 DukeRlty .68 12.45 +.11 Aetna .04 29.86 -.49 Dynegy rs ... 4.64 +.01 ... 21.02 +.04 Agilent ... 34.80 -.12 EMC Cp Agnico g .18 u77.59 +2.15 EOG Res .62 95.72 +.78 ... 4.70 +.12 Agrium g .11 88.51 +2.42 EKodak AirTran ... 7.40 -.01 EdisonInt 1.26 u36.90 +.93 AlbertoC n .34 37.29 +.03 ElPasoCp .04 13.26 +.11 AlcatelLuc ... 3.48 -.01 EldorGld g .05 16.93 -.18 Alcoa .12 13.14 +.49 EmersonEl 1.34 54.90 +.07 AllgEngy .60 23.20 +.14 EnCana g s .80 28.22 +.58 Allergan .20 72.41 -.43 Entergy 3.32 74.53 +.56 AldIrish ... d1.02 ... EntPrPt 2.33f u42.85 +.90 Allstate .80 30.49 +.06 EsteeLdr .55 u71.17 +6.76 Altria 1.52f u25.42 +.08 ExcoRes .16f 14.83 +.58 AmbacF h ... .83 -.08 Exelon 2.10 40.82 -.16 Ameren 1.54 28.98 +.38 ExxonMbl 1.76 66.49 +.27 Amerigrp ... u41.73 -.03 FairchldS ... 11.27 -.10 AMovilL 1.31e 57.26 +.12 FedExCp .48 87.72 -1.11 AmAxle ... 9.22 -.61 FedInvst .96a 24.91 +.43 AEagleOut .44 16.02 -.02 FidlNFin .72 13.39 +.19 AEP 1.84f u37.44 +.23 FidNatInfo .20 27.10 +.09 AmExp .72 41.46 +.24 FstBcpPR ... .31 +.02 AmTower ... 51.61 -.13 FstHorizon .72t 10.09 +.11 Ameriprise .72 51.69 -1.74 FstMercFn.10a u16.30 +4.94 AmeriBrgn .32 32.83 -.58 FirstEngy 2.20 36.32 +.15 Anadarko .36 61.57 -.20 FlagstB rs ... 1.27 +.02 AnalogDev .88 u33.67 +.74 Flowserve 1.16 100.00 -.54 .50 48.19 -.89 AnnTaylr ... 23.30 +.78 Fluor ... 14.13 -.09 Annaly 2.60e 17.68 +.11 FordM Aon Corp .60 39.75 -.91 ForestLab ... 33.05 -.52 Apache .60 101.02 +.66 FranceTel1.77e 23.89 -.04 AptInv .40 23.31 +.29 FMCG 2.00f 94.80 -.70 ArcelorMit .75 32.38 -.06 FrontierCm .75 8.78 +.08 ArchCoal .40 24.59 -.89 G-H-I ArchDan .60 33.32 -.13 Avnet ... 29.78 -.43 GameStop ... 19.65 +.24 Avon .88 30.45 -.56 Gannett .16 11.85 -.03 .40 19.01 -.14 BB&T Cp .60 23.41 +.21 Gap BHP BillLt1.74e 82.58 -.26 GenDynam1.68 68.12 +.34 BP PLC ... 40.80 +.20 GenElec .48f 16.02 -.06 BakrHu .60 46.42 +.43 GenMarit .04m d3.84 +.22 BallCp .40 u64.36 +2.56 GenMills s 1.12 37.56 +.12 BcoBrades .51r 20.80 +.05 Genworth ... 11.33 -1.25 BcoSantand.80e 12.81 +.10 Gerdau .21e 13.04 +.21 BcoSBrasil .33e 14.39 -.29 GlaxoSKln2.00e 39.04 -.34 BkofAm .04 11.45 -.08 GoldFLtd .16e 15.77 +.34 BkAm wtB ... 2.05 -.01 Goldcrp g .36f 44.59 +.30 BkIrelnd 1.04e 3.08 -.05 GoldmanS 1.40 161.13 -2.11 BkNYMel .36 25.06 -.11 Goodyear ... 10.22 -.34 BarVixShT ... 13.10 +.05 GpTelevisa.52e 22.45 +.23 BarrickG .48 48.09 +1.07 Hallibrtn .36 31.86 +.18 Baxter 1.16 50.93 -.04 HarleyD .40 30.66 +.24 BerkH B s ... 79.56 -.54 HartfdFn .20 23.95 -.09 ... 8.01 +.23 BestBuy .60 42.98 +.08 HltMgmt ... 6.89 +.05 BigLots ... 31.37 -1.07 HeclaM 1.80 49.11 -.27 BioMedR .68f 18.35 -.14 Heinz .20 6.10 -.03 Blackstone .40 13.48 +.22 Hersha ... 11.32 -.05 BlockHR .60 11.78 +.14 Hertz .40 63.03 -.20 Boeing 1.68 70.64 -.63 Hess HewlettP .32 42.04 -.62 Boise Inc ... 7.25 +.10 BostonSci ... 6.39 +.01 HomeDp .95 30.90 -.29 Brinker .56 18.54 +.23 HonwllIntl 1.21 47.11 +.01 BrMySq 1.28 26.90 -.09 HostHotls .04 15.89 -.02 ... u58.29 +.45 BrkfldPrp .56 17.39 -.13 Humana CBL Asc .80 15.68 ... Huntsmn .40 13.85 +.15 CBS B .20 16.93 +.07 IAMGld g .06 18.28 +.09 CF Inds .40u122.53+3.39 ICICI Bk .53e 52.58 +2.53 ... 10.78 -.18 CIGNA .04 35.16 -.50 ING CMS Eng .84f 18.38 -.13 iShGold s ... 13.28 +.14 iSAstla .81e 24.47 +.01 CSX 1.04f 61.45 +.90 CVS Care .35 30.13 -.53 iShBraz 2.58e 77.04 +.37 Calpine ... 12.50 +.26 iSh HK .48e 18.73 +.05 Cameron ... 43.75 -.66 iShJapn .16e 10.02 -.04 CdnNRs gs .30 36.47 +.80 iSh Kor .39e 54.39 -.65 CapOne .20 37.27 -.65 iSMalas .25e 14.07 +.08 CapitlSrce .04 6.11 +.38 iShMex .75e 57.52 +.51 CardnlHlth .78 34.69 +.36 iSTaiwn .21e 13.90 ... ... u24.17 +.74 CareFusion ... 24.14 -.22 iShSilver CarMax ... u30.99 +1.51 iShChina25.68e 44.97 -.14 Carnival .40 43.17 +.10 iSSP500 2.34e 118.89 +.03 Caterpillar 1.76 78.60 +.86 iShEMkts .59e 46.12 +.13 Celanese .20 u35.65 +.16 iShB20 T 3.82e 100.42 +.93 Cemex .43t 8.77 -.07 iS Eafe 1.38e 57.01 -.02 CenterPnt .78 u16.56 +.17 iSRus1K 1.11e 65.59 +.08 CntryLink 2.90 u41.38 +.18 iShR2K .79e 70.30 +.22 ChesEng .30 21.68 +.35 iShREst 1.88e 54.96 +.04 ... 4.57 +.50 Chevron 2.88 82.60 -1.84 iStar Chicos .16 9.72 -.27 ITT Corp 1.00 47.19 -1.02 1.36f 45.68 -.24 Chimera .69e 4.10 +.07 ITW 2.60u143.60+2.70 ChinaUni .23e 14.00 -.28 IBM ... 5.62 +.12 Chubb 1.48 58.02 +.45 Intl Coal Citigrp ... 4.17 ... IntlGame .24 15.59 -.08 IntPap .50 25.28 +.79 CliffsNRs .56 65.20 +1.83 Coach .60 50.00 +.35 Interpublic ... u10.35 -.07 CocaCE .48f 24.01 -.14 IntPotash ... u34.33 +1.36 .44 23.00 +.53 CocaCl 1.76 61.32 +.11 Invesco .25 21.79 +.60 Coeur ... 20.61 +.53 IronMtn ItauUnibH .59e 24.56 +.16 ColgPal 2.12 77.12 +2.20 ColonPT .60 17.93 -.42 J-K-L Comerica .20 35.78 +.08 ... 31.99 +.56 ComScop ... 31.66 +.02 JCrew CmtyHlt ... 30.08 +.79 JPMorgCh .20 37.63 +.12 .28 15.34 +.42 ConocPhil 2.20 59.39 -.19 Jabil ConsolEngy .40 36.76 -1.66 JanusCap .04 10.56 +.09 ConstellA ... u19.73 +.69 JohnJn 2.16 63.74 +.18 ConstellEn .96 30.24 -.60 JohnsnCtl .52 35.12 +.17 Corning .20 18.28 -.21 JonesGrp .20 14.46 -.16 Covidien .80f 39.87 -.43 JnprNtwk ... 32.39 +.60 Cummins 1.05 88.10 -.91 KBR Inc .20 25.40 +.40 KKR n .08p u12.68 +.32 D-E-F Kellogg 1.62f 50.26 +.88 DPL 1.21 26.10 -.60 Keycorp .04 8.20 -.01 DR Horton .15 10.43 +.03 KimbClk 2.64 63.34 +.80 .64 17.21 -.02 DanaHldg ... u14.17 -.03 Kimco Danaher s .08 43.36 +.29 KingPhrm ... 14.14 -.01 Kinross g .10 17.95 +.29 DeanFds ... 10.40 ... ... 51.22 -.77 Deere 1.20 76.80 +1.30 Kohls 1.16 32.27 +.13 DeltaAir ... 13.89 +.01 Kraft .42f 22.00 -.17 DenburyR ... 17.02 +.27 Kroger DevelDiv .08 12.92 -.22 LDK Solar ... 11.37 -.63 LSI Corp ... 5.24 +.15 DevonE .64 65.02 +.29 ... 45.88 +1.25 DiaOffs .50a 66.16 -.14 LVSands DrxEMBll s5.68e 37.40 +.40 LenderPS .40 28.84 +1.34 Name

Name Sell Chg Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 18.56 -.01 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 17.61 -.01 Amer Century Inv: EqInc 6.92 ... GrowthI 24.00 +.01 Ultra 21.22 +.01 American Funds A: AmcpA p 17.67 +.01 AMutlA p 24.38 +.04 BalA p 17.40 +.02 BondA p 12.49 +.02 CapWA p 21.29 +.05 CapIBA p 50.05 +.07 CapWGA p35.33 +.05 EupacA p 40.97 +.01 FdInvA p 34.74 +.01 GovtA p 14.71 +.03 GwthA p 29.00 +.02 HI TrA p 11.34 ... IncoA p 16.45 +.02 IntBdA p 13.69 +.02 IntlGrIncA p31.16 +.06 ICAA p 27.02 +.01 NEcoA p 24.60 +.01 N PerA p 27.69 +.05 NwWrldA 54.58 +.18 STBA p 10.17 +.01 SmCpA p 37.14 +.17 TxExA p 12.41 ... WshA p 26.05 +.01 American Funds B: CapIBB p 50.04 +.06 GrwthB t 27.96 +.02 Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 29.64 +.10

IntlEqA 28.87 +.09 IntEqII I r 12.27 +.05 Artisan Funds: Intl 21.66 -.03 MidCap 30.66 -.01 MidCapVal19.38 +.02 Baron Funds: Growth 45.50 +.36 SmallCap 21.53 +.08 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 14.18 +.03 DivMu 14.69 +.01 TxMgdIntl 15.73 +.03 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 16.63 +.03 GlAlA r 18.97 +.03 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 17.70 +.04 BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 16.66 +.03 GlbAlloc r 19.07 +.04 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 49.18 ... Columbia Class A: Acorn t 27.11 +.11 DivEqInc 9.36 -.02 DivrBd 5.09 +.01 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 27.96 +.11 AcornIntZ 39.21 +.23 ValRestr 46.12 +.06 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq n10.78 +.02 USCorEq2 n10.06+.02 DWS Invest S: MgdMuni S 9.17 ... Davis Funds A: NYVen A 32.24 +.05

LennarA .16 Lexmark ... LillyEli 1.96 Limited .60a LincNat .04 Lowes .44 LyonBas A ...

M-N-0

NEW YORK(AP) - Cattle/hogs futures on the Chicago Merchantile Exchange Friday: Open high low settle chg. CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 10 100.50 100.50 97.70 98.85 -1.85 Dec 10 98.72 99.52 98.55 98.82 -.45 Feb 11 102.00 102.57 101.77 102.17 -.35 Apr 11 104.90 105.30 104.50 104.77 -.55 Jun 11 102.30 102.70 101.97 102.52 -.13 Aug 11 102.30 102.55 101.92 102.45 -.40 Oct 11 104.60 104.95 104.17 104.72 -.23 Dec 11 105.30 105.30 104.70 104.90 -.45 Feb 12 105.10 105.10 105.10 105.10 -.60 Apr 12 106.10 Last spot N/A Est. sales 32599. Thu’s Sales: 40,375 Thu’s open int: 316575, off -1327 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Nov 10 110.45 111.25 110.00 110.32 -.63 Jan 11 111.00 111.45 110.42 110.80 -.37 Mar 11 111.67 112.20 111.17 111.60 -.40 Apr 11 113.02 113.40 112.62 113.15 -.35 May 11 113.77 114.12 113.40 113.60 -.65 Aug 11 115.30 115.60 115.00 115.20 -.45 Sep 11 114.00 115.47 114.00 115.10 -.40 Oct 11 115.15 115.35 115.15 115.35 Last spot N/A Est. sales 3896. Thu’s Sales: 5,468 Thu’s open int: 25705, off -3316 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Dec 10 66.42 67.45 66.10 66.20 -.85 Feb 11 71.85 73.20 71.65 71.92 -.98 Apr 11 75.92 77.05 75.70 75.95 -.80 May 11 81.70 82.57 81.35 81.90 -.60 Jun 11 84.60 85.87 84.45 84.82 -.70 Jul 11 84.47 85.30 84.35 84.65 -.55 Aug 11 84.45 85.25 84.20 84.65 -.60 Oct 11 77.72 78.00 77.40 77.75 -.40 Dec 11 74.80 75.40 74.70 75.00 -.10 Feb 12 76.90 76.90 76.90 76.90 -.10

-.08 +.41 +.05 +.11 -.53 -.04 -.65

MBIA ... 11.21 +.04 MEMC ... 12.82 +.11 MF Global ... 7.83 -.01 MFA Fncl .90f 7.91 ... MGIC ... 8.82 -.39 MGM Rsts ... 10.93 -.07 Macys .20 23.67 +.38 Manitowoc .08 11.14 +.22 MarathonO1.00 35.57 +.30 MarinerEn ... 24.92 +.11 MktVGold .11p 57.30 +.94 MarIntA .16 37.05 -.47 MarshM .84f 24.98 -.27 MarshIls .04 5.95 +.12 Masco .30 10.66 +.06 MasseyEn .24 42.07 +.19 McDnlds 2.44f u77.77 +.29 McGrwH .94 u37.65 +.12 McKesson .72 65.98 +.95 McMoRn ... 16.84 +.88 McAfee ... 47.30 -.03 Mechel ... 23.55 +.72 MedcoHlth ... 52.53 +.35 Medtrnic .90 35.23 -.91 Merck 1.52 36.31 -.63 MetLife .74 40.33 -.13 MobileTel s ... 21.65 +.13 Molycorp n ... 35.40 +1.51 Monsanto 1.12f 59.42 +.73 MonstrWw ... 18.06 +3.67 Moodys .42 27.06 +.49 MorgStan .20 24.87 +.01 Mosaic .20 u73.16 +2.77 Motorola ... 8.16 +.03 NRG Egy ... 19.91 +.12 NYSE Eur 1.20 30.64 +.23 Nabors ... 20.90 +.60 NBkGreece.29e 2.26 -.04 NOilVarco .40a u53.76 +.28 NatSemi .40f 13.70 +.17 Netezza ... 26.96 ... NY CmtyB 1.00 16.93 +.06 NewellRub .20 17.65 -.15 NewmtM .60 60.86 +1.05 NewpkRes ... 5.88 -2.37 Nexen g .20 21.29 +.38 NextEraEn 2.00 55.04 -.01 NiSource .92 17.31 -.14 NikeB 1.08 81.44 +.33 NobleCorp .20a 34.53 +.21 NokiaCp .56e 10.70 -.33 Nordstrm .80 38.51 -.22 NorflkSo 1.44 61.49 +.70 Novartis 1.99e 57.95 -.04 Nucor 1.44 38.22 +.26 OcciPet 1.52 78.63 -.24 OfficeDpt ... 4.49 -.21 OfficeMax ... 17.70 +.60 OilSvHT 2.66e 119.20 +.30 OldRepub .69 13.20 +.20 Omncre .13f 24.12 -.13 Omnicom .80 u43.96 +.10 OwensIll ... 28.03 +.53

P-Q-R

PG&E Cp 1.82 47.82 +.09 PMI Grp ... 3.34 +.01 PNC .40 53.90 +.26 PPL Corp 1.40 26.86 +.42 PatriotCoal ... 13.49 +.10 PeabdyE .34f 52.90 -.03 Penney .80 31.18 -.51 PepcoHold 1.08 19.26 +.27 PepsiCo 1.92 65.30 +.29 Petrohawk ... 16.99 +.44 PetrbrsA 1.12e 31.19 -.08 Petrobras 1.12e 34.12 -.21 Pfizer .72 17.42 -.16 PhilipMor 2.56f 58.51 -.75 Pier 1 ... 8.68 +.31 PitnyBw 1.46 21.94 +.34 PlainsEx ... 27.87 +.96 Potash .40 145.09 +2.56 PS USDBull ... 22.37 -.04 PrideIntl ... 30.32 +.49 PrinFncl .50f 26.84 -.26 ProShtS&P ... 47.01 ... PrUShS&P ... 27.33 -.02 ProUltQQQ ... u74.87 -.25 PrUShQQQ ... d12.88 +.05 ProUltSP .43e 42.35 +.02 ProUShL20 ... 33.99 -.64 ProUSRE rs ... 19.69 -.04 ProUShtFn ... 19.05 +.03 ProUFin rs .09e 56.19 -.13 ProUSR2K ... 16.03 -.06 ProUltR2K .01e 34.40 +.17 ProUSSP500 ... 24.01 -.03 ProUltCrude ... 10.24 -.14 ProUShCrude... 12.88 +.19 ProctGam 1.93 63.57 +.38 ProgrssEn 2.48 45.00 +.05 ProgsvCp 1.16e 21.16 -.18 ProLogis .45m 13.63 +.29 ProvET g .72b 7.68 +.33 Prudentl .70f 52.58 -.45 PSEG 1.37 32.34 -.11 PulteGrp ... 7.85 -.01 QntmDSS ... 3.38 +.04 Questar s .56 16.97 -.03 QksilvRes ... 14.97 +.41 QwestCm .32 u6.61 +.05 RRI Engy ... 3.76 -.02 RadianGrp .01 7.59 -.06 RadioShk .25 20.12 -.29 RangeRs .16 37.39 +.62 RaserT h ... .19 +.02 Raytheon 1.50 46.08 +.44 Reddy Ice ... 3.49 +1.33 RegalEnt .72 13.50 -.63 RegionsFn .04 6.30 +.01 ReneSola ... 11.97 -.90 RepubSvc .80f 29.81 -.63 ResMed s ... 31.87 -.14 Rowan ... 32.90 +.67 RylCarb ... 39.54 -.43 RoyDShllB3.36eu64.32 +1.24

Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 32.63 +.05 NYVen C 31.01 +.05 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.77 +.02 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq n21.31 +.01 EmMktV 36.27 +.02 IntSmVa n 16.16 +.04 LargeCo 9.34 -.01 USLgVa n 18.58 ... US Micro n12.25 +.04 US Small n19.06 +.07 US SmVa 22.49 +.06 IntlSmCo n16.14 +.06 Fixd n 10.38 ... IntVa n 17.81 +.03 Glb5FxInc n11.70 +.03 2YGlFxd n 10.24 ... Dodge&Cox: Balanced 67.27 -.05 Income 13.45 +.02 IntlStk 35.08 -.03 Stock 101.27 -.17 Eaton Vance A: LgCpVal 17.03 -.01 NatlMunInc 9.91 -.01 Eaton Vance I: GblMacAbR10.31 +.01 LgCapVal 17.08 -.01 FMI Funds: LgCap px 14.76 -.12 FPA Funds: NwInc 10.97 ... FPACres n26.35 -.02 Fairholme 33.99 +.19 Federated Instl: KaufmnK 5.27 +.01 TotRetBd 11.39 ...

CATTLE/HOGS

14.51 38.03 35.20 29.39 24.48 21.34 26.86

RoyDShllA3.36eu64.93 +1.14 Ryland .12 d14.98 -.14

S-T-U

SAP AG .67e 51.73 +.11 SLM Cp ... 11.90 -.06 SpdrDJIA 2.55e 111.31 +.21 SpdrGold ... 132.62 +1.38 SP Mid 1.54e 150.53 +.35 S&P500ETF2.31e118.49+.09 SpdrHome .12e 15.50 +.05 SpdrLehHY4.30eu40.88 +.08 SpdrRetl .57e 43.61 +.16 SpdrOGEx .20e 43.85 +.31 SpdrMetM .35e 55.99 +.60 Safeway .48 22.90 +.19 StJude ... 38.30 -.28 Saks ... 11.14 +.09 SandRdge ... 5.47 +.07 Sanofi 1.63e 35.11 +.32 SaraLee .46f 14.33 -.21 Schlmbrg .84 69.89 +.11 Schwab .24 15.41 -.03 SemiHTr .60e 29.51 +.13 SiderNac s .58e 16.88 -.01 SilvWhtn g ... u28.75 +1.20 SimonProp 2.40 96.02 -.38 Skechers ... 19.44 +.11 SolarWinds ... 18.15 +.17 SouthnCo 1.82 37.87 +.06 SwstAirl .02 13.76 ... SwstnEngy ... 33.84 +.20 SpectraEn 1.00 23.77 +.13 SprintNex ... 4.13 -.07 SprottSilv ... 10.04 ... SP Matls 1.05e 34.80 +.28 SP HlthC .58e 31.17 -.13 SP CnSt .77e 28.77 +.10 SP Consum.43e 35.26 -.01 SP Engy 1.00e 59.24 +.04 SPDR Fncl .16e 14.56 -.02 SP Inds .60e 32.18 +.05 SP Tech .31e u24.35 +.04 SP Util 1.27e 31.72 +.05 StanBlkDk 1.36 61.97 +1.10 StarwdHtl .20e 54.14 -1.03 StateStr .04 41.76 +.65 StillwtrM ... 17.80 +.58 Stryker .60 49.49 -.71 Suncor gs .40 32.01 +.21 Sunoco .60 37.47 -2.25 Suntech ... 8.49 -.31 SunTrst .04 25.01 -.33 Supvalu .35 10.79 -.04 Syniverse ... 30.49 -.01 Synovus .04 2.16 -.11 Sysco 1.00 29.46 -.26 TCF Fncl .20 13.16 -.11 TECO .82 17.59 +.26 TJX .60 45.89 -.55 TaiwSemi .47e 10.91 +.15 Talbots ... 9.78 +.06 TalismE g .25 18.14 +.17 Target 1.00 51.94 -.42 TataMotors.32e 28.12 -.21 TeckRes g .40 44.74 +.33 TelNorL 1.65e 15.34 -.09 TenetHlth ... 4.36 +.05 Teradyn ... 11.24 +.29 Tesoro ... 12.96 -.25 TexInst .52f u29.57 +.33 Textron .08 20.82 +.16 ThermoFis ... 51.42 +.44 ThomCrk g ... 12.03 +1.31 3M Co 2.10 84.22 -.85 Tiffany 1.00 u53.00 +1.50 TimeWarn .85 32.51 +.15 Total SA 3.13e 54.48 +.08 Transocn ... 63.36 -.80 Travelers 1.44 55.20 +.46 TrinaSol s ... 26.76 -.99 TycoElec .64 31.68 +.28 TycoIntl .85e 38.28 -.02 Tyson .16 15.55 ... UBS AG ... 17.02 -.07 UDR .74f 22.48 +.11 US Airwy ... 11.79 -.09 USEC ... 5.37 -.01 UnionPac 1.32 87.68 +1.63 UtdContl ... 29.04 +.12 UPS B 1.88 67.34 -.32 US Bancrp .20 24.20 +.02 US NGsFd ... 5.82 +.19 US OilFd ... 35.17 -.22 USSteel .20 42.72 +2.25 UtdTech 1.70 74.77 +.07 UtdhlthGp .50 36.05 -.20 UnvHlth s .20 41.27 +.70 UnumGrp .37 22.42 -.35

V-W-X-Y-Z

Vale SA .76e 32.14 +.34 Vale SA pf .76e 28.73 +.44 ValeantPh .38 27.61 +.55 ValeroE .20 17.95 -.27 VangEmg .55e 46.87 +.12 VarianMed ... u63.22 +2.51 VerizonCm1.95f 32.48 +.07 ViacomB .60 u38.62 +.27 VimpelC n ... 15.33 +.42 Visa .60f 78.16 +1.71 VishayInt ... 11.30 +.13 VMware ... 76.46 -.11 WABCO ... u46.42 +3.56 WalMart 1.21 54.17 +.09 Walgrn .70 33.88 -.26 WsteMInc 1.26 35.72 -.41 WeathfIntl ... 16.81 -.15 WellPoint ... 54.34 -.27 WellsFargo .20 26.06 +.12 WendyArby .06 4.60 -.04 WDigital ... 32.01 +.51 WstnUnion .24 17.59 -.67 Weyerh .20a 16.22 +.53 Whrlpl 1.72 75.83 -1.17 WmsCos .50 21.51 +.36 WilmTr .04 d7.11 -.42 Wyndham .48 28.75 -.26 XL Grp .40 21.15 -.15 Xerox .17 11.70 +.02 Yamana g .08f 10.99 +.11 YingliGrn ... 11.66 -.36 YumBrnds 1.00f 49.56 +.30 Zimmer ... 47.44 -1.97

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. Dec 10 122.21 126.47 121.68 Mar 11 119.72 122.50 118.90 May 11 116.38 118.40 115.36 Jul 11 112.50 115.27 112.47 Oct 11 Dec 11 89.75 91.60 89.51 Mar 12 May 12 Jul 12 Oct 12 Dec 12 83.00 84.00 83.00 Mar 13 May 13

GRAINS

125.26 120.45 117.09 114.00 98.91 91.21 88.65 87.25 87.09 84.89 83.74 84.24 84.24

chg.

+3.58 +1.55 +1.64 +1.68 +.91 +1.09 +.89 +.69 +1.43 +1.43 +1.28 +1.28 +1.28

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

low settle

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 10 721fl 725 711ü 717ü Mar 11 761fl 764fl 751 757ü May 11 780ü 782ø 769 775

chg.

-1 -fl -ø

Roswell Daily Record

MARKET SUMMARY

NYSE

AMEX

NASDAQ

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

Name Vol (00) Last Chg Citigrp 1666965 4.17 ... S&P500ETF1293740118.49+.09 BkofAm 1247999 11.45 -.08 FordM 516098 14.13 -.09 SprintNex 506949 4.13 -

Name Vol (00) NovaGld g 68641 PhrmAth 54259 RareEle g 48931 GenMoly 47156 KodiakO g 44696

Name Reddy Ice FstMercFn MonstrWw iStar ThomCrk g

Last 3.49 16.30 18.06 4.57 12.03

Chg +1.33 +4.94 +3.67 +.50 +1.31

%Chg +61.6 +43.5 +25.5 +12.3 +12.2

Name Last Chg %Chg Name GenMoly 5.22 +.92 +21.4 InfoSvcs un Gainsco 11.60 +1.20 +11.5 TeleNav n Kemet 3.74 +.36 +10.7 Vivus Dreams 2.07 +.17 +8.8 Coinstar GrahamCp 16.97 +1.27 +8.1 Arbinet rs

Name NewpkRes AmbacF pfZ Dex One n Genworth Grtbatch

Last 5.88 7.70 7.01 11.33 21.75

Chg -2.37 -.87 -.78 -1.25 -1.89

%Chg -28.7 -10.2 -10.0 -9.9 -8.0

Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg ChinaShen 2.25 -.45 -16.7 NuVasive 26.17-10.45 -28.5 PhrmAth 3.51 -.57 -14.0 SunBcpNJ 3.95 -1.12 -22.1 LGL Grp 26.37 -3.62 -12.1 ExactSci h 6.86 -1.71 -20.0 Metalico 4.34 -.33 -7.1 AMAG Ph 15.91 -3.40 -17.6 BioTime wt 3.74 -.26 -6.5 SenecaB 23.06 -4.64 -16.8

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

DIARY

1,804 1,183 111 3,098 148 11 3,725,880,690

52-Week High Low 11,258.01 9,614.32 4,823.98 3,546.48 413.75 346.95 7,743.74 6,355.83 2,118.77 1,689.19 2,535.28 2,024.27 1,219.80 1,010.91 12,847.91 10,573.39 745.95 553.30

Name

Div

Last 11.22 3.51 11.36 5.22 4.13

Chg +.60 -.57 +.06 +.92 -.12

Name Vol (00) Last Microsoft 1059158 26.67 SiriusXM 871479 1.50 MicronT 823313 8.26 Intel 570113 20.05 PwShs QQQ43833552.18

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

278 181 59 518 13 2w Lows 108,289,32702

INDEXES

Last 11,118.49 4,754.29 404.86 7,513.35 2,083.89 2,507.41 1,183.26 12,489.09 703.35

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume Net Chg +4.54 +20.11 +.88 +8.50 +9.02 +.04 -.52 +10.14 +2.32

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

PE Last

Chg

Last Chg 2.30 +.65 6.29 +1.39 7.75 +1.62 57.58+11.32 6.36 +1.17

%Chg +39.4 +28.4 +26.4 +24.5 +22.6

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

DIARY

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

Chg +.39 +.07 +.32 -.42 -.12

YTD %Chg Name

Div

DIARY

1,460 1,166 150 2,776 113 36 2,011,382,402

% Chg +.04 +.42 +.22 +.11 +.43 ... -.04 +.08 +.33

PE Last

YTD % Chg +6.62 +15.97 +1.72 +4.57 +14.19 +10.50 +6.11 +8.14 +12.47

52-wk % Chg +14.47 +31.58 +11.52 +11.48 +18.93 +22.61 +14.19 +17.21 +24.98

Chg

YTD %Chg

BkofAm

.04

17

11.45 -.08

-24.0 ONEOK Pt

4.52f

24

78.33 +.10

+25.7

Chevron

2.88

10

82.60 -1.84

+7.3 PNM Res

.50

25

11.79 +.15

-6.8

CocaCl

1.76

19

61.32 +.11

+7.6 PepsiCo

1.92

16

65.30 +.29

+7.4

Disney

.35

18

36.13 -.39

.72

9

17.42 -.16

EOG Res

.62

42

95.72 +.78

-1.6 SwstAirl

.02

25

13.76

...

+20.4

...

7

14.13 -.09

+41.3 TexInst

.52f

12

29.57 +.33

+13.5

FordM

+12.0 Pfizer

-4.3

HewlettP

.32

11

42.04 -.62

-18.4 TimeWarn

.85

15

32.51 +.15

+11.6

HollyCp

.60

84

32.73 -.23

+27.7 TriContl

.19e

...

12.91 +.01

+12.1

Intel

.63

11

20.05 -.42

-1.7 WalMart

1.21

14

54.17 +.09

IBM

2.60

13 143.60 +2.70

+9.7 WashFed

.20

72

15.05

Merck

1.52

13

Microsoft

.64f

36.31 -.63

-.6 WellsFargo

.20

10

HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW 7

26.67 +.39

-12.5 XcelEngy

1.01

14

...

+1.3 -22.2

26.06 +.12

-3.4

23.86 +.06

+12.4

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~ # Div: Current annual dividend rate paid on stock, based on latest quar- ACMIn 1.10 9} +[ ACM Op .80 7\ # terly or semiannual declaration, unless otherwise footnoted. ACM Sc 1.10 8{ -[ Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. ACMSp .96 7{ # 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 Chg

Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. d – New 52wk low during trading day. g – Dividend in Canadian $. Stock price in U.S.$. n – 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.

Fidelity Advisor A: GrowthCoK77.47 +.12 IntlInxInv n35.06 ... NwInsgh p 19.04 +.04 HighInc r n 9.03 +.01 TotMktInv n34.37 +.02 StrInA 12.98 +.02 Indepn n 22.59 +.08 Fidelity Spart Adv: IntBd n 10.79 +.02 500IdxAdv n41.94-.01 Fidelity Advisor I: NwInsgtI n 19.24 +.03 IntmMu n 10.38 ... TotMktAd r n34.37+.01 IntlDisc n 32.34 +.09 First Eagle: Fidelity Freedom: 44.36 +.13 FF2010 n 13.44 +.01 InvGrBd n 11.73 +.03 GlblA FF2015 n 11.21 +.02 InvGB n 7.52 +.02 OverseasA21.86 +.07 FF2020 n 13.53 +.02 LgCapVal 11.71 -.01 Frank/Temp Frnk A: FF2020K 12.92 +.01 LatAm 57.50 +.54 CalTFA p 7.20 +.01 FF2025 n 11.22 +.01 LevCoStk n25.17 +.10 FedTFA p 12.05 ... FF2030 n 13.37 +.02 LowP r n 36.02 +.07 FoundAl p 10.32 ... FF2035 n 11.06 +.01 LowPriK r 36.02 +.08 HYTFA p 10.31 ... FF2040 n 7.72 +.01 Magelln n 66.79 +.06 IncomA p 2.14 ... MidCap n 25.96 +.04 NYTFA p 11.88 +.01 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 12.34 +.01 MuniInc n 12.87 ... StratInc p 10.52 ... AMgr50 n 14.97 +.03 NwMkt r n 16.45 +.02 USGovA p 6.86 ... AMgr20 r n12.72 +.02 OTC n 50.70 -.11 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: Balanc n 17.57 +.03 100Index 8.36 -.02 GlbBdAdv p ... ... BalancedK17.57 +.03 Ovrsea n 31.56 -.06 IncmeAd 2.13 ... BlueChGr n42.04 -.01 Puritn n 17.20 +.01 Frank/Temp Frnk C: Canada n 54.14 +.59 RealE n 25.05 +.02 IncomC t 2.16 ... CapAp n 24.03 +.03 SCmdtyStrt n11.48 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: SharesA 20.15 +.04 CpInc r n 9.40 +.01 +.04 Contra n 64.74 +.11 SrsIntGrw 10.89 +.04 Frank/Temp Temp A: ContraK 64.78 +.11 SrsIntVal 9.91 ... ForgnA p 6.92 ... DisEq n 21.67 -.02 StIntMu n 10.76 ... GlBd A p 13.65 +.02 DivIntl n 29.49 +.05 STBF n 8.52 +.01 GrwthA p 17.51 -.01 DivrsIntK r 29.51 +.04 SmllCpS r n17.74 +.02 WorldA p 14.52 -.01 DivGth n 25.91 +.06 StratInc n 11.58 +.02 Frank/Temp Tmp EmrMk n 25.72 +.04 StrReRt r 9.38 +.02 Adv: Eq Inc n 41.03 -.01 TotalBd n 11.02 +.02 GrthAv 17.55 ... EQII n 16.88 -.01 USBI n 11.60 +.02 Frank/Temp Tmp Fidel n 29.63 +.01 Value n 64.09 +.33 B&C: GlBdC p 13.67 +.02 FltRateHi r n9.77 +.01 Fidelity Selects: GNMA n 11.72 ... Gold r n 53.71 +.72 GE Elfun S&S: S&S PM 38.48 +.05 GovtInc 10.78 +.03 Fidelity Spartan: GroCo n 77.41 +.13 ExtMkIn n 34.99 +.15 GMO Trust III: GroInc n 16.91 -.01 500IdxInv n41.93 -.02 Quality 19.77 ...

Apr 12 78.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 36041. Thu’s Sales: 32,285 Thu’s open int: 200592, off -556 PORK BELLIES 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 104.00 Mar 11 104.50 May 11 105.00 Jul 11 103.50 Aug 11 102.50 Last spot N/A

FINANCIAL

MUTUAL FUNDS

Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

GMO Trust IV: IntlIntrVl 21.61 +.04 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 14.12 -.03 IntlCorEq 28.50 +.04 Quality 19.77 ... Goldman Sachs A: MdCVA p 33.05 +.06 Goldman Sachs Inst: HiYield 7.31 ... HYMuni n 8.83 ... MidCapV 33.38 +.06 Harbor Funds: Bond 13.17 +.03 CapApInst 34.73 +.02 IntlInv t 58.44 -.10 Intl r 59.13 -.10 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 32.40 +.01 Hartford Fds C: CapApC t 28.79 +.01 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI n 32.39 +.01 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 39.56 +.03 Div&Gr 18.64 -.01 Advisers 18.79 +.01 TotRetBd 11.47 +.03 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 13.06 ... Invesco Funds A: CapGro 12.62 +.02 Chart p 15.30 -.02 CmstkA 14.81 -.01 EqIncA 8.21 ... GrIncA p 17.96 -.03 HYMuA 9.61 ... Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 22.99 +.06

Jul 11 783 791 778ø 783fl Sep 11 804ü 805ü 795 800fl Dec 11 819 821 807ø 815fl Mar 12 830ü 831ø 819 828fl May 12 817ü 817ü 816ü 816ü Jul 12 797 798fl 787ü 791ø Sep 12 800 805 797ø 797ø Dec 12 806 820 806 812ø Mar 13 831 831 822ø 822ø May 13 811 811 802ø 802ø Jul 13 780ø 790ø 780 790ø Last spot N/A Est. sales 185745. Thu’s Sales: 114,963 Thu’s open int: 527721, up +677 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 10 581 583 571 582 Mar 11 595 596 584 595 May 11 598ø 602ü 590ø 601 Jul 11 601ø 605fl 594ü 603fl Sep 11 561 563ü 553ø 562 Dec 11 540 545fl 531 542 Mar 12 548ø 551 537ü 548 May 12 552 554fl 550fl 551ø Jul 12 555 558ü 554ü 555ü Sep 12 533fl 536ø 528fl 536ø Dec 12 517ü 519fl 514ü 517fl Jul 13 537ø 537ø 536 536 Dec 13 518 519ø 515 517fl Jul 14 534ø 534ø 532fl 532fl Last spot N/A Est. sales 437310. Thu’s Sales: 378,933 Thu’s open int: 1605365, up +16814 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 10 370ü 373 364 368 Mar 11 382ø 385 375fl 380ü May 11 382 385ü 382 385ü Jul 11 388ü 390ü 388ü 390ü Sep 11 344 344 344 344 Dec 11 349 351ø 349 350 Mar 12 355 355 355 355 May 12 362 362 362 362 Jul 12 370 370 370 370 Sep 12 375 375 375 375 Jul 13 375 375 375 375 Sep 13 375 375 375 375

-2ü -2ø -2ø -1 -1 -11 -7ø -7ø -8ø -8ø -8ø

+3 +3 +2fl +1fl +1 -1 -1ø -2 -2 -1fl -1fl -1ø -1fl -1fl

+2 +2 +2 +2

AssetStA p23.67 +.07 AssetStrI r 23.88 +.07 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A x11.69 -.02 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd x n11.69 -.01 HighYld x n 8.21 -.05 IntmTFBd x n11.07 .02 ShtDurBd x n11.06 .01 USLCCrPls n19.45 .04 Janus S Shrs: Forty 32.53 +.01 Janus T Shrs: BalancdT 25.66 +.03 OvrseasT r49.37 -.07 PrkMCVal T21.21 +.04 Twenty T 64.38 +.03 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggr 11.71 +.01 LSBalanc 12.75 +.02 LSGrwth 12.55 +.01 Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p21.90 +.07 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.29 +.01 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p21.62 +.01 Legg Mason A: WAMgMu p16.04 -.02 Longleaf Partners: Partners 26.77 -.01 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.42 +.03 StrInc C 15.00 +.03 LSBondR 14.37 +.04

FUTURES

StrIncA 14.92 +.02 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdA p12.67 +.04 InvGrBdY 12.67 +.03 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 10.59 -.01 BdDebA p 7.81 +.01 ShDurIncA p4.67 ... Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t4.70 ... MFS Funds A: TotRA x 13.70 -.02 ValueA 21.57 -.04 MFS Funds I: ValueI 21.67 -.04 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBA x 5.92 -.03 Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 8.55 -.02 Matthews Asian: AsianGIInv18.13 +.03 China Inv 30.02 +.17 PacTgrInv 23.37 +.07 MergerFd 15.95 +.02 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.74 +.02 TotRtBdI 10.74 +.02 MorganStanley Inst: IntlEqI 13.33 +.02 MCapGrI 35.04 +.16 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 28.93 -.02 GlbDiscZ 29.33 -.02 QuestZ 18.27 ... SharesZ 20.35 +.05 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 41.15 +.06 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 42.67 +.06

OIL/GASOLINE/NG

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

low settle

LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. Dec 10 81.14 82.18 80.56 Jan 11 81.89 82.92 81.33 Feb 11 82.50 83.56 81.97 Mar 11 83.00 83.94 82.50 Apr 11 83.40 84.40 83.13 May 11 83.89 84.58 83.35 Jun 11 84.08 85.06 83.66 Jul 11 84.68 84.68 84.54 Aug 11 84.80 84.86 84.79 Sep 11 85.07 85.57 84.74 Oct 11 85.35 85.61 85.20 Nov 11 85.64 85.82 85.54 Dec 11 85.66 86.57 85.21 Jan 12 86.09 86.10 85.61 Feb 12 86.20 86.21 86.09 Mar 12 86.13 86.22 86.13 Apr 12 86.33 86.33 86.31 May 12 86.34 86.42 86.34 Jun 12 86.45 86.92 86.07 Jul 12 86.64 86.64 86.62 Aug 12 86.73 86.73 86.71 Sep 12 86.82 86.82 86.80 Oct 12 86.91 86.91 86.89 Nov 12 Dec 12 87.01 87.67 86.58 Jan 13 87.00 87.09 87.00 Feb 13 Mar 13 Apr 13 May 13 Jun 13 87.09 87.16 87.09 Jul 13 Aug 13 Sep 13 Oct 13 Nov 13 Dec 13 87.36 87.93 87.03 Jan 14 Feb 14

81.43 82.15 82.73 83.21 83.61 83.99 84.31 84.61 84.86 85.11 85.35 85.60 85.86 85.98 86.09 86.20 86.31 86.42 86.53 86.62 86.71 86.80 86.89 86.98 87.09 87.09 87.10 87.11 87.12 87.14 87.16 87.20 87.24 87.29 87.34 87.39 87.45 87.45 87.45

chg.

-.75 -.79 -.84 -.87 -.91 -.92 -.92 -.93 -.93 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.92 -.91 -.91 -.90 -.90 -.90 -.89 -.89 -.89

Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.38 ... MMIntEq r 9.64 +.02 Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 26.58 +.04 18.60 -.06 Intl I r Oakmark r 39.78 -.10 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.99 +.02 GlbSMdCap14.78-.01 Oppenheimer A: CapApA p 41.19 +.06 DvMktA p 34.67 +.21 GlobA p 58.61 +.23 GblStrIncA 4.37 ... Gold p 49.38 +.71 IntBdA p 6.91 +.01 MnStFdA 30.87 -.06 Oppenheimer Roch: LtdNYA p 3.33 ... RoMu A p 16.84 -.02 RcNtMuA 7.35 ... Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 34.36 +.21 6.91 +.01 IntlBdY PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 11.69 +.03 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r11.26 +.03 AllAsset 12.69 +.03 ComodRR 8.78 +.04 HiYld 9.40 ... InvGrCp 11.94 +.03 LowDu 10.71 +.01 RealRtnI 11.85 +.04 ShortT 9.94 ... TotRt 11.69 +.03 TR II 11.26 +.03 TRIII 10.36 +.02

NASDAQ NATIONAL MARKET

Div Last Chg Comc spcl .38 19.36 -.23 Compuwre ... 10.01 +.05 A-B-C Conexant ... 1.50 -.22 ADC Tel ... 12.69 +.02 ConstantC ... 23.00 +1.24 ... 5.23 -.15 AMAG Ph ... d15.91 -3.40 CorinthC .82 62.77 -.03 ASML Hld .27e 33.16 -.07 Costco Cray Inc ... 5.98 +.41 ATP O&G ... 14.35 +.39 ... 51.29 +.36 AVI Bio ... 2.12 +.04 Cree Inc ... 13.93 +.11 AXT Inc ... u8.25 +1.21 Crocs ... 32.41 -.69 AcmePkt h ... u39.55 -.14 Crucell AcordaTh ... 27.04 +.29 Ctrip.com s ... 52.06 +1.33 ActivsBliz .15 11.46 +.12 CubistPh ... 23.28 -.30 AdobeSy ... 28.15 +.05 CypSemi ... 14.10 +.01 Adtran .36 32.29 +.34 D-E-F AEterna g ... 1.26 +.04 AkamaiT ... 51.67 +.56 DDi Corp .24 u10.28 +1.22 Alexza ... d1.04 -.03 Dell Inc ... 14.40 -.20 AlignTech ... 17.02 -.04 DeltaPtr h ... .73 +.01 Alkerm ... 11.57 +.08 Dndreon ... 36.50 -.44 AllscriptH ... 19.10 -.01 Dentsply .20 31.39 +.05 Alphatec ... 2.18 -.11 DirecTV A ... 43.45 -.01 AlteraCp lf .24 u31.24 +.49 DiscCm A ... 44.67 -.30 Alvarion ... 2.76 +.04 DiscCm C ... 38.90 -.18 Amazon ... 165.23 -1.61 DishNetwk2.00e 19.87 +.16 ACapAgy 5.60e 28.64 -.07 DonlleyRR 1.04 18.45 +.38 AmCapLtd ... 6.98 +.07 DrmWksA ... 35.30 -.18 AmerMed ... 20.20 -.54 drugstre ... 1.60 -.03 AmSupr ... 33.65 -.64 DryShips ... 4.11 -.07 Amgen ... 57.19 -.08 ETrade rs ... 14.30 +.06 AmkorT lf ... 7.23 +.08 eBay ... u29.86 +.14 Amylin ... 13.03 -.19 EagleBulk ... 5.13 +.01 Anadigc ... u6.79 +.21 ErthLink .64 8.99 +.03 A123 Sys ... 9.72 +.05 EstWstBcp .04 17.63 +.29 ApolloGrp ... 37.48 -.11 ElectArts ... 15.83 +.20 ApolloInv 1.12 11.01 +.21 EndoPhrm ... 36.74 -.03 Apple Inc ... 300.98 -4.26 EngyConv ... 4.52 -.05 ApldMatl .28 12.35 +.10 Entegris ... 5.99 +.16 AMCC ... 10.07 +.42 EntropCom ... 8.37 +.19 ArenaPhm ... 1.65 +.06 Equinix ... 84.24 +1.38 AresCap 1.40 u16.74 +.09 AriadP ... 3.68 ... EricsnTel .28e 10.98 +.13 EvrgrSlr h ... .93 -.03 Ariba Inc ... 18.78 -.32 ArmHld .12e 17.68 -.25 Expedia .28 28.95 -.19 ExpdIntl .40f 49.36 +.15 Arris ... 9.31 -.16 ArtTech ... 4.20 -.05 F5 Netwks ...u117.70 +.92 ... 27.84 +.19 ArubaNet ... 21.93 +.44 FLIR Sys AsiaInfoL ... 22.20 +.14 FifthThird .04 12.56 -.16 ... 17.03 +.17 AsscdBanc .04 12.65 -.23 Finisar .16 15.33 -.23 Atheros ... 31.04 -.21 FinLine FstNiagara .60f 11.85 +.01 Atmel ... u8.86 +.22 ... 137.68 Autodesk ... u36.20 +.78 FstSolar 13.47 AutoData 1.36 44.49 +.12 Fiserv ... 54.52 +.38 AvagoTch ... u24.68 +1.25 ... 7.17 +.06 AvanirPhm ... d2.42 -.39 Flextrn Axcelis ... 2.14 +.13 FocusMda ... 24.73 +.33 ... 9.73 +.14 BE Aero ... 36.76 -.06 FormFac BGC Ptrs .42e 6.96 -.24 FosterWhl ... 23.44 +.35 FresKabi rt ... .05 ... BMC Sft ... u45.46 +1.49 ... 1.14 -.04 BMP Sunst ... u9.84 +.01 FuelCell FultonFncl .12 9.34 +.13 BannerCp .04 d1.65 ... BedBath ... 43.90 +.36 G-H-I Biodel ... 3.63 +.25 BiogenIdc ... 62.71 -1.14 GSI Cmmrc ... 24.42 +1.06 ... 8.23 -.19 BioMarin ... u26.11 +1.49 GT Solar BlkRKelso 1.28 11.72 -.12 Garmin 1.50f 32.84 +.01 BlueCoat ... 26.97 -.06 GenProbe ... 48.35 -.72 BrigExp ... 21.10 +.69 Gentex .44 19.98 +.28 Broadcom .32 40.83 -.80 Genzyme ... 72.25 -.01 Broadwind ... 1.90 +.08 GeronCp ... 5.58 -.11 BrcdeCm ... 6.35 +.19 GileadSci ... 39.67 -.19 Bucyrus .10 68.16 +1.32 Gleacher ... 2.25 +.03 CA Inc .16 23.20 +.31 Google ... 613.70 -4.88 CH Robins 1.00 70.48 +.30 GreenPlns ... 11.10 -.14 CKX Inc ... 4.09 -.04 Gymbree ... 65.06 -.02 CME Grp 4.60 289.65 +.25 HMS Hld ... 60.11 +3.60 Cadence ... u8.47 +.04 HanmiFncl ... 1.17 +.02 Callidus ... u4.91 +.41 HansenMed ... 1.71 -.01 CdnSolar ... 13.97 -.79 Harmonic ... 6.98 ... CpstnTrb h ... .75 ... HawHold ... 7.32 -.29 CareerEd ... 17.54 +.14 HSchein ... 56.15 -2.47 CathayGen .04 13.60 -.15 HercOffsh ... 2.36 +.05 CaviumNet ... 31.87 +.24 Hologic ... 16.03 -.02 CeleraGrp ... d5.71 +.14 HorizTFn n ... 15.59 ... Celgene ... 62.03 +.83 HudsCity .60 11.64 +.08 CentAl ... 13.52 +.45 HumGen ... 26.88 +.28 Cephln ... 66.44 -.08 HuntJB .48 35.95 -.02 Cerner ... 87.83 +.58 HuntBnk .04 5.66 ... ChrmSh ... 3.49 ... IAC Inter ... 27.90 +.16 ChkPoint ... u42.75 -.13 Illumina ... 54.31 -.21 Cheesecake ... 29.12 +.35 Imax Corp ... u21.65 +.26 ChildPlace ... 44.06 +.17 Immucor ... 17.40 -.11 ChinaDir ... 1.42 -.01 ImunoGn ... 8.22 +.16 ChinaGrnT ... 2.87 -.53 ImpaxLabs ... 18.84 -2.53 CienaCorp ... 13.81 +.49 Incyte ... 16.66 +.06 CinnFin 1.60f 29.45 -.13 Infinera ... 8.19 -.06 Cintas .49f 27.47 -.02 InfosysT .90e 67.44 +.54 Cirrus ... 12.86 -.23 IntgDv ... 5.90 +.14 Cisco ... 22.86 -.33 ISSI ... 7.51 -.05 CitrixSys ... 64.13 -.63 Intel .63 20.05 -.42 Clearwire ... 7.09 -.03 InterDig ... u33.57 +.53 Cogent ... 10.52 +.03 CognizTech ... 65.19 -1.99 InterMune ... 13.16 -1.35 Intersil .48 13.09 ... Coinstar ... 57.58 Intuit ... u47.98 -.25 +11.32 Itron ... 60.77 -.08 Comcast .38 20.63 -.23 Name

Name

J-K-L

JA Solar ... 8.33 -.18 JDS Uniph ... 10.50 +.26 Jamba ... 2.37 +.01 JamesRiv ... 17.28 +.50 JetBlue ... 6.98 -.07 JoyGlbl .70 70.95 +1.23 KLA Tnc 1.00f 35.72 +.24 Kulicke ... 6.22 ... LamResrch ... 45.79 +.29 Lattice ... 4.86 +.08 LawsnSft ... 8.89 +.09 LeGaga n ... 11.26 ... LeapWirlss ... 11.41 +.25 Level3 ... .97 -.01 LibGlobA ... u37.77 +1.47 LibGlobC ... u36.19 +.76 LibtyMIntA ... 14.76 +.20 LifeTech ... 50.18 -.16 LifePtH ... 33.92 -1.60 LimelghtN ... 6.79 -.01 LinearTch .92 32.25 +.50 LinnEngy 2.64f u34.99 +.56 Logitech ... 18.80 -.18

M-N-0

MIPS Tech ... u14.70 +.81 MagelnHl ... u48.00 -.76 MannKd ... 6.38 -.02 MarvellT ... 19.28 +.08 Mattel .75 23.33 +.14 MaximIntg .84 u21.66 +2.00 MecoxL n ... d16.33 +.33 MedAssets ... 18.59 -.40 MelcoCrwn ... u6.27 +.27 MentorGr ... 10.82 +.18 Microchp 1.37f u32.18 +.10 MicronT ... 8.26 +.32 MicroSemi ... 19.99 +.16 Microsoft .64f 26.67 +.39 Microtune ... 2.89 ... Molex .70f 20.30 +.03 Momenta ... 16.70 +.21 Motricity n ... u21.96 -.30 Mylan ... 20.32 -.19 MyriadG ... 19.86 -.30 NETgear ... u30.81 -.76 NII Hldg ... 41.81 +1.42 NasdOMX ... 21.11 +.21 NatusMed ... 13.12 +.10 NetLogic s ... 30.06 +1.38 NetApp ... 53.25 +.44 Netease ... 41.82 +.91 Netflix ... 173.57 -2.13 NetwkEng ... 1.67 +.13 NewsCpA .15 14.48 -.01 NewsCpB .15 16.09 +.02 NorTrst 1.12 49.63 -.39 NovtlWrls ... 10.50 -.32 Novell ... 5.93 ... Novlus ... u29.22 +.68 NuVasive ... d26.17 10.45 NuanceCm ... 15.71 -.03 Nvidia ... 12.02 -.03 OReillyA h ... u58.50 +1.38 Oclaro rs ... 8.41 -.19 OmniVisn ... u27.13 +.34 OnSmcnd ... 7.67 +.10 OpenTable ... 61.47 -1.10 OpnwvSy ... 2.06 +.09 OplinkC ... 17.46 +2.21 Oracle .20 u29.38 +.02 Orexigen ... 5.29 -.25 Oritani s .30 10.65 +.37 Overstk ... 13.41 -2.46

P-Q-R

Qlogic ... 17.58 +.32 Qualcom .76 45.16 +.74 QualitySys 1.20 64.26 -2.74 QuantFu h ... .46 +.00 QuestSft ... u26.22 -.04 Questcor ... u12.28 +1.35 RF MicD ... 7.29 -.11 Regenrn ... 26.11 -.85 RschMotn ... 56.92 +.71 RINO Intl ... 18.34 -.58 Riverbed ... 57.59 +1.01 RossStrs .64 58.99 +.62 Rovi Corp ... 50.65 +.67

S-T-U

SBA Com ... 39.26 -.78 STEC ... 15.60 +.32 SalixPhm ... 37.83 +.41 SanDisk ... 37.63 -.42 Sanmina ... 13.19 -.08 Sapient .35e u13.16 +.19 SavientPh ... 12.43 +.03 SciGames ... d7.92 -.84 SeacoastBk ... 1.25 -.05 SeagateT ... 14.71 +.77 SeattGen ... 16.41 -.07 Sequenom ... 6.36 -.11 ShandaGm ... 6.68 -.08 Shire .34e 70.10 +.05 ShoreTel ... 6.26 +.39 SierraWr ... 12.07 +.66 SigmaAld .64 63.49 +.93 SilicnImg ... 6.15 -.16 Slcnware .41e 5.58 +.14 SilvStd g ... 24.28 +.74 Sina ... 56.30 +1.47 Sinovac ... 4.04 +.07 SiriusXM ... u1.50 +.07 SkywksSol ... u22.92 +.24 Sohu.cm ... 74.50 +1.53 Solarfun ... 10.21 -.53 SonicCorp ... 8.89 -.10 Sonus ... 3.12 +.02 Sourcefire ... 23.59 -.14 Staples .36 20.52 -.10 StarScient ... 2.00 ... Starbucks .52f 28.56 +.33 StlDynam .30 14.54 +.09 StemCell h ... .89 -.04 SterlBcsh .06 5.38 +.03 Strayer 4.00f 139.96 +11.96 SunHlthGp ... 9.51 +.31 SunPowerA ... 13.60 -.26 support.cm ... u5.68 +.67 SusqBnc .04 7.91 +.02 Symantec ... 16.19 -.26 Synopsys ... u25.58 +.26 TD Ameritr .20 17.09 +.12 TFS Fncl ... d8.73 +.24 tw telecom ... 18.40 -.06 TakeTwo ... 10.67 +.48 TalecrisBio ... u24.52 +.18 Taleo A ... 28.69 -1.32 TlCmSys ... 5.42 -.03 TeleNav n ... 6.29 +1.39 Tellabs .08 6.82 +.01 TevaPhrm .72e 51.88 -.42 Thoratec ... 32.66 -2.47 TibcoSft ... 19.22 +.29 TiVo Inc ... 11.15 +.03 TridentM h ... 1.86 +.02 TriQuint ... 10.31 -.14 UtdCBksGa ... 1.96 -.03 UtdTherap ... 60.00 +.57 UtdWstrn h ... .40 -.06 UnivDisp ... 25.04 +1.35 UrbanOut ... 30.79 +.45

V-W-X-Y-Z

PDL Bio 1.00a 5.22 +.04 PF Chng .63e 45.92 +.78 PMC Sra ... 7.69 +.11 PSS Wrld ... 23.65 +.25 Paccar .48f 51.26 +.06 PacCapB h ... .64 -.02 PacSunwr ... 5.96 +.03 PanASlv .05 u31.92 +.58 ParamTch ... 21.47 +.22 Patterson .40 27.65 ... PattUTI .20 19.41 +.24 Paychex 1.24 27.74 +.04 PeopUtdF .62 d12.30 +.07 PerfectWld ... 32.40 +1.17 PetsMart .50 37.43 +.32 PharmPdt .60b 25.81 -.25 Polycom ... 33.78 -.29 Popular ... 2.73 -.07 Power-One ... 10.42 -.71 PwShs QQQ.33eu52.18 -.12 Powrwav ... u2.18 +.22 PriceTR 1.08 55.27 +.57 priceline ...u376.81+9.23 ProspctCap1.21 9.91 +.09 QIAGEN ... 18.82 -.24 QiaoXing ... 1.77 +.08

VCA Ant ... 20.67 +.28 ValueClick ... 13.76 +.13 VarianSemi ... 32.72 +2.50 VeecoInst ... 41.50 +2.68 Verisign ... u34.75 +1.30 VertxPh ... 38.30 ... Vical ... d2.16 -.08 VirgnMda h .16 u25.43 +.21 VistaPrt ... 42.07 +3.32 Vivus ... 7.75 +1.62 Vodafone 1.32e u27.51 +.09 Volcom 1.00e 17.17 -1.70 Volterra ... 20.46 +.20 WarnerCh s8.50e23.98 -.42 WashFed .20 15.05 ... WernerEnt .20a 21.33 -.02 WholeFd ... 39.75 +.23 Windstrm 1.00 12.66 +.12 Winn-Dixie ... 6.70 -.09 WrightM ... 13.35 -1.24 Wynn 1.00 107.16 +.11 Xilinx .64 26.80 +.58 YRC Ww rs ... 4.41 -.16 Yahoo ... 16.49 +.09 Zagg n ... 8.30 -.25

IntTower g Kemet KodiakO g LibertyAcq MagHRes Metalico MdwGold g Minefnd g NIVS IntT NeoStem NBRESec Nevsun g NDragon NwGold g NA Pall g NDynMn g NthnO&G NthgtM g NovaGld g Oilsands g OrienPap n ParaG&S PhrmAth PionDrill PolyMet g ProceraNt

RadientPh ... RareEle g ... Rentech ... RexahnPh ... Rubicon g ... SamsO&G ... SondeR grs ... SulphCo ... TanzRy g ... Taseko ... TimberlnR ... TrnsatlPt n ... UQM Tech ... US Gold ... Uluru ... Uranerz ... UraniumEn ... VantageDrl ... VantDrl wt ... VirnetX .50e VistaGold ... WidePoint ... WT DrfChn ... YM Bio g ...

AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE

Div Last Chg ChinNEPet ... ChinaShen ... AbdAsPac .42 6.90 -.05 ClaudeR g ... AlexcoR g ... 6.20 +.31 CrSuiHiY .32 AlldNevG ... 24.64 +1.01 Crossh glf ... AmApparel ... .97 -.01 Crystallx g ... AmO&G ... 8.61 -.02 DejourE g ... Anooraq g ... 1.28 -.02 DenisnM g ... AntaresP ... 1.46 +.05 EV LtdDur 1.39 ArcadiaRs ... .37 +.02 EndvrInt ... Augusta g ... 3.91 -.15 EndvSilv g ... Aurizon g ... 6.68 +.11 EntGaming ... BMB Munai ... .79 +.04 ExeterR gs ... BarcUBS36 ... 44.47 +.14 Express-1 ... BarcGSOil ... 23.02 -.15 FiveStar ... BrcIndiaTR ... 76.89 +.40 Fronteer g ... BioTime ... 6.00 -.01 GabGldNR 1.68 Brigus grs ... 1.59 ... GascoEngy ... CAMAC n ... 2.64 +.08 GenMoly ... CapGold n ... 4.39 +.07 GoldResrc .12e CardiumTh ... .46 -.01 GoldStr g ... CelSci ... .69 -.01 GranTrra g ... CFCda g .01 17.70 +.28 GrtBasG g ... CheniereEn ... 3.28 +.07 GugFront .38e CheniereE 1.70 19.18 -.32 Hyperdyn ... ... ChiGengM ... 1.92 -.08 IndiaGC

PIMCO Funds A: LwDurA 10.71 +.01 RealRtA p 11.85 +.04 TotRtA 11.69 +.03 PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 11.69 +.03 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 11.69 +.03 PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 11.69 +.03 Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n 25.13 -.02 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 43.99 +.23 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 38.00 +.03 Price Funds: Balance n 18.71 +.01 BlChip n 36.11 +.01 CapApp n 19.63 +.03 EmMktS n 34.50 +.12 EqInc n 22.04 ... EqIndex n 31.91 -.01 Growth n 30.39 +.01 HiYield n 6.84 ... IntlBond n 10.50 +.03 Intl G&I 13.32 +.02 IntlStk n 14.04 +.03 LatAm n 55.19 +.49 MidCap n 55.29 +.22 MCapVal n22.32 +.10 N Asia n 19.31 +.05 New Era n 45.95 +.16 N Horiz n 30.44 +.11 N Inc n 9.76 +.02 R2010 n 15.23 +.02 R2015 n 11.68 +.01 R2020 n 16.01 +.02 R2025 n 11.64 +.01

Mar 14 87.46 Apr 14 87.48 May 14 87.50 Jun 14 87.53 Jul 14 87.56 Aug 14 87.59 Sep 14 87.63 Oct 14 87.68 Nov 14 87.74 Dec 14 88.00 88.00 87.80 87.80 Jan 15 87.85 Feb 15 87.90 Mar 15 87.96 Apr 15 88.02 May 15 88.08 Jun 15 88.15 Jul 15 88.22 Aug 15 88.29 Sep 15 88.37 Oct 15 88.45 Nov 15 88.53 Dec 15 88.67 88.99 88.33 88.61 Jun 16 89.14 Dec 16 89.73 90.08 89.42 89.68 Jun 17 90.23 Dec 17 90.79 91.08 90.52 90.78 Jun 18 91.42 Dec 18 92.07 92.07 92.00 92.06 Last spot N/A Est. sales 467380. Thu’s Sales: 501,161 Thu’s open int: 1408493, up +10731 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Nov 10 2.0807 2.1275 2.0723 2.1045 Dec 10 2.0486 2.0850 2.0380 2.0594 Jan 11 2.0571 2.0950 2.0475 2.0682 Feb 11 2.0780 2.1150 2.0700 2.0888 Mar 11 2.1028 2.1336 2.0900 2.1106 Apr 11 2.2203 2.2500 2.2085 2.2277 May 11 2.2317 2.2495 2.2241 2.2377 Jun 11 2.2365 2.2604 2.2239 2.2428 Jul 11 2.2332 2.2511 2.2274 2.2410 Aug 11 2.2376 2.2380 2.2365 2.2366 Sep 11 2.2378 2.2500 2.2200 2.2283 Oct 11 2.1418 2.1550 2.1270 2.1341 Nov 11 2.1261 2.1378 2.1094 2.1258 Dec 11 2.1258 2.1450 2.1150 2.1293

R2030 n 16.60 +.02 R2035 n 11.68 +.01 R2040 n 16.63 +.02 ShtBd x n 4.90 ... SmCpStk n31.76 +.06 SmCapVal n33.12+.13 SpecGr n 16.77 +.02 SpecIn x n 12.49 +.01 Value n 21.87 ... Principal Inv: LT2020In 11.48 +.02 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 12.56 ... MultiCpGr 46.77 +.10 VoyA p 22.16 -.04 Royce Funds: PennMuI r 10.55 +.03 PremierI r 18.45 +.13 TotRetI r 12.14 +.03 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 35.79 ... S&P Sel 18.70 ... Scout Funds: Intl 31.43 -.02 Selected Funds: AmShD 39.05 +.06 AmShS p 38.98 +.06 Sequoia n 127.28 +.24 St FarmAssoc: Gwth 50.77 +.08 TCW Funds: TotRetBdI 10.42 ... Templeton Instit: ForEqS 20.20 +.01 Third Avenue Fds: ValueInst 50.14 -.13 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 27.11 +.07 IntValue I 27.71 +.07

-.89 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.88 -.87 -.87 -.87 -.86 -.86 -.86 -.86 -.82 -.78 -.77 -.77 -.76 -.75

-.0094 -.0234 -.0246 -.0242 -.0241 -.0234 -.0228 -.0227 -.0216 -.0212 -.0217 -.0209 -.0197 -.0182

6.72 2.25 1.56 2.92 .23 .35 .31 2.10 16.68 1.38 4.89 .41 5.81 u2.45 5.43 7.94 17.61 .34 u5.22 21.10 5.22 7.46 2.81 23.89 2.46 .78

-.20 -.45 -.03 -.02 ... -.01 +.01 +.03 +.05 +.01 +.08 +.02 -.03 -.07 +.18 +.03 +.17 +.01 +.92 +.75 +.08 -.18 +.12 +.14 -.08 -.07

Tweedy Browne: GblValue 23.16 +.03 USAA Group: TxEIt 13.14 ... VALIC : StkIdx 23.98 -.01 Vanguard Admiral: CAITAdm n11.19 ... CpOpAdl n71.89 +.15 EMAdmr r n38.82 +.03 Energy n 112.29 +.36 500Adml n109.06 -.04 GNMA Ad n11.11 +.01 HlthCr n 52.28 -.11 HiYldCp n 5.79 ... InfProAd n 26.73 +.09 ITBdAdml n11.74 +.04 ITsryAdml n11.98 +.04 IntGrAdm n60.27 +.05 ITAdml n 13.80 +.01 ITGrAdm n10.43 +.03 LtdTrAd n 11.15 ... LTGrAdml n9.60 +.06 LT Adml n 11.25 ... MuHYAdm n10.67 ... PrmCap r n65.82 -.01 STsyAdml n10.93 +.01 ShtTrAd n 15.95 ... STFdAd n 11.01 +.01 STIGrAd n 10.90 +.01 TtlBAdml n10.89 +.03 TStkAdm n29.54 +.01 WellslAdm n52.79+.11 WelltnAdm n52.25+.03 Windsor n 42.37 -.03 WdsrIIAd n43.26 -.04 Vanguard Fds: AssetA n 23.68 +.02 CapOpp n 31.11 +.06

... 7.44 ... 3.74 ... 4.13 ... 10.50 ... 4.78 ... 4.34 ... .61 ... 8.81 ... 2.85 ... 1.88 .24 3.88 ... 5.71 ... .04 ... 7.40 ... 4.65 ... 9.02 ... u19.68 ... 2.81 ... u11.22 ... .44 ... 5.45 ... 1.69 ... 3.51 ... 6.16 ... 1.85 ... .59

+.06 +.36 -.12 +.03 ... -.33 +.01 -.01 +.01 +.04 +.01 +.24 -.00 +.16 +.07 +.12 +.46 +.03 +.60 +.01 +.09 +.05 -.57 -.05 +.12 +.03

DivdGro n 13.81 ... Energy n 59.78 +.19 Explr n 66.03 +.34 GNMA n 11.11 +.01 GlobEq n 17.40 +.03 GroInc n 24.88 -.03 HYCorp n 5.79 ... HlthCre n 123.84 -.27 InflaPro n 13.61 +.05 IntlGr n 18.93 +.02 IntlVal n 31.92 -.01 ITIGrade n 10.43 +.03 LifeCon n 16.19 +.01 LifeGro n 21.28 +.02 LifeMod n 19.21 +.01 LTIGrade n 9.60 +.06 Morg n 16.86 +.03 MuInt n 13.80 +.01 MuLtd n 11.15 ... MuShrt n 15.95 ... PrecMtls r n25.01 +.25 PrmcpCor n13.09 ... Prmcp r n 63.41 -.01 SelValu r n17.73 -.02 STAR n 18.76 +.02 STIGrade n10.90 +.01 StratEq n 17.04 +.03 TgtRetInc n11.33 +.02 TgRe2010 n22.37+.03 TgtRe2015 n12.32 +.01 TgRe2020 n21.74+.02 TgtRe2025 n12.33 +.01 TgRe2030 n21.02+.01 TgtRe2035 n12.65 +.01 TgtRe2040 n20.73 +.01

.51 11.36 1.19 1.11 3.68 1.19 3.20 .25 6.98 6.31 1.18 3.05 2.36 5.23 .10 u2.24 3.87 1.72 .01 18.55 2.75 1.30 25.54 2.03

-.01 +.06 +.04 -.01 +.11 +.03 +.23 ... +.02 +.06 +.04 +.01 -.10 +.01 +.00 -.01 +.07 +.12 ... -.10 +.01 -.01 ... -.03

TgtRe2045 n13.09 +.01 USGro n 17.17 +.02 Wellsly n 21.79 +.05 Welltn n 30.25 +.02 Wndsr n 12.56 -.01 WndsII n 24.37 -.03 Vanguard Idx Fds: 500 n 109.04 -.05 Balanced n20.72 +.02 DevMkt n 10.06 +.01 EMkt n 29.49 +.03 Europe n 27.15 +.02 Extend n 37.59 +.15 Growth n 29.74 +.03 ITBnd n 11.74 +.04 MidCap n 18.80 +.09 Pacific n 10.39 ... REIT r n 18.12 +.02 SmCap n 31.62 +.11 SmlCpGth n19.63 +.10 SmlCpVl n 14.81 +.03 STBnd n 10.74 +.01 TotBnd n 10.89 +.03 TotlIntl n 15.48 +.01 TotStk n 29.53 +.01 Value n 19.50 -.02 Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst n 20.73 +.03 DevMkInst n9.99 +.01 EmMkInst n29.55 +.02 ExtIn n 37.65 +.16 FTAllWldI r n92.50 +.12 GrwthIst n 29.75 +.03 InfProInst n10.89 +.04 InstIdx n 108.34 -.05 InsPl n 108.35 -.04 InsTStPlus n26.70+.02

METALS NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Fri. Aluminum -$1.0464 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$3.7787 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper $3.7320 N.Y. Merc spot Fri. Lead - $2478.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.1171 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1346.75 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1357.10 troy oz., NY Merc spot Fri. Silver - $24.235 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $23.560 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Fri. Platinum -$1703.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1707.10 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Fri. n.q.-not quoted, n.a.-not available r-revised


Roswell Daily Record

COMICS

Garfield

Jumble

Family Circus

Beetle Bailey

DEAR ABBY: I am a 12-year-old girl who is not happy with who I am. When I was younger I always imagined what I’d be like when I was older — and this is not who I want to be. I am the girl everyone wants to date. I have lost people close to me lately and made mistakes I wish I could take back. I love God and the fact that He gave me life, but I don’t like myself. People treat me like I have no feelings sometimes, and I’m tired of drama that isn’t worth my time. I want to change who I am to who I really want to be. Do you have any tips on how to make myself the person I want to be, and not the person everyone else wants? WHO AM I? VALRICO, FLA. DEAR WHO AM I?: You are an intelligent young lady who has recognized that she must make changes if she wants to achieve her goals. Good for you. At 12, you’re not frozen into any role. There is time to change your image. While it may be flattering to be someone “everyone wants to date,” you are not obligated to date anyone. Concentrate on improving your grades,

Halloween Help for Pets Dear Readers: Some pet owners enjoy dressing their pets in funny costumes for HALLOWEEN, but your pets should feel safe and happy on this night. Here are a few hints from our friends at the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (www.aspca.org) and from the Heloise Files for a safe Halloween for all pets: * If your dog or cat does don a costume, make sure that it fits well, or dress the animal in a black-andorange bandana or bow. * The constant ringing of the doorbell, strange people showing up and unusual

DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE

becoming active in sports, developing your interests and a stronger relationship with your church. If you do, you will form different kinds of relationships that will enable you to become the person you want to be. I have no doubt that you’ll accomplish whatever you set your mind to because you have already started.

DEAR ABBY: I am a friendly, 23-year-old woman who likes to make new friends all the time. Recently, though, I have had a few “bumps” and I’m not sure if I may be doing something wrong. I tried to befriend one girl who was an acquaintance from high school. I found her on Facebook and sent her a message. She replied that she was glad for the surprise email. I sent her a reply, but

HINTS

FROM HELOISE

KING FEATURES SYNDICATE

noises can be stressful for your pets. Be sure that all inside animals are comfortably contained in another part of the house so they don’t run out. Make sure they are properly tagged and microchipped with identification in case they do get out. * Candy is terrible for ani-

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

she never returned one. I also tried to add her as a friend, but she declined. Then there’s the girl who is the sister of one of my male friends. I found her on Facebook, too, and sent her an email. It was the same story. I got a friendly reply — then nothing. I met the third girl online at a different friend-type site. She said she was “so glad I messaged her” and the same scenario repeated. I’m confused. Am I making some mistake or just picking the wrong people to befriend? EVERYONE’S PAL, EUGENE, ORE.

DEAR PAL: What matters in life isn’t the number of friends one has, but the quality of the friendship. Friendship does not usually happen spontaneously, it takes time and common interests among acquaintances to build. Instead of trying to make friends all the time, concentrate on trying to nurture relationships more slowly on common interest sites. The approach you have chosen may strike others as a little too aggressive. Also, stop depending on online sites and venture into the real world, too.

mals — especially chocolate, which can cause vomiting and diarrhea. Treats for your pets on this night? Carrot pieces, apple slices or their favorite biscuits. Keep candy wrappers picked up, too; dogs may be attracted to the scent and ingest them, which can lead to blockage. * If you decorate for Halloween, keep electric cords up and away from pets so they don’t chew on the cords or cause a tripping hazard. Have a great and fun Halloween, and keep your pets safe, on this night and every night! Heloise

Hagar the Horrible

Blondie

Zits

Snuffy Smith

Dear Readers: Frances Riel of Manchester, N.H., sent a photo of her male beagle mix, Skipper, hanging out in Mom’s chair. Frances says: “Skipper spends more time in my chair than I do. He was adopted from a shelter and has brought such joy to our family.” To see Skipper hanging out, visit www .Heloise.com. Heloise

Dear Heloise: My dog had an operation, and the pain pills she had to take were bitter. All the tricks I’d used before didn’t work, and I hated forcing the pills down her throat. So I chopped up a dog treat in the food processor till it was like coarse bread crumbs, hid the pill inside a small ball of peanut butter, and then coated the peanut-butter ball with the dog-treat crumbs. Down the hatch, and saved a couple of fingers, too. Tim Merrill in Alexandria, Va.

Dear Readers: Healthy cats can eat any brand of cat food, as long as the food is balanced and nutritionally complete. However, we all know how picky cats can be. If your cat has specific dietary needs, there are special foods available. If you’re concerned about what to feed your cat, speak with your veterinarian. Do not feed cats dog food, because it is not formulated to meet a cat’s dietary needs. Heloise

Dear Heloise: My dogs love to chew on plastic water bottles. If I put dog treats in it, this will keep them occupied for a while! Susan in San Antonio

Dilbert

The Wizard of Id

For Better or For Worse

Saturday, October 30, 2010

B7


B8 Saturday, October 30, 2010

Roswell Daily Record

Yucca Recreation Center 500 S. Richardson

Fall Festival Saturday, October 30

FREE INFLATABLES 6:00 pm—8:00 pm For Additional Information Please call 575.624.6719

The Chipmunks & Chipettes of Let’s Play Entertainment RHS Honor Society GHS Key Club ENMU-R Upward Bound

“Hometown Proud”

would like to take this time to thank all the teachers in the Roswell Community for their terrific dedication and time they spend to make a difference for the next generation of leaders.

You do make a difference in so many children and young adults in the community by helping them to see the greatness they have within their selves. We know that your job is not always fun, as some are more challenging than others. What is so rewarding is to see how you so lovingly work individually with so many of them. You create classrooms to hopefully be fun and inspiring and one which will help focus on their strengths versus the weaknesses. Thank you for all you do!!! From the whole team at ***We have set aside a special day just for you! On Saturday, October 30th, 2010 stop by and enjoy cake and refreshments on us. Just show us your approved teacher ID and you will receive a special gift from Lawrence Brothers. Plus on Saturday 10am till 2 pm all teachers with proper ID will receive hot dogs, chips and drinks on us.***

“Teachers inspire the smallest hearts to grow big enough to change the world. Great teachers inspire their students to believe THEY can become GREAT!” Paula J. Fox

HOT SPECIALS!

MARKET MADE GROUND CHUCK VALUE PACK

1

$ 69 lb.

1/2 GALLON

BLUE BELL ICE CREAM

3/$10

NEW YORK STRIP STEAKS VALUE PACK

4

$

99 lb.

11.9-34.2 OZ. BOX SELECT VARIETIES

DIGIORNO PIZZAS

3

$

99

FRI 10/29

SAT 10/30

HOMO/2%/SKIM

BROTHERS BEST MILK

1

$ 88 gal. 16 OZ. CAN SELECT VARIETIES

BEST CHOICE JUMBO BISCUITS

5/$5

SUN 10/31

SALAD SIZE

AVACADOS

4/$1

SELECT VARIETIES

HAMBURGER HELPER

5/$5

ROSWELL STORE ONLY GREEN BELL PEPPERS

2/88¢ 15.5 OZ CAN

MANWICH SLOPPY JOE MIX

5/$5

Don’t Forget Our Convenient Don’t Forget Our Convenient 900 W. Second St Roswell, NM Drive-Thru Window In Our Pharmacy Drive-Thru Window In Our Pharmacy Hours: Sun.-Thurs. 7am till 9pm • Fri. & Sat. 7am -10pm

EVERY TUESDAY IS “BANANA TUESDAY” 3 LBS. FOR $1

TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION

TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION

TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION

Pharmacy Hours: 9am-6pm Mon-Fri • 9am-4pm Sat. Closed Sundays Pharmacy Hours: 9am-6pm Mon-Fri • 9am-12 noon Sat. Closed Sundays • TEACHER APPRECIATION TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION • TEACHER APPRECIATION


Saturday, October 30, 2010

Legals

CLASSIFIEDS Roswell Daily Record

Legals

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------October 30, 2010 NOTICE OF NAMES APPEARING TO BE OWNERS OF ABANDONED PROPERTY

Pursuant to Section 7-8 A-9 NMSA 1978, notice is hereby given that the persons listed below appear to be owners of unclaimed money or other personal property. To obtain information concerning these properties, address all inquiries to the New Mexico Taxation & Revenue Department/Unclaimed Property Office, PO Box 25123, Santa Fe, NM 87504 or (505)476-1774. The inquiry must include the name and address of the owner and the identifying PID# shown in this notice. Satisfactory proof of claim must be presented to the New Mexico Taxation & Revenue Department to file a claim. Stephanie Dennis Administrative Resolution & Services Bureau Revenue Processing Division (505)827-0762

PID# 2920849 2855903 2908186

2922097 2965379

2864407 2865146 2840035

2849941 2851052

2908270 2864408 2956786 2866745 2896186 2864415 2870186 2957526 2958795 2907901 2847296 2840458 2846211 2957792 2959033 2841667 2879140 2884244 2878620 2782799 2919975 2857047 2852184 2912959 2780959

2671810 2931623 2928210 2838973 2888124

2963532 2841666 2928216

2877497

2934287 2846120 2837363 2864448 2956412

2919978

2848256 2878448 2838756 2879149 2864465

2929661 2855924

2930572 2855998 2907079 2912826 2707631 2892762 2854970 2884358 2932314 2840824 2846165 2851070 2835222 2841496 2954517 2949733 2879155

2954885 2851074

2833617

2671848 2845758 2934526 2841220 2839483 2877797

2855906 2855921

2668094 2913007 2928268 2883212 2846223 2919504 2931633 2838538 2838013 2929723 2956737 2864503 2908336

2838014

2941488 2833435 2832726 2956451

2929734 2832583 2843353

2941497 2922630

2964147 2880941 2896030 2837372 2848393 2958890 2931573

2846941

2892774

NAME ABERNATHY CLAUDIA F ACEVES ABELINO R AGUERO JOANNA, LAMBERT ALEJANDRO AGUILAR A, J AGUIRRE MARIA G, RAMON AHLNESS ROBERT AIDA DUKE SMOOT AIR REFREGERATION

AKIN ROBERT ALARCON MANUEL OLVERA ALDERETE JOSE ALLEY SAMANTHA ALONSO JESSICA ALVIDRES DOMINGO ANAYA ABELARDO ANDRADE MICHELLE ANDREWS BENNY ANGELL FLODELL Z ANGHEL GEORGEESTA APODACA BEATRICE D APRIA HLTHCARE CC 6129 ARACELY TORRES ARAGON ANGIE ARCHIBALD JOSEPH B ARMSTRONG MURPHY ARMSTRONG PEARL ARNOLD JOHN C ATWELL RON AUTO ONE ACCEPT CORP AVERY R H BACA TRINIDAD L BAEZA MARY BAILEY BRIAN BAILEY ERIC BAKER FRANCES

BAKER FRANCES L BALDERRAMAVICTOR BALDONADO ANDREW BALERIO MONICA, OLGA BANKRUPTCY CLERK CLARK COLL BARBEY EDWIN BARELA MARIA BARNES

BARONE JILLIAN, RONALD BARRAZA BRIGIDO BARRERA REBECCA BARRERAS ADAM A BARTLETT WILLIAM BECK JERRY D

BECKL RAYMOND A

BELTRAN CHRIS BENAVIDEZ BILLY R BENCOMO MANUEL R BENSON SCOTT A BHAKTA SATISH R

BIGGERS RONALD E BINGHAM ROLAND A

BIOIFACIO MORENO BIPIN BHAKTA BLANCHARD LOUISE BLEWETT HERSCHEL BOCKMAN GRACE, JB BOLING MARY L BOND SUMAYA IESHA BOQNET ALBIN SR BORUNDA JOSE BOWLES ROBERT D DMD BOWMAN ROBERT BOYLAN JOHN J BRANKO INC BRAUN LESTER T BRAZIEL SANDRA J BREADEN JAMES BREWTON DIANE

BRICENO ROSALIA BRIZENO JAIME D

BROWN JANICE, GARY

BROWN ROBERT L BRYANS EDWARD B SR BRYANT LASHAUN E BUNTE ARNOLD BURKHALTER MICHAEL Q BURNEISTER MARY E ESTATE BURR DOROTHY E BURROUGHS STEVE

BUSH LISA, PATRICK BUTTS SHANNON CABEZUELA AMBER CALLAWAY CHRISTOPHER CAMERON ADAM CANTU RICK CAPLEJESSICA CARASCO KALVIN K CAREY EVERETT CAROLYN POLLARD DBA CARRASCO LIDIA CARRELL LLOYD H CARRILLO MINNIE, DELOSSANTOS MARY CARSON KAREN L MD

CASA BLANCA CASE OF SE NM CASTENADA PATRICIA CASTLE ORTHOPEDICS PC CASTRO ANGELINA CASTRO CECILIA A CATTLE BARON RESTAURANT CAVIN S H CHAMBERS JAMES

CHANDLER HAROLD CHAVARRIA JOSE CHAVEZ CESAR R CHAVEZ MARIAH C CHEVETT JOHN E CHOICE MED CLINIC

CHOICES CTR INDEPENDENT LIVING CHOWAN ELSIE M, EWAN M CHRISTY S B IV

ADDRESS 2807 E BRASHER RD PO BX 42

616 S PINE 507 E LA PALOMA LN

1504 S POPLAR ST 200 S 202W 1 ST 900 BEL AIRE DR 815 S ATKINSON AVE 706 S ASPEN

CITY ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

411 N GARDEN AVE ROSWELL 39 RIVERSIDE ROSWELL 901 W SUMMIT ST ROSWELL 1800 S PENN AVE #2 ROSWELL 2313 N DAVIS AVE ROSWELL 702 S FRUITLAND DR ROSWELL 2 BARLOW PL ROSWELL 1200 SAN JUAN DR ROSWELL 408 HOWARD DR ROSWELL 400 E 23RD ROSWELL 1516 S CAHOON AVE ROSWELL 123 N MAIN ST ROSWELL 3900 N GARDEN AVE ROSWELL 44 BYURN ROSWELL PO BX 1082 ROSWELL PO BX 1873 ROSWELL 908 W MATHEWS ROSWELL 1714 W JUNIPER ROSWELL 306 E ONYX ST ROSWELL PO BX 34 ROSWELL PO BX 3 ROSWELL 317 E FOREST ST ROSWELL 709 KANSAS LAKE ARTHUR 74 PIERRE RD DEXTER 3 PECAN PLACE ROSWELL 1708 S STANTON AVE ROSWELL 3009 ENCANTO DR ROSWELL 1712 MISSOURI ROSWELL 57 G ST ROSWELL 8493 SPOKAN RD LAKE ARTHUR

PO BX 550 8002 N 42TH ST 306 E FRAZIER 2601 N KENTUCKY AVE A 104 TIERRA BERRENDA DR 23 BRENDA PO BX 6264 802 S LEA 706 W 3RD ST 1601 S SUNSET AVE #312 1400 E LINCOLN HWY #21 311 E HENDRICKS 700 DEBORAH DR 1414 S UNION #A4 7884 LINCOLN RD 603 TWIN DIAMOND RD 200 E 22ND ST #40 1618 S RICHARDSON AVE 2800 EMERALD DR 3010 N MAIN 534 COMANCHE PO BX 934 BOX 716 PO BX 1514 306 S DELAWARE 6423 WICHITA 1200 W BONITA DR 1405 N UNION 71 GAIL HARRIS 108 W 13TH ST #A PO BX 1858 21 MARK RD 3103 N ALHAMBRA 3204 ENCANTO DR 202 TIERRA BERRENDA DR 311 E MATHEWS ST 71 S ESPUELA RD NO 2 3000 N WASHINGTON AVE 2047 E POE ST 706 LUSIK 804 S ATKINSON 611 W CHURCH 1502 S UNION AVE 2801 N KENTUCKY AVE #203 PO BX 2042 200 W 1ST ST STE 648 1100 N LEA AVE 3005 W 8TH ST 303 ROBINS DR 31 NASHVILLE RD 408 E 4TH ST 17 GARDIN 907 N ATKINSON 102 E PEAR ST 801 COLORADO ST 2100 E 19TH ST 1012 RANCHO RD 303 N ELM AVE 508 COTTONWOOD AVE 813 N WASHINGTON AVE 1 HILLCREST 113 E 19TH ST 1002 CREST DR 607 W COUNTRY CLUB 706 HICKORY 43 RIDGECREST DR

PO BX 1654 PO BX 1125 403 E LINDA VISTA BLVD 400 S SPRUCE AVE PO BX 394 912 S ELM AVE 2301 N GRAND 1500 N PECAN 1621 N WASHINGTON AVE

720 E COLLEGE #15 4306 W MCGAFFEY ST PO BX 569

ROSWELL LAKE ARTHUR ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL HAGERMAN

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL HAGERMAN ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

LAKE ARTHUR

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL LAKE ARTHUR ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL HAGERMAN ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

2854730 2849938

2835675 2676691

2906161 2907773

2934430

2884545 2893816 2854616 2870343

2864535 2846504 2833616 2955131 2934620

2854980

2858243 2878651 2913048

2877793 2841422

2834819 2870360 2949778

2876975

2891289 2837174 2907989 2867401

2851099 2845074 2846482

2941552 2941555 2864555 2922004 2956493 2846255 2741245

2835233 2870373 2929795

2864559 2855897 2864563 2959601 2933737 2883091 2929802

2832728 2920780 2834144 2958804

2862443 2846140

2838699 2890977 2933298 2952490 2836671

2884695 2835289 2958498 2851904 2913029

2864591

2919620

2865309 2861789 2904111 2846360 2956552 2799550 2845337

2941631 2850432

2852591 2934320 2959102 2954771

2929865 2955652 2878841

2855891 2846474 2850433

2832156 2958891

2845338 2864618 2929883 2858884 2908354 2961064 2913059

2929891

2835218 2957366 2849939

2846168

2964284 2832543

2852211 2934447 2864627 2922024 2929896

2887811 2908841

2896051

2717619 2855866 2846219 2932506 2930596

2851129 2855894 2855863

Legals

CHUCK PANKEY APPRAIS CICERO CARLO CIESZINSKI J E CITIMORTGAGE & AFFILIATE CITIMORTGAGE INC CLARK DON R MD

CLARKE COLL BANKRUPTCY TTEE CLEGG JANEL CLEMENTS JOE B CLICK EVA CLOW MERLE

COBAS LORENZO COBOS ARTHUR R COFRAN JOSEPH COL R F COLBERT WALTER

COLBY JACOB BRANDON

COLL LLINDA

COLLINS MICHAEL E CONTRERAS AUDREIANNA CORDOVA LAURA CORN MARTHA

CORTINA RENE R CORUM RICHARD V COTA DAVID

COVENANT CARDIAC & VASCULAR CROCKER DAVID CROOK ROBERT CROSS DIAMOND INC CRUZ MIGUEL

CULLENDER HILA CULLIGAN WATER CURTIS ROLLINS RHOADS CO CUSACK CRAIG CUSACK JOHN PATRICK DANA DARA DANLEY TROY W DANNY E SONS DANSBY JERI DAUBERT JEREMY B

DAUGHTRY MAUD A DAVENPORT THEODORE E DAVID ROSE DBA DAVIS DORIS DAVIS RICHARD A DEAA GENE DEAN SCOTT INS DEARING KAREN J DEARING RODNEY DECK JEFFREY W

DELA FRANK DEMAIN JOSEPH N DESERT SUN COLLISION CTR DEXTER SCHLS FBO NANCY MILES DIAZ ERNESTO DOLEN CAROL

DOMINGUEZ CELINDA A DONOWHO BILL DORAM CORNELL DUNCAN CHARLES DUNN BELINDA

DURAN BERTHA DURAN RAUL DURAND KAITLIN C EAKER DANNY EAKER JAMES

EARLE KAREN

EASTERN NM MED CTR

EASTHAM ALLENE L EGP SVCS ELK OIL CO ELKINS KARLA ELLETT JOHN ELLIOTT CHARLES ELWELL NELIE

ENGWALL RUTH ENMMC PHYSICIANS CLINIC ENRON TRANS STORAGE ERMA CORN ERNEST MILDRED L EST JEAN A HAMBERG

EVANS FRANCES EVANS HAYDEN L EVERITT JR FRANK, MARTHA W EVETTS JAMES O FAMILY HOME CARE SERVICES FAMILY PR CTR O ENMMC FARMERS INC FEATHERSTONE TERRI L

FINGERPRINT GRAPHICS FINKELSTEIN SUZI FLANNERY JESSICA FLETT MICHAEL FLORES LIBBY FLOWERS JENIFER MCCREA FLY JAMES

FOX STEPHEN

FRANCO CHRIS W FRANCO CHRISTOPHER FRANKLIN ANTHONY

FRANKLIN PAUL

FRIEDRICH DOLORES FUCHS NETTIE M, SHERRILL H FUENTES DEBBIE FUENTES J P FUENTES JOHN FULL DEDUCTIBLE REFUN FULWIDER ROBERT C

FURMANBOYD JENNIFER GAINES TIMOTHY P

GALASSINI BRET

GARCIA ATHANACIO C GARCIA CONCHA GARCIA CYNTHIA GARCIA MARYANN GARCIA MITZIE

GARCIA ROBERT J GARDNER ROBERT GARNER BRIAN

Section

Continued next page

PO BX 446 101 W COLLEGE BLVD #736 22 RIVERSIDE DR 415 B TIERRA BERRENDA 5090 SAQUARO RD 313 W COUNTRY CLUB RD #7

PO BX 550 602 E 23RD ST 507 W FOREST 3010 DELICADO 1416 S RICHARDSON AVE 3072 VASSAR DR PO BX 496 608 S PLAZA DR 3201 BRADLEY DR 1501 SOUTH ADAMS AVE 3731 E CROSSROADS 5207 S HUMMINGBIRD LN 1420 S BONITA DR

2309 N MESA 207 E BONNEY ST 900 S PLAINS PARK DR 803 AYLESBURY 91 SHARON ST 101 W COLLEGE BLVD 1 GRAND AVE PLAZA B 6 JARDIN CT 431 WALNUT DR 1210 N MAIN ST 108 VISTA LARGO RD 108 E 22ND ST 1303 N GARDEN

PO BX 1635 PO BX 250 PO BX 250 6574 CHEROKEE RD 1213 HARVARD DR 9 HALEY CIR PO BX 3396 1301 E ALAMEDA #1104 703 E 5TH 3212 BANDOLINA DR 2313 N ATKINSON AVE PO BX 927 2307 E COLLEGE ST 306 WEFIN 1904 SO MAIN 2 DESOSA CT PO BX 6119 4808 MICHIGAN AVE N 1210 HOLLAND AVE PO BX 404

2912 W 2ND

PO BX 159 2804 WEST 4TH #B 904 CANCHAS PLACE 512 S FIR 2700 W 2ND ST #131 307 E LEWIS ST 89 LOS FLORES 2001 S SUNSET #G128 65 POWELL PL 712 W 12TH 1904 W 4TH ST 695 VAN BUREN 5403 OLD CLOVIS HWY 1337 MCCALL LP TRLR 140 405 W COUNTRY CLUB RD PO BX 1857 PO BX 1734 PO BX 310 905 W POE 600 S KENTUCKY 1506 W2ND #05 812 SWINGING SPEAR RD PO BX 1782

PO BX 488 6381 N MAIN 1902 S RICHARDSON 1400 S MISSOURI AVE 1301 W COUNTRY CLUB RD PO BX 1462 PO BX 1462 301 TIERRA BERRENDA PO BX 1471

PO BX 237

PO BX 488 PO BX 1734 3105 NOTTING HILL AVE 500 N MAIN #800 301 S HEMLOCK AVE 1208 1/2 W 8TH ST 71 W BYRNE 2800 S LEA

121 NO NAME RD 812 SWINGING SPEAR 2303 N SHARTELL AVE 3304 FURTURA DR 806 MEADOW PL 3201 N KENTUCKY 36 3201 N KENTUCKY #36 3211 ENCANTO DR

1406 E 19TH ST 813 ELDORA PO BX 465 202 W TILDEN ST 403 S CYPRESS AVE 417 S CHAMISAL AVE 1722 N KENTUCKY 814 N KENTUCKY AVE 410 E 23RD ST SPC 65 1606 S HOLLAND DR 516 E 6TH ST 29 DEL NORTE 632 E ORANGE ST 907 N ATKINSON AVE 54 ANDREWS PL 11 EVERGLADE CT 307 NORTHWOOD

C

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL LAKE ARTHUR ROSWELL

DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

DEXTER ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

DEXTER

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

Legals

-----------------------------------------------------------------------Publish October 30, 2010 Public Notice Information:

On 10/25/10, an application seeking consent to the assignment of

license of FM translator station K230AW was tendered for filing with

the Federal Communications Commission. The station is licensed to Edgewater Broadcasting Inc. to serve the area of Roswell, NM. The

proposed assignee is Nowalmark Broadcasting Corporation. K230AW operates on channel 230 with 0.17 kilowatts of power from a transmitter located at 33-23-36N, 104-37-27W. K230AW will rebroadcast station KXXQ(FM), 264, Milan, NM.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------October 30, November 6, 13, 2010 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

IN THE MATTER OF THE KINSHIP GUARDIANSHIP of D.A.R., a male child born 11/21/09 No. DM-2010-482

NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION

TO;

Unknown Father of D.A.R. You are hereby notified that there is now pending in the District Court of Chaves County, New Mexico, Cause No. DM-2010-482, a Petition for Appointment of Kinship Guardianship action wherein Jessica M. and Shawn White are the Petitioners. The general object of this action is to obtain Kinship Guardianship of a male child, initials D.A.R., born 11/21/2009, in Graham Texas to Cassandra Richardson. Notice is further given that unless you respond in writing to said cause on or before November 13, 2010, judgment by default will be entered against you in conformity with the allegations of the Petition for Kinship Guardian ship of the minor child. The name and address of Petitioner’s attorney is Sheryl L. Saavedra, LLC, P.O. Box 1327, Roswell, New Mexico, 88202-1327. WITNESS my hand and seal of said District Court on this 27th day of October 2010.

Seal

KENNON CROWHURST Clerk of the District Court By: s/Maureen J Nelson Deputy

-----------------------------------------------------------------------Publish October 23, 30, Nov. 6, 13, 2010 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas, as Trustee, Plaintiff,

vs. CV-2010-273

VICTORIA BRAUN, Personal Representative of the ESTATE OF Lester T. Braun, deceased, THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the above-entitled Court, having appointed me or my designee as Special Master in this matter with the power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property (the "Property") situated in Chaves County, New Mexico, commonly known as 21 Mark Road, Roswell, New Mexico 88203, and more particularly described as follows: TRACT 2 OF THE TIM AND VICTORIA BRAUN BOUNDARY SURVEY PLAT OF PART OF THE SW1/4SW1/4 OF SECTION 34, TOWNSHIP 10 SOUTH, RANGE 23 EAST, N.M.P.M., IN THE COUNTY OF CHAVES AND STATE OF NEW MEXICO, BEING MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS:

BEGINNING AT A POINT THAT IS 894.67 FEET NORTH OF THE SOUTH LINE AND 40.00 FEET EAST OF THE WEST LINE OF THE SW1/4SW1/4 OF SAID SECTION 34, FROM WHICH THE SOUTHWEST CORNER OF SAID SECTION BEARS S 02°48’14” W, A DISTANCE OF 895.86 FEET; THENCE FROM SAID POINT OF BEGINNING N 89°56’21” E, A DISTANCE OF 666.29 FEET; THENCE S 00°16’20” W, A DISTANCE OF 389.37 FEET; THENCE S 89°49’39” W ALONG A LINE BEING 504 FEET NORTH AND PARALLEL TO THE SOUTH LINE OF SAID SW1/4SW1/4, A DISTANCE OF 666.12 FEET; THENCE N 00°14’41” E ALONG THE EAST RIGHT-OF-WAY LINE OF MARK ROAD, BEING 40 FEET EAST AND PARALLEL TO THE WEST LINE OF SAID SW1/4SW1/4, A DISTANCE OF 390.67 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING.

The sale is to begin at of 1:45 p.m. on December 9, 2010, at the Main Entrance of the Chaves County Courthouse, 400 N. Virginia, Roswell, New Mexico, at which time I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in lawful currency of the United States of America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and to satisfy the Judgment in favor of Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas, as Trustee. Deutsche Bank Trust Company Americas, as Trustee, was awarded a Judgment on October 7, 2010, in the principal sum of $259,350.02, plus outstanding interest due on the Note through August 17, 2010, in the amount of $14,669.03 and accruing thereafter at the rate of $50.63 per diem, plus late charges of $817.29, plus escrow advances of $3,251.55, plus property inspection fees of $78.75, plus expense advances of $605.00, plus corporate advances of $83.00, plus reasonable attorney's fees incurred by Plaintiff in the sum of $900.00 and costs through August 31, 2010, in the sum of $569.71, with interest on the late charges, escrow advances, property inspection fees, expense advances, corporate advances, attorney's fees and costs of this suit at the rate of 7.125% per annum from date of the entry of the Judgment until paid. The sale is subject to rights and easements of record, to unpaid property taxes and assessments, and to the one (1) month right of redemption in favor of Defendant(s) as specified in the Judgment filed herein. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. _____________ FAISAL SUKHYANI Special Master 2222 Parkwest Drive NW Albuquerque, New Mexico 87120-3660 (505)228-8484


C2 Saturday, October 30, 2010 Legals

2919626

2877393

2929927

2957213

2837026 2864651 2858893 2929932 2956447 2896412 2956745 2956699

2857305 2928472 2857307

2834591 2888125

2864657 2848619 2841618 2861219 2848624 2847503 2833618

2908755 2860758

2839855

2866905

2835219 2902872

2887790 2959167 2871599

2838109 2864667 2832364

2941730 2883315 2907660 2841978

2920049 2906427 2834562

2908020 2841668 2855925 2856868

2846393 2949871 2846242 2908174 2877713 2888186

2904408 2930001

2953463 2879200 2741323 2832637 2928563

2867588

2855916 2956512 2955654 2871394 2837858 2941793 2879203 2956424 2864709 2871607

2841660 2933985 2920181 2839337 2835225

2846270

2908180 2863893 2845897

2846193 2932652

2903601

2833334 2930052

2956533

2930613 2912156

2869060 2866958 2887313

2839019 2910080 2893830 2878500 2912973

2833896

2909511 2836696

2930698

2919633 2908422 2837859 2958821 2728943

2891674 2668500 2954712 2907667 2956391 2958731

2929393 2864772 2878919 2720366 2871615

2885359

2847584 2941904 2858920 2896077

2877717 2935768

GARVEY EVELYN J

GELDERT MAURICE

GENHO PAUL C

GEORGE DAVID M DO

GERVAIS ROBERT GLASS LESTER GLASS MELINDA, TOMMY GLASS ROBERT GLASS WAYNE S GOLDEN WILLIAM R GOMEZ DAVID P GONZALES ELAINE T

GONZALES MELISSA GONZALEZ GONZALEZ FLORENTINO

GONZALEZ LIZETTE GOODE BILLY

GOODHEART JESSE GORDON DREW A GORDON ELLEN GOULDING DONALD GRANADOS GABRI E GRAVES GREGORY G GRAVES SHIRLEY A

GRAY KRISTEN D GREAT SOUTHWESTERN AVIATN GREAT WESTERN RECOVERY GREEN BERNIE

GREEN RAY A GRIFFIN HAROLD H

GUERRERO LUCIA L GUSTAMANTES FRANK GUTIERREZ ISRAEL

GUTIERREZ MARIANO HALEY TERRY HANAGAN OIL PROPOERTIES HANAGAN PETROLE HANNAGAN NORELA HANNAGAN NORELA HARPER JAMIE

HART HELEN E HAVENS MYRON HAYNES DAWN M, HOOVER GEORGE HELEN BERTRAND DBA HENDRICK ALTA F HENSON RAYFORD HERMAN CURRY MARY EST HERNANDEZ DELIA HERNANDEZ FIDEL HERNANDEZ RITA HERRERA TOMAS D HERRIN VIRGLE O MD HERRING ANN, HERRING E P HESS AMY E, JEFFREY W HIGGINSON TONY

HIGHTOWER MARY HILL SYLVIA A HOLLOWAY INS HOLSUM BAKERS INC HOOGERHUIS DANIEL

HOOPER PATRICK M

HOOSER ED HORTON VERATTA HUNTER JEWELINE IBARRA JONATHAN J IDLEMAN CHARLES INGRAM TOM L INMAN SHIRLEY A INS CTR OF ROSWELL ISLAND CLARISSA ISLER LEONARD

J & G ELECTRIC JAMES RODNEY JARA CARLOS JARAMILLO LISA/ALICE JENNINGS DAISY JUANITA

JIMENEZ BARTOLO

JIMENEZ FRANK JMICHELLEWATTSCOM JOHN W WAYNE REV LIVING TR JOHNSON AMANDA JOHNSON ANGELICA, ARDELL T JOHNSON ARTHUR B, INA M JOHNSON TERRY R JONES BILL

JONES DOYAL WEEMS MARY EDITH JONES NATHANIEL JONES WAYNE N

JONES WITT MELISSA JONES WITT S DOUG JOST JAMIE L

JUAREZ MARIA JUCKES DONNA K A YODER CO KANG ENG KEITH CYNTHIA

KEITH ELDA RUTH

KELTNER CLARISSA KENNEDY MICHAEL C

KHORSAND SAHBAIG MASOUD KING ADA KING AUTUMN, WILLOUGHBY LADONNA KING RICHARD KINNEY PEARL KLEIN BERNARD N

KRASOWSKY THOMAS KREITZ JUSTIN S KUEKER MONIQUE E LANCE LEE LANKFORD VIRGINIA L LAPORTE CHERIE A

LEONARDI JASON LEONHARDT ANNE LEWIS DOROTHY B, E ES LILA DOYLE LINDEMANN SYDNEY

LINTERMAN DELLA

LITTELL REINETTE LONGO NATHAN L LOPEZ CRISTINA LOPEZ MARIO

LOZANO GUILLERMO LUCERO ELAINE

Legals

DR SOUTH FORK TRAILER PARK 1111W COUNTRY CLB 1201 W MCGAFFEY ST #64 1621 N WASHINGTON AVE 105 W 3RD ST #242 1609 S KANSAS AVE 306 E REED ST 604 MIMOSA DR PO BX 1516 1200 W 3RD ST 1110 EAST PLUM 502 S WYOMING AVE #706 306 WEST 5TH 107 HARRIS RD 1301 E ALAMEDA #1002 308 S KANSAS 711 E GREENWOOD DR 414 S CEDAR AVE 502 S DELAWARE 309 N MISSOURI AVE 710 WYOMING 1200 W MCGAFFY 29 103 YAKIMA RD 500 S EVERGREEN AVE 26 B BENT TREE

PO BX 5700

PO BX 1332 508 1/2 W DEMING ST 3403 CAMILA DR 3101 N RICHARDSON 310 W MATHEWS 307 W TILDEN ST 106 N ATKINSON AVE 12 E EYEMAN 803 E VISTA PKWY

PO BX 430 PO BX 1737 2110 S MAIN ST 1506 S MADASON 6 AVENIDA DE VISTA RD 1106 W 3RD ST PO BX 2917

3101 LA TIERRA 2100 S MAIN ST 810 W DEMING PO BX 456

22 RIVERSIDE DR 3000 GOLONDRINA 326 WRANGLERD RD 609 EAST BLAND 610 E MESCALERO 2110 S MAIN

PO BX 1674 4705 ALLEN AVE 2201 W JUNIPER ST #B 2802 HIGHLAND RD RT 1 BX 144D 111 1/2 3RD ST PO BX 1874 410 W LINDA VISTA BLVD 1 807 N MONTANA AVE PO BX 3494 317 E LEWIS ST PO BX 64 805 W 9TH ST 2901 N LEA PO BX 1757 333 W BRASHER PO BX 1240 104 S OHIO AVE 2001 S SUNSET ST #140K 512 S MAIN 3100 RADCLIFF DR 2905 ALHAMBRA 3 804 N BEACH 1617 S WASHINGTON 1200 W MCGAFFEY #50 PO BX 942 2524 NORTH CE

PO BX 2468 4001 W JUDY

PO BX 1030

1102 SAN JUAN DR 206 HARRIS RD 20 BENT TREE RD #B 1019 SOUTH KENTUCKY 1621 S UNION AVE 702 GOLONDRINA DR 400 N MISSOURI AVE 400 N MISSOURI AVE 1304 N KENTUCKY AVE 44 E WELLS ST 1724 N OHIO AVE 414 W ALAMEDA 2510 MIMOSA DR 1906 E COUNTRY CLUB 2801 N KENTUCKY AVE #124 704 S MICHIGAN AVE 110 NORTH WASHINGTON #2

PO BX 1574 703 W GAYLE

1102 W FOURTH ST 7105 S WYOMING 808 S GRAND AVE 1100 S WASHINGTON 115 REDBRIDGE RD 9 EVERGALDE CT 704 SAUNDERS 72 5TH RD 1800 LIPAN RD 2005 N LOUISIANA AVE 2501 S SUNSET 406 W 17TH ST 2 109 W 3RD 320 DETTA LP 500 W BRASHER RD #94 2687 N SYCAMORE AVE PO BX 1291 PO BX 1893 1 GAIL HARRIS PL 1616 S STANTON AVE 331 E LEWIS 404 S FIR AVE

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL HAGERMAN

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ELKINS ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

CLASSIFIEDS 2893713 2849943 2833619

2928676 2864792 2923929

2920090

2836848 2864795 2838938 2845192

2908452

2954295

2836363

2908045

2855955

2846185 2840520 2890320 2886682

2877530

2886683 2836849 2908048

2864812 2838826 2855966 2920095 2933210

2903702 2920187 2893442 2930151 2748806 2902886

2958932 2934556 2885542 2835229 2839550 2966631 2849940 2672191 2957550 2841662 2877418

2908472 2832392 2933388 2934666 2962036 2833430 2871412 2910388

2965484 2912999 2861797

2955571 2866717 2846183

2846309 2963357 2670829 2837961 2924169 2711874 2865638

2885606 2965485 2837252 2838705 2861146 2958124 2862768

2855022 2865644 2846351

2689295 2870095 2867049 2954637 2877185 2864858 2958691 2890403 2890401 2941977 2890404

2846238 2913008 2864865 2883023

2930232 2855867

2856136

2907626 2840890 2832093 2840096

2930244

2854201 2941998 2882127 2869832 2863258 2896242 2942009 2877796 2869232 2958475 2851931 2865674 2832684 2867075 2837963 2835628

2758899

Legals

LUCERO GLORIA LUCERO RITA LUECHTEFELD JULIE L, MICHAEL LUPIAN ARTURO A MABE DEBORA MACIAS C, MACIAS LA

MACIAS CHRISTOPH A

MADRID ELIGIO MADRID SANTOS MAGBY DOVER L MALDONADO MARY

MALES LORETTA

MALONE MARIE LOUISE C

MANN RUSSELL D

MANUEL SANCHEZ DBA SEERN REMV MARINELARENA YAHIR

MARION WILLIAM III MARQUEZ RAUL L MARSHALL CLARIBEL Y MARSHALL JAMES, VIRGINIA MARTIN CHARLES III, CHARLES JR MARTIN DONNA J MARTIN RYAN C, LEANN MARTINEZ EILEEN, GREGORY MARTINEZ GRATIA MARTINEZ JOSE L MARTINEZ JUAN J MARTINEZ SANDRA C MARY F CARROLL M D

MATHERS JEANNETTE J

MAXWELL MICHELLE L MAY WILLARD W MAYES ANTHONY MAYO BRANDIE R MAYVIS E HARTMAN LIVING TR MCBEE ROBERTA MCCLAIN ANGELA M MCCRARY HEATHER MCCULLOUGH MARY MCDONALD CLIFFORD D MCGINTY BRITTANY MCGRATH ERIN M MCGUIRE MIKELL MCINTOSH PEGGY D MCMASTER RICHARD MCTEIGUE CURTIS

MEDINA LYDIA, RAMON MEDLIN NELL KELLY MEDRANO MANUAL MEIN HENRY III MELENDEZ BIANCA MELVIN PAMELA MENDOZA GLORIA MENDOZA JODI

MENDOZA MIREYA MENDOZA STEVEN MENTOR OF ROSWELL

MEREDITH VIVIAN G MERRILL RISA L MEYER CINDY

MICHELET CASEY MICHELET JOSEPH ALLEN MICHELET LOUIS PAUL MILES AUTUMN MILLER DWAYNE MILLER JEFFERY S MILNER MARY

MITCHELL CAROLYN MITCHELL ELVA MOFFETT STEVE MOLYNEAUX DEANNE K MONCADA LAWRENCE E MONTGOMERY CHESTER MONTGOMERY SCOTT, MORT SRV MONTOYA LEROY MOODY DONNA J MOODY LUCILE

MOORE JIM MORGAN JEFFREY M MORGAN JIM MORGAN MARY MORGAN ROBERT MOSLEY DIONNA MUNSON CHARLES O MURPHY 1987 IRREV TR MURPHY BERT H MURPHY PETROLEU MURPHY PROFIT SHARING MUSICK JOHN NAVA HUMBERTO NAVA LUIS NEELY FERN W

NELSON KATHLEEN NELSON MELISSA D

NET PLUS INC

NEWLIN PELAGAYIA NM JUNIOR COLLEGE NOLAN LENDELL L NOLES JENNIFER

NORFOR SHALENA

NORWOOD SHAWN D NUEVO SEIS LTD NUNEZ JOSE NUNEZ MARIA R NUTHIN FANCY CAFE ODELL JOHN L OKELLEY EVIE DORIS OLDS JAMES L EST OROZCO JUAN ORTIZ ENRIQUE OSBORNE WESLEY V OSTERHOUT ANNA L OVERMIER RANDALL PADILLA ADRIANA PAGEL JESSICA PALMA

PARKER MARY J

2965494

PARKER NATALIE

2957221

PATHOLOGY CONSULTANTS NM PEER RUBY PEER RUBY MARY PENA ALMA PENA LARRY

2920287

2841661 2893472 2846506 2930272

2891984 2896247 2871421

2858954 2865680 2954597

PARTYKA ANDREW

PERALTA TERESA PEREZ CECILIA I PEREZ EVELYN

PEREZ LAZARO, YOLANDA PERRY F L PFINGSTEN FRED W

Roswell Daily Record

Continued next page

58 FISK RD 911 W MATTHEWS

DEXTER ROSWELL

1713 N UNION 1014 S UNION AVE 611 SUNRISE RD 605 S PLAINS PARK DR 605 S PLAINS PARK DR 211 S SHERMAN AVE 7037 VINEYARD RD 88 WILLARD 900 N RICHARDSON AVE #10 2301 E PINE LODGE #2 111 S PECAN GROVE RD 1908 W CAROLINA WAY 315 W MCGAFFEY ST 1901 S SUNSET AVE #1303 1207 N LEA AVE 87 HOLLOMAN PO BX 1712

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

PO BX 1675 15 RIVERSIDE DR 610 S MICHIGAN AVE

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

PO BX 206

1908 HEIGHTS 602 W FRAZIER ST 2107 W 1ST 45 A ST 4912 S LEA AV 601 W COUNTRY CLUB RD #202 2716 N PENNSYLVANIA #39 29 SANDHILL AVE 1206 RANCHO RD 201 S UNION AVE 6870 WICHITA RD

4024 S SPR LP PO BX 1060 PO BX 1052 PO BX 1244 606 N MISSOURI 5020 MOCKINGBIRD 700 N MISSOURI AVE 2601 N KENTUCKY 7341 PIMA RD BOX 459 PO BX 502 3820 E CROSSROADS 22 B ST 1614 N OHIO 511 W 7TH 1800 S ATKINSON 1209 S ELM AVE 508 SUNRISE RD 318 E JEFFERSON 872 SWINGING SPEAR RD 130 MANDAN RD 1207 W HOBBS SP 6 207 N UNION ST STE H 1115 S KENTUCKY 2003 E BLAND ST 8 1012 S PLAINS PARK DR PO BX 832 RT 2 BX 76B RT 2 BX 76B 1002 E 2ND ST 36 MORNINGSIDE DR 405 N KANSAS AVE 2725 N PENNSYLVANIA #129 717 BAHIA ST 101 S OHIO #B PO BX 675 2901 PURDUE DR 1210 N OHIO 1710 N KANSAS AVE

104 NORTH LEA AVE 77 WILLARD 208 E THIRD ST 1500 S WASHINGTON AVE 910 E BLAND PO BX 26 709 PENNSYLVANIA

1332 MCDOUGIL AVE 300 N UNION AVE 3108 LATIERRA DR PO BX 2164 PO BX 2164 PO BX 2545

PO BX 2164 6433 TOPEKA 1404 S MULBERRY 3201 E HERVEY 410 E 23RD ST LOT #64 333 W BRASHER RD 4705 APACHE HILLS DR 601 WEST SECOND #18 610 SOUTH BIRCH 3004 VASSAR DR 935 W MESCALERO 1202 RANCHO RD #526 1100 S WASHINGTON 1615 WEST WALNUT PO BX 2588 41 LANGLEY 5500 CHISUM RD 2103 N MAIN ST 1304 HIGHLAND RD 2315 N COLE 3204 RATCLIFF DR 1204 W DEMING ST 1015 IVY DR 1406 S KENTUCKY 2503 GAYE DR 1804 S MONROE 17 REYNOLDS PL 513 S SEQOUIA 1500 AVENIDA DEL SUMBRE 1508 S MICHIGAN AVE 707 1/2 N PENNYSLVANIA AVE 101 WEST COLLEGE BLVD 600 N RICHARDSON AVE 10 E BYRNE 125 RANSOM RD 1719 W ALAMEDA 2315 N SHERMAN AVE 802 W 12TH 609 S LEA AVE 5208 S PENNSLYVANIA 509 N RAIL RD 41 RIVERSIDE DR PO BX 2468

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER DEXTER ROSWELL

ROSWELL

LAKE ARTHUR ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL LAKE ARTHUR LAKE ARTHUR ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL

Legals

-------------------------------------------Publish Oct. 30, November 6, 2010 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES IN THE PROBATE COURT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF GORDON ERIC LACK, Deceased Probate: 8826

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The undersigned having been appointed Co-Personal Representatives of the ESTATE OF GORDON ERIC LACK, deceased. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims (i) within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this notice, or (ii) within two (2) months after the mailing or delivery of this notice, whichever is later, or be forever barred. s/Dorothy Edith Lack 3100 Jane Place NE #M101 Albuquerque, NM 87111 s/Christie Eileen Garfield Box 256 Corona, NM 88318

GARAGE SALES

DO N ’ T ’ MI S S A SALE BY MISSING THE 2:00 PM DEADLINE FOR PLACING YOUR ADS

001. North

5303 N Washington Saturday Moving Sale. Lots of house hold, furniture, tools, horse tack, designer purses, farm misc., exercise equipment. 1st road left off Main Street, just past Tractor Supply. 1/2 mile down Huskey Rd. on right. 7:30-3pm. No early Birds! 623-6584

002. Northeast

306 BROKEN Arrow Saturday 7am-12pm furniture, clothes, shoes, household items, nick nacks. 341 N. Red Bridge, Sat. 8am-1pm. Moving sale. Furniture, appliances, scrubs, misc.

824 SWINGING Spear, Sat. 9-4. Misc. 414 TIERRA Berrenda Sat. 8am-? Furniture, antiques, kids clothes & lots of misc.

#3 E.C. Tucker Ct. East on Berrendo to Mission Arch immediate left to EC Tucker Ct. Sat. only. 8-2pm Quality furniture, tools & misc. 3012 BANDOLINA, Sat. 8am-Noon. Moving sale. EVERYTHING MUST GO!

2727 N. Wilshire Blvd. Apt 1D, Fri-Sat 9-3. Everything must go!

604 MIMOSA Dr., Sat. 8am-Noon. Lots of misc., 2 families, cleaning out for winter! 200 E. College, Fri-Sat 105. Mens, womens, childrens clothing, furniture, collectibles, etc. 606 E. Vista Parkway, Saturday 6am. Got to get rid of some stuff. Maybe something you can’t live without. Misc.

003. East

1501 E 2nd at Amy’s Friday Saturday 9-3 Vintage clothes, small size, antiques, lots of misc.

004. Southeast

1402 E. McGaffey, Sat-Sun 8am-? Furniture, odds & ends, desks. 400 E. Bland, Sat-Sun 8am-5pm. Furniture.

005. South

29 MELTON Ct. Sat. 8a-? Artesia Hwy Turn right on mile marker 96 into Ken Rd approx. 1 mile, right on Melton Ct.

006. Southwest

ONE STOP Thrift Shop 1712 S. Sunset Sat. and Sun 9-5 Bedroom sets, beds, couches, hide-a-bed, armoire, dinette sets, china cabinets, refrigerator, washer and dryers, baby items, clothing, purses, shoes, jewelry, Sega Dreamcast and Nintendo 64 systems with games, NES games, dishes, and so much more! Come check out 4600 square feet of great deals!

ROSWELL

2003 S. Penn., Sat. 8am-2pm. Everything priced to sell, computer desk, dresser, misc. items.

ROSWELL

29 VON Leuven, Thurs-Sat 8am-5pm. Huge yard sale. Lots of everything.

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

1207 W. Hobbs Trlr #19, Sat-Sun 7am-6pm. 3 family yard sale. A lot of everything.

006. Southwest

CORNER OF S. Union & Plains Park, Sat. 10-4 & Mon. 10-4. Everything must go. 504 W. McGaffey, Sat. 8am, Large yard sale - a little bit of everything. 600 S. Spruce, Fri-Sat 84pm. Clothes, dishes, decorations, shoes, table w/6 chairs, toys, & trailer. 2809 S. Emerald Dr. Sat. & Sun. 7-1pm. Lots of everything, baby stuff, misc. 204 W. Mathews Sat. 7am2pm Huge yard sale. Free puppies. 6106 S Sunset/Hobson Rd Fri & Sat. 8-5 No early birds. Clothes, furniture. 502 W Deming at Lea Sat. thru Weds. 8am-? Huge Indoor- Outdoor sale. 1113 S. Missouri, Sat-Sun 7am. Whirl Pool refrigerator, freezer, solid oak entertainment center, misc., little bit of tools.

007. West

BLAIRS MONTEREY Flea Market 1400 W Second. Outback shed #107 Babe McClain owner. Clothing, tools, jewelry, VHS tapes, kitchen items, & lots more. Mon. Thurs & Fri. 10-5 Sat. & Sun. 9-5 weather permitting. Entrance off Sunset or thru Flea Market.

008. Northwest

5014 W. Berrendo, Sat., 10/31, 71pm. 3 Family garage sale. 4300 CHAPPARAL Rd. 3/10 mile west of Berrendo Elementary, turn south. Fri. Sat. 7am-? Furniture, kitchenware, linens, baby/kids & adult clothes, boots, Bose speakers, tools, lawn equipment, bikes, misc. 1600 N Ohio Sat. 7-? No early birds!! Huge 3 party yard sale, dishes, mens womens girls & baby clothing, carseats, strollers, king size comforter & sheet sets, standing jewelry box vanity, tools, lawnmowers a little bit of everything. 902 N. Union, Fri-Sat 6am6pm. Harley parts, clothes, tools, car parts. FURNITURE SALE Sat., Oct. 30, 8-11. 507 N. Lea Ave. or call 420-3443. Bedroom furniture-oak, 4 poster queen bed, dresser, & mirror, 2 bedside tables, queen Select Comfort mattress & base, armoire/TV entertainment center, Glass top/wood coffee table, end table, sofa table-set, antique DuncanPhyfe drop leaves (2) table, 4 dining chairs.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

025. Lost and Found LOST FEMALE Chihuahua, one eye, pregnant. Please call 6264687. $100 REWARD

LOST DIAMOND earring at RHS class reunion on Friday evening, Oct. 22 at Sally Port Inn. Reward. Call 623-1839 WHITE & orange male cat w/a bent tail, named Comet, in vicinity of Pine Lodge & N. Atkinson. If you have any info please call 420-2731. LOST BLACK & white Great Dane & Bassett/Beagle mix. Vicinity of McGaffey & Sycamore. Need medications. Reward offered. 575-910-0321 FOUND MALE Chihuahua 626-6679 LOST INDIAN ring necked parrot, mostly green in color. Reward offered. 622-2915

INSTRUCTION

EMPLOYMENT

045. Employment Opportunities 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.


Roswell Daily Record 2920191 2929577 2835008 2866724 2942027 2850454

2851498 2834863

2919903 2956390 2910598 2912972 2913030 2834983 2920554 2834456 2675535 2957224

2835146 2950007 2832862 2858961 2846310 2841354 2855946 2707026 2962472

2957033 2950009 2934488 2836736 2851220 2847545 2959618 2835676 2837268 2956485

2964587

2920193 2837269 2924704 2876889

2908075 2840511 2912970 2965500 2720893 2877828 2840722 2912975 2934054 2855871

2720899 2712468

2869518

2942058 2892866

2942059 2896256 2931708 2907604 2707374 2927615

2859627 2840672 2958263 2929793 2858817 2871646 2913055 2841665 2930342 2956383

2857672 2857674 2965505 2931605

2955576 2910719 2892086 2871016

2908532 2864939

2920123 2950034 2869348

2930657 2846265 2854707

2846352 2896014

2864955 2886105 2942074 2910762

2836588

2957801 2930389

2927761 2883072 2925007 2942090 2956556 2859119

2956517 2904875

2690321

2890583 2942097 2903815 2861144

2865753 2920816 2846016 2892878 2867148 2959675 2896886 2903749 2957069

2865765 2965529

2871101 2855909 2867151 2836750 2908234

2855922 2865773 2842100

2861846 2958346 2852366 2908949

Legals

PICKENS DOUGLAS PIERCE JANET PIERCY DEBORAH K PINEDA MARK A PINNACLE PETROL PINON RADIOLOGY SERVICES PINON RICK PIONEER SAVINGS & TR FA POHL GRETCHEN A POLLARD MARVELLE B POMPA STEPHANIE PONCEDELEON SARAH PORRAS ELISABETH PORTER KARYN POWELL GARRY POWERS CAROLYN S PRIMM DRUG PROFESSIONAL ANESTHESIA PROGRESSIVE INS PULIDO LUIS PURDY MARION JEWETT QUIJAS JOSE RACKLER DOMIE RAGAN CHARLES R RAINTREE APTS RAMIREZ RAMIREZ BAUDELIO, MARIA G RAMIREZ CORREA MAYRA RAMIREZ HENRY RAMON R REYNOSA RANKIN JESS RATCLIFFE SANDY RATTAN CODY J RAY JANE RAYMOND EDWIN S REACH 2000 READER CHARLES D

REDFERN SHARI

REED VANCE REGALADO ROBERTO REGALADO VICTOR S REGION VI HOUSING AUTHORITY RHODES FRANK, LINDA RICE CHRISTOPHER R RICE SEAN RICHARDS JANICE RICHARDSON TODD RICHBURG GARY, JUDY RIGDON MICHAEL RIVAS JOSE F RIVAS JOSE FRANCISCO RIVERA FRANCISCO A

RIVERA LAURA ROBERSON HOWARD

ROBERT E PENNINGTON MD PHD PC ROBERTS HUGH ALLEN ROBERTS KATHERINE

ROBERTS LAURA SUE ROBERTS LESTER SR RODRIGEZPABLO RODRIGUEZ AGATHA RODRIGUEZ DAVE P RODRIGUEZ FRANCISCO

RODRIGUEZ JOSE RODRIGUEZ ROBERTA RODRIGUEZ TOMMIE ROGERS DALE & MARLEY ROLLWITZ J ROMERO JERRY ROMERO PAUL ROMERO ROBIN ROMERO VANESSA ROSS NELL R

ROSWELL CLINIC CORP ROSWELL HOSPITAL ROSWELL HOSPITAL ROSWELL INDEPENDENT SCHL DIST ROSWELL TOYOTA RUDYS TOWING SERVICE RUSS PAT RUSS WILLIAM H JR

RUSSEL NICK RUSSELL SCOTT

RUVAL CABA ALFREDO O SAAVEDRA MANUEL S SALAS LUIS

SALAZAR CARLOS SALAZAR MARY SALCIDO ELSA

SANCHEZ DIANA SANCHEZ MARIBEL

SANCHEZ STEVEN SANDERS LORIN SANTA RITA EXPL SANTI CHANDRA

SAVAGE BROTHERS ELECTRIC SCHEIBE MAE L SCHREITER JEFFREY

SCHUT DOLORES SCITERN WINNIE SCOTT CAD SCOTTWINN LLC SEALE RAYMOND L SEBASTIAN ROOR CONNIE D SEDBERRY JOE W SEDILLO LESLIE

SELLS JOANN HARGRAVES SERAFINO ANN W SHACKELFORD WILBUR SHANER WILLIAM L JR SHARPE ROBERT H

SHAW JACQUELINE J SHELTON LYLE D SHIRLEY MILDRED SHORT IRENE SILLS ELIZABETH SIMPSON BURNELL D SINGER ANNIE SKIDMORE A L SKIPPER CURTIS D

SLATEN STANLEY SMITH CHARLES, YEAGER GINA SMITH FRANK SMITH JAMES L SMITH JUNE

SOARES NARCIE S SOGOR PETER, VILLANUEVA DELLA SOTELO FRANCES E SOUTH SPRINGS EXPLOR SOUTHEASTERN NM GRAZING SOUTHERN SKY SPELLER STEVEN R SPENCER RUTH B SPENCERBROWN TRACY

3409 RIVERSIDE DR 1011 W 14 ST PO BX 2366-115 57 G ST PO BX 2164

PO BX 8218 1 BRAZOS PL

PO BX 550 608 S 5TH 2003 E 19TH ST PO BX 4081 311 E LEWIS 301 3RD PO BX 184 408 S MAIN ST 501 N BROWN RD 711 N UNION 405 W COUNTRY CLUB RD 204 W 2ND, STE 4 404 MICHIGAN 1614 W 3RD 1212 W 2ND 5 3428 S UNION 7544 SHOSHONI RD PO BX 477 307 S KANSAS AVE

200 GV SECOND ST 6443 SHADOW RD 6474 BEARD ST 921 PECAN DR PO BX 2305 181 E DARBY RD 3724 E 2ND ST 901 DE SOSA 3102 ALHAMBRA DR PO BX 3068 3668 E CROSSROADS 120 W CROSSROADS HC 31 BX 1044 1411 W 7TH ST PO BX 30

PO DRAWER 2057 1500 W FIRST 806 W ABQ 121 E BYRNE 307 W ALAMEDA ST PO BX 176 1902 N MESA 1904 S MAIN ST #14 1609 S BEECH 2310 CARVER DR APT 591200 W MCGAFFEY ST 40 CONDE PLACE 5506 N OCOTHILLO AVE 405 W COUNTRY CLUB RD 508 PARKVIEW RD 201 S KENTUCKY AVE 508 PARKVIEW RD

209 W WALNUT 24 LAFAYETTE LP 501 BARNETT DR 1202 N MICHIGAN AVE 2206 JUNIPER 341 E 8TH ST PO BX 126 212 E 4 1200 S SUNSET AVE PO BX 308 2804 PURDUE 208 E MATHEWS 1412 HENDRICKS W 310 S EVERGREEN AVE PO BX 1029 PO BX 1029 117 E 19TH ST

25 MARTIN 1909 W 2ND ST 6221 DEVONIAN RD PO BX 3134 402 S SYCAMORE AVE 1104 W DEMING 9067 R BITTER LAKES RD PO BX 3114 37 CONDE PL 2901 ALHAMBRA DR #1 608 W MATHEWS ST 2201 W MESCALERO 171 SOUTH STANTON 32 DOVER RD 1513 S MULBERRY AVE 804 W 10TH ST 3014 N GARDEN AVE 3400 W 8TH ST 307 THREE CROSS DR

PO BX 38 2004 N MESA AVE 1400 ATKINSON AVE #18 214 E MCGAFFEY ST 805 E 19TH 222 THISTLE RD PO BX 1834 1311 N LEA 3826 E CROSSROADS 310 E BLAND ST 1205 NORTH MONTANA 610 WEST TILDEN ST PO BX 1456 512 NM DR PO BX 1312 1000 S PENNSYLVANIA AVE 80 W DARBY RD 2302 N GARDEN AVE 700 N MISSOURI O 1613 S PENN 29 LAFAYETTE LP 2811 LARGO 705 S PLAINS PARK PO BX 2243 1504 N GREENWOOD AVE PO BX 135

3410 N ATKINSON 700 SERENA DR 15 DEL NORTE DR 117 E MESCALERO RD #6 178 CHEYENNE RD

28B BENT TREE 505 1/2 N OHIO AVE PO BX 1269

PO BX 2914 PO BX 2167 6534 YO ROAD 1006 S WYOMING 1008 N KENTUCKY

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL LAKE ARTHUR ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL HAGERMAN ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL DEXTER DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL HAGERMAN ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL

Legals 2843309 2908102 2890612 2921914 2921915

2886241 2934503 2893030 2846210 2865008

2855927 2862787 2833431

2955229

2846350 2896118

2865015 2753119

2871158 2855943 2839049 2871658

2908861 2956648 2838681 2855951 2925206

2931521 2871173

2942168 2835150 2907740 2930453 2840898 2835772 2886306 2846518 2853209

2852606 2934504

2929088 2876972

2836755 2867180 2934506

2865037 2846166 2731812 2861145 2865043

2876909 2960187 2942194 2847351

2906643 2851934 2836637 2930483 2835195 2877697

2925322 2929114 2895927

2746033 2886407 2862182 2865936

2851571

2857797 2865061 2886424 2925365

2865062 2699245 2846245 2865065 2896165

2837308 2846040 2835048 2956534 2855940

2838333 2930504

2761240 2908854 2835620 2954621 2965326

2871262

2954925 2956406 2942219 2865082 2865083 2856883 2958959

2833774

2931100

2925483 2865095 2908606 2832458 2838550 2877841

2952668 2868283 2846066 2888233 2942253 2930549 2851293 2851294 2919950 2928104

2890744 2863692

CLASSIFIEDS SQUIRE LEONA STAAB BRENDALYN STALLARD GEORGE T

STANGEBYE ERIC T, SOPHIA ROSE STANGEBYE ERIC T, THEODORE OKEEFFE STEEN HARRY STEPHENS JOE R STEPHENS RICK STIGGINS LUKE STOESSER ANNETTE STOKES ROBERT C

STRICKER PAUL, WELLS FARGO STRONG ROSE

SUNWEST BK OF ROSWELL SUTTON DAVID TABREZ SALMA A

TALAMANTES LILLIANA TALBERT CLARA M

TALLEY RHOMA G TAQUERIA LA FOGATA TAVAREZ AMANDA TAYLOR JASON

TAYLOR MELANIE A TAYLOR VICTOR MAX TESILLO EMILIO S TESILLO STEVEN TESTORFF MARTIN

THE TOPOF THIMM WILLIAM E

THOMPSON DAVID L THOMPSON ELLEN THOMPSON KIMBERLY THOMPSON MEAGAN THOMPSON WINNIE THRIFTY CAR SALES AUTO SOURCE TIAJUANA MEXICAN REST TILLER JEFFERY A TIRE TIME

TORBENSEN MARTY TORRES LUZ C

TORREZ MARTY TOWN OF LAKE ARTHUR CITY HALL TROST JEFFREY M JR TROUBLEFIELD BILL TRUJILLO GILBERT

TRUJILLO TERI R TUCKNESS SARA TURNER CHARLES R (JR) TURNER CHRISTOPHER TURNER JOSIE

UNITED BLOOD SYSTEMS UNITED DRILLING UNITED NM BANK URETHANE CONTRACTORS SPLY USA TITLE LOAN VACCA HERBERT VALE ERICA VALENCIA LORENZO VALERIO PEDRO VAN WINKLE ROBERT G

VANEATON JAMES VANLANINGHAM PAUL VANTAGE ENGINEERING & CONST VASQUEZ ISMAEL VASQUEZ JULIAN VASQUEZ MARIA VEGA REBECCA, LEONCIO

VENABLES RAISSA

VENTURA DIANE VERDUZCO LEONEOL VERHOEVEN GARY VICKERS MARK

VICUNA MARTIN VILLA ANDY VILLA MANUEL VILLARREAL RAE LYNN VISSER MITCH K

VOWELL MIKE VRSKA GEORGE F II WAGNER GARY B WALDROP VELMA O WALKER BUDDY

WALLACE JAMES R WALTON MILDRED

WARD BESSIE V WARD IRMA WASHBURN WEBRE BESS S WHITAKER JOHN B MD

WHITE LILLIAN C

WHITED MARGARET WHITEHEAD STANLEY EST WIGGINS JANE WIGGINS MONA WILBER THOMAS WILLARD SYBIL WILLIAM R BOSTON ESTATE WILLIS GEORGIANA WILSON HAZEL G

WILSON JAMES, SHARON WILSON JOHN WILSON THERESA WINCHESTER PATRICIA R WISE JAMES G WOLFE GWENDOLYNE, STEVEN WOOD ALICE WOOD CHARLES G WOOD THEODORE B WOOD VIRGINIA R XY LTD YATES CAROL YOUTH FISHING CLINIC YU LIK K ZAMORA JOSEPH ZAMORA LEE R

ZIA DATA SEARCH CORP ZUBER PROPERTIES RM INC

Legals

Saturday, October 30, 2010

AVE 1208 AMBHERST ST 3106 ENCANTE DR 227 PEACEFUL VALLEY DR

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

16 RIVERSIDE DR 1310 W 3RD ST 414 E 23RD ST SPC 3 2400 URTON RD 1801 WESTERN 112 S KENTUCKY AVE 407 S PENNSYLVANIA #N 3203 N WASHINGTON AVE 3013 N WASHINGTON

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

16 RIVERSIDE DR

500 N MAIN ST 5104 S MAIN 12 BERRENDO MEADOWS CIR 337 E LEWIS ST 207 NORTH MICHIGAN 317 SHERRILL LN #3 1505 W 2ND ST 3213 BANDOLINA DR 101 W COLLEGE BLVD 4376 PO BOX 64 E ST R1AC 1514 S ELM AVE 904 W MATHEWS ST 855 SWINGING SPEAR RD 160 JACKSON RD 2550 BENT TREE RD #F 606 W FIRST ST 4609 ACACIA RD 5 CORANAD CIR 403 S BIRCH AVE PO BX 511

2610 W 2ND ST 3601 N MAIN ST 121 NO NAME RD 202 E COLLEGE BLVD 1615 W WALNUT 7157 OLD CHISUM TRL 4500 RANCHITO DR

PO BX 10 3205 FUTURA DR PO BX 167 1213 W MATHEWS ST 809 W 12TH ST 201 WEST DEMING PO BX 2183 3301 BELMONT DR 1209 AVENIDA DEL SUMBRE 3 GRAND AVE PLAZA PO BX 32130 PO BX 1977

1208 N GRAND 205 S MAIN ST 812 S LEA PO BX 6053 200 OFFUTT ST #10 6 SHELBY PL 319 BROKEN ARROW RD PO BX 3671 505 N MAIN ST

PO BX 2602 413 S EVERGREEN 3615 E BRASHER RD 312 E BONNEY 601 S SYCAMORE AVE 8 HOWARD COOK RD 4612 PAUL AVE BOX 4201 3968 S SPRING LP 823 TRAILING HEART RD PO BX 6192 PO BX 224 806 S RICHARDSON 800 GLAND ST 3950 COTTONWOOD LN 130 FUNK RD PO BX 2087 700 N MISSOURI #32 1414 S UNION AVE 1000 E COLLEGE BLVD TRLR 25 500 S CYPRESS 1101 N ATKINSON AVE PO BX 1896 3421 S UNION AVE PO BX 1594 2614 SHERRILL LN 405 W COUNTRY CLUB RD 1111 SOUTH MISSOURI AVE PO BX 39 3010 N GARDEN AVE 8029 LINCOLN 2103 E 19TH ST 1619 W JUNIPER ST PO BX 248 1 RIVER VIEW CIRCLE 1700 W HENDRICKS #3 1414 S UNION AVE #C2 2021 CLOVER LN 300 GREEN AVE 1012 PLAZA DEL SOL 200 E 22ND #70 104 EAST 6TH ST

1901 HORSE CTR RD 914 N OHIO 2904 PRINCETON 607 S MISSOURI 211 W CHISUM PO BX 569 326 E 6TH ST 1912 W 2ND ST 3117 N MAIN ST 573 E MERCALERO 801 1/2 E MCGAFFEY ST PO DRAWER 2188 4501 N MAIN

ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL LAKE ARTHUR

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL

DEXTER ROSWELL

LAKE ARTHUR ROSWELL HAGERMAN

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL HAGERMAN ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL LAKE ARTHUR ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL HAGERMAN ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL HAGERMAN ROSWELL ROSWELL DEXTER

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

ROSWELL ROSWELL ROSWELL

C3

045. 045. Employment Employment Opportunities Opportunities COMFORT KEEPERS NOW HIRING! The TOP in-home care agency serving Roswell & Artesia seeks F/T or P/T Reliable, experienced caregivers and/or CNAs for immediate work. Week-ends or bilingual a plus. You’ll make every day special for someone and this will be the best job you ever had! Call Carol @ 624-9999 and apply in Roswell at 1410 S. Main or at 502 W Texas, Ste C, Artesia. www.comfortkeepers.com.

Receptionist/Personal

Assistant needed for busy law office. Please send cover letter, resume and references to P.O. Box 1327 Roswell, NM 88202. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENTIST & Specialist-O Job ID# 12072 The NM Environment Department, Air Quality Bureau, is seeking a fulltime operator in Roswell to undertake environmental air quality monitoring work in Roswell, Hobbs, and Carlsbad, using knowledge of physical and life science practices and principals to ensure compliance with the requirements of the Clean Air Act (C.A.A.) and Part 58 of Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Successful candidate will independently operate continuous and non-continuous ambient air monitoring equipment in Air Quality Control Region 5 of New Mexico. Basic duties include driving to the monitoring sites, maintaining and trouble shooting monitors, and using the air monitoring software to remotely oversee the functioning of the monitors.

BS Degree in Engineering, Environmental Science, Natural Science, or Physical Science. Four (4) years experience in Engineering, Environmental Science, Natural Science, or Physical Science. Experience with a PC using MS Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.

The job requires working outdoors in often inclement weather. Fieldwork requires driving long distances, climbing ladders, and working on rooftops. Some duties will also be performed in an office or laboratory. Salary near midrange $22.74/hour, higher or lower based on experience. Applicants must apply no later than November 12 at: www.spo.state.nm.us/ Click on apply for state government jobs, select advanced search and enter job number. Follow all instructions and include resumé. The State of New Mexico is an Equal Opportunity Employer

BUSY OPTOMETRIST office seeking Full Time Employee. Individual must be dependable, well organized and hard working. Experience and bilingual a plus. Please send resume to P.O. Box 1897, Unit 247, Roswell, NM 88202. SALES REPRESENTATIVE - For Las Vegas, NM area. The Las Vegas Optic is seeking applications for a full time position in sales. Successful candidates must have good people skills as well as the ability to sell advertising and help businesses grow, Experience isn't a requirement. Resumes should be mailed to the attention of Vincent Chavez, Optic advertising manager, P.O. Box 2670, Las Vegas, NM 87701, or e-mail to vchavez@ lasvegasoptic.com. ALL CASH VENDING ROUTE! Be Your Own Boss! 25 machines + Candy All for $9995. 877915-8222

KENEMORE WELDING is looking for back truck & kill truck operators. Please call Robert at 575-390-6734 REHABCARE IS immediately interviewing PT, OT, SLP for staff positions and lead PT for MSU setting, for our SNF/Short-Term Rehab Units in Roswell, New Mexico.

*Sign on bonus available* We offer excellent pay, a generous comp package, I-touch technology, and more! For consideration, call Chris Hellman at 800-677-1202 ext. 2263, Email: cdhellman@rehabcare.com EOE. Live and Work In Colorado!!! Hiring a Graphic Designer. “Don’s Directory of the Oil & Gas Industry” www.donsdirectory.com Call Mike Hart 888-6229943 or email Mike@donsdirectory.com

BETWEEN HIGH School and College? Over 18? Drop that entry level position. Earn what you’re worth!!! Travel/ w Successful Young Business Group. Paid Training. Transportation, Lodging Provided. 1-877-646-5050 KBIM RADIO is seeking part time board operator. Contact Gary Lee at 575-623-9100.

ROSWELL HYUNDAI NOW HIRING - Customer Service Specialist. Seeking a courteous professional with an outgoing personality. We offer an excellent benefit package including HEALTH, DENTAL,VISION, 401k and PAID VACATION. We are an EOE; all applicants must pass a drug test, background check and driving report. Apply in person, ask for Eric. Roswell Hyundai 1909 W. 2nd St. TAXIDERMIST ASSISTANT needed. Must be dependable and able to work independently. Duties include prep work, cleaning, and lots of sewing. PT Mon-Fri 1-5. Starting pay $7.50. Drug test required. Please call 575-622-3640. EOE.

ROSWELL TOYOTA: Immediate opening For Sales and Customer Service. Friendly, outgoing, self-motivated, works well w/others, bi-lingual a plus. Busy, fast paced dealership. Full benefits & 401K. Apply in person. Ask for B.J. at 2211 W. Second St. AVON, Buy or Sell. Pay down your bills. Start your own business for $10. Call Sandy 317-5079 ISR.

ROSWELL LIVESTOCK & Farm Supply has an immediate opening for an experienced tire tech/truck accessory installer. Great working environment. Apply in person at Roswell Livestock, 1105 E 2nd, ask for Mike. CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE/ ROUTE DRIVER

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. Applications available at 515 N. Virginia, Roswell, NM 88201 from 10/27/ to 11/02/10. EOE EMPLOYER IMMEDIATE OPENING for Receptionist and Salesperson. Competitive pay and excellent benefits. Looking for long term employment. Must have good people, communication skills and professional attire. Health benefits: 401K, Dental and Vision. Apply in person @ Roswell Honda 2177 W. 2nd St.

NATIONAL GREETING Card Company needs parttime merchandiser for the Roswell Area! Must have phone and transportation. Respond to: agmerchandisers@yahoo.c om.

PRODUCTION WORKERS needed. Must be able to pass drug test. Apply at AmeriPride Linen between 8:00am and 11:00am 10/2/ thru 11/03 at 515 N. Virginia, Roswell, NM 88201. Competitive Salary and benefits! No phone calls will be accepted! AA/EEO Employer M/F/D/V Certified Vet Technician Position available at progressive veterinarian facility. Working with dogs, cats, and horses. Must be responsible, multi-tasker with good communication skills. Will train the right candidate. Drop off resume at 1607 Fowler Road.

DIESEL MECHANIC (Lubbock)-Must have one year experience & own tools. Standard Energy Services (oilfield services). Call 806-777-8590 for more information. EEO

SERVICES

080. Alterations

HILO & Stitch Alterations, from hems, zippers, repairs etc. and sewing contracts. Call 575-4200800 or drop by 1300 N Washington Ave

105. Childcare

NEED CHILD care? Find the widest range of available childcare for your children and their needs. 1800-691-9067 or www.newmexic okids.org. You may also call us; Family Resource & Referral 6229000 and we can help you navigate the system.


C6 Saturday, October 30, 2010

CLASSIFIEDS

105. Childcare

140. Cleaning 140. Cleaning 225. General Construction HOUSE/OFFICE Cleaning low JD CLEANING Service, Licensed

prices. Excellent work call anytime. 575-973-2649 or 575-973-3592

WILL PROVIDE child care. State licensed, registered with Comida program. Mon-Fri, 6am-4:30pm. For more information call 623-1837. LICENSED HOME accepting private pay & CYFD kids. All shifts. 420-6803

HOUSEKEEPING SERVICES Home and/or Office. Attention to detail, highly dependable & honest. 578-1447 or (575) 749-4900

Looking for

Toughnecks Are You

Tough Enough? JOB FAIR

Precision Drilling is currently seeking smart, professional, strong, committed, resourceful and high performing individuals for our West Texas/Mid-Continent operations. If you have what it takes, join our team today.

Wednesday, Nov. 3rd 8am – 5pm MCM Elegante 5200 East University Odessa, TX 79762 (432) 368-5885

Please complete an application online prior to attending the job fair at:

Please bring two forms of identification to Job Fair.

www.toughnecks.com Precision Drilling, an international Oil & Gas Drilling Company, is a leading provider of safe, efficient and innovative contract drilling, well servicing and strategic support services. We offer competitive salaries and a robust offering of benefits, including medical, dental, vision, life insurance, 401(k), and more.

Now Hiring: Drillers Derrickhands Motorhands Floorhands

and bonded. References. 623-4252.

I DO general H/C. Have references. Call 623-0316

CANINE CLEANUP Services, low rates, reliable service. Call 420-4669

185. Electrical

ALLIANCE ELECTRIC Call for your discounted electrical prices on new construction, remodels, service changes. Lic# 367386 575840-7937

200. Fencing Rodriguez Construction FOR WOOD, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100

M.G. Horizons Install all types of fencing. Free estimates. Chain link, wood, or metal. 623-1991.

210. Firewood/Coal SEANSONED MOUNTAIN wood $100 1/2 cord. 626-9803. CORDOVA CHIMNEY 623-5255 or 910-7552 after 3pm.

QUALITY FIREWOOD, price matched, same day free delivery & stack, checks ok, 575-317-4317

225. General Construction Carpentry, Drywall, Painting, doors, windows, tile work. Lic., Insured, Bonded. 914-7002 Dean

Precision Drilling strives to provide equal employment and advancement opportunities to all individuals.

TEE TIME Construction Commercial/Residential Construction - Framing, cement, roofing, drywall/painting, New Construction of Homes, Additions and Remodeling. Licensed and Bonded. Call 575-626-9686

MILLIGAN CONTRACTING. Bathroom remodels, interior painting, home improvements and so much more. References upon request. Listed on Angieslist.com. Licensed, bonded, insured. Call Geary @ 578-9353.

ROOFING “ALL Types” Commercial, residential, complete remodeling 30 yrs exp. Lic-Bonded-Insured 317-0115 or 637-2222 HANDY MAN LIcensed & free estimates. Gary Robertson 1-801-673-4626 or Jay 575-420-6654. 15 yrs exp. Remodeling, plumbing, roofing. All forms of construction.

005 010 015 020 025

045 050 055 060

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

• Ads posted online at no extra cost

(includes tax)

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

CLASSIFICATION

PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE

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

Greenscapes Sprinkler Systems Lawn mowing, field mowing, gravel, sodhydro seed, pruning, tilling, For dependable & reliable service call 622-2633 or 910-0150. WEEKEND WARRIOR Lawn Service mowing, property cleanup, residential rain gutter cleaning, and much more 575-626-6121

305. Computers

PHILLIPS COMPUTER, PC repair, data retrieval, virus removal, free est. & reasonable rates, senior discounts, credit cards accepted 1400 W. 2nd (Blairs Monterey Flea Mrkt) booth 3 Call Brian 914-0788 or 623-2411.

CHIMNEY SWEEP Have your woodstove or fireplace inspected and cleaned. Dust free Guarantee. 35 years Experience, Licensed, Insured. Bulldog Janitorial Services 575-308-9988

COMPUTER DOCTOR

PROPERTY CLEANUPS Will tear down old buildings, barns, haul trash, old farm equipment. 347-0142 or 3177738

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

Instruction

030 Education 035 Music – Dance/Drama 040 Instructions Wanted

WEED MOWING, Lots & Fields scraping. Property clean-up. Free est. John 317-2135

ALL TYPES of landscaping specialize in sprinklers, brush hog just ask we may do it. 914-3165

232. Chimney Sweep

235. Hauling

EXPIRES ________

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

WORD AD DEADLINE To Place or Cancel an Ad

COMMERCIAL ACCOUNT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .NOON SUNDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .FRIDAY, 2:00 PM MONDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .FRIDAY, 2:00 PM TUESDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .MONDAY, 2:00 PM WEDNESDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .TUESDAY, 2:00 PM THURSDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .WEDNESDAY, 2:00 PM FRIDAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .THURSDAY, 2:00 PM POLICY FOR CLASSIFIED ADTAKING

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

CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS

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

LEGALS

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

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

Employment

Microsoft Certified 50% off any repair (Labor only) 575-208-9348 Call Billy

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

Dennis the Menace

Roswell Lawn Service rake leaves, trim trees, general cleanup, 420-3278

CLASSIFIEDS INDEX

www.precisiondrilling.com

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

Roswell Daily Record

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

310. Painting/ Decorating

Quality Painting! Interior, Exterior at prices you can afford. Mike 9107012

312. Patio Covers

MG HORIZONS. Patio, curbing, driveways, sidewalks, slab, etc. Free estimates. 623-1991

330. Plumbing

Plumber Needs Work. Steve’s Plumbing & Heating. 28 yrs exp. 622-9326

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 Need A Roof?

Call R & R Construction 18 years in Roswell. 622-0072 Guaranteed Shingle Roof jobs. Locally owned. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 6222552.

395. Stucco Plastering

M. G. Horizons All types of Stucco and Wire lath. Free Estimates 6231991

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

410. Tree Service

STUMP GRINDING. Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 623-4185 ALLEN’S TREE Service. The oldest tree service in Roswell. Million $ ins. 6261835

435. Welding RANCHERO’S WELDING and Construction On site repairs or fabrication. Pipe fencing, Wrought iron, Work, Roofs, Shingle, Metal, Stone, Concrete, Drywall, Tape, Frame, Block, Lath, Stucco, Tile. Bobcat Work Services. More Info www.rancheroswelding .com Hector (575) 910-8397

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

FINANCIAL

REAL ESTATE

490. Homes For Sale

ADVERTISE YOUR HOME ALL OVER NEW MEXICO. CALL THE DAILY RECORD FOR DETAILS. 622-7710 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.

PRICE REDUCED more - Open House Daily - 1PM to 7PM - Now $122,500 #3 Forest Drive. 2050 SF 4 Br, 1 3/4 Bath. Brokers welcome. Esquibel Real Estate (575) 6267550 (575) 312-3529 Cisco

490. Homes For Sale

4 BR 1 BA, fncd yrd, new paint, carpet, doors, ceiling fans, $59,500. 624-1331 M-Th 8am-4pm FOR SALE By Owner 1912 W. 4th St. Built 2005, 2500 sq. ft., 3 large bedrooms w/walk-in closet space. 2 full bathrooms. Custom cabinets throughout the home. Close to the Spring River Golf Course & Walking Trail. Call 6227046 for appointment. $295,000

DRIVE BY 505 S. Mississippi very, very nice 3 br 2 bath, well located $89,500. 623-6165 412 LA Fonda, 3/2, 2 living areas, newly remodeled, refrig. air, NE location, near good schools. $119k, 4200929

2 lots, 5ac overlooking city, 1ac in town SW. Willing to trade for your home & owner can carry the balance on short term note can add addtl cash, value approx. $60k ea. 910-7969 or 914-3271 REAL ESTATE Auction Nominal Opening Bid: $10,000. 400 S Lea Ave, Roswell, 4BR/2BA, 2,106sf+/Sells: 8:00AM Mon., Nov. 1 on site. Open to the Public Open this weekend, please go to williamsauction.com or call 800-801-8003 for details. Many properties now available for online bidding! A Buyer’s Premium may apply. Williams & Williams NM RE LIC#18340 DANIEL NELSON BROKER

NEWLY REMODELED 3br, 2ba, heat pump+1br house, 6k down. Al 703-0420 OWNER FINANCING 1806 Western Ave 3/2, 10% dn, payment approx. $1300 mo. 149k, 317-0177 3305 RIVERSIDE Dr. 2,222 sq. ft., 4/2.5/2, fp, hot tub, custom cabinets, $256k. 622-7010 FOR SALE By Owner: 2614 N. Pennsylvania Townhouse. 2BR/2BTH. 1750 Sq. Ft. New appliances. Below market value. $118,000.00 6236748

495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale

WATER, WATER, WATER. 3 acres with central water, hard surfaced streets, near Ruidoso. Only $17,900. Call NMLR 1-866-906-2857. 4 Plus Acres off Pine Lodge Rd on Brenda Rd $25,000; terms, $2,500 dn, 0% int., $250 mo. (575)361-3083/887-5915. 10 ACRES of senior water rights. Location: Just east of Roswell. $6500/acre. Call: 623-9952

500. Businesses for Sale

FOR LEASE-1200 sq ft office w/restroom, a/c, good parking, great downtown location, $400 per month. 212 W.1st. 317-6479 STORAGEMAX- 17 40‘ metal containers, 37’ hauling trailer. ‘06 1 ton Dodge. Serious inq. 575317-4551

505. Investment/ Commercial/ Business Property

5.26 ACRES commercially zoned, east of Allsup’s at RIAC entrance. $60,000. $7,000 down/$745 mo. @ 8% int. for 8 yrs. John Owen, Inc., Owner/Broker 623-3322. PRICE REDUCED Commercial Property formerly C&J Nursery, 410 S. Sunset, $40k. 3176099 or 623-1092

Restaurant bldg, $275K, cash or will trade for Ruidoso property, 624 1331 for appt, M-Th, 8AM-4PM


Roswell Daily Record 510. ResortOut of Town TRADE - Alto cabin for Roswel property. Call John Grieves 6267813. Prudential Enchanted Lands, REALTORS®.

515. Mobile Homes - Sale

WE BUY used mobile homes. Single and double wides 622-0035. D01090 NICE 2005 28x56 Fleetwood doublewide Anniversary model. 3br, 2ba. Must move, Est. value $41,000. Asking $35,000. 575-355-9050 1997 CLAYTON 16x60 3br 2ba. Very nice and clean. Setup on lot in Roswell. Fenced, large carport and large storage building. Selling both for $44,900. Ph. 622-0035 D01090. VERY NICE 2002 Clayton 16x60 2 bedroom 2 bath. Has refrigerator, cook stove Refrigerated air plus some furniture. Setup in park in Hobbs or can be moved. Call 575-622-0035. D01090. 2005 SOLITAIRE 28x50, 3 bed room 2 bath, covered deck, Dbl carport, 12x24 workshop, located in Roswell’s finest 55+ Park. 575-622-5569

520. Lots for Sale

OWNER FINANCING for a limited time. Ready to build 5 acre lots w/ great views & good covenants. Located 9 miles West of Roswell @ the Club House Banquet Facility. Free land maps and at entrance. 575-623-1800. www.BuenaVidaLand.com PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, Owner will finance with 10% down, New Construction only (no mobile homes), , Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd. between Country Club & Berrendo Rd. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 6266791, 626-4337 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. Enchanted Hills on Sanders St. 125x124, $30,000. No covenants. Call 910-3247 for info.

RENTALS

535. Apartments Furnished 1 BD, all bills pd, no pets, no smoking, no HUD - 623-6281

1 & 2 BR’s, 1BA, utilities paid, No HUD, no pets, 2 person max, 624-1331 for appt, M-Th, 8am-4pm 1 BDR, fully furnished, near NMMI, private yard, no pets, no smoker, $850 includes utilities, 317-0080 for application.

540. Apartments Unfurnished

VALLE ENCANTADA YOUR BEST $ RENTAL VALUE! LARGE 1,2,3 BEDROOMS. FREE UTILITIES. unfurnished, laundry room, playground, pool, ample parking. 2001 South Sunset. 6233722. PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHAN TED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN. BEST VALUE IN TOWN 3br/2ba, $580+elec, newly remodeled, only a few apts left, 1br $380, 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944

540. Apartments Unfurnished ALL BILLS PAID 3br, 2ba, $680 mo., brand new everything. 1br $480. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944

1BR, 750 sq ft, $380 + elec. Central heating, ref air, new carpet, paint & tile. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944 3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, 930 sf, $580 plus electric. 502 S. Wyoming. 2 bedroom, 1 bath $480 or 1 bedroom $380. Call 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. VERY SMALL 1 bedroom w/large fenced in yard. $300 mo., $200 dep. 6259208

305 W. Deming alley apartment, 1br, refrig. air, utilities pd., $450 mo, $400 dep. No pets. 623-7678

NE 2BR, 2 ba, recent remodel, central ht, $595, water pd., st, fridg, DW, no pets. 207 E 23rd 317-1078

711 BAHIA.-$1025 a mo, $1000 Dep., 2/2, 2 Car Gar -Stove, Frig, DW Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-624-2262 www.roswellforrent.com

2601-2 N. Kentucky-$800 a mo, $400 Dep., 2/1, All utilities paid -Stove, Frig., DW. Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-6242262 www.roswellforrent.com

1 & 2 BR’s, 1BA, 3 locations, No HUD, no pets, rental history req., 6241331 for appt, M-Th, 8am4pm 1 BDR, near NMMI, private yard, no smoker, $650 includes utilities, 317-0080 for application.

REMODELED 1 br, utilities included for $550 mo. $250 deposit SW 910-8603 2 BR. 1700 W First St. No pets. $495 + electric. 637-9992.

APTS FOR rent 1,2,3, bedrooms some all bills paid call mike roswell area cell (575)637-2753.

908 W. 8th St Apt C, 1 bd, 1 ba, appliances. $200 dep. $300 mo. water & elec. pd. 505-296-4057 105 S Ohio 1 br studio apt. $550 mo. 408 N Lea 2 br apt $675. All bills paid on both. Call 652-9682 2301 N. Grand, 2br, 1.5ba, 1car garage & laundry room. 910-4225.

545. Houses for RentFurnished

BEAUTIFUL BRAND new 3br, 2ba house, FLETC ready. 623-8240 2 BR, 2 BA, lawn care incl, No HUD, no pets, 2 person max, 624-1331 for appt, MTh, 8AM-4PM 3-4 bd/2 ba, great yard, NRoswell, $1200 mo., references 619-993-5604.

NOW AVAILABLE 2/2/1 CAR GARAGE This is a fully-furnished, all electric, newer duplex with all amenities. Xeriscape landscaping with fenced backyard, quiet neighborhood, close to shopping + schools. For showing, please call Eliot at (719) 237-4680.

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 FLETC SPECIAL. 3 BR 2 Bath. 2 car garage. Security. Completely furnished with all amenities. Fishing privileges. $70/day. Call: 623-9304

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

FOR LEASE: 1yr, 3br, 1 3/4ba, din. rm, den, 2 car carport, covered patio, walled backyard 1008 Rancho Rd. $1000mo., $600dep. Ref required. 626-4072 LARGE TRILEVEL home, 4 BR, 2 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard. $1050 per mo., $1000 deposit. Located at 2404 S Baylor in Roswell. (575) 623-1800 or (575) 420-5516. 317-6409 LARGE EXECUTIVE Townhome NE location 3 br, 3 ba. 2 car garage, many extras $1250 mo. $800 dep. 420-4535

1720 N. Michigan, 3br, 2ba, ref. air, w/d hookups, no pets, $850 mo, $500 dep., 637-8234.

TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262 CLEAN 2BDRM 1 bath, garage, appliances. $650+ dep. No HUD. Avail. Nov. 1st. Taking apps 626-2156 or 623-5428. 2BR, washer & dryer hookup, $475 mo., $400 dep. No ut. pd., HUD ok. 625-0079 or 840-6250.

LARGE 3/2, unfurnished w/ref. air, 1212 N. Washington, no HUD. 6238240 3 BD/1 ba. 1 car gar. 66 G St., ref air, RIAC $650 mo., $650 dep. 6279942.

1209 W. Summit, 3br, 2ba, $800 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604.

1406 CIRCLE Diamond, 4br, 3ba, $1900 month, Century 21 H, 3117 N. Main 575-622-4604. 2211 S. Union, 4 BR 2 BA, $1000 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604

2008 CLOVER, 2br, 2ba, $900 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604. 1800 W. Alameda, 3 BR 2BA, $950 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575622-4604

203 E. Reed, 2br, 1ba, $525 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604

1514 W. Tilden, 2 BR 1 BA, $600 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604 #9 HUNSICKER, 2br, 1ba, $500 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604. 50 MARK Rd 3br, 2ba $1400 month, Century 21 HP 3117 N Main 575-6224604

GOOD LOCATION Large 2 bedroom - appliances, w/d hookups, $550 mo., $450 dep. No HUD, no pets. 575-914-0531 1BR, 1BA, carport, alarm, lawn care, water incl., 2 person max. 637-8467. No HUD. $695/1mo dep. 1806 WESTERN- $825 a mo, $750 Dep., 3/2, 2 Car Gar- Stove, Frig, DW Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-6242262 www.roswellforrent.com

315 BROKEN Arrow - $825 a mo, $750 Dep., 3/2, 1 Car Gar- Stove, FrigNew paint, New Carpet. Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-6242262 www.roswellforrent.com 2&3 BRs Houses, NO HUD, no pets, good pmt history req'd, 624 1331 for appt, M-Th 8AM-4PM

511 S Evergreen- $750 a mo, $650 Dep., 3/2, 1 Car Gar- Stove, Frig Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-624-2262 www.roswellforrent.com

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3Average; 2-So-so; 1-Diffi- JACQUELINE cult BIGAR ARIES (March 21-April 19) The impossible becomes possible with the aid of a very caring friend or YOUR HOROSCOPE partner. Listen to your inner voice. Build your relationship without offending a very rough partner. Tonight: Make the most of the night. Someone would be happy to help you along. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might need to consider a family member more often and understand what is motivating him or her Sometimes you are more critical of yourself than anyone else. Confusion surrounds a partnership. Tonight: Entertain from your place. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Touch base with others. How can you get what you want if you don’t put this desire out into the universe? You could be developing a new hobby or interest. Creativity comes from spending time with a kid or becoming more like one yourself. Tonight: Add life and controversy to the moment.

CLASSIFIEDS

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

639 E. Cherry 2 BR 1 bath with carport, no Hud or pets $500. 6269347 125 W Orchard Park (Dexter) - $1300 a mo, $1300 Dep., 3/2, 2 Car Gar- Stove, Frig, DW, Pool, Horse Barn. Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-624-2262 www.roswellforrent.com

THREE BEDROOM 1 bath, brick, new carpet, clean, Senior discount, 2314 N. Davis. $675 plus deposit. 575-622-4641 NEWLY REMODELED 4BR, 2 BA. $900m. $600 dep. No pets, no HUD. 403 S. Birch 626-3816

REMODELED 1 br, utilities included for $550 mo. $250 deposit SW 910-8603

1BR, FENCED, double lots, appliances, w/d included, $450 mo. 9103578 3 bd/2 ba. 1 car garage. Excellent neighborhood. $900/$300dep. 2006 Barnett 575-910-1605

2706 S. Lea, 3br, 1ba, $700 w/$500 dep., no HUD. 420-0244 3BR, 2BA, 2102 S. Pennsylvanica, $1100 mo., 2 car garage, quiet neighborhood. 420-8281 TOWNHOME NE location, 2br 2ba, w/d, appliances, fireplace, $990 mo., water, lawn care & assoc. dues pd. 625-0014 or 626-7768

109 FAIRWAY, Dexter, 4/2, $1300.00 mo., 5 Fairway, 2/2/1, $1250.00 mo., 1409-B S. Riley, 2/1, $675.00 mo., 506 S. Union, 2/1, $525.00 mo., 501 E. 3rd, 3/1, $550.00 mo., 307 S. Ohio, 2/1, $450.00 mo., 501-B E 4th, 1/1, $275.00 mo., Call Breedyk Realty, 575-623-9711.

1619 S. Kentucky, 4br, lease/purchase w/10K down or straight lease $950 mo. + dep. 420-1274 3BR $575, 1br $400, 2br $600. Santiago 202-4702 or Al 703-0420 SOON 3 bdrm 650 @ mo 350 dep ref. no pets, w/d hook ups 317-3222

2BR/1BA, STOVE, refrig., washer, dryer, fireplace, 603 S. Pennsylvania, rent $595, dep. $400. Call Jim 910-7969. 616 E Cherry large 2-br fenced yard, appliances, security doors $500 mo. $450 dep. 317-7950

COUNTRY LIVING at its best. 4BR, 2 bath on 5 acres, large garage, $990.00 per mo., includes water, $1,000.00 deposit. Located at 12 Loma Verde in Buena Vida subdivision, 10 miles west of downtown Roswell. 575-623-1800 or 575-420-5516

803 W. Summit, 2 bdrm, 1 bath, single garage storage bldg, $425/mo, $125/dep. Call Jo 910-1407 3/2-2/1 HOUSE post office/cahoon park c/h/ac, gar, laundry, fresh, professional and pet friendly. $650/$1100 mo. 625-2277

558. Roommates Wanted

ROOMMATE WANTED to share a modern North side home. Quiet neighborhood $500 month $250 deposit. No calls after 10pm 231-620-3773 ROOMMATE WANTED for 2 small furn, rooms plus bath.$395.00 + $100 dep. All bills pd. No smkng, kids, or pets. Must be employed FT. 575-420-8333

569. Mobile Home Spaces/Lots

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

570. Mobile 605. Home Courts Miscellaneous

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. EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITE for lease: Newly decorated, private rest room, covered parking at 1210 North Main. Contact David McGee, Owner / Broker 622-2401

OFFICE SUITE- 900 sf. ft. 4 room office- Ground Floor, Great Parking and Easy Access. Large Reception Area with Three Individual Offices each connected to the reception area. Small utility/kitchen area. $800 a month plus electrical. Call 623-2414 for information. FOR LEASE - Space in Sunwest Centre aka the Bank of America Building. Various size spaces available. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 623-1652 or mobile 4202546. STOREFRONT/Retail/ 2500 sqft 58 ft frontage at 3106 N. Main 1200/month 627-9942 207 N. Union level entry office $500 monthly plus utilities approx. 780 sq. ft. North-Roswell one room office 104 E. Linda Vista $185 per month. Call 420-2100

4504 W. 2nd $300 mo. $300 dep. water paid Avail. 2 wks. call Alice 420-0948

585. Warehouse and Storage

1000 SF or 3500 SF-dock high floor, 408 N Grand Ave (on railroad between 4th & 5th) 575-623-8331

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. LIFT CHAIR, bath transfer bench power wheelchair, commode. 622-7638

NEED FURNITURE? Shop Blair’s Trading Post for the best prices in town for your household items. We buy & sell furniture, appliances, home decor, collectibles, electronics, saddles, jewelry, tools, fishing & camping items, movies plus everything else from A-Z. Including many hard to find items. Serving Roswell for 40 years. Open daily 9-5. Accept Visa & MC. 5611 Hummingbird Ln. 627-2033 WASHER & dryers, good selection, good condition, and great prices! 626-7470 53 FORD tractor, good working order, ‘07 John Deere brush hog mower, sold as a set $4000 firm. 840-8682

22CF REFRIGERATOR (NSF) white w/casters. Large safe w/drop slot. Both good cond. 914-3271

REACH OVER 500,000 READERS in more than 30 newspapers across the state for one low price. Contact your local newspaper’s classified department or visit nmpress.org for details. 1963 CUB Cadet $750 antique rototiller, 2whl garden tractor, antique Sears garden tractor 3pt hitch. 317-2135

for Sale

‘86 CAMARO $2500. 2 male Chiq. $150, 13 wks 1st shots 620-2535842 ATTENTION ROCKHOUNDS I have quality rocks and fossils at discount prices. 622-8945

CENTRAL HEATING & airconditioning unit, 5 ton just a few yrs old great cond. $2800 910-7376. DISPLAY COUNTER $75 The Gallery 107 E 5th 6255263 or PM 623-9649 SET OF maroon leather couches, $1200, good condition. 910-3247 5 COMPARTMENT, stainless steel, super medal steam table, $550. 4201352 8’X12’ TANDUM wheeled utility cargo trailer $3975. Used once, less than 500 miles, rear spring loaded ramp door plus side door, wedge shaped nose/internal lights & vents, integral break system/spare tire, 3/4” plywood floor. New cost was $4590.00. Seen at: www.northamericancargo.c om under Wedge. 6224415 FREE SCRAP Wood must pick up. 575-8408190

LIKE NEW super size w/d, frig, $200 each or 1st $450. Leave msg. 575-914-0450 COLLECTORS: 1940’S Blue Willow dishes & Fire King; also guitar stand, beginner songbooks & likenew stainless steel easels. 622-1677 EMPIRE GAS wall heater, single sided, great condition, used for one winter, $300. 626-8956

KENMORE FRIDGE great cond. very clean $200 6235295 318 DIAMOND Carat wedding ring for sale for $2000. Call 910-1632 or 317-2488.

EXCELLENT CONDITION frostfree refrigerator $150, washer/dryer $125 each. 914-9933

KENMORE DRYER elite elec. heavy duty extra large capacity great condition $175 623-5295 BLAIRS MONTEREY Flea Market 1400 W Second. Outback shed #107 Babe McClain owner. Clothing, tools, jewelry, VHS tapes, kitchen items, & lots more. Mon. Thurs & Fri. 10-5 Sat. & Sun. 9-5 weather permitting. Entrance off Sunset or thru Flea Market. BIG ENTERTAINMENT unit, purchased at Miller Waldrup. Lighted, beautiful oak, fits up to 52” TV must see to appreciate $1200 623-5295

OVER 2000 like new Wrangler, Levi, Rustler, Dickies, Polo jeans $8.00 or less. Electric heaters $10, twin, full, & queen beds $50 ea., dressers, desk, antiques, collectibles 50% off. 5010 S. Main.

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

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be aware of what you are spending and the choices you are making. Sometimes you go overboard, and today could be a classic example. A family member could be much more demanding than he or she realizes. Tonight: Make it your treat. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You know, just know, when you are on top of your game. Speak your mind and understand what is going on. Confusion surrounds a family member or a message. Confirm plans before heading out the door. Tonight: Whatever knocks your socks off. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You could be making mountains out of molehills. Be more easygoing than in the past. Expenses could get out of whack out of the blue. Listen to your sixth sense. Let your imagination play a significant role in making plans and jazzing up an interaction. Tonight: Vanish without letting everyone know what your plans are. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Focus on what is going on with your friends. You simply might have more choices than you would like. Invitations come in left and right. Stop being so hard on yourself and others. Tonight: Wherever you are, the action is. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Understand that others demand an awful lot from you. You could be overwhelmed. Use your instincts with someone you look

Saturday, October 30, 2010

620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous I AM interested in purchasing furniture, appliances, pellet stoves and heaters. 637-9641

625. Antiques

FOR SALE- 40 gallon Western Stoneware Crock, full sized, walnut bed. 505-469-0904

630. Auction Sales

PUBLIC AUCTION 300+ Travel Trailers, Camp Houses, & Mobile Homes. NO MINIMUM PRICE Online Bidding Available Sat. Oct. 30 @ 10am Carencro, LA www.hendersonauctions.com 225686-2252 Lic#136

715. Hay and Feed Sale

Alfalfa Hay- small bales, all grades $5.50-$9.00 per bale. Big bales available. Open 8:00-5:30 Mon- Sat 1:00-5:00 Sunday, Graves Farm & Garden 622-1889 Credit Cards Accepted 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

720. Livestock & Supplies

CHARRO BLACK Stallion, 15yr old, gentle sound. $2500, kid gentle & sound. 575-840-5274 or drg.casaq@gmail.com

745. Pets for Sale FREE CATS! Some young, old, some spayed, neutered, most are loving & friendly, some wild barn cats, all need good homes. 6264708.

GREAT DANE puppies for sale (not registered). Harlequin & Merle will be ready 11/3, mother & father on site. 575-613-2570 AKC CHIHUAHUA pups Blue with black spots female $350 black male, white & tan fuzzy male $300 2nd shots 623-2897 PUGS READY to go has first shots. 420-6769

PUPPY LOVE Grooming Large Dogs Welcome, Cats also - 575-420-6655 LITTLE ORPHAN Annie needs a home! Sweet, spoiled kitten, 10-12 wks. First shots done. 626-3596 “CATS & kittens ready to go to a new good home.” 575-910-6052

READ FOR new homes. 4 Shih Tzu puppies. Please call Anne @ 623-6761. Have another little or new homes @ Christmas. Taking deposits now. TWO 9 wk old male Toy Poodles $300 ea., also Razor elect. scooter $70. 624-8810 FOR SALE: Rottweiler puppies $200. 622-4249 for more info.

YORKIE, M, 12 wks $400, pullets for sale $5.00, call ducks $15. 420-4706

RECREATIONAL

765. Guns & Ammunition

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

775. Motorcycles & Scooters

WR250 2 stroke Husqvarna. Just had a new top end put in at Motion Performance have receipt for the work! Centrifugal clutch FMF exhaust FAST!!! Asking $3000 OBO. 910-7376

C7

775. Motorcycles & Scooters

2005 HARLEY Davidson Dyna wide glide, 14,800 miles, excellent condition w/new tires, runs great, $11,500 obo. Call 910-0679 2005 HD Road Glide 5300 miles, excellent cond. recently serviced, runs great $12,950 OBO. 4201181

2006 YAMAHA Road Star less than 6k miles lots of chrome like new one owner Call 6230320 after 5pm ‘08 ROKETA 250cc moped scooter, water-cooled engine. Blue 600 miles $1800. 575-627-2102 ‘05 H-D 1200C sportster. $5000 OBO, 7800 miles, always garaged, never dropped,1 owner.420-5153

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 RV, TRAILER & boat storage, onsite security. 637-8709

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 FOR SALE 2005 36ft GeorgeTown Forest River motor home w/2 slideouts, only 10,604 miles, loaded, leather seats, fireplace, generator, satellite TV. Asking $59,900. Call 480282-1838 or view at 2803 W. 2nd. Roadway Inn Hotel BELLY DUMP 1980 Clemants factory tarp needs some work $5000 575-626-2718

‘07 20’ Layton travel trailer, sleeps 7. Like new $8000. 624-2708

24FT TELSTAR motor home by Champ. Mint condition, loaded w/extras, all fiberglass. Call 317-3726 AWESOME CAMPER, 2006 Keystone Outback, w/8ft slideout, loaded, 26ft, sleeps 6, garage kept, excellent condition, $15,000 obo. 623-6608

TRANSPORTATION

790. Autos for Sale

5.0, 5 speed Mustang seen at 1617 S. Kansas. 575-808-4244 ‘92 HONDA Accord, 4dr, 5spd, lots of miles, runs great, $1000. 317-8083

2005 CHEVROLET Malibu Classic, excellent condition, $6095. Call 623-1523 or 626-1524 2002 ES 300 Lexus, Pearl color, 4dr, $13,995, 102k miles. 2007 black Nissan Datsun Altima, 4dr, $13,995, 42k miles. 9103247 2005 DODGE Stratus Coupe SXT, automatic, sporty, nice. 420-5727

795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans 2004 KIA Sedona sliding rear doors, 3rd seat, 84k mi, excellent cond. $4800 w/1k down owner finance. 420-1352

2006 TOYOTA Tacoma, low miles, one owner, great condition, $11,500. Serious inquiries please. 623-2852 or 626-2616

AWESOME TRUCK, 2009 Ford Platinum, 4x4, fully loaded, nav/dvd sys., backup camera & sensors, sunroof, ac & heated seats, 22k miles, garage kept, perfect condition, $35,000 obo. 623-6608

796. SUVS

2002 GMC Yukon, nice -n - clean, $12,500 obo. 840-6400

up to or need to pay attention to. Tonight: Out late. You cannot hide your plans all the time! SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Keep reaching out for someone at a distance. Some of you simply might decide to take off. Listen to feedback that heads in your direction. A friend could be nothing less than touchy. Tonight: Opt for something different. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Deal with a partner on a one-on-one level. Relate on a one-on-one level with a friend or loved one. You discover how very serious a boss or older relative can be. Don’t allow this person’s mood to get to you. Tonight: Get together with a favorite person. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Listen to feedback from others. You could be forced into a position where you must respond to someone very difficult. Worry less about what is going on. Take off at the last minute if you feel like it. Tonight: Sort through suggestions. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Take the next few days to rest up. Others seek you out, but it suits you to distance yourself from others and take your time thinking through an issue. Confusion surrounds a partner and plans. Stay centered. Tonight: Relax — whatever you choose.

BORN TODAY Actor Henry Winkler (1945), singer Grace Slick (1939), writer Fyodor Dostoevsky (1821)


C8 Saturday, October 30, 2010

ENTERTAINMENT

Chad Hurley steps down as YouTube CEO

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — YouTube CEO Chad Hurley is surrendering the reins of the popular video website that he started with two buddies as a quirky curiosity and went on to groom into a media magnet that shows more than 2 billion clips a day. The change in command announced Friday formalizes a transition that has been unfolding over the past two years as YouTube’s owner, Internet search leader Google Inc., asserted more control over the website. Google dispatched one of its longtime employees, Salar Kamangar, to help Hurley steer YouTube in 2008. That move signaled Google’s resolve to start making more money off its 2006

acquisition of YouTube for $1.76 billion. Kamangar’s expertise is in online advertising. Since his arrival at YouTube’s San Bruno headquarters, Kamangar had been running the day-to-day operations while Hurley concentrated on keeping the site’s steadily growing audience happy. Kamangar now of ficially assumes the CEO’s role while Hurley, 33, remains available as a part-time adviser. The transition will give Hurley, a designer, more time to devote to another of his business ideas, the men’s clothing line Hlaska. The brand’s name is a mash-up of Hawaii and Alaska, signifying its goal of becoming “the 51st state.”

Although YouTube has been selling more ads and striking more business partnerships since Kamangar entered the picture, Google hasn’t said whether the site is profitable yet. The ads shown on YouTube are part of the roughly $625 million in revenue that Google got from socalled display advertising during the three months ending in September. That’s less than 10 percent of Google’s total revenue of $7.3 billion during the period. Google confir med Hurley is stepping down after he disclosed his diminished role Thursday night at an event in Ireland. YouTube’s two other cofounders, Steve Chen and Jawed Karim, had already phased out of YouTube. Karim left just a few

Roswell Daily Record

months after the trio decided to set up a way to share their videos online. Chen, formerly YouTube’s chief technology officer, moved on in 2008. YouTube’s sale to Google enriched all three of the founders, who had met while working at the online payment service PayPal. Hurley raked in the biggest cut: 735,000 shares Google stock. Based on Google’s closing price of $613.70, those shares would now be worth about $450 million. Some television and movie studios contended YouTube built its early success by looking the other way as video pirates swamped the website with copyrighted clips. Viacom Inc. even went so far as to file a lawsuit that alleged Hur-

ley, Chen and Karim welcomed the pirated clips because they knew the material would help widen YouTube’s audience. Although the lawsuit uncovered some e-mail exchanges that seemed to support some of Viacom’s allegations, a federal judge ruled four months ago that YouTube had complied with U.S. laws requiring websites to remove copyright violations after they are reported. Viacom had been seeking more than $1 billion in damages in the case. YouTube now has a more cordial relationship with Hollywood, partly because Google helped develop technology that automatically flags copyrighted videos that have been uploaded to the site without approval.

Hollywood doctors face fallout from Smith LOS ANGELES (AP) — In hospitals, medical offices and pharmacies, Anna Nicole Smith was routinely registered under pseudonyms to protect her privacy. But in the wake of the convictions of her psychiatrist and lawyer-boyfriend for using false names on her drug prescriptions, the Hollywood medical community awoke to the realization Friday that the practice might be off limits and some doctors could avoid treating celebrity clients rather than risk criminal charges. “This is a shocker,” criminal defense attorney Harland Braun, who has represented celebrities and doctors, said of Thursday’s verdicts. He said the convictions of Dr. Khristine Eroshevich and Howard K. Stern for obtaining drug prescriptions for Smith under false names contradicts common practice. “It’s absolutely necessary for survival in Hollywood,” he said, noting that in the age of paparazzi and celebrity gossip websites, information on star illnesses can be worth a lot of money. Medical professionals routinely use pseudonyms for celebrities to protect their privacy and until now no one was being prosecuted for doing it, he said. “If it stands that keeping these people anonymous is a criminal act, a lot of doctors will have to refuse to take celebrity patients because they can’t protect them,” he said. Smith, the late Playboy model and reality TV star, was known as Jane Brown, Susie Wong and

AP Photo

Dr. Sandeep Kapoor leaves court after he was acquitted on all charges in the Anna Nicole Smith drug conspiracy trial in Los Angeles on Thursday.

Vickie Lynn Marshall, her true name. She was not the only star with a medical pseudonym. Michael Jackson had several, although the doctor who pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter in his death is not charged with using a false name to get him drugs. Performers such as Britney Spears and Mariah Carey also were known to use aliases when seeking medical care. Attorney Ellyn Garofalo, whose client Dr. Sandeep Kapoor was acquitted of all charges including false name allegations in the Smith case, said “these statutes involving use of fake names have never

been enforced in this context.” She said it was so unusual that she was unable to find case law on the subject when doing research for the trial. “There are doctors in Beverly Hills today saying, ‘Oh, my God, this is illegal?’... It just goes on all the time,” Garofalo said. If the convictions of Stern and Eroshevich stand, “this whole process of helping celebrities protect their privacy is in jeopardy. What physician in his right mind wants to take on a celebrity when they will get charged criminally,” she said. Kapoor was continuing a fictitious name, Michelle

Chaseused for Smith by another doctor who treated her then sold his practice to Kapoor. The other doctor was not charged and testified for the prosecution. Testimony in the trial also showed that when Smith was admitted to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, she was automatically given a pseudonym, Jane Brown. When she left the hospital, she was given a prescription under that name. Garofalo said UCLA Medical Center also has given aliases to stars including Britney Spears and Mariah Carey, attempting to avoid repeats of a scandal that erupted when an employee

accessed records of the dying Farrah Fawcett and sold them to the tabloids. Nicole White. a spokeswoman for Cedars Sinai, and Dale Tate, a spokeswoman for UCLA Medical Center, said they were seeking comment from officials about the issue and had no immediate response. Steve Sadow, the lawyer for Stern, expressed hope that the verdicts will be overturned or reduced to misdemeanors by Superior Court Judge Robert Perry. “The judge has the authority to consider the well-known and commonly accepted practice of doctors and hospitals using aliases and so-called false

Fans hoping Stewart-Colbert rally boosts WASHINGTON (AP) — Is it a way to improve the nation’s political discourse? A way to tip some votes just before the election? Or just a big outdoor comedy show? Organizers insist that Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert’s “Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear” on the National Mall on Saturday isn’t about politics. But that hasn’t dampened the expectations of thousands of fans and advocacy groups seeking to rekindle some of the voter enthusiasm seen in 2008, particularly among young adults. For many of them, that civic engagement would translate to a boost for Democrats — a calculation President Barack Obama bet on this week when he became the first sitting president to appear on Stewart’s “The Daily Show” on TV’s Comedy Central. Obama said his message was still “Yes, we can” — “but it’s not going to happen overnight.” “This rally is attracting a lot of attention, and it could have an impact because the target demographic of young people who tend to vote Democratic needs more mobilization to vote than do older people,” said Scott Keeter, director of survey research at the nonpartisan Pew Research Center. A Pew poll last month found 41 percent of Stewart’s fans identify themselves as Democrats, compared with 38 percent independents and 14 percent Republicans. His audience also tends to be younger than for many other cable programs, a key segment since adults 18-29 are half as

likely than those 30 and older to vote. “Any shift in a Democratic or Republican direction coming from a change in the national mood, from whatever outside force, could tip a lot of races because they seem to be so balanced on a razor’s edge at this point,” Keeter said. A preliminary list of entertainers includes musicians Sheryl Crow and The Roots. Actor Sam Waterston and Don Novello, who played Father Guido Sarducci on “Saturday Night Live,” are also expected to appear. The event is described on its website as a place for people who want to see a return to sanity — those who think “shouting is annoying, counterproductive and terrible for your throat, who feel that the loudest voices shouldn’t be the only ones that get heard, and who believe that the only time it’s appropriate to draw a Hitler mustache on someone is when that person is actually Hitler.” Organizing for America, Obama’s political operation based at Democratic National Committee headquarters, is setting up a “Phone Bank for Sanity” after the rally to urge people to vote on Tuesday. Groups planning to enlist supporters at the event include Naral Pro-Choice America and backers of California’s Proposition 19 to legalize marijuana. “The vitriol and hatred toward our president and Democrats, it has become so extreme that it

names,” Sadow said. Brad Brunon, the attorney for Eroshevich, said doctors treating stars have a dual obligation to provide good medical care but also to protect their privacy. “I don’t think most physicians know that writing a prescription under a pseudonym is a felony,” he said. Judge Perry has scheduled a hearing for Jan. 6 for further action in the case and possible sentencing. Brunon said he will urge the judge to reduce the charges or order a new trial. He said he would cite Eroshevich’s good faith. “No one said she was doing this out of ill will,” he said. “She certainly did not do it for money.” As for Stern’s penalty, Sadow said he hopes the judge will dismiss the charges on grounds that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdicts. If not, he said he will urge reduction to a misdemeanor with probation. The professional licenses of both defendants also are in jeopardy. Brunon said that in lieu of suspension, the medical board could allow Eroshevich to practice with a monitor overseeing all of her prescriptions. He said she could also be ordered to go through a reeducation program on prescriptions. Sadow said that even if Stern receives misdemeanor probation, his prospects as a lawyer are bleak. “Howard’s law license is in jeopardy,” said Sadow, “because the State Bar of California will likely still treat him as a convicted felon.”

AP Photo

President Barack Obama talks with host Jon Stewart during in a taping of Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,” in Washington, Wednesday.

kind of scares me,” said Margaret Espaillat, 49, of Orlando, who’s hoping the rally will improve the political tone and galvanize Democrats. She plans to attend the rally with her three sons who are in college and her husband, a U.S. Army colonel. “We’ve never done anything like this before,” she said. “But I think in this environment we need to show some real love of our country ... and to rub shoulders with other nice, normal people, I hope.” Charlie Rudnick, 21, a senior at the University of California at Santa Cruz who considers him-

self to the left of Obama, said he will attend because he is a fan of “The Daily Show” and supports Stewart’s goals of civil political discourse. “Obama has talked about getting past partisanship, but I think he’s largely failed,” Rudnick said. Saturday’s event mirrors the “Restoring Honor” rally held in August by Glenn Beck, the Fox News commentator popular among conservatives and tea party members. Beck, too, downplayed his event as a political rally; Stewart has described his simply as an alternative format

for the fake-news humor seen by millions of viewers each night on “The Daily Show” and “The Colbert Report.” The rally has generated extensive buzz on the Internet, with more than 226,000 people on a Facebook page created for the event saying they would attend. The liberal Huffington Post says it is sending a caravan of 10,000 people on 200 buses from New York, while Oprah Winfrey expressed her support by surprising a “Daily Show” studio audience of about 200 members with free travel expenses to attend.


C4 Saturday, October 30, 2010

CLASSIFIEDS

Roswell Daily Record


Roswell Daily Record

CLASSIFIEDS

Saturday, October 30, 2010

C5


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

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