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MATTHEW ARCO RECORD STAFF WRITER
GIFFORDS MOVES ARMS AND LEGS TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Rep. Gabrielle Giffords is opening both eyes, moving both legs and arms and is responding to friends and family ... - PAGE A7
City councilors voted to pass new sign regulations Thursday night, that sparked contr oversy months before the rules were voted down during an August council meeting. The regulations passed in an 8-1 vote. The revamped package slated to go into effect is without much of the language and restrictions on businesses and homes that originally caused an
THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY
January 14, 2011
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outpouring of resistance. “I want to first thank you all,” said Bill Glenn, a local store owner who has often spoken against the rules that he said would harm businesses. “You made all the changes we wanted,” he said. “I know you spent a lot of time (on this issue). ... I appreciate everything you’ve done.” Glenn’s comments came before the council spent about an hour discussing the newest pr oposal, which was drafted following a three and a half hour
December council workshop. Scant changes were made before the council appr oved the measur e, though two r esidents asked the council prior to the vote to not support the package. Councilor Art Sandoval was the only of ficial to vote against the regulations. “I’m pleased with the outcome,” said City Planner Michael Vickers, who was one of the handful of officials who helped shape the rules that will be added to the city’s zoning
ordinance. “It’s an all inclusive document that makes us more business friendly for development and protects existing businesses,” he said. Councilors also voted to appr ove financing th is year’s UFO Festival up to the same amount it has in recent years. The co-chairs of the UFO Festival Committee, Julie Shuster, of the UFO Museum and Resear ch Center, and Roswell resident Greg Neal, will share responsibility of managing
the festival with the city’s $150,000. “Our goal is not to use that (full amount),” Shuster said. “Our goal is to make this a self-sustaining event.” The council appr oved spending up to that amount with the restriction that city funds won’t be spent to turn a profit on money that would then be given to the UFO Museum and Research Center for future festivals, citing state statute anti-donation clauses. MATTARCO@ROSWELL-RECORD.COM
JONATHAN ENTZMINGER RECORD STAFF WRITER
Guerrero and Hall trained for several months to prepare for their mission, which will take them away from their families for quite some time. Hall and his wife, Janette, are expecting two new additions to their family in the spring. “We have twins coming in March,” he said. “I think about them every day. I think about my wife and my family. That’s part of the sacrifice that we make as soldiers. Unfortunately — my wife — she’s the one who has the hard part. She’s got a family and a household to run.” For soldiers, spending time away from their families, is a great sacrifice. Yet, they are willing to do so, if it keeps their communities and loved ones safe from harm. The yellow ribbon ceremony symbolizes the sacrifice and dedication deployed Americans have
More than 500 attend yellow ribbon ceremony
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INSIDE SPORTS Mark Wilson Photo
New Mexico Governor Susanna Martinez greets troops of the 717th Brigade Support Battalion who are scheduled for deployment to Kosovo during a yellow ribbon ceremony Thursday at the Roswell Convention and Visitors Bureau.
Emotions ran high at Thursday’s yellow ribbon ceremony at the Roswell Civic Center. “It’s a send-off ... a tribute to the men and women of this community,” Mayor Del Jurney said. “We want them to know that our prayers and our encouragement go with them when they travel across the globe. Our thoughts and our prayers go with them as they travel across the world, for a mission of peace-keeping to help other nations ... continue to bring support and freedom to this nation. It’s a special day ... a very special day.” Approximately 450 Army National Guard soldiers will be deployed to Kosovo for a “peace keeping” mission later this month. Among them are soldiers like specialist Amanda Guerrero and 1st Lt. Shad Hall.
Solis sworn in as Roswell Police Department Chief JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER
NEWTON HEADED TO NFL MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton will skip his senior season and enter the NFL draft after leading Auburn to a national championship ...
- PAGE B1
TODAY’S OBITUARIES • John Ward Watson • Don M. West • Epifano Montez • Victor De La Cruz • Allen F. Mauldin - PAGE B3
Alfonso Solis took his oath of of fice as the Roswell Police Department’s new chief, at 2:30 p.m., Thursday, in a special cer emony at the Roswell Convention and Civic Center. Solis’ longtime friend, Gov. Susana Martinez, attended. During the opening remarks, State Representative and Interim Chief Dennis Kintigh said, “To the men and women of the Roswell Police Department, it has been my incr edible privilege to serve with you.” He told them that they had been an inspiration to him.
To the incoming chief, he quipped, “I’m so happy to see you.” Mayor Del Jur ney referred to the occasion as bittersweet, “But when you lose a good man and replace him with another good man, that’s a pretty good deal.” He thanked Kintigh for “stepping up to the plate” during the time of transition. “We’re excited about Al Solis,” he said. Martinez spoke of her youth as the daughter of a law enforcement of ficer and the wife of a 30-year veteran. “I’ve known Al Solis for many years,” she said. “He was a great communicator
JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER
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CLASSIFIEDS..........B6 COMICS.................B4 ENTERTAINMENT.....B6 FINANCIAL .............B5 GENERAL ..............A2 HOROSCOPES ........B6 LOTTERIES ............A2 OPINION ................A4 SPORTS ................B1 WEATHER ..............A8 WORLD .................A7
Mark Wilson Photo
Roswell Police Department's newest chief, Al Solis, is sworn in during a Change of Command ceremony as Dennis Kintigh, interim chief, looks on.
NM Rehabilitation Center opens its doors See SOLIS Page A3
See RIBBON, Page A2
INDEX
Mark Wilson Photo
New Mexico Gov. Susanna Martinez greets and signs autographs for students from Sidney Gutierrez Middle School during the New Mexico Rehabilitation Center ribbon-cutting ceremony, grand opening & tour, Thursday.
The newly-constructed New Mexico Rehabilitation Center, 72 Gail Harris Avenue, opened its doors with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Thursday. The event was attended by state Sen. T im Jennings and New Mexico’s new governor, Susana Martinez. James D’Agostino, the r ehabilitation center administrator, opened the ceremony with a welcome addr ess. “I want to … thank the state of New Mexico for the hospital it has given us.” He also showed his appr eciation to center staff, whom he called the “stars of the project.” Mayor Del Jur ney remarked it was “a good day for Roswell.” The mayor spoke of the See REHAB, Page A2
Elementary schools awarded funds for remodeling EMILY RUSSO MILLER RECORD STAFF WRITER
A state entity that allocates grant money based on need voted yesterday to approve construction funding for three elementary schools in the Roswell school district. East Grand Plains, Monterrey and Pecos elementary schools will receive money for remodeling and improvements to bring the schools up to state adequacy standards. The Public School
See SCHOOLS, Page A2
A2 Friday, January 14, 2011 Ribbon
Continued from Page A1
for their nation. However, the ceremony transcends communal ideas and nationalism because it exemplifies love. “To me, it’s something big for families,” Guerrero said. “So ... people can be with their families one last time [before they are deployed] to say goodbye. I love the yellow ribbon.” Guerrero said that she’s looking forward to the cultural experiences that she will have in Kosovo and also looks at her deployment as an opportunity to learn. “I’m really excited,” she said. “I’m glad to have this opportunity, because being in Kosovo is going to create a lot of wonderful opportunities. They
GENERAL have great culture there, a lot of history — we’re going to learn a lot being there.” Thursday’s ceremony featured many prominent members of the community and National Guard, who delivered moving oratory, in front of a crowd of more than 500. Some moments, like Sheryl Saavedra’s reading of the history of the yellow ribbon, could only be completed with tears. Her presentation was met with praise and a standing ovation after it was read. Other notables included New Mexico’s new sitting governor, Susana Martinez; Artesia Mayor Philip Burch; representatives from Sen. Jeff Bingaman; state Sen. Tim Jennings; state Rep. Nora Espinoza; several Roswell City Council members; the Roswell
Fire Department; East Grand Fire Department; various veterans from the community; New Mexico YCA and many others. The New Mexico Military Institute band, led by Maj. Ken Tuttle, provided the music for the processional. The yellow ribbon was tied by Lt. Aaron McCaskey, along with his mom, and Staff Sgt. Gary Saavedra and his wife, Sheryl. “It’s a fantastic ceremony,” Jennings said. “They’re going to be gone for a year. They’ve all got their family members here. They’ve got to look after each other. It’s a good send-off ... to be your brother’s keep over there and watch-and be good for each other. I think it’s a great send-off.” j.entzminger@roswell-record.com
Roswell Daily Record
Mark Wilson Photo
Alex Evans wipes away tears during a yellow ribbon ceremony honoring troops of the 717th Brigade Support Battalion, Thursday, at the Roswell Convention and Visitors Bureau. The 717th Brigade Support Battalion is scheduled for deployment to Kosovo.
Subway restaurant robbed at gunpoint The Subway at 1307 S. Main St. was held up at gunpoint around 7 p.m. on Wednesday. “The male subject covered his face with a bandana and wore a beanie,” said T ravis Holley, spokesman for the Roswell Police Department. “The infor mation is
sketchy,” according to Holley. The make of the handgun is unknown. An undisclosed amount of money was taken. Employees of Subway said that the man had his face and hair covered, only his eyes were visible. He wore gloves. However, they described him as 5-feet-7
inches tall and of medium build. This is the second time in five months that the Subway on South Main Street has been robbed. The first incident occurr ed on Aug. 15, when a robber entered the Subway ar ound 8 p.m. The robber, Philip Gonzales, 44, was appre-
hended four days later on Aug. 18. The police have no suspects for this second robbery. People with infor mation ar e asked to call Crimestoppers, 1-888594-TIPS (8477). Callers can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward.
graphic website.
cers arrived and covered the front door. The suspects were located inside the house. One held a laptop and had a power cord inside his pocket. Other items had been collected and placed inside the dining room. Officers recovered a Toshiba laptop, two speakers, and a Symphonic DVD player. The items were valued at $695. Cost of repair of damages is estimated at $300. •The Chaves County Sheriff's Office received a
report from the 5500 block of North Main Street, Thursday. The victim stated the residence had been entered using a key and the only thing removed was a key ring full of keys. Anyone with information about these and any other crimes is asked to call Crime Stoppers, 1-888-594TIPS (8477). Callers can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward.
Identity theft / fraud
Police took two walk-in reports for identity theft and fraud on Wednesday. • In the first case, the victim received a letter from the Internal Revenue Service stating that $6,875 in back taxes were owed for work done at Charles Block and Sons in Serviceville, Tenn. The victim had lived in Roswell for her entire life and never been to Tennessee. Police instructed her to send a copy of the police report, employment record and proof of residency, such as utility bills, and send them to the IRS. •The second case was a report of fraudulent charges to a credit card. The victim received a bill of $2,304.87 for logging into a paid-for por no-
LOTTERIES
Graffiti
Police were called to the 1100 block of South Pennsylvania Avenue, Wednesday, where someone spray painted the words “SUD,” “450”, and “Romero” on the garage door facing the alley.
Burglary
•Police caught burglars in the act at 1560 South Kentucky. The suspects kicked in the door. Offi-
Continued from Page A1
Capital Outlay Council — a nine-member body comprised of both state executive and legislative agencies — moved to pay the full 72 percent of each school’s five-year Facilities Master Plan (which every school in the district must have, by law). The voters agreed last May to pay for the other 28 percent of the project through a general obligation bond. East Grand Plains Elementary School will receive a state share of $5,116,332 (72%), contingent upon a local share of $1,989,682 (28%). Monterrey Elementary School will receive a state share of $3,862,847 (72%), contingent upon a local share of $1,502,218 (28%). Pecos Elementary School will receive a state share of $6,161,466 (72%), contingent upon a local share of $2,396,121 (28%).
The PSCOC also voted in the same session to award four more Roswell schools funding to begin planning and designing for renovations. Valley View, Berrendo, Military Heights and El Capitan elementary schools were chosen, as they were ranked 10, 33, 37 and 48, respectively, on the New Mexico Condition List. The NMCI measures the physical condition and adequacy of a school facility based on the state’s adequacy standards. Usually these awards are made annually at the end of July, but PSCOC decided last Sept. to allow a delayed 20102011 Special StandardsBased Capital Outlay Award cycle to begin design for the top 60 neediest schools. Those four schools will also pay for the local share (28 percent of the total project cost) through the general obligation bond passed by Roswell voters last May. emiller@roswell-record.com
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Roswell Daily Record
Solis
Continued from Page A1
and he’s able to pull people together. You can have no gr eater leader after Dennis Kintigh, than Al Solis.” Judge Kea W. Riggs administer ed the oath. Then the new chief took his place at the podium and told the story of his first meeting with the governor when he was subpoenaed before a grand jury two days after he took a job at the Las Cruces
Rehab
Continued from Page A1
need for having a rehabilitation unit in the city. “Twenty-five years ago my mother developed Guillain-Barré Syndrome. I didn’t even know we had a r ehab center, but thanks to the rehab center, she was given quality of life.” Dr. Steven Gambel, ENMU pr esident,
jail. About the job, he said, “I am humbled by this honor and this obligation.” Solis repeated what he said during the press conference when city officials announced his selection for the office. “I ask that they give me a chance and I hope in time I will ear n your respect,” he said. Solis said his goal was to make children safe and senior citizens comfortable. He called upon the people of the community to assist the police. “We need the help of the expressed pride in having the center on the campus. He acknowledged Jane Batson for her work on the pr oject and praised Sen. Jennings. “Without his strong committed, tireless work, we would not have this facility.” Sen. T im Jennings referred to the process as a shared effort. He welcomed the governor and husband Chuck Franco, whom he called the First Dude. He shared
GENERAL
Friday, January 14, 2011
citizens,” he said. “We need their eyes and ears out there.” The event concluded with an awards ceremony. The best employees of the third and fourth quarters were recognized Officer Steve Meredith was honor ed for his actions during an incident that took place on June 25, when he gained the trust of a man with a gun and saved the lives of his family Detective Mike Stanton was honored for an investigation that resulted in the confiscation of two
pounds of cocaine and $11,000 in cash. Sergeants Ron Smith and Rusty Brisco, and Commander Eric Brackeen, each received their badges of promotion. Mike Law Of ficer received the Life Saving Award for his efforts during an incident that took place on Oct. 19, when he found a distraught woman trying to give CPR to an infant. He continued the CPR and got the baby to the hospital. Although the infant eventually died, he was praised for his work. Of ficer John Clay
banter with Keith Gardner, saying that Franco had pointed out: “She gets the biggest dude she can. We may both have to hide behind him.” On a more serious note, Jennings said “You never know the curves life will send you. The staff and the people in the old center wer e incr edible .... We’re dedicated to making this the best rehab center in the state.” About Susana Martinez, he said, “Governors
come and governors go, but seldom has any governor taken on the challenges that she has.” Bill Taylor of the General Services Administration or GSD praised the building as one that “allowed us to bring the best value to New Mexico.” The new rehabilitation center is designed to be “green” and energy efficient. The center was also built in a circular plan, which decr eases the
paigns as a treasurer. He currently is a pipeline inspector and safety specialist for MBS Services. A Vietnam-era veteran, Wooley graduated from high school in Eunice and later went on to receive a Bachelor of Science in Agricultural Business from New Mexico State University. “I think Bob is well-qualified,” Commissioner James Duffey said, citing
Wooley’s background in agriculture. Duffey added he has known Wooley since the 1970s, when they went to school at NMSU together. District 66 of the state House of Representatives covers parts of Chaves, Eddy, Lea and Roosevelt counties. In other business, the Board of Commissioners appointed and re-appointed members to three differ-
received the Police Meritorious award, while Officer Ted Sandoval received the Police Purple Heart. Detectives Keith Rightsell and Doyle Baker received the Medal of Valor and Police Purple Heart. The four men were honored for their bravery during the David Vega arrest on May 9, when the police were ambushed. Sandoval was wounded and Clay aided the fallen officer. Meanwhile, Rightsell and Baker held their position even though they had been wounded. number of steps patients will have to walk. Dr. Catherine Torres, Secretary of Health, said she was impressed with the facility and impressed because it had a therapeutic pool necessary for spinal injuries. “Safety-net services are important to me and it is an honor to start my job with this rehabilitation hospital,” Torres said. Gov. Susana Martinez continued the banter between herself and Jen-
A3
City Administrator Larry Fry said after the ceremony, “He (Solis) has got big shoes to fill, but he’s the right man for the job.” In a brief interview befor e the cer emony, Kintigh expressed relief that he was now “wearing only one hat” as state representative. “It’s been a great experience,” Kintigh said. “I’m afraid that the legislative job has suffered because this one took priority, but now we'r e going to be doing good things.” j.palmer@roswell-record.com nings when she said she faced a dinner with the senator on Sunday, which Jennings had called “her husband’s coming out party.” She applauded the legislature for putting everything together to make this pr oject possible, regardless of party affiliations. “If ther e is anything the governor’s office can do, I am committed. I want to be part of every community in the state.” j.palmer@roswell-record.com
State House rep replaced by Roswellian EMILY RUSSO MILLER RECORD STAFF WRITER
The Chaves County Board of Commissioners recommended Bob Wooley, of Roswell, to fill the vacated state House seat for District 66, Thursday morning. House Minority Whip Keith Gardner (RRoswell) left his legislative post late last year to serve as Gov. Susana Martinez's
chief of staff. The state constitution requires that the commissioners recommend a replacement for appointment by the governor. “Keith requested us to appoint Mr. Wooley to secede him,” Chairman of the Board Greg Nibert said. “He seems like a person who will represent the district well.” Wooley previously worked in Gardner’s cam-
ent zoning commissions. LeRoy Lang, Richard Garcia and Royce “Pancho” Maples will continue to serve on the RoswellChaves County Extraterritorial Zoning Commission. ETZ members serve oneyear terms and must be reappointed every year. Dale Rogers and Bill Thompson were reappointed to the Chaves County Planning and Zoning Commission, as per the
board’s recommendation. P&Z ter m limits expire after two years. Scott McNally, representing agricultural interests, T. Calder Ezzell, representing extraction interests and Jim Byrd, representing recreational interests, were approved to continue serving on the Chaves County Public Lands Advisory Committee. emiller@roswell-record.com
supermarket chain expects to raise prices on those goods throughout the year. “At some point everybody has to be more rational and understanding when your costs are up as much as they are,” Gary Rodkin, CEO of ConAgra, said recently. “You cannot sustain those kind of margin pressures, whether you are a retailer or a manufacturer, for the long-term health of your business.” Brian Bethune, an economist at IHS Global Insight, still thinks consumer spending will rise this year because wage gains and a Social Security tax cut will outweigh the higher prices. Companies that don’t pass along the higher costs will need to save money elsewhere. That could mean delaying hiring or putting off pay raises. For now, economists don’t think rising food and
energy prices will force the Federal Reserve to scale back or halt its program to buy $600 billion worth of Treasury bonds by the end of June, an effort aimed at strengthening the economy. But the Fed will watch for signs that higher food and energy prices are forcing companies to raise lots of other prices, which would spread inflation throughout the economy. So far, there are only limited signs that’s happening. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Ber nanke told Congress last week that he expected inflation in the United States is “likely to be subdued for some time.” Still, some economists expect it to accelerate. Rising wholesale prices won’t result in higher costof-living adjustments in benefit programs like Social Security.
Higher commodity prices may spur inflation
AP Photo
In this Dec.14 photo, Sharon Sexton of Waco, Texas, attempts to locate a baking item to match a coupon she clipped from her local newspaper at the Family Dollar store, in Waco, Texas. Rising wholesale prices for food and energy are putting pressure on retailers to pass along the costs to customers, threatening to slow the global economy.
unemployment near 10 percent and the economy weak. That’s expected to change as food producers raise their prices and stores slow their discounting. Super market chain Kroger Co. says it’s already passing on some cost increases from national brand suppliers. But it’s being selective about raising other prices. Some major food produc-
ers, including ConAgra Foods Inc. and General Mills Inc., say they’re feeling the crunch of higher ingredient costs and are raising prices to cope. Supervalu Inc. said inflation has hit its perishables — meat, dairy and produce — but has been slower for other products. But with most of its major vendors announcing they plan to pass on rising costs, the
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most of the increase came in food and energy prices, said Joel Naroff, chief economist at Naroff Economic Advisors. “These are not products which you can do without very easily,” he said. Last year, Americans spent about 8 percent of their money on energy, which includes natural gas, electricity, gasoline and motor oil. They spent about 13 percent on food. Rising commodity prices have a bigger impact in developing countries, where people spend as much as 30 percent of their income on food. Inflation in China and Brazil will likely accelerate this year, forcing their central banks to raise interest rates and potentially slowing the global economy in 2012. China’s inflation rate reached 5.1 percent in November, a 28-month high. Chinese officials have raised interest rates and have vowed to make fighting inflation a higher priority. Further rate increases could slow the Chinese economy. Grocers in the U.S. resisted passing along higher prices for meat, bread and other goods last year, with
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WASHINGTON (AP) — Rising wholesale prices for food and energy are putting pressure on manufacturers and retailers to pass higher costs to customers. It’s a trend that could raise inflation in the United States and slow economies in Asia and Latin America. U.S. gas prices have topped $3 a gallon, and grain prices have reached a 2 1/2-year high. Some lawmakers say the increases illustrate the need for tighter limits on speculation in commodities markets. Airlines, clothing manufacturers and some grocery stores have already raised retail prices. And even those companies that have resisted increases because they worry that customers can’t afford them may be more reluctant to hire because of the squeeze. Some economists expect prices to rise faster this year than last, although not fast enough to cause policy changes at the Federal Reserve, which has the power to raise interest rates to keep inflation in check. And though the higher prices could be a drag on consumer spending, they shouldn’t derail the overall economy, economists say. The price of corn, soybeans, wheat and other grains has shot up since last summer as bad weather has hammered harvests in Russia, Australia and Argentina. That raises the cost of feeding livestock, and in turn raises prices for beef and poultry. Oil prices, currently at about $92 a barrel, are rising because of strong demand from fastgrowing developing countries. Wholesale prices rose 1.1 percent in December, the Labor Department said Thursday, the biggest increase in 11 months. Higher energy and food costs drove the increase. So-called core prices, which exclude those volatile categories, rose just 0.2 percent. But the report can’t be dismissed just because
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A4 Friday, January 14, 2011
OPINION
Book takes a look at Washington’s early years
SANTA FE — Think you know just about everything regarding the father of our country? You know he was our first president — and probably our greatest. You know he was a great general and that we likely wouldn’t have won our independence without him. You’ve also undoubtedly read that little George chopped down a cherry tree as a child and then ‘fessed up to his little crime. The obvious message is that George already was mature as a child and that all children should strive to be that way. But that’s not the way it happened. Little George started out as a baby and had a childhood not unlike the rest of us. He grew into adolescence with all the irritating traits of that stage of life. If you would like to read a story of how our greatest American got through adolescence to become the superhero he was, do I have a book for you. It was written by
EDITORIAL
JAY MILLER
INSIDE THE CAPITOL
Roswell historian David Clary and published by Simon & Schuster. Clary tells a story that few have ever told. It chronicles Washington’s struggle through the long adjustment from boyhood to manhood. It is a story that helps a reader appreciate Washington more than ever because he was not bor n a great man. He endured a painful struggle to become one. Washington did not have a military education as most great generals have. But his strong ambition to become a leader and a keen ability to learn from his mistakes managed to get him
there. The young Washington did get an early start by doing a great job selling himself to his elders. It was during the French and Indian War of 1754 to 1763 that the young man got to start lear ning the lessons of war, starting as a colonel at age 22. He was a young glory seeker thrust into circumstances he was not prepared to handle by elders who should have known better than to listen to Washington’s entreaties for command. Leading young amateur soldiers in the Virginia militia against French professionals, he was on his own, with no superior officers and no battle hardened veterans to keep him out of trouble. The brash young man made many mistakes. He survived his five-year ordeal unlike any other founding father. He was becoming a great military thinker by
Roswell Daily Record
the process of trial and error — mostly error in the beginning. But he usually managed to explain his way out of bad decisions, sometimes by shading the truth. His insubordination to civil and military leaders was, at times, shocking. But he got away with it, struggled through it and eventually emerged as the steady, mature supreme leader our revolution had to have. Clary has the talent of reveling in the backstories of American history. In “Adopted Son,” he tells of the father-son relationship that developed between Washington and the Marquis de Lafayette that saved the American Revolution. In “Eagles and Empire,” he tells the story of the Mexican-American War from both sides, revealing the horrible decisions by American and Mexican leaders that led to a war that never
should have happened the way it did. Once again, in “Washington’s First War,” Clary reveals amazing facts about the foibles of a precocious young man who had to learn everything the hard way. Some may feel Clary shouldn’t even reveal some of young Washington’s mistakes, missteps and even insubordination. Others may feel like Clary’s wife, Bea, who said some of Washington’s actions made her want to send him to his room. But they were all actions that molded perhaps our greatest American, a man without whom our revolution may not have succeeded. Clary’s book is now available in bookstores and online. It’s a great read — by a fellow New Mexican. (Write to Jay Miller at 3 La Tusa, Santa Fe, NM 87505; by fax at 984-0982; or by e-mail at insidethecapitol@hotmail.com)
National Opinion Obama and Guantanamo
Congress approved a defense spending bill with an unusual twist. The measure included provisions specifically forbidding expenditure of funds to close the Guantanamo Bay prison where scores of terrorists are being held. It added that no funds can be spent to bring Guantanamo inmates to the U.S. or to ship them to other countries where security is a concern. Clearly, the provisions were slaps in President Barack Obama’s face. He has maintained closing the prison is a top priority. Now, White House aides are saying Obama may sign the bill, but use a technicality referred to as a “signing statement” to refuse to abide by its provisions on the Guantanamo Bay inmates. Without exposing his hypocrisy — his penchant for following only the rules he likes — we fail to see how the president can do that. It needs to be remembered the defense funding bill was a bipartisan measure passed during a time when Democrats controlled both houses of Congress. If Obama attempts to circumvent the Guantanamo Bay stipulations, then, it will be to appeal to his ultraliberal base even if many Democrats disagree with him. The president is well aware most Americans disagree with his policy concerning the prison. He doesn’t have to like that — but he should at least bow to the will of the people as expressed by Congress. Guest Editorial The Post-Journal, Jamestown, N.Y.
Congressional distractions
Given their ubiquity, one would think Americans no longer can live without the iPhones, iPads, BlackBerrys, smart phones and assorted electronic devices that collectively provide the chirps, whistles, clicks, beeps and other noises that have become the soundtrack of contemporary life. Not so. The gadgets, to be sure, are extremely useful, but they remain a convenience not a necessity in the truest sense of the word. Sensible limits on their use are wise. Indeed, rather than finding ways to expand the arenas in which the use of electronic devices is acceptable, there appears to be a trend toward limiting their use. It’s a movement that should be encouraged in the name of public politeness and propriety. Not everyone, of course, agrees with that assessment. Some actively oppose it. That’s certainly the case for the new Republican majority in the U.S. House of Representatives. They’ve proposed a rule that will lift the current ban on such devices on the floor of the House. They’ve wrapped up the proposal in language that suggests they don’t want to trounce tradition, but a careful reading of the proposal suggests otherwise. House members don’t need additional distractions. There already are enough. The chamber has operated without the distractions of electronic devices for more than two centuries. It should continue to do so. The proposal to allow the gizmos on the House floor should be defeated. Guest Editorial Chattanooga (Tenn.) Times on DEAR DR. GOTT: I am a 65-year old female in good health, other than the type 2 diabetes I’ve had since 1992. I have used insulin since 2002, and my diabetes is in good control with an A1C of 6.5. I have had a watery eye for four months now. Initially, I threw away two tubes of mascara, thinking they may be causing my eye to be infected. The water is clear, and there is no pain in my eye. I used allergy eyedrops and took an allergy pill with an antihistamine in it. Neither helped my eye. I visited my dentist and lear ned I needed some dental work done on the upper right side of my mouth. I asked if this
Obamacare’s baby death panels (Part 1) My wife, Gena, and I mourn with the rest of the nation over the murder and maiming of innocent citizens and lawmakers in Arizona this past Saturday morning. We, too, pray for the victims and survivors. It makes us even more passionate in our fight for human life and reminding the world that from the womb to the tomb, human life is precious and should be prized. Last week, two questions dominated the political landscape regarding Obamacare. First, will the new 112th Congress repeal it? And secondly, if Obamacare didn’t of fer advanced directives for end-of-
Doonesbury
ASK DR. GOTT UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE
could cause my eye to water, and he didn’t think so. I later had the dental work completed, and my eye still watered. I visited my ophthalmologist, and he gave me a thorough eye exam, including irrigation of the tear duct. The water flowed through to my throat. He could not find a reason for my eye to be watering. So I visited my fam-
CHUCK NORRIS
SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
life planning (aka “death panels”), then why did the Obama administration just repeal a Medicare regulation and reference for it covered under the new health care law? Those are both great questions. But the one question being overlooked by too many is this one: If the 112th Congress fails to repeal Oba-
ily doctor, and she referred me to another ophthalmologist for a second opinion. The second one did a thorough eye exam, including irrigating the tear duct again. The second irrigation was VER Y painful, leading me to believe that the needle was not placed in the proper position. When the doctor released the water, it ran down my cheek so the second doctor believes there may be a tear -duct blockage. She wanted to refer me to a surgeon. I don’t believe the second procedure was done correctly so I don’t wish to see a surgeon. She further suggested I use eyedrops up to four times a day and hold hot compresses to that eye twice a day. After a
macare, will it include “baby death panels” in the future? In other words, will taxpayer money be used to provide for abortions under the new universal health care law? It’s been coming down Washington’s political pike for two years. Remember, during the president’s first year in of fice, when the Senate tabled the amendment introduced by Sen. Ben Nelson, D-Neb., and Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, which would have banned federal funds from providing for abortion in the universal health care reform bill? Then the House and Senate,
week, the eye is still watering. Do you have any suggestions? Or is this just a part of the aging process and something I am going to have to live with? DEAR READER: I certainly hope not. Tearing occurs when the body makes more tears than are lost through natural drainage or evaporation. Obvious causes include exposure to cold, wind, allergies and infection or, as both ophthalmologists attempted to determine, a blocked tear duct. Other less common possibilities include irritation, an ingrown eyelash, dry
See GOTT, Page A5
on secret Sunday sessions, passed an omnibus bill and its provision that also overtur ned the 1988 Dor nan amendment, which prevented taxpayer dollars from funding abortions in Washington, D.C. (Tragically, that omnibus bill also appropriated $648.5 million for international family planning funding — an increase of $103 million over 2009 — and contained funding for Planned Parenthood and for the United Nations Population Fund, both of which have pro-abortion agendas.) Next will likely be the
25 YEARS AGO
See NORRIS, Page A5
Jan. 14, 1986 • Niki Packenham and Debbie D. Woody have been selected AAUW girl and Silverbelle at Roswell High School. The honors are given by the American Association of University Women and the Service League of Chaves County. Packenham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hopper, is president of the Honor Society, an officer of the Drama Club, and secretary of Advanced Mixed Chorus. Woody, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Paul Woody, is German Club secretary, Science Club secretary, a member of the National Senior Honor Society and a member of the Who’s Who of American High School Students. • Angela and Melissa Hernandez and Christine Urvina recently won honors at the NBTA State Twirling Championships. Angela and Melissa are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hernandez, of Carlsbad, and granddaughters of Mr. and Mrs. Pete Hernandez and Mr. and Mrs. Fred M. Trujillo, of Roswell.
Roswell Daily Record
TODAY IN HISTORY
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today is Friday, Jan. 14, the 14th day of 2011. There are 351 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight On Jan. 14, 1784, the United States ratified a peace treaty with England, ending the Revolutionary War. On this date In 1639, the first constitution of Connecticut — the Fundamental Orders — was adopted. In 1858, Napoleon III, Emperor of the French, and his wife, Empress Eugenie, escaped an assassination attempt led by Italian revolutionary Felice (fay-LEE’chay) Orsini, who was later captured and executed. In 1900, Puccini’s opera “Tosca” had its world premiere in Rome. In 1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and French General Charles de Gaulle opened a wartime conference in Casablanca. In 1952, NBC’s “T oday” show premiered, with Dave Garroway as the host, or “communicator,” as he was officially known. In 1953, Josip Broz T ito (YAW’-sihp brawz TEE’-toh) was elected president of Yugoslavia by the country’s Parliament. In 1963, George C. Wallace was sworn in as governor of Alabama with a pledge of “segregation forever.” In 1968, the Green Bay Packers of the NFL defeated the AFL’s Oakland Raiders, 33-14, in Super Bowl II. In 1969, 27 people aboard the aircraft carrier USS Enterprise, off Hawaii, were killed when a rocket warhead exploded, setting off a fire and additional explosions. In 1970, Diana Ross and the Supremes performed their last concert together, at the Frontier Hotel in Las Vegas. Ten years ago: The matchup for Super Bowl XXXV (35) was decided as the New York Giants shut out the Minnesota Vikings, 41-0, to win the NFC championship and the Baltimore Ravens beat the Oakland Raiders, 16-3, to gain the AFC
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Hyde amendment, which prohibits the same when it comes to federal spending. The 111th Congress repeatedly rejected any amendments to the universal health care bills that would have prevented taxpayer money from being used for abortions. In the end, even the Stupak-Pitts amendment in the House and the Nelson-Hatch amendment in the Senate were sidestepped, on the basis that the president would sign an executive order promising that federal funds would not be used for funding abortions. Of course, President Barack Obama’s executive orders aren’t worth the paper they are printed on. Proof came this past year, when it was discovered that federal funds were, in fact, being funneled to provide for abortive services in Pennsylvania and New Mexico. The truth is that when our country elected Obama as president, we placed a man in the highest office in the land who had the most liberal views and voting record on abortion of any president in American history. Our president, who once confessed on the campaign trail that estimating when a baby gets human rights was above his “paygrade,” has graded human life in the womb in such a way that he has zero problem signing into law a piece of legislation that will terminate the lives of millions of babies. He certainly wasn’t joking when he told Planned Parenthood during his presidential campaign that he would “turn the page” on the abortion culture war. Planned Parenthood has just filed a restraining order trying to keep you from discovering information from a former Planned Parenthood director (Bryan, Texas) and “Employee of the Year,” Abby Johnson. There’s no doubt why; Abby already has helped to expose the multibillion-dollar marketing of abortion, in the fifth episode of the Emmy-winning series “Facing Life Head-
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eye, eyelid abnormalities, eyestrain and blepharitis (overgrowth of normal skin bacteria). Keep in mind that some medications such as antihistamines, diuretics, pain relievers, sleeping pills and beta-blockers might be the culprit. As we age, we commonly have dry eyes (decreased production of tears) and a relaxation of the muscles that hold the inner portion of the eyelid tightly against the eye. Treatment will obviously depend on the cause. Blocked ducts can be repaired by creating a new channel from the sac to the inside of the nose. Narrowed (but not blocked) drainage channels can be widened with the use of a
OPINION II title. Five years ago: The chief judge in Saddam Hussein’s trial (Rizgar Mohammed Amin) submitted his resignation (he was succeeded by Raouf Rasheed Abdel-Rahman). Johnny Weir won his third straight title at the U.S. Figure Skating championships in St. Louis; Sasha Cohen won the women’s division; Michelle Kwan was given a berth on the U.S. Olympic figure skating team. Academy Award-winning actress Shelley Winters died in Beverly Hills, Calif., at age 85. One year ago: President Barack Obama and the U.S. moved to take charge in earthquake-ravaged Haiti, dispatching thousands of troops along with tons of aid. Iraq’s electoral commission barred 500 candidates from running in March 2010 parliamentary elections, including a prominent Sunni lawmaker, deepening sectarian divides. Today’s Birthdays: CBS commentator Andy Rooney is 92. Blues singer Clarence Carter is 75. Country singer Billie Jo Spears is 74. Singer Jack Jones is 73. Singer-songwriter Allen Toussaint is 73. Former NAACP Chairman Julian Bond is 71. Actress Faye Dunaway is 70. Actress Holland Taylor is 68. Actor Carl Weathers is 63. Singer-producer T-Bone Burnett is 63. Movie writer-director Lawrence Kasdan is 62. Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Maureen Dowd is 59. Rock singer Geoff Tate (Queensryche) is 52. Movie writer-director Steven Soderbergh is 48. Actor Mark Addy is 47. Fox News Channel anchorman Shepard Smith is 47. Rapper Slick Rick is 46. Actor Dan Schneider is 45. Actress Emily Watson is 44. Actor comedian Tom Rhodes is 44. Rock musician Zakk Wylde (Ozzy Osbourne Band) is 44. Rapper-actor LL Cool J is 43. Actor Jason Bateman is 42. Rock singer-musician Dave Grohl (Foo Fighters) is 42. Actress Jordan Ladd is 36. Retro-soul singer-songwriter Marc Broussard is 29. Rock singer -musician Caleb Followill (Kings of Leon) is 29. Rock musician Joe Guese (The Click Five) is 28. Thought for Today: “Dignity is like a perfume; those who use it are scarcely conscious of it.” — Queen Christina of Sweden (1626-1689). On,” available to watch online. She also is blowing the whistle on her former employer and telling the shocking truth about everything that she saw inside the abortion industry — and why she resigned her job to join the pro-life movement — in her brand-new book, “Unplanned.” (You can get a free chapter of it at http://UnplannedWebcast.com.) Planned Parenthood is the long arm of government for the abortion industry. In fact, consider that from 2002-08, Planned Parenthood, the largest but not the only abortion agency to receive government funds, received $657.1 million from federal taxpayers alone. And in just a single year, from 2008-09, Planned Parenthood received $363.2 million in government grants and contracts, a $13.6 million increase from the previous year, which resulted in 324,800 abortions. The question that I keep coming back to is the one Sen. Hatch asked more than a year ago: “Why should people of conscience be forced to participate in any aspect of abortion?” To give you hope, Gena and I would also encourage you to visit the website http://www.IAmSecond.com, started by our dear friends Norm and Anne Miller. In particular, please listen there to the powerful testimony of Lisa Luby Ryan. Please also read the article “50 Ways To Help Unborn Babies and Their Mothers,” by my friend and prolific author Randy Alcorn. It’s one of a host of great resources at his website, http://www.epm.org. (Next week, I’ll explain not only how the pro-life cavalry has come to Washington but also how you can assist it via three particular action items, just in time for Sanctity of Human Life Sunday, which is Jan. 23. I also tell how we can esteem human life in the chapter “Reclaim the Value of Human Life,” in my New York Times best-seller “Black Belt Patriotism,” a free chapter from which is available at http://www.ChuckNorrisNewBook.com.) © 2011 Chuck Norris probe. Allergic conjunctivitis will respond to antihistamines. Infective conjunctivitis might ultimately require an antibiotic. Perhaps you are unknowingly on a medication that could be causing the tearing. I cannot comment on the second irrigation treatment, but I can recommend you make an appointment with your primary-care physician so he or she can ask relevant questions, perform some simple testing, and zero in on or rule out some of the possibilities I mentioned. Good luck. Dr. Peter H. Gott is a retired physician and the author of several books, including “Live Longer, Live Better,” “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Diet” and “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Cookbook,” which are available at most bookstores or online. His website is www.AskDrGottMD.com.
Friday, January 14, 2011
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A6 Friday, January 14, 2011
LOCAL/VISTAS
Blooming plant known by many names; not edible
Q. Please identify this plant? It is like a “pregnant plant.” I have had the plant for years, and for the first time it is blooming. I have never been able to figure out what it is. I am sending pictures. A. This plant is Kalanchoe daigremontiana (previously Bryophyllum daigremontiana), a native of South America. It goes by a number of common names — pregnant plant, mother of thousands and devil’s backbone — because the stem often grows in a spiral or twisted manner — are just a few of the common names. It is an interesting plant for several reasons. But first I should point out that it is very toxic to humans and pets. I often receive the question “can I eat this plant” with regard to many plants. This time the answer is that you should definitely not eat it and you should keep it away from pets that like to chew on plants. Of course you should keep it away from little children who are at the stage of putting everything into their mouths. Along with the toxicity may come some
medicinal properties, but this is not something for the average homeowner to try. In South America, some herbalists use it to cure illness and scientists are finding some possibly anti-cancer compounds in the plant. Many plants that cure can kill when used improperly. Leave this one to the medical scientists to use for developing cures. The ability of this plant to produce “foliar embryos” through the process of “apomixes” makes it very interesting. Baby plants (foliar embryos) which are produced along the edge of the leaf, drop to the soil when they are mature and take root. Each then produces a new plant. I first learned of this plant when I was in my early teens and saw it at a friend’s house. I was given some of the embryos and put
Outreach stitchers to meet
Remnant Piecemakers, a partner of Sisters and Brothers in Stitches, will meet at the ENMMC Senior Circle facility in the Wilshire Center, 2801 N. Main St., next to Family Dollar, from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Friday, Jan. 14. Sisters and Brothers in Stitches is a collaborative partnership of outreach quilters and stitchers. Anyone who can tie a double knot, sew, crochet, knit or quilt will fit right in. It is not necessary to be a Senior Circle member — all age groups are welcome. For more information, call 623-2311.
Retired nurses
The retired nurses will meet at 11:30 a.m., Friday, Jan. 14, at Peppers restaurant. All retired nurses are welcome. For more information, call 625-0508.
MLK commemorative breakfast
The 12th annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Commemorative Breakfast, presented by Blackdom Memorial Inc., and the Roswell Parks and Recreation Department, will be held at 9 a.m., Saturday, Jan. 15, at the Roswell Convention and Civic Center, 912 N. Main St. Cost is $12 per person; tickets may be purchased at the venue. The keynote speaker will be Roswell Mayor Del Jurney; Michael Francis’ Spice of Life Band will entertain. For more information, call Justus Bowe at 623-6621 or Landjur Abukusumo at 622-3306.
High Prairie Poets
The High Prairie Poets chapter of the New Mexico State Poetry Society will meet at 2 p.m., Saturday, Jan. 15, in the Bassett Room of the Roswell Museum and Art Center, 100 W. 11th St. Albuquerque poet K. M. White will be the featured reader, with a presentation of new poems from her recent trip to Paris. Also featured will be Logan Mathison, fifth-grade winner in the recent Character Counts! poetry contest, who will read his winning poem “Actions Speak Louder Than Words.” The meeting will include a discussion of writing prompts and a planning session for the 2011 Spring Poetry Contest for Roswell schools. Poets of all ages and all levels of experience — from beginner to widely published — are welcome to come and bring their own poems to read. Critique is available on request.
Wings for L.I.F.E.
Wings for L.I.F.E. will meet at 6 p.m., Sunday, Jan. 16, at the Roswell Boys & Girls Club, 201 S. Garden Ave. The program, “Making Realistic New Years Resolutions & Planning for Future Success,” will be presented by Bobby Heard and Shelly Currier. Dinner will be served at 6 p.m. For more information, call Shelly at 3172042.
Hospitality Luncheon
The Roswell Chamber of Commerce, the City of Roswell and Summit Food Service Management are hosting a Hospitality Luncheon from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 19, at the Roswell Convention and Civic Center, 912 N. Main St. Reservations must be made by the end of the day today. To RSVP, call 623-5695.
Commission on Aging
The Roswell City Commission on Aging will meet at 3 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 19, at Villa Del Rey Assisted Living, 2801 N. Ken-
tucky Ave. The public is invited and the Commission will take questions related to aging concerns. Dr. Terry Wilmot, who is developing a transportation needs survey instrument for seniors, will discuss travel issues to and from Albuquerque. Transportation limitations allegedly placed on residents at Sunset Villa nursing home will also be discussed. Sen. Tim Jennings’ legislation prohibiting the establishment of small town monopolies for assisted living and nursing homes will be discussed, and representatives of the Hunt and Clark law firm will brief the Commission on the class action and federal whistle blower lawsuits against Eastern New Mexico Medical Center and its parent company, Community Healthcare Services. For more infor mation contact L ynn Ybarra at 622-3675 or Tom Dunlap at 622-2607 or by e-mail at dunlaplawoffice@cableone.net.
Delta Kappa Gamma
The Alpha Chapter of Delta Kappa Gamma will meet at 6 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 20, at Peppers restaurant. It is a Dutch treat, so bring a guest if you wish. We will be collecting school supplies for a needy school. For more infor mation, call Jennifer Bolanos at 626-1710.
Chaves County Democrats
The Chaves County Democrats will meet at 6:30 p.m., Thursday, Jan. 20, at the Roswell Elks Lodge, 1720 N. Montana Ave. The Democratic candidates running for school board seats in Chaves County have been invited to share their platform for election. Come have dinner and dessert and hear from the candidates. For more information, call Olivia G. Reid at 724-5920.
Assistance League
Assistance League of Chaves County will hold its regular meeting at 10 a.m., Friday, Jan. 21, at the Chapter House, 2601 N. Aspen Road. A coffee social will start at 9:30 a.m. The hostesses will be Betty Teel, Nancy Corn, Elizabeth Norsch and Annette Voliva. For more infor mation, call L ynn Allensworth at 627-0722 or by e-mail at lynn_sa@msn.com.
AWA spay/neuter clinic
The Animal Welfare Alliance is holding its first spay/neuter clinic of the year on Jan. 21, 22 and 23. Start the new year off by spaying or neutering your pet to avoid unwanted litters of puppies and kittens. The AWA has a small amount of financial assistance available for large dogs and grant funds from the Community Foundation of Chaves County to assist in paying to spay or neuter cats and kittens owned by any senior citizen. To make an appointment, call 317-7439; prior to the clinic, a volunteer will call you back.
Roswell Daily Record
Photo courtesy of Curtis Smith
them into my coat pocket. I forgot about the embryos and put my coat in the closet at home. I found the coat with embryos in the pocket many months later, perhaps the next winter. I planted them and they grew. This toughness makes this a good plant for people with “brown thumbs.” This is one plant that you can kill only by overwatering or never watering. It is also a bit weedy. Most potted plants in my house have several of these plants, or related
Pet of the Week
plants, growing in the pot. I have to pull them out frequently. They also make a mess on the floor. The good news in New Mexico is that for most New Mexico gardeners, they will not overwinter outside and will not become outdoor weeds. They are succulent plants, which explains their toughness and ability to survive very infrequent watering. They bloom only rarely for most indoor gardeners and because the flowers are attractive, they are a very interesting plant to grow. Just remember that they are toxic plants. For more gardening information, visit the NMSU Extension publications website at http://aces.nmsu.edu/pubs/_h. Send your gardening questions to Yard and Garden, Attn: Dr. Curtis Smith, NMSU Agricultural Science Center, 1036 Miller Road, SW, Los Lunas, N.M., 87031. Curtis W. Smith, Ph.D., is an Extension Horticulture Specialist with New Mexico State University’s Cooperative Extension Service. NMSU and the U.S. Department of Agriculture cooperating.
Jessica Palmer Photo
These two kittens — one male, one female — are available for adoption at Roswell Animal Control. If you are interested in these kittens or in any other wonderful pet, visit Roswell Animal Control, 705 E. McGaffey St., or call 624-6722.
Eat right for Chinese New Year SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Have your luck and eat it, too. That’s the philosophy behind traditional Chinese New Year’s dishes, which are loaded with symbolic meaning auguring prosperity for the coming year. Want to live long? Eat long noodles — just be sure not to cut them. Need a bit more in the bank? Serve fish, the Chinese name for which sounds like the word for surplus. And don’t forget dumplings, which also symbolize prosperity and are traditionally eaten late on the eve of the New Year. The Year of the Rabbit starts with the big “reunion dinner” on New Year’s Eve — Feb. 2 this year — a meal reserved for family and resonant with culinary customs. Carolyn Jung, a San Francisco Bay food writer who blogs at www.foodgal.com, remembers sitting at the table as the youngest of her family, and only girl, helping her mom fold dumplings by hand and “waiting eagerly for her to pan fry them or boil them so that we could dig in.” Chinese New Year is celebrated in many parts of the world that have sizable populations of Chinese immigrants, and other Asian cultures have similar celebrations. With so many people involved, the customs aren’t uniform, though the hope for a prosperous new year is a constant. The festival lasts 15 days, with some days set aside for visiting and other rituals. It wraps up with a Lantern Festival on the final night. For Patricia Tanumihardja, who grew up in Singapore and is of Chinese and Indonesian
AP Photo
This Jan. 10, 2011, photo shows tomato beef chow mein in Concord, N.H.
descent, the holiday means eating pineapple tarts, which can take different forms but generally call for a luscious pineapple jam stuffed into flaky pastry. “Every year that was the one thing I wanted to eat,” says Tanumihardja, author of “The Asian Grandmothers Cookbook.” This is the time when luxury ingredients such as shrimp or abalone shine and fish is served whole to symbolize plenty. Serving whole poultry also is a sign of family unity and Tanumihardja sometimes makes a whole braised duck for a holiday meal. In Singapore, a raw fish salad is served in restaurants with the ingredients kept separate on a large plate or tray. Before they eat, diners stand and toss the salad as high as they
can saying auspicious words like “Every year we’ll have prosperity.” As a kid, Jung saw Chinese New Year as mostly about the food — and the red envelopes filled with crisp dollar bills that are handed out to children. She spent the money and kept the brightly decorated envelopes, keeping them neatly stowed away in a drawer. As she grew up, the holiday became more about family. These days she often makes her mom’s tomato beef chow mein, a blend of east and west cooking styles typical in Chinese-American kitchens. “I remember so many times peeking over her shoulder as she crisped up the noodles in the pan,” says Jung, who would sneak noodles right out of the pan until she was shooed away.
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Major milestone: Giffords moves arms, legs Roswell Daily Record
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — Rep. Gabrielle Giffords is opening both eyes, moving both legs and arms and is responding to friends and family. Her doctors call it a “major milestone” in her recovery. “We’re hoping that she crosses through many more,” said her neurosurgeon, Dr. Michael Lemole. Her remarkable recovery five days after being shot through the head has provided a much-needed dose of jubilation after a tragic week that left the nation in mourning. Giffords and 18 others were shot Saturday when a gunman opened fire at a meet-and-greet she was hosting outside a supermarket in her own hometown. Six people died, including a 9-year-old girl whose funeral was Thursday. The three-term Democrat first opened her eyes on her own Wednesday evening while surrounded by her husband, astronaut Mark Kelly, and close friends from Congress. Her left eye, which was unbandaged, started to flicker and she struggled a bit to widen it. “Gabby, open your eyes, open your eyes,” her husband urged her. Kelly told her to give him a thumbs-up if she could hear him. She did more than that. She slowly raised her left arm. President Barack Obama, who had just left her bedside to speak at a tribute for the shooting victims,
announced the news to the thousands gathered in the University of Arizona arena — and to the world. The arena erupted in thunderous applause. There were tears. And hugs. First lady Michelle Obama embraced Kelly, sitting beside her. Giffords’ movements left her friends astonished. “It felt like we were watching a miracle,” said Rep. Debbie Wasser man Schultz, who was at the bedside. “The strength that you could see flowing out of her, it was like she was trying to will her eyes open.” At a news conference Thursday at Tucson’s University Medical Center, Lemole smiled when asked if it was a miracle. Then, he spoke carefully, as those trained to operate on the most delicate of organs do. He knows all too well the setbacks that could lurk. “Miracles happen every day,” he said. “In medicine, we like to very much attribute them to either what we do or others do around us. But a lot of medicine is outside of our control and we’re wise to acknowledge miracles.” He called her movements a “leap forward.” Her doctors said her progress was not completely unexpected, but still remarkable. Giffords was still in critical condition, with part of her skull removed to allow for brain swelling. Few people survive a bullet to the brain — just 10 percent — and some who do end up in a vegetative
state. The fact that Giffords is alert and moving “puts her in the exceptional category,” Lemole said. The doctors figured Giffords would open her eyes soon enough and were pleased that it coincided with Obama’s visit. She can now keep them open for up to 15 minutes at a time. Trauma chief Dr. Peter Rhee said Giffords acts like a bleary-eyed person just waking up. Giffords yawns, rubs her eyes and tries to focus, he said. Doctors don’t yet know if she can recognize her surroundings, but there are signs her eyes are beginning to track movements. She is receiving physical therapy, which includes dangling her legs from her bed while propped up by nurses. Doctors hope to have her sit in a chair by Friday. They also hope to remove her breathing tube — what they called the next milestone. Kelly has remained by her side the whole time, doctors said. He is scheduled to command NASA’s last space shuttle flight, but that’s uncertain now. NASA announced a fill-in commander Thursday just in case. The latest progress is a far cry from last week, when a shocked nation braced for the worst, holding candlelight vigils outside the hospital and Giffords’ Tucson office. But as the days ticked by, doctors shared signs of
BAGHDAD (AP) — Iraqi politicians face the contentious question this year of whether to ask U.S. troops to stay beyond an end-of-2011 deadline for their departure. That decision has become far more complicated with the return to Iraq of anti-American cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. The future of U.S. troops in Iraq was a topic of talks
between Vice President Joe Biden and Iraqi leaders Thursday during the first visit by a senior U.S. official since Iraq’s new government was formed. The case for an extension centers around concerns that Iraqi forces may not be ready to keep security. Many Sunnis want U.S. troops to stick around for their protection, fearing
domination by the Shiite majority. Kurds see the Americans as a guarantee of their autonomous region in the north. And some in the party of Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki also want the U.S. forces to stay. But al-Sadr, a Shiite who came home last week from nearly four years in voluntary exile in Iran, is a formidable obstacle. He immedi-
Friday, January 14, 2011
AP Photo
In this Jan. 11 file photo, Dr. Peter Rhee, Trauma and Critical Care Emergency Surgery doctor at University Medical Center, describes in more detail the gunshot wound Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, D-Ariz., received on Saturday, during a news briefing at UMC in Tucson, Ariz. Giffords remains in critical condition, but doctors have reported steady progress each day since she was wounded last weekend. If all goes well, she may be "out of the woods" on Friday, said Rhee.
improvement. There was a glimmer of hope early on: Gif fords was able to squeeze a doctor’s hand in the emergency room. Gif fords survived the gunshot wound for many reasons. The path of the bullet, quick and quality medical care, and a stroke of luck meant the difference between life and death, say her doctors and brain experts. Doctors think the bullet pierced the front of Giffords’ head and exited the back, slicing the left side of the brain, which controls
speech abilities and muscles on the right side of the body. They did not explain why her right eye was bandaged. Had the bullet damaged both sides of the brain or struck the brain stem, which connects to the spinal cord, the outcome would likely be worse — extensive permanent damage, vegetative state or death. “So far, she’s passed with flying colors of each stage” of her recovery, said neurologist Dr. Marc Nuwer of
the University of California, Los Angeles, who is not involved in the congresswoman’s treatment. It is too early to tell the extent of damage, but experts say it is rare for people with gunshot wounds to the head to regain all of their abilities. Damage to the brain’s left side can result in memory loss, difficulty reading and hand-eye coordination problems. Her doctors have not been able to determine whether Gif fords can speak, since she still has a breathing tube.
ately put the government on notice that he and his movement, which is a pivotal member of the ruling coalition, will not tolerate any lingering American troop presence. “We heard a pledge from the government that it will expel the occupier, and we are waiting for it to honor its word,” he said during a speech. No decision on an extension will come at least until al-Maliki has chosen a defense minister. If Iraq requests an extension, the overriding question will be whether al-Sadr is willing to risk bringing down the government over it. Under a deal agreed upon in 2008, the approximately 47,000 American troops still in the country must leave by the end of 2011. Privately, many in Iraq and the U.S. long assumed that the two sides would re-negotiate for an American troop presence in some form past that deadline. Iraq’s top military commander has said U.S. troops should stay until Iraq’s security forces can defend its borders — which he said could take until 2020. The U.S. officially doesn’t rule out an extension. Biden
told American troops Thursday that the U.S. should make sure Iraq’s stability and democracy are strong enough to make it “a country that was worthy of the sacrifices” American troops have undergone. He also said the U.S. would continue to train and equip Iraqi forces beyond 2011, highlighting the continued uncertainty about the future of America’s troop presence. An aide to Biden said the vice president reiterated Washington’s longtime position that the U.S. would listen to any request by the Iraqi government for troops to stay longer but that Baghdad has not asked. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the talks. Biden met Thursday with al-Maliki, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and other officials, but not with alSadr, in keeping with longstanding practice on both sides. The topic had been sidelined for most of the past year, with Iraqi politicians deadlocked after national elections in March failed to produce a clear winner. But with al-Maliki’s formation of a government, the issue is
now under discussion. Publicly, al-Maliki has rejected an extension, telling a November news conference and then The Wall Street Journal last month that there is no reason for U.S. troops to stay past the deadline. But a lawmaker from alMaliki’s bloc said an American troop presence is likely to remain past 2011. He did not have specific information on how many, but said any remaining forces would help with specific tasks such as protecting Iraqi airspace, training Iraqi forces and logistics. He acknowledged that such an extension would be “embarrassing” for the government, especially after alSadr’s return. The lawmaker did not want to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue. Al-Maliki faces a dilemma. Asking for American help would be difficult politically, considering he won his new term only with al-Sadr’s reluctant support. A senior Sadrist lawmaker, Bahaa alAaraji, said al-Sadr returned in part to ensure that al-Maliki keeps his promise to stick by the deadline.
Sadr return complicates US troop presence in Iraq
AP Photo
U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, left, shares a light moment with Iraq's Parliament Speaker Osama al-Nujaifi, in Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday. Biden arrived in Iraq early Thursday for talks with the new government's leaders about the future of American troops in the country as they prepare to leave at year's end.
5
RIGINAL O ORIGINAL CCHILI HILI D OGS DOGS
5
$
2407 N. Main, Roswell
A8 Friday, January 14, 2011
WEATHER
Roswell Seven-day forecast Today
Mostly sunny
Tonight
Mainly clear
Saturday
A full day of sunshine
Sunday
Monday
Mostly sunny
Tuesday
Partly sunny and breezy
Sunshine
Roswell Daily Record
National Cities
Wednesday
Thursday
Mostly sunny and mild
Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Boston Charlotte Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit El Paso Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Lubbock
Cooler with a shower
High 65°
Low 22°
59°/24°
69°/31°
70°/32°
61°/26°
67°/31°
62°/21°
VAR at 2-4 mph POP: 0%
WNW at 10-20 mph POP: 0%
NW at 6-12 mph POP: 0%
NE at 3-6 mph POP: 0%
SE at 6-12 mph POP: 5%
N at 10-20 mph POP: 5%
SSE at 4-8 mph POP: 5%
NW at 10-20 mph POP: 55%
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Almanac
New Mexico Weather
Roswell through 5 p.m. Thursday
Regional Cities Today Sat.
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Temperatures High/low ............................. 54°/9° Normal high/low ............... 55°/24° Record high ............... 79° in 1957 Record low ................ -15° in 1963 Humidity at noon ................... 26%
Farmington 40/19
Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Deming Espanola Farmington Gallup Hobbs Las Cruces Las Vegas Los Alamos Los Lunas Lovington Portales Prewitt Raton Red River Roswell Ruidoso Santa Fe Silver City T or C Tucumcari White Rock
Clayton 49/26
Raton 51/17
Precipitation 24 hours ending 5 p.m. Thu. Month to date ....................... Normal month to date .......... Year to date ......................... Normal year to date .............
0.00” 0.00” 0.21” 0.00” 0.21”
Santa Fe 47/22
Gallup 42/12
Tucumcari 54/23
Albuquerque 50/28
Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast
Clovis 56/25
Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading 37 0-50
51-100
Good
Moderate
Source: EPA
101-150
Ruidoso 58/33
151+
Unhealthy Unhealthy sensitive
T or C 57/30
Sun and Moon The Sun Today Sat. The Moon Today Sat. Full
Jan 19
Rise 7:02 a.m. 7:02 a.m. Rise 12:32 p.m. 1:18 p.m. Last
Jan 26
New
Feb 2
Set 5:12 p.m. 5:13 p.m. Set 2:05 a.m. 3:04 a.m. First
Feb 11
Alamogordo 61/24
Silver City 60/29
ROSWELL 65/22 Carlsbad 65/21
Hobbs 63/25
Las Cruces 58/32
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2011
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Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
61/24/s 50/28/pc 43/10/pc 67/26/s 65/21/s 43/12/c 49/26/pc 48/22/s 56/25/s 58/27/s 49/27/pc 40/19/pc 42/12/pc 63/25/s 58/32/s 53/22/pc 45/21/pc 53/23/pc 59/27/s 55/23/s 44/12/pc 51/17/pc 41/7/pc 65/22/s 58/33/s 47/22/pc 60/29/pc 57/30/s 54/23/pc 48/23/pc
57/26/s 50/27/s 43/12/s 59/31/s 60/26/s 42/5/s 56/29/s 48/6/s 58/26/s 59/24/s 49/26/s 41/21/s 44/14/s 55/26/s 59/30/s 52/25/s 44/13/s 53/28/s 58/26/s 58/26/s 45/14/s 55/18/pc 40/6/s 59/24/s 54/34/s 47/21/s 57/30/s 55/29/s 56/24/s 48/18/s
YEAR PHONE
Sat.
Today
Sat.
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
10/-7/s 40/26/s 30/16/pc 24/15/pc 38/23/s 26/17/c 26/20/sn 46/38/c 48/26/c 27/17/sf 60/31/s 81/69/sh 52/43/c 28/22/c 30/22/c 63/40/s 78/50/s 57/24/s
4/-11/s 47/31/pc 38/26/pc 30/26/pc 46/26/pc 25/6/sn 34/17/sn 53/44/c 54/30/c 32/14/sn 60/32/s 81/68/pc 61/51/c 34/11/sf 30/11/c 61/41/s 82/50/s 58/27/pc
70/58/pc 57/25/s 19/5/sn 52/33/s 27/18/pc 28/14/c 64/42/pc 28/17/pc 71/47/pc 26/19/sf 54/44/r 38/21/s 32/24/c 45/27/c 71/51/s 55/44/r 71/40/pc 34/24/pc
75/60/pc 55/30/pc 10/-6/c 59/40/c 33/27/c 18/4/sn 68/45/s 34/28/c 71/47/s 33/20/sn 52/45/r 47/30/pc 37/18/c 42/31/c 73/50/s 50/44/r 70/39/s 41/30/pc
U.S. Extremes (For the 48 contiguous states)
State Extremes
High: 76°............... El Centro, Calif. Low: -11° ...................Austin, Minn.
High: 57°...................... Las Cruces Low: 0°...........................Angel Fire
Seattle 55/44
San Francisco 58/46
Chicago 26/17
New York 27/18 Washington 34/24
Kansas City 30/22 Los Angeles 78/50
Atlanta 40/26
El Paso 60/31
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Houston 52/43 Miami 70/58
Fronts Cold
-10s
Warm
-0s
Precipitation Stationary
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10s
20s
Showers T-storms
30s
40s
50s
Rain
60s
Flurries
70s
80s
Snow
Ice
90s 100s 110s
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Friday, January 14, 2011
LOCAL SCHEDULE FRIDAY JANUARY 14 HIGH SCHOOL BOYS BASKETBALL 6:30 p.m. • Valley Chr. at Elida 7 p.m. • Roswell at Deming John Reid Invitational, At Dexter 1 p.m. • Gateway Chr. vs. Dexter JV 2:45 p.m. • Lovington vs. Lake Arthur 4:30 p.m. • Tularosa vs. NMMI 6:15 p.m. • Dexter vs. Hagerman HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL 5 p.m. • Roswell C at NMMI 7 p.m. • Goddard at Hobbs
LOCAL BRIEFS ENMU-R TO HOST SNOWBALL HOOPS TOURNAMENT
The Eastern New Mexico University - Roswell Intramurals department will host the annual 3-on-3 Snowball basketball tournament on Saturday, Feb. 5, at the PE Center on the ENMU-R campus. The fee is $60 per team and each team may have four players. The deadline to enter is Feb. 3. For more information, call 624-7338.
SPORTS Roswell Daily Record
KEVIN J. KELLER RECORD SPORTS EDITOR
The newly-minted No. 1 4A team in the state put its top billing on the line for the first time on Thursday when the Roswell Lady Coyotes hosted No. 4 3A Portales at the Coyote Den. Roswell protected its No. 1 ranking, but certainly didn’t play up to its potential in a sloppy and slow-paced 40-26 win over the Rams. “It’s one of those games where we don’t like to play them and I don’t even think (Portales’) kids like playing that style,” Coyote coach Joe Carpenter said after the game. “It’s a style that the coach believes and, sometimes, both teams have to play that style.” The style Carpenter was talking about was the slowtempo style Portales likes to play. It worked for the Rams last year when they upset Roswell at the Coyote Den. However, it didn’t work this year, thanks in large part to a first-quarter run that gave the Coyotes a comfortable cushion that they would never relinquish. Leading 3-2 less than 3 minutes into the game, Marika Trujillo hit a runner in the lane that jump-started a 10point run that put Roswell (13-1) up by 11 with 2:47 left in the first. “It’s huge,” Carpenter said about how important it is to get an early run like that in a game where your opponent is trying to slow the tempo to a crawl. Portales got to within six 39 seconds into the second with a triple from Jenna Sievers, but the Rams would get no closer the rest of the way. See NO. 1, Page B2
NATIONAL BRIEFS TAYLOR PLEADS GUILTY IN N.Y.
He was arrested May 6 after the underage girl’s uncle contacted New York City police. Officers from Ramapo woke him at a Holiday Inn in Montebello.
SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS 1973 — The Miami Dolphins, who went 14-0 in the regular season and won two playoff games, beat the Washington Redskins 14-7 in the Super Bowl to become the only undefeated team in NFL history. 2003 — Pat Summitt becomes the first women’s college basketball coach to win 800 Division I games when her Tennessee Lady Vols beat DePaul, 76-57.
ON THIS DAY IN...
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Kevin J. Keller Photo
Roundup: GHS victorious
Arianna Gomez penetrates into the middle of Portales defenders, from left, Gabby Garcia, Emily Roberts, Francis Armijo and Jenna Sievers during Roswell’s 40-26 win, Thursday.
RECORD STAFF REPORTS
• More briefs on B2
NEW CITY, N.Y. (AP) — Former NFL star Lawrence Taylor pleaded guilty Thursday to sexual misconduct and patronizing a 16year-old prostitute, misdemeanor charges that carry no jail time but require him to register as a sex offender. The 51-year-old ex-linebacker, who led the New York Giants to Super Bowl titles in 1987 and 1991, will serve six years’ probation. “She told me she was 19,” Taylor, standing with his hands clasped behind him, said in court as he admitted having intercourse with the prostitute, who turned out to be a Bronx runaway. Taylor said he now knows the girl was 16 and legally incapable of consent. He said he paid her $300. Prosecutor Patricia Gunning said the plea deal was acceptable in part because Taylor had assisted in investigations into human trafficking since he was charged.
B
No. 1 Coyotes defeat No. 4 Rams Section
AP Photo
In this Sept. 26 file photo, then-Carolina Panthers coach John Fox reacts to a call. On Thursday, Fox was hired as the new head coach of the Denver Broncos.
Broncos hire Fox
ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — John Fox turned around a floundering franchise before. The Denver Broncos are counting on him to do it again. Fox was picked over four other candidates to replace Josh McDaniels, who was fired Dec. 6 amid the Broncos’ worst slide in four decades and the embarrassing Spygate II videotaping scandal. The lost season led to a restructuring of the front office and the return of Hall of Famer John Elway as chief football executive. On
Thursday, Elway hired Fox, the 55-year-old former Carolina Panthers coach to a four-year contract. “For what this building needed, John Fox was the perfect fit for us,” Elway said outside team headquarters before zipping off in his Bentley on Thursday evening. “The one thing I saw in John he had great football wisdom,” Elway said. “And I think that comes with the experience that he has. But
In high school boys basketball, 73 points would be an above average four quarters worth of scoring. For the Goddard boys basketball team, they led Ruidoso 73-33 at the half and cruised to a 97-50 win on Thursday. Seven Rocket players scored in the first quarter, as Goddard had a 37-21 lead at the end of the first 8 minutes. The hot streak continued in the second for the Rockets, but the defensive intensity picked up as they limited Warriors to just 12 points. Goddard coach Kevin Jones said that he told his team to be aggressive on the defensive end. “We just told them to be aggressive and shoot the passing lanes when the trap occurred,” he said. “Then we went man-to-man in the second half and told them to pressure the ball. We got tur novers out of that too. It was just one of those games where we were clicking on all cylinders. “We were finding the open man on offense and we got a lot of fast break points, which is really good.” Austin Rader led the Rockets (10-5) with 17 points and Ruben Otero netted 16. Lane Vander Hulst (14), Joseph Hahn (10), Skylar George (12) and Erik John-
Steve Notz Photo
Goddard’s Ruben Otero (22) puts up a shot over Ruidoso’s Tito Montoya during Goddard’s win, Thursday. son (12) all scored in double digits for the Rockets.
Hagerman 71, Lovington 58 DEXTER — The Hagerman boys basketball team is used to jumping on teams early and building a cushion by halftime. Against Lovington on Thursday, the Bobcats (150) fell behind 10-2 and trailed 20-19 after the first
quarter, but were able to rebound to down Lovington in the first round of the John Reid Invitational. Hagerman coach Anthony Mestas said that the Bobcat defense allowed them to overcome the early deficit. “We were down 10-2 right at the start,” he said. “Real-
Heisman winner Cam Newton declares for NFL draft See FOX, Page B2
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton will skip his senior season and enter the NFL draft after leading Aubur n to a national championship and drawing nearly as much attention for a pay-for-play scandal as for his dynamic performances. Auburn released a statement Thursday night AP Photo
LEFT: Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton celebrates after a TD during the national title game. On Thursday, Newton announced he was entering the NFL draft.
See ROUNDUP, Page B2
announcing the quarterback’s decision following his lone year as a major college starter. Newton led the T igers to their first national title since 1957 and a 14-0 season with a 22-19 victory over Oregon on Monday night. “This decision was difficult for me and my family,” Newton said, adding that he made it after talking to coach Gene Chizik and offensive coordinator Gus Malzahn. “It’s been a blessing for me to be a part of something so great,” he said. See NEWTON, Page B2
B2 Friday, January 14, 2011 Fox
Continued from Page B1
not only does he have it on the defensive side, but overall his football wisdom is what won us over.” Elway broke the news of Fox’s hiring on Twitter in keeping with the organization’s new emphasis on transparency as it tries to reconnect with a disenchanted fan base. Fox went 78-74 including playoffs in nine seasons with the Panthers, who did not renew his contract following an NFL-worst 2-14 season. “I’m very competitive,” Fox said as he left the team’s Dove Valley headquarters Thursday night. “Last year was obviously a very disappointing and very hard season, but that’s all the more reason to jump
Newton
Continued from Page B1
“Any time you win games it’s a big deal, but for this school to win a BCS national championship, what a way to make people happy. Auburn is a special place that I can call home.” The former backup to T im Tebow at Florida arrived after leading Blinn College in Texas to a junior college national championship and won on a much bigger stage with the Tigers. The national champions are waiting on Lombardi Award-winning defensive tackle Nick Fairley to announce his NFL decision on Friday in his hometown of Mobile. Fairley might be the No. 1 overall pick, but the 6-foot-6, 250pound Newton is the guy that Chizik called “prob-
High School
Thursday’s Scores By The Associated Press Boys Basketball Albuquerque High 55, Valencia 33 Bernalillo 57, Belen 51 Cleveland 79, Gallup 68 Eldorado 59, Valley 51 Goddard 97, Ruidoso 50 Hope Christian 78, Hatch Valley 22 Jal 71, Eunice 59 Monte del Sol 83, Evangel Christian 64 Mora 63, McCurdy 40 Piedra Vista 80, Santa Fe Indian 71 Pojoaque 21, Los Alamos 18 Portales 56, Tohatchi 43 Robertson 47, Tucumcari 44 Sandia Prep 47, Santa Fe 44 Santa Fe Prep 64, Escalante 51 St. Michael’s 52, Wingate 33 John Reid Invitational Dexter 58, Lake Arthur 20 Hagerman 71, Lovington 58 NMMI 56, Dexter JV 29 Tularosa 78, Gateway Christian 31 Girls Basketball Eldorado 59, Valley 30 Gallup 71, Albuquerque Academy 44 Hobbs JV 51, Hagerman 36 Hope Christian 67, Zuni 17 Jal 68, Eunice 27 Magdalena 79, East Mountain 12 Mesa Vista 55, Bloomfield 46
LOCAL BRIEFS RACE FOR BACKPACKS TO BE HELD FEB. 5
The Boy Scouts Conquistador Council, in conjunction with the Roswell Parks & Recreation Department and the Roswell Runners Club, will hold the inaugural Race for Backpacks on Feb. 5 at Cahoon Park. The event will feature a 5K walk and a 5K run. The entry fee to participate is a school backpack, which will be donated to Chaves County CASA. Race day registration begins at 7:30 a.m. and the race will begin at 9 a.m. For more information, call the Parks & Recreation Department at 624-6720 or Matt Gardner at 623-2627.
RTA VALENTINE TOURNEY SET FOR FEB. 5
The Roswell Tennis Association will hold its annual Valentine Tournament on Feb. 5 at 9 a.m. at the Cahoon Park tennis courts. The competition will be a mixed doubles adult tournament with a round-robin format in two levels. The tournament is open to RTA members and the entry fee is $20 per player. The deadline to enter is Feb. 1. A Valentine dinner for all tournament participants will also be held on the night of the tournament at 6 p.m. at Peppers Grill & Bar. For more information, or to enter the tournament, call Faye Stokes at 622-3889.
back in and get things turned around here.” Fox and general manager Brian Xanders spent much of the day putting together a coaching staff. Speculation centered on Fox keeping Mike McCoy as Denver’s offensive coordinator and hiring for mer Seahawks head coach Jim Mora Jr., as his defensive coordinator. “There’s been no decisions in that area yet,” Fox said. Fox’s task in tur ning around this team seems as high and steep as the biggest peaks in the Rocky Mountains. The Broncos are coming off a franchise-worst 4-12 season, own the second overall pick in the draft and are in need of a major overhaul — much like the Panthers were when Fox arrived in 2002 following a ably the best football player I’ve ever seen” after the Southeastern Conference championship game. “We appreciate Cameron’s many contributions to Auburn and the outstanding leader that he was for our football team,” Chizik said. “He had one of the greatest individual seasons ever by an Auburn player and was a key part of our championship run. Cam will always be a member of the Auburn family and we wish him the best in his future endeavors.” The College Park, Ga., native was chosen the Walter Camp and Associated Press National Player of the Year. Newton also won the Maxwell Award as the nation’s top player and the Davey O’Brien Award as the best quarterback. Rio Rancho 35, Highland 23 Roswell 40, Portales 26 Socorro 66, Tohatchi 57
Baseball
Hamilton still hosptialized, but improving
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — AL MVP Josh Hamilton remains hospitalized while showing signs of getting better in a bout with pneumonia. In a statement Wednesday, the Texas Rangers said Hamilton “is showing significant improvement” but remained at the hospital for treatment “in order to accelerate his full recovery.” The team said Hamilton is expected to be released by the weekend and should be able to resume his conditioning and baseball activities within a few days after his release. Hamilton was diagnosed Monday with an early case of pneumonia. Hamilton hit a majors-leading .359 with 32 homers and 100 RBIs last season. —————
Braves host Phils on May 15 in Civil Rights Game
NEW YORK (AP) — The Atlanta Braves will host the Philadelphia Phillies on May 15 in the fifth annual Civil Rights Game. Major League Baseball made the announcement Thursday. The game at Turner Field will cap four days of events that highlight civil rights history in Atlanta and all over the country. Braves Hall of Famer Hank Aaron will be honored with a red carpet tribute. All net proceeds from that celebration will be donated to a foundation named in honor of Martin Luther King Jr.
Basketball
National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Boston . . . . . . . . . . . .29 9 .763 — New York . . . . . . . . . .22 16 .579 7 Philadelphia . . . . . . . .15 23 .395 14 Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . .13 25 .342 16 New Jersey . . . . . . . .10 28 .263 19 Southeast Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . .30 11 .731 — Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . .26 14 .650 3 1⁄2 Orlando . . . . . . . . . . .25 14 .641 4 Charlotte . . . . . . . . . .15 21 .417 12 1⁄2 Washington . . . . . . . .10 27 .270 18 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Chicago . . . . . . . . . . .25 13 .658 — Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . .16 20 .444 8 Milwaukee . . . . . . . . .14 22 .389 10 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . .12 26 .316 13 Cleveland . . . . . . . . . .8 30 .211 17
TV SPORTSWATCH
TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press All times Mountain Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Friday, Jan. 14 BOWLING 3 p.m. ESPN2 — PBA, World Championship, at Las Vegas BOXING 7 p.m. ESPN2 — Middleweights, Peter Manfredo (36-6-0) vs. Daniel Edouard (23-3-2), at Key West, Fla. GOLF
SPORTS
1-15 season. He led them to a 7-9 mark in his first year before guiding them to the 2004 Super Bowl in his second season. Fox arrived in Denver on Wednesday to meet with Elway after his flight out of North Carolina was delayed three times by winter weather. He was the fifth and final candidate interviewed, and his sit-down lasted 90 minutes longer than the others’. Xanders said the interview lasted 5 1/2 hours, followed by a dinner with Elway and Fox that lasted just as long at Elway’s
Roundup
Roswell Daily Record
Steakhouse. “The more he talked, the more football wisdom came out in terms of different situations,” Xanders told The Associated Press. “Running the defense, the offense, the nine years of head coach experience came out in his answers. And then his personality, his energy and positive outlook fit the Broncos model.” In the Broncos’ new organizational structure, Elway oversees Xanders, who’s in charge of roster-building, and Fox, who’s in charge of the team. “We spent some time at dinner, a long dinner after
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ly, Lovington could have opened it up from there, but we had a few good defensive stands and started making shots and gained some confidence. Lovington is very athletic and very quick. They are the best team we’ve played all year, without a doubt.” For a team that is accustomed to winning big, Mestas said it was good to see his team step up. “It was good to see the boys step up as a team,” he said. “The other guys may not have scored a lot, but they defended well and rebounded well. I was really proud of our boxing out. Lovington is a physical team, but we played physical with them.” Isaac Bejarano poured in 39 points for the Bobcats, while Edward Montoya contributed 25 points and seven steals. Michael Garcia pulled down 12 rebounds for Hagerman. Dexter 58, Lake Arthur 20 DEXTER — The Dexter boys basketball team downed Lake Arthur in the first round of the John Reid Invitational on Thursday. With the win, Dexter (7-7) moved to the semifinals, where they will square off against Hagerman for the third time this season. From the start, Dexter kept the
Panther offense in check. Lake Arthur (6-6) never scored more than seven points in a quarter, while the Demons never scored fewer than 10. “We kind of pulled it together tonight defensively,” Dexter coach James Bracken said. “The last few games we’ve kicked it up a notch defensively. It’s like I told the kids, ‘When you play defense, you make life a lot easier.’ We got stops when we needed them. “We connected and executed on the offensive end. We did a good job and maybe the light has clicked on.” Steven Marquez netted 12 points for Dexter, while Tyler Miles chipped in with 10. Lake Arthur coach Mark Lopez said that an inability to cash in on open looks in the paint cost his team. “It wasn’t their ability to keep us in check, it was our inability to make the easy shot that cost us,” he said. “We shot 6 for 24 from the paint and a majority of those were open looks. We left so many points on the floor. We could have easily went into the half with a lead. “As the game progressed, our intensity slowed and (Dexter) was hitting its shots.” Jacob LeBlanc led the Panthers with seven points. NMMI 56, Dexter JV 29 DEXTER — The Colts led by just one at halftime, but pulled away in
SCOREBOARD
WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L San Antonio . . . . . . . .33 6 Dallas . . . . . . . . . . . . .26 11 New Orleans . . . . . . .23 16 Memphis . . . . . . . . . .18 21 Houston . . . . . . . . . . .17 22 Northwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Oklahoma City . . . . . .27 13 Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26 13 Denver . . . . . . . . . . . .22 16 Portland . . . . . . . . . . .20 19 Minnesota . . . . . . . . .10 30 Pacific Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L L.A. Lakers . . . . . . . .29 11 Phoenix . . . . . . . . . . .16 21 Golden State . . . . . . .15 23 L.A. Clippers . . . . . . .13 24 Sacramento . . . . . . . .8 28
Pct .846 .703 .590 .462 .436
GB — 6 10 15 16
Pct GB .675 — 1⁄2 .667 .579 4 .513 6 1⁄2 .250 17
Pct GB .725 — .432 11 1⁄2 .395 13 .351 14 1⁄2 .222 19
Wednesday’s Games Charlotte 96, Chicago 91 Indiana 102, Dallas 89 Atlanta 104, Toronto 101 Boston 119, Sacramento 95 Memphis 107, Detroit 99 San Antonio 91, Milwaukee 84 New Orleans 92, Orlando 89, OT Oklahoma City 118, Houston 112 Phoenix 118, New Jersey 109, OT Utah 131, New York 125 L.A. Lakers 115, Golden State 110 L.A. Clippers 111, Miami 105 Thursday’s Games Minnesota 109, Washington 97 Oklahoma City 125, Orlando 124 Denver 130, Miami 102 Friday’s Games Chicago at Indiana, 5 p.m. Milwaukee at Philadelphia, 5 p.m. Detroit at Toronto, 5 p.m. Charlotte at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Sacramento at New York, 5:30 p.m. Dallas at San Antonio, 6 p.m. New Orleans at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Cleveland at Utah, 7 p.m. L.A. Clippers at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. New Jersey at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. Portland at Phoenix, 8:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Houston at Atlanta, 5 p.m. New Orleans at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Toronto at Washington, 5 p.m. Sacramento at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Miami at Chicago, 6 p.m. Dallas at Memphis, 6 p.m. Orlando at Minnesota, 6 p.m. Cleveland at Denver, 7 p.m. New Jersey at Portland, 8 p.m.
Football
NFL Playoff Glance By The Associated Press
7:30 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Joburg Open, second round, at Johannesburg, South Africa (same-day tape) 5 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Sony Open, second round, at Honolulu NBA BASKETBALL 6 p.m. ESPN — Dallas at San Antonio 8:30 p.m. ESPN — Portland at Phoenix PREP BASKETBALL 5 p.m. ESPN2 — St. Patrick (N.J.) at Winter Park (Fla.)
the interview, and the more we talked the more matched-up we felt,” Xanders said. “We fit in with each other.” Team president Joe Ellis told The AP he couldn’t pick one thing he liked most about Fox. “Everything. Energy. Enthusiasm. Wisdom. Tremendous connections throughout the league. He did a great presentation on his whole scheme, his whole plan. He’s turned it around before, when he was in Carolina. Great reputation as a head coach. I just think all of his experience. And then you look at
All Times Mountain Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 8 Seattle 41, New Orleans 36 N.Y. Jets 17, Indianapolis 16 Sunday, Jan. 9 Baltimore 30, Kansas City 7 Green Bay 21, Philadelphia 16
Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 15 Baltimore at Pittsburgh, 2:30 p.m. (CBS) Green Bay at Atlanta, 6 p.m. (FOX) Sunday, Jan. 16 Seattle at Chicago, 11 a.m. (FOX) N.Y. Jets at New England, 2:30 p.m. (CBS)
Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 23 NFC, 1 p.m. (FOX) AFC, 4:30 p.m. (CBS)
Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 30 At Honolulu AFC vs. NFC, 5 p.m. (FOX)
Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 6 At Arlington, Texas AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 4:30 p.m. (FOX) —————
Stanford hires David Shaw as football coach
STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — If David Shaw has his way, he will never have to interview for another football coaching job. He is right where he has always felt he belonged: Stanford. A head college coach at age 38, Shaw is ready to turn Stanford into a football powerhouse despite its tough academic standards. “Since the day I started coaching, this is the job I always knew that I wanted,” Shaw said. “Today’s finally the day.” Shaw arrived as an assistant on the Stanford coaching staff with Jim Harbaugh four years ago with the task of rebuilding a one-win team. He was promoted Thursday to replace Harbaugh and maintain the Cardinal’s place as a national contender following their most successful season in decades. “We’ve got a good football team. We’ve got a team that’s tough, that’s physical, that’s eager to pick up where we left off,” Shaw said during his introductory news conference. “Our schemes are going to be the same. It’s going to be very similar. We’re going to be aggressive on defense. We’re going to get after people on defense. We’re going to be aggressive on offense.” Shaw won out over fellow assistants Greg Roman and Vic Fangio, among others, to take over the program less than a week after Harbaugh left to become coach of the San Francisco 49ers. “His contribution to the current state of affairs of our football program is immeasura-
No. 1
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the second half for their second victory of the year in the first round of the John Reid Invitational on Thursday. “It was a one-point game at half. I really had a lot of respect for the Dexter kids,” said NMMI coach Pilar Carrasco. “Our kids responded and started executing better. “In the second half, we turned it around. I was really proud of our kids for making the adjustments we needed to make to pull out the victory. Justin Petross and Richard Trujillo led the Colts (2-8) with 10 points apiece. Chris Weingardt added a team-best eight boards for NMMI.
Girls Basketball
Hobbs JV 51, Hagerman 36 HOBBS — The Hagerman girls basketball team led 34-31 with 6 minutes left in the game, but was unable to hold on against the Hobbs junior varsity team on Thursday. “We were up 34-31 with 6 minutes to go and then we started having problems on defense,” said Hagerman coach Casey Crandall. “They were a lot taller than us and they finally figured out how to get it down low at the end. We didn’t get looks at the basket in the fourth quarter. They did a pretty good job defensively in the fourth quarter.” Leah Dunnahoo paced the Bobcats (7-9) with 15 points, while Lexi Mason and Gabby Barela added six points each.
ble,” athletic director Bob Bowlsby said in a statement. “It has been an interesting and exciting fall. This is, in my estimation, the most logical step that we can take. Having David Shaw take over the football program at this university speaks volumes about Stanford. I think it speaks volumes about the experience student-athletes have. ... He is the guy who is going to lead Stanford football for a long, long time.” The job Shaw inherits is a much more desirable one than Harbaugh took over after Stanford went 1-11 in 2006 under Walt Harris. The Cardinal improved each season under Harbaugh, making a bowl game in his third year and going 12-1 this past season, capped by a 40-12 victory over Virginia Tech in the Orange Bowl. That helped Stanford finish fourth in the final AP poll, its best ranking since the unbeaten 1940 team finished No. 2. Shaw is the son of Willie Shaw, a former Stanford and longtime NFL assistant. David was a receiver at Stanford from 1991-94 under Dennis Green and Bill Walsh. Willie Shaw was a finalist for the head coaching job when Walsh was hired for the second time in 1992. Shaw was an assistant in the NFL for Philadelphia, Oakland and Baltimore, before joining Harbaugh as an assistant at the University of San Diego. As passing game coordinator and receivers coach, he helped lead the Toreros to an 11-1 record and the top marks in what was then Division I-AA in passing offense, total offense and scoring offense. —————
Pasqualoni hired as UConn head coach
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Former Syracuse coach Paul Pasqualoni is heading back to the Big East as football coach at Connecticut. UConn athletic director Jeff Hathaway announced the hiring Thursday and said a news conference introducing Pasqualoni, who grew up in Cheshire, would be held a 12:30 p.m. Friday. “We are very proud to welcome Paul Pasqualoni to the UConn family and also bring him back home to his native Connecticut,” Hathaway said in a statement. “Paul brings an outstanding coaching background to UConn on the collegiate, professional and high school level. He also is a man of strong character and integrity and we look forward to him developing our football student-athletes in the classroom, on the field and as part of the community.” Pasqualoni had been the Dallas Cowboys defensive coordinator, taking the position in November after the firing of coach Wade Phillips, who also handled the defensive duties. The 61-year-old replaces Randy Edsall, who took the head coaching job at Maryland after leading UConn to an 8-5 season and a berth in the Fiesta Bowl, where the Huskies lost to Oklahoma 48-20. Pasqualoni compiled a 107-59-1 record in 14 years at Syracuse before being fired after the 2004 season. He took the Orange to nine bowls, won three consecutive Big East Conference titles from 1996 to 1998 and shared the title with West Virginia in 2004. Pasqualoni began his coaching career in 1972 at Cheshire High school, his alma mater.
Shanice Steenholdt and Trujillo combined to score the next seven in a row for Roswell and the Coyotes rode that cushion to a 14-point win. “They’re going to be a handful in Portales, I promise you that,” Carpenter said about the Rams. “It will be very difficult to beat them in Portales.” Portales never really threatened in the game, but Carpenter still wasn’t ready
where his real background was throughout football: on the defensive side,” Ellis said. “I think we were really pleased that John Elway made a special emphasis to get consistent and good on defense and John Fox is going to help us do that.” A one-time assistant under Chuck Noll, Fox spent 13 years as a defensive coach with the Steelers, Chargers, Raiders, Rams and Giants, including seven seasons as coordinator, before taking over the Panthers, who owned the league’s worst defense.
He also was the head coach and athletic director at Western Connecticut from 198286, leading his 1985 team to a 10-2 record and a spot in the NCAA Division III playoffs. He has served as a defensive coach in the NFL with both the Cowboys and the Miami Dolphins.
Transactions
Thursday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES—Agreed to terms with RHP Kevin Gregg on a two-year contract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association TORONTO RAPTORS—Signed G Sundiata Gaines to a 10-day contract. FOOTBALL National Football League CLEVELAND BROWNS—Named Pat Shurmur coach. DENVER BRONCOS—Named John Fox coach. TENNESSEE TITANS—Signed WR Yamon Figurs and RB Joe Tronzo to reserve/futures contracts. Canadian Football League HAMILTON TIGER-CATS—Named Corey Chamblin defensive coordinator. Promoted Brad Miller to special teams coordinator. WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS—Signed CB Brandon Stewart to a contract extension. HOCKEY National Hockey League DALLAS STARS—Traded LW Fabian Brunnstrom to Toronto for RW Mikhail Stefanovich. Assigned D Philip Larsen to Texas (AHL). PHOENIX COYOTES—Recalled F Mikkel Boedker from San Antonio (AHL). WASHINGTON CAPITALS—Assigned RW Brian Willsie to Hershey (AHL). SOCCER Major League Soccer TORONTO FC—Traded F Chad Barrett to Los Angeles for future considerations. COLLEGE CLEMSON—Named Tony Elliott running backs coach. COLGATE—Named Mona E. NyheimCanales coordinator of the athletic academic achievement program. CONNECTICUT—Named Paul Pasqualoni football coach. KENTUCKY—Announced WR Randall Cobb will enter the NFL draft. LSU—Announced the resignation of offensive coordinator Gary Crowton to take a similar position at Maryland. MIAMI—Named Jedd Fisch offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. SMU—Announced men’s basketball G Shawn Williams is transferring from Texas. STANFORD—Promoted offensive coordinator David Shaw to football coach. TEXAS-SAN ANTONIO—Named Nathaniel Jones cornerbacks coach. VANDERBILT—Named John Donovan offensive coordinator, Charles Bankins tight ends/special teams coach, Herb Hand offensive line coach, Chris Beatty wide receivers coach, Ricky Rahne quarterbacks coach and Dwight Galt strength coach.
to say that his team played well. “I just felt like our focus wasn’t there in some areas,” he said. “It kind of bogged us down. (Portales) got physical and beat us to the spots in the post quite a bit. “We’ve got to get better. I wouldn’t say disappointed, because we knew it was going to be an ugly game, but we came out with the ‘W.’” Steenholdt led three Coyotes in double figures with 11 points, while Trujillo and Diana Carrillo each added 10 apiece. Sievers led Portales with nine points.
NATION/OBITUARIES
Roswell Daily Record
OBITUARIES
Epifano Montez
dren; Manuel Montez, Toby and wife Sonia and daughter; Julie Franco and husband Ruben and children; Max Franco, Albert Franco, and Angela Lara and husband Sam and son. He was preceded in death by his parents; Emma Ramirez, his lifelong companion; and a nephew: Sam Lara Jr. Pallbearers will be David Montes, Manuel Montes, Toby Franco, Max Franco, Albert Franco, Lupe Madrid, and Phillip Madrid. Honorary pallbearers will be Tony S. Arambula, Steven Villareal, Esmail Sanchez, Steve Arambula, Ruben Franco, and Sam Lara. Please share your thoughts and memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com. Services are under the direction of Anderson Bethany Funeral Home and Crematory.
A rosary will be recited for Epifano Montez, 66, of Midway, at 7 p.m. Friday, Jan. 14, 2011, at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church. A funeral Mass will be celebrated at 10 a.m., Saturday, Jan. 15, 2011, at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church with Father Charlie Martinez O.F.M. officiating. Burial will follow at South Park Cemetery. Visitation will be held Thursday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Friday from 8 a.m. until service time. Epifano passed away Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2011, in the comfort of his home. Epifano was born March 22, 1944, to Francisco Montes and Simona Madrid Montes in Presidio, Texas. He has been an active member of the community his entire life, as well as attending services at St. John the Baptist Catholic Church. He retired from working in agriculture as a farmer. He will be deeply missed by all who love him. Those left behind to cherish his memory are his son: Joe Ramirez; daughters: Rhonda Ramirez and Wanda Atkinson; sisters: Nellie Garcia, Lucy Sisneros and husband Joe, and Olivia Franco and husband Maximino; a brother: Agapito Montez; and his nephews and nieces: Joann Sanchez and husband Esmail and children; Missy Villareal and children; Gina Arambula and husband Steve and children; Linda Sisneros and daughter, Simona Montez; David Montez and children; Valerie Montez and chil-
The family would like to invite you to join us in celebrating the life of Edith Baird, 92, at 10 a.m., Saturday, Jan. 15, 2011, at Aldersgate United Methodist Church. Edith saw the light and went to join her husband, Ray, on Jan. 10, 2011. Rev. Curtis Hayes of Aldersgate United Methodist Church will officiate. Services will be held at L ynch & Sons Funeral Home in Milford, Mich. on Jan. 19, 2011, at 1 p.m. Burial will follow at Milford Memory Garden in Milford, Mich. Edith was born Jan. 19,
ATLANTA (AP) — Days after a few inches of snow crippled the city, children are still home from school, icy highways are still littered with hundreds of abandoned cars and grocery stores are still running low on staples such as milk and juice. Life in Atlanta probably won’t retur n to nor mal until late Friday, when temperatures finally rise above freezing. But the city’s helplessness in the face of a relatively mild winter storm raises a question: Should one of the South’s largest population centers have been better prepared? Frustrated drivers and stranded travelers couldn’t help but lament Atlanta’s too-little, too-late response. “You’ve got the busiest airport in the world, and the snow they got we would have cleaned in a matter of minutes,” said Wayne Ulery, an Ohio man who was stuck at HartsfieldJackson Airport for three days. “They used things that we use for our driveways here trying to get the airport cleaned up.” London and Heathrow Airport had similar problems recently. Hundreds of thousands of passengers were stranded in the runup to Christmas after a five-inch snowstorm canceled flights and ruined holiday plans. The airport’s embarassed owner had to launch an inquiry into why the snow halted traffic. In Atlanta, city leaders are trying to take stock of the lessons learned. Mayor Kasim Reed said the next time a storm threatens, he will recruit more private contractors to supplement
Atlanta’s meager fleet of 10 snowplows, and he will put them to work sooner. He also said he won’t wait for the state to clear main arteries within the city limits. “We want to send a clear signal that we are working,” Reed said at a press conference. “The last few days have been tough ... But we are not hiding. This is a noexcuses situation.” Critics said the city had plenty of warning that bad weather was on the way and should have been better prepared. “The forecast was perfect,” said state Sen. Vincent Fort. As early as Jan. 6, “we knew this was coming.” Fort said he will push the mayor’s office to draft better emergency plans. “I’m really disappointed with my city,” he added. “Can we really allow our city to be paralyzed for an entire week if not more?” State transportation officials were equally overmatched. To deal with the weather, the Georgia Department of Transportation tapped into $10 million in reserve money set aside last year. Spokeswoman Jill Goldberg said that money is probably gone after this week’s storm and a smaller one last month. “We’ve spent that, and we’ll have to move some money around,” she said. “In a normal year, that $10 million would have given us some padding. But we’ve had some big storms and long storms.” The state dispatched hundreds of pieces of equipment that dumped thousands of tons of sand, salt and gravel. Exhausted
Edith Louise Baird
1918, in Fairview, W. Va., to C.E. and Iva Gault Cartright. Her parents preceded her in death. Edith married Raymond Matthew Baird on March 27, 1938, in Mannigton, W. Va. He preceded her in death in April 1979. She is also preceded in death by her brother, Virgil and her grandson, Alvin. Edith moved to Milford, Mich. in 1953 and later moved to Roswell in 1970, with her husband where she resided until her death. She was a longtime member of Aldersgate Methodist Church and loved singing in the choir. Edith enjoyed babysitting for numerous Roswell families over the years. She was actively involved in Senior Circle. Edith is survived by her cousin: Sarah Jean Cole, and husband, Gene; daughter: Barb Pierce and her family: Kathy Raymond and husband Stacy, Christopher Richards, Daniel Richards, Alex Lam, Ashley Forster and husband Jeffrey and children, Devin and Carly, Stephanie Beemer and husband Dan and children: Katelyn and Jenna; Tammy Lowery and husband and children: Lindsay Powell, Nichole Lowery and Justin Lowery; Kevin Harrigan and wife Cheri and children: Bethany and Michael; son, Jim Baird and wife Reba and their family: Michael Baird and wife Kelley and daughter, Avery; Dana Thiebert and children: Mathew, Quinn and Hunter; Danielle Brock and husband Jeff and children: Ale and Ben; Jason Baird and wife Argean and son, Jackson; Tamara Montgomery; Candice Rincon and husband Tommy and children: Hunter, Jordan and Rory; Chandler Montgomery and wife Shauna and children: Jayton, Lukas and Carly; son, Charles Baird and wife Kate; daughter Charlene Casper and husband Gary and children: James Minnich and wife Yung, David Minnich and wife Kylie, and Wayne Minnich and wife Ashley; daughter:
Garen Wickert and husband Bill and children: Edward Zgrabik, Heather and Heidi Wickert; Melanie Martinson and husband Michael and children: Kristoffer, Jonathan and Paisley; Matthew Minnich and wife Suzanne and children: Samuel and Daniel; daughter: Florence Bassler and children: Jane Russom and Jessica Russell; Lee and Kate Bassler and their children: Bruce, Gary, Michael, Josh, Cody, Pete, Karen and Kiconco Bassler; and Christina Gibson; Roy and Diane Bassler and their children: Stacey Little, Jamie Payne and Robbie Bassler, Alvin who preceded her in death; Allen and Tammy Bassler and their children: Amanda Messick, Loraine and A.J. Bassler, Marie Bassler Butler and her children: Jennifer Sanders, Mark Butler Jr. and Candice Butler, and 15 great-great grandchildren. Pallbearers will be Donald Brock, Kevin Harrigan, Dan Beemer, Bill Lowery, Eddie Zgrabik, Jason Baird, Michael Harrigan, and Matthew Minnich. Honorary pallbearers will be Justin Lowery, Tommy Rincon, Chandler MontChristopher gomery, Richards, Daniel Richards, Alex Lam, Michael Baird and Stacy Raymond. Arrangements have been entrusted to Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory. An online registry can be accessed at www.ballardfuneralhome.com
John Ward Watson
Services are pending at Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory for John Ward Watson, 87, who passed away Jan. 12, 2011, at Eastern New Mexico Medical Center. A further announcement will be made once arrangements have been finalized.
Victor De La Cruz
Arrangements are pending for Victor De La Cruz, 57, of Roswell, at Anderson Bethany Funeral Home & Crematory. He passed away Wednesday, Jan.12,
Friday, January 14, 2011
2011.
Don M. West
Don M. West, 88, passed away, Jan. 12, 2011. He was born in Belknap, Iowa, raised in Princeton, Mo., and attended the Missouri School of Mines in Rolla. Upon graduation, he enlisted in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and served in the Pacific Theater during WWII. He remained in the Ar my Reserve and retired with the rank of Lt. Colonel. His engineering career was spent in Pittsfield, Mass. He retired to North Carolina and came to Roswell in 1992. Don was an avid model railroad enthusiast. He was a member of Westminster Presbyterian Church. He is survived by his wife, Janice, of the home. He is survived by son Richard and daughter-in-law Ginny of North Canton, Ohio; by daughter Cindy Conder and son-in-law, Robert, of Corvalis, Ore.; and by daughter Debye West of Moseley, Va. He is also survived by four grandchildren and one great-grandchild. According to his wishes, he was cremated; a private family memorial will be at a later date. Donations may be made to the charity of your choice.
Allen F. Mauldin
Allen F. Mauldin, known in Ault as “Big Al”, 85, of Greeley, formerly of Ault, died on Friday, Jan.7, 2011, at Centennial Health Care Center. He was born April 2, 1925, in Elizabeth, Colo., to William and Edith (Chenot) Mauldin. Allen served in the U.S. Ar my during World War II, in Northern France. He married Evelyn Mae Johnson on Dec. 28, 1968, at Grace Baptist Church in Denver, Colo. Mr. Mauldin attended the Colorado School of Mines, Denver University and the University of Northern Colorado. He was a high school mathematics and English teacher. He was a principal and became a counselor. Mr. Mauldin taught first grade at Vernon
B3
School from 1950-51, then at Ault High School through the name change to Highland High School, until he retired in 1980. He was a member of the First Congregational Church where he sang in the choir. When it closed, he became a member of what is now Highland Community Church in Ault, where he served the Lord in many capacities. For the past three years, he was a member of West Greeley Baptist Church. He was also a member of the Lions Club. Allen will be remembered as a wise and kind man. He accepted others as they are and saw the best in each of them. Mr. Mauldin kept score for more than 2,000 basketball games. The Highland High School scoreboard was dedicated to him. The Mauldin home was open to all, especially the youth. Allen loved time with his family who loved him dearly. He will be greatly missed. He is survived by his wife, Evelyn, of Greeley; daughter Celeste Mauldin, of Ault and son, Wayne (Bobbi) Mauldin, of Roswell; grandchildren: Jessica (Brian) MauldinGenzling, of Ft. Collins, Robert (Jennifer) Early, of Kimball, Neb. (with 4 greatgrandchildren), Stephen A. Mauldin, Grace Linda Mae Mauldin and Wayne Allen William Mauldin, all of Roswell; nephews: Rev. Dan (Debra) Mauldin, of Far mington, Douglas Mauldin, of (Melba) Brighton, Colo.; and sisterin-law Opal Mauldin, also of Brighton. He was preceded in death by his parents and his brother, Clarence William Mauldin. A memorial service will be held at 3 p.m. Monday, Jan. 17, 2011, at West Greeley Baptist Church, 3251 W. 22nd St. Memorial gifts may be made to the Allen Mauldin memorial fund in care of Allnutt, 702 13th St., Greeley, Colo. 80631. Friends may view the online obituary, sign the guest book & send condolences at www.allnutt.com
Should Atlanta have been better prepared for snow? road crews worked around the clock to clear roads and highways. But for all their effort, many routes were impassable until Thursday, and some drivers were stranded for more than 24 hours on Interstate 285, which encircles Atlanta. “We understand the frustration. We understand people think it should be cleared quicker, and they’re anxious to return to their nor mal lives,” Goldberg said. “But this wasn’t a snowstorm — it was an ice storm. And we had an inch, an inch and a half of solid ice on our main roads.” After it paralyzed the South, the storm moved up the East Coast, dumping more than 2 feet of snow on parts of New England. But by Thursday, much of that region was swiftly getting back to its usual routine. In Atlanta, roads were showing signs of improvement, too, as some antsy residents emerged from their homes for the first time since Sunday. Many interstates and major thoroughfares were finally moving again. Still, there were plenty of hazards. Hundreds of cars ditched earlier in the week jutted out into traf fic, blocking plows from clearing the sides of roads. Many subdivisions were still caked in ice. And police blamed the weather for the death of a 67-yearold man whose car collided with another vehicle and then slammed into a light pole. A few businesses were showing signs of life, but many were still shuttered. Grocery stores were packed with customers, but supplies of milk, juice, eggs
AP Photo
Snow falls against the backdrop of the Georgia State Capitol the night before Gov.-elect Nathan Deal was to be sworn into office, Sunday.
and fresh fruits and vegetables ran thin. During the storm’s aftermath, stores and restaurants struggled to stay fully staf fed because many employees could not get to work. Amanda Ayers, a manager at the Tavern at Phipps, was determined not to let the snow and ice disrupt nor mal business, even though about half her employees were stuck at home. “We’re open every single day of the year, and the last snowstorm we were open,” Ayers said. “We didn’t want to break the cycle.” Sam Williams, president of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce, was confident the region would rebound.
“Tractor-trailers will get back out. Shopping malls and grocery stores will be restocked,” he said, calling the storm a “once-in-30years” type of event. Atlanta residents, long accustomed to the city’s winter weather woes, are often embarrassed by the slow cleanup. Even so, many say the city cannot afford the expensive snowresponse efforts of northern cities. “Atlanta’s just not prepared, and I can’t blame it. It’s hard to prepare for something so random,” said Edward Mosely, 53, who left home for the first time in days to shop for groceries. “But when it comes, it really comes.” Anne Pippin, who works
at the Inter nal Revenue Service in downtown Atlanta, said the city shouldn’t spend money on equipment it will rarely use. “This doesn’t happen often,” she said as she waited for a train at a subway station. “We can’t afford to spend a quarter million dollars on each piece of equipment and have it sit around for 14 years.” But some people pointed out that other Souther n cities fared much better. Wally Kuku pulled out his Blackberry to show pictures of frigid snowscapes — and clear roads — from a trip he took Wednesday to the North Carolina mountains.
B4 Friday, January 14, 2011
COMICS
Garfield
Jumble
Family Circus
Beetle Bailey
DEAR ABBY: A for mer student asked me to write a character reference to help her land a teaching job abroad. I agreed, since I thought highly of her potential as a teacher and scholar, and her level of character. However, after she was placed in the classroom, the ministry of education of the nation where she was to teach discovered some inappropriate posting on her social networking site. Because I had written the recommendation, they contacted me asking if they had a problem and provided me with copies of what they had found. Her posting detailed a history of forging fake IDs to buy alcohol while underage, numerous episodes of binge drinking in high school and college, her marijuana use and several exhibitionistic stunts and sexual activities that I won’t mention. I was shocked. None of this matched the person I thought I knew. When I tried to contact her to let her know she had been discovered, she rebuf fed my inquiries and cut off all contact! Her parents’ response was denial and to “kill the messenger.” I have been left with the problem of how to respond to the ministry’s questions. Dear Heloise: During a recent weeklong stay at a motel, we were troubled by BOTTOM SHEETS that would not stay tucked in. Consequently, the mattress pad would shift around also, and we would be sleeping on the bare mattress by morning. After the first couple of nights, we secured the sheets with large binder clips that we carry for just such emergencies. J.E., via e-mail This is one way to solve the problem! Usually the problem is because the hotel may use flat
DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE
Ordinarily I would not want my signature associated with someone with those behaviors and attitudes, but this young woman is in legal jeopardy abroad. I still don’t know if what she wrote is true, but I find it highly problematic that she would portray herself as she did. This situation has so shaken my trust in the character and judgment of the 20-something crowd that I’m now reluctant to write recommendations for any of my students. What do you think I should have done? I’m concerned that too many of these young people, however intelligent, lack integrity, c h a r a c t e r, j u d g m e n t a n d common sense. HEARTBROKEN TEACHER, OAKLAND, CALIF. DEAR HEARTBROKEN: You responded appropria t e ly b y t r y in g t o co n ta c t your former student and her parents. If the information
HINTS
FROM HELOISE
KING FEATURES SYNDICATE
sheets for both top and bottom, or the pockets are not deep enough for a new “deeper” mattress. Heloise
Today’s Crossword Puzzle
on that social networking site is an accurate reflection of her behavior, she could get herself in real trouble if the country she’s in is one with conservative social views. It is intelligent of you to think twice about giving references to students in the future. It’s important that you be careful because there could be liability for you if you knew anything about her antics when you wrote her recommendation. If you are wondering how to respond to the ministry of education, what you need to convey is that you had no knowledge of any social networking sites or postings related to her, and that you were basing your recommendations on your personal interactions with her. Let this be a lesson to all young people who are using social networking sites. Employers are doing background checks and you will be discovered. Any past communications you have on the Internet are there to stay. This has been a hot topic in the media. But I’m interested to know what you, my readers, both young and old, think about this. You teach me more than I teach you, and this subject is one of great importance.
Hagar the Horrible
Blondie
Zits
Dear Readers:
Rubber car mats can be cleaned very easily — remove and vacuum them. But for a more thorough cleaning, scrub the mats with a solution of equal amounts household vinegar and water. Rinse well and let dry before returning them to your vehicle. Vinegar is one of the most eco-friendly and cheap cleaners around! For a pamphlet filled with my favorite vinegar hints, please send $5 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (61 cents) envelope to: Heloise/Vinegar, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. Keep a small spray bottle filled with an equal amount of vinegar and water (along with a microfiber cloth or a roll of paper towels) in your auto to quick-clean windows.
Snuffy Smith
Heloise
Dear Heloise:
I have many friends and family to whom I send greeting cards for birthdays and anniversaries. I have envelopes for each month of the year. On the left side of the envelope is the month on which the special occasion occurs, and on the right is either “B” for birthday or “A” for anniversary. At the beginning of every month, I take the cards I will need, address them and put them back into the envelope until the date I need the cards. Pat in Ohio
Dear Heloise:
If you purchase a garment with an extra button attached to the tags (usually in a plastic bag), either keep the tags with the bag to identify the item, or write on the bag which item the bag belongs to. Keep the bags in a designated place, such as a slot in your jewelry tray, sewing kit, etc. If you are capable of sewing on a button, sew it on the inside of the garment. Melanie, via e-mail
Dear Heloise:
I accidentally used a permanent black marker on my white dry-erase board and thought it was ruined. I needed something to clean off the marker without scratching up the finish. I finally decided to try the cleaner that I use for my glass cooktop, and it came right off with no scrubbing. Phyllis Sporven, via e-mail
Dilbert
The Wizard of Id
For Better or For Worse
Roswell Daily Record
FINANCIAL
Roswell Daily Record
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
.40f 39.26 +.09 Div Last Chg Disney DomRescs 1.83 42.61 +.35 A-B-C DowChm .60 u35.65 -.20 ABB Ltd .48e u23.27 +.37 DuPont 1.64 49.39 +.29 AES Corp ... 12.93 -.01 DukeEngy .98 17.80 +.09 AFLAC 1.20 57.08 -.07 DukeRlty .68 13.05 +.01 AK Steel .20 15.10 -.13 ECDang n ... u34.39 +2.68 ... u23.98 +.53 AMR ... 8.56 +.12 EMC Cp ... 5.51 -.09 AT&T Inc 1.72f 28.08 +.04 EKodak .70f 49.04 -.48 AbtLab 1.76 47.37 -.21 Ecolab Accenture .90f 49.87 -.02 EdisonInt 1.28f 37.96 -.16 ... 8.26 -.13 ElPasoCp .04 u14.09 +.29 AMD ... 6.73 -.17 Aeropostl s ... 25.13 -.32 Elan .04 32.80 -.01 EldorGld g .05 17.73 -.54 Aetna Agnico g .64f 70.59 -1.90 EmersonEl1.38f 58.00 -.21 Agrium g .11 92.79 -.96 EnCana g .80 30.69 +1.05 AirProd 1.96 88.86 +.21 EqtyRsd 1.47e 50.23 +.17 AlcatelLuc ... 3.24 -.02 EvergE rs ... 2.62 -.23 .12 15.75 -.49 ExcoRes .16 19.41 +.07 Alcoa AllgEngy .60 25.26 +.07 Exelon 2.10 42.37 -.21 Allergan .20 70.83 -.11 ExxonMbl 1.76 u76.71 +.13 ... .88 +.01 FamilyDlr .62 43.31 -.02 AldIrish Allstate .80 30.68 -.13 FedExCp .48 95.63 +.63 AlphaNRs ... 64.00 -2.38 FidNatInfo .20 29.64 +.11 Altria 1.52 24.12 +.06 FstHorizon .72t 12.48 +.04 AmBev s .99e 29.23 -.11 FirstEngy 2.20 38.36 +.08 Amdocs ... 28.30 +.43 FlagstB rs ... 1.68 -.03 ... 5.89 -.18 AmAssets n ... 21.25 ... Flotek h .50 u70.18 +.26 AmAxle ... u15.82 +.32 Fluor AEagleOut .44a 14.02 -.08 FootLockr .60 18.52 -.17 ... u18.68 -.03 1.84f 35.67 -.28 FordM AEP AmExp .72 45.06 +.06 FordM wt ... u9.82 +.02 AmIntlGrp ... 57.19 -1.21 FordC pfS 3.25 u55.36 -.19 ... 5.66 -.21 AmTower ... 50.75 +.05 Fortress Ameriprise .72 60.53 -.57 FMCG 2.00a 118.07 -3.77 .75 9.43 ... FrontierCm AmeriBrgn .40f u35.38 +.52 Anadarko .36 77.14 -1.39 G-H-I AnalogDev .88 37.85 -.19 ... 5.72 -.31 AnglogldA .18e 44.37 -1.19 GMX Rs ... 23.90 -.25 GameStop ... 20.60 -.07 AnnTaylr Gannett .16 14.76 -.04 Annaly 2.65e 17.65 -.14 .40 20.29 -.09 Aon Corp .60 43.83 -.07 Gap Apache .60u125.18-1.02 GenDynam1.68 71.78 +.62 ArcelorMit .75 36.11 -.41 GenElec .56f 18.60 -.07 ArchCoal .40 35.46 +1.33 GenGrPr n ... 14.81 +.01 ArchDan .60 33.23 +.67 GenMarit .04m 3.35 -.04 Avon .88 29.22 -.14 GenMills s 1.12 36.33 -.33 BB&T Cp .60 26.87 +.02 GenMot n ... 38.27 -.35 BHP BillLt1.74e 90.69 -.38 GenOn En ... 4.10 -.03 BP PLC ... 47.54 -.15 Genworth ... 14.24 -.07 BabckW n ... u28.32 +1.07 Gerdau .32e 14.74 -.22 .60 58.46 -.30 GoldFLtd .16e 16.88 -.39 BakrHu BcBilVArg .55e 11.01 +.71 Goldcrp g .36 42.07 -1.57 BcoBrades .82r 20.24 -.16 GoldmanS 1.40 171.57 -.10 BcoSantand.78e 11.36 +.47 Goodyear ... 12.47 -.72 BcoSBrasil .45e 13.37 -.02 GpTelevisa ... 25.90 +.23 .80f 43.56 +.90 BkofAm .04 14.77 -.22 Guess BkIrelnd 1.04e 2.51 -.06 HCP Inc 1.86 36.37 +.31 BkNYMel .36 31.64 -.02 HSBC 1.70e 56.18 -.08 Barclay .28e 19.31 +.21 Hallibrtn .36 39.23 -.66 Bar iPVix rs ... d32.99 -.44 HartfdFn .20 28.28 +.12 ... 9.76 +.02 BarrickG .48 47.44 -2.56 HltMgmt ... 9.75 -.56 Baxter 1.24f 50.35 -.62 HeclaM BerkH B s ... 80.76 +.02 Hershey 1.28 49.81 +1.02 ... 13.77 +.09 BestBuy .60 35.54 -.13 Hertz .40 79.92 -.27 Blackstone .40 u15.70 +.42 Hess BlockHR .60 12.53 -.10 HewlettP .32 45.65 +.01 Boeing 1.68 69.83 -.32 HomeDp .95 35.27 +.44 Borders ... .82 +.01 HonwllIntl 1.33f u54.59 -.13 BorgWarn ... 68.87 -1.23 HostHotls .04 18.40 -.05 BostonSci ... 7.47 +.03 Huntsmn .40 u17.88 +.26 BoydGm ... 11.60 +.07 IAMGld g .08f 17.87 -.54 BrMySq 1.32f 25.90 -.05 ICICI Bk .53e 45.66 -.88 ... 10.35 +.34 BungeLt .92 69.86 +2.57 ING CB REllis ... 21.31 +.15 iShGold s ... 13.43 -.14 .20 u19.87 +.09 iSAstla .82e 24.88 +.17 CBS B CF Inds .40u142.47 +.66 iShBraz 2.53e 77.40 -1.24 .50e 31.24 -.20 CSX 1.04f u69.27 +.57 iSCan CVS Care .50f 34.86 +.05 iShGer .29e 24.40 +.24 iSh HK .45e 19.85 -.12 CablvsnNY .50 33.41 -.35 Calpine ... 14.28 -.19 iShJapn .14e u11.15 -.01 Cameron ... u51.65 -.48 iSh Kor .39e 62.34 -.47 CdnNRs gs .30 41.78 -.75 iSMalas .34e u14.91 +.00 CapOne .20 46.69 -.48 iShMex .54e 62.45 +.01 CapitlSrce .04 7.63 ... iShSing .43e 13.97 -.06 CardnlHlth .78 u40.63 +.38 iSTaiwn .29e 15.70 -.06 ... 28.00 -1.00 CareFusion ... 26.49 +.57 iShSilver Carnival .40 47.02 -.29 iShS&P1001.08e 57.86 -.15 Caterpillar 1.76 94.14 +.65 iShChina25.63e 44.56 -.13 Cemex .43t 10.51 -.30 iSSP500 2.36e 128.91 -.18 Cemig pf 1.19e 17.94 +.38 iShEMkts .64e 47.79 -.42 CenterPnt .78 15.77 ... iShB20 T 3.86e 92.43 +.82 CntryLink 2.90 44.86 +.23 iS Eafe 1.42e u59.09 +.16 ChesEng .30 27.70 -.19 iSR1KG .73e u58.59 -.01 Chevron 2.88 92.18 -.27 iShR2K .89e u79.94 -.03 .16 10.85 -.06 iShREst 1.97e 56.02 +.16 Chicos Chimera .69e 4.11 +.02 ITT Corp 1.00 59.45 -2.05 1.36 u55.76 +.32 Chubb 1.48 57.46 -.72 ITW Citigrp ... u5.04 -.04 IngerRd .28 46.90 -.29 2.60 148.82 -.28 CliffsNRs .56 87.40 -1.03 IBM ... u9.48 +.25 .60 53.87 -.44 Intl Coal Coach IntlGame .24 18.88 +.08 CocaCE .48f 25.33 +.20 .75f 28.87 +.10 CocaCl 1.76 63.40 +.36 IntPap Coeur ... 24.91 -1.71 Interpublic ... u11.13 ... .44 24.73 -.15 ColgPal 2.12 78.31 -.10 Invesco Comerica .40f 42.01 -.01 ItauUnibH .65e 23.96 -.30 IvanhM g 1.48e 25.51 +.88 Con-Way .40 34.90 +.34 ConAgra .92 23.20 -.01 Ivanhoe rt ... 1.71 +.11 ConocPhil 2.20 67.26 -1.43 J-K-L ConsolEngy .40 54.06 +.06 .20 19.85 -.08 JPMorgCh .20 44.45 -.26 Corning JanusCap .04 13.56 -.04 CovantaH1.50e 16.98 +.19 Covidien .80f 47.32 +.45 JohnJn 2.16 62.91 +.41 CrwnCstle ... 41.92 -.17 JohnsnCtl .64f 40.21 -.53 Cummins 1.05 112.91 +1.08 JnprNtwk ... u38.22 -.10 CurEuro .01e 132.96 +2.18 KB Home .25 15.06 -.07 KBR Inc .20 30.86 +.47 D-E-F KKR n .23e u15.65 +.43 DCT Indl .28 5.43 -.05 Kellogg 1.62 51.50 +.39 DR Horton .15 13.08 -.03 Keycorp .04 8.57 -.20 Danaher s .08 46.89 -.21 KimbClk 2.64 63.60 -.27 .72f 17.90 -.03 DeanFds ... 9.96 +.12 Kimco Deere 1.40f u89.47 +2.02 Kinross g .10 17.28 -.57 ... 51.48 -.22 DelMnte .36 18.93 +.03 Kohls 1.16 31.44 -.06 DeltaAir ... 12.61 +.10 Kraft .42f 21.52 -.23 DenburyR ... 19.06 -.27 Kroger DevelDiv .16f 13.29 +.10 LDK Solar ... 12.31 -.38 ... 6.12 +.01 DevonE .64 u81.94 -.05 LSI Corp ... 47.21 -1.40 DiaOffs .50a 72.14 +.49 LVSands DrSCBear rs ... d14.55 ... LennarA .16 20.17 -.29 ... 35.21 -1.66 DirEMBr rs ... 19.98 +.48 Lexmark 1.96 34.90 -.13 DirFnBear ... d8.63 +.06 LillyEli DrxFBull s ... 30.16 -.25 Limited .60a 29.43 +.50 DirxSCBull .11e u76.94 -.14 LincNat .20f 29.01 -.53 ... 5.60 -.01 DirxLCBear ... 8.23 +.04 LizClaib Discover .08 u20.04 +.14 LloydBkg ... 4.30 +.04
Name
Name Sell Chg Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 19.95 -.09 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 18.96 -.08 Amer Century Inv: 7.28 -.01 EqInc GrowthI 26.37 +.02 23.25 +.02 Ultra American Funds A: AmcpA p 19.24 ... AMutlA p 25.60 -.07 BalA p 18.19 ... BondA p 12.21 +.03 CapIBA p 50.05 +.05 CapWGA p36.20 +.09 CapWA p 20.42 +.08 EupacA p 41.85 +.07 FdInvA p 37.26 -.06 GovtA p 13.91 +.03 GwthA p 30.97 -.06 HI TrA p 11.40 +.02 IncoA p 16.69 ... IntBdA p 13.45 +.02 IntlGrIncA p31.42 +.07 ICAA p 28.57 -.05 NEcoA p 26.10 +.06 N PerA p 28.86 -.04 NwWrldA 54.78 -.03 SmCpA p 39.48 +.01 TxExA p 11.61 -.07 WshA p 27.52 -.10 American Funds B: GrwthB t 30.05 -.07 Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 30.33 +.03 IntlEqA 29.60 +.03 IntEqII I r 12.55 ... Artisan Funds: Intl 22.15 +.06 IntlVal r 27.28 +.03
MidCap 34.42 +.07 MidCapVal20.34 -.03 Baron Funds: Growth 51.60 -.14 SmallCap 24.16 -.01 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 13.77 +.03 DivMu 14.18 -.03 TxMgdIntl 15.98 +.06 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 17.69 -.01 GlAlA r 19.63 ... BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 18.33 ... BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 17.72 -.01 GlbAlloc r 19.71 ... CGM Funds: Focus n 36.00 -.39 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 55.24 -.05 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 29.57 -.03 DivEqInc 10.29 -.01 DivrBd 5.02 +.01 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 30.53 -.04 AcornIntZ 41.33 +.07 ValRestr 51.41 -.36 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 9.34 -.04 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq n11.50 +.03 USCorEq1 n11.25-.02 USCorEq2 n11.23-.01 DWS Invest S: MgdMuni S 8.46 -.07 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 34.84 -.13 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 35.20 -.13
LockhdM 3.00f 73.84 -.40 S&P500ETF2.37e128.37-.21 .44 24.55 +.11 SpdrHome .33e 18.02 -.11 Lowes LyonBas A ... 36.40 -.34 SpdrKbwBk.13e 26.55 -.17 SpdrKbw RB.35e 26.16 -.23 M-N-0 SpdrRetl .49e 47.03 -.17 MBIA ... 13.33 -.28 SpdrOGEx .20e u54.10 -.16 ... 11.88 -.01 SpdrMetM .38e 70.07 -.92 MEMC MFA Fncl .94f 8.04 +.04 SRA Intl ... 24.78 -1.34 MGIC ... 11.37 +.07 Safeway .48 21.14 -.03 MGM Rsts ... u16.29 -.04 StJude ... 41.60 -.13 MSCI Inc ... 36.75 -2.97 Saks ... 11.58 -.19 .20 22.99 -.23 Salesforce ... 143.85 +2.21 Macys Manitowoc .08 13.69 -.14 SandRdge ... 7.83 +.01 MarathonO1.00u42.98 +2.45 Sanofi 1.63e 34.43 +.72 MktVGold .40e 56.05 -1.85 SaraLee .46f u18.33 +.15 MktVRus .18e 39.67 -.36 Schlmbrg .84 u84.60 +.15 MktVJrGld2.93e 36.45 -1.48 Schwab .24 18.55 +.39 MktV Agri .33e u56.24 +.15 SemiHTr .56e u33.53 +.01 MarIntA .35f 41.13 +.31 SiderNac s .58e 18.00 -.33 MarshM .84f 27.40 -.09 SilvWhtn g ... 32.50 -2.03 MarshIls .04 7.10 +.01 SilvrcpM g .08 10.53 -.82 .30 13.75 -.03 Skechers ... 21.73 +.82 Masco MasseyEn .24 u57.42 -.62 SmithfF ... 20.30 +.08 McDnlds 2.44f 72.67 -.93 SouthnCo 1.82 38.28 +.20 McKesson .72 74.40 +.41 SwstAirl .02 13.09 -.07 ... 47.40 -.05 SwstnEngy ... 39.26 +.35 McAfee ... 33.26 -.84 SpectraEn 1.04f 24.81 -.41 Mechel MedcoHlth ... 64.94 +.47 SpiritAero ... 22.31 -.11 Medtrnic .90 37.27 +.57 SprintNex ... 4.48 +.07 Merck 1.52 34.69 -2.46 SP Matls 1.17e 38.71 -.34 .74 45.63 -.95 SP HlthC .57e 32.14 -.17 MetLife MetroPCS ... 12.96 -.01 SP CnSt .78e 29.33 +.06 MitsuUFJ ... u5.55 ... SP Consum.49e 37.69 -.06 MobileTel s ... 20.60 -.11 SP Engy .99e u69.89 -.20 Molycorp n ... 48.87 -3.53 SPDR Fncl .16e 16.46 -.06 Monsanto 1.12 74.78 -.14 SP Inds .60e u35.77 +.04 MonstrWw ... 23.51 -.49 SP Tech .32e u25.94 -.02 Moodys .46f 28.95 -.03 MorgStan .20 28.30 -.41 SP Util 1.27e 31.59 -.03 Mosaic .20 u80.69 +.88 StarwdHtl .30f 61.31 +1.22 MotrlaSol n ... 37.85 -.11 StateStr .04 48.57 +.79 ... u22.11 -.32 MotrlaMo n ... 33.08 +.45 StillwtrM .72f 57.65 -.16 MurphO 1.10 73.30 -1.22 Stryker Suncor gs .40 38.69 +.44 NRG Egy ... 20.23 +.11 .60 40.17 +.61 NYSE Eur 1.20 32.55 +.32 Sunoco ... 9.14 -.09 Nabors ... 22.08 -.29 Suntech .04 28.35 -.56 NBkGreece.29e 1.74 +.05 SunTrst NatGrid 7.04e 42.58 -.66 Supvalu .35 7.50 -.21 NOilVarco .44f 67.13 -.25 Synovus .04 2.78 +.02 NatSemi .40 14.27 +.05 Sysco 1.04f 30.50 +.04 NY CmtyB 1.00 18.36 -.12 TCF Fncl .20 15.46 -.01 .60 45.52 -.37 NewellRub .20 17.78 -.43 TJX NewmtM .60 56.81 -.98 TRWAuto ... 57.80 -1.99 Nexen g .20 24.12 -.26 TaiwSemi .47e 13.37 -.14 ... 6.23 +.13 NiSource .92 18.33 +.01 Talbots NikeB 1.24f 82.56 -1.17 TalismE g .25 22.87 -.43 Target 1.00 55.42 -.03 NobleCorp .90e 38.05 -.08 NokiaCp .56e 10.88 +.12 TataMotors.32e 27.33 -.23 Novartis 1.99e 57.03 -.66 Taubmn 1.75f 50.69 -.25 1.45f 44.72 -.01 TeckRes g .60f 63.64 -1.46 Nucor OcciPet 1.52 96.42 -1.08 TelNorL 1.65e 15.87 +.32 OfficeDpt ... 5.85 -.02 Tenaris .68e 45.24 -2.63 OilSvHT 2.40eu143.16 -.61 TenetHlth ... u7.00 -.01 ... 14.02 +.07 Omnicom .80 44.84 -.53 Teradyn Terex ... 31.25 +1.72 P-Q-R Tesoro ... 18.89 +.12 PG&E Cp 1.82 46.94 +.22 TexInst .52f 33.48 -.18 .08 25.20 +.28 PMI Grp ... 3.90 +.05 Textron .40 61.13 -1.07 ThomCrk g ... 15.14 -.31 PNC 2.10 88.04 -.62 PPL Corp 1.40 25.73 -.87 3M Co ParkerHan1.16f u89.23 +.57 TW Cable 1.60 65.14 +.23 PatriotCoal ... u26.48 +.38 TimeWarn .85 33.60 -.09 ... 18.40 -.11 PeabdyE .34f 63.85 +.74 TitanMet Penney .80 30.67 +.01 TollBros ... 20.39 -.07 PepsiCo 1.92 66.91 +.18 Total SA 3.13e 56.03 +1.03 Petrohawk ... 19.77 +.09 Transocn ... 77.32 +.28 PetrbrsA 1.20e 33.18 -.91 Travelers 1.44 54.67 +.08 Petrobras 1.20e 37.18 -1.25 TrinaSol s ... 27.06 -.34 Pfizer .80f 18.22 -.15 TycoElec .64 u36.33 +.13 PhmHTr 2.42e 65.86 -.80 TycoIntl .86e u44.95 +1.07 PhilipMor 2.56 56.50 -.09 Tyson .16 16.81 -.02 Pier 1 ... 10.46 -.59 UBS AG ... 17.30 +.02 PlainsEx ... 33.60 -.40 US Airwy ... 10.89 +.01 Potash .40u170.13 +.14 UnilevNV 1.11e 30.35 +.02 PwshDB ... 27.89 -.04 UnionPac 1.52f u99.02 +.94 PS Agri ... 32.82 +.12 UtdContl ... 25.96 +.06 PS USDBull ... 22.80 -.24 UtdMicro .08e 3.26 +.02 PrideIntl ... 34.01 +.23 UPS B 1.88 72.25 +.30 PrinFncl .55f 32.86 -.37 UtdRentals ... u25.55 +.44 PrisaA n ... u8.57 +.50 US Bancrp .20 26.75 +.06 ProShtQQQ ... d33.35 -.03 US NGsFd ... 5.98 -.16 PrUShS&P ... 22.82 +.09 US OilFd ... 38.65 -.34 ProUltQQQ ... u87.87 +.20 USSteel .20 55.60 -1.03 PrUShQQQ ... d10.77 ... UtdTech 1.70 79.50 +.07 ProUltSP .43e 50.04 -.11 UtdhlthGp .50 u39.60 +.74 ProUShL20 ... 38.26 -.63 UnivHlthS .20 u46.00 +1.26 ProUShtFn ... d14.83 +.09 ProUFin rs .07e 69.82 -.45 V-W-X-Y-Z ProUSR2K ... d12.00 ... Vale SA .76e u35.99 -.62 ProUSSP500 ... 18.23 +.08 Vale SA pf .76e u31.51 -.43 ProUltCrude ... 12.41 -.19 ProUSSlv rs ... 11.24 +.72 ValeantPh .38a 35.57 -.06 ProUShCrude... 10.17 +.15 ValeroE .20 u25.04 +.48 ProUShEuro ... 20.29 -.70 VangEmg .82e 48.33 -.55 ... u44.26 +1.27 ProctGam 1.93 u65.48 +.51 VeriFone ProgrssEn 2.48 44.52 +.28 VerizonCm 1.95 35.80 +.33 ProgsvCp 1.16e 19.16 -.07 ViacomB .60 41.27 +.05 ProLogis .45m 14.76 +.03 VimpelC n .46p 15.34 -.31 .60f 71.14 -1.47 Prudentl 1.15f 60.98 -.59 Visa PSEG 1.37 31.59 -.57 VishayInt ... 15.99 -.15 VMware ... 95.50 +.34 PulteGrp ... 8.35 -.07 ... u3.18 -.08 QntmDSS ... 3.80 -.18 Vonage WalMart 1.21 54.79 -.06 QksilvRes ... 14.78 +.08 Walgrn .70 u41.64 +.44 QwestCm .32 7.37 +.05 RAIT Fin .03e 2.92 -.08 WalterEn .50 137.47 +.80 RSC Hldgs ... u12.53 +1.17 WsteMInc 1.36f 36.68 +.32 RadianGrp .01 9.39 ... WeathfIntl ... u23.23 +.05 RadioShk .25 17.14 -.31 WellPoint ... 61.81 -.12 RangeRs .16 48.16 +.32 WellsFargo .20 31.89 -.12 Raytheon 1.50 49.52 +.17 WendyArby .08f 4.52 -.04 ... 32.75 -.20 RegalEnt .84a 12.50 +.29 WDigital RegionsFn .04 7.24 -.03 WstnRefin ... u11.20 +.42 ReneSola ... 10.59 -.54 WstnUnion .28f 19.11 -.04 RioTinto s .90e 71.11 -.73 Weyerh .60f u21.34 -.21 ... 1.01 +.02 WmsCos .50 u26.52 +.63 RiteAid h RockColl .96 61.95 +1.11 WmsSon .60 32.90 -1.28 RylCarb ... 47.81 -.56 WT India .15e 24.56 -.52 RoyDShllA3.36e 67.52 -.04 Wyndham .48 29.50 +.04 XL Grp .40 u22.96 +.68 S-T-U XcelEngy 1.01 23.45 -.09 .17 11.32 -.21 ... 16.22 +.16 Xerox SAIC SAP AG .67e u54.58 +3.40 Yamana g .12f 11.95 -.38 SLM Cp ... u14.09 -.07 YingliGrn ... 10.62 -.23 ... 37.58 +.37 SpdrDJIA 2.77e 117.20 -.20 Youku n SpdrGold ... 134.05 -1.41 YumBrnds 1.00 48.90 -.25 SP Mid 1.51e 167.79 -.14 ZaleCp ... 5.73 -.03
NYVen C 33.68 -.14 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.23 +.01 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq n22.28 -.08 EmMktV 36.37 -.09 IntSmVa n 17.53 +.07 LargeCo 10.12 -.01 USLgVa n 20.69 -.06 US Micro n14.03 -.02 US Small n21.89 -.01 US SmVa 26.13 -.07 IntlSmCo n17.44 +.05 Fixd n 10.33 ... IntVa n 18.93 +.12 Glb5FxInc n10.90 +.02 2YGlFxd n 10.15 ... Dodge&Cox: Balanced 71.70 -.13 Income 13.27 +.02 IntlStk 36.35 +.28 Stock 110.60 -.34 Dreyfus: Aprec 38.33 -.13 Eaton Vance A: LgCpVal 18.46 -.10 NatlMunInc 8.53 -.12 Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 9.03 +.01 GblMacAbR10.29 -.03 LgCapVal 18.51 -.10 FMI Funds: LgCap p 16.01 -.01 FPA Funds: NwInc 10.88 ... FPACres n27.08 ... Fairholme 36.14 -.16 Federated Instl: KaufmnR 5.62 ... TotRetBd 11.17 +.04
CATTLE/HOGS NEW YORK(AP) - Cattle/hogs futures on the Chicago Merchantile Exchange Friday: Open high low settle chg. CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 110.25 110.75 109.55 109.90 -.30 Apr 11 114.77 114.90 113.95 114.45 -.12 Jun 11 112.75 112.87 111.70 112.52 +.15 Aug 11 112.40 113.50 112.40 113.10 +.13 Oct 11 114.85 115.95 114.85 115.70 +.48 Dec 11 116.00 116.80 115.40 116.75 +.53 Feb 12 116.00 116.90 115.80 116.85 +.70 Apr 12 116.00 117.10 116.00 117.10 +.70 Jun 12 112.65 114.20 112.65 114.20 +1.30 Last spot N/A Est. sales 97029. Wed’s Sales: 96,517 Wed’s open int: 329746, off -3808 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Jan 11 124.05 124.90 124.05 124.90 +.88 Mar 11 127.15 127.25 125.37 126.90 +.85 Apr 11 126.40 127.70 126.15 127.65 +.78 May 11 127.90 127.95 126.25 127.92 +.65 Aug 11 128.30 128.50 126.95 128.45 +.58 Sep 11 127.00 128.00 127.00 128.00 +.45 Oct 11 127.00 127.60 127.00 127.60 +.50 Nov 11 127.02 127.30 127.02 127.30 +.30 Last spot N/A Est. sales 5071. Wed’s Sales: 5,762 Wed’s open int: 51078, up +405 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 80.37 81.30 79.62 80.30 -.82 Apr 11 86.27 87.22 85.77 86.30 -.72 May 11 93.17 94.02 93.10 93.40 -.55 Jun 11 95.90 96.20 95.40 95.95 -.67 Jul 11 95.15 95.25 94.25 95.15 -.52 Aug 11 93.90 93.90 93.00 93.75 -.55 Oct 11 83.80 84.15 83.10 84.02 -.25 Dec 11 79.90 80.00 79.30 80.00 -.20 Feb 12 81.00 81.00 80.60 80.90 -.25 Apr 12 82.00 May 12 86.40 86.40 86.30 86.30 -.20 Jun 12 87.50 87.50 87.50 87.50 +.10 Last spot N/A
COTTON
NEW YORK(AP) - Cotton No. 2 futures on the N.Y. Cotton Exchange Friday: Open high low settle COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Mar 11 149.00 151.63 143.97 144.06 May 11 144.54 146.40 139.45 139.46 Jul 11 138.00 139.95 132.90 133.10 Oct 11 115.25 115.50 115.00 115.00 Dec 11 104.85 105.85 102.01 102.38 Mar 12 99.30 99.30 96.75 96.75 May 12 94.99 Jul 12 93.36 Oct 12 87.51 Dec 12 86.51 Last spot N/A Est. sales 25070. Wed’s Sales: 30,752 Wed’s open int: 203253, off -345
chg.
-3.91 -3.99 -3.80 -2.92 -2.05 -2.17 -2.20 -2.28 -2.54 -2.75
GRAINS
CHICAGO(AP) - Futures trading on the Chicago Board of Trade Thursday: Open high
low settle
chg.
WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Mar 11 780 787ø 769ü 783ø +13 May 11 811fl 815 797fl 812ü +14 Jul 11 837 840 822 837ø +14ø
MARKET SUMMARY
NYSE
AMEX
NASDAQ NATIONAL MARKET
NASDAQ
MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)
Name Vol (00) Last Chg Citigrp 6116140 5.04 -.04 BkofAm 1532137 14.77 -.22 S&P500ETF1059840128.37-.21 FordM 989816 18.68 -.03 Merck 733602 34.69-
Name Vol (00) NthgtM g 77716 NA Pall g 69984 NovaGld g 66707 SamsO&G 45596 ChinaShen 43169
Name Last CaptlTr 2.27 AlonUSA 7.49 LeeEnt 2.77 CaptlTr pf 2.72 ChNBorun n 13.12
Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg PacOffPT 3.48 +1.44 +70.6 Golfsmith 3.86 +.89 Wstmlnd pf 55.10+17.60 +46.9 Biodel 2.50 +.54 Barnwell 8.94 +1.01 +12.7 IndBkMI rs 3.17 +.56 Tofutti 2.16 +.20 +10.2 TTM Tch 17.74 +3.12 PernixTh 7.42 +.67 +9.9 MarketLdr 3.00 +.51
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Chg +.38 +1.01 +.32 +.29 +1.24
%Chg +20.1 +15.6 +13.1 +11.9 +10.4
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Name Goldcp wt CenPacF CitiDJaig14 EvergE rs MSCI Inc
Last 2.44 2.10 11.02 2.62 36.75
52-Week High Low 11,782.23 9,614.32 5,243.83 3,742.01 413.75 346.95 8,126.79 6,355.83 2,225.48 1,689.19 2,737.33 2,061.14 1,286.87 1,010.91 13,674.35 10,596.20 802.40 580.49
Chg -.15 +.16 -.19 +.27 +.02
Name Intel MicronT Nvidia Microsoft Oracle
Last 2.24 7.30 6.11 4.26 22.37
Name SemiLeds n ChiValve DragonW g Westwy un SmithMicro
165 313 36 514 18 33 Lows 177,729,49949
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
INDEXES
Name Dow Jones Industrials Dow Jones Transportation Dow Jones Utilities NYSE Composite Amex Index Nasdaq Composite S&P 500 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
Last 11,731.90 5,229.47 409.34 8,119.43 2,167.77 2,735.29 1,283.76 13,644.44 800.65
Last 18.76 7.15 7.25 5.68 13.43
YTD %Chg Name
Chg -.01 +.29 +.04 -.36 +.24
%Chg +30.0 +27.6 +21.5 +21.3
%Chg -34.5 -18.0 -16.3 -15.5 -14.5
1,140 1,456 151 2,747 206 10ofutti 1,897,177,749
Net % Chg Chg -23.54 -.20 +16.87 +.32 +.71 +.17 -3.55 -.04 -35.62 -1.62 -2.04 -.07 -2.20 -.17 -21.36 -.16 -.71 -.09
Div
Chg -9.87 -1.57 -1.41 -1.04 -2.27
DIARY
STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
PE Last
YTD % Chg +1.33 +2.40 +1.07 +1.95 -1.84 +3.11 +2.08 +2.13 +2.17
52-wk % Chg +9.54 +23.60 +2.45 +9.01 +14.82 +18.07 +11.78 +14.58 +23.86e
Chg
YTD %Chg
Div
PE Last
BkofAm
.04
22
14.77 -.22
+10.7 ONEOK Pt
4.52f
24
80.81 +.10
+1.6
Chevron
2.88
11
92.18 -.27
+1.0 PNM Res
.50
33
13.54 +.03
+4.0
CocaCl
1.76
20
63.40 +.36
-3.6 PepsiCo
1.92
17
66.91 +.18
+2.4
Disney
.40f
19
39.26 +.09
+4.7 Pfizer
.80f
10
18.22 -.15
+4.1
EOG Res
.62
49
97.86 -.63
+7.1 SwstAirl
.02
24
13.09 -.07
+.8
...
9
18.68 -.03
+11.3 TexInst
.52f
14
33.48 -.18
+3.0
HewlettP
.32
12
45.65 +.01
+8.4 TimeWarn
.85
15
33.60 -.09
+4.4
HollyCp
.60
49
42.70 +.09
+4.7 TriContl
.25e
...
13.97 +.01
+1.5
Intel
.72f
12
21.29 -.01
+1.2 WalMart
1.21
14
54.79 -.06
+1.6
IBM
2.60
14 148.82 -.28
+1.4 WashFed
.24f
17
17.39 -.12
+2.8
Merck
1.52
18
34.69 -2.46
-3.7 WellsFargo
.20
13
31.89 -.12
+2.9
.64
7
28.19 -.36
+1.0 XcelEngy
1.01
14
23.45 -.09
-.4
Name
FordM
Microsoft
Chg
Last 21.29 9.63 23.39 28.19 31.18
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Chg %Chg -.40 -15.2 -.70 -8.8 -.51 -7.7 -.30 -6.6 -1.50-
DIARY
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
Vol (00) 869944 728282 669216 648366 432351
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)
Chg %Chg Name -.37 -13.0 YM Bio g -.20 -8.7 CagleA -.97 -8.1 ChinNEPet -.23 -8.1 AlmadnM g -2.97 -7.5 GoldenMin
1,369 1,648 116 3,133 246 108 4,354,571,663
Last 2.78 7.35 13.95 1.82 8.81
GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)
DIARY
Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume
HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW
Here are the 525 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, the 400 most active on the Nasdaq National Markets and 100 most active on American Stock Exchange. Mutual funds are 450 largest. Stocks in bold changed 5 percent or more in price. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Company names made up of initials appear at the beginning of each letters’ list. AAR .48 12.88 # Div: Current annual dividend rate paid on stock, based on latest quar- ACMIn 1.10 9.75 +.13 ACM Op .80 7.25 # terly or semiannual declaration, unless otherwise footnoted. ACM Sc 1.10 8.50 -.13 Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. ACMSp .96 7.50 # Chg: Loss or gain for the day. No change indicated by ... mark. Fund Name: Name of mutual fund and family. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold. Chg: Daily net change in the NAV.
AAL Mutual: Bond p 9.49 -.01
Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. d – New 52- CaGrp 14.47 -.03 wk low during trading day. g – Dividend in Canadian $. Stock price in U.S.$. n – MuBd 10.43 -.01 New issue in past 52 wks. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. s – Split SmCoSt 9.73 -.05 or stock dividend of 25 pct or more in last 52 wks. Div begins with date of split or stock dividend. u – New 52-wk high during trading day. v – Trading halted on primary market. Unless noted, dividend rates are annual disbursements based on last declaration. pf – Preferred. pp – Holder owes installment(s) of purchase price. rt – Rights. un – Units. wd – When distributed. wi – When issued. wt – Warrants. ww – With warrants. xw – Without warrants. Dividend Footnotes: a – Also extra or extras. b – Annual rate plus stock dividend. c – Liquidating dividend. e – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos. f – Annual rate, increased on last declaration. i – Declared or paid after stock dividend or split. j – Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last meeting. k – Declared or paid this year, accumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m – Annual rate, reduced on last declaration. p – Init div, annual rate unknown. r – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos plus stock dividend. t – Paid in stock in last 12 mos, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or distribution date. x – Ex-dividend or ex-rights. y – Ex-dividend and sales in full. z – Sales in full. vj – In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. • Most active stocks above must be worth $1 and gainers/losers $2. Mutual Fund Footnotes: e – Ex-capital gains distribution. f – Wednesday’s quote. n - No-load fund. p – Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r – Redemption fee or contingent deferred sales load may apply. s – Stock dividend or split. t – Both p and r. x – Ex-cash dividend.
Fidelity Advisor A: HighInc r n 9.07 +.01 TotMktInv n37.23 -.06 NwInsgh p 20.34 -.01 Indepn n 25.12 +.02 Fidelity Spart Adv: StrInA 12.47 +.03 IntBd n 10.58 +.03 500IdxAdv n45.44-.08 Fidelity Advisor I: IntmMu n 9.93 -.03 TotMktAd r n37.23-.06 NwInsgtI n 20.53 -.01 IntlDisc n 33.63 +.03 First Eagle: InvGrBd n 11.42 +.03 GlblA Fidelity Freedom: 46.79 +.03 FF2010 n 13.77 ... InvGB n 7.41 +.02 OverseasA22.77 +.06 FF2015 n 11.50 ... LgCapVal 12.12 -.03 Forum Funds: FF2020 n 14.01 ... LatAm 58.58 -.38 AbsStrI r 10.85 ... FF2020K 13.40 ... LevCoStk n29.34 -.01 Frank/Temp Frnk A: FF2025 n 11.72 ... LowP r n 38.96 +.05 CalTFA p 6.52 -.07 FF2030 n 14.03 ... LowPriK r 38.94 +.04 FedTFA p 11.02 -.12 FF2030K 13.85 ... Magelln n 73.11 -.14 FoundAl p 10.66 +.01 FF2035 n 11.70 -.01 MagellanK 73.04 -.15 HYTFA p 9.38 -.10 FF2040 n 8.18 ... MidCap n 29.63 ... IncomA p 2.21 ... MuniInc n 12.02 -.08 NYTFA p 10.86 -.11 Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 13.00 -.02 NwMkt r n 15.73 +.01 StratInc p 10.49 ... AMgr50 n 15.64 +.02 OTC n 58.22 +.02 USGovA p 6.75 +.01 AMgr20 r n12.89 +.02 100Index 8.93 -.02 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: Balanc n 18.56 +.01 Ovrsea n 33.20 +.14 GlbBdAdv p ... ... BalancedK18.56 +.01 Puritn n 18.24 +.01 IncmeAd 2.19 ... BlueChGr n46.92 ... RealE n 25.64 +.06 Frank/Temp Frnk C: IncomC t 2.23 ... Canada n 58.48 -.60 SCmdtyStrt n12.57Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: CapAp n 25.98 ... .09 CpInc r n 9.64 -.01 SrsIntGrw 11.28 -.04 SharesA 21.06 -.01 Contra n 69.05 -.02 SrsIntVal 10.27 +.10 Frank/Temp Temp A: ContraK 69.02 -.02 SrInvGrdF 11.42 +.03 ForgnA p 7.20 +.07 DisEq n 23.18 ... StIntMu n 10.58 ... GlBd A p 13.60 -.06 DivIntl n 30.51 +.03 STBF n 8.47 +.01 GrwthA p 18.17 +.06 DivrsIntK r 30.48 +.03 SmllCpS r n20.65 +.04 WorldA p 15.19 +.03 DivGth n 29.16 -.03 StratInc n 11.16 +.02 Frank/Temp Tmp EmrMk n 26.65 -.04 StrReRt r 9.62 -.01 B&C: Eq Inc n 45.41 -.13 TotalBd n 10.76 +.03 GlBdC p 13.63 -.05 EQII n 18.73 -.05 USBI n 11.35 +.04 GE Elfun S&S: Fidel n 33.02 -.04 Value n 70.44 -.05 S&S PM 41.24 -.04 GMO Trust III: FltRateHi r n9.87 +.01 Fidelity Selects: GNMA n 11.49 +.03 Gold r n 49.35-1.23 Quality 20.35 -.04 GMO Trust IV: GovtInc 10.44 +.04 Fidelity Spartan: GroCo n 86.92 +.10 ExtMkIn n 39.08 -.03 IntlIntrVl 22.37 +.13 GroInc n 18.78 -.02 500IdxInv n45.44 -.08 GMO Trust VI: GrowthCoK86.87 +.10 IntlInxInv n35.90 +.25 EmgMkts r 14.94 -.03
Est. sales 53930. Wed’s Sales: 60,012 Wed’s open int: 214478, up +4356 PORK BELLIES 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 106.00 Mar 11 107.00 May 11 106.70 Jul 11 103.50 Aug 11 102.50 Last spot N/A Wed’s Sales: Wed’s open int: 3, unch
Friday, January 14, 2011
Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.
MUTUAL FUNDS
IntlCorEq 29.72 +.12 Quality 20.35 -.05 Goldman Sachs A: MdCVA p 36.83 -.10 Goldman Sachs Inst: HiYield 7.37 +.01 MidCapV 37.10 -.09 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.15 +.03 CapApInst 37.77 +.09 IntlInv t 60.92 +.08 Intl r 61.48 +.08 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 35.68 -.03 Hartford Fds C: CapApC t 31.65 -.03 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI n 35.69 -.03 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 43.70 -.04 Div&Gr 19.84 -.06 Advisers 19.68 -.01 TotRetBd 10.95 +.01 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 12.09 +.03 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r16.82 +.01 Invesco Funds A: CapGro 13.92 +.03 Chart p 16.52 -.02 CmstkA 16.06 -.05 EqIncA 8.77 -.01 GrIncA p 19.71 -.04 HYMuA 8.74 -.07 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 24.22 -.13 AssetStA p24.93 -.13 AssetStrI r 25.14 -.13 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.51 +.02
Sep 11 856 859ü 843 857fl +15ø Dec 11 875fl 878 859fl 876ü +17 Mar 12 887fl 889 870 887ü +17 May 12 872fl 884ü 872ø 884ü +18 Last spot N/A Est. sales 170746. Wed’s Sales: 99,704 Wed’s open int: 498804, up +2429 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Mar 11 639 649ø 633ü 642ø +11ø May 11 649 658ü 642ü 651ø +11fl Jul 11 657ø 662fl 646ø 656ø +12ü Sep 11 603 610ø 598 608 +12fl Dec 11 568ø 572fl 562 570ø +10ø Mar 12 576fl 580 568ø 578ü +11 May 12 581fl 584 573fl 583fl +11 Last spot N/A Est. sales 700241. Wed’s Sales: 430,288 Wed’s open int: 1578445, up +24794 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Mar 11 395 399ø 393ü 396ø +2 May 11 399fl 403ø 399 401ü +2 Jul 11 399ø 403fl 399 401ü +2ø Sep 11 368ü 368ü 364ø 364ø -1ø Dec 11 357ø 362ü 356fl 358 +1 Mar 12 367 367 367 367 May 12 374 374 374 374 Last spot N/A Est. sales 1517. Wed’s Sales: 1,461 Wed’s open int: 12337, up +264 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jan 11 1419 1426 1407ø 1410 +1 Mar 11 1415 1432ø 1413 1416 +1 May 11 1425ø 1442 1422ø 1425ø +1fl Jul 11 1439ü 1445ø 1426 1429ø +2 Aug 11 1406 1412 1398 1398 +2fl Sep 11 1361 1367ü 1349ø 1353ü +3fl Nov 11 1319 1327ü 1308 1312ø +4ø Jan 12 1321 1328 1311 1313ø +2ø Mar 12 1313ü 1325 1308 1312 +4ü May 12 1309ü 1317 1303 1303 +4 Last spot N/A Est. sales 377439. Wed’s Sales: 269,036 Wed’s open int: 631595, up +8389
JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd n 11.51 +.02 HighYld n 8.27 +.01 IntmTFBd n10.69 -.03 ShtDurBd n10.98 ... USLCCrPls n21.17.08 Janus S Shrs: Forty 34.15 -.03 Janus T Shrs: BalancdT 25.36 +.01 OvrseasT r53.10 +.35 PrkMCVal T22.88 -.05 Twenty T 67.28 -.06 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggr 12.55 ... LSBalanc 13.12 +.01 LSGrwth 13.09 ... Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p25.34 ... Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.77 -.01 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p22.17 -.01 Legg Mason A: WAMgMu p14.59 -.17 Longleaf Partners: Partners 28.98 -.09 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.42 +.02 StrInc C 15.04 +.03 LSBondR 14.37 +.03 StrIncA 14.97 +.03 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdY 12.19 +.03 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 11.86 -.04 BdDebA p 7.90 +.01 ShDurIncA p4.61 ... Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t4.64 ...
FUTURES
MFS Funds A: TotRA 14.25 -.01 ValueA 23.17 -.07 MFS Funds I: ValueI 23.28 -.06 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBA 5.95 +.01 Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 8.70 +.04 Matthews Asian: AsianGIInv18.24 +.01 PacTgrInv 23.55 -.03 MergerFd 15.87 +.02 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.43 +.02 TotRtBdI 10.43 +.03 MorganStanley Inst: IntlEqI 13.86 +.03 MCapGrI 38.37 +.04 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 29.68 +.01 GlbDiscZ 30.03 +.01 QuestZ 17.93 ... SharesZ 21.22 -.01 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 46.26 -.13 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 47.94 -.14 Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.37 +.01 MMIntEq r 10.07 ... Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 28.05 -.04 Intl I r 19.94 +.18 Oakmark r 42.28 -.06 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.84 ... GlbSMdCap15.61 ... Oppenheimer A: CapApA p 44.04 -.15 DvMktA p 36.07 -.21
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. Feb 11 91.62 92.37 90.75 91.40 Mar 11 92.56 93.27 91.83 92.30 Apr 11 93.42 94.10 92.74 93.21 May 11 94.10 94.73 93.49 94.00 Jun 11 94.67 95.30 94.05 94.60 Jul 11 95.13 95.75 94.50 95.06 Aug 11 95.34 95.96 94.83 95.38 Sep 11 95.52 96.18 95.50 95.62 Oct 11 95.84 96.34 95.81 95.81 Nov 11 95.50 96.28 95.50 95.95 Dec 11 96.09 96.68 95.47 96.07 Jan 12 95.78 96.44 95.77 96.09 Feb 12 96.06 Mar 12 96.02 Apr 12 95.98 May 12 95.94 Jun 12 96.27 96.45 95.40 95.91 Jul 12 95.81 Aug 12 95.72 Sep 12 95.64 Oct 12 95.57 Nov 12 95.55 Dec 12 95.50 96.10 94.92 95.56 Jan 13 95.43 Feb 13 95.30 Mar 13 95.18 Last spot N/A Est. sales 898575. Wed’s Sales: 933,343 Wed’s open int: 1516692, up +15104 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Feb 11 2.4535 2.4800 2.4316 2.4459 Mar 11 2.4693 2.4872 2.4478 2.4615 Apr 11 2.5700 2.5820 2.5576 2.5661 May 11 2.5733 2.5900 2.5590 2.5724 Jun 11 2.5752 2.5896 2.5590 2.5714 Jul 11 2.5609 2.5800 2.5569 2.5648 Aug 11 2.5517 2.5565 2.5409 2.5505 Sep 11 2.5312 2.5332 2.5312 2.5332
chg.
-.46 -.57 -.53 -.48 -.45 -.42 -.39 -.37 -.35 -.32 -.30 -.28 -.28 -.27 -.27 -.27 -.27 -.28 -.29 -.29 -.30 -.30 -.30 -.30 -.30 -.29
-.0172 -.0157 -.0155 -.0163 -.0159 -.0154 -.0152 -.0150
GlobA p 61.73 +.14 GblStrIncA 4.31 +.01 Gold p 46.65-1.19 IntBdA p 6.50 +.02 MnStFdA 33.11 -.06 Oppenheimer Roch: LtdNYA p 3.17 -.02 RoMu A p 14.73 -.16 RcNtMuA 6.40 -.06 Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 35.68 -.21 6.50 +.02 IntlBdY PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 10.88 +.03 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r10.60 +.03 AllAsset 12.14 +.02 ComodRR 9.35 -.03 HiYld 9.39 +.01 InvGrCp 10.53 +.04 LowDu 10.43 +.03 RealRtnI 11.43 +.04 ShortT 9.88 ... TotRt 10.88 +.03 TR II 10.40 +.04 TRIII 9.62 +.03 PIMCO Funds A: LwDurA 10.43 +.03 RealRtA p 11.43 +.04 TotRtA 10.88 +.03 PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 10.88 +.03 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 10.88 +.03 PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 10.88 +.03 Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n 27.10 -.01 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 45.73 +.04
B5
... 37.62 +.17 Div Last Chg Copart ... 4.72 +.09 CorinthC A-B-C Costco .82 71.60 +.11 ... 65.46 -3.74 A-Power ... 6.17 +.01 Cree Inc ... 17.04 -.08 ASML Hld .27e 37.29 -.19 Crocs ATP O&G ... 16.84 -.04 Ctrip.com s ... 43.13 -.41 ... 22.51 +.08 AVI Bio ... 2.40 -.14 CubistPh ... 2.97 +.18 AcadiaPh h ... 1.64 -.06 Curis Cyclacel ... 1.53 -.02 ... 61.62 +.80 AcmePkt ... u21.23 +.89 AcordaTh ... 27.44 -1.74 CypSemi ActivePwr ... u2.69 -.06 D-E-F ActivsBliz .15 12.04 +.08 ... 14.17 -.22 AdobeSy ... 33.38 -.19 Dell Inc h ... .79 -.02 DeltaPtr AEterna g ... 1.61 -.07 ... 36.60 -.51 Affymetrix ... 5.29 -.12 Dndreon ... 3.09 +.16 Depomed ... 7.06 +.04 AgFeed ... u15.42 +.25 AkamaiT ... 50.38 +1.12 DexCom AlaskCom .86 9.61 -.35 DirecTV A ... 42.22 +.39 AllosThera ... 4.03 -.18 DiscCm A ... 38.83 -.83 AllotComm ... u13.41 +.67 DiscCm C ... 33.65 -.76 AllscriptH ... 20.63 -.16 DishNetwk ... 21.46 -.07 AlteraCp lf .24 36.96 +.21 DonlleyRR 1.04 17.65 -.50 ... u2.83 +.23 Amazon ... 185.53 +1.45 DotHill h ... 5.45 -.05 ACapAgy 5.60e 28.64 -1.04 DryShips ... 2.18 +.04 AmCapLtd ... u8.39 -.09 DyaxCp AmerMed ... 19.41 -.15 ETrade rs ... 16.64 +.17 ... 28.71 -.12 Amgen ... 56.32 -.53 eBay ... u9.06 +1.49 AmkorT lf ... 7.91 ... EXFO g Amylin ... 14.68 +.46 EagleBulk ... 4.95 -.08 Anadigc ... 7.58 -.01 ErthLink .64 8.87 +.05 A123 Sys ... 10.35 -.42 EstWstBcp .04 20.64 -.14 ... 16.04 +.01 ApolloGrp ... 42.39 +.53 ElectArts ApolloInv 1.12 11.86 -.10 Emcore lf ... 1.46 -.06 Apple Inc ...u345.68+1.26 EmmisCm ... 1.38 +.16 ApldMatl .28 14.24 -.01 EndoPhrm ... 34.87 +.77 ... 3.70 +.36 AMCC ... 10.45 -.18 Ener1 ArenaPhm ... 2.05 -.04 EngyConv ... 4.39 -.18 ... 7.49 -.13 AresCap 1.40 16.73 +.06 Entegris AriadP ... 5.08 -.22 EntropCom ... 13.25 -.02 ArmHld .12e u27.22 +3.20 EricsnTel .28e 11.45 +.05 ... 7.36 -.39 Arris ... 12.42 +.03 Exelixis ... u10.48 +.17 ArubaNet ... 25.38 +.59 ExideTc Expedia .28 27.12 +.47 AsiaInfoL ... 19.34 -.06 AspenTech ... u13.91 +.33 ExpdIntl .40 54.03 -.21 AsscdBanc .04 14.67 -.08 F5 Netwks ...u143.95+1.34 ... 26.63 +.81 Atheros ... 44.70 ... FEI Co ... 29.13 +.10 AtlasEngy ... 44.49 +.22 FLIR Sys Fastenal .84f 58.81 +.03 Atmel ... 13.79 ... AuthenTec ... 3.31 +.19 FifthThird .04 14.62 -.14 Autodesk ... 41.08 +.55 FinEngin n ... u22.90 +1.56 ... u34.76 +1.10 AutoData 1.44f 48.51 -.47 Finisar .04 12.42 -.23 AvagoTch .07p 28.35 +.18 FMidBc FstNiagara .60f 14.20 -.14 AvanirPhm ... 4.46 +.01 ... 141.55 +1.72 AvisBudg ... 14.56 +.05 FstSolar ... 8.30 -.03 Axcelis ... 3.60 +.02 Flextrn BGC Ptrs .48e u9.00 +.15 FocusMda ... 23.88 +.54 ... u36.79 +.21 BMC Sft ... 47.71 +.15 Fortinet BSD Med ... 5.05 -.25 Fossil Inc ... 69.28 +.70 BannerCp .04 2.19 +.01 FosterWhl ... u37.07 +.19 BedBath ... 49.24 -.23 FresKabi rt ... .04 -.00 ... 2.00 +.01 Biocryst ... 4.82 -.35 FuelCell Biodel ... 2.50 +.54 FultonFncl .12 10.16 -.18 BioFuelEn ... 1.36 -.03 G-H-I BiogenIdc ... 67.52 +.12 BioSante ... 1.72 ... GSI Cmmrc ... 23.87 -.54 ... u10.64 -.36 ... 40.40 -.27 GT Solar Blkboard BlueCoat ... 31.43 +.03 Genzyme ... 72.36 +.02 Geores ... u26.55 +.74 BostPrv .04 6.25 -.15 ... 5.24 -.12 BrigExp ... u28.31 +.50 GeronCp ... 1.46 -.05 Broadcom .32 45.86 -.19 GigaMed BrcdeCm ... 5.91 +.07 GileadSci ... 38.12 +.30 ... 2.35 -.04 Bucyrus .10 u90.34 +.06 Gleacher ... 7.22 +.03 CA Inc .16 25.06 -.03 GloblInd ... 616.69 -.18 CNinsure .26e 19.66 +1.08 Google HanmiFncl ... 1.15 ... Cadence ... 8.58 -.02 CdnSolar ... 14.24 +.01 HansenNat ... 53.15 -.06 CapFdF rs ... 11.70 -.04 Harmonic ... 8.32 -.12 CpstnTrb h ... 1.20 -.01 Hasbro 1.00 44.65 -.39 CareerEd ... 21.23 +.53 HercOffsh ... 3.42 -.16 ... 18.88 -.27 Celgene ... 57.25 -.66 Hologic CentEuro ... 25.55 +.47 Home Inns ... 38.81 +.37 CentAl ... 16.47 -.26 HudsCity .60 12.97 +.01 ... 26.88 -.08 Cephln ... 59.94 -.35 HumGen .48 42.02 +.19 CerusCp ... 3.04 +.16 HuntJB HuntBnk .04 7.12 -.10 ... 3.17 -.18 ChrmSh ChkPoint ... 45.18 +.03 iGateCorp .26e 16.29 +.03 .07e u1.53 +.16 Cheesecake ... 30.00 +.59 iPass ChildPlace ... 44.99 -1.40 iShAsiaexJ .97e 63.88 -.53 ChinaBAK ... 2.05 +.04 iSh ACWI .81e u47.41 -.03 ... 1.95 +.02 ChinaBiot ... 15.03 +.19 Icagen rs ... u5.00 +.06 ChinaMda ... 20.65 +2.20 iGo Inc Illumina ... u69.55 +2.60 ChiValve ... 7.15 -1.57 CienaCorp ... u25.05 +.06 Imax Corp ... 27.93 +.01 ... 18.48 +.25 ImpaxLabs ... 21.24 +.57 Cirrus ... 15.96 -.01 Cisco ... 21.08 -.04 Incyte CitrixSys ... 67.67 -.42 IndBkMI rs ... 3.17 +.56 Infinera ... 10.22 -.18 CleanEngy ... 14.14 +.09 ... 44.42 -.06 Clearwire ... 5.67 -.03 Informat CognizTech ... 74.59 -.65 InfosysT .90e 71.84 -4.84 ... 4.05 +.13 Coinstar ... 56.95 -.28 InspPhar ... 6.85 +.09 Comcast .38 22.54 +.01 IntgDv Intel .72f 21.29 -.01 Comc spcl .38 21.24 -.02 CmcBMO .94b u40.88 +.17 InterDig .40 u48.03 +2.86 Compuwre ... 11.86 -.04 InterMune ... 36.42 +.20 .48 14.85 +.17 Conexant ... 2.12 -.01 Intersil
... 46.36 -.22 RepubAir ... 6.79 -.26 RschMotn ... 64.01 +.48 RexEnergy ... 12.27 -.54 ... 7.67 -.21 Rovi Corp ... u67.14 +3.12 JA Solar JDS Uniph ... u17.46 +.74 RubiconTc ... 22.87 -.38 Jamba ... 2.54 +.10 S-T-U JamesRiv ... 25.80 -.54 JazzPhrm ... u22.45 -.65 SBA Com ... 39.91 -.28 ... 6.89 -.07 SI Fincl JetBlue ... 9.27 -.31 .70 89.70 +.27 STEC JoyGlbl ... u22.17 +1.09 KLA Tnc 1.00 39.75 +.76 SanDisk ... 51.40 -.47 KandiTech ... 5.26 +.53 Sanmina ... 13.34 +.62 Kulicke ... 9.41 -.04 Sapient .35e 12.98 +.21 L&L Egy n ... 9.22 -.23 SavientPh ... 10.69 -.41 LTXCrd rs ... 8.17 +.37 SeacoastBk ... 1.62 +.10 LamResrch ... 50.40 +.18 SeagateT ... 14.08 -.12 LeapWirlss ... 13.77 +.58 SearsHldgs ... 72.83 -2.31 Level3 h ... 1.28 +.01 SeattGen ... 17.23 +.20 LexiPhrm ... 2.09 ... LibtyMIntA ... 16.05 -.18 SemiLeds n ... d18.76 -9.87 ... 55.93 -.21 Sequenom ... 7.33 -.17 LifeTech LifePtH ... 37.25 -.25 ShandaGm ... 6.59 +.10 ... 15.75 -.69 LinearTch .92 34.88 +.07 SierraWr ... 2.52 +.06 Logitech ... 18.12 -.20 SifyTech SigmaAld .64 64.15 -.65 LookSmart ... 1.71 -.26 ... 6.68 -.19 lululemn g ... 71.76 -1.09 SilicnImg Slcnware .41e 6.15 +.14 M-N-0 SilvStd g ... 23.76 -1.28 ... u85.53 +3.98 MIPS Tech ... 17.71 +1.19 Sina ... 1.53 -.03 MagicSft .50e 7.21 +.22 SiriusXM Magma ... 5.33 +.04 SkywksSol ... 31.80 -.08 ... 6.02 +.19 MannKd ... 9.40 +.36 SmartM Martek ... 31.49 +.04 SmithMicro ... 13.43 -2.27 ... 21.43 +.44 SodaStrm n ... 39.00 +6.30 MarvellT ... 69.68 +.22 .83f 24.05 +.10 Sohu.cm Mattel ... 9.23 -.20 MaximIntg .84 u25.72 +.35 Solarfun MelcoCrwn ... 7.29 -.14 SonicCorp ... 10.88 -.33 MergeHlth ... u4.43 +.23 SonicSolu ... 15.16 +.33 Microchp 1.38f 36.01 +.26 Sonus ... 3.00 -.02 MicronT ... 9.63 +.29 Spreadtrm ... u19.65 +.22 MicroSemi ... u24.74 +.33 Staples .36 23.24 -.25 Microsoft .64 28.19 -.36 Starbucks .52 32.41 +.21 Micrvisn ... 2.26 -.07 StlDynam .30 18.65 -.34 Mindspeed ... 7.41 -.05 StemCells ... 1.00 +.00 Molex .70f u24.64 -.10 SterlBcsh .06 u7.48 ... Motricity n ... 19.83 -.26 StratDiag ... 2.30 -.33 Mylan ... 22.73 +.13 SuccessF ... u31.54 -.11 MyriadG ... 21.59 -.42 SunPowerA ... 13.90 -.36 NGAS Rs h ... .57 -.01 SusqBnc .04 9.22 +.04 NII Hldg ... 42.08 -.68 Symantec ... 17.39 -.24 Nanosphere ... 4.46 ... Synopsys ... 26.44 -.21 NasdOMX ... 24.11 +.15 TD Ameritr .20 u20.89 +.58 NetLogic s ... 36.26 ... TFS Fncl ... 9.62 -.01 NetApp ... 58.62 -.31 TTM Tch ... u17.74 +3.12 Netease ... 39.00 +.02 tw telecom ... 17.41 +.14 Netflix ... 191.49 +2.59 TakeTwo ... 13.15 +.40 NewsCpA .15 14.13 -.23 NewsCpB .15 15.97 -.19 TalecrisBio ... 23.20 +.14 Telestone ... 8.67 +.21 NorTrst 1.12 55.50 -.40 .08 7.19 -.06 Novell ... 5.93 ... Tellabs ... 14.10 -.71 Novlus ... 32.81 +.19 Terremk NuVasive ... 28.00 -.10 TeslaMot n ... 26.22 -.74 NuanceCm ... u20.51 +.03 TevaPhrm .75e 54.57 +.13 Nvidia ... u23.39 +.04 TexRdhse ... 17.89 +.51 ... 28.40 -.61 OReillyAu ... 56.71 -.45 Thoratec ... 21.07 +.23 Oclaro rs ... 14.39 +.06 TibcoSft Inc ... 9.77 -.19 TiVo OmniVisn ... 29.85 +.86 OnSmcnd ... u11.43 +.06 TowerSemi ... 1.48 -.03 ... 13.85 -.01 OpnwvSy ... 2.56 -.02 TriQuint ... 51.39 -1.90 .20 31.18 +.24 UltimSoft Oracle Orexigen ... 9.32 -.44 UltraClean ... u11.70 +1.42 OriginAg ... 11.31 +.04 UtdCBksGa ... 1.70 -.11 Oxigene h ... .23 -.01 UtdWstn hlf ... .45 +.07 UrbanOut ... 36.31 +.10 PDL Bio 1.00e 5.59 +.04 PMC Sra ... 9.08 +.12 Paccar .48a 56.40 -1.01 PacSunwr ... 4.87 -.05 PanASlv .10f 36.33 -1.36 Parexel ... 20.07 -.38 Parkrvsn h ... .62 +.09 PattUTI .20 20.15 -.26 Paychex 1.24 32.09 -.18 PeopUtdF .62 14.21 +.07 PerfectWld ... 21.43 -1.32 PetsMart .50 39.66 +.01 Popular ... 3.21 -.05 Power-One ... 11.07 +.23 PwShs QQQ.33eu56.58 +.02 Powrwav ... u3.80 +.22 PriceTR 1.08 u66.74 +.13 ProspctCap1.21 11.53 +.38 QiaoXing ... 2.78 -.12 QlikTech n ... 25.58 -.21 ... 17.39 +.25 Qlogic Qualcom .76 51.87 -.47 QuantFu h ... .46 -.03 QuickLog ... 5.84 -.13 QuinStrt n ... 23.03 ... ... u8.25 -.05 RF MicD RadOneD ... 1.50 +.06 Rambus ... 21.11 +.29 Rdiff.cm ... u7.27 +.37 RegncyEn 1.78 27.50 +.05
ValVis A ... u7.15 +.90 ValueClick ... 15.45 -.38 VarianSemi ... u41.59 +.23 VeecoInst ... 47.57 -2.10 Verigy ... 13.27 +.43 Verisign 3.00e 32.57 +.03 VertxPh ... 38.55 +1.34 VirgnMda h .16 25.19 -.75 ViroPhrm ... u18.58 +.18 ... 11.05 +.38 Vivus Vodafone 1.33e 27.36 +.17 WarnerCh s8.50e23.93 -.04 WarrenRs ... u5.29 +.17 WashFed .24f 17.39 -.12 WetSeal ... 3.85 +.01 WhitneyH .04 13.47 -.23 WholeFd .40 u52.31 +2.30 Windstrm 1.00 13.16 -.21 Winn-Dixie ... 6.70 +.23 Wynn 1.00a 116.72 -.06 XOMA rs ... 5.74 -.14 Xilinx .64 30.89 -.10 YRC Ww rs ... 3.42 -.10 Yahoo ... 16.75 +.10 Zagg ... u10.37 +.52 Zalicus ... 2.10 +.08 ZionBcp .04 23.80 -.22 ... u4.74 +.06 Zix Corp
Name
Metalico ... 5.81 +.04 MincoG g ... 2.30 -.13 Minefnd g ... 10.34 -.49 NIVS IntT ... 2.29 +.12 NeoStem ... 1.50 +.02 Nevsun g ... 6.68 -.23 NwGold g ... 8.94 -.33 NA Pall g ... u7.35 +.16 NDynMn g ... u16.50 -.50 NthnO&G ... 28.09 +.41 NthgtM g ... 2.78 -.15 NovaGld g ... 13.95 -.19 Oilsands g ... .53 -.12 OpkoHlth ... 4.03 ... PacOffPT .04m 3.48 +1.44 ParaG&S ... 3.74 -.20 ... 3.57 +.02 PhrmAth PionDrill ... 8.52 -.07 PlatGpMet ... 2.48 -.02 Protalix ... 10.14 -.05 PudaCoal ... 14.16 -.18 Quaterra g ... 2.11 +.03 RadientPh ... .94 +.06 RareEle g ... 14.42 -.66 Rentech ... 1.32 +.02 RexahnPh ... 1.22 -.06
Rubicon g ... SamsO&G ... SeabGld g ... Senesco ... SulphCo ... TanzRy g ... Taseko ... ... Tengsco TimberlnR ... TrnsatlPet ... TriValley ... TriangPet ... TwoHrbInv1.48e US Geoth ... Uluru ... Ur-Energy ... Uranerz ... UraniumEn ... VantageDrl ... VirnetX .50e VistaGold ... WizzardSft ... YM Bio g ... ZBB Engy ...
Name
Intuit
J-K-L
P-Q-R
V-W-X-Y-Z
AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE
Div Last Chg ChinNEPet ... 6.11 ChinaShen ... 8.81 AbdAsPac .42 6.65 +.01 ChShengP ... u1.30 Advntrx rs ... 2.55 +.08 ClaudeR g ... 2.19 AlexcoR g ... 6.91 -.41 CrSuiHiY .32 2.95 AlldNevG ... 25.37 -.79 Crossh g rs ... 2.28 AlmadnM g ... 4.26 -.30 Crystallx g ... .30 AmApparel ... 1.54 ... DejourE g ... .35 Anooraq g ... 1.47 -.03 DenisnM g ... 3.29 ArcadiaRs ... .34 -.00 EVMuniBd .92 d10.57 Armour wt ... .07 -.01 EndvSilv g ... 6.35 Augusta g ... 4.05 +.19 Fronteer g ... 10.48 Aurizon g ... 6.76 -.18 GascoEngy ... .49 AvalRare n ... 6.13 -.37 Gastar grs ... 4.72 BarcUBS36 ... 48.85 -.39 GenMoly ... 6.25 BrcIndiaTR ... 70.80 -1.48 GoldResrc .18e 28.55 BlkMunvst .71 8.80 -.06 GoldStr g ... 3.94 Brigus grs ... 1.81 -.02 GranTrra g ... 8.48 CAMAC En ... 1.91 ... GrtBasG g ... 2.57 CanoPet ... .40 -.02 Hyperdyn ... u7.40 Cardero g ... 1.84 -.08 iBio ... 3.90 CardiumTh ... .41 -.01 ImpOil gs .44 42.22 CelSci ... .82 ... InovioPhm ... 1.50 CFCda g .01 19.42 -.52 KodiakO g ... 6.28 CheniereEn ... 6.91 -.18 LongweiPI ... 2.88 ChiGengM ... 3.60 -.08 MadCatz g ... 1.14
Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 41.74 -.07 Price Funds: BlChip n 39.17 +.04 CapApp n 20.60 -.01 EmMktS n 35.43 -.18 EqInc n 24.18 -.08 EqIndex n 34.59 -.06 Growth n 32.94 +.03 HiYield n 6.86 ... IntlBond n 9.84 +.08 Intl G&I 13.64 +.08 IntlStk n 14.39 ... LatAm n 56.23 -.73 MidCap n 60.24 ... MCapVal n24.16 -.02 N Asia n 19.17 -.06 New Era n 53.18 -.15 N Horiz n 34.15 +.03 N Inc n 9.50 +.03 R2010 n 15.54 +.01 R2015 n 12.07 +.01 R2020 n 16.71 ... R2025 n 12.26 ... R2030 n 17.62 ... R2035 n 12.48 -.01 R2040 n 17.77 -.01 ShtBd n 4.85 ... SmCpStk n35.05 ... SmCapVal n36.68-.02 SpecGr n 18.10 -.01 SpecIn n 12.42 +.03 Value n 23.96 -.08 Principal Inv: LT2020In 11.86 +.01 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 13.87 -.04 MultiCpGr 52.22 -.06 VoyA p 24.61 -.02 Royce Funds: LwPrSkSv r18.37 -.06
Oct 11 2.4257 Nov 11 2.4067 Dec 11 2.3976 2.4176 2.3876 2.3997 Jan 12 2.4090 Feb 12 2.4227 Mar 12 2.4361 Apr 12 2.5346 May 12 2.5391 Jun 12 2.5371 Jul 12 2.5316 Aug 12 2.5221 Sep 12 2.5071 Oct 12 2.4041 Nov 12 2.3911 Dec 12 2.3871 Jan 13 2.3910 Feb 13 2.3985 Mar 13 2.4060 Last spot N/A Est. sales 111875. Wed’s Sales: 125,509 Wed’s open int: 276789, up +496 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Feb 11 4.422 4.503 4.362 4.407 Mar 11 4.433 4.498 4.377 4.419 Apr 11 4.425 4.492 4.380 4.420 May 11 4.465 4.532 4.425 4.463 Jun 11 4.516 4.580 4.487 4.514 Jul 11 4.580 4.644 4.552 4.584 Aug 11 4.615 4.674 4.588 4.614 Sep 11 4.618 4.682 4.590 4.621 Oct 11 4.684 4.739 4.648 4.679 Nov 11 4.840 4.900 4.815 4.839 Dec 11 5.071 5.127 5.040 5.067 Jan 12 5.211 5.266 5.185 5.210 Feb 12 5.165 5.215 5.159 5.173 Mar 12 5.080 5.122 5.056 5.075 Apr 12 4.838 4.891 4.837 4.853 May 12 4.845 4.894 4.845 4.858 Jun 12 4.889 4.889 4.874 4.882 Jul 12 4.915 4.922 4.913 4.922 Aug 12 4.948 4.976 4.944 4.952 Sep 12 4.981 4.981 4.953 4.962 Oct 12 5.017 5.075 5.017 5.026 Last spot N/A Est. sales 357605. Wed’s Sales: 346,302 Wed’s open int: 833355, up +15563
-.51 +.02 +.35 -.10 ... +.15 -.00 -.01 -.05 -.36 -.33 -.35 -.04 -.04 -.26 +.80 -.18 -.07 -.05 +.52 +.18 +.52 +.03 -.06 +.09 -.05
5.80 u1.82 29.90 .31 .24 6.89 5.77 u.77 .99 3.34 .45 7.92 9.96 1.20 .09 2.87 u4.36 5.64 2.02 15.13 2.86 .33 2.24 1.38
-.14 +.27 -.69 -.01 -.01 -.21 -.05 -.01 -.04 -.11 -.04 +.65 +.08 -.01 -.00 -.12 +.05 -.15 +.07 -.37 -.14 +.04 -.40 +.02
PennMuI r 11.84 -.02 IntGrAdm n62.25 -.11 Morg n 18.54 +.01 Vanguard Instl Fds: PremierI r 20.51 -.03 ITAdml n 13.12 -.05 MuInt n 13.12 -.05 BalInst n 21.68 +.01 TotRetI r 13.28 -.02 ITGrAdm n 9.95 +.03 MuLtd n 10.97 -.01 LtdTrAd n 10.97 -.01 PrecMtls r n25.71 -.20 DevMkInst n10.14+.04 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 37.98 -.06 LTGrAdml n9.26 +.07 PrmcpCor n13.96 -.02 ExtIn n 42.30 -.02 S&P Sel 19.99 -.03 LT Adml n 10.47 -.07 Prmcp r n 67.33 -.07 MCpAdml n94.03 -.03 SelValu r n19.12 -.08 FTAllWldI r n95.07 Scout Funds: Intl 32.76 +.04 MuHYAdm n9.89 -.07 STAR n 19.35 +.01 +.12 PrmCap r n69.85 -.08 STIGrade n10.78 ... Selected Funds: GrwthIst n 32.28 -.03 AmShD 42.01 -.16 ReitAdm r n78.36 +.16 StratEq n 18.70 -.01 AmShS p 42.04 -.16 STsyAdml n10.69 +.01 TgtRetInc n11.36 +.02 InfProInst n10.47 +.04 Sequoia n 132.85 -.08 STBdAdml n10.57+.01 TgRe2010 n22.55+.03 InstIdx n 117.47 -.20 ShtTrAd n 15.85 -.01 TgtRe2015 n12.57 St FarmAssoc: InsPl n 117.48 -.20 Gwth 53.77 -.03 STFdAd n 10.77 +.01 +.01 STIGrAd n 10.78 ... TgRe2020 n22.40+.01 InsTStPlus n29.17-.05 Templeton Instit: ForEqS 20.50 +.20 SmCAdm n35.60 -.04 TgtRe2025 n12.81 MidCpIst n 20.77 -.01 TtlBAdml n10.60 +.03 +.01 Third Avenue Fds: ValueInst 53.06 -.28 TStkAdm n32.27 -.05 TgRe2030 n22.03 ... SCInst n 35.60 -.04 ValAdml n 21.24 -.05 TgtRe2035 n13.32 ... TBIst n 10.60 +.03 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 28.37 +.06 WellslAdm n52.80+.06 TgtRe2040 n21.88 ... TSInst n 32.27 -.05 IntValue I 29.00 +.07 WelltnAdm n54.47+.01 TgtRe2045 n13.74Windsor n 46.68 -.08 Tweedy Browne: ValueIst n 21.25 -.04 .01 GblValue 23.98 +.08 WdsrIIAd n46.69 -.15 Wellsly n 21.79 +.02 Vanguard Signal: Vanguard Fds: VALIC : Welltn n 31.54 +.01 25.33 -.05 AssetA n 24.84 ... Wndsr n 13.84 -.02 500Sgl n 97.73 -.16 StkIdx CapOpp n 34.31 -.08 Vanguard Admiral: WndsII n 26.31 -.08 STBdIdx n 10.57 +.01 BalAdml n 21.68 +.01 DivdGro n 14.50 -.01 TotBdSgl n10.60 +.03 CAITAdm n10.58 -.04 Energy n 66.42 ... Vanguard Idx Fds: CpOpAdl n79.26 -.18 Explr n 74.96 +.01 500 n 118.30 -.20 TotStkSgl n31.14 -.05 EMAdmr r n40.19 -.19 GNMA n 10.74 +.02 DevMkt n 10.23 +.05 Energy n 124.72 +.01 GlobEq n 18.24 ... EMkt n 30.59 -.14 Victory Funds: ExplAdml n69.76 +.01 HYCorp n 5.74 ... Extend n 42.29 -.02 DvsStA 15.93 -.05 ExtdAdm n42.31 -.02 HlthCre n 124.27 -.34 Growth n 32.28 -.03 500Adml n118.31 -.20 InflaPro n 13.09 +.05 MidCap n 20.72 ... Wells Fargo Adv C: GNMA Ad n10.74 +.02 IntlGr n 19.56 -.04 SmCap n 35.57 -.04 AstAllC t 11.81 ... GrwAdm n 32.28 -.03 IntlVal n 32.87 +.06 SmlCpGth n22.58 -.01 HlthCr n 52.44 -.14 ITIGrade n 9.95 +.03 SmlCpVl n 16.28 -.03 Western Asset: HiYldCp n 5.74 ... LifeCon n 16.51 +.01 STBnd n 10.57 +.01 CorePlus I 10.83 +.02 InfProAd n 25.70 +.08 LifeGro n 22.41 ... TotBnd n 10.60 +.03 ITBdAdml n11.25 +.05 LifeMod n 19.82 +.02 TotlIntl n 15.96 +.02 Yacktman Funds: ITsryAdml n11.36 +.04 LTIGrade n 9.26 +.07 TotStk n 32.26 -.05 Fund p 16.75 -.03
-.0153 -.0153 -.0153 -.0152 -.0148 -.0144 -.0139 -.0139 -.0149 -.0149 -.0149 -.0149 -.0149 -.0149 -.0159 -.0159 -.0159 -.0159
-.124 -.107 -.102 -.099 -.095 -.092 -.094 -.096 -.097 -.095 -.092 -.088 -.087 -.083 -.071 -.071 -.071 -.071 -.068 -.068 -.070
METALS NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Thu. Aluminum -$1.1266 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$4.3634 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper $4.3670 N.Y. Merc spot Thu. Lead - $2657.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.1042 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1381.50 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1386.90 troy oz., NY Merc spot Thu. Silver - $29.370 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $29.252 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Thu. Platinum -$1828.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1818.60 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Thu. n.q.-not quoted, n.a.-not available r-revised
B6 Friday, January 14, 2011 Legals
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish December 31, 2010, January 7,14,21, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT NO. CV 2010-6
BANK OF OKLAHOMA, N.A., Plaintiff,
vs.
ALONSO ESTRADA,
Defendant.
NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the above-entitled Court, having appointed me or my designee as Special Master in this matter with the power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property (the “Property”) situated in Chaves County, New Mexico, commonly known as 1809 Western Avenue, Roswell, New Mexico 88203, and more particularly described as follows: LOT 7 AND THE SOUTH 33.5 FEET OF LOT 8 IN BLOCK 3 OF PLAINS PARK SUBDIVISION NO. 2, IN THE CITY OF ROSWELL, COUNTY OF CHAVES AND STATE OF NEW MEXICO, AS SHOWN ON THE OFFICIAL PLAT FILED IN THE CHAVES COUNTY CLERK’S OFFICE ON MARCH 31, 1954 AND RECORDED IN BOOK C OF PLAT RECORDS, AT PAGE 11.
The sale is to begin at 1:45 p.m. on February 3, 2011, outside the front entrance to the Chaves County Courthouse,, City of Roswell. County of Chaves, State of New Mexico, at which time I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in lawful currency of the United States of America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and to satisfy the Judgment granted Bank of Oklahoma, N.A.
Bank of Oklahoma, N.A., was awarded a Judgment on December 15, 2010, in the principal, sum of $93,200.31, plus outstanding interest through November 1, 2010, in the amount of $8,318.10 and accruing daily thereafter at a rate of $16.08 per day, plus late charges of $500.48, plus escrow advances of $2,880.44, plus fee and cost advances of $1,438.84, plus attorney’s fees in the amount of $1,500.00 and costs in the amount of $570.40, with interest on the above-listed amounts, attorney’s fees and costs at the rate of 6.30% per annum from date of the entry of the Judgment until paid.
The sale is subject to rights and easements of record, to unpaid property taxes and assessments, and to the one (1) month right of redemption in favor of the Defendant as specified in the Judgment filed herein. PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT THE SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. /s/Faisal Sukhyani, Special Master c/o Leverick and Musselman, L.L.C. 5120 San Francisco Road NE Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109 (505) 858-3303
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 14, 21, 28, February 4, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
Case No. D-504-CV-201000898 Wells Fargo Bank, N.A, Plaintiff, v.
CHRISTOPHER MICHAEL GREEN; LORI KAY GREEN, Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will on February 9, 2011 at 11:30 AM, the west steps entrance of the Chaves County Courthouse, 400 N. Virginia, Roswell, NM, sell and convey to the highest bidder for cash all the right, title, and interest of the above-named defendants in and to the following described real estate located in said County and State: TRACT A in BLOCK 3 of Apache Hills Subdivision Number 1, in the City of Roswell, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat filed in the Chaves County Clerk’s Office on May 15, 1962 and recorded in Book D of Plat Records, Chaves County, New Mexico, at Page 11.
The address of the real property is 4603 White Dove Drive, Roswell, NM 88201. Said sale will be made pursuant to the Decree of Foreclosure entered on December 6, 2010 in the above entitled and numbered cause, which was a suit to foreclose a mortgage held by the above Plaintiff and wherein Plaintiff was adjudged to have a lien against the abovedescribed real estate in the sum of $214,486.27 plus interest from November 29, 2010 to the date of sale at the rate of 6.375% per annum, the costs of sale, including the Special Master's fee, publication costs, and Plaintiff's costs expended for taxes, insurance, and keeping the property in good repair. Plaintiff has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. At the date and time stated above, the Special Master may postpone the sale to such later date and time as the Special Master may specify.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that this sale may be subject to a bankruptcy filing, a pay off, a reinstatement or any other condition that would cause the cancellation of this sale. Further, if any of these conditions exist, at the time of sale, this sale will be null and void, the successful bidder's funds shall be returned, and the Special Master and the mortgagee giving this notice shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damages.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due.
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above-described real property subject to rights of redemption.
10-2338 FCO1
___________________ Jeffrey Lake Special Master c/o Castle Stawiarski, LLC 20 First Plaza NW, Suite 602 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Attorney for Plaintiff (800) 286-0013; (505) 848-9500
CLASSIFIEDS/ENTERTAINMENT
YOUR HOROSCOPE
JACQUELINE BIGAR
The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) Everyone has awkward moments, you included. Today you encounter one of these strange moments where you would like to be anywhere else but where you are. Others still appreciate your strength and leadership. Tonight: Of course, a force to be noticed. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Realize the cards are stacked in your favor, even if you don’t feel like it. Allow greater give-and-take. You have no reason to feel
Legals
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 7, 14, 2011 NOTICE OF SALE TO SATISFY LIEN
GEORGE GONZALES ORCIA McCURTIS RUBEN MOJICA AMANDA JOHNSON JERRY ADAMS NONA WOOTEN KAREN McDONALD ELSA RODRIQUEZ JERRY R. VANDER DUSSEN LOUISE BARBER
The above named person(s) are hereby notified that the household goods, wares and merchandise left by them in storage with UFO SPACE STORAGE company will be sold or disposed by said company on January 20, 2011 at 10:00 A.M. Silent bids will be taken at 3612 S. Main St. We have the option To refuse any bid. The public sale is to satisfy the lien for said storage of said household goods, wares and merchandise together with incidental and proper charges pertaining thereto including the reasonable expenses of this sale as allowed by the state of New Mexico.
Kimberly F. Cade UFO Space Storage Manager ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 2011 LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT INVITATION TO BID
Sealed bids will be received at Community Action Agency of Southern New Mexico, 3880 Foothills Road, Suite A, Las Cruces, NM 88011 for the following: BID# 01-12011 is for vehicles. BID# 02-12011 is for laptop computers. BID# 03-12011 is for blower door systems. BID# 04-12011 is for combustion analysis devices. BID# 05-12011 is for infrared cameras.
For a bid specification package, contact Greg Garcia, Energy$mart Program Director, Community Action Agency of Southern New Mexico, at 2320 Westgate, Las Cruces, NM 88005 or call (575) 523-1639. Community Action Agency of Southern New Mexico reserves the right to reject any and all bids submitted. BIDS WILL BE ACCEPTED UNTIL January 20, 2011 @ 4:30 P.M. Public Opening of Bids will take place on January 21, 2011 @ 2:00 P.M. at same address.
ALL ENVELOPES MUST BE CLEARLY MARKED AS FOLLOWS: SEALED PROPOSAL FOR BID # (specify which bid) DATE RECEIVED__________ TIME _________ ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 7, 14, 21, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
jeopardized. Add that extra creative touch to your style of communication. Tonight: Christen the weekend right. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) If you need to withdraw or take a day off, there is no time like now. You might opt to close your door socially as well. Yes, you need and want to recharge your batteries. Do for yourself right now. Tonight: Nowhere to be found. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Zero in on what you want. You might have a gawky moment or two. Be more adventuresome in how you deal with a certain partner or friend. You seem to just go along with his or her moodiness as part of the program. Tonight: Zero in on what you want. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You might need to reorganize your day if you accept the predominant role you want. Sorting through your priorities could be very important. Your sense of direction will be called upon. Knowing and understanding your limits remains a high priority. Tonight: Count on being a centerpiece. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Retain that earthy quality that others love. You will see how instrumental that outlook is to your well-being. Understanding evolves to a new level if you are willing to share more than in the past. Take a deep look at a new opportunity. Tonight: Take off ASAP. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Continue relating on an individual level. You could be distinctly uncomfortable as you make your way through another person’s defensive maze. Look at your feelings. If you really want to pull out, do. Be direct in your dealings. Tonight: How about a more fun one-on-one? SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Defer to others,
knowing what must be done. Everyone needs to see the outcome of his or her own decisions. By deferring, you are providing a wonderful opportunity to do just that. Ultimately, you are creating more respect and understanding. Tonight: The more the merrier. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Understand what is happening within your immediate circle. You might need to take action or try something differently in order to ease some of the tension. Look to solutions that break the mold, not the bank. Tonight: Work as late as need be. You will feel freer later. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Allow for more exchange with others. A sense of humor, a different approach and/or less intensity could work. Lighten up a situation. Deal directly with someone you care about. He or she will illuminate your day as a result. Tonight: Let your imagination lead. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Stay on top of a problem; it could be much easier to deal with. Count on your sixth sense coming through. Your instincts often bypass facts and logic. Learn to put more trust in them as well. Reach out for a family member. Tonight: Buy a favorite munchie on the way home. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) Your ability to come to terms with a situation emerges. Someone, clearly a close friend or associate, is hard on you. At what point do you cut bait? The answer really depends on your boundaries. A meeting stars in your day. Tonight: Where your friends are.
---------------------------------------Publish Jan. 7, 14, 2011
---------------------------------------Publish Jan. 14, 21, 2011
Legals
FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF COURT CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF EDRIE JANE KUYKENDALL, deceased.
No. PB-2010-65
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed as Personal Representative of the above-named Estate. All persons having claims against this Estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this Notice or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the Personal undersigned Representative, PO Box 6669, Pine Bluff Arkansas 71711, or filed with the Chaves County District Court at PO Box 1776, Roswell, New Mexico 882021776.
BABAK MIRIN, Plaintiff, v.
CLARENCE IRVIN, AGNES IRVIN, THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF CLARENCE IRVIN AND AGNES IRVIN, Defendants. NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION
To: The following-named defendants: Clarence Irvin and Agnes Irvin, if living; if deceased, their unknown heirs
Plaintiff has filed suit against you to quiet title in his name to property commonly known as 3719 Tome, Roswell, New Mexico.
You are required to file a written answer to the lawsuit within thirty days of the date of the last publication in this newspaper and serve a copy on Dr. Mirin’s attorney. If you do not file a written answer within (30) days, a default judgment may be rendered against you. The attorney for Dr. Mirin is: Brett A. Schneider 215 W. Third Street, Suite A Roswell, NM 88201 (575) 624-0000 - phone (575) 623-8179 - fax
Legals
---------------------------------------Publish Jan. 14, 21, 2011
FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JAMES R. GELDER, DECEASED.
No. PB-10-62 NOTICE TO CREDITORS The undersigned is Personal Representative of the above captioned estate. Creditors of this estate and all claimants of any nature must present their claims within two months after the date of first publication of this notice or forever be barred. S/SHIRLEY DULABONE 7132 Quail Springs Pl. NE Albuquerque, NM 87113
TOM DUNLAP, Lawyer 104 N. Kentucky Ave. Roswell, NM 88203 (575) 622-2607
DunlapLawOffice@cableone.net
Legals
FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF COURT CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF NELLIE L. HARGROVE, DECEASED.
No. PB-10-71 NOTICE TO CREDITORS The undersigned is Personal Representative of the above captioned estate. Creditors of this estate and all claimants of any nature must present their claims within two months after the date of first publication of this notice or forever be barred. S/CARROLL E. HARGROVE 1103 E. Elm Roswell, NM 88201
TOM DUNLAP, Lawyer 104 N. Kentucky Ave. Roswell, NM 88203 (575) 622-2607
DunlapLawOffice@cableone.net
GARAGE SALES
/s/ Paul H. Kuykendall
Legals
DON ’T’ MISS A SALE BY MISSING THE 2:00 PM DEADLINE FOR PLACING YOUR ADS
NOTICE is hereby given that on January 5, 2011, Berrendo Co-Operative Water Users Association, 2004 East 19th Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, filed application No. RA-499-A with the STATE ENGINEER for permit to supplement the diversion of 498.0 acre-feet per annum, consumptive irrigation requirement, of artesian groundwater by drilling an artesian well approximately 12 3/4 inches in diameter and 550 feet in depth located in Lot 6, 20, 21, 22, 64 or 65 of Section 4, Township 11 South, Range 23 East, N.M.P.M. The applicant proposes to supplement the following described artesian wells:
WELL NO. RA-499-A RA-130 POD5
SUBDIVISION SE1/4SE1/4SE1/4 NE1/4NW1/4NW1/4
TOWNSHIP 10 S. 10 S.
Any person, firm or corporation or other entity having standing to file objections or protests shall do so in writing (legible, signed, and include the writer’s complete name and mailing address). The objection to the approval of the application must be based on: (1) Impairment; if impairment you must specifically identify your water rights; and/or (2) Public welfare/conservation of water; if public welfare or conservation of water within the state of New Mexico, you must show you will be substantially affected. The written protest must be filed, in triplicate, with John R. D’Antonio, Jr., P.E., State Engineer, 1900 West Second Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, within ten (10) days after the date of last publication of this Notice. Facsimiles (fax) will be accepted as a valid protest as long as the hard copy is sent within 24-hours of the facsimile. Mailing postmark will be used to validate the 24-hour period. Protest can be faxed to Office of the State Engineer, (575) 623-8559. If no valid protest or objection is filed, the State Engineer will evaluate the application in accordance with Sections 72-2-16, 72-5-6, and 72-12-3.
The applicant proposes to supplement the following described artesian wells: TOWNSHIP 12 S. 12 S. 12 S. 12 S. 12 S. 10 S.
RANGE 24 E. 24 E. 24 E. 24 E. 24 E. 23 E.
for domestic, municipal, industrial and commercial purposes within the Berrendo Co-Operative Water Users Association’s distribution system, near the City of Roswell in Chaves County, New Mexico.
Application is made to drill and use a well supplemental to the 55.34 acre-feet per annum of water rights under OSE File No. RA-2084-A in order to improve water distribution. Additional applications are being filed at this time to use this same new well supplemental to water rights under OSE Files No. RA-499-A and RA-130 et al.
Any person, firm or corporation or other entity having standing to file objections or protests shall do so in writing (legible, signed, and include the writer’s complete name and mailing address). The objection to the approval of the application must be based on: (1) Impairment; if impairment you must specifically identify your water rights; and/or (2) Public welfare/conservation of water; if public welfare or conservation of water within the state of New Mexico, you must show you will be substantially affected. The written protest must be filed, in triplicate, with John R. D’Antonio, Jr., P.E., State Engineer, 1900 West Second Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, within ten (10) days after the date of last publication of this Notice. Facsimiles (fax) will be accepted as a valid protest as long as the hard copy is sent within 24-hours of the facsimile. Mailing postmark will be used to validate the 24-hour period. Protest can be faxed to Office of the State Engineer, (575) 623-8559. If no valid protest or objection is filed, the State Engineer will evaluate the application in accordance with Sections 72-2-16, 72-5-6, and 72-12-3.
Legals
002. Northeast
2807 N. Orchard Sat. & Sun. 8-5 Moving sale. Pooltable, washer, dryer, decorations and much more 575-317-6139 1202 W. Hobbs Sat-Sun, 7am. Moving sale beds, furniture Tv’s & much more SAT. 7:30AM, 400 Swinging Spear. Bookcase, full mattress & springs, floor lamp, desks, wood storage cabinet, wood futon, TV, clothes. 3200 BANDOLIINA Sat. 8am-12pm Entertainment center, nice loveseat, shelves, area rug & more... SAT., 8-2, 402 Swinging Spear. Household decor, baby clothes, maternity clothes, changing table, stroller, boxing bag w/gloves, lots of good misc.
004. Southeast
102 S. Virginia St. Sat. & Sun. 85 Moving Sale. Vet Pharm & Feed. All fixtures, shelving, counters, appliances, large heating unit furniture, Tack, large & small animal supplies, feed, hunting equip. guns & more. 1403 S. Missouri, Fri., 7-2. Clothes, shoes, toys, jewelry.
006. Southwest 1204 W. Hobbs 10-5pm, TuesSat. Just back Deep South antiques, vintage collectibles, snow skis & poles old buttons, marbles, Pecos diamonds, unusual rocks, unbelievable selection & clothes by the pound, tool world, manland, 6400 sqft of fun & deals. 914-1855
1416 S. Richardson, FriSat, 9a-? Furniture & lots of odds & ends. MOVING SALE! Everything must go. 1502 Sunset Place, Sat-Sun, 84pm.
RANGE 23 E. 23 E.
Application is made to drill and use a well supplemental to the 498.0 acre-feet per annum of water rights under OSE File No. RA-499-A in order to improve water distribution. Additional applications are being filed at this time to use this same new well supplemental to water rights under OSE Files No. RA-2084-A and RA-130 et al.
NOTICE is hereby given that on January 5, 2011, Berrendo Co-Operative Water Users Association, 2004 East 19th Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, filed application No. RA-2084-A with the STATE ENGINEER for permit to supplement the diversion of 55.34 acre-feet per annum, consumptive irrigation requirement, of artesian groundwater by drilling an artesian well approximately 12 3/4 inches in diameter and 550 feet in depth located in Lot 6, 20, 21, 22, 64 or 65 of Section 4, Township 11 South, Range 23 East, N.M.P.M. SECTION 22 15 22 22 27 34
SECTION 11 34
for domestic, municipal, industrial and commercial purposes within the Berrendo Co-Operative Water Users Association’s distribution system. The proposed new well is to be located West of the City of Roswell near the intersection of Highway 70 and Mark Road, Chaves County, New Mexico.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 14, 21, 28, 2011
SUBDIVISION NE1/4SE1/4SE1/4 NE1/4SE1/4SW1/4 NE1/4SE1/4NW1/4 SE1/4NE1/4SW1/4 NE1/4SE1/4NW1/4 NE1/4NW1/4NW1/4
Legals
BORN TODAY Actress Faye Dunaway (1941), author, commentator Andy Rooney (1919), singer Jack Jones (1938)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 14, 21, 28, 2011
No. CV-2011-6
WELL NO. RA-2084 RA-2084-X RA-2084-X-2 RA-2084-X-3 RA-2084-X-4 RA-130 POD5
Roswell Daily Record
1200 PRINCETON Sat. 8:30-12:30 Art supplies, books, music books & sheets tapes, cd’s misc.
ANNOUNCEMENTS 015. Personals Special Notice
PLAZA MOVIE Center, 301 W. McGaffey, 623-4816. Mon-Sat, 2-8pm. New releases every Tuesday.
025. Lost and Found
FOUND BASSET Hound, white w/brown spots, black collar, taken to animal control.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 14, 21, 28, 2011
NOTICE is hereby given that on January 5, 2011, Berrendo Co-Operative Water Users Association, 2004 East 19th Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, filed application No. RA-130 et al with the STATE ENGINEER for permit to supplement the diversion of 1,581.0 acre-feet per annum, consumptive irrigation requirement, of artesian groundwater by drilling an artesian well approximately 12 3/4 inches in diameter and 550 feet in depth located in Lot 6, 20, 21, 22, 64 or 65 of Section 4, Township 11 South, Range 23 East, N.M.P.M.
The applicant proposes to supplement the following described artesian wells:
WELL NO. RA-130 RA-130-S-2 RA-130-S-3 RA-130 POD5
SUBDIVISION NE1/4SW1/4NW1/4 NE1/4SW1/4SW1/4 NE1/4SW1/4SW1/4 NE1/4NW1/4NW1/4
SECTION 30 30 30 34
TOWNSHIP 11 S. 11 S. 11 S. 10 S.
RANGE 25 E. 25 E. 25 E. 23 E.
for domestic, municipal, industrial and commercial purposes within the Berrendo Co-Operative Water Users Association’s distribution system. The proposed new well is to be located West of the City of Roswell near the intersection of Highway 70 and Mark Road, Chaves County, New Mexico.
Application is made to drill and use a well supplemental to the 1,581.0 acre-feet per annum of water rights under OSE File No. RA-130 et al in order to improve water distribution. Additional applications are being filed at this time to use this same new well supplemental to water rights under OSE Files No. RA-499-A and RA-2084-A.
Any person, firm or corporation or other entity having standing to file objections or protests shall do so in writing (legible, signed, and include the writer’s complete name and mailing address). The objection to the approval of the application must be based on: (1) Impairment; if impairment you must specifically identify your water rights; and/or (2) Public welfare/conservation of water; if public welfare or conservation of water within the state of New Mexico, you must show you will be substantially affected. The written protest must be filed, in triplicate, with John R. D’Antonio, Jr., P.E., State Engineer, 1900 West Second Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, within ten (10) days after the date of last publication of this Notice. Facsimiles (fax) will be accepted as a valid protest as long as the hard copy is sent within 24-hours of the facsimile. Mailing postmark will be used to validate the 24-hour period. Protest can be faxed to Office of the State Engineer, (575) 623-8559. If no valid protest or objection is filed, the State Engineer will evaluate the application in accordance with Sections 72-2-16, 72-5-6, and 72-12-3.
Roswell Daily Record INSTRUCTION
045. Employment Opportunities
EMPLOYMENT
045. Employment Opportunities
OFFICE ASSISTANT with bookkeeping and payroll experience, flexible work hours, and pleasant work environment. Send resume to John Jerge, CPA PC at 101 South Union, Roswell, New Mexico 88203. Do you enjoy people? Do you like to have fun?
Champion Motorsports
Southeastern New Mexico's largest motorcycle dealership is holding A Job Fair January 15, 2011 From 9:00am-4:30pm
We are looking for people who: • Understand what great customer service means • Like to have fun • Like to be productive
In Exchange We Offer: • Fun people to work with • Competitive pay • Health Insurance • 401K • Vacation • All the training you will need to be successful in our store
Champion Motorsports
has openings in Motorcycle Sales, Parts & Accessories Sales, Motorclothes Sales, Service and Custodial. Only those interested in helping us make Champion Motorsports famous for out of this world service should apply. If that's you stop by to fill out an application on January 15, 2011 from 9:00am-4:30pm. 2801 West Second Street Roswell, NM .
045. Employment Opportunities
BIG D’S is taking resumes for cook, cashier & delivery driver. Bring resume to 100 S. Richardson between 2-4pm Mon.-Fri. only.
Opening for Office Assistant. Microsoft Office Program a must. Other duties will include ten key, filing, answering phones & other misc. duties. Email resumes to rskippermjg@ qwestoffice.net or Fax to 575-623-3075
PRODUCTION WORKERS #102653 Production workers needed. Must be able to pass drug test. Apply at AmeriPride Linen between 8:00am and 11:00am 01/10 thru 01/14 at 515 N. Virginia, Roswell, NM 88201. Competitive Salary and benefits! No phone call will be accepted! AA/EEO Employer M/F/D/V
FRESENIUS MEDICAL Care/Southeastern New Mexico Kidney Center is seeking 1 Staff RN. Full benefits, 401, medical, vision, dental. PTO after 6 months. Other company benefits. Open Mon-Sat. Off Sundays.12 hour shifts. Competitive pay. Apply in person at 2801 N. Main St. Suite H. COASTAL TRANSPORT is seeking OWNEROPERATORS at least 23 years of age, Class A CDL with X Endorsement and 1 year driving experience. Apply at 2408 N. Industrial, Artesia, NM or call 575748-8808 LAW OFFICE seeking a full-time file clerk/runner effective immediately. Candidate must have office skills, be proficient in Word and WordPerfect, and have own transportation with proof of insurance. Send resumes with cover letter to: PO Box 1897 Unit 255, Roswell, NM 88202 LOCAL CHURCH seeking part-time finance secretary. Must have bookkeeping experience and computer literacy. Position is presently open. Submit resume to Search Team, PO Box 298, Roswell, NM 88202.
SCHLUMBERGER IN Roswell currently has openings for Equipment Operators. Equipment Operators are responsible for preventative maintenance, operation of logging/transport vehicles & oilfield equipment out on sites. Operators are provided extensive and ongoing training in troubleshooting, technical procedures and safety. Schlumberger offers a competitive salary, training, advancement opportunities and one of the best benefit packages in the U.S. Candidates must have a HS diploma or GED, must be at least 21 yrs of age, possess a clean driving record and the ability to pass a background check and extensive drug testing. A CDL is preferred but not required. Applicants must be hardworking, self motivated and dependable. To apply for this position call 575-625-1136. Apply in person at SOS Staffing, 315 W. 2nd St. or log onto www.sosstaffing.com.
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
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PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE
SEND TO: Roswell Daily Record, Classified Department, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell, N.M. 88202 WE ACCEPT:
EXPIRES ________
Card # __________________ 3 Digit # (ON BACK OF CARD)________ NAME ____________________________________________ ADDRESS _________________________________________ PHONE ___________________________________________
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.
CLASSIFIEDS
045. Employment Opportunities
DRIVER – Drive Knight in 2011! Get paid today for what you hauled yesterday. Top equipment! Van and Refrigerated. CDL-A, 3 months OTR experience. 800-414-9569. www.driveknight.com DRIVERS Come join our team! Coastal Transport is seeking Drivers with Class (A) CDL. Must be 23 yrs old (X) Endorsement with 1 yr experience, excellent pay, home everyday! Paid Vacation, saftey bonus, company paid life inc. We provide state of the art training program. $2000 sign on bonus. For more information call 1-877-2977300 or 575-748-8808 between 8am & 4pm, Monday-Friday. MAKE EXCELLENT money. Looking for sharp well represented individual to demonstrate a new kind of air cleaner in Roswell & Artesia area. Part time and evenings. Must have reliable car. Call Shawn after 11am 575-446-8571
HELENA CHEMICAL Company, a national agricultural-chemical company, has an immediate opening for an experienced truck driver at our Artesia location. This position will make deliveries, utilize a forklift and perform general warehouse duties. Requires a high school diploma or equivalent, CDL with HAZMAT endorsement. We offer an excellent working environment and outstanding compensation and benefits package. For consideration, please Apply in person: Helena Chemical Company 504 Lake Arthur Highway Lake Arthur, NM 88253 (575) 365-2148 Pre-employment drug screen required. EOE M/F/V/H LOS PASITOS Learning Center currently has a Daycare Teacher position open for the infant room. Position requires a professional appearance, a love for children, a high school graduate with at least 45 hours course training and must be a team player. Salary based on experience and drug test required. Please bring current resume with completed application, police background check, and driving record. Come join the Tobosa Team. Closing date: 01/19/2011. (Apply @ 110 E. Summit or call 575-623-6402 and ask for Naomi. (EEOC Employer.) PHLEBOTOMY CERTIFICATION Class January 22 & 23. Fairfield Inn, Roswell, 1201 North Main $300 To register call 505-620-3025 or 505-4109559 or swphlebotomy.com
THE ROSWELL JOB CORPS CENTER is currently taking applications for the following positions: Career Preparation Counselor: Serve as liaison between the student, center and training partners for the development of employability skills. Bachelor’s degree in related field, one or two years related experience and/or training; or equivalent combination of education and experience. Starting salary is $30,000. Career Technical Instructor Health Occupations-PT: Certified Licensed Practical Nurse or Registered Nurse with two years experience in the nursing field. Must have a valid driver’s license with an acceptable driving record. Hourly salary is $20.00. Recreation Advisor-PT: Responsibilities include carrying out general student recreation activities. Must have a High School Diploma or GED and two years of related experience in recreation or working with youth. Must have a valid driver’s license with an acceptable driving record in order to obtain a Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) with passenger endorsement and obtain and maintain CDL medical certification. This position pays $10.50 per hour. Residential Advisor, PartTime: Responsibilities include monitoring the dorms, ensuring a safe living environment, assisting students in maintaining cleanliness of the dorms, and assisting students in developing social skills and independent living skills. High school diploma or equivalent and one year experience required. Starting rate of pay is $10.50 per hour. View Job Description and Apply online at: www.chugachjobs.com Applications will only be accepted online Deadline to apply: Open Until Filled An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F, D/V
045. Employment Opportunities
AVON, Buy or Sell. Pay down your bills. Start your own business for $10. Call Sandy 317-5079 ISR. SAFETY MANAGER (Lubbock) - Standard Energy Services (oilfield services). Must know OSHA regulations related to oilfield equipment, drug testing, and general safety issues. Experience required – preferably in oilfield services. Excellent computer skills and good driving record required. Competitive salary and benefits. EEO. Send resumes to: robbye@ thestandardenergy.com
TELLER Bank of the Southwest is seeking a qualified candidate to fill a fulltime Teller position at our Roswell South Branch. Primary duties include, but not limited to: understanding and promoting bank products and services, cash handling and customer service. Requirements: Must have a good attitude and basic computer skills. Must be detailed oriented with excellent time management and people skills. Previous bank experience is preferred. Company offers excellent work environment, salary and benefits. Background screen required. Apply in person with Lawrence at the Bank of the Southwest, 800 W. Hobbs, Roswell, NM, by January 19, 2011. EOE/AA PECOS VALLEY Equipment is seeking career-minded individuals for long term employment. Current openings include service technician and sales professional. For more information, stop by 312 West Richey, Artesia, NM, to submit your resume or complete an application. May be faxed to 575-7481401.
F/T CERTIFIED Nurse Aide Call (575) 623-8000 ask for Bobby Dockins or bring resume to: 400 E College Blvd. Ste. A.
DELICATESSEN MANAGER Now accepting applications for Full-time Deli Manager. Must have Food Service Management experience to apply. Must be able to work weekends & holidays. Drug testing required. Benefits include Employee discount, 401k, medical benefits, prescription discounts, Holiday & Birthday pay, vacation pay. Pay is based on experience. Great atmosphere to work in. Apply at Lawrence Brothers IGA. 900 W. 2nd Street, Roswell, Nm 88201 CHRISTMAS BY Krebs is now hiring production workers for our 2011 season We have the following positions available: Machine Operators Line Workers Material Handlers Custom Paint Formulator Sample Coordinator Darkroom Coordinator Entry Level Maintenance Workers Applications are accepted Monday - Friday from 910:30 am and 1-2:30 pm Christmas by Krebs is an equal opportunity employer and drug free workplace
EARN WHAT YOU’RE WORTH. Full time with local Co.! Prof. appearance, hard working people needed immediately. No experience necessary, training available. Call 575-6269293.
SERVICES
105. Childcare
NEED CHILD care? Find the widest range of available childcare for your children and their needs. 1-800691-9067 or www.newmexic okids.org. You may also call us; Family Resource & Referral 6229000 and we can help you navigate the system. HOME DAYCARE providing weekend childcare. 626-6203
LICENSED PROVIDER has opening for day/night, 622-7423 Mary
140. Cleaning JD CLEANING Service, Licensed and bonded. References. 623-4252
HOUSEKEEPING - Home and/or office. Honest & dependable. 575-749-4900 or 575-578-1447 HOUSEKEEPER FOR house/offices. Home & commercial experience, ref. avail. 627-6335 or 3173302 HOUSEKEEPER incl. windows & seasonal cleaning wkly, bi., mo. honest & dep. ref. 3475270 Elizabeth
185. Electrical BIG HORN Electric Professional work, affordable price. 575-317-8345 NM Lic#367662.
Friday, January 14, 2011
195. Elderly Care
Dennis the Menace
B7
ADVANCED HOME Care. All caregivers are licensed bonded & have passed federal criminal back-ground checks. Loving care since 1994. 6276256
200. Fencing
M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991 Rodriguez Construction FOR WOOD, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100
210. Firewood/Coal SEANSONED MOUNTAIN wood $100 1/2 cord. Free delivery/stack. 626-9803.
FIREWOOD Seasoned cedar & juniper: split, stacked & delivered, sale any amount call for pricing. 575-910-4842 GRAVES FARM oak and elm. Cord and 1/2 cord delivered. 622-1889 3 BS (Best-Price/wood & service Ros-Art, cks ok, snr. disc. John 317-4317. FIREWOOD-SPILT, CURED & Delivered. Oak 1 Cord-$280, 1/2 Cord-$160. Elm 1 cord-$190, 1/2 Cord$115. Discount if Picked up. Credit Cards accepted. Graves Farm 622-1889.
220. Furniture Repair
REPAIR & Refinish furniture, build furniture, firewood. Southwest Woods. 1727 SE Main. 623-0729 or 6268466 By appointment only.
225. General Construction
MILLIGAN CONTRACTING Bathroom remodels, painting, tile, home repairs & more. Licensed, bonded & insured. Call Geary at 578-9353.
230. General Repair
T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Call John 317-1477 T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Handyman for a day. Call John for all your misc. repairs. 317-1477
232. Chimney Sweep
CHIMNEY SWEEP Have your woodstove or fireplace inspected and cleaned. Dust free Guarantee. 35 years Experience, Licensed, Insured. Bulldog Janitorial Services 575-308-9988
235. Hauling
PROPERTY CLEANUPS Will tear down old buildings, barns, haul trash, old farm equipment. 347-0142 or 317-7738
270. Landscape/ Lawnwork
LAWN SERVICE & much more work at low price. 914-0803 or 914-1375 Roswell Lawn Service rake leaves, trim trees, general cleanup, 420-3278 WEEKEND WARRIOR Lawn Service mowing, property cleanup, residential rain gutter cleaning, and much more 575-626-6121 Greenscapes Sprinkler Systems Lawn mowing, field mowing, gravel, sodhydro seed, pruning, tilling, For dependable & reliable service call 622-2633 or 910-0150. MOW GRASS, Trim Bushes, Flower Beds, Clean Ups, Pull Weed, Leaf Raking, Pecan pick up, Tree Pruning, Rock Yards. Call Pedro or Virginia 575910-5247 or 623-1826
285. Miscellaneous Services
I REBUILD Planetary gear boxes for $550 with parts and labor included (mostly 68:1 gear ratio) and pivot points (T&L systems) Call Junior at 575-7485613
305. Computers COMPUTER DOCTOR Microsoft Certified 50% off any repair (Labor only) 575-208-9348 Call Billy
310. Painting/ Decorating
INTERIOR/EXTERIOR PAINTING, water damage repairs, drywall, blown shingles, carpentry/license. 25 yrs exp. Call 208-0888
310. Painting/ Decorating
Quality Painting! Interior, Exterior at prices you can afford. Mike 910-7012
345. Remodeling
BERRONES CONSTRUCTION. Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing. Licensed, Bonded. Ray: 6259924/ 626-4153. NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552.
350. Roofing
T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Call John 317-1477 Guaranteed Shingle Roof jobs. Locally owned. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 6222552.
Need A Roof?
Call R & R Construction 18 years in Roswell. 622-0072
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
440. Window Repair
AQUARIUS GLASS For Less. Screens, Patio & Shower Drs., Table Tops & Mirrors. 623-3738. T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Call John 317-1477
FINANCIAL
485. Business Opportunities
ARE YOU tired of exchanging your time for money and watching life pass by in an instant? Do you seem to spend more time at your job than at home with your family doing what you actually enjoy? I’m involved in an opportunity that can change that, and give you complete freedom of time. Not to mention, the income potential is outstanding. ACN Independent Representative Ronika Thomas 575-626-9409. DO YOU earn $800 in a day? Your Own Local Candy Route! 25 Machines and Candy All for $9995. 877-915-8222 All Major Credit Cards Accepted! FOR SALE FENCED COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 210x115 w/3200 SQFT SHOP & OFFICE IN & OUTSIDE PARKING. CALL 575-9102070.
REAL ESTATE
490. Homes For Sale EQUAL HOUSING NOTICE All real estate advertised in the Roswell Daily Record is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion or sex, family status and handicap or national origin or an intention to make any such preference limitation or discrimination. The Roswell Daily Record will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis.
490. Homes For Sale ADVERTISE YOUR HOME ALL OVER NEW MEXICO. CALL THE DAILY RECORD FOR DETAILS. 622-7710 4Bd, 1 Ba, new paint, carpet, doors,fncd yrd, $59,500, M-Th 624-1331
Charming 3/2, garage fenced, remodeled in & out. 1514 W. 1st $119k 9104247 REDUCED Must sell charming 2 bed 1 bath, located at 601 S. Missouri. Basement, huge lot, new fencing. $64,900, owner financing avail. 637-5530
118 N. Wind Lp, 4/2/2, granite counters, new paint & A/C unit. 317-3703 OPEN HOUSE Call 6227010/910-6104. 3305 Riverside, 2222 sq. ft., 4/3/2, will negotiate 1% finders fee.
FSBO: 3/2, 1001 Avenida Del Sumbre, new carpet, roof, paint, clean, ready to move in. Possible owner financing. 622-6218 or 6222361 3 BR 1 3/4bath 1239 sq ft. remodeled & updated, lots of potential. $82k 303 S. Balsam Ave. 626-5752
FSBO 2715 N Orchard beautiful 2 story, 2400 SF 4 br, 2 living areas, office or 5th br, laundry Rm, ref. air. Wonderful neighborhood across from Del Norte Park & Elem. Sch. 2 blks Goddard High a deal at $162k. 420-3606 for appt. to see.
NE, 4BDRM, 3bth, 2 car garage, in ground pool in back, courtyard, walk in closets, many new updates throughout. Must see! 575637-4978 or 575-626-6843 for appointment. 511 Mission Arch Dr. Best offer or $103,000, Brokers welcome. #3 Forest Dr. OPEN HOUSE DAILY 1PM TO 6PM, 2050 square feet. 4 Bedroom, 1 3/4 bath. Esquibel Real Estate. 575-626-7550 CISCO 575-3123529 2 HOUSES-2BR/1BA, $60k each , owner will finance w/$6k down. 623-0459
1305 W. 7th, 2/1, $44,900, owner fin., $450mo. 10% dn., central ht/air.626-5290 FOR SALE Remodeled 3br, 1.5ba in Plains Park area. 361-4010049 3 BD, 2 ba, garage, completely remodeled in & out house @ the base. $60k, owner will finance w/$8k down. 910-1886
FSBO: NEWLY remodeled 3/2/2. 804 E. La Paloma. Call for appt. 575-317-2563
495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale
COUNTRY HOME HORSE PROPERTY W. of Roswell, 5ac, 1800sf home, 4br, 2ba, fl. sz arena w/roping chutes, covered runs, metal barn, tack hse, shop, trees - ready to sell. 623-2538 5 ACRE land for sale w/1500 sq. ft. shop, mountain view/city view, #40 Tamarish Rd (West on Pine Lodge to Tamarish). $45k Call 910-0115.
PRICE OF Land is going up, put your new or used doublewide on this 5.7 acres. Has good well & electric @ #42 Wagon Trail, NE Roswell. $38,000/$9,999 down. 6225587
B8 Friday, January 14, 2011 505. Investment/ Commercial/ Business Property
Restaurant bldg, $275K cash/trade for Ruidoso prprty, MTh 624-1331
515. Mobile Homes - Sale
‘94 SOUTHERN Energy 16x80, 3br, 2ba, quality built 2x6 walls, hardboard siding shingle roof. Well equipped, has ref. air. Selling $18,900. Call 575-6220035 D01090. 1997 CLATON, 3/2 in adult park, can be moved, nice. Call 575-317-6489.
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. 575623-1800. www.BuenaVidaLand.com Mobile Home Lots for Sale $15,000. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. We Take Visa and Mastercard! 420-1352. PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, Owner will finance with 10% down, New Construction only (no mobile homes), , Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd. between Country Club & Berrendo Rd. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 6266791, 626-4337
530. Real Estate Wanted
I AM looking for a shop to work on vehicles and prefer one that is fenced in if possible. I would like to rent or purchase on a real estate contract. Please call 575317-7908.
RENTALS
535. Apartments Furnished
1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 6241331
540. Apartments Unfurnished
VALLE ENCANTADA YOUR BEST $ RENTAL VALUE! LARGE 1,2,3 BEDROOMS. FREE UTILITIES. unfurnished, laundry room, playground, pool, ample parking. 2001 South Sunset. 623-3722. Town Plaza Apartments New Owners, friendly new managers. New Remodeled EXTRA LARGE 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Each 2 & 3 bedroom is multi level, upstairs/downstairs w/ large closets, stove & refrigerator, private patios, and private parking. Complex has a pool, laundry room, and a quiet garden setting environment. Friendly managers on-site. Seniors 55yrs plus, will receive discount. No HUD. Good credit? Pay less rent! 575-623-2735 3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, 930 sf, $559 plus electric. 502 S. Wyoming. 2 bedroom, 1 bath $480 or 1 bedroom $380. Call 622-4944.
EFFICIENCY 1 br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348. EFFICIENCY 2 BR, downtown, clean, water paid. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD Call 623-8377
1 BD, all bills pd, no pets, no smoking, no HUD - 6236281 1&2Bd, wtr pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331
2/2, $600 mo., $350 dep., wtr pd, no HUD or pets, 2802 W. 4th. 910-1300
305 W. Deming alley apartment, 1br, refrig. air, utilities pd., $450 mo, $400 dep. No pets. 623-7678 2BR, 1BA, no pets. Also avail. 2br, 1ba mobile home, rent to own & 3br, 2ba mobile home rent to own. 624-2436
2 BED, 2 ba, 1 car garage, central air, fenced yard, 26-A Bent Tree Rd, $700/mo, $700/dep., 6279942
LARGE 1 bedroom apartment. References and background check required. Washer and Dryer hookups. Private parking. 420-0100 PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHAN TED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN.
540. Apartments Unfurnished
2 BDR. No Pets, No HUD, $500+ Dep. 1702 E. 2nd St. 773-396-6618 1 BEDROOM apartment. 2 bedroom apartment. Call 910-8170
1BR APT., all bills paid $575, $200 dep. 420-5604
BEST VALUE IN TOWN 3br/2ba, $559+elec, newly remodeled, only a few apts left, 1br $380, 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
ALL BILLS PAID 3br, 2ba, $680 mo., brand new everything. 1br $480. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
1BR, 650 sq ft, $380 + elec. Central heating, ref air, new carpet, paint & tile. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
545. Houses for Rent-Furnished FLETC Homes for rent. Long & short term rentals. 5 minutes from FLETC. Brand new & beautiful! Visit our website: www.lgrentalhomes.com or Call 420-0519 or 910-7670
3 BR 2 bath 2 living areas, game room, 2600sqft, 1101 Camino Real off Sunset & McGaffey. $1200 mo. $500 dep. No Hud/pets 575-317-1748 NMMI HISTORICAL area, nice 2/2 + office. Hardwood floors, fireplace, quiet, fenced, gas grill. FLETC or Nurse. 575-910-7148 EXCEPTIONAL 2/2 furnished home in NW location convenient to hospitals/shopping. No HUD. All utilities paid/security system. Pet considered w/additional deposit. Owner/Broker. 626-7663 2/1, carport, sec. alarm, water, $695/1mo. dep., No HUD, 637-8467
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 200 S. Washington Ave. - 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, detached garage on an extra large lot. $700.00 per month with 1 month security deposit. Renter pays all utilities. No indoor pets, no smokers. Hud accepted. Call 575-317-5322 or 575-625-8627. 409 LA Fonda - Nice and Clean 3 bedroom, 2 bath, one car garage - $1,100 a month. Call 627-7595 or 840-7411. 504 W. Albuquerque, 2br, w/d hookups, heat pump, no pets, $550 mo., $500 dep. 637-8234
114 W. Oliver St. 3 bdrm/2bth, $1100 mo. $500 dep. newly remodeled, new appliances,Granite counter tops, ref. air, hot tub, sky lights. NO SMOKING,NO PETS! Leroy (702)232-7578 3 BD/1 ba. 1 car gar. 66 G St., ref air, RIAC $650 mo., $650 dep. 6279942.
NOW AVAIL. 3br, 2ba, new carpet & tile, $900 mo., $600 dep., no HUD, no pets. 420-5930 2&3 Bd, 1&2 Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331
OLDER LADY to share 2br home in Artesia. 575746-3912
LOOKING FOR a place to rent? Let us help you!! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors, 501 N. Main. (575) 624-2262 Stop by to pick up a list of our available rentals or check them out online at www.roswellforrent.com!
LARGE 3 bedrooms 2 bath w/d hook ups appliances. No pets or HUD $700 mo. $500 dep. 840-8630 or 623-6200 Dan, 914-0531 400 1/2 E 5th 1 bedroom stove, refrig., water paid, $325 mo. $200 dep. No HUD & No Pets. 910-9648
4BR, 2BA, w/garage & ldry rm, fenced yd, near ENMUR, HUD approved, $650, #59 Luebke Pl. 317-2945 or 623-6999
CLASSIFIEDS
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished
580. Office or Business Places
3/2, REFRIGERATOR, stove, w/d, over 2000 sq. ft., all wood floors in this Historic home @ 709 N. Pennsylvania, $1050 mo., $700 dep. 910-7969
BEAUTY SHOP for lease, 103 N. Pennsylvania. A/C, plubming & stations ready to go, $595 mo., $500 dep. 575-317-6479
NO PETS, No HUD, 3br, $600 mo., $500 dep. 914-0101
2/1, fenced yard, $550/ $500dep. 304 S. Kansas. 623-1800 or 420-5516
1BR, 12031/2 N. Lea Ave., $450 mo., $400 dep, great quiet neighborhood, wtr pd. 627-3403 2 BR 1 3/4 bath heated & cooled basement $650 mo. $500 dep. ref. air & central heat Terry 420-5111
1616 N. Delaware 2 br, 1 ba. $600 month $300 dep. You pay all bills good rental history req. 578-9668 902 MULLIS, 3 Bd, 2 ba, new home in Enchanted Hills. $1500 mo. + dep. Call 973-2466 2/1/1, appl included, $600/$550, 1706 N. Kentucky, 575-937-7491
LARGE 2 BR 1 bath 2 car garage stove, refrig. w/d. lawns maintained & water paid. $650 mo. drive by 811 N. Lea if interested call 575-653-4654 or 575-9731332 NICE NE area, 3/1.5ba, no HUD or pets, non-smoking, month to month rent special $625/$500dep. Call for details 627-0726. ENCHANTED HILLS Townhome, 2/2/2, lawn maintenance provided. New appliances in kitchen & laundry. All window coverings. $1100 mo. $1000 damage deposit. 625-5229
1305 W. College, 2br, 1ba, garage, all elec., nice & clean, $595. 626-9530 1205 N. Maple, 2br, ht pump, w/d hookups, $550 mo., $500 dep., no pets. 637-8234
502 W. Albuquerque, 2br, ht pump, w/d hookups, $500 mo., $500 dep., no pets. 637-8234 406 W. Tilden, 2br, garage, ht pump, w/d hookups, $600 mo., $500 dep., no pets. 637-8234 2BR, 1BA, $550, $200 dep., no HUD, you pay bills. 420-5604
TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262 3/1/1, storage rm, fenced backyard, 900 N. Greenwood, $550/$300 dep., no pets. 626-4006
555. Mobile Homes for Rent
2BR, 1BA, $500 mo., $400 dep. 5009 W. 2nd. Call 575-623-3105 for details.
569. Mobile Home Spaces/Lots
EASY LIVING community - 1337 McCall Loop, Roswell. Long term RV’s welcome. 624-2436
570. Mobile Home Courts
SOUTH FORK. A 55 & above community w/large quiet and attractive lots for people that care. 624-1742 500 W Brasher Rd.
580. Office or Business Places
OFFICE SPACE for Rent. Prime downtown area, 2,061 sq.ft. Please call 622-8711. EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITE for lease: Newly decorated, private rest room, covered parking at 1210 North Main. Contact David McGee, Owner / Broker 622-2401
STOREFRONT - Retail - Or Customized professional office suite. Everything new inside & out, 105 W. 6th, across from Peppers. 575-420-6050
New Mexico Psychiatric Services Inc.
is seeking for a Full Time M.D. Psychiatrist in New Mexico. Must be Board Certified or Board Eligible. Job Description:
• Working in medically underserved area in New Mexico
• Covering In Patient and Out Patient Services with participation in hospital On Call coverage. • Competitive Salary & Benefits
Please send resume to: New Mexico Psychiatric Services Inc. 1700 N Union Roswell, NM 88201
112 W. 1st, office for lease, 1200sqft, A/C, $400 mo., $400 dep. 575-317-6479
EXCELLENT PROFESSIONAL building, 7 offices, 1550 square feet, water paid $1,050 per month. North Roswell. Available first of February. Call 420-2100 to see property. 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 58ft frontage at 3106 N Main $1200mo 627-9942 STOREFRONT/Retail/ 800 sqft 20ft utilities pd. 2102 S. Main $550mo. 627-9942
MERCHANDISE
605. Miscellaneous for Sale
605. Miscellaneous for Sale
4 12FT upholstered Church Pews $500. 347-2514 or 6262524 22” TIRES & rims $600. Call 317-7795. WASHER & Dryer for sale. Call 622-6846. THE TREASURE Chest 1204 W. Hobbs see our Antique Mall Fiesta, large selection depression, carnival unusual Antiques 914-1855 Tues-Sat. 10-5
SINGLE BED, blonde w/headboard & mattress, drawers below, $150 obo. 622-2523
102 S. Virginia St. Sat. & Sun. 8-5 Moving Sale. Vet Pharm & Feed. All fixtures, shelving, counters, appliances, large heating unit furniture, Tack, large & small animal supplies, feed, hunting equip. guns & more.
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
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.
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
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
WE BUY PECANS Top Prices Paid. Up to $1.80 lb. On Grand Ave. between 4th & 5th St. Behind Courthouse.
ATTENTION ROCKHOUNDS I have quality rocks and fossils at discount prices. 622-8945 POWER WHEELCHAIR, walker, commode chair, wheelchair lift. 622-7638 ANTIQUES, DISHES, cookware, old trunk, cowhide Bernard sofa. By appt. only, 910-0014 FOR SALE by owner: Tutnour Autoclave originally $3500 will sell for $2000, Also Gurney- tiltable $500 both in good condition great for medical office or hospital call Connie 626-9155 FOR SALE by owner: 12’ outdoor kitchen $4500, Minolta 4000 office copier $2000 obo, Carved beds King & Queen $600-$800, dining table & china hutch lighted upper end $3000, 11’6” entertainment center wood $2500, cubes of brick & ceramic tile 1/2 price, 1900 wood burning cooking stove. Call for appointment must see, Dave 626-5837 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. DINING SET w/6 chairs $200, dresser w/mirror $200. 637-8559
FARM FRESH eggs from free roaming chickens, Lg & XLg only. Call Rocky 317-9290 SW ENTERTAINMENT center oak like new $500. Older big screen TV 55” $300. Call 625-8816
SELL THOSE Pecans Haley Farms paying up to $1.75 per pound for your pecans. Monday-Friday 2:00 to 5:00 Sat. 9:00-2:00 5018 W. Country Club Rd. HARD TIMES? Get the most cash for your old & broken gold & silver jewelry. Also, US silver coins. Call Skeets in Roswell, 578-0805.
WILL BUY your good used washers & dryers. 6267470
BUYING PECANS N. Main & Berrendo Rd. Mon. & Weds. 575-399-2212 GUITAR WANTED! Local musician will pay up to $12,500 for pre-1975 Gibson, Fender, Martin, Rickenbaker and Gretsch guitars. Fender amplifiers also. Call toll free! 1-(800) 995-1217.
I AM interested in buying furniture, appliances and household items. 637-9641
635. Good things to Eat
GRAVES FARM & Garden Frozen green chile, extra hot, regular hot, big Jim & mild. Dried red chile pods. New crop in January. Convenient store items available. We accept EBT, Credit cards and debit cards, we ship anywhere. 7 1/2 miles South on old Dexter Hwy. 622-1889 hours Monday thru Saturday 8-5:30 Sunday 1-5
650. Washers & Dryers USED WASHER & natural gas dryer for sale, 623-4180 or 4209372
WE BUY washers & dryers, working or not. Call 6226846.
715. Hay and Feed Sale
Alfalfa Hay- small bales, oat hay & sudan all grades $4.50$9.50 per bale. Big bales available $110-$140 each. Open 8:00-5:30 Mon- Sat.1:00-5:00 Sunday, Graves Farm & Garden 622-1889 Credit Cards Accepted
Roswell Daily Record 745. Pets for Sale
CHOTTIES READY Christmas Eve. Small (810lbs.), fuzzy cuteness $100. 622-6190
745. Pets for Sale
7 ADORABLE Chi-Weiner pups, 7 wks. old, $100 each. 347-0118
RECREATIONAL
AKC REG. Miniature Schnauzer, white male puppy, ready mid Jan. $500, 420-2006 or 6241858
765. Guns & Ammunition
1997 GMC 2500- extended cab 98,800 actual miles Granpas “Cream Puff” all extras incl. step rails tool box, headache rack, bed liner, wheels- terrific stereo. $6495 Call 910-1328 between 10am-9pm
GREAT TOURING bike, 2006 Yamaha Roadliner 1900, midnight, 12,500 miles, lots of extras, $8200. 575-910-4382
PUPPY LOVE Grooming Large Dogs Welcome, Cats also - 575-420-6655
1 YR old male Rottweiler $200 call Richard 317-6045 or 347-2051
2000 YAMAHA YZF 600R $1,500 for information call 575-840-9609
AKC LABRADOR puppies, 2 chocolates, 2 blacks, male & female avail, $300 each, call Cari @ 575-3781770 or 575-973-7302 FREE PUPPIES to good home. I have 2 male & 5 females, mixed breed part pit bulls & boxers. They are over 3wks old. Eating/drinking on their own. Please call after 4pm (575)910-3905 located at 1006 S. Union
795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans
775. Motorcycles & Scooters
BLUE EYED Great Pyrenees/Siberian Husky puppies. 623-4295 Joe
2006 FORD F250, excellent cond., ext. cab, $10,800, 626-7488.
780. RV’s & Campers Hauling
MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. Your dealer of choice. Sales, parts, service, consignments, purchases, propane, dump station. 2900 West Second. 6221751, 1-800-929 0046
TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale
2002 ACURA RSX, Black, 5 speed, AC, CD, sunroof, alarm, cruise, power locks & windows, new tires & brakes, $5600. 4205240. 2005 MITSUBISHI Lancer OZ Rally never been raced silver, moon roof, 62k mi. really good cond. $11k obo 840-9888 or 626-1213
New Mexico concealed handgun course now being scheduled in Roswell. Call 622-4989
FREE CATS! Some older cats, some spayed, neutered, shy now but will be friendly, all need good homes. 626-4708.
790. Autos for Sale
FORD CONTOUR 83k miles, runs great, $2850, no financing. 420-1352
2004 KIA Sedona sliding rear doors, 3rd seat, 84k mi, excellent cond. $3650 w/1k down owner finance. 420-1352 2000 FORD super duty F350 7.3 diesel DRW. After 5pm call 734-4924
1986 CHEVY Silverado 4x4 pickup long bed. Runs good needs a little body work $1500 OBO. Call 626-3608 or 626-3609
796. SUVS
‘93 JEEP Grand Cherokee, runs great, clean, 4x4 132k $3500. Call 622-6692.
CLASSIFIEDS INDEX
005 010 015 020 025
Announcements Special Notice Card of Thanks Personals/Special Transportation Lost & Found
Instruction
030 Education 035 Music – Dance/Drama 040 Instructions Wanted 045 050 055 060
Employment
Employment Opportunities Salesperson/Agents Employment Agencies Jobs Wanted – M & F
Services
070 Agricultural Analysis 075 Air Conditioning 080 Alterations 085 Appliance Repair 090 Auto Repair 100 Babysitting 105 Childcare 110 Blade Work 115 Bookkeeping 120 Carpentry 125 Carpet Cleaning 130 Carpeting 135 Ceramic Tile 140 Cleaning 145 Clock & Watch Repair 150 Concrete 155 Counseling 160 Crafts/Arts 165 Ditching 170 Drafting 175 Drapery 180 Drilling 185 Electrical 190 Engraving 195 Elderly Care 200 Fencing 205 Fertilizer 210 Firewood – Coal 215 Floor Covering 220 Furniture Repair 224 Garage Door Repair 225 General Construction 226 Waterwell 230 General Repair 232 Chimney Sweep 235 Hauling 240 Horseshoeing 245 House Wrecking 250 Insulation 255 Insurance 260 Ironing & Washing 265 Janitorial 269 Excavating 270 Landscape/Lawnwork 280 Masonry/Concrete 285 Miscellaneous Service 290 Mobile Home Service 293 Monuments 295 Musical 300 Oil Field Services 305 Computers 306 Rubber Stamps 310 Painting/Decorating 315 Pest Control 316 Pets 320 Photography 325 Piano Tuning 330 Plumbing 335 Printing 340 Radio/TV’s/Stereo’s 345 Remodeling 350 Roofing 355 Sand Blasting 356 Satellite 360 Screens/Shutters 365 Security 370 Sewer Service & Repair 375 Sewing Machine Service 380 Sharpening 385 Slenderizing 390 Steam Cleaning 395 Stucco Plastering 400 Tax Service 401 Telephone Service 405 Tractor Work 410 Tree Service 415 Typing Service 420 Upholstery 425 Vacuum Cleaners 426 Video/Recording 430 Wallpapering 435 Welding
440 441 445 450
Window Repair Window Cleaning Wrought Iron Services Wanted
455 456 460 465
Money: Loan/Borrow Credit Cards Insurance Co. Oil, Mineral, Water, Land Lease/Sale Investment: Stocks/Sale Mortgages for Sale Mortgages Wanted Business Opportunities
470 475 480 485
Financial
Real Estate
490 Homes for Sale 495 Acreage/Farm/Ranch 500 Business for Sale 505 Commercial Business Property 510 Resort Out of Town Property 515 Mobile Homes/Sale 520 Lots for Sale 525 Building Transfer 530 Real Estate Wanted
Rentals
535 Apartments, Furnished 540 Apartments, Unfurnished 545 Houses, Furnished 550 Houses, Unfurnished 555 Mobile Homes – Rental 560 Sleeping Rooms 565 Rest Homes 569 Mobile Home Lots/Space 570 Mobile Home Courts 571 RV Parks 575 Resort Homes 580 Office/Business Rentals 585 Warehouse & Storage 590 Farms/Acreage – Rent 595 Miscellaneous for Rent 600 Want to Rent
Merchandise
605 Miscellaneous for Sale 610 Garage Sales, Individuals 611 Garage Sales, Businesses 615 Coins/Gold/Silver 620 Want to Buy – Miscellaneous 625 Antiques 630 Auction Sales 635 Good Things to Eat 640 Household Goods 645 Sewing Machines 650 Washers & Dryers 652 Computers 655 TV’s & Radios 660 Stereos 665 Musical Merchandise 670 Industrial Equipment 675 Camera/Photography 680 Heating Equipment 685 Air Conditioning Equipment 690 Business/Office Equipment 695 Machinery 700 Building Materials 705 Lawn/Garden/Fertilizer 710 Plants/Flowers 715 Hay & Feed Sale 720 Livestock & Supplies 721 Boarding Stables 725 Livestock Wanted 730 Poultry & Supplies 735 Poultry Wanted 740 Show Fowl 745 Pets for Sale
Recreational
750 Sports Equipment 755 Bicycles for Sale 760 Hunting & Camping Equipment 765 Guns & Ammunition 770 Boats & Accessories 775 Motorcycles 780 RV’s/Campers 785 Trailers Wanted
Transportation
790 Automobiles for Sale 795 Trucks & Vans 796 SUV’s 800 Classic Automobiles 805 Imported Automobiles 810 Auto Parts & Accessories 815 Wanted – Autos