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Roswell Daily Record

Vol. 119, No. 245 50¢ Daily / $1 Sunday

INSIDE NEWS

DRILLING MORATORIUM DROPPED

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration on Tuesday lifted the deep water oil drilling moratorium that the government imposed in the Gulf of Mexico in the wake of the disastrous BP oil spill. The administration has been under heavy pressure from the industry and others in the region to lift the sixmonth ban on grounds it has cost jobs and damaged the economy. - PAGE A7

THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

October 13, 2010

NM pushes changes to water proposal

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — The New Mexico Environment Department and conservation groups presented a compromise Tuesday to state regulators who are considering a proposal that would protect hundreds of miles of headwater streams, more than two dozen lakes and numerous wetlands in federal wilderness areas around New Mexico. The department first petitioned the Water Quality Control Commission to designate headwaters in a dozen federal wilderness areas around the state as outstanding water sources, which would protect streams, lakes and wetlands

WEDNESDAY

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by prohibiting any activities that would degrade water quality. Under the compromise, temporary degradation of water quality would be allowed only in limited circumstances, such as during restoration or maintenance projects. Supporters said the compromise better defines protections for outstanding waters and keeps in place the state’s strict anti-degradation policy. But it immediately drew criticism from a ranchers’ group that has been fighting the department’s effort to designate the waterways as national “outstanding

resources waters.” Dan Dolan, an attorney representing the New Mexico Cattle Growers’ Association, said suggesting changes to the proposal during the hearing process does not give ranchers or others who are concerned enough time to review and present their cases. “We have the agency changing its proposal to be something that it never was in the first place and that the public never got notice of,” he said. “It’s just another example of an environmental agency that does not really care what the public’s input is.” State officials said they

Equine exercise

have tried to address the public’s concerns and that development of the initial proposal included extensive public participation. The hearing before the commission in Santa Fe is a continuation of a proceeding that started last month. Some groups involved in the case have been negotiating changes to the proposal’s language over the last three weeks, but the ranchers contend that they were left out. The hearing was scheduled to last through Friday. It will be up to the commission to approve, modify or reject the proposal. It could be December before the commission makes a final

Martinez has money advantage

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INSIDE SPORTS

Mark Wilson Photo

Susan Bierwirth runs Promise Land through his paces during a light workout Tuesday morning at Hi Hollow Farms. Promise Land is an 8-year-old retired race horse.

Dexter students discover joy of reading EMILY RUSSO MILLER RECORD STAFF WRITER

RANGERS ADVANCE TO 1ST ALCS

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Cliff Lee added another impressive line to his growing October resume, putting the Texas Rangers on his back and carrying them into the AL championship series for the first time. Lee tossed another postseason gem and Texas won a playoff series for the first time, beating the Tampa Bay Rays 5-1 Tuesday night in a decisive Game 5 on the legs of some daring baserunning. - PAGE B1

TODAY’S OBITUARIES

• John “Johnny” Raymond Morsey Jr. • Dan Snyder • Lillie Mitchel • James R. Gelder • Jose Rivas • Gwendolyn Wessen - PAGE A3

HIGH ...77˚ LOW ....46˚

TODAY’S FORECAST

CLASSIFIEDS..........B6 COMICS.................B4 DR. GOTT .............A5 FINANCIAL .............B3 GENERAL ..............A2 HOROSCOPES ........A8 LOTTERIES ............A2 OPINION ................A4 SPORTS ................B1 WASHINGTON .........A7 WEATHER ..............A8

INDEX

Most school libraries are deserted after hours, but on Tuesday evening, Dexter Elementary school children were running full speed toward the book shelves. Kids were allowed to choose one free book as part of the fifth annual Reading Roundup. “We want reading to be fun,” said Nancy Miles, the school librarian who wore a denim shirt with a rocket patch on the pocket that read, “5-4-3-21 READ.” Dexter Elementary students receive three free books a year in conjunction with the largest children’s literary program in the nation called Reading is Fundamental. The nonprofit organization is supported by the Department of Education and motivates youngsters to read by delivering free, brandnew books. “Oh, what have you got there?” Dexter Middle School librarian Beth Harris asked a

Emily Russo Miller Photo

Kylilea Roa, 2, and her sister hold their new books outside Dexter Elementary School during the fifth annual Reading Roundup. young boy perusing the nonfiction table. “They have long tongues,” Leviathan Burrows, 3, responded, holding up a copy of “Chameleons are Cool.” Reading is Fundamental raises three-quarters of the cost, around $3,000, and Dexter Community Sponsors donate the rest.

decision in the case. “The cattle growers are just slowing the process down and stalling it as much as they can,” said Bryan Bird of WildEarth Guardians, one of the groups that negotiated the compromise. “The bottom line is that a handful of public lands ranchers are holding the entire state’s clean water hostage. I think that’s inappropriate.” Pointing to citizens’ signatures and support from municipalities and sportsmen’s groups, Bird said protecting New Mexico’s headwaters will help the state prepare for growing pressure on its limited water resources.

“A lot of the kids in the elementary do not have money to buy books for themselves,” Amy Deutsch, the district librarian, explained. According to Reading is Fundamental’s website, nearly two-thirds of low-income families in the United States own no books.

See BOOKS, Page A2

SANTA FE (AP) — Republican gubernatorial candidate Susana Martinez collected another $500,000 from a national GOP group during the past month, bringing to $1 million the amount from the Republican Governors’ Association in the general election campaign. Martinez stockpiled more campaign cash than Democrat Diane Denish as the race entered the final stretch to the Nov. 2 general election, according to the latest financial reports filed Tuesday. Martinez reported cash-onhand of $1.3 million as of Oct. 4, while Denish had a balance of $950,607. Denish has served as lieutenant governor since 2003 under Gov. Bill Richardson, who is term-limited and can’t seek re-election. Martinez has been district attorney in Las

AG: No board conflict in emissions case

See MARTINEZ, Page A2

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — The New Mexico Attorney General’s Office has dismissed allegations that some of the state regulators considering whether to adopt new rules to curb greenhouse gas emissions have a conflict of interest. Assistant Attorney General Stephen Vigil says he talked with members of the state Environmental Improvement Board. He concluded that none of them have financial interests that would warrant their disqualification under the Governmental Conduct Act from hearing the two emissions proposals pending before the board. Vigil made the comments in a letter to Republican Rep. William Gray of Artesia. Gray and the New Mexico House GOP caucus had asked the attorney general to investigate. There had been rumblings for months about whether some of the regulators were too closely aligned with environmental interests.

Burst water pipe closes El Capitan Elementary School El Capitan Elementary School is closed the remainder of the week due to a burst pipe which left parts of the school under 4 inches of water, officials said. Roswell Independent School District Superintendent Michael Gottlieb said the damage occurred Monday night at around 10 p.m. School officials worked through the night cleaning the building and an Albuquerque-based company was called in Tuesday to assess the damage and make repairs.

“There’s a whole bunch of stuf f that has to be done,” Gottlieb said. “They’re going to need all the days, including Sunday, to get everything done.” Gottlieb said he hopes to have the school re-open on Oct. 18. It’s the school’s second water leak due to a broken line, he said, adding that the age of the building makes it susceptible to such damage. Gottlieb couldn’t immediately give an estimate on the cost to make repairs.

Mark Wilson Photo

Workers move items and perform clean-up duties at El Capitan Elementary School Tuesday morning after a water leak partially flooded classrooms, forcing the cancellation of school.


A2 Wednesday, October 13, 2010

GENERAL

Paula becomes Cat. 2 hurricane, threatens Cancun

CANCUN, Mexico (AP) — A strengthening Hurricane Paula roared toward Mexico’s resort-dotted Yucatan Peninsula on Tuesday. The hurricane smashed homes and forced schools to cancel classes in Honduras early Tuesday, then grew into a Category 2 storm with top sustained winds of 100 miles per hour (160 kph) on its way to the Yucatan, the U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said. Moving north-northwest at near

Martinez

10 mph, Paula’s center was expected to pass just to the east of Cancun this morning, and could near Category 3 strength by then, the center said. It warned that preparations to protect life and property should be rushed to completion. Dozens of boat owners in Cancun hauled yachts and other vessels to shore, while sea tour operators canceled reservations. At least one company, Transbordadores del Caribe, canceled ferry trips from Playa del Carmen to

Continued from Page A1

Cruces since 1997. Martinez was leading the governor’s race at the end of last month, according to the most recent poll published by the Albuquerque Journal. Martinez collected $1.4 million in contributions since Sept. 7 and Denish raised $820,595. The GOP governors’ group was the top donor to Martinez. It previously had given $750,000. Other large donors to Martinez included a Midland, Texas company, Lewis Burleson Properties, $75,000, and Midland oil producer Clayton Williams Energy, $15,000. Ronald Miller, a Roswell accountant, gave $20,000. Eight other donors from Texas each gave $10,000. Labor unions were the largest contributors to Denish. The political action committee of the National Education Association-New Mexico and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees each contributed $100,000. The Democratic Governors’ Association gave $50,000 to Denish and the group separately reported spending $385,000 for TV ads in the race during the past month, bringing to more than $900,000 the cumulative contributions and ads on Denish’s behalf so far in the race. Giving $20,000 to Denish were EMILY’s List, a national group that backs female candidates who support abortion rights; the International Association of Fire

Books

Continued from Page A1

Over 1,000 books were on display Tuesday in the library, with seven tables of fiction and nonfiction novels at all reading levels. “I want to get a chap-

ter book so it can last,” Juan Peinado, a 10year -old fifth-grader, declared. He flipped “Amazing through Things Animals Do,” but finally decided on The Book of World Records, 2006.

emiller@roswell-record.com

Election classes scheduled

The Chaves County clerk’s office will hold election schools for precinct personnel working in the upcoming General Election. Classes for clerks are scheduled on Oct. 26, judges on Oct. 27 and presiding judges on Oct. 28. The classes will begin at 10 a.m. in the county clerk’s Area D office, 1 St. Mary’s Place. Contact the chief deputy clerk, Doug Shaw, for questions at 624-6614.

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high winds destroyed 19 homes in northeastern Honduras, said Lisandro Rosales, head of Honduras’ emergency agency. Officials closed schools along the country’s Atlantic coast and some airports were reported closed. Tuesday afternoon, the hurricane was centered about 105 miles (175 kilometers) southsoutheast of Cozumel. Paula was expected to dump from 3 to 6 inches (8 to 15 centimeters) of rain on Honduras,

The Democratic Governors’ Association gave $50,000 to Denish and the group separately reported spending $385,000 for TV ads in the race during the past month, bringing to more than $900,000 the cumulative contributions and ads on Denish’s behalf so far in the race.

Fighters; and Harvey Operating and Production Co., a potash mining company in Denver, Colo. Denish spent nearly $1.2 million, with about 70 percent for television and radio advertising. Martinez spent $1.1 million, with three-fourths going for broadcast advertising. Martinez has erased a fundraising advantage that Denish enjoyed for much of the campaign. The Democrat was unopposed in the June primary while Martinez ran in a five-way GOP contest against several well-financed opponents. Martinez had a cash balance of only $300,000 in late June while Denish had more than $2 million.

Council to vote on repairs to channel

City councilors will vote whether to approve spending nearly $750,000 to repair a portion of the Spring River drainage channel during the council’s regular monthly meeting on Thursday. The repairs will be made to the channel near the Roswell Museum and Art Center, between Main Street and Richardson Avenue, city officials said. The project will be paid for with city and grant funds. The channel “needs some serious work done on it,” said Larry Fry, assistant city manager.

The council will also decide whether to approve a 2 percent increase in hourly rate of pay for city workers of the Utility Workers Union of America. The council will meet during a closed session just prior to the regular meeting to discuss collective bargaining. Officials will meet in City Hall, 425 N. Richardson Ave., at 7 p.m. Thursday.

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the resort island of Cozumel south of Cancun, though others were still operating under the still-mild weather. Armando Galmiche closed down his water-skiing tour business in Cancun and canceled 15 reservations he had for Tuesday afternoon. “It’s already low season for tourism and, with this hurricane, things are going to get worse,” he said, lamenting the loss of revenue. Early Tuesday, heavy rains and

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northern Belize, eastern portions of the Yucatan Peninsula and parts of western and central Cuba. The government of Mexico issued a hurricane warning for the country’s Caribbean coast from Punta Gruesa north to Cabo Catoche, including the island of Cozumel. Warnings are issued when hurricane conditions are almost certain to occur. A hurricane warning also was in effect for Cuba’s westernmost province of Pinar del Rio.

Police investigate embezzlement cases

Police were called to Walmart, 4500 N. Main St., twice on Monday regarding two cases of embezzlement. Both people were caught on surveillance tape. One created two separate false transactions — once for the alleged purchase of five DVDs and the second ringing up a $20 gift card. The second subject was taped taking $50 worth of iTunes without paying for them.

Battery

• Police were dispatched to the 1800 block of North Cambridge Avenue on Monday, where one person reportedly hit, pushed and bit a second individual. The second person struck back. Both people filed a complaint against the other. • Police went to a work site at the corner of Lusk Street and Union Avenue on Monday to take a report regarding an aggravated battery. One of the individuals said he went to the site to pick up his tools and his rifle that he had loaned to someone. After he retrieved his tools, he was attacked by the person who was working at the site with a claw hammer. The person who came to get his tools said he used a saw to defend himself. A witness reported that the second person put the claw hammer down, and the first person went to collect it, saying it was his. The witness intervened, telling the first individual that the hammer was not his. She was grabbed and the hammer was taken away from her. Anyone with information about these and any other crimes is asked to call Crimestoppers, 1888-594-TIPS (8477). Callers can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward.

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OBITUARIES

Roswell Daily Record

OBITUARIES

John ‘Johnny’ Raymond Morsey Jr.

John “Johnny” Raymond Morsey Jr., age 52, went to be with his Savior Jesus Christ on Oct. 7, 2010, after valiantly battling a brain tumor. Johnny was in the comfort of his home in Roswell, surrounded by his loving family when God called him to his eternal home in heaven, reunited with his father who was called in September 1977. Johnny was the oldest son of four children born to John Raymond and Jacque Lee Morsey on Jan. 22, 1958, while residing in Sapulpa, Okla. In November 1964, at the age of 6, he moved with the family five miles south of Loco Hills when his father was transferred with Fair Oil Co. They had no other family in New Mexico. He attended first through part of fourth grade in a tworoom school. In November 1967, his father was employed by Anadarko Production Co. and moved the family 15 miles south of Caprock, to a three-house oil field camp. He rode the bus 120 miles round trip for three hours a day to attend fourth through half of sixth grade in Tatum. This was touted to be the second longest bus route in America. The family was transferred to Eunice in January 1970. While attending junior high, Johnny accepted Jesus as his savior and was baptized at Highland Baptist Church. He enjoyed several sports but his favorite was baseball, participating at Babe Ruth, Little League and high school levels. During high school he worked at the Eunice Locker Plant and had a passion for cars. He graduated from Eunice High School in May 1976. Johnny joined the U.S. Army in June 1976, with his basic training at Ft. Jackson, Columbia, S.C. In August 1976, he was assigned to his first duty station as a motor pool mechanic at Ft. Benning, in

Columbus, Ga. In March 1978, he was stationed at Schofield Barracks, Oahu, Hawaii. As a Spc. 4, he was the 25th Infantry Division 1979 Automotive Mechanic of the Year. He also received the Sharpshooter Award and Good Conduct Medal. Upon his honorable discharge in June 1980, he returned to southeastern New Mexico. He was employed driving oil field transport and pump trucks while living in Eunice, Roswell and Hobbs. Johnny moved to Roswell and was married to Julie Mobley on June 25, 1983, until June 1992. They had three sons, Jordan Levi, bor n July 9, 1984, in Hobbs, Jerrick Tyler, born Feb. 12, 1986, and Jackson Chase, bor n Nov. 3, 1988, both in Roswell. Johnny married Debra L ynn Cof fey, Sept. 12, 1993, at Christ’s Church in Roswell, where they were members. They had a son, Justin Shane, born, Sept. 18, 1995, in Roswell, becoming a family of six. Johnny’s life revolved around family, work, church and working with his hands. A favorite love was his and Debra’s devotion to the four boys. They were involved in their school and sports activities, teaching Sunday school, as Cub Scout and Boy Scout leaders, working on vehicles, building numerous projects and fishing. Johnny was employed in May 1987, as a local driver and salesman for ABF Freight System, Inc. when they first opened for business in Roswell. He transferred to Tucumcari with ABF in April 2004, but lived with his family in Logan on Ute Lake where he enjoyed his passion for fishing. They were members of the First Baptist Church of Logan. Johnny retired in May 2008 after 21 years with ABF Freight, and moved back to Roswell to pursue his own home improvement business allowing more time with his family. This enabled him to volunteer his diverse skills to help others, and share his love for Christ. Johnny will be greatly missed by his family and all those who knew and loved him. Johnny is survived by his devoted wife of 17 years, Debra Morsey of the family home; four sons he was proud of: Jordan, Jerrick and Jackson Morsey, all attending college in Albuquerque, and Justin Morsey of the family home; mother, Jacque Morsey, of Hobbs; older sister, Debi Alves and husband, Lee, of Hobbs; two younger brothers: Roger Morsey and wife, Kristy, of Morrill, Maine, and Rex Morsey and wife, Denise, of Odessa, Texas; in-laws thought of as a sis-

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ter and brother, Lisa Williams and husband, Borde, of Ruidoso; nieces and nephews: Heather Shook and husband, Brad, of Odessa, Texas, Jon Bulman and wife, Adrienne, of Midland, Texas, Alexander, Nathaniel and Benjamin Morsey of Morrill, Maine, Dustin Summers of Odessa, Texas, Derek Rodgers and wife, Mandy, of Hawley, Texas, Haley and Ryan Williams of Ruidoso; great nephews, Brendon and Caleb Shook, Brodie and Kade Bulman; also surviving are numerous aunts, uncles, cousins and a host of friends. Johnny also joins his inlaws, O.B. and Kathryn “Kay” Coffey; grandparents, Howard Clifford and Ruth Street Morsey and John “Jack” Walton and Geraldine Futrell Crank; and other fondly remembered relatives. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m., Friday, Oct. 15, 2010, at Christ’s Church in Roswell, with Pastor Lonnie Owens officiating. Burial will follow at South Park Cemetery. There will be a family meal and fellowship at Christ’s Church before the services at noon. Pallbearers will be Jordan, Jerrick, Jackson and Justin Morsey, Rex Morsey, Lee Alves, Borde Williams and Roger Lollar. Honorary pallbearers will be Roger Morsey, Robin Cox, Ray Mathews and other family members and friends. In lieu of flowers, the family prefers memorials to: Clovis Community College Foundation, Attn: Stephanie Spencer, 417 Schepps Blvd., Clovis, N.M., 88101, designated to the O.B. Cof fey Vo-Tech Memorial Scholarship; or Christ’s Church, 2200 N. Sycamore Ave., Roswell, N.M., 88201, designated to the Household of Faith, Missions or Pastor’s Benevolence Fund. The family graciously thanks all those who God placed in their lives to help them through this time. Many thanks for their endless prayers, love, care, support and helping hands. Debra extends special thanks to their loving family and friends, Christ’s Church family, co-workers of City of Roswell, Roswell Home Health and Hospice, Kymera Oncology, Surgeon S. Lopez, Comfort Keepers, Neurosurgeon Harold Smith staff, ENMMC Radiation Oncology. “In this you greatly rejoice, though now for a little while you may have had to suffer grief in all kinds of trials. These have come so that your faith — of greater worth than gold, which perishes even though refined by fire —

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

may be proved genuine and may result in praise, glory and honor when Jesus Christ is revealed. Though you have not seen Him, you love Him; and even though you do not see Him now, you believe in Him and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy, for you are receiving the goal of your faith, the salvation of your souls.” 1 Peter 1:6-9. “If you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead you will be saved. For everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved.” Romans 10:9 and 13. Care has been entrusted Anderson-Bethany to Funeral Home and Crematory, www.anderson bethany.com.

traveling the world with his wife, Susie, and children Kate, Tom and John. Dan was preceded in death by his mother Shirley, father Raymond, and older brother Terry. He is survived by his wife of 29 years Susie Snyder, his daughter Katelyn Shirley and sons Thomas Daniel and John Raymond Walter. He is also survived by his big brother Gregg and wife, Jo-Anne, and younger brothers Tim Snyder and Tony Snyder and his wife Donna; Susie’s family who dearly loved him, Sharon Budd, Terry’s dear friend, along with many great friends who loved him. His family sends special thanks to the medical team of MD Anderson Cancer Research Center in Houston, Texas, Dr. El-Sayah, M.D., along with the Kymera staf f. Special thanks for the exceptional care and compassion of the ICU nursing staf f of ENMMC. In lieu of flowers the family requests that donations be made to the Dan Snyder Memorial Educational Fund in care of Pioneer Bank of Roswell or to your favorite charity.

A3

exquisite quilts. She spent many hours with a needle in her hand, crafting all kinds of wonderful pieces of embroidery. When she wanted some time away, she loved to dance with her loving husband, Charles. She and Charles were the owners of a local service station for many years. She is survived by her husband of 57 years, Charles Mitchell of the family home; a son, Tommy Williams; a daughter, Marie Hyatt and her husband, Frank; an adopted, daughter Barbara Rogers; three sisters, Mary Lockhart, Trudie Jones and Bonnie Henderson; four grandchildren, Linnette, Tonya, Michael and Lisa; and six great-grandchildren with two more on the way. Lillie was preceded in death by her parents, a brother, Thomas Mobley, and a, sister Edna Fore. Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com Services are under the direction of AndersonBethany Funeral Home & Crematory.

James R. Gelder

Dan Snyder

Dan Snyder, beloved husband, father, brother, and son, passed away peacefully Saturday, Oct. 9, 2010, surrounded by his family. Services will be Thursday, Oct. 14, 2010, at St. Andrews Episcopal Church. Dan was bor n July 1, 1957, at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Albuquerque to Shirley Mae and Raymond Edward Snyder. In 1981 Dan married his sweetheart Susie Wigren in Albuquerque. Dan was an avid hockey player and played semi-professional in Albuquerque with the Chaparrals and the Six Guns. When Dan and Susie moved to Roswell in 1983, Dan traded in his hockey stick for a set of golf clubs and soon became a regular at his home course New Mexico Military Institute. After working hard all week his favorite thing to do was join his golf buddies for their regular Saturday and Sunday games. Dan was known and loved in many southeastern New Mexico cities as the cookie man while employed by Kellogg’s and Keebler. Dan’s greatest joy was spending time, playing and

Lillie Mitchel

Memorial services for Lillie Mitchell, 86, of Roswell, will be held Thursday, Oct. 14, 2010, at AndersonBethany Funeral Home. Garth Hyde, chaplain for Vista Care Hospice of Roswell, will be officiating. Lillie passed away Monday, Oct. 11, 2010, in the comfort of her home surrounded by her loving family. Lillie was born Aug. 15, 1924, to Newton Mobley and Minnie Weldy Mobley in Lake Arthur, N.M. She has spent all of her days in the Roswell area. She married Charles Mitchell in Roswell on Oct. 5, 1953. Together, they just celebrated 57 years of marriage. Lillie was a loving and devoted wife and mother. She, on several occasions was awarded blue ribbons at the fair for her

James Gelder, 74, passed away Oct. 8, 2010, at Roswell Regional Hospital. James’ wishes were to be cremated with no services. James was born in 1936 in Pulteney, N.Y., to Ivan Phillip Gelder and Anita M. Kile Gelder. His parents have preceded him in death. He is survived by his sister, Shirley Dulabone and husband, Carl, of Albuquerque and brother Roger Gelder and wife, Glenna, of Los Lunas, N.M. Also surviving him are several nieces and nephews. James was a retired owner and operator of Blackie’s Restaurant in Moriarity, N.M. All arrangements have been entrusted to Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory. An online obituary may be accessed at www.ballardfuneralhome.com.

Jose Rivas

Arrangements are pending at Anderson-Bethany Funeral Home & Crematory for Jose Rivas, 25, of Roswell who passed away Sunday, Oct. 10, 2010.

Gwendolyn Wesson

Arrangements are pending at Anderson-Bethany Funeral Home & Crematory for Gwendolyn Wesson, 54, of Roswell who passed away Saturday, October 9, 2010.

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A4 Wednesday, October 13, 2010

OPINION

What will Richardson do after he leaves office?

SANTA FE — What is Gov. Bill Richardson up to? What will he be doing during his last two and a half months in office? We know he can’t sit still so his final months are bound to be busy. Will he stay in Santa Fe as he says he will or will he leave for something more exciting? Will he make bold moves that will deeply affect our state or will he concentrate on finding a job or polishing his legacy? Gov. Richardson occasionally gives hints. What other governor, here or anywhere, holds a garage sale three months before going out of office? Why not wait until his term ends? Do the Richardson’s want to make a quick getaway? The garage sale was called an estate sale but that doesn’t sound like Bill. It’s too final. It’s probably first lady Barbara’s doings. She wouldn’t mind putting an end to the Santa Fe phase of her life.

EDITORIAL

JAY MILLER

INSIDE THE CAPITOL

Some of the sale items were revealing. A large number of bolo ties and women’s turquoise jewelry items were for sale, along with Nambe pieces. Maybe it wasn’t the total Richardson collection but could it mean that the couple is contemplating moving somewhere where such New Mexico items aren’t as popular? Some of the sale items appeared to be gifts the governor received, some even autographed. How do you suppose those donors felt? Proceeds from the popular sale in a building across the street from the Capitol were announced as going mostly to

Roswell Daily Record

charity. Some wags suggested they could donate the proceeds to the state to help reduce the budget deficit the governor created. It’s deductible. Many stories have circulated about Gov. Richardson’s interest in jobs in the Obama administration, with a national lobbying group or as head of a major organization in athletics or the film industry, maybe based in New York or Los Angeles. But Richardson says he’s been there, done that. He says he wants to settle in Santa Fe and maybe drive around the country visiting major league baseball parks. Richardson gave a hint of his desire to stick around during the Albuquerque Balloon Fiesta recently when he said although this is his last year as governor, he plans to attend many more balloon fiestas. So what will the governor be doing during his last 10 weeks in

office? He’s talked about staging a big trial to decide whether to pardon Billy the Kid. Not much seems to be happening on that. Maybe another trade mission to some exotic place? Or freeing some captives from a rogue country? Gov. Richardson wanted to take a passenger rocket ride from New Mexico’s Spaceport America before he left office but development of the space plane fell behind after a tragic accident during fuel testing. Regardless of what you think about him, it has been a wild ride. Richardson began his tenure almost eight years ago by proposing a big tax cut. It sent him off to a great start. For mer Gov. Gary Johnson had proposed tax cuts during almost all of his eight years in office but Democrat-dominated legislatures had knocked them down.

Gov. Richardson sold the cuts as part of a massive economic development initiative. Even his huge billboard on Times Square supposedly was a part of the economic development program. Richardson brought in big shots from the film industry and green business ventures, such as solar and wind power. The film industry is about the only venture that has taken off. But we still aren’t sure whether the state is coming out ahead after its 25 percent rebates to film makers. Richardson would easily be able to find a spot on a celebrity reality show. He could take off a few pounds in a South American jungle, kick up his heels dancing with a star or get fired by Donald Trump. He’ll come up with something. (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)

60 MPG requirement unrealistic

For all of the rules Congress creates for the auto industry, none have proven less effective at achieving a desired result than mandating higher fuel rules for cars and trucks. Yet the insanity continues and environmental activists and some in Congress are pushing rules that would require an average of 60 miles per gallon or more by 2025. Why not make that number 100 mpg? Or 300 mpg? Those targets are no less arbitrary than the proposed 60 mpg that’s being pushed by activists, which is based neither in scientific fact nor reality. Automakers haven’t even met the current new mandate of 34.1 mpg for cars and trucks for the 2016 model year and the true cost for that regulation is still unclear. The Obama administration says the new fuel efficiency rule will cost automakers $51.5 billion. But that number has at times been as high as $85 billion. Clearly, no one yet knows the costs, nor could they since those vehicles are only now in development and production. Activists say the costs to increase to a 60 mpg standard by 2025 would be about $3,000 for each new vehicle, which is the same number that was pegged for the increase from the previous 27.5 mpg standard for cars. It is doubtful, at best, that a 25 percent increase in fuel efficiency will cost the same as a nearly 75 percent increase, yet that fallacy continues to be pushed by environmental groups to try to sell a higher standard that isn’t based on fact. And it’s particularly dubious and shortsighted because consumers haven’t reacted to the higher standards by buying smaller vehicles or hybrids. In fact, in September, light trucks, which includes crossover, SUVs, minivans and pickups, accounted for more than 50 percent of the market, according to Autodata Corp. Hybrid sales, by contrast, fell again and now account for only 2.3 percent of the market despite there being 29 models available, which is nearly double the models for sale three years ago. That anemic market share was down from 2.8 percent a year ago and was achieved with the help of federal tax breaks, which are still available on almost every hybrid sale. The next round of fuel rules needs to be based in reality, not on biased polls created by activist groups or on hopes and dreams for electric cars and hybrids. Further excessive regulation on the auto industry won’t increase consumer demand for cars and trucks they already don’t buy. But it will impose untold billions in costs on the automakers, including the two already bailed out by taxpayers. That will translate into reduced demand for new cars and trucks and lost jobs when the industry is forced to scale back again. Those are neither smart nor efficient ways to improve the economy and certainly will further damage the auto industry. Guest Editorial The Detroit News DEAR DR. GOTT: Many years ago, I suf fered from frequent cramps in my legs and toes, mostly at night. At the suggestion of an older relative, I took a vitamin E capsule, which she said would r elieve the pain. Much to my surprise, the pain was gone about five minutes after taking it. Twelve years ago, I had radialnerve surgery, which was successful. I was able to use my arm and hand without any problems. However, if I engaged in an activity such as playing cards or knitting, where my hand was in the same position for any length of time, my hand cramped up and was painful. I tried the vitamin E capsule (400 IU) twice a day and very rarely have cramping anywhere in my body. If I do

The sound of one hand clapping I was preparing to applaud the Obama administration and specifically Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano for announcing the deportation of a record number of criminal aliens last year. According to the Washington Times, “the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported 392,862 aliens in fiscal year 2010, slightly less than a 1 percent increase over 2009 but short of the agency’s goal to remove 400,000 this year.” What curbed my enthusiasm was news that removal of other illegal immigrants — those not convicted of crimes, though it could be justifiably argued that

Doonesbury

ASK DR. GOTT UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE

have a problem, I take an extra capsule immediately with the same result. During a r ecent physical examination, I discussed this “remedy” with my doctor, who also reads your columns, and he said he thought you might be interested in this remedy. He said he had no idea why it works but since it does, to continue with the regimen, as this rela-

CAL

THOMAS SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

their status as illegal immigrants is, by definition, the breaking of American law — fell to the lowest number since 2007. Dan Stein, president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform, said that while it is nice that Secretary Napoli-

tively small dose will not harm me. Because it is a blood thinner, I have been advised to stop taking it seven to 10 days prior to any surgery. I am a 78-year-old Caucasian woman; however, I assume age and race have nothing to do with the results that I have had. I hope this will work as well for others. DEAR READER: Vitamin E is a fat-soluble vitamin with antioxidant properties. It is used for the treatment and prevention of many health conditions. In fact, research remains ongoing regarding its value in treating heart conditions, Parkinson’s, diabetes, anemia, cancer and a host of other diseases and disorders. However, no conclusive studies are available for these

tano believes removing people in the country illegally is an important function for the Department of Homeland Security, “policy directives from the highest levels of DHS clearly demonstrate that the administration is refusing to enforce laws against noncriminal aliens.” That bad cop/good cop approach is designed to pacify those on the political right while the administration and some Democrats in Congress simultaneously lay the groundwork for legalizing those who broke our laws to get here and remain in the country illegally. In a desperate last-minute

and other conditions. The recommended long-term daily allowance of E is between 15 and 20 IU daily; however, many experts claim it is safe when consumed in larger amounts. Deficiency of E is rare with a proper diet that includes broccoli, spinach, kiwi, fortified cereals, whole grains, fruits, vegetables and vegetable oils, and also because it is stored in the body for extended periods of time. There is concern regarding the safety of E in high doses because of the potential for an increased risk of bleeding, particularly in patients on anticoagulants or with a vitamin K deficiency. Excesses have been known to See GOTT, Page A5

pre-election move to win more votes for Democratic candidates, New Jersey Sen. Bob Menendez and Vermont Sen. Patrick Leahy introduced the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2010 prior to adjournment. This bill, if passed, would effectively grant amnesty to illegal immigrants currently in the country. No one expects the bill to pass when Congress returns for a lame duck session, especially if Republicans win a House majority and make substantial inroads to the Democrats’ Senate majority, or take back the

See THOMAS, Page A5

25 YEARS AGO

Oct. 13, 1985 • Two Roswell cadets are among those receiving the Commandant’s Commendation Award for outstanding service as members of the 1985 training cadre at NMMI. John W. Bassett III, son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Bassett Jr.; and Jim G. Pappas, son of Mr. and Mrs. Nick J. Pappas, were presented the award for outstanding service worthy of special recognition. • Air Force Tech Sgt. Robert A. Lewis of Artesia recently arrived for duty in the Philippines. Lewis is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth W. Lewis.


About Steve Pearce: My humble opinion LOCAL

Roswell Daily Record

We are about to face one of this community’s most important elections ever. In my volunteer role as veterans’ advocate, I take my endorsement of elected officials very seriously. My decisions are not compensated with money or political “favors.” They represent my view, solely apart from this newspaper or any other organized entity. I present this column each week to hopefully benefit you, my brother and sister veterans. I do not offer my opinions lightly or without arduous research. My carefully considered opinion is to support Steve Pearce in next month’s voting ritual. My only interest in the 2nd Congressional District of New Mexico is helping to elect someone who will take care of southeastern New Mexico veterans’ long standing problems. This endorsement is made in spite of implied threats and intimidation. One classic example of “intimidation” and misrepresentation was the response from a local veterans group following a column I wrote on a Roswell Town Hall meeting held by Steve Pearce: "After reading John Taylor’s opinion on April 14, I can’t help but won-

JOHN TAYLOR

VETERANS ADVOCATE

der if the poor man has been in a coma for the past 14 months.” An homage to Harry Teague followed. I was a bit baffled, as I knew most of the guys writing to the editor. As I later found out, all but three of the nine officers listed had no knowledge of the letter to the editor and did not agree with the content. If that’s true, there was serious “mis-speaking” going on. In any event, what exactly has Teague done for us? We still have to drive six-plus hours round trip for hospital care, still have grossly deficient after care for PTSD, still have to go to Albuquerque for physical therapy, eye exams and treatment, com-

prehensive screening, speciality medical services, etc. Approved medications are becoming more restrictive. Local physicians no longer take Tricare veterans. I could go on for a couple of pages, but you can see the point. Teague’s “legislation” just hasn’t helped! If I had been in a coma as “my brothers” suggested, I guarantee it was likely due to no Teague-sponsored improvements in local VA care. Look at the facts, please. When in office, Pearce held quarterly meetings with all veterans in southeast New Mexico, rotating meetings in Roswell, Hobbs, Artesia, Las Cruces, etc. His staff made sure transportation was found for out-of-town vets attending. Notice was given a month in advance. He arranged for two current secretaries of the VA to meet in Roswell and Albuquerque. Pearce made sure vets from Cruces, Silver City, Carlsbad, Hobbs, Artesia, etc. made the Roswell meeting. Everyone who wanted to ask questions was able to do so. Pearce also arranged several meetings involving NM DVS Secretary, John Garcia, the Albuquerque VA administrator and staff and

Senior Circle to celebrate birthdays The ENMMC Senior Circle is having its monthly birthday party at 3 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 13, at the facility in the Wilshire Center, 2801 N. Main St., Suite D, next door to Family Dollar. All members are invited, regardless of when their birthdays are, and nonmembers interested in learning more about Senior Circle are welcome. As always, there’s a Halloween costume contest! So drag your costume out early to compete. We’re also celebrating the Eastern New Mexico State Fair with some cowboy chow plus birthday cake — and door prizes! For more information, call the office at 623-2311.

HealthSense

A physician who is new to Roswell will be the guest speaker at HealthSense on Friday, Oct. 15, from 11 a.m. until noon, at Senior Circle, 2801 N. Main. Jay Bishop, D.O., a urologist, will outline the plans for his practice in Roswell. HealthSense is a community-wide health information program which is free and open to the public. It is sponsored by the ENMMC chapter of Senior Circle. For more information, call Vonnie Goss at 624-1110.

High Prairie Poets

The High Prairie Poets chapter of the New Mexico State Poetry Society will meet at 2 p.m., Saturday, Oct.

Thomas

those with more than four feral cats. To make an appointment, call 3177439. If the phone is busy or the machine is full, please keep trying. A volunteer will call you back.

Bridge winners

16, in the Bassett Room of the Roswell Museum and Art Center, 11th and Main streets. Roswell poet–artist Gretchen Phillips, the featured reader, will present her poems and the paintings that illustrate them. She is a fellow of the High Plains Writing Project and has served as its co-director since 2004. The group will also experiment with writing impromptu poems, as well as read their own poems. Poets of all ages and all levels of experience — from beginner to widely published — are welcome to come and bring poems to read. Critique is available on request.

AWA clinic

The next monthly clinic for the Animal Welfare Alliance’s spay/neuter clinic will be held Friday, Oct. 23 through Sunday, Oct. 24. We will spay and neuter dogs for $1 to $70. Pregnant dogs and female dogs in heat will not cost extra. We spay and neuter cats for $25; additional discounts will be taken for

Continued from Page A4

Senate. According to FAIR’s analysis, DHS data show the Obama administration has “dramatically curtailed all aspects of immigration enforcement against illegal aliens who have not committed violent crimes in this country.” FAIR says when it comes to enforcement of the law at worksites, “administrative arrests have fallen by 77 percent, criminal arrests are down 60 percent, indictments are down 64 percent, and convictions have fallen by 68 percent since 2008.” We have seen this political game played out over many years and with administrations of both parties. Big business, which mostly contributes to Republican political campaigns, wants cheap labor and so favors illegal immigrants. Democrats want the illegal immigrants because they see them as potential Democratic voters. Rep. Lamar Smith, Texas Republican, says, “Millions of Americans are struggling to find work, while an estimated 7 million illegal immigrants are working in the U.S. Worksite enforcement could help make those much-

Gott

Continued from Page A4

also cause headache, fatigue, blurred vision, diarrhea, flatulence and bloating. If your physician thinks the 800 IU daily regimen is OK for you, stick with it, especially if it relieves your pain. Other readers should consider a modification in their diet and a discussion with their primary-car e physician before taking the supplement. Medications, even those available over the counter, can interact adversely. The safest bet is to get the go-ahead first rather than backtrack after the fact. T o pr ovide r elated information, I am sending you a copy of my

Health Report “Vitamins & Minerals.” Other readers who would like a copy should send a self-addressed stamped No. 10 envelope and a $2 check or money order made payable to Newsletter and mailed to Newsletter, P.O. Box 167, Wicklif fe, OH 44092-0167. Be sure to mention the title or print an order form off my website at www.AskDrGottMD.com. Dr. Peter H. Gott is a retired physician and the author of several books, including “Live Longer, Live Better,” “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Diet” and “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Cookbook,” which are available at most bookstores or online. His website is www.AskDrGottMD.com.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The Pecos Valley Duplicate Bridge Club has announced its winners for the week of Oct. 4-9. Monday, Oct. 4 — 6 tables The first-place north-south winners were Idamaye Sanders and Howard Smith; in second were Jim Perkowski and Jewel Harp. The first-place east-west winners were Kay Rogers and Vi Perkowski; in second were Bradford Pretti and Elaine Hanson. Thursday, Oct. 7 — 5 1/2 tables The first-place overall winners were Betty Meeks and Mary Ann Bosch; in second were Nancy Lynd and Jewel Harp; in third were Bette Bossell and Vi Perkoswki; and in fourth, Marion Riley and Arthur Brown. Saturday, Oct. 9 — 4 1/2 tables The first-place overall winners were Frank Whitney and John Yule; in second, Marion Riley and Mary Ann Bosch; in third were Peter Yeaton and Judy Farley; and in fourth, Joyce Shutt and Jewel Harp. Anyone interested in playing duplicate bridge is invited to call Rose Caldwell at 622-7779.

needed jobs available for U.S. citizens and legal immigrant workers.” That is a debatable point whether the unemployed would be willing to do the grunt work illegal immigrants often do, especially when Americans can now collect unemployment checks for more than a year. What should not be debatable is that lax enforcement of our immigration laws leads to more disrespect for those laws and serves as an incentive for more people to enter the country illegally. This is what occurred following the “comprehensive” immigration reform under Ronald Reagan and it would happen again unless our borders are fully secured and something is done about those illegal immigrants already here. Granted, they won’t all be deported, but they should not be allowed to escape punishment for breaking the law. Otherwise, the law is meaningless. So let’s hear it for Homeland Security’s successful deportations of criminal aliens. But given that the U.S. is only enforcing a portion of its immigration laws, all I can offer is the sound of one hand clapping. (Write to Cal Thomas at: Tribune Media Services, 2225 Kenmore Ave., Suite 114, Buffalo, N.Y. 14207. Readers may also e-mail Cal Thomas at tmseditors@tribune.com.) © 2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

A5

veterans from all over southeast New Mexico. Many of the improvements promised by VA representatives never came into existence after Teague took office. By his supporters’ own admission, his few “summits” were in Cruces and Alamogordo. Local vets were either not notified or were notified the afternoon before the meeting — I verified this with the e-mail notices I saved. It's amusing, and sad at the same time, that Pearce is accused of voting “no” on several pieces of veteran legislation. The whole story is he voted “yes” on all those bills after the land mines planted by opposition politicians were removed and the bills were resubmitted (HR 338, HR 2861, H Res 95, HR 1588, HR 2861, HR 27, S256, and on and on). Voting "no" on a bill to benefit veterans that also closes Cannon Air Force Base is understandable. Yes, the opposition forgets that part of the story. It would take many more pages than I’m allocated to give you all the reasons and facts supporting my endorsement. I’ll just say Pearce is our best choice, in my carefully considered opinion. God bless.

CLUB CALENDAR

Items for the Club Calendar must be submitted to the Daily Record at least one week before the event. The club announcements may pertain to women’s clubs, civic clubs, social groups and medical clubs. Alcoholics Anonymous 24-hour answering service: 623-0166.

Today 6 a.m. — Early Bird, Alcoholics Anonymous, Dry Harbor Club, 200 E. Van Buren St. 7 a.m. — Sunrise Optimist Club, Hungry American, 3012 N. Main St. Contact: John Jaquess, 622-8866. 8 a.m. — Retirees Golf Association, Cahoon Park. 9 a.m. — Pecos Valley Quilters, Roswell Adult and Senior Center, 807 N. Missouri Ave., until 3 p.m. 9:15-11:15 a.m. — Roswell Women’s Community Bible Study, Christ Church, 2200 N. Sycamore Ave. Contact: Suzanne Boerio, 623-3837. 11:30 a.m. — Campus Crusade for Christ “Doing Life Together,” student-led teaching. Fireplace Room, Eastern New Mexico University-Roswell. Contact: Ron, 6221137. Noon — Roswell Optimist Club, Hungry American, 3012 N. Main St. Contact Bob Tucker, 420-6195. Noon — Roswell-Pecos Valley Rotary Club, Kwan Den Restaurant, 1000 W. Second St. Contact: John Russell, 622-1850. Noon — Lunch Bunch, Alcoholics Anonymous, Dry Harbor Club, 200 E. Van Buren St. 12:15 p.m. — Roswell Noonday Toastmasters, Candlewood Suites, behind Applebee’s restaurant. Contact: Twyla McKee, 623-0886. 12:30 p.m. — Canasta at the Roswell Adult and Senior Center, 807 N. Missouri Ave. Everyone welcome. For more information, call the center at 624-6718. 12:30 p.m. — Pinochle Club at Senior Circle, in the Wilshire Mall. Everyone welcome. Contact: 622-0699. 1 p.m. — Progressive bridge at Roswell Adult and Senior Center, 807 N. Missouri Ave. All bridge players welcome. For more information, call the center at 6246718. 5:30 p.m. — Grupo de Apoyo, a support group for Spanish-speaking women, mujeres, to discuss the social problems they face. Open to women of all denominations. Iglesia Hispana Presbiteriana, 300 N. Missouri Ave. Contact: co-pastor, the Rev. Reyna Mairena, 6222935 or 623-6790. 5:30 p.m. — Friends of Sobriety, Alcoholics Anonymous, Dry Harbor Club, 200 E. Van Buren St., nonsmoking.


A6 Wednesday, October 13, 2010

BUSINESS REVIEW

Roswell Daily Record

Broadmoor Center presents Western Finance & The Medicine Shop

Western Finance

Western Finance is located in Suite 3 of the Broadmoor Shopping Center at 1010 South Main Street. They offer both signature and title loans up to $900.00, with easy monthly payments. Western Finance offers Credit Starter Loans to help you establish credit or to repair your credit. Western Finance started in Roswell 17 years ago and moved to Broadmoor Center in June of 2004. There are 154 other Western Finance locations in Texas, Oklahoma, Missouri and New Mexico as part of Western Shamrock Corporation of San Angelo, Texas. As a customer of Western Finance, after three months of on-time payments, you are eligible to finance merchandise such as TVs, stereos, refrigerators, stoves, washers, dryers, digital cameras and game systems with low monthly payments. All loans are made by check and phone applications are welcome. If you have a clear title on your vehicle there is no credit check when applying for a loan at Western Finance. The car must be licensed and running and they must be able to verify your income and address.

The Medicine Shop

Grace Paiz is ready to help you at Western Finance. Western Finance is located in Suite 3 of the Broadmoor Shopping Center at 1010 South Main Street. One of 154 Western Finance stores in the southwest, Grace is ready to serve you with quick and friendly service. She offers signature loans and title loans up to $900.00. Grace likes to help people establish credit or repair their credit. Western Finance also offers personal tax services including e-Filing and Refund Anticipation Loans. Give Western Finance a call at 623-3394 for more information. Signature loans are ers, DVD-video/VHS playalways available if you ers, DVD recorders, DVD changers and rack and don't have a title. Western Finance cus- shelf stereo systems tomers can earn a $10.00 • X Box, Playstation 3 and check for referring a new UVC digital cameras. customer. Some of the furniture • Phillips and RCA projecand electronics available tion and LCD televisions plus direct view and at Western Finance are: combo televisions • Sharp toasters and microwaves • Hoover vacuums • Crosley washers and Western Finance, 1010 dryers South Main Street, Suite • Crosley ranges 3, in the Broadmoor • Crosley refrigerators and Shopping Center is open freezers from 9:00 a.m. until 6:00 • Catnapper Furniture, p.m., Monday through including recliners Friday and from 9:00 a.m. • Michels & Company TV until 1:00 p.m. on stands and entertainment Saturday. centers They offer quick and • JVC, Philips, Yamaha and Coby home theater friendly service and Se systems, portable DVD Habla Español. players, stereos, Mp3 playThe phone number is

Western Finance: Creating a Culture for Success

Core Values: ∆ Service - We are committed in providing superior customer service and fostering long term customer relationships. We will make every effort possible to qualify potential customers and provide them with financial services. ∆ Motivation - We strive to do it better today than yesterday. ∆ Integrity - We approach everything we do in an honest, fair and ethical manner. ∆ Loyalty - We encourage teamwork throughout our organization and strive for loyalty from our communities as lender of choice. ∆ Empowerment - We value the contributions made by our employees and recognize the role each play in our success. We empower them to make the right decisions in the best interest of our company and customers.

623-3394.

Go in to Western Finance and find out how pleasant and easy it is to make a loan!

Mission Statement

Western-Shamrock Corporation provides financial services second to none in an industry where there are many choices. Our customers look forward to seeing our SMILE when they visit our stores and consider us their lender of choice.

Since 1959. The Medicine Shop located in the Broadmoor Shopping Center at 1010 South Main Street is your locally owned and operated Health Mart pharmacy, offering prescriptions, cosmetics, vitamins, diabetic supplies, jewelry, gifts, Spenco Shoe Insoles, Russell Stover Candies, Carlton Cards and a wide variety of over the counter items. The Medicine Shops' phone system helps speed up your pharmacy services, however if at anytime you need to speak with any of the friendly staff, simply press 0 (zero) and you will be connected. Christmas will be here before you know it, holiday parties and special events will fill your calendars, go in soon and see the large selection of jewelry and great gifts that will make your shopping season easier. The Medicine Shop offers free gift wrapping with purchases. The Medicine Shop offers a large selection of designer colognes and fragrances for both men and women, including Elizabeth Arden cosmetics. Women's fragrances: • Ooh La, La - Victoria Secret • Delicious Candy Apples DKNY • Kim Kardashian • Roxy - Roxy • Lust - Sex in the City • Viva La Juicy - Juicy Couture • Glam Princess - Vera Wang • Hearts & Daggers - Ed Hardy • Very Hollywood-Michael Kors Men's colognes: • Aqua Di G O - Giorgio Armani • The One - Dolce & Gabbana • Avatar - Coty • Hearts & Daggers - Ed Hardy • Versace The Medicine Shop has a line of Derma-E Natural Bodycare products. Voted “best skin care product” in 2009 by Whole Foods Magazine. Products include: * Age-Defying Hand & Body Lotion - Lavender * Pycogenol Redness

The professional staff at The Medicine Shop includes (left to right) Bernadette Daleske, CPT (Certified Pharmacy Technician); Rosanna Linares, CPT; Erin McGraw, CPT; Yvonne Harris, RPh; Eldon Hodges, RPh and owner; Ramona Montoya and Tanya Santana, Support Personnel; and Norene Lyons, CPT. The Medicine Shop, your complete Health Mart drug store, offers prescriptions and cosmetics as well as over the counter items. Please phone 623-3900 for more information. The baby gifts are in and Reducing Serum * Pycogenol Eye Gel with ready for giving. Many new items to choose from, Green Tea * Hyaluronic Acid Day including: Crème • Chocolate and bubble gum * Vitamin A with E Wrinkle cigars Treatment Oil • Baby Books * Anti-Aging Hand Crème • Banks * Anti-Aging Moisturizing • Frames Complex, spf 15 • Piggy Banks * Eye Bright Dark Circle • Stuffed Animals Crème The Medicine Shop has * Tea Tree and E Antiseptic convenient parking, close to Crème * Itch Relief Lotion with Tea the door and short lines. you'll be in and out and on Tree, E, Chamomile your way. * Skinbiotics Treatment The Medicine Shop parCrème * Very Clear Spot Blemish ticipates in all four Salud! programs: Presbyterian, Treatment Lovelace, Molina, and Blue * Clear Vein Crème New from Mill Creek: Salud, Optium Health as well Ever Care and Biotene H-24 products for as Amerigroup long term servthicker, fuller hair: ices for certain Medicaid eli∆ Shampoo gible patients. ∆ Conditioner The Medicine Shop is cur∆ Extra Body Styling Gel rently open Monday through ∆ Scalp Emulsion Friday 8:30 a.m. until 6:30 ∆ Conditioning Hair Spray p.m. and Saturday from Biotin Botanicals 8:30 a.m. until 2:00 p.m. Shampoo They are closed on Sunday. Conditioner The Medicine Shop will Amazon Organics with kava, gladly transfer prescriptions lemon grass, and lavender from any pharmacy. Shampoo Prescription delivery is Conditioner Don’t be left out in the available at no cost within cold, flu season is quickly the delivery area. They accept Visa, approaching, The Medicine Discover, Shop is stocked and ready MasterCard, with all your flu season sup- American Express, and FSA plies, cough and cold reme- Flexible Spending Cards for dies, hand sanitizers, gloves your convenience. and even masks. Be preFor more informapared this season, don’t let tion. call 623-3900, or betMr. Flu Bug get you down, ter yet go in and have a look go in and get your supplies around - they look forward today. to seeing you!

Check out the featured business at www.roswell-record.com - Click on Business Review

MASTER CLEAN SPECIALIZING IN CARPET CLEANING

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

FOR APPOINTMENT 622-5376 420-0965

In business more than 67 years

Contact us for all of your insurance needs

(575) 624-0404

Serving the Pecos Valley’s granite and quartz countertop needs

Dale Bristow Owner/Operator

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

Encore!

Flowers & Gifts

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

BOSS’S DAY IS SATURDAY, OCTOBER 16!!!

Call us today to order a beautiful fresh bouquet or green plant for your special boss.

Becky Neeley, Designer/Owner

INDOOR ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL & HOME COMFORT

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

Roswell’s own Community Credit Union 2514 N. Main • 110 W. College Blvd. Ste G WWW.ROSWELLCU.ORG 623-7788 - Toll Free: 1-877-623-7788

Hours: Lobby: Mon-Fri 9 am - 4:00 pm Drive Up: Mon-Thur 8:30 am - 5:30 pm • Fri 8:30 am - 6 pm Saturday 9 am - 1 pm Branch: Mon-Fri 9 am - 4 pm

Low Income Spay/Neuter Program

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

Roswell Humane Society 703 E. McGaffey 622-8950

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

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

622-4977


WASHINGTON

Roswell Daily Record

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

A7

AP Photo

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton during a meeting with members of the Bosnian tri partite Presidency in Sarajevo on Tuesday.

AP Photo

Administration lifts 6-month deep water oil drilling freeze

BP PLC offshore land negotiator Michael Beirne, right, testifies alongside his attorney Michael Monico during Deepwater Horizon joint investigation hearings held by the U.S. Coast Guard and the Bureau of Ocean Management Regulation and Enforcement in Metairie, La., Wednesday.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration on Tuesday lifted the deep water oil drilling moratorium that the government imposed in the Gulf of Mexico in the wake of the disastrous BP oil spill. The administration has been under heavy pressure from the industry and others in the region to lift the sixmonth ban on grounds it has cost jobs and damaged the economy. A federal report said the moratorium likely caused a temporary loss of 8,000 to 12,000 jobs in the Gulf region. While the temporary ban on exploratory oil and gas drilling is lifted immediately, drilling is unlikely to resume immediately. Drilling companies must meet a host of new safety regulations before they can resume operations, officials said. Michael Bromwich, director of the agency that oversees offshore drilling, said it would take “at least a couple of weeks” after the ban is lifted before permits are approved. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar said that new rules imposed after the BP spill — the worst offshore oil spill in the nation’s history — have strengthened safety measures and reduced the risk of another catastrophic blowout. “Operators who play by the rules and clear the higher bar can be allowed to resume” drilling, Salazar said at a news conference. The secretary said he knows that some people in the oil industry and along the Gulf Coast will say the new rules are too onerous. “Others will say that we are lifting the deep water drilling suspension too soon. They will say there are still risks

involved with deep water drilling,” he said. The truth is, there will always be risks involved with deepwater drilling, Salazar said. “As we transition to a clean energy economy,” he added, “we will still need oil and gas from the Gulf of Mexico to power our homes, our cars, our industry.” The new rules imposed by the administration will make oil and gas drilling in the Gulf “safer than it has ever been,” Salazar said. Rep. Charlie Melancon, D-La., called the end of the drilling ban great news for Louisiana’s economy and workers. Salazar emphasized that the move would include new requirements for those seeking to drill exploratory wells. Those entities and the companies they represent will have to prove they have the appropriate steps in place to contain a worst-case scenario. The new rules include many recommendations made in a report Salazar released in May, including requirements that rigs certify that they have working blowout preventers and standards for cementing wells. The cement process and blowout preventer both failed to work as expected in the BP spill. The April 20 spill, which was triggered by an explosion that killed 11 people, dumped an estimated 200 million gallons of oil in the Gulf. BP killed the well two weeks ago and expects to eventually pay at least $32 billion to handle the cleanup and damage claims. Under the new rules, a professional engineer must independently inspect and certify each stage of the drilling

Census: Fast-growing US areas show big income drop

WASHINGTON (AP) — Call it the migration bust: Many of the fast-growing U.S. areas during the housing boom are now yielding some of the biggest income drops in the economic downturn. That could have broad impact on the political map in the coming weeks. Voter discontent over the economy and related issues such as immigration head to the polls on Nov. 2 to decide whether to keep Democrats in Congress. Whites and blacks have taken big hits since 2007 in once-torrid Sunbelt regions offering warm climates and open spaces, including Florida, Colorado, Arizona and Nevada, according to 2009 census data. Hispanics suffered paycheck losses in many “new immigrant” destinations in the interior U.S., which previously offered construction jobs and affordable housing, such as Tennessee, Georgia and North Carolina. The few bright spots: Washington, D.C., San Jose, Calif., San Francisco and Boston. Their household incomes remained among the highest in the nation last year partly due to steady demand for government and high-tech work. “As a whole, the income changes represent a sharp Uturn from the mid-decade gains,” said William H. Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution who reviewed the household income data. “The last two years have left those who couldn’t move stuck in place with lower incomes.” In December, the Census Bureau will release 2010 population counts, which triggers a politically contentious process of divvying up House seats. In all, Southern and Western states are expected to take seats away the Midwest and Northeast. But last-minute shifts could affect a handful of states hanging in the balance, including California, which is hoping to avoid losing its first seat ever, and Arizona, which may now gain just one seat rather than two based partly on slowing Hispanic population growth. The census data show that Hispanics, the nation’s largest and fastest-growing minority group, are helping drive growth in southeastern parts of the U.S. They include five states in which their numbers have doubled over the last decade — South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Alabama and Arkansas. Other big gainers included Georgia and North Carolina.

process. Blowout preventers — the emergency cutoff equipment designed to contain a major spill — must be independently certified and capable of severing the drill pipe under severe pressure. Companies also will be required to develop comprehensive plans to manage risks and improve workplace safety. Todd Hornbeck, CEO of Covington, La.-based Hornbeck Offshore Services, said lifting the moratorium would leave the industry in a “de facto moratorium stage” until the government fully explains how new drilling permits will be issued. “We’re still in the dark,” said Hornbeck, who heads up one of the companies that sued to block Interior’s initial moratorium. His company provides vessels and other services for the offshore industry. “The devil is in the details, as they say, and the industry hasn’t seen the final requirements for what we would have to do to be able to actually get a permit issued,” he added. “Until that is done, lifting the moratorium may be just a moot or perfunctory act. ... Right now, I’m skeptical that it will be anytime soon that permits will be issued even if the moratorium is lifted.” Billy Nungesser, president of the Plaquemines, La., parish and outspoken critic of the moratorium, said lifting the ban “would be great news. At a time when the future is still uncertain on how quickly the fishing and shrimping and all will come back, we could use some good news.”

Pfizer banks on King Pharma’s new painkillers

WASHINGTON (AP) — Pfizer’s purchase of King Pharmaceuticals announced Tuesday represents a $3.6 billion investment in an emerging class of painkillers that are designed to be less addictive than older pills such as OxyContin. The new products have been touted by federal health officials as an important way to curb prescription drug abuse, but they are relatively untested in the marketplace. In recent years, King, based in Bristol, Tenn., has thrown the bulk of its research funding into the effort to develop abuse-resistant versions of morphine and other opioid-based drugs. The effort has been encouraged by regulators at the Food and Drug Administration, who have watched reports of abuse climb into the millions over the last decade. Patients will often crush or dissolve extendedrelease painkillers to get an especially euphoric high. Last summer, King’s drug Embeda became the first tamper-resistant medication to win approval from the FDA. The morphine tablet contains an extra ingredient, naltrexone, which neutralizes the effect of the morphine if it is crushed or chewed. But analysts have been disappointed by the drug’s sales — just $15 million in the last quarter — and raised questions about the commercial potential of two other pain medications in King’s pipeline: Remoxy and Acurox. While Embeda aims at the morphine market, the main ingredient in Remoxy and Acurox is oxycodone. Both have been designed to make them less vulnerable to drug abuse. Remoxy is a version of extended-release oxycodone, but the opiate is contained in a thick liquid form. Acurox is intended to be a fast-acting form of the drug. If it is exposed to alcohol or water, the oxycodone inside gets trapped in a gel mixture that is hard to draw into a needle. If the drug is snorted, it creates a burning, irritating sensation in the nose. Oxycodone has a larger share of the pain drug market than morphine, so Remoxy and Acurox should have much higher sales than Embeda, said Gary Nachman, an analyst at Susquehanna & Co. Purdue Pharma’s branded version of the drug, Oxycontin, was the top-selling painkiller in the U.S. last year, with total sales of over $3 billion. Purdue recently launched its own abuse-resistant version of the drug.

Clinton seeks political reform in Sarajevo S A R A J E V O , Clinton’s stop in Bosnia is Bosnia-Herzegovthe first by a sitting secreina (AP) — U.S. Secretary of State tary of state since 2004 and Hillary Rodham her first to the country Clinton is pressing political since 1996, when she travrefor ms to the eled here as first lady after restive Balkans a peace accord technically with the hope that such ended the war. changes will lead to the region’s full integration into the European Union and NATO. Clinton arrived Monday night in Sarajevo, the capital of ethnically divided Bosnia-Herzegovina, which just held elections, to urge the country’s new leadership to make EU membership a priority. She then travels to Serbia and its now-independent former province of Kosovo to encourage the bitterly divided sides to normalize relations. From Kosovo, Clinton will bring her message to EU headquarters in Brussels, where she will also attend NATO meetings on Thursday with Defense Secretary Robert Gates to discuss European security, the situation in Afghanistan and prepare for a November summit of alliance leaders in Portugal. In Sarajevo on Tuesday, Clinton plans to meet with the three-member presidency to push for constitutional and other changes deemed necessary for EU membership. Bosnia is lagging behind other countries in the Western Balkans in making progress on such reforms, and its recent elections brought few changes to its political climate. “We’ve been quite clear that we believe that further reforms are necessary,” Philip Gordon, the top U.S. diplomat for Europe, told reporters aboard Clinton’s plane. “The Bosnians need to follow up,” Gordon said. “The rest of the region is moving towards Europe, and Bosnia is going to have to overcome these ethnic divisions ... if they want to go down this path.” At the same time, Gordon stressed that Clinton would not be trying to impose reform. Instead, he said, the secretary of state “will underscore to the parties the need to move forward with the types of reforms that will strengthen their candidacies for the European Union membership and NATO membership.” Gordon cited a provision in the constitution that prohibits anyone other than Bosniaks, Serbs or Croats from being president, a limitation that excludes Jews, Roma or other minorities from elected leadership positions. Bosnia is still divided between those who want to see the country split up along ethnic lines and those who want to see it unified and multiethnic. Since Bosnia’s brutal 1992-95 civil war, the country has been divided in two autonomous regions — a Serb republic and a federation of Bosniaks, or Bosnian Muslims, and Croats — linked by a weak central government. The EU has conditioned further progress toward membership on a stronger central government and a better -functioning state, but Bosnian Serbs reject the idea because they fear they would lose their autonomy. Clinton’s stop in Bosnia is the first by a sitting secretary of state since 2004 and her first to the country since 1996, when she traveled here as first lady after a peace accord technically ended the war. That visit, during which she met locals and U.S. troops at a military base in Tuzla, became an issue in the 2008 Democratic primaries when Clinton said she had arrived at the base under sniper fire. That assertion was questioned by eyewitnesses and Clinton’s campaign said later she misspoke when recalling a trip filled with security concerns. But the incident was seized on by her former primary opponent, now-President Barack Obama, and may have damaged her candidacy. After Bosnia, Clinton goes to the Serbian capital of Belgrade to push leaders there for a speedy start to talks with the world’s newest nation of Kosovo, which declared independence from Serbia in 2008 and is still not recognized by its former master and a number of European countries. Neither Serbia nor Kosovo are yet members of the EU. Serbian President Boris Tadic has said he is ready to participate in the talks but will never recognize Kosovo’s secession, a stance that does not auger well for the success of the negotiations. Clinton also hopes to tamp down calls in Serbia for Kosovo’s borders to be challenged as the U.S. believes that would set a bad precedent. On Wednesday, Clinton moves to Kosovo for similar discussion in the capital of Pristina where she plans to also promote tolerance and integration between the deeply divided ethnic Albanian and minority Serb communities. She will visit the Serb-majority town of Gracanica to stress the importance of inclusion, Gordon said.


A8 Wednesday, October 13, 2010

WEATHER

Roswell Seven-day forecast Tonight

Today

Sunshine and pleasant

Partly cloudy

Thursday

Friday

Sunny

Saturday

Bright and sunny

Mostly sunny

Monday

Sunday

Partly sunny and warm

Partly sunny

Roswell Daily Record

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

Sunshine

High 77°

Low 46°

78°/46°

80°/46°

83°/47°

83°/48°

85°/50°

79°/39°

WNW at 4-8 mph POP: 5%

W at 3-6 mph POP: 5%

W at 7-14 mph POP: 5%

NNE at 4-8 mph POP: 0%

SSW at 7-14 mph POP: 5%

NNE at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

ENE at 6-12 mph POP: 10%

NNE at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

New Mexico Weather

Roswell through 5 p.m. Tuesday

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

Regional Cities Today Thu.

Temperatures High/low ........................... 80°/49° Normal high/low ............... 78°/48° Record high ............... 95° in 1979 Record low ................. 37° in 1986 Humidity at noon ................... 30%

Farmington 71/38

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 70/43

Raton 65/33

Precipitation 24 hours ending 5 p.m. Tue. . 0.00” Month to date ....................... 0.15” Normal month to date .......... 0.61” Year to date ....................... 14.31” Normal year to date ........... 11.54”

Santa Fe 71/39

Gallup 75/31

Tucumcari 70/42

Albuquerque 74/47

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Clovis 70/45

Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading 40 0-50

51-100

Good

Moderate

Source: EPA

101-150

Ruidoso 67/50

151+

Unhealthy Unhealthy sensitive

T or C 76/49

Sun and Moon The Sun Today Thu. The Moon Today Thu. First

Oct 14

Rise Set 7:01 a.m. 6:27 p.m. 7:02 a.m. 6:26 p.m. Rise Set 1:08 p.m. 11:21 p.m. 1:50 p.m. none Full

Oct 22

Last

Oct 30

Alamogordo 78/46

Silver City 77/45

Carlsbad 81/48

Hobbs 78/43

Las Cruces 79/51

New

Nov 5

ROSWELL 77/46

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

78/46/s 74/47/s 64/30/s 80/50/s 81/48/s 65/28/s 70/43/s 64/28/s 70/45/s 80/48/s 73/46/s 71/38/s 75/31/s 78/43/s 79/51/s 63/35/s 67/35/s 74/49/s 77/46/s 71/45/s 71/32/s 65/33/s 64/28/s 77/46/s 67/50/s 71/39/s 77/45/s 76/49/s 70/42/s 70/36/s

78/44/s 75/48/s 70/30/s 79/49/s 80/46/s 69/27/s 81/47/s 69/27/s 76/47/s 79/46/pc 74/47/s 73/40/s 75/32/s 78/42/s 78/49/s 72/39/s 71/34/s 75/49/s 77/46/s 76/47/s 73/32/s 78/34/s 69/27/s 78/46/s 67/46/s 73/39/s 76/45/pc 77/47/s 77/45/s 73/37/s

Today

Thu.

Today

Thu.

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

41/30/s 80/59/pc 68/47/s 60/46/s 81/57/pc 66/45/pc 66/50/pc 82/52/s 68/42/s 66/46/sh 80/53/s 87/73/pc 85/60/s 72/44/sh 68/43/s 88/63/s 89/64/pc 74/46/s

41/28/s 70/47/s 61/46/r 60/52/pc 73/47/pc 64/46/s 60/45/pc 82/53/s 76/44/s 60/43/pc 79/51/s 87/73/pc 83/53/s 63/45/s 72/48/s 88/64/s 91/65/s 81/49/s

84/72/t 79/48/s 64/42/s 82/64/pc 63/50/s 68/39/s 87/66/s 67/47/s 98/70/s 66/46/s 70/44/s 78/57/pc 72/46/pc 65/41/s 76/63/pc 64/44/s 94/66/s 68/52/s

83/71/t 78/49/s 65/40/s 81/58/s 62/52/r 74/42/s 87/63/pc 61/48/r 97/71/s 57/44/r 67/46/pc 70/44/r 69/47/s 70/44/s 81/63/pc 58/46/c 91/63/t 63/47/r

Miami Midland Minneapolis New Orleans New York Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Raleigh St. Louis Salt Lake City San Diego Seattle Tucson Washington, DC

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

State Extremes

High: 100°....... Palm Springs, Calif. Low: 15°...West Yellowstone, Mont.

High: 83°............................Deming Low: 21°.........................Angel Fire

National Cities Seattle 64/44

Minneapolis 64/42

Billings 68/43

Detroit 66/46

Denver 68/42

San Francisco 89/56

Washington 68/52

Kansas City 68/43 Los Angeles 89/64

Atlanta 80/59 El Paso 80/53

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

Houston 85/60

Miami 84/72

Fronts

Precipitation

WE GET INTO HELPING YOU HEAR BETTER Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2010

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

Cold

-10s

Warm

-0s

Stationary

0s

10s

20s

Showers T-storms

30s

40s

50s

IT’S TIME FOR YOUR FREE HEARING TEST!

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YOUR HOROSCOPE

ARIES (March 21-April 19) You settle into a very hard work pace and might not be ready to leave work at the conventional time of day. Review some structural ideas and concepts before proceeding in a set, chosen direction. Tonight: Burning the midnight oil. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You challenge yourself to get to the root of a problem before you make a decision. Though someone might think you are playing games or stalling, you are really seeking out more information. Tonight: Where there is music. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) A partner might be slightly more challenging than you anticipated, causing a lot of problems and affecting your perspective and willingness to grasp his or her issue. Diplomatically explain the ramifications of this type of behavior. Tonight: Dinner with a favorite person. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Defer to others and be willing to open up to new beginnings. Intense gatherings mark your decisions. Be careful as to how much you take on. You could suddenly feel overwhelmed. Tonight: Head home. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Maintain a steady pace, and remain sure of your choices. You have discussed an issue until you are blue in the face. Have you not made a choice? Express your caring in a way that is meaningful. Tonight: Keep at what you are doing. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Where others struggle, you express an innate creativity and an unusually dynamic style. You could be pushed beyond your limits financially. If so, don’t play ostrich — stick your head out and let others know. Tonight: Let your wildness emerge. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) You could be very tired and drawn. In your ability to see beyond the obvious lies a steady basis in your thinking and choices. Update your office or a special room in your home to reflect the changing you. Tonight: Happily head home. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Sometimes you ask a lot of questions; other times others will simply start talking. Listen well, because much could be revealed in the present moment. You could be a bit hurt if you take a situation personally. Tonight: Exchange ideas. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Be aware of self-imposed limitations, especially financially. Drop the word “no” from your vocabulary, and replace it with “how can I make ‘x’ happen?” The results could be substantially different. Tonight: Make it your treat. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You are all smiles, even if you are working through a difficult matter. You don’t need to worry, as you have the power and strength to make the mark you want. Don’t allow a boss or older person to ride you too hard. Tonight: Moving along ... AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Much that you see or observe is best not shared. Keep certain insights to yourself, and you might find that people remain more open with you. Read between the lines with someone at a distance. Tonight: Behind the scenes. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You are on top of your game. You see life from a more resplendent perspective. Let a friend open up to new impressions and get to know you better. Someone could be unusually cold. Tonight: Where the action is.

New York 63/50

Chicago 66/45

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Wednesday, October 13, 2010

LOCAL SCHEDULE WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 13 COLLEGE VOLLEYBALL 11 a.m. • NMMI at Midland College

LOCAL BRIEFS TOBOSA GOLF TOURNEY TO BE HELD OCT. 16

Tobosa Developmental Services will host its fourth annual Go For The Gold golf tournament on Saturday, Oct. 16, at Spring River Golf Course. The format is a three-person scramble based on points per handicap. The cost is $75 per player or $225 per team. The fee includes drinks and lunch, range balls, green fees, mulligans, door and proximity prizes and prizes and awards for the top five placers. For more information, call Joe Madrid at 973-4032 or Carlton Blewett at 622-9506.

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GOODELL: NO TIMETABLE FOR FAVRE WRAP-UP

CHICAGO (AP) — NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said Tuesday there was no timetable for wrapping up an investigation of an Internet report that Vikings quarterback Brett Favre sent racy text messages and lewd photos to a former New York Jets game hostess. “We’re just looking for facts now,” Goodell said at the NFL owners meeting. “I am going to deal with it as we get the facts.” He said he had no plans to meet with Favre, “but if it is something that would help us get to a conclusion and it is warranted, I will do so.” The investigation, announced last week, centers on a report by the sports website Deadspin that in 2008 Favre, then with the Jets, sent the photos and messages to Jenn Sterger. Sterger’s manager, Phil Reese, declined to say if his client has talked with the NFL. “This is something that allegedly happened two years ago,” Reese said in an e-mail to The Associated Press. “We don’t want a quick resolution, but the proper resolution.” Favre could be fined or suspended under the NFL’s personal conduct policy. “One of the reasons we instituted the personal conduct policy ... to make everyone understand their responsibilities,” Goodell said. “We’re not going down a line of speculation and hypothetical situations.” Favre has not responded to questions about the Deadspin report. Deadspin reported the voicemails include a man asking to meet with Sterger, who now is a TV personality for the Versus network. The website posted a video that contained those messages and several below-thewaist photos — said to be of Favre — that were allegedly sent to Sterger’s cell phone. COMMENT OR IDEA?

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Roswell Daily Record

LAWRENCE FOSTER RECORD SPORTS REPORTER

In the practices leading up to its game against Socorro on Tuesday, the NMMI Colts boys soccer team had worked on on passing and communicating. The practice definitely paid off as the Colts dominated the Warriors, 6-0. “You know this is a good win for us,” NMMI coach John Barbour said. “They have a young squad. When we went down there it was 8-0. We kind of knew going in how it was going to be. “We wanted to improve on our passing. We worked on that in practice and that’s one of the things that carried over into the game. Communication and passing, that was really the difference here today.” NMMI jumped on the young Warriors early as Mackenzie Salman scored in the 2nd minute to give the Broncos a 1-0 lead. Five minutes later, Jorge Garza increased the NMMI lead to 2-0 with his first goal. Garza was at it again in the 10th minute as he gave the Broncos a 3-0 lead as he beat the goalie on the backside for an easy goal. Getting an early, big lead was exactly what Barbour wanted, particularly after the Warriors had picked up a win over Hatch last week. “Psychologically, it is very important,” he said about getting a lead on a

Lawrence Foster Photo

NMMI’s Jose Ruiz Serhan (10) dribbles the ball into the Socorro box as Warrior goalie Will Schaffer, left and Bryan Melanson, right, defend during their game, Tuesday.

young team. “You don’t want to just be up by a couple, because then they still feel like they can get back into it. You want to get up by a good number of goals... I didn’t expect (them to beat Hatch), but when I heard that I told them ‘Guys, don’t think this is going to be easy.’ “So we talked to them from the beginning when war ming up and pretty much all week. We told them we need to take it to

them. We need to take it to them and not take it for granted, because it could very easily change. We wanted to make sure we got out quickly and stuck to our game, which is passing and communicating and hopefully get a few goals and put it out of reach early.” Joseph Stearns scored the Colts’ fourth goal in the 19th minute and the score remained 4-0 into the second half.

Jose Ruiz Serhan scored both of the second-half goals for the Colts. A convincing win was big for NMMI’s confidence as they square off against Silver High School on Thursday. The Fighting Colts have already beat NMMI 1-0 twice this year and Barbour would like to turn the table on his district foe. “Thursday is very key,” he said. “They bested us twice, 1-0. I would like to

return the favor to be quite honest. We’re going to work hard in practice tomorrow and build on what we have going now. “We’re going to have to really work hard and stay on it from the beginning until the end and not lose our focus. We have got to stay mentally focused on defense, but again it will come down to communication and passing.”

the road team won every game — a first in major league history. “It was a lot of fun, I know that much,” Lee said. “We had our back against the wall today and we came out and performed.” The Rangers will host the wild-card New York Yankees in the opener of the best-of-seven ALCS on Friday night. Texas’ previous three playoff appearances ended with first-round losses to New York, in 1996, 1998 and 1999. The teams split eight games during the regular season, with the Rangers winning the final four. “They’re a great team and that’s why they are where they are,” Lee said. “They’re going to be a good challenge, just like these guys.” Ian Kinsler hit a two-run homer in the ninth inning for Texas, which had been the only active major league franchise that had not won a playoff series. Lee improved to 6-0 with a 1.44 ERA and three complete games in seven career postseason starts, striking out 54 and walking six in 56 1-3 innings.

The left-hander, acquired from Seattle in July, threw 120 pitches and walked none. He retired his final nine batters and prevented Tampa Bay from completing an improbable comeback after losing the first two games at home. When B.J. Upton popped out to shortstop for the final out, Lee didn’t even watch the ball drop into Elvis Andrus’ glove. He simply walked toward catcher Bengie Molina and the two hugged as Rangers players poured onto the field to mob Lee near the plate. The Rays had the AL’s best record this season, giving them home-field advantage in the playoffs. But they lost all three games at Tropicana Field, managing only two runs in the process. The Rangers said it’s the first time the road team has won every game in a postseason series, according to research by the Elias Sports Bureau. This also was the first time a division series went

Lee, Rangers down Rays, advance to ALCS

AP Photo

The Texas Rangers' Cliff Lee pitches during the second inning against the Tampa Bay Rays during Game 5 of the American League Division Series, Tuesday.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — Clif f Lee added another impressive line to his growing October resume, putting the Texas Rangers on his back and carrying them into the AL

championship series for the first time. Lee tossed another postseason gem and Texas won a playoff series for the first time, beating the Tampa Bay Rays 5-1 Tuesday

night in a decisive Game 5 on the legs of some daring baserunning. Lee struck out 11 in a six-hitter for his second win over Rays ace David Price in a series in which

RECORD STAFF REPORTS

against Artesia because they’ll be ready for us and maybe that’s what we’re waiting on.” The Coyotes host Artesia in their District 4-4A debut on Thursday.

our intensity was a lot better than it has been in the last few matches.” Leah Dunnahoo led Hagerman’s offense with 10 kills, and she also added seven digs. Ysenia Grado had six digs and Lexi Mason added seven assists.

Coyote netters spike Cavegirls CARLSBAD — Roswell won its final non-district tuneup on Tuesday, defeating host Carlsbad 3-0 on Think Pink night in Carlsbad. The Coyotes (11-4) got off to a slow start, but still won Game 1 25-22 before cruising to a 25-14 win in Game 2 and a 25-17 win in Game 3. “We started off sluggish in the first game and I felt like we were giving points away and that wasn’t good for us,” Roswell coach Bobby Bates said. “But, I thought we did a good job keeping our compusure. “At least we’re still winning them, but at the same time, I’m still looking for us to do a better job completing the game. I don’t think we’re playing super well, but we’re not playing horrible. We’ll have to wake up

Hagerman 3, Capitan 1

CAPITAN — The Bobcats rebounded from their first district loss with their second district win on Tuesday, defeating host Capitan in four games. After falling 25-23 in Game 1, Hagerman (10-4) rattled off three straight wins to move to 2-1 in District 7-1A play. The Bobcats won Game 2 and Game 3 25-22 and then won Game 4 2521 to secure the win. “Overall, our team chemistry was a lot better,” said Bobcat coach Kate DeHoyos. “We just played a lot better as a team and

Gateway Chr. 3, Mescalero Apache 1

The Warriors moved to 2-1 in District 7-1A with a four-game victory over visiting Mescalero Apache on Tuesday at the Red Rock Warrior Center. Gateway (10-4) won Game 1 25-8, but the Chiefs rallied for a Game 2 win, 2522, to tie the match. The Warriors then closed things out by winning Game 3 2516 and Game 4 25-10. “We have a tendency to, if See WRAP, Page B2

l.foster@roswell-record.com

See FIRST, Page B2

NFL expects to review controversial catch rule CHICAGO (AP) — Calvin Johnson’s nocatch just might become a catch in the future. The NFL expects to review the rule that cost the Lions’ star receiver a potential winning touchdown in a season-opening loss to Chicago. After Johnson went to the turf with possession, he placed the ball on the ground as he ran to celebrate. It’s been one of the season’s most discussed — and dissed — calls. “The going-to-theground rule definitely will be discussed,” NFL competition committee co-chair man Rich McKay said Tuesday at the league’s fall meetings. “It’s been dis-

cussed the last couple of years. It’s a difficult rule. It was made for on-field officials, not as much for people watching on TV.” “There’s a definite conflict,” he added. “We have to go back and look if we extended it too far.” Against Chicago, with Detroit trailing 19-14, Johnson leaped to grab a pass from Shaun Hill in the end zone. He got both feet and a knee on the ground before putting the ball on the grass and beginning to celebrate. It was ruled incomplete because Johnson didn’t maintain possession of the ball throughout the entire process of the catch.

See REVIEW, Page B2


B2 Wednesday, October 13, 2010 First

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the full five games since the Los Angeles Angels beat the New York Yankees in 2005. A pair of Rangers runners scored from second base on infield grounders — thanks to heads-up baserunning by Elvis Andrus and Vladimir Guerrero. It’s the first playof f series victory in the 50season history of the Washington/Texas franchise. “It’s something we’re proud of,” slugger Josh Hamilton said. “Hopefully, we can take it to the next level.” Back in the clubhouse, the first round of celebrating was with ginger ale so that Hamilton, who has battled alcohol and drug addiction, could take part. When he left the room, the Rangers brought out champagne. Lee, the 2008 AL Cy Young Award winner, won the series opener 5-1, allowing five hits and striking out 10 over seven innings. He fanned Rays slugger Carlos Pena six of the seven times he faced him in the series, and finished with an AL division series record 21 Ks in two games. Texas pitchers struck out 55 in the five games, a record for a division series in either league. After losing the first two games at Tropicana Field, the Rays rallied to win Games 3 and 4 in Texas to give themselves a

Local

Roswell Youth Football League Standings and results As of Oct. 2 11-12 Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Cowboys . . . . . . . . . . . .5 0 Cardinals . . . . . . . . . . . .4 0 Redskins . . . . . . . . . . . .4 1 Lobos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 2 Longhorns . . . . . . . . . . .3 3 Broncos . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 4 Giants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 5 USC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 6

T 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0

Pct. .917 .900 .800 .667 .500 .200 .000 .000

9-10 Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Red Raiders . . . . . . . . . .4 49ers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Cowboys . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Ducks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Greyhounds . . . . . . . . . .2 Raiders . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Gators . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1 Valley Maroon . . . . . . . .0 Valley White . . . . . . . . . .0 LSU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0

T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Pct. 1.000 .833 .800 .667 .500 .500 .250 .000 .000 .000

Weekly results Monday, Oct. 4 Cardinals 24, USC 6 Cowboys 41, Broncos 6 Tuesday, Oct. 5 Lobos 6, Longhorns 0 Redskins 16, Giants 0 Thursday, Oct. 7 Cowboys 29, Broncos 0 Cardinals 16, USC 6 Saturday, Oct. 9 Lobos 8, USC 0 Cowboys 6, Longhorns 0

Weekly results Tuesday, Oct. 5 49ers 24, Greyhounds 0 Thursday, Oct. 7 Cowboys 7, Valley White 6 Saturday, Oct. 9 Raiders 13, LSU 0 49ers 35, Cowboys 0 Red Raiders 41, Gators 6

7-8 Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Eagles . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Georgia Bulldogs . . . . . .5 Cowboys . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Cardinals . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Spartans . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 Chargers . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Ravens . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Steelers . . . . . . . . . . . . .0 Gators . . . . . . . . . . . . . .0

L 0 1 1 1 2 2 3 3 3 4

L 0 1 1 2 3 4 4 4 5

Weekly results Monday, Oct. 4 Eagles 19, Cowboys 0 Georgia Bulldogs 7, Gators 0 Tuesday, Oct. 5 Spartans 6, Ravens 2 Thursday, Oct. 7 Chargers 7, Cardinals 6 Saturday, Oct. 9 Georgia Bulldogs 32, Chargers 26 Eagles 13, Spartans 0 Cowboys 6, Ravens 0

T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Pct. 1.000 .833 .800 .600 .500 .333 .333 .000 .000

Baseball

Braves begin life without Bobby Cox as manager

ATLANTA (AP) — Bobby Cox strolled into the Atlanta Braves clubhouse around lunchtime Tuesday with that familiar waddle, only this time he was wearing his new uniform: A blue golf shirt and slacks. The duds of retirement. “Are y’all still here?” he jokingly yelled toward the handful of players who had returned to clean out their lockers, not even 24 hours removed from a season-ending loss in the NL division series. On the first day of the rest of his life, Cox still had plenty of loose ends to tie up. First up was a meeting with general manager Frank Wren, probably to start graphing out his new consulting role with the organization. At some point, he’ll have to pack up his office to make room for the next guy. As strange as it seems, someone besides ol’ No. 6 will be occupying that spot next season. “It’s still hard to believe he’s not going to be the manager come spring training,” Chipper Jones said. But that’s the reality, and Wren made it clear

SPORTS chance to join the 1985 Royals, 1986 Mets, 1996 Yankees and 2001 Yankees as the only teams to lose the first two games of a postseason series at home and come back to win the series. Those 2001 Yankees were the only ones to rally in a best-of-five playof f, bouncing back against Oakland in 2001, when Rangers manager Ron Washington was the Athletics’ third base coach. For the first time since Tampa Bay’s final four home games of the 2008 postseason, the tarps from the upper deck at T ropicana Field were removed, boosting capacity in the domed stadium by about 5,000 seats — some with obstructed views. But a sellout crowd of 41,845 was not enough to keep the Rays’ bats from going silent again. Not with Lee on the mound. Jason Bartlett had three hits off Lee, but the Rays went 1 for 7 with runners in scoring position, with that lone hit being Ben Zobrist’s RBI single that tied it 1-all in the third. Price, a 19-game winner in his first full season in the majors, allowed three runs and eight hits in six innings. The Rangers hurt him with two long home runs in Game 1, but did much of their damage this time on ground balls that forced him to cover first base. Lee went 4-0 with a 1.56 ERA in five postseason starts for Philadelhe’s already got a timeframe in mind to name Cox’s successor. Most of the speculation has centered on Fredi Gonzalez, who was fired by Florida in June after 3 1/2 years as the Marlins manager. He was a minor league manager in the Braves organization and did an apprenticeship as Cox’s third-base coach from 2003-06. Gonzalez still lives in suburban Atlanta, remained tight with Cox and frequently turned up at Turner Field after being dumped by the Marlins. The Braves are likely to act quickly — Wren, after all, has known for more than a year that this would be Cox’s final season. Pitcher Jair Jurrjens said he hopes the next manager is in the same mold as Cox, who did not ask much of his players beyond working hard and showing up on time. If they followed those two simple rules (and abided by a couple of other minor pet peeves: No loud music or using cell phones in the clubhouse), they knew Cox had their back. “When you come in here now, you know what kind of rules you have,” Jurrjens said. “You hope it’s not going to be different, just the same type of guy, someone who lets us do our thing and have fun. I don’t want a sergeant to come in here with a bunch of rules.” Cox’s successor will inherit a team that has one of baseball’s best pitching staffs. The rotation is in good hands with 17-game winner Tim Hudson, Derek Lowe, Tommy Hanson and Jurrjens. Even though closer Billy Wagner is retiring along with Cox, a trio of promising rookies emerged this season: Jonny Venters (1.95 ERA, 93 strikeouts in 83 innings), Craig Kimbrel (0.44 ERA, 40 Ks in 20 2-3 innings) and Mike Dunn (1.89 ERA). Throw in ground-ball specialist Peter Moylan and the bullpen looks in good hands. “It’s been the strength of our club,” Wren said. “Pitching is the hardest thing to get, and we have it.” Other than hiring a new manager, the top priority for the offseason is clear: The Braves desperately need a power-hitting outfielder — preferably right-handed — to bolster a lineup that was shaky at best and had no chance after season-ending injuries to Jones and All-Star infielder Martin Prado. Atlanta batted .175 and scored only nine runs in its four-game loss to San Francisco in the playoffs. Jones, who had considered retiring, changed his mind after going down with a knee injury. He hopes to be at close to full strength by the start of spring training and would presumably reclaim third base. That would send Prado back to second and free up Omar Infante, perhaps the team’s biggest surprise, to go wherever he’s needed. Infante wound up third in the NL in hitting (.321) and can play six positions. He even threw out the possibility of moving to center field, a weak spot for the Braves ever since they parted ways with Andruw Jones. Freddie Freeman is set to take over at first base after getting a brief taste of the majors this season. The Braves hope he can have the impact of this year’s rookie star, Jason Heyward, who earned the starting job in right field at age 20 and showed he was worthy of it (.277, 18 HRs, 72 RBIs). Assuming the Braves pick up a club option on shortstop Alex Gonzalez, the lineup could look a whole lot better in 2011 with one more big bopper in the middle of it. As for Cox, he will remain a part of the organization in a consulting role that is largely his to carve out. For instance, when the team’s top officials meet in Florida next week to start laying out their plans and priorities for next season, Cox is welcome to come along. “Quite frankly, we want him to be as involved as he wants to be,” Wren said. Just no spikes when he’s hanging out in the executive suite. “That wouldn’t be good for the hardwood floors,” Wren quipped. The unique bond between Cox and his players was there even on the first day of retirement. Brooks Conrad, whose three errors in Game 3 helped shorten Cox’s final season, ran into his now ex-manager in a hallway. They hugged and Conrad asked if Cox planned to be at Turner Field on Wednesday. Cox said he would be. “Would you mind signing a few things for me?” Conrad asked. “I’ll sign anything you want,” Cox said with a smile.

Football

AEG would manage LA

phia in 2009. He began this season with the Mariners and was acquired by Texas in the hope that he again would make a difference in the playoffs. Despite the lack of success against Lee in the opener, the Rays were confident going into Game 5. They beat him three times during the regular season and hit the ball hard in Game 1, even though they had just five hits to show for it. The Rangers gave Lee an early 1-0 lead, catching the Rays napping after Andrus led off the game with a single and stole second base. Price coaxed Hamilton into hitting a grounder to first base, and Andrus — running on the pitch — scored from second base when Pena flipped the ball to Price covering the bag and the pitcher didn’t turn to check on Andrus. Texas remained aggressive on the bases. The slow-footed Molina singled and stole second on a full-count pitch in the third, his first steal since Sept. 9, 2006, with Toronto. In the fourth, Nelson Cruz doubled off the wall in the deepest part of the ballpark — narrowly missing his fourth homer of the series. He put the Rangers ahead 2-1 when he stole third — with two outs — and continued home on a throwing error by catcher Kelly Shoppach. An alert play by Guerrero gave the Rangers another run for a 3-1 lead in the sixth.

Heat rally to beat CSKA Moscow

MIAMI (AP) — CSKA Moscow provided one scare, then LeBron James gave Miami another. The Heat survived both. James scored 22 points in 26 minutes before leaving with leg cramps in the third quarter, Chris Bosh added 17 points and eight rebounds, and the Heat overcame an early 10-point deficit to beat the Euroleague powerhouse 9685 in an exhibition on Tuesday night. Former Duke star Trajan Langdon scored 20 for CSKA Moscow, which got 17 from Jamont Gordon and 15 from Ramunas Siskauskas. It took a 23-4 run in the third quarter — with James and Bosh combining for 19

SCOREBOARD

convention center in NFL plan

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The president and CEO of AEG, the company that owns LA Live and Staples Center, said Tuesday that he is exploring a deal for the company to manage the adjacent Los Angeles Convention Center as part of a plan to bring an NFL team to downtown. Tim Leiweke said at a downtown business forum that he and City Councilwoman Jan Perry have discussed a plan to redevelop one of the convention center’s halls into an exhibition space that could double as an enclosed NFL stadium. Leiweke made his remarks a day after Majestic Realty Co., which is planning a separate stadium some 15 miles east of Los Angeles, said it is tweaking its design to lure World Cup soccer matches. Leiweke mentioned the World Cup and NCAA Final Four games as events that could take place in the downtown stadium as well. But he said it would also boost the city’s convention and exhibition business, which he predicted would ripple through the downtown economy. “Game, set, match. Everything else will come,” he said. “Retail will come, transportation will come and people will move back down here.” The potential plan would require AEG to invest $1 billion to build the stadium. Leiweke said the company would also consider asking the city for a contract to manage the entire Convention Center site, including the new structure. Leiweke said the proposal would nearly double the amount of exhibition and meeting space in the convention center from 867,000 to 1.4 million square feet.

Branch practices with Patriots

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — Together again, Deion Branch and Tom Brady walked side-by-side to the sunny practice field. The Patriots new wide receiver was getting a crash course on plays installed since he left in 2006 after they were part of two NFL championships. “I still remember some plays,” Branch said Tuesday. “They didn’t call those plays today.” The Patriots reacquired the player they drafted in the second round in 2002 — and the MVP of the 2005 Super Bowl — from the Seattle Seahawks on Monday for a fourth-round draft pick next year. Some things are the same since New England traded him to Seattle. Brady, center Dan Koppen, tackle Matt Light, guard Stephen Neal and running back Kevin Faulk are still around from the offense. And much is different. The Patriots haven’t won the Super Bowl since he left. Randy Moss has come and gone. And Branch is wearing No. 84 because his old 83 belongs to Wes Welker. “Wes came in, did a great job,” Branch said with one of the many wide smiles he flashed throughout his 10-minute news conference. “I’m just going to get one (number) higher than his because I’m taller than him.” At 5-foot-9, Branch doesn’t exactly tower over Welker. And with Julian Edelman, listed at 5-10, three of the Patriots top four receivers are small. Size isn’t the only difference between Branch and the 6-4 Moss, whose trade to the Minnesota Vikings on Wednesday created the need for an experienced wide receiver. Branch hopes to play Sunday against the Baltimore Ravens. “That’s the first thing I want to let you all know,” Branch said. “I’m not here to replace Randy. I’m not Randy Moss. I wasn’t Randy Moss when I was here and I’m not here to replace him. My job is to go out and do what the offense asks me to do.” Moss was a deep threat who drew double teams. Branch is a possession receiver. But both left the Patriots after having contract concerns and said they felt as if they were home again after being traded to their original NFL teams. Moss said several times this year he didn’t think the Patriots would re-sign him before his contract expired after this season. Branch, who led the Patriots with 78 catches in 2005, was traded the day after the 2006 opener following a 45-day holdout staged in hopes of improving on the $1.045 million he was to receive that year, the last of his original contract. “I wish it never happened, but no regrets,”

Roswell Daily Record

of those points — for Miami to create any sort of comfort zone over their Russian guests, who will also face Oklahoma City and Cleveland on their NBA preseason tour before returning to Moscow early next week. This one wasn’t decided until the final minutes. Langdon’s jumper with 4:15 remaining cut Miami’s lead to five, but the Heat answered with four quick points. Kenny Hasbrouck — fighting for a roster spot — found Udonis Haslem for a layup on the next Miami possession, then added a driving layup in transition for a 90-81 lead. Hasbrouck finished with 12 points and four assists for Miami. Matjaz Smodis

scored 11 for CSKA Moscow. Miami played again without Dwyane Wade, who is continuing to recover from a strained right hamstring suffered in the preseason opener on Oct. 5. Mike Miller started in his place again for the Heat, who were also without Carlos Arroyo and Jamaal Magloire, neither of whom is expected to be back when Miami visits New Orleans on Wednesday. CSKA Moscow got quite a welcome: An opera singer performed the Russian national anthem, and a group of fans waved the nation’s flag directly across from the visiting bench. The Heat even exchanged gifts with their Euroleague foes just before tip-off.

AP Photo

CSKA Moscow center Dmitry Sokolov (30) tries to block a shot by Miami Heat forward LeBron James (6) during the first half of their game, Tuesday.

he said. “When I left here there weren’t any issues between me and Coach (Bill) Belichick, none at all. We talked during the course of the year. ... We didn’t leave on a bad note and I think that’s why it was so easy to return.” Branch is signed through next season with base salaries of $5.45 million in 2010 and $5.95 million in 2011. But he said he’d be willing to adjust that. He also said he thought it more likely he would be traded last year when he started just five of his 14 games. Brady isn’t sure Branch’s transition will be smooth. “I’m sure there will be a pretty steep learning curve for him. Hopefully, he gets up to speed as quickly as possible because we’ll need him this week,” Brady said on his weekly appearance on WEEI radio. Brady also denied a report aired on a CBS pregame show Sunday that he and Moss had a confrontation before the receiver was traded. Branch, in his first stint with the Patriots, had 213 receptions for 14 touchdowns. Moss was much more prolific with 259 catches and 50 touchdown receptions in three full seasons plus four games this year. But Branch was outstanding in the 2004 and 2005 Super Bowls with a total of 21 catches. “I’m excited,” said Edelman, a seventhround draft choice last year. “He’s been here when they won Super Bowls and I’m going to be able to get to learn from another guy, another veteran,” Branch started three of Seattle’s four games this season, catching 13 passes for 112 yards and one touchdown. He’s been healthy after missing parts of the past three seasons with knee, hamstring and foot injuries. He caught 190 passes, 15 for touchdowns, with the Seahawks. He said he was “very thankful” to have been part of the Seahawks organization and also to return to the team that drafted him then traded him for a first-round pick in 2007 that turned out to be starting safety Brandon Meriweather. “The opportunity presented itself and they took another shot at it,” Branch said.

Kraft: CBA solution in 2010 realistic

CHICAGO (AP) — For now, optimism is the approach for NFL owners in negotiations with the players on a new collective bargaining agreement. New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft said Tuesday it’s a realistic goal to reach a new CBA before the end of the season. At the conclusion of the league’s fall meetings, Kraft said “we’re moving ahead. I’d like to see this get done before the season ends.” Asked if that was a realistic objective, he added “to me it is.” Even as the 32 owners were discussing strategies for negotiations with the NFL Players Association and the possibility of a work stoppage, many of them were expressing confidence that pro football is not headed for a lockout. The CBA expires in March, and union officials steadfastly claim they expect to be locked out if a new deal isn’t reached. “It’s taken a lot of time and energy to build the league into what it is and we want to keep it going,” Colts owner Jimmy Irsay said Tuesday. “I don’t think it’s doomsday, and we’re taking it a day at a time. Everybody is engaged, and from my perspective the key thing is to find a solution. That’s where both sides are. “I know that energy (to reach a deal) will be

TV SPORTSWATCH

TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press (All times Mountain) Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Wednesday, Oct. 13 COLLEGE FOOTBALL 6 p.m. ESPN — UCF at Marshall NHL HOCKEY 5 p.m. VERSUS — N.Y. Islanders at Washington

there.” Added Commissioner Roger Goodell: “Our issue is to get there sooner rather than later, bargaining in good faith and get an agreement with the players that is fair.” NFLPA president Kevin Mawae, who recently retired after a 16-year playing career, also called for an early agreement. “We should recognize the business we are both in and for our fans and workers, let’s wrap this up by the holidays,” Mawae told The Associated Press in an e-mail. “I agree on both time and energy. Since 2006, the players contributed almost $3 billion to stadium construction and improvements, so our investment is at risk, too. The players are the ones losing their health care, and yet it was the owners who opted out of this deal and are threatening a lockout.” Expanding the regular season to 18 games was not discussed, except when Irsay joked about it. Colts President Bill Polian said recently that it was a “fait accompli,” and Polian was admonished by Goodell. “There’s nothing else to report,” Irsay said with a laugh. “My president said some things and then the commissioner said some things to him and I said some things.” Goodell reiterated Tuesday that the league wants all of its partners involved in such a decision. “We’re trying to do it the right way, in a comprehensive fashion and understanding all perspectives of this,” Goodell said. “We recognize the player health safety issues and what we do to prepare our players in the offseason. I think we’ve been both thoughtful and intelligent. We made a proposal to the players on this. “Every day you go by without implementing it, that’s probably another day it is into the future. We’re not as focused on when as much as doing it properly.” Goodell and the NFL Alumni announced a partnership to benefit retired players that will include the Gay Culverhouse Players’ Outreach Program. Efforts will include hiring case workers, establishment of a toll-free hotline and personal contact with retired players and their families through events sponsored by NFL Alumni and the Culverhouse program. “There are very comprehensive benefits and services available,” Goodell said. “But too often former players and their families don’t know what they are or how to gain access to the programs.”

Transactions

Tuesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League DETROIT TIGERS — Declined their 2011 contract option on OF Maggio Ordonez. National League CHICAGO CUBS — Announced the retirement of ticket operations director Frank Maloney, effective at the end of the 2010 calendar year. BASKETBALL Women’s National Basketball Association NEW YORK LIBERTY — Named John

Wrap

Continued from Page B1

we win pretty easily at first, relax too much and take it for granted, so it wasn’t a great game,” said Warrior coach Kerri Pirtle. “It’s good, but it wasn’t the caliber of win we were looking for.” Hannah Bradshaw and Sadie Fox each served the ball well, recording four and three aces, respectively.

Whisenant coach and general manager. FOOTBALL National Football League BUFFALO BILLS — Signed LB Thomas Williams to the practice squad. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Re-signed QB Brett Ratliff. Terminated the contract of WR Sam Aiken. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Placed OL Nick Kaczur on injured reserve. HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS — Signed G Igor Bobkov to a three-year contract. BOSTON BRUINS — Assigned G Nolan Schaefer to Providence (AHL). CAROLINA HURRICANES — Assigned F Jiri Tlusty to Charlotte (AHL) for conditioning. TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS — Waived D Jeff Finger. SOCCER Women’s Professional Soccer PHILADELPHIA INDEPENDENCE — Traded G Karina LeBlanc to Chicago for 2011 first- and third-round draft picks.n COLLEGE CONFERENCE USA — Suspended East Carolina DB Derek Blacknall one game for a flagrant personal foul committed during Saturday’s game against Southern Mississippi. GEORGIA — Suspended TB Caleb King two games following King’s arrest on Monday for failing to appear at a court date for a speeding ticket. SAGE — Named Sean McAvoy men’s assistant basketball coach. TEXAS A&M-CORPUS CHRISTI — Named Mark Dannhoff men’s assistant basketball coach. WRIGHT STATE — Named Kyle Oaks assistant swimming and diving coach.

Review

Continued from Page B1

The competition committee will meet after the Super Bowl and then suggest any rules changes to team owners at the league’s spring meetings in March. McKay also said another move that drew criticism, switching the umpire from behind the defense line to behind the of fensive backfield, is working. He hasn’t seen any video of an umpire being hit by another player; last season, there were “between 105 and 115 hits on video.” But the move has affected the number of of fensive holding penalties, which were up through four weeks. Placing the umpire behind the of fense apparently has given him a better view of blocking on the line. Several quarterbacks, particularly Peyton Manning, complained in the preseason that the new positioning of the umpires delayed spotting of the ball to restart play.


FINANCIAL

Roswell Daily Record

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

1.20 74.66 -.65 Div Last Chg Deere ... 11.42 +.18 DeltaAir A-B-C DenburyR ... 17.50 -.11 AES Corp ... 12.30 +.08 DevonE .64 66.84 -.30 AFLAC 1.20f 54.50 +.14 DiaOffs .50a 69.37 +2.69 AK Steel .20 14.50 -.14 DianaShip ... 13.76 -.03 AMB Pr 1.12 26.75 -.20 DrxEMBll s5.68e 37.57 -.47 ... 6.37 +.16 DrSCBear rs ... 23.59 -.16 AMR AT&T Inc 1.68 28.39 +.07 DirFnBear ... 12.22 -.37 AU Optron ... 9.71 -.09 DrxFBull s ... 23.19 +.66 AbtLab 1.76 53.51 +.70 DirxSCBull4.77e 51.34 +.46 AberFitc .70 45.03 +1.27 DirxLCBear ... d11.46 -.13 Accenture .90f 45.73 +.17 DirxLCBull8.06e 56.72 +.56 AMD ... 7.30 +.06 DirxEnBull5.06e 37.16 -.11 Aeropostl s ... 27.00 +1.25 Discover .08 17.09 +.15 .35 34.48 -.09 .04 31.01 +.11 Disney Aetna ... 33.68 -.07 DomRescs 1.83 44.32 -.37 Agilent 1.10f 54.05 -.02 Agnico g .18 72.17 -.49 Dover Agrium g .11 u85.47 +2.47 DowChm .60 29.81 -.04 AirTran ... 7.34 ... DuPont 1.64 46.29 +.20 AlcatelLuc ... 3.61 +.01 DukeEngy .98f 17.58 -.04 Alcoa .12 13.20 +.27 DukeRlty .68 12.04 -.07 AllgEngy .60 24.20 -.18 Dynegy rs ... 4.87 +.12 ... 20.20 +.14 Allergan .20 u67.54 -.36 EMC Cp ... 4.26 +.04 ... 1.26 -.01 EKodak AldIrish .80 32.52 +.09 EdisonInt 1.26 35.43 +.08 Allstate AlphaNRs ... 45.30 -.46 ElPasoCp .04 12.99 -.10 ... 5.97 +.02 1.52f 24.54 +.19 Elan Altria Alumina .15e 7.87 -.01 EldorGld g .05 18.42 -.15 AmbacF h ... .77 +.03 EmersonEl 1.34 53.00 -.19 Ameren 1.54 28.91 -.27 EnCana g s .80 30.39 -.18 AMovilL 1.31e 55.58 -.19 ENSCO 1.40 46.23 +1.50 AmAxle ... 9.08 +.09 EqtyRsd 1.35 49.48 +.93 AEagleOut .44 17.36 +.25 EsteeLdr .55 67.00 +1.60 1.68 35.86 -.43 Exelon 2.10 43.03 -.17 AEP .72 38.54 +.60 ExxonMbl 1.76 64.70 +.15 AmExp AmIntlGrp ... 41.78 +.74 FairchldS ... 9.80 +.13 AmTower ... 50.62 +.61 FamilyDlr .62 u46.11 -.03 Ameriprise .72 49.96 +.26 FedExCp .48 87.98 -.42 AmeriBrgn .32 32.06 +.27 FidlNFin .72 14.72 +.60 Anadarko .36 58.30 -.48 FidNatInfo .20 27.56 +.48 AnalogDev .88 32.56 +.07 FstHorizon .72t 11.40 -.30 AnglogldA .18e 46.80 ... FirstEngy 2.20 38.35 -.09 ... 22.04 -.18 FlowrsFds .80 24.40 -.96 AnnTaylr .50 51.42 -.49 Annaly 2.60e 18.02 +.25 Fluor Aon Corp .60 39.50 +.51 FootLockr .60 15.63 +.10 ... 13.78 ... FordM .60 101.57 -.44 Apache ArcelorMit .75 34.32 -.08 ForestLab ... 32.63 +.39 .76 57.05 +1.55 FortuneBr ArchCoal .40 26.60 -.22 ArchDan .60 32.71 +.15 FrankRes .88 115.50 +2.11 1.20 95.43 +.05 ArvMerit ... 16.88 +.39 FMCG Avon .88 34.54 +1.38 FrontierCm .75 u8.63 +.03 BB&T Cp .60 23.82 +.32 G-H-I BHP BillLt1.74e 80.23 -.83 BP PLC ... 41.26 +.02 GameStop ... 19.80 -.57 .60 44.73 +.25 Gannett .16 13.77 -.01 BakrHu .40 18.71 +.44 BcoBrades .51r u21.79 +.12 Gap BcoSantand.80e 12.81 ... GenElec .48f 17.19 +.23 BcoSBrasil .33e u15.11 +.23 GenMills s 1.12 36.86 +.28 BkofAm .04 13.52 +.37 Genworth ... 12.87 +.10 BkIrelnd 1.04e 3.60 +.06 Gerdau .21e 13.35 -.06 BkNYMel .36 26.58 +.02 GlobPay .08 38.90 -3.44 Barclay .22e 18.83 -.07 GoldFLtd .16e 15.72 -.02 BarVixShT ... d14.50 -.61 Goldcrp g .18 43.97 -.02 BarrickG .48f 48.44 -.27 GoldmanS 1.40 155.21 +3.01 1.16 49.42 +.07 Goodyear ... 11.76 -.07 Baxter BeazerHm ... 4.32 +.17 GpTelevisa.52e 21.76 +.08 BerkH B s ... 83.30 +.35 HCP Inc 1.86 36.35 +.22 BestBuy .60 40.73 -.13 HSBC 1.70e 52.60 +.01 Blackstone .40 13.33 -.19 Hallibrtn .36 34.84 +.28 BlockHR .60 14.14 -.07 HarleyD .40 31.75 +.13 Boeing 1.68 70.22 +.23 HarmonyG .07e 11.41 -.08 Boise Inc ... 6.70 ... HartfdFn .20 24.39 +.36 ... 7.54 -.21 BorgWarn ... 53.11 +.59 HltMgmt ... 6.68 -.04 BostonSci ... 6.13 ... HeclaM .20 u5.93 +.13 BoydGm ... 8.54 +.12 Hersha ... 10.39 +.33 BrMySq 1.28 27.23 -.13 Hertz .40 62.67 -.37 BroadrdgF .60f 21.89 -.46 Hess .32 41.35 +.15 HewlettP BrkfldPrp .56 16.87 +.11 CB REllis ... u19.21 +.47 HomeDp .95 31.41 -.38 CBL Asc .80 13.99 +.33 HonwllIntl 1.21 45.55 -.06 .20 u17.90 +.39 HostHotls .04 15.81 +.29 CBS B CF Inds .40u116.37+2.92 Huntsmn .40 12.27 +.06 CIGNA .04 36.13 +.08 IAMGld g .06 17.73 +.02 CMS Eng .84f 18.83 -.09 ICICI Bk .53e 51.39 -.56 CNO Fincl ... 5.49 -.06 iShGold s ... 13.21 -.04 CRH .83e 16.85 -.60 iSAstla .81e 24.51 -.22 CSX 1.04f 57.26 -.91 iShBraz 2.58e 79.10 -.20 .42e u29.01 +.01 CVS Care .35 30.95 -.10 iSCan CabotO&G .12 30.66 -.87 iSh HK .48e 18.94 -.08 Calpine ... 12.69 +.01 iShJapn .16e 10.12 -.09 Cameron ... 43.36 +.03 iSh Kor .39e 54.32 -.84 CampSp 1.10 35.82 -.05 iSMalas .25e 14.00 +.04 CdnNRs gs .30 37.47 -.13 iShMex .75e 55.48 -.03 CapOne .20 40.57 +.89 iShSing .38e 13.55 -.01 CapitlSrce .04 5.84 +.01 iSTaiwn .21e 13.39 -.18 ... u22.84 +.06 CardnlHlth .78 32.84 +.18 iShSilver ... 29.43 -.25 iShChina25.68e 44.68 -.14 CarMax 2.34e 117.41 +.36 iSSP500 Carnival .40 40.18 +.07 Caterpillar 1.76f 79.34 -.64 iShEMkts .59e 46.01 -.19 .43t 8.15 +.07 iShSPLatA1.22e 51.85 +.12 Cemex CenterPnt .78 16.08 -.08 iShB20 T 3.82e 103.21 -1.03 CntryLink 2.90 39.79 +.03 iS Eafe 1.38e 56.68 -.12 ChesEng .30 23.87 +.57 iSR1KG .72e 52.61 +.19 Chevron 2.88 83.84 +.13 iSR2KG .47e 76.97 +.29 Chicos .16 11.32 +.38 iShR2K .79e 69.52 +.18 Chimera .69e 4.08 +.05 iShREst 1.88e 54.71 +.47 1.36f 48.27 -.02 ChiMYWd n ... d10.80 -2.10 ITW ChNBorun n ... 17.30 +.76 IngerRd .28 38.60 ... 2.60u139.85 +.19 Citigp pfN 1.97 26.07 -.03 IBM ... 5.97 +.01 ... 4.24 +.06 Intl Coal Citigrp CliffsNRs .56 68.31 -.73 IntlGame .24 14.84 -.18 .50 22.72 +.33 Coach .60 44.29 +.39 IntPap ... u22.85 +.17 Interpublic ... u10.65 -.06 CocaCE CocaCl 1.76 59.60 +.04 IntPotash ... 29.92 +.81 .44 22.44 -.06 Coeur ... 19.75 -.10 Invesco .25 20.96 +.06 ColgPal 2.12 74.94 +.09 IronMtn Comerica .20 38.89 +.29 ItauUnibH .59e 25.60 +.03 ConAgra .92f 22.03 +.07 J-K-L ConocPhil 2.20 59.61 -.18 ... 35.77 +1.08 ConsolEngy .40 39.47 -.13 JCrew ConstellEn .96 32.44 +.14 JPMorgCh .20 40.40 +.67 .28 14.69 +.12 ContlRes ... 47.98 -2.34 Jabil Corning .20 18.45 +.14 JanusCap .04 11.39 -.18 ... 7.71 -.36 JohnJn 2.16 63.29 -.01 Cott Cp CoventryH ... 22.89 +.27 JohnsnCtl .52 31.54 -.10 Covidien .80f 40.97 -.08 JnprNtwk ... 31.91 +.23 CrwnCstle ... 41.83 -.32 KB Home .25 10.92 -.12 Cummins 1.05f 92.26 -.80 Kellogg 1.62f 50.03 +.21 Keycorp .04 8.50 +.02 D-E-F .64 16.90 +.12 Kimco DCT Indl .28 4.91 -.03 KingPhrm ... u14.14 +3.99 DR Horton .15 10.72 +.18 Kinross g .10 18.94 -.20 ... 53.46 -.10 DanaHldg ... 13.23 +.02 Kohls 1.16 31.15 +.11 Danaher s .08 41.36 +.06 Kraft .42f 21.69 +.10 DeanFds ... 10.33 -.13 Kroger

Name

Name Sell Chg Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 18.47 +.07 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 17.53 +.07 Amer Century Inv: 6.88 ... EqInc GrowthI 23.53 +.08 Ultra 20.62 +.07 American Funds A: AmcpA p 17.23 +.04 AMutlA p 24.12 +.01 BalA p 17.20 +.02 BondA p 12.53 -.02 CapWA p 21.36 +.02 CapIBA p 49.67 -.01 CapWGA p34.98 +.03 EupacA p 40.75 +.01 FdInvA p 34.35 +.07 GovtA p 14.77 -.02 GwthA p 28.50 +.06 HI TrA p 11.26 ... IncoA p 16.30 ... IntBdA p 13.71 -.01 IntlGrIncA p30.82 +.01 ICAA p 26.62 +.05 NEcoA p 24.01 +.02 N PerA p 27.25 +.07 NwWrldA 54.13 ... STBA p 10.17 -.01 SmCpA p 36.73 +.01 TxExA p 12.50 +.01 WshA p 25.76 +.01 American Funds B: CapIBB p 49.68 -.01 GrwthB t 27.49 +.06 Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 29.31 -.20 IntlEqA 28.55 -.20 IntEqII I r 12.13 -.09

Artisan Funds: 21.36 +.04 Intl MidCap 29.70 +.14 MidCapVal19.21 +.07 Baron Funds: Growth 45.15 +.06 Bernstein Fds: 14.23 -.01 IntDur DivMu 14.75 +.01 TxMgdIntl 15.65 ... BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 16.66 +.03 GlAlA r 18.93 +.02 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 17.66 +.02 BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 16.70 +.03 GlbAlloc r 19.02 +.02 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 48.07 +.28 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 26.71 +.07 DivEqInc 9.29 +.03 5.11 ... DivrBd Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 27.54 +.06 AcornIntZ 38.83 -.02 ValRestr 45.22 +.08 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq n10.72 -.02 USCorEq2 n9.97 +.04 DWS Invest S: MgdMuni S 9.23 +.01 Davis Funds A: NYVen A 32.10 +.07 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 32.48 +.06 NYVen C 30.88 +.06 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.79 ...

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

+1.27 +.55 +.88 +.60 +.53 +.40 +.32 +.27 +.10

+.32 +.13 +.10 -.33 +.25 +.20

-.10 +.15 -.08 +.08 +.65 +.60 +.82 +1.15 +1.20 +1.30 +1.00

M-N-0

-.18 +.08 +.38 +.42 -.35 +.14 +.40 -.30 -.07 -.05 +.07 +.65 -.04 -.55

M&T Bk 2.80 77.55 +.33 MBIA ... 10.70 +.19 MEMC ... 13.47 +.07 MGIC ... 9.87 -.12 MGM Rsts ... 13.61 +.13 Macys .20 24.96 +.11 Manitowoc .08 12.02 -.09 Manulife g .52 12.32 -.05 MarathonO1.00 35.28 +.02 MktVGold .11p 57.17 -.24 MktVRus .08e 34.17 -.11 MktVJrGld ... 35.19 -.20 .16 35.76 +.09 MarIntA MarshM .84f 23.95 +.08 MarshIls .04 7.61 +.11 .30 11.82 -.26 Masco MasseyEn .24 35.54 -.14 McDnlds 2.44f 75.58 -.01 ... 18.86 -.11 McMoRn ... 47.14 +.01 McAfee ... 24.31 -.73 Mechel MedcoHlth ... 52.77 +.17 Medtrnic .90 33.41 +.04 1.52 36.64 -.22 Merck .74 39.19 +.31 MetLife MetroPCS ... 10.76 -.03 MobileTel s ... 22.36 -.60 Monsanto 1.12f 52.25 +1.02 MonstrWw ... 12.85 +.01 Moodys .42 27.68 +.11 MorgStan .20 25.93 +.78 Mosaic .20 u68.15 +1.52 Motorola ... 8.13 -.16 NRG Egy ... 20.98 -.16 NYSE Eur 1.20 29.08 +.09 Nabors ... 18.87 +.04 NBkGreece ... 2.60 +.05 NOilVarco .40a 46.82 +.18 NatSemi .40f 13.10 +.10 ... 26.94 ... Netezza NY CmtyB 1.00 16.57 +.17 NY Times ... 8.47 -.12 NewellRub .20 17.81 -.31 NewmtM .60f 62.00 -.54 NextEraEn 2.00 55.24 +.25 NikeB 1.08 u81.89 -.09 NobleCorp .20a 34.66 +1.12 NokiaCp .56e 10.90 -.06 Nordstrm .80 39.01 -.10 NorflkSo 1.44f 59.73 -.93 Novartis 1.99e u59.21 +.76 1.44 39.88 -.20 Nucor OcciPet 1.52 83.23 -.49 OfficeDpt ... 5.02 +.19 OfficeMax ... 15.69 +1.34 OilSvHT 2.60e 116.89 +1.59 Omncre .13f 22.74 ... Omnicom .80 40.79 +.16 OwensCorn ... 27.71 -.03 ... 26.16 -.31 OwensIll

P-Q-R

PG&E Cp 1.82 46.56 -.03 ... 4.12 -.02 PMI Grp PNC .40 53.05 +.21 PPL Corp 1.40 27.54 -.14 PatriotCoal ... 13.51 -.17 PeabdyE .28 50.84 -.69 PennWst g 1.80 21.92 +.41 .80 33.81 +.69 Penney PepsiCo 1.92 66.08 +.56 Petrohawk ... 17.92 +.40 PetrbrsA 1.18e 31.20 -.16 Petrobras 1.18e 34.58 -.02 Pfizer .72 17.48 +.10 PhilipMor 2.56f u57.18 +.76 Pier 1 ... 8.16 +.13 Potash .40 147.21 -.27 ... 25.14 +.12 PwshDB ... 28.86 +.56 PS Agri PS USDBull ... 22.42 -.07 PrideIntl ... 31.62 +.40 PrinFncl .50f 27.01 -.21 ProShtS&P ... 47.60 -.18 PrUShS&P ... d28.08 -.18 PrUlShDow ... d23.42 ... ProUltQQQ ... 69.12 +1.00 PrUShQQQ ... d14.02 -.20 ProUltSP .43e 41.35 +.25 ProUShL20 ... 32.32 +.68 ProUSRE rs ... d19.96 -.31 ProUShtFn ... 18.68 -.38 ProUFin rs .09e 57.73 +1.11 ProUSR2K ... 16.44 -.08 ProUltR2K .01e 33.75 +.22 ProUSSP500 ... d25.02 -.25 ProUltCrude ... 10.60 -.06 ProUShEuro ... 19.00 -.10 ProctGam 1.93 62.02 -.12 ProgsvCp .16e 21.12 +.02 ProLogis .60 12.60 -.21 ProvET g .72b u7.56 +.26 Prudentl .70f 53.98 +.53 PSEG 1.37 33.17 -.25 PulteGrp ... 8.28 +.09 QntmDSS ... 2.36 +.07 QksilvRes ... 12.75 +.09 QwestCm .32 6.37 +.04 ... 1.95 +.06 RAIT Fin RRI Engy ... 3.84 +.05 RadianGrp .01 8.42 +.04 RangeRs .16 35.85 -.05 Raytheon 1.50 45.63 +.13 RedHat ... 39.15 +.74 RegionsFn .04 7.47 +.15 ReneSola ... 13.60 -.16 ... .93 -.00 RiteAid ... 31.84 -.07 Rowan RoyDShllA3.36e 62.61 -.26

S-T-U

... 16.03 -.01 SAIC ... 11.20 -.04 SLM Cp SpdrDJIA 2.55e 110.26 ... SpdrGold ... 131.96 -.33 SP Mid 1.54e 148.06 +.50 S&P500ETF2.31e117.01+.36 SpdrHome .12e 15.84 +.02 SpdrKbwBk.11e 23.83 +.31 SpdrLehHY4.30e 40.19 -.04 SpdrKbw RB.30e 23.30 +.08 SpdrRetl .57e 43.80 +.47 SpdrOGEx .20e 44.14 -.06 SpdrMetM .35e 56.22 -.15 Safeway .48 20.69 -.26 ... 39.44 -.15 StJude Saks ... 9.59 +.34 Salesforce ... 105.47 +5.56 SandRdge ... 5.46 -.01 Sanofi 1.63e 33.94 -.32 SaraLee .44 14.54 +.12 Satyam lf ... 3.68 -.23 Schlmbrg .84 62.66 -.84 Schwab .24 14.03 +.05 SeadrillLtd2.31e 29.50 +.40 SemiHTr .52e 28.67 +.18 SiderNac s .58e 17.47 -.16 SilvWhtn g ... 26.75 +.16 SimonProp 2.40 96.44 +.71 ... 15.62 +.46 SmithfF SolarWinds ... 17.40 +.48 SouthnCo 1.82 37.49 -.05 SwstAirl .02 12.99 +.13 SwstnEngy ... 33.60 -.10 SprintNex ... 4.59 +.13 SP Matls 1.05e 34.27 +.09 SP HlthC .58e 30.86 +.07 SP CnSt .77e u28.29 +.07 SP Consum.43e 34.45 +.08 SP Engy 1.00e 58.43 -.09 SPDR Fncl .16e 14.85 +.17 SP Inds .60e 32.09 -.02 SP Tech .31e 23.49 +.14 SP Util 1.27e 31.73 -.13 StateStr .04 39.66 +.16 ... 17.41 +.04 StillwtrM .60 49.05 -.74 Stryker Suncor gs .40 34.75 +.15 ... 9.65 -.49 Suntech SunTrst .04 27.37 +.44 Supvalu .35 12.05 -.09 Synovus .04 2.61 +.11 1.00 28.58 -.02 Sysco TCF Fncl .20 15.34 -.59 .60 44.82 -.17 TJX TaiwSemi .47e 10.27 -.07 Talbots ... 10.33 -.02 TalismE g .25 18.07 +.27 Target 1.00 54.74 -.11 TeckRes g .40 44.23 +.22 Tenaris .68e 41.42 +.37 TenetHlth ... 4.56 +.07 Teradyn ... 11.28 +.07 Terex ... 24.32 +.41 Tesoro ... 13.84 +.06 TetraTech ... 10.20 +.29 TexInst .52f 28.68 -.09 .08 21.47 -.03 Textron ThermoFis ... 48.46 +.87 2.10 88.15 -.10 3M Co Tiffany 1.00 49.83 +.57 TimeWarn .85 31.07 -.38 Total SA 3.23e 53.05 -.34 Transocn ... 64.81 +2.90 Travelers 1.44 52.82 -.13 TrinaSol s ... 29.58 -.11 TycoElec .64 30.13 -.26 TycoIntl .85e 37.29 ... Tyson .16 14.84 ... UBS AG ... 18.08 +.41 .74f 21.77 +.12 UDR US Airwy ... 9.55 +.55 UnilevNV 1.22e 29.62 -.07 UnionPac 1.32 83.46 -1.60 ... u26.98 +.94 UtdContl UtdMicro .08e 2.75 -.07 UPS B 1.88 67.24 -.11 UtdRentals ... u16.07 +1.02 US Bancrp .20 22.88 +.63 US NGsFd ... d5.81 +.06 US OilFd ... 35.65 +.05 USSteel .20 44.83 -.79 UtdTech 1.70 72.98 +.05 UtdhlthGp .50 35.02 +.37 UnumGrp .37 22.25 -.05

V-W-X-Y-Z

Vale SA .43e 32.04 -.45 Vale SA pf .43e 28.44 -.30 ValeantPh .38 u27.88 +.72 ValeroE .20 17.97 -.12 VangEmg .55e 46.73 -.20 ... 16.53 -.47 Venoco VerizonCm1.95f 32.54 -.49 ViacomB .60 u37.41 +.12 VimpelC n ... 14.48 +.01 Visa .50 74.25 -.04 VishayInt ... u10.31 +.28 VMware ... 77.92 +2.52 ... 8.18 +.30 Wabash WalMart 1.21 53.92 -.69 Walgrn .70f 34.04 +.29 WsteMInc 1.26 36.53 +.09 ... u46.11 +.97 WatsnPh WeathfIntl ... 17.99 +.18 WellPoint ... 55.66 +.27 WellsFargo .20 25.98 +.33 WendyArby .06 4.53 ... ... 29.42 +.24 WDigital WstnUnion .24 17.74 -.12 Weyerh .20a 15.84 +.09 1.72 84.27 +1.21 Whrlpl WmsCos .50 19.61 -.10 WmsSon .60 u33.56 +.42 WilmTr .04 7.98 +.24 WT India .14e 27.37 -.29 Wyndham .48 u29.04 +.27 .40 u22.22 +.09 XL Grp XcelEngy 1.01 23.23 -.18 Xerox .17 11.16 +.12 Yamana g .08f 11.50 -.14 YingliGrn ... 12.87 -.47 YumBrnds 1.00f 47.90 +.32 ... 50.98 -.64 Zimmer

Est. sales 35166. Mon’s Sales: 36,052 Mon’s open int: 214652, up +2471 PORK BELLIES 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Feb 11 103.50 104.00 103.00 103.00 Mar 11 104.00 104.50 103.50 103.50 May 11 105.00 Jul 11 103.50 Aug 11 102.50 Last spot N/A Mon’s Sales: Mon’s open int: 11, unch

COTTON

NEW YORK(AP) - Cotton No. 2 futures on the N.Y. Cotton Exchange Friday: Open high low settle COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Dec 10 110.46 112.38 108.57 109.58 Mar 11 108.50 109.98 106.66 106.72 May 11 106.08 108.50 105.41 105.48 Jul 11 105.20 106.55 104.00 104.09 Oct 11 92.80 92.80 91.01 91.01 Dec 11 87.01 88.00 86.80 87.18 Mar 12 85.39 May 12 84.19 Jul 12 83.99 Oct 12 82.87 Last spot N/A Est. sales 21335. Mon’s Sales: 24,769 Mon’s open int: 235720, up +25

chg.

-.92 -1.85 -1.80 -1.56 -1.39 -.67 -.66 -.20 -.40 +.05

GRAINS

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

low settle

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 10 710 719fl 703 710 Mar 11 749ø 754ü 737 745ü May 11 763ø 768ü 751fl 759ü

chg.

+fl +fl -fl

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 4613432 4.24 +.06 KingPhrm 1935192 14.14 +3.99 S&P500ETF1559830117.01+.36 BkofAm 1315296 13.52 +.37 SPDR Fncl 636720 14.85 +.17

Name Vol (00) GrtBasG g 30630 Taseko 30143 GoldStr g 23279 NthgtM g 22330 NovaGld g 21190

Name Last KingPhrm 14.14 SwEBioFu2311.55 MPG pfA 13.30 FdAgricA 10.46 ZaleCp 2.70

Chg +3.99 +1.72 +1.55 +1.05 +.27

Name SunLink HeraldNB Ever-Glory ChinaPhH ChaseCorp

Name ChiMYWd n GlobPay Duoyuan n Ampco DuoyGWat

Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg -2.10 -16.3 NewConcEn 4.39 -1.10 -20.0 -3.44 -8.1 SearchMed 2.20 -.40 -15.5 -.20 -6.4 CAMAC n 3.59 -.36 -9.1 -1.65 -6.1 GoldenMin 23.20 -1.30 -5.3 -.89 -6.0 AoxingP rs 2.69 -.14-

Name Tongxin lf GenFin un BOSLtd rs DJSP Ent GS Fncl

1,690 1,313 128 3,131 190 2 4,073,629,471

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

%Chg +39.3 +17.5 +13.2 +11.2 +11.1

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Last 10.80 38.90 2.94 25.30 14.03

52-Week High Low 11,258.01 9,614.32 4,812.87 3,546.48 408.57 346.95 7,743.74 6,355.83 2,110.20 1,689.19 2,535.28 2,024.27 1,219.80 1,010.91 12,847.91 10,573.39 745.95 553.30

Name

Div

Last 2.71 6.47 5.05 2.88 9.22

Chg -.03 -.03 -.03 -.06 -.23

Name Vol (00) Last Intel 824956 19.77 PwShs QQQ78590450.11 Microsoft 474667 24.83 SiriusXM 427047 1.35 Dell Inc 425333 13.92

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Last 2.40 2.72 2.44 2.87 16.08

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

DIARY

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

256 215 43 514 14 2 92,394,227

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 11,020.40 4,611.40 402.98 7,489.62 2,087.14 2,417.92 1,169.77 12,323.47 696.04

Net Chg +10.06 -19.34 -1.03 +10.61 +6.62 +15.59 +4.45 +47.92 +2.58

Chg

YTD %Chg Name

Div

Last 2.86 2.30 2.34 2.46 9.69

Chg -.84 -.60 -.59 -.51 -1.85

DIARY

%Chg -22.7 -20.7 -20.1 -17.2 -16.1

1,522 1,086 154 2,762 107 28 1,916,229,554

% Chg +.09 -.42 -.25 +.14 +.32 +.65 +.38 +.39 +.37

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

PE Last

Chg +.21 +.34 +.24 +.01 +.19

Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg +.27 +12.7 ActivIden 3.23 +.97 +42.9 +.27 +11.0 ChinaTDv lf 2.83 +.78 +37.7 +.22 +9.9 Motricity n 17.42 +4.44 +34.2 +.25 +9.5 DayStar rs 2.23 +.54 +32.0 +1.35 +9.2 IntactInt 22.90 +4.72 +26.0

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

DIARY

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

PE Last

YTD % Chg +5.68 +12.48 +1.25 +4.24 +14.37 +6.56 +4.90 +6.71 +11.30

52-wk % Chg +11.64 +18.47 +6.93 +6.51 +14.57 +12.99 +9.00 +10.80 +13.79

Chg

YTD %Chg

BkofAm

.04

90

13.52 +.37

-10.2 ONEOK Pt

4.48f

24

77.24 +.72

+24.0

Chevron

2.88

10

83.84 +.13

+8.9 PNM Res

.50

25

11.53 +.02

-8.9

CocaCl

1.76

19

59.60 +.04

+4.6 PepsiCo

1.92

17

66.08 +.56

+8.7

Disney

.35

17

34.48 -.09

+6.9 Pfizer

.72

9

17.48 +.10

-3.9

EOG Res

.62

43

98.91 -.65

+1.7 SwstAirl

.02

...

12.99 +.13

+13.6

FordM

...

8

+37.8 TexInst

.52f

14

28.68 -.09

+10.1

HewlettP

.32

11

41.35 +.15

-19.7 TimeWarn

.85

14

31.07 -.38

+6.6

HollyCp

.60

78

30.35 -.20

+18.4 TriContl

.19e

...

12.65 +.03

+9.8

Intel

.63

12

19.77 +.21

-3.1 WalMart

1.21

14

53.92 -.69

+.9

IBM

2.60

13 139.85 +.19

+6.8 WashFed

.20

85

15.34 +.09

-20.7

Merck

1.52

13

36.64 -.22

.20

10

25.98 +.33

-3.7

Microsoft

.64f

7

24.83 +.24

1.01

15

23.23 -.18

+9.5

13.78

...

+.3 WellsFargo -18.5 XcelEngy

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 CaGrp 14.47 MuBd 10.43 SmCoSt 9.73

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

Dimensional Fds: FF2015 n 11.13 +.02 LatAm 57.16 +.09 FoundAl p 10.20 ... EmMCrEq n21.23 -.07 FF2020 n 13.42 +.03 LevCoStk n24.70 +.11 HYTFA p 10.38 -.01 EmMktV 36.11 -.07 FF2020K 12.82 +.03 LowP r n 35.49 +.01 IncomA p 2.13 ... IntSmVa n 16.07 -.06 FF2025 n 11.12 +.02 LowPriK r 35.48 +.01 NYTFA p 11.95 ... LargeCo 9.23 +.03 FF2030 n 13.24 +.03 Magelln n 66.01 +.19 StratInc p 10.52 -.01 USLgVa n 18.47 +.08 FF2035 n 10.95 +.04 MidCap n 25.89 +.12 USGovA p 6.86 +.01 US Micro n12.10 +.05 FF2040 n 7.64 +.02 MuniInc n 12.95 +.01 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: US Small n18.85 +.08 Fidelity Invest: NwMkt r n 16.51 +.03 GlbBdAdv p ... ... US SmVa 22.32 +.08 AllSectEq 12.20 +.06 OTC n 49.03 +.47 IncmeAd 2.12 ... IntlSmCo n15.98 -.04 AMgr50 n 14.88 +.01 100Index 8.29 +.04 Frank/Temp Frnk C: Fixd n 10.37 ... AMgr20 r n12.68 ... Ovrsea n 31.17 +.01 IncomC t 2.15 ... IntVa n 17.78 -.01 Balanc n 17.55 +.04 Puritn n 17.16 +.05 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: Glb5FxInc n11.68 -.01 BalancedK17.56 +.05 RealE n 24.82 +.18 SharesA 19.86 +.05 2YGlFxd n 10.24 ... BlueChGr n40.84 +.28 SCmdtyStrt n11.40 Frank/Temp Temp A: Dodge&Cox: Canada n 54.29 +.22 +.09 Balanced 66.33 +.06 CapAp n 23.63 +.17 SrsIntGrw 10.71 -.01 ForgnA p 6.77 -.03 Income 13.44 ... CpInc r n 9.28 +.03 SrsIntVal 9.83 -.02 GlBd A p 13.78 -.03 IntlStk 34.87 +.09 Contra n 63.21 +.26 StIntMu n 10.78 ... GrwthA p 17.23 -.03 99.43 +.10 ContraK 63.24 +.25 STBF n 8.52 ... WorldA p 14.30 -.02 Stock Frank/Temp Tmp Eaton Vance A: DisEq n 21.53 +.09 SmllCpS r n17.44 +.14 LgCpVal 17.01 +.05 DivIntl n 29.17 -.02 StratInc n 11.58 +.02 Adv: NatlMunInc10.03 ... DivrsIntK r 29.19 -.02 StrReRt r 9.31 +.02 GrthAv 17.26 -.03 Eaton Vance I: DivGth n 25.66 +.11 TotalBd n 11.15 -.01 Frank/Temp Tmp GblMacAbR10.34 ... EmrMk n 25.40 -.14 USBI n 11.70 -.01 B&C: LgCapVal 17.06 +.05 Eq Inc n 41.21 +.18 Value n 63.57 +.33 GlBdC p 13.81 -.02 GE Elfun S&S: FMI Funds: EQII n 17.00 +.08 Fidelity Selects: LgCap p 14.71 +.01 Fidel n 29.31 +.12 Gold r n 54.12 -.28 S&S PM 37.74 +.12 GMO Trust III: FPA Funds: FltRateHi r n9.70 ... Fidelity Spartan: NwInc 10.96 -.01 GNMA n 11.75 +.02 ExtMkIn n 34.37 +.15 Quality 19.36 +.05 FPACres n26.12 +.07 GovtInc 10.82 -.02 500IdxInv n41.44 +.16 GMO Trust IV: Fairholme 33.55 +.31 GroCo n 75.26 +.58 IntlInxInv n34.76 -.12 IntlIntrVl 21.47 -.03 Federated Instl: GroInc n 16.69 +.07 TotMktInv n33.93 +.13 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 14.05 -.07 KaufmnK 5.26 +.01 GrowthCoK75.32 +.58 Fidelity Spart Adv: TotRetBd 11.45 -.02 HighInc r n 8.96 +.02 500IdxAdv n41.44+.16 IntlCorEq 28.32 -.03 Fidelity Advisor A: Indepn n 21.81 +.18 TotMktAd r n33.93+.13 Quality 19.36 +.05 Goldman Sachs A: NwInsgh p 18.58 +.07 IntBd n 10.83 -.01 First Eagle: 12.98 +.02 IntmMu n 10.44 +.01 GlblA StrInA 43.99 -.02 MdCVA p 32.68 +.06 Fidelity Advisor I: IntlDisc n 31.92 -.02 OverseasA21.81 -.07 Goldman Sachs Inst: HiYield 7.27 +.01 NwInsgtI n 18.78 +.07 InvGrBd n 12.01 -.02 Frank/Temp Frnk A: InvGB n 7.53 ... CalTFA p 7.22 ... HYMuni n 8.84 -.01 Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 n 13.36 +.02 LgCapVal 11.73 +.06 FedTFA p 12.12 +.01 MidCapV 33.00 +.07

CATTLE/HOGS Open high low settle CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 10 96.30 96.85 95.95 96.62 Dec 10 99.37 99.65 98.75 99.30 Feb 11 102.17 102.37 101.27 102.10 Apr 11 104.55 105.00 103.97 104.92 Jun 11 101.60 102.22 101.10 102.20 Aug 11 101.30 101.75 101.00 101.65 Oct 11 104.00 104.22 103.75 104.22 Dec 11 104.30 104.45 103.95 104.42 Feb 12 105.35 105.40 105.35 105.40 Last spot N/A Est. sales 29665. Mon’s Sales: 49,482 Mon’s open int: 318677, off -2130 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 10 107.35 108.75 107.10 107.47 Nov 10 106.90 108.97 106.67 107.25 Jan 11 107.50 109.47 107.15 107.70 Mar 11 109.00 109.50 108.25 108.47 Apr 11 109.80 110.25 109.70 109.70 May 11 111.00 111.30 110.85 110.95 Aug 11 113.50 113.60 113.50 113.60 Sep 11 113.00 Last spot N/A Est. sales 7959. Mon’s Sales: 10,183 Mon’s open int: 29708, off -156 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 10 73.52 74.52 73.47 73.60 Dec 10 72.52 73.20 72.10 72.77 Feb 11 76.80 77.40 76.45 76.92 Apr 11 80.27 80.55 79.85 80.50 May 11 84.55 85.20 84.55 85.10 Jun 11 86.87 87.20 86.00 87.07 Jul 11 85.25 86.05 85.20 86.02 Aug 11 84.10 85.20 84.00 85.20 Oct 11 74.77 75.95 74.50 75.95 Dec 11 71.70 73.00 71.70 73.00 Feb 12 73.50 74.10 73.50 74.10 Last spot N/A

LDK Solar ... 11.14 ... 4.68 LSI Corp ... u39.00 LVSands LenderPS .40 28.19 LennarA .16 15.90 1.96 37.36 LillyEli Limited .60a u29.71 LincNat .04 25.15 ... 6.80 LizClaib LloydBkg 1.45r 4.59 LockhdM 3.00f 70.55 .25 u39.48 Loews ... 7.63 LaPac .44 22.04 Lowes

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

-.01

Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

MUTUAL FUNDS

Harbor Funds: Bond 13.17 ... CapApInst 33.56 +.20 IntlInv t 58.01 +.24 58.69 +.25 Intl r Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 31.89 +.12 Hartford Fds C: CapApC t 28.34 +.10 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI n 31.87 +.11 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 38.86 +.17 Div&Gr 18.51 +.05 Advisers 18.57 +.03 TotRetBd 11.49 ... HussmnStrGr13.14.01 Invesco Funds A: CapGro 12.20 +.07 Chart p 15.10 +.01 CmstkA 14.56 +.06 EqIncA 8.12 +.02 GrIncA p 17.73 +.04 HYMuA 9.67 +.01 Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 22.74 -.03 AssetStA p23.41 -.02 AssetStrI r 23.61 -.02 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.74 ... JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd n 11.73 -.01 HighYld n 8.16 +.01 IntmTFBd n11.14 ... ShtDurBd n11.06 ... USLCCrPls n19.13 +.06 Janus S Shrs: Forty 31.48 +.17

Jul 11 760ü 765 750fl 756ø -1fl Sep 11 776fl 776fl 762ø 768fl -1fl Dec 11 785 789ü 777ü 781ø -3ü Mar 12 792 796 786ø 790ü -3ü Last spot N/A Est. sales 132766. Mon’s Sales: 92,310 Mon’s open int: 507445, up +1884 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 10 578ø 584ø 554ø 579 +23ü Mar 11 588 594ø 563ø 588fl +23fl May 11 592 599 568fl 593ø +23 Jul 11 595 600ø 571ø 595ø +21ø Sep 11 541ø 547ü 533fl 540fl +5 Dec 11 521fl 525ü 511fl 522ø +8ø Mar 12 523fl 529 516fl 527fl +7fl Last spot N/A Est. sales 1009933. Mon’s Sales: 570,038 Mon’s open int: 1459987, up +35367 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 10 380ø 383 369 383 +14 Mar 11 388ü 392 378fl 392 +13 May 11 388 395 388 395 +13 Jul 11 394 397 394 397 +13 Sep 11 343 344 343 344 +5 Dec 11 349 349 349 349 +9 Mar 12 349 358 349 358 +9 Last spot N/A Est. sales 1593. Mon’s Sales: 1,677 Mon’s open int: 13144, up +128 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Nov 10 1178ü 1185fl 1154 1178ø +26 Jan 11 1189ü 1196ü 1163 1189ø +26ø Mar 11 1198ü 1205fl 1172ü 1199 +26fl May 11 1203 1209 1177ü 1203 +25ø Jul 11 1209 1214ø 1184ø 1209 +24ø Aug 11 1196ü 1200 1174 1195 +21 Sep 11 1171ü 1172fl 1153fl 1170 +19ø Nov 11 1149fl 1154ü 1130fl 1149 +17ø Jan 12 1153ø 1155ü 1136 1152ø +17ü Mar 12 1139ü 1156 1138 1155 +16ü Last spot N/A Est. sales 469450. Mon’s Sales: 366,792 Mon’s open int: 628450, up +15792

Janus T Shrs: BalancdT 25.52 +.04 OvrseasT r49.18 +.06 PrkMCVal T21.04 +.03 Twenty T 62.13 +.38 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggr 11.52 ... LSBalanc 12.59 ... LSGrwth 12.37 ... Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p21.78 +.03 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.53 -.11 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p21.87 -.11 Legg Mason A: WAMgMu p16.11 +.02 Longleaf Partners: Partners 26.55 +.12 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.45 +.01 StrInc C 15.03 +.02 LSBondR 14.40 +.02 StrIncA 14.95 +.02 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdA p12.69 ... InvGrBdY 12.70 ... Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 10.59 +.06 BdDebA p 7.75 ... ShDurIncA p4.67 -.01 Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t4.70 -.01 MFS Funds A: TotRA 13.69 +.03 ValueA 21.45 +.09 MFS Funds I: ValueI 21.54 +.09 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBA 5.90 +.01

FUTURES

Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 8.55 ... Matthews Asian: AsianG&I 18.04 -.04 29.94 +.08 China PacTiger 23.29 -.13 MergerFd 15.95 ... Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.75 ... TotRtBdI 10.75 ... MorganStanley Inst: IntlEqI 13.25 -.06 MCapGrI 33.99 +.25 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 28.64 +.09 GlbDiscZ 29.03 +.09 QuestZ 18.04 +.06 SharesZ 20.05 +.06 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 40.85 -.01 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 42.36 -.01 Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.30 ... MMIntEq r 9.63 +.01 Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 26.40 +.01 Intl I r 18.57 -.03 Oakmark r 39.43 +.10 Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 7.92 ... GlbSMdCap14.61+.02 Oppenheimer A: CapApA p 40.21 +.15 DvMktA p 34.40 -.17 GlobA p 57.65 +.24 GblStrIncA 4.38 ... Gold p 49.22 -.09 IntBdA p 6.97 +.02 MnStFdA 30.33 +.17

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. Nov 10 81.95 82.38 80.88 81.67 Dec 10 82.70 83.10 81.67 82.45 Jan 11 83.54 83.98 82.51 83.32 Feb 11 84.19 84.58 83.17 83.98 Mar 11 84.72 85.12 83.71 84.54 Apr 11 85.18 85.58 84.43 85.00 May 11 85.56 85.84 84.81 85.39 Jun 11 85.96 86.32 84.93 85.74 Jul 11 86.08 86.09 85.54 86.04 Aug 11 86.41 86.41 86.09 86.28 Sep 11 86.81 87.09 86.27 86.51 Oct 11 86.56 86.82 86.54 86.75 Nov 11 87.17 87.55 86.70 86.99 Dec 11 87.46 87.88 86.43 87.25 Jan 12 87.49 88.02 87.13 87.39 Feb 12 87.34 87.53 87.34 87.53 Mar 12 87.82 88.02 87.41 87.67 Apr 12 87.97 88.08 87.81 87.81 May 12 87.94 Jun 12 88.16 88.16 87.91 88.07 Jul 12 88.18 Aug 12 88.29 Sep 12 88.39 Oct 12 88.50 Nov 12 88.61 Dec 12 88.92 89.20 88.37 88.74 Jan 13 88.77 Feb 13 88.80 Mar 13 88.83 Apr 13 88.87 May 13 88.91 Jun 13 89.18 89.18 88.96 88.96 Jul 13 89.01 Aug 13 89.06 Sep 13 89.12 Oct 13 89.18 Last spot N/A Est. sales 652168. Mon’s Sales: 544,795 Mon’s open int: 1421941, off -29514

chg.

-.54 -.56 -.56 -.52 -.48 -.45 -.41 -.38 -.37 -.36 -.35 -.33 -.32 -.31 -.30 -.29 -.28 -.27 -.27 -.26 -.24 -.22 -.21 -.19 -.18 -.17 -.17 -.17 -.17 -.17 -.17 -.16 -.16 -.16 -.15 -.15

Oppenheimer Roch: LtdNYA p 3.34 +.01 RoMu A p 16.87 +.01 RcNtMuA 7.35 ... Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 34.09 -.18 6.96 +.01 IntlBdY PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 11.70 -.01 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r11.28 -.01 AllAsset 12.68 ... ComodRR 8.70 +.04 DivInc 11.75 ... HiYld 9.35 ... InvGrCp 11.98 -.02 LowDu 10.72 +.01 RealRtnI 11.79 -.04 9.94 ... ShortT TotRt 11.70 -.01 11.27 -.01 TR II 10.39 ... TRIII PIMCO Funds A: LwDurA 10.72 +.01 RealRtA p 11.79 -.04 TotRtA 11.70 -.01 PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 11.70 -.01 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 11.70 -.01 PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 11.70 -.01 Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n 24.92 +.03 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 43.84 -.02 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 37.46 +.09 Price Funds: Balance n 18.53 +.03 BlChip n 34.85 +.17

B3

Div Last Chg CleanEngy ... 13.92 -.13 Clearwire ... 6.75 ... A-B-C ... 10.48 ... Cogent A-Power ... 8.10 -.12 CognizTech ... 64.83 +1.21 ... 44.25 +.14 ADC Tel ... 12.71 +.04 Coinstar AMAG Ph ... 20.35 +1.23 ColumLabs ... 1.37 +.02 .38 18.02 ... Comcast ASML Hld .27e 30.57 +.69 ATP O&G ... 16.79 +1.49 Comc spcl .38 17.07 +.03 AcmePkt h ... 35.63 +1.00 Compuwre ... 8.83 +.13 AcordaTh ... 30.15 -.45 ConcurTch ... 47.43 -.40 ActivIden ... 3.23 +.97 Conexant ... 1.81 +.10 ... 34.31 -.06 ActivsBliz .15 11.25 +.12 Copart ... 27.66 +.41 CorinthC ... 5.90 -.43 AdobeSy .82 63.34 -.98 .36 35.52 +.27 Costco Adtran ... 7.35 +.09 AdvEnId ... 13.68 +.58 Cray Inc ... 52.53 -1.05 AEterna g ... 1.28 ... Cree Inc Crocs ... 14.70 +.09 ... 5.25 -.17 Affymax Affymetrix ... 4.42 +.04 Ctrip.com s ... 47.14 +.44 ... 13.20 +.16 ... 2.97 +.04 CypSemi AgFeed AirTrnsp ... u6.65 +.39 D-E-F AkamaiT ... 45.86 +1.68 ... 13.92 +.19 ... 4.32 ... Dell Inc Akorn ... u68.40 +1.05 DeltaPtr h ... .83 -.03 Alexion ... 39.77 +.02 ... d1.34 -.04 Dndreon Alexza AlignTech ... 19.88 +.31 Dentsply .20 31.79 -.07 Alkerm ... 15.68 -.20 DirecTV A ... 42.19 +.06 AllosThera ... 4.31 -.21 DiscCm A ... 43.49 +.28 AllscriptH ... 18.51 +.14 DishNetwk2.00e 19.47 -.18 AlteraCp lf .24f 30.09 +.59 DonlleyRR 1.04 17.97 -.14 ... 4.57 ... Amazon ... 156.48 +3.45 DryShips ACapAgy 5.60e 27.97 +.26 DurectCp ... 2.76 -.03 rs ... 14.77 -.04 ETrade AmCapLtd ... 6.17 +.03 ... 24.45 +.16 ... 38.05 +1.55 eBay AmSupr ... 55.94 -.16 EagleBulk ... 5.30 -.05 Amgen AmkorT lf ... 6.68 -.07 ErthLink .64 8.67 ... ... 21.45 +.04 ElectArts ... 16.61 -1.05 Amylin Anadigc ... 5.82 ... Emcore hlf ... 1.06 +.11 Ansys ... 44.39 +1.65 EndoPhrm ... u34.99 +.66 A123 Sys ... 9.17 +.20 EngyConv ... 4.88 -.10 ... 4.90 +.11 ApolloGrp ... 49.98 -.17 Entegris ApolloInv 1.12 10.47 -.01 EntropCom ... 9.16 +.35 ... 74.01 +1.06 Equinix Apple Inc ...u298.54+3.18 ApldMatl .28 11.96 +.14 EricsnTel .28e 10.81 +.01 AMCC ... 9.74 +.43 EvrgrSlr h ... .92 +.20 ... 4.33 +.06 ArcSight ... 43.45 +.02 Exelixis ArenaPhm ... 1.83 +.07 Expedia .28 27.91 -.59 ExpdIntl .40f 47.82 +.23 AresCap 1.40 15.98 +.07 ... 3.93 +.07 F5 Netwks ... 95.61 +4.43 AriadP Sys ... 25.16 +.47 FLIR ArmHld .12e 18.02 -.30 ... 2.92 +.03 Arris ... 9.82 +.17 FSI Intl ... 4.28 +.05 Fastenal .84f 52.04 -2.71 ArtTech ArubaNet ... 21.00 +1.31 FifthThird .04 12.76 +.48 ... 20.15 +.19 AscentSol ... 5.66 +1.09 Finisar .16 15.56 +.19 AsscdBanc .04 13.35 +.04 FinLine Atheros ... 27.25 +.33 FstNiagara .56 11.73 -.06 ... 137.01 -2.49 AtlasEngy ... 30.71 +.34 FstSolar ... 54.09 -.18 ... u8.54 +.02 Fiserv Atmel ... 6.08 +.01 Autodesk ... 32.68 +.82 Flextrn FocusMda ... 23.91 -.32 AutoData 1.36 42.00 -.04 Auxilium ... 26.23 +.28 Fortinet n ... 24.99 -.01 AvagoTch ... 22.02 -.32 FosterWhl ... 24.87 +.02 AvanirPhm ... 3.40 ... FresKabi rt ... .03 +.00 BE Aero ... 32.16 -.51 Fuqi Intl lf ... 7.88 +.06 ... 42.59 +.12 BMC Sft G-H-I BannerCp .04 d1.85 +.04 BebeStrs 1.00e 6.80 +.09 GSI Cmmrc ... 23.98 -.19 GT Solar ... 8.78 -.12 ... 43.25 -.05 BedBath Biodel ... 4.16 -.15 Garmin 1.50f 30.79 +.50 .44 20.68 +.09 BiogenIdc ... 56.93 -.13 Gentex BioMarin ... 21.92 +.10 Genzyme ... 72.72 -.19 BlueCoat ... 23.93 +.67 GeronCp ... 6.37 +.70 BrigExp ... 20.63 -.91 GileadSci ... 36.11 -.10 ... 1.84 -.03 Broadcom .32 36.73 +.35 Gleacher ... 5.78 +.18 Broadwind ... 2.22 +.10 GloblInd ... 541.39 +2.55 BrcdeCm ... 5.66 -.01 Google Bucyrus .10 74.35 -.73 Gymbree ... 65.00 +.17 CA Inc .16 21.74 +.06 Halozyme ... 8.08 +.10 CH Robins 1.00 70.63 -.49 HanmiFncl ... 1.23 +.01 CME Grp 4.60 264.17 +4.60 HansenMed ... 1.84 +.16 CNinsure .26e 23.26 +.65 HansenNat ... u47.86 +.50 Cadence ... 7.74 +.07 HarbinElec ... 23.20 -.02 ... 6.35 +.24 CdnSolar ... 16.18 -.06 HawHold CapProd .90 8.79 +.17 HercOffsh ... 2.55 +.26 Corp ... 2.94 +.40 Hoku CpstnTrb h ... .80 -.01 ... 15.92 -.10 CareerEd ... 20.49 -.32 Hologic CathayGen .04 13.03 +.19 HudsCity .60 12.01 -.03 ... 28.74 +.31 CaviumNet ... 28.67 -.34 HumGen .48 35.62 -.16 CeleraGrp ... d5.89 -.10 HuntJB .04 5.94 +.12 HuntBnk Celgene ... 57.88 +.23 ... 26.09 -.54 CentEuro ... 23.59 +.51 IAC Inter CentAl ... 14.41 +.26 iShAsiaexJ .87e 62.17 -.43 Cephln ... 62.68 +.89 iShNsdqBio ... 88.06 +.52 ... 1.29 +.09 ... 4.12 +.39 Ikanos ChrmSh ... 49.76 +.88 ChkPoint ... u39.21 +.93 Illumina Cheesecake ... 27.70 -.07 Imax Corp ... 17.27 +.07 ChildPlace ... 56.55 +3.10 ImunoGn ... 7.29 -.15 ... u17.17 +.28 ChinAgri s ... 12.41 -.20 Incyte ... 12.03 +.19 ChinaMda ... 12.27 +.99 Infinera ... 37.23 +1.03 Informat ChinaSun ... 4.67 -.03 CienaCorp ... 15.22 -.32 InfosysT .54e 68.94 +.14 ... 6.09 +.02 CinnFin 1.60f 29.68 +.15 IntgDv .63 19.77 +.21 .48f 27.33 -.26 Intel Cintas ... 22.90 +4.72 Cirrus ... 16.53 -.01 IntactInt Cisco ... 22.62 +.15 InterMune ... 15.08 +.07 .48 12.18 +.32 CitrixSys ... 57.44 +1.75 Intersil

... u46.92 +1.05 Rambus ... 19.79 +.18 ... 25.70 +.24 RealNwk ... 3.25 +.01 ... 8.48 -.08 RealPage n ... u21.90 +1.39 RschMotn ... 48.97 +.29 J-K-L RightNow ... u23.48 +3.34 JA Solar ... u9.32 -.10 Riverbed ... 44.07 +1.26 JDS Uniph ... 12.51 +.17 RofinSinar ... 27.61 -.28 JazzPhrm ... 10.69 +.18 RosettaR ... 24.48 +.14 ... 6.47 ... RossStrs .64 56.17 +.08 JetBlue .70 72.57 -.55 Rovi Corp ... 50.15 +.75 JoyGlbl KLA Tnc 1.00f 34.69 +.17 RubiconTc ... 18.84 -1.70 KnightT 1.20e 19.66 +.62 Kulicke ... 5.86 +.15 S-T-U LamResrch ... 40.99 +.65 SBA Com ... 40.72 -.16 Lattice ... 4.93 +.01 SEI Inv .20f 20.77 +.22 LawsnSft ... u8.83 +.15 STEC ... 14.09 -.11 LeapWirlss ... 12.00 -.16 SalixPhm ... 37.94 +.93 ... .87 +.01 Level3 SanDisk ... 40.07 +.63 LibGlobA ... u32.04 +.13 LibtyMIntA ... 14.34 +.04 Sapient .35e 12.10 -.22 ... 22.64 -.17 SavientPh ... 47.46 -.13 LifeTech LimelghtN ... 6.22 +.19 SeagateT ... 12.56 +.26 SearsHldgs ... 72.44 +.82 LinearTch .92 31.56 +.32 ... 18.63 +.36 SeattGen ... 17.19 +.39 Logitech lululemn g ... 45.94 -.38 Sequenom ... 6.99 +.04 ShandaGm ... 6.20 +.05 M-N-0 SigmaAld .64 60.46 +.05 ... 4.73 +.19 MIPS Tech ... 9.52 +.06 SilicnImg SilcnLab ... 37.20 +.66 MannKd ... 6.68 +.06 ... 16.98 +.26 Slcnware .41e 5.28 -.04 MarvellT ... 22.60 +.18 Mattel .75 23.93 -.06 SilvStd g ... 52.58 -.29 MaximIntg .84f 18.97 -.11 Sina ... u1.35 +.01 MelcoCrwn ... 5.67 +.05 SiriusXM MentorGr ... 10.75 +.09 SkywksSol ... 21.21 +.70 ... 6.52 -.28 MercadoL ... 64.77 ... SmartM Microchp 1.37f 31.15 +.07 SmartHeat ... 6.98 +.11 ... 59.42 +.18 ... 7.75 +.08 Sohu.cm MicronT MicroSemi ... u20.29 +.41 Solarfun ... 11.94 -.25 Microsoft .64f 24.83 +.24 SonicCorp ... 8.99 +.34 .61 21.63 +.09 SonicSolu ... 12.17 -.09 Molex Motricity n ... u17.42 +4.44 Sonus ... 3.43 -.22 Mylan ... 18.73 +.33 SpectPh ... 4.47 +.11 MyriadG ... 18.66 +1.74 Spreadtrm ... 11.87 +.38 NETgear ... 27.39 -.09 Staples .36 20.70 -.09 NGAS Rs h ... d.71 -.08 Starbucks .52f 27.14 +1.15 ... 42.37 +.06 StlDynam .30 14.78 +.17 NII Hldg NasdOMX ... 20.01 +.11 StemCell h ... .95 +.12 NetLogic s ... 27.28 +.28 SuccessF ... 25.60 +.20 ... 48.77 +.73 SunHlthGp ... 8.67 -.07 NetApp Netease ... 37.84 -.10 SunOpta ... 5.81 -.48 ... 155.39 +1.70 SunPowerA ... 14.30 +.30 Netflix ... 3.40 +.42 SuperGen ... 2.17 -.15 Netlist NewsCpA .15 13.92 +.09 SusqBnc .04 8.69 -.14 NewsCpB .15 15.76 +.08 Symantec ... 15.39 +.22 NorTrst 1.12 49.26 +.31 NwstBcsh .40 11.31 +.08 Synaptics ... 25.06 -.77 NovtlWrls ... 9.76 +.20 Synopsys ... u25.11 +.14 ... 6.03 +.07 TD Ameritr ... 16.31 +.09 Novell ... 4.28 +.12 ... 26.78 +.43 THQ Novlus NuanceCm ... 15.10 +.04 TakeTwo ... 10.65 +.10 TalecrisBio ... 23.63 +.06 Nvidia ... 11.02 +.21 OReillyA h ... 53.36 +.51 TlCmSys ... 5.49 +.28 .08 7.41 +.01 Tellabs ... 16.40 +.06 Oclaro rs OmniVisn ... 24.71 +1.09 TerreStar ... .42 -.01 OnSmcnd ... 7.06 +.10 TevaPhrm .72e 53.55 +.57 OnyxPh ... 26.43 -.15 TexRdhse ... 15.39 +.17 ... 35.26 +.40 OpnwvSy ... 1.72 -.05 Thoratec ... 17.85 +.37 .20 27.95 +.10 TibcoSft Oracle ... 10.28 +.06 ... 6.23 +.02 TiVo Inc Orexigen Oxigene h ... .27 -.00 Tongxin lf ... d2.86 -.84 Toreador ... u14.38 +.83 P-Q-R TridentM h ... 2.08 +.20 ... 34.89 +.73 PDL Bio 1.00a 5.43 ... TrimbleN ... 7.29 +.01 TriQuint PMC Sra ... 9.20 +.11 PSS Wrld ... 21.77 +.18 UltaSalon ... u30.90 +1.87 .48f 49.86 -.39 UtdOnln .40 5.85 +.01 Paccar ... 5.78 -.27 UrbanOut ... d31.21 +.39 PacerIntl PacCapB ... .84 +.03 V-W-X-Y-Z PacSunwr ... 5.95 ... PainTher ... u7.41 +1.16 VCA Ant ... 21.30 -.07 PanASlv .05 29.52 -.24 ValueClick ... 13.38 +.15 ParamTch ... 19.75 +.14 VarianSemi ... 29.44 +.67 ... 21.00 -.22 VeecoInst ... 37.03 -.03 Parexel PattUTI .20 17.78 +.49 Verisign ... 32.10 +.35 Paychex 1.24 27.28 -.12 Verisk ... 28.63 +.43 PeopUtdF .62 13.33 +.05 VertxPh ... 34.30 -.63 PetsMart .50 36.28 -.03 Vical ... d2.20 -.01 PharmPdt .60b 24.38 -.23 VirgnMda h .16 23.91 +.08 ... 27.88 +.47 Polycom ... 15.78 -.07 ViroPhrm Popular ... 2.76 +.02 ... 38.58 +1.91 Power-One ... 10.87 +.31 VistaPrt ... 6.59 -.10 PwShs QQQ.33e 50.11 +.34 Vivus Powrwav ... 1.85 +.12 Vodafone 1.32e 25.85 -.12 PriceTR 1.08 52.13 +.41 WarnerCh s8.50eu24.96+1.08 ... 35.86 +.92 ... 336.18 +3.83 WholeFd priceline PrUPShQQQ ... d41.32 -1.02 Windstrm 1.00 12.27 -.01 ProspctCap1.21 9.81 -.04 WonderAuto ... 9.75 +.30 1.00u102.37 +.59 QIAGEN ... 17.72 +.40 Wynn .64 26.83 +.22 QiaoXing ... 1.59 +.02 Xilinx ... 17.71 +.10 XinhuaSp h ... .25 +.04 Qlogic Ww rs ... 4.09 -.49 YRC Qualcom .76 44.79 +.61 ... 14.43 +.02 QuantFu h ... .61 +.03 Yahoo ... 8.27 +.16 QuestSft ... 23.98 -.36 Yongye RF MicD ... u6.70 +.31 ZionBcp .04 22.12 +.32 ... u2.95 +.11 Radware ... 34.26 +.21 Zix Corp

Name

HstnAEn Hyperdyn InovioPhm Kemet KodiakO g LibertyAcq LibAcq wt LongweiPI MagHRes Metalico Minefnd g NIVS IntT Nevsun g NDragon NwGold g NA Pall g NthnO&G NthgtM g NovaGld g Oilsands g OrienPap n ParaG&S PionDrill PolyMet g ProceraNt Protalix

Name

Intuit IsilonSys Isis

AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE

Div Last Chg Contango ... CrSuiHiY .32 AbdAsPac .42 7.01 +.01 Crossh glf ... AlexcoR g ... 6.54 -.16 Crystallx g ... AlldNevG ... 25.50 -1.03 DejourE g ... AlmadnM g ... 3.03 -.07 DenisnM g ... AmO&G ... 8.58 -.05 EV LtdDur 1.39 Anooraq g ... 1.34 +.10 EndvrInt ... AntaresP ... 1.56 -.03 EndvSilv g ... Augusta g ... 4.00 +.05 EntGaming ... Aurizon g ... 6.96 ... EntreeGold ... Banro g ... 2.87 +.13 ExeterR gs ... BarcGSOil ... 23.35 -.07 Express-1 ... BrcIndiaTR ... 78.54 -.66 FiveStar ... BioTime n ... 5.69 +.25 Fronteer g ... CAMAC n ... 3.59 -.36 GSE Sy ... ... .50 -.01 GabGldNR 1.68 CanoPet CapGold n ... 4.52 -.05 GascoEngy ... CardiumTh ... .50 -.01 GenMoly ... ... .75 +.04 GeoGloblR ... CelSci CFCda g .01 17.26 -.06 GoldResrc .09e CheniereEn ... 2.96 +.10 GoldenMin ... CheniereE 1.70 u20.18 +.31 GoldStr g ... ChinNEPet ... 7.50 +.19 GranTrra g ... ChinaPhH ... 2.87 +.25 GrtBasG g ... ClaudeR g ... 1.54 -.05 Hemisphrx ...

CapApp n 19.39 +.05 EmMktS n 34.20 -.25 EqInc n 22.03 +.07 EqIndex n 31.53 +.12 Growth n 29.43 +.12 HiYield n 6.79 +.01 IntlBond n 10.55 +.04 Intl G&I 13.11 -.03 IntlStk n 13.84 -.03 LatAm n 54.95 +.03 MidCap n 54.19 +.12 MCapVal n22.25 +.05 N Asia n 19.35 -.23 New Era n 45.63 -.11 N Horiz n 29.81 +.07 N Inc n 9.79 -.01 R2010 n 15.11 +.01 R2015 n 11.57 +.01 R2020 n 15.84 +.02 R2025 n 11.51 +.02 R2030 n 16.40 +.03 R2035 n 11.53 +.02 R2040 n 16.41 +.03 ShtBd n 4.90 ... SmCpStk n31.36 +.09 SmCapVal n32.71+.05 SpecGr n 16.50 +.03 SpecIn n 12.49 +.01 Value n 21.88 +.06 Principal Inv: LT2020In 11.36 +.02 Putnam Funds A: GrInA p 12.55 +.03 MultiCpGr 45.64 +.17 VoyA p 21.91 +.11 Royce Funds: PennMuI r 10.44 +.01 PremierI r 18.21 +.01 TotRetI r 12.07 +.02 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 35.32 +.14

NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Nov 10 2.1350 2.1631 2.1177 2.1239 Dec 10 2.1172 2.1420 2.0986 2.1070 Jan 11 2.1261 2.1452 2.1081 2.1175 Feb 11 2.1434 2.1609 2.1267 2.1364 Mar 11 2.1595 2.1783 2.1476 2.1570 Apr 11 2.2659 2.2865 2.2554 2.2658 May 11 2.2712 2.2850 2.2598 2.2719 Jun 11 2.2715 2.2728 2.2710 2.2728 Jul 11 2.2698 2.2850 2.2650 2.2710 Aug 11 2.2657 2.2785 2.2657 2.2669 Sep 11 2.2588 2.2706 2.2582 2.2582 Oct 11 2.1609 2.1717 2.1603 2.1603 Nov 11 2.1560 2.1627 2.1467 2.1513 Dec 11 2.1502 2.1614 2.1400 2.1543 Jan 12 2.1792 2.1800 2.1638 2.1678 Feb 12 2.1858 Mar 12 2.2038 Apr 12 2.3138 May 12 2.3203 Jun 12 2.3133 Jul 12 2.3073 Aug 12 2.2993 Sep 12 2.2848 Oct 12 2.1898 Last spot N/A Est. sales 139778. Mon’s Sales: 148,060 Mon’s open int: 266931, up +5704 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Nov 10 3.601 3.667 3.545 3.629 Dec 10 3.972 4.021 3.926 3.992 Jan 11 4.243 4.287 4.203 4.263 Feb 11 4.275 4.313 4.244 4.302 Mar 11 4.218 4.270 4.192 4.247 Apr 11 4.189 4.240 4.167 4.212 May 11 4.225 4.275 4.207 4.247 Jun 11 4.281 4.316 4.267 4.306 Jul 11 4.359 4.388 4.342 4.378 Aug 11 4.406 4.439 4.392 4.427 Sep 11 4.434 4.455 4.413 4.446 Oct 11 4.511 4.540 4.496 4.529 Nov 11 4.790 4.820 4.778 4.805 Last spot N/A Est. sales 329693. Mon’s Sales: 277,934 Mon’s open int: 782075, off -12659

53.17 +1.15 2.92 -.04 .22 -.02 .38 -.01 .32 +.02 1.82 -.05 16.55 +.04 1.35 +.01 4.55 -.04 .34 +.01 2.81 -.09 6.10 -.20 2.35 +.02 5.50 +.03 7.55 -.12 3.52 +.10 17.88 -.01 .36 -.01 3.97 +.07 .95 -.07 23.37 +.06 23.20 -1.30 5.05 -.03 7.49 +.02 2.71 -.03 .54 -.01

.02 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

12.76 u3.24 1.22 3.05 3.80 10.33 1.65 3.05 4.88 4.38 9.49 2.18 5.35 .04 7.06 4.42 18.70 2.88 9.22 .49 4.76 1.80 6.58 2.10 .51 8.85

+.99 +.24 -.06 ... +.04 +.02 ... +.01 +.22 -.02 +.05 ... -.13 ... +.02 +.07 -.45 -.06 -.23 -.01 -.09 -.04 +.18 -.04 -.01 -.32

PudaCoal ... RadientPh ... RareEle g ... ... Rentech Rubicon g ... SamsO&G ... Senesco ... SondeR grs ... Talbots wt ... TanzRy g ... ... Taseko TrnsatlPt n ... ... US Gold ... Uluru Ur-Energy ... ... Uranerz UraniumEn ... VantageDrl ... VirnetX .50e VistaGold ... WFAdvInco1.02 WidePoint ... WizzardSft ... YM Bio g ...

9.03 .61 8.20 1.03 4.10 1.22 .28 3.03 d1.67 7.27 6.47 3.34 5.18 .10 1.12 1.76 3.83 1.65 16.19 2.75 10.50 1.27 .25 u2.07

+.07 +.01 +.13 +.02 -.11 -.02 ... +.15 +.03 ... -.03 +.01 -.02 -.00 +.01 -.01 +.08 ... +.44 ... -.02 -.11 ... +.13

S&P Sel 18.47 +.07 LT Adml n 11.33 ... STIGrade n10.90 ... Vanguard Instl Fds: MuHYAdm n10.74 ... StratEq n 16.80 +.09 BalInst n 20.57 +.05 Scout Funds: Intl 31.08 -.01 PrmCap r n64.14 +.15 TgtRetInc n11.29 ... DevMkInst n9.92 -.01 STsyAdml n10.93 ... TgRe2010 n22.24+.02 Selected Funds: EmMkInst n29.48 -.10 AmShD 38.85 +.08 ShtTrAd n 15.96 ... TgtRe2015 n12.25 ExtIn n 37.03 +.15 AmShS p 38.78 +.07 STFdAd n 11.00 ... +.02 FTAllWldI r n92.06n21.58+.04 TgRe2020 n 10.90 ... STIGrAd Sequoia n 125.80 +.23 TtlBAdml n10.92 -.01 TgtRe2025 n12.23 St FarmAssoc: .10 50.21 +.05 TStkAdm n29.15 +.11 +.03 Gwth GrwthIst n 28.91 +.10 WellslAdm n52.84-.06 TgRe2030 n20.83+.05 TCW Funds: InfProInst n10.83 -.03 TotRetBdI 10.38 ... WelltnAdm n52.09+.07 TgtRe2035 n12.52 InstIdx n 107.05 +.41 Windsor n 41.82 +.15 +.03 Templeton Instit: InsPl n 107.05 +.40 ForEqS 19.95 -.06 WdsrIIAd n42.95 +.17 TgtRe2040 n20.52 +.05 Vanguard Fds: Third Avenue Fds: InsTStPlus n26.35+.11 ValueInst 50.43 -.43 AssetA n 23.58 +.04 TgtRe2045 n12.96 MidCpIst n 18.58 +.08 CapOpp n 30.07 +.11 +.04 Thornburg Fds: IntValA p 26.76 -.06 DivdGro n 13.66 +.01 USGro n 16.60 +.08 SCInst n 31.27 +.12 IntValue I 27.34 -.07 Energy n 59.85 -.19 Wellsly n 21.81 -.02 TBIst n 10.92 -.01 Explr n 65.06 +.28 Welltn n 30.16 +.04 TSInst n 29.16 +.12 Tweedy Browne: GblValue 22.80 -.03 GNMA n 11.10 +.03 Wndsr n 12.39 +.04 ValueIst n 19.55 +.09 GlobEq n 17.24 +.03 WndsII n 24.20 +.09 Vanguard Signal: USAA Group: 13.23 +.01 GroInc n 24.71 +.10 Vanguard Idx Fds: TxEIt HYCorp n 5.75 ... 500 n 107.75 +.41 500Sgl n 89.01 +.34 VALIC : StkIdx 23.69 +.09 HlthCre n 123.16 +.20 Balanced n20.56 +.04 STBdIdx n 10.74 -.01 InflaPro n 13.53 -.05 DevMkt n 9.99 -.01 TotBdSgl n10.92 -.01 Vanguard Admiral: CAITAdm n11.27 ... IntlGr n 18.81 +.01 EMkt n 29.42 -.09 TotStkSgl n28.14 +.12 CpOpAdl n69.48 +.26 IntlVal n 31.87 -.03 Europe n 26.81 +.07 Victory Funds: EMAdmr r n38.72 -.13 ITIGrade n 10.47 -.02 Extend n 36.97 +.15 Energy n 112.43 -.35 LifeCon n 16.13 +.01 Growth n 28.91 +.11 DvsStA 14.29 +.04 500Adml n107.75 +.41 LifeGro n 21.10 +.04 ITBnd n 11.82 -.02 Waddell & Reed Adv: GNMA Ad n11.10 +.03 LifeMod n 19.11 +.03 MidCap n 18.51 +.08 AssetS p 9.02 -.01 HlthCr n 51.99 +.08 LTIGrade n 9.78 -.07 Pacific n 10.44 -.07 Wells Fargo Adv A: HiYldCp n 5.75 ... Morg n 16.38 +.09 REIT r n 17.95 +.13 InfProAd n 26.58 -.08 MuInt n 13.90 ... SmCap n 31.21 +.12 AstAllA p 11.94 ... ITBdAdml n11.82 -.02 MuLtd n 11.17 +.01 SmlCpGth n19.29 +.09 Wells Fargo Adv C: ITsryAdml n12.03 -.02 MuShrt n 15.96 ... SmlCpVl n 14.69 +.05 AstAllC t 11.53 ... IntGrAdm n59.90 +.06 PrecMtls r n24.61 +.07 STBnd n 10.74 -.01 Wells Fargo Instl: ITAdml n 13.90 ... PrmcpCor n12.79 +.03 TotBnd n 10.92 -.01 ITGrAdm n10.47 -.02 Prmcp r n 61.79 +.14 TotlIntl n 15.40 -.02 UlStMuIn p 4.82 ... LtdTrAd n 11.17 +.01 SelValu r n17.53 +.05 TotStk n 29.15 +.12 Western Asset: LTGrAdml n9.78 -.07 STAR n 18.63 +.03 Value n 19.54 +.08 CorePlus I 11.00 -.01

-.0416 -.0355 -.0302 -.0257 -.0229 -.0203 -.0175 -.0153 -.0130 -.0116 -.0110 -.0099 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114 -.0114

+.028 -.018 -.023 -.024 -.022 -.024 -.023 -.023 -.025 -.028 -.031 -.033 -.037

METALS NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Tue. Aluminum -$1.0840 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$3.7805 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper $3.7810 N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Lead - $2270.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.0436 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1348.50 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1345.70 troy oz., NY Merc spot Tue. Silver - $23.190 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $23.129 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Platinum -$1686.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1678.30 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. n.q.-not quoted, n.a.-not available r-revised


B4 Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Jumble

Family Circus

COMICS

Garfield

Beetle Bailey

DEAR ABBY: How do I get out of an affair that has been going on for two years? I started it at a bad time in my life —- fights with my husband, the pressure of having three young kids, and a business we coowned that was in financial difficulty. I know what I did was wrong. My husband doesn’t know, and I don’t think he suspects. I’m afraid if I end the affair, I will get blackmailed or found out. My lover refuses to end it. He wants me and thinks he can treat me better than my husband. Any advice? STUCK IN HOT TEXAS DEAR STUCK: Just this. A man who “refuses to end it” and implies that he would blackmail or betray you is not someone you would ever want to spend your life with. It’s time to tell your husband everything — that you deeply regret what you have done, why it happened, that you want to heal your marriage and be free of this barnacle who refuses to let go. The longer you wait, the more difficult it will be. Do it now. ##### DEAR ABBY: My wife, “Marissa,” and I are expecting our first child. My sister “Patti” has a little boy whom we all love and adore. When Patti learned Dear Readers:

A while back, we printed a longtime family recipe for TOMATO SOUP CAKE, or Conversation Cake. This is a recipe from my mother, the original Heloise, that was printed in the early 1960s and many times since. Some of you have written that it did not turn out well; others have said they liked it!

In this last printing, however, something got left out: the spices, which are optional. We have two versions, one “from

DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE

that we’re having a girl, she said we don’t “deserve” to have one because she has always wanted a daughter. Then Marissa added fuel to the fire with a few well-chosen remarks of her own that she shared with friends and neighbors. I just want all of this to stop and I don’t know how to accomplish it. I’m upset with Patti for her behavior, and sad that my wife and sister are at odds. This is hurting everyone in the family. What should I do? STRESSED-OUT DAD-TO-BE DEAR STRESSED OUT: Everyone needs to just calm down. Your wife and sister need to apologize to each other. Patti may have been joking when she said you don’t deserve to have a baby girl. What she may have meant — and overstated — was that she was experiencing a twinge of jealousy. Suggest to Marissa that your sister shouldn’t have

HINTS

FROM HELOISE

KING FEATURES SYNDICATE

scratch” and a quick one using a boxed cake mix. The cooking and editing gremlins must have gotten into the mix (yes, bad pun intended), and

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

been taken literally, and that she apologize to Patti for “snapping.” Ditto for your sister for her tactlessness. Then remind your sister that we don’t live in a country with a one-child policy. If she wants to try for a daughter, she is free to do so, and in the meantime, she’ll have a sweet little niece to spoil. #####

DEAR ABBY: My family moved to a new state last year. While there have been ups and downs, one of the things I miss most is my pets. Before we moved, we had a dog, a cat and some goldfish. Now we’re in an apartment and can’t afford all the fees associated with having pets. My son “Toby” is 2. He loved each of the animals. He’d watch the dog run around, pet the cat and stare at the fish. The cat slept in Toby’s nursery, the dog guarded him in his stroller, and the fish loved him because he fed them. How can I encourage my son’s natural love of animals? PETLESS IN MARYLAND DEAR PETLESS: Buy your son more goldfish. Read him stories about animals, and take him to the zoo as often as you can manage. His love of animals has already begun and this will continue it to develop.

the spices that CAN be added did not get printed. Mea culpa, mea culpa, and, oh yes, how many ways can I say sorry? It turns out, two! I have personally been retesting this recipe for weeks and have baked dozens of cakes: different brands of mix, different brands of tomato soup (the house brand was thinner than the national brand) and different “flavors” of cake mix. I used regular chocolate, German chocolate, dark chocolate, plain white and a yellow cake mix. The white and yellow looked a little orange, so I added a few drops of red food coloring to punch it up. This and the spices, plus a handful of raisins and 1/4 cup chopped nuts, made it taste like a carrot or spice cake. A few observations from me: Spend a little extra money and use a national brand, both cake mix and soup. The batter will be very thick — yes, that is how it is supposed to be. If you like spice, add any or all, or vary the spices. Nuts and raisins do add texture and make it more like a spice or carrot cake. Any frosting or icing will work. Sometimes I used chocolate, other times white. To the white, I added some food coloring to half and did a Picasso design. Once, I even put a few drops of red food coloring right on top of the batter in the pan, and then swirled with a knife for a colored, marbled look! So, here it is again, with the “extras.” You probably know how it goes with recipes, especially family or hand-medowns. Sometimes it seems the recipe gets lost in translation! 1 box cake mix 1 can tomato soup (undiluted) 2 eggs 1 teaspoon baking soda AND (These are optional; any or all, depending on your taste): 1 1/2 teaspoons nutmeg 2 1/2 teaspoons cinnamon 1 teaspoon allspice 1/2 teaspoon cloves 1 cup chopped nuts 1 cup raisins Put the dry cake mix in a large mixing bowl. Add the UNDILUTED tomato soup, eggs and baking soda, and spices, nuts and raisins, if you prefer. Mix and bake according to cake-mix directions. Heloise

Hagar the Horrible

Blondie

Zits

Snuffy Smith

Dilbert

The Wizard of Id

For Better or For Worse

Roswell Daily Record


Roswell Daily Record

B5

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

41-1 (10)

release dates: October 9-15

TM

Mini Spy . . .

Mini Spy loves her new video game. See if you can find: s SCISSORS s KITE s LADDER s NEEDLE s WORD -).) s BANDAGE s SNAIL s OWL s BROOM s PENCIL s SOCK s ICE CREAM s LETTER % s BOOK s HEART CONE Š 2010 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick

Layers of Imagination

Creating Art for Video Games photo by Dennis Burnett, courtesy Savannah College of Art and Design

Do you have fun playing video games? Hundreds of people may have worked to create each game. Many kinds of artists work on video game art so it looks real and exciting. The Mini Page talked with a video game designer and video game art professor to learn more about video game artists.

Concept artist The concept artist comes up with the concept, or idea, of the game. This artist invents the universe and the characters that will make up the game. He or she might draw out a rough idea of what the game world would look like.

2-D artist Artists working in two dimensions, or 2-D, might create art for games on devices such as cell phones. These devices were not specially made for games.

Dimensions

Wei-Hao (Kent) Chang, a student at the Savannah College of Art and Design, shows a game he created. Players hold a box and flip it to control a spot on the screen. Players have to use sound, touch and vision to play the game. Their moves show up on the screen and can create a work of art.

Animators

A dimension is the length, width or depth of an object. A picture in 2-D has only length and width and appears flat. For example, photos and most paintings are in 2-D.

An animator makes the characters seem to move. There are 2-D and 3-D animators. For example, if an artist has drawn a picture or made a model of a dragon, the animator would make it seem to 3-D artists come alive. He or she would make the The difference between a dragon’s wings flap or fire blow out of 2-D artist and a 3-D artist its mouth. is like the difference between a painter Animators of regular cartoons work and a sculptor. Artists working in in 2-D. Artists 3-D, or three dimensions, often make working on 3-D models of the art first. Their models animation movies have length, width and depth. such as “Wall-E� They may begin by making a model or “Shrek� may out of clay or plastic. But usually they also work on 3-D make only computer models. video games.

from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick

TM

Rookie Cookie’s Recipe

Spicy Baked Potato

You’ll need: s MEDIUM SIZE POTATO s TEASPOONS MARGARINE OR BUTTER s 1/2 teaspoon taco seasoning s TABLESPOON CHUNKY SALSA s TABLESPOONS SHREDDED REDUCED FAT CHEDDAR CHEESE s TABLESPOON LOW FAT SOUR CREAM s 1/2 cup black beans, drained and rinsed What to do: 1. Wash, dry and poke holes in potato with a fork. 2. Cook potato in microwave for 6 to 7 minutes on high. 3. Cut potato in half lengthwise; allow to cool slightly. 3COOP OUT POTATO INTO A MEDIUM SIZE BOWL -IX AND MASH IN BUTTER TACO seasoning, salsa, cheese and sour cream. 5. Place mixture back in potato shell; microwave again for 45 to 50 seconds. 6. Top with black beans. You will need an adult’s help with this recipe. from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick

Meet Justin Roberts

from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick

TM

Supersport: Ichiro Suzuki Height: 5-11 Weight: 170

Birthdate: 10-22-73 Hometown: Kasugai, Japan

Ask big-league baseball managers to describe the perfect LEADOFF BATTER AND CHANCES ARE THEY LL SAY h)CHIRO 3UZUKI v The veteran Seattle Mariners right fielder gets hits, draws walks, steals bases and scores runs. And he has been DOING ALL OF THAT SINCE COMING FROM *APAN AND MAKING HIS big-league debut in 2001. Ichiro batted more than .300 in each of his first nine seasons, reaching a career-high of .372 in 2004. As of early September this season, Ichiro was still rolling. His batting average was .313, his on-base percentage .361, and he was selected to play in his 10th straight All-Star Game. He’s nifty in the outfield as well, having won nine Gold Glove Awards for his defensive play. ! FAVORITE BOTH IN *APAN AND 3EATTLE )CHIRO IS APPROPRIATELY KNOWN AS the “Hits Man.�

More About the Artists Texture artists Texture is the way something looks or feels. Texture artists add color. They make art seem real. For example, an artist might create a model of a car. But at this point the car is still colorless. The texture artist paints it different colors. He or she might add designs to the car. The artist might put the rubber on the tires and splashes of light on the fenders. He or she might take photos of a real car and scan them into the computer. Computer programs help copy the textures from the photo onto the art. Artists might create their own textures too. Their materials can seem real, even in fantasy games. The texture artist might make a car’s metal look smooth or a dragon’s scales look rough.

The model on the left is the original model of a character from the game “Rift Boy� by Leng Lor. The artist has added texture to the model on the right. These designs were done as a project at the Savannah College of Art and Design.

photo courtesy Savannah College of Art and Design

photo Š 2010 by Todd Rosenberg

*USTIN 2OBERTS AND THE .OT 2EADY FOR Naptime Players travel the country playing MUSIC FOR KIDS (IS LATEST #$ IS h*UNGLE 'YM v *USTIN BEGAN HIS MUSICAL CAREER AS A member of a rock band in Minneapolis. He played music at night and worked as a preschool teacher during the day. He began writing and playing music for his students. He recorded some of these songs and sent them to friends for Christmas. One of his friends was a music producer WHO ENCOURAGED *USTIN TO RECORD HIS MUSIC FOR THE PUBLIC *USTIN HAD PLANNED TO GET AN ADVANCED DEGREE IN RELIGIOUS studies, but he began spending more time on his music. Within a few years, he and his friends in the band began touring full-time. *USTIN AND HIS WIFE LIVE IN %VANSTON )LL from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick

Other creators Many people are needed to create advanced games. s 7RITERS decide what words the characters say. They might work on PLOTS 6IDEO GAME WRITERS MIGHT ALSO WRITE FOR MOVIES OR 46 SHOWS COMIC books or regular books. s 3OUND ENGINEERS record real noises or invent their own. s 0ROGRAMMERS, people good at math and science, are the ones who build the software engine that makes everything work together.

The designer A designer takes a completed animated figure and puts it into the game. For example, the artist might take a car and decide how fast it will go and how quickly it will turn. The designer might create a NASCAR stadium or a landscape to put the car in. If the game involves a soldier parachuting from a plane, the designer could lay out a forest, build Army headquarters or lay out a beach. The designer can take characters and put them at different levels of the game. The designer might decide to move an animated dragon from a tree to a castle. from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick

TM

Video Game History

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

Bursting into our world

The Mini Page thanks Jack Mamais, video game designer and professor of Interactive Design and Game Development, Savannah College of Art and Design, for help with this issue.

Add` i]gdj\] ndjg cZlheVeZg [dg hidg^Zh i]Vi XdjaY WZ ijgcZY ^cid \ddY k^YZd \VbZh# Next week, The Mini Page is about the Great Lakes.

photo Š Nintendo

Alec: How were the animals entertained during the Great Flood? Ginger: They played video games in Noah’s Arcade!

photo Š Nintendo

Experts say the video game industry has grown faster than any other artistic medium. The earliest computer games became popular in the early 1970s. Early games were just some dots on the screen. “Pong,� one of the first popular video games, was basically made up of just three dots on the screen. Two dots were the paddles, and one dot represented the ball. If you looked closely, you could see that these screen dots were made up of even tinier dots called pixels (PIKS-uhls). As games became more advanced, the number of pixels on the screens kept growing. Today, there are so many pixels that the graphics can look almost as real as photographs.

“Donkey Kong� was one of the first popular video arcade games. The character Mario first appeared in this game.

The character Mario was designed especially for video games. He began as a 2-D game character. Today he appears as a 3-D character.

Growing technology

Advice from a designer

At first, people played simple video games on home computers. Then more advanced games were designed for video arcades, or places where people can go to play games. Movie complexes and hotels often have video arcades today. Today, the most advanced games are usually played on consoles (KAHN-soles) such as PlayStation or Xbox. A console is a computer system designed to run games. It is usually meant to be hooked up to a screen. Today, the best video games pull together great art, stories and technology. Experts say the video game business today makes more money than Hollywood movies do.

6IDEO GAME ARTISTS OFTEN WORK IN several different areas. For example, the concept artist might also work as the 3-D artist and the designer. *ACK -AMAIS GAME DESIGNER AND professor at Savannah College of Art and Design, says good designers and artists have to have experiences in life before they can develop great games. He recommends that after doing their homework, kids go outside and play. Later they can play video games. If you want to be a video game artist, read everything you can. Study mythology. Kids who want to be any kind of artist should carry a sketchbook. Draw all the time. If you can, learn how to use computer programs such as Photoshop.

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

! W E

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I]Z B^c^ EV\Zœ

7dd` d[ HiViZh

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

Amanda: 7HAT IS $R *EKYLL S FAVORITE video game? Rose: “Hyde and Seekâ€?! Hannah: What age group enjoys playing video games? Jackson: Kideos! from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick

Brown Bassetews The N d’s Houn

TM

TRY ’N FIND

Video Games

Words that remind us of video game art are hidden in the block below. Some words are hidden backward or diagonally. See if you can find: ANIMATOR, ARCADE, ART, CHARACTER, COLOR, COMPUTER, CONCEPT, CONSOLE, DESIGNER, DIMENSIONS, DOT, GAME, MODEL, PLAY, SCREEN, SCULPTOR, TECHNOLOGY, TEXTURE, VIDEO.

ARE YOU A GAMER?

C O N S O L E M T

A N I M A T O R O

G P C X A K C Y D

M A L O L R L G S

K O M A L A T O N

X R D E Y O Q L O

R O E E V T R O I

E T R S L P E N S

N P U C O E D H N

G L T R E C A C E

I U X E D N C E M

S C E E I O R T I

E S T N V C A L D

D C O M P U T E R

C H A R A C T E R

from The Mini Page Š 2010 Universal Uclick

Ready Resources The Mini Page provides ideas for websites, books or other resources that will help you learn more about this week’s topics. At the library: s h(OW !RTISTS 3EE (EROES -YTH (ISTORY 7AR Everyday� by Colleen Carroll s h3O 9OU 7ANNA "E A #OMIC "OOK !RTIST (OW TO "REAK Into Comics! The Ultimate Guide for Kids� by Philip Amara s h6IDEO 'AME $ESIGNER #OOLCAREERS COM v BY 7ALTER Oleksy s h(OT *OBS IN 6IDEO 'AMESv BY 3CHOLASTIC

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

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


B6 Wednesday, October 13, 2010

CLASSIFIEDS

Chile choreographs dramatic finish to rescue saga

SAN JOSE MINE, Chile (AP) — A missile-like escape capsule was lowered into a nearly half-mile tunnel in the Chilean desert Tuesday night to carry 33 miners to fresh air and freedom after 69 days — the longest anyone has ever been trapped underground and survived. Steam rushed from the hole into the frigid night air — a sign of the humid, sauna-like conditions the men have endured in the gold and copper mine. Chilean President Sebastian Pinera patted the side of the custom-built capsule proudly as the last act of the mine collapse ordeal approached. “We made a promise to never surrender, and we kept it,” Pinera said as he waited to greet the miners, whose endurance and unity captivated the world as Chile meticulously prepared their rescue. Mining Minister Laurence Golborne said he hoped the first of the miners would still emerge before midnight, a slow process because of the need for methodical testing with a rescue worker inside once all the cables are attached and tested. A mine rescue expert will be lowered in the capsule and raised again to test it, and then that rescuer and a navy special forces paramedic will be lowered to the men to prepare them for the trip. Only then can the first miner be pulled to safety. It is expected to take as many as 36 hours for the last miner to be rescued. Families and reporters huddled around TVs and bonfires as the preliminary rescue order was announced. Florencio Avalos, the 31-year-old second-in-command of the miners, was to be the first

miner out. Avalos has been so shy that he volunteered to handle the camera rescuers sent down so he wouldn’t have to appear on the videos that the miners sent up. The last miner out is also decided: Shift foreman Luis Urzua, whose leadership was credited for helping the men endure 17 days with no outside contact after the collapse. The men made 48 hours’ worth of rations last that entire time before rescuers could drill holes to them and send down more food. Janette Marin, sister-in-law of miner Dario Segovia, said the order of rescue didn’t matter. “What matters is that he is getting out, that they are all getting out. “This won’t be a success unless they all get out,” she added, echoing the solidarity that the miners and people across Chile have expressed. The paramedics can change the order of rescue based on a brief medical check once they’re in the mine. First out will be those best able to handle any difficulties and tell their comrades what to expect. Then, the weakest and the ill — in this case, about 10 suffer from hypertension, diabetes, dental and respiratory infections and skin lesions from the mine’s oppressive humidity. The last should be people who are both physically fit and strong of character. Chile has taken extensive precautions to ensure the miners’ privacy, using a screen to block the top of the shaft from the more than 1,000 journalists at the scene. The miners will be ushered through an inflatable tunnel, like those used in sports stadiums, to an ambulance for a trip of several

GARAGE SALES

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

006. Southwest

Legals

Legals

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish Sept. 22, 29, Oct. 6, 13, 2010 FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO

PIONEER BANK, v.

Plaintiff,

ANNOUNCEMENTS

025. Lost and Found

FOUND MALE Basset Hound. Call to identify. 831-262-9498 LOST: 10/2, white male Chihuahua. S. Lea/Gayle. Reward. SRCTZ. 627-0633

JOYCE E. PINKERTON,

FOUND MEDIUM sized, pure bred male dog near Berrendo/Atkinson. Call to identify 505-514-4956.

Defendant.

No. CV-2010-714

710 FRUITLAND, Thurs-Sat. TVs, sofas, tables, mens & womens clothes, jewelry, toys.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE is hereby given that on the October 26, 2010, at the hour of 11:45 a.m. the undersigned Special Master, or his designee, will, at the south door of the Roswell Police Department, 128 W. Second Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, sell, assign and convey, FOR CASH, all of the right, title and interest of Defendant Joyce E. Pinkerton, in and to the hereinafter described land and appurtenances to the highest bidder for cash. The property to be sold is located in Chaves County, New Mexico, and is more particularly described as follows: SURFACE TITLE ONLY: Lot 137, of the Meadows, a Redivision, in the City of Roswell, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat recorded June 10, 1982 in Plat Book H, page 153, Real Property Records of Chaves County, New Mexico.

(a/k/a 1008 Ivy Drive, Roswell, New Mexico 88203).

including all improvements, fixtures and attachment. Subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to the statutory one (1) month right of redemption by the Defendant from entry of an order approving the sale. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy allowed claims by Pioneer Bank against the Defendant in the amount of $99,297.67, pursuant to Order of the District Court of Chaves County, New Mexico in the above numbered and entitled cause entered on September 10, 2010, together with interest after Judgment on the entire Judgment at the rate of 7.50%, costs of sale, and additional costs which may be incurred by Plaintiff. Pioneer Bank has the right to bid at such sale all of their joint claims, covered by the above-referenced Judgment and submit its/their bid verbally or in writing. Pioneer Bank may apply all or part of the sums due to them to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master. The Courts decree, having duly appointed the Special Master to advertise and immediately offer for sale the subject real estate and to apply the proceeds of sale first to the cost of sale and then to the Special Masters fees, then to pay the above-described claims recognized in favor of Pioneer Bank and cost of sale, and to pay into the registry of Court any balance remaining to satisfy future adjudication of other claims against the estate. NOW, therefore, Notice is hereby given that in the event that said property is not sooner redeemed, the undersigned will as set forth above, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent the land and improvements described above for the purpose of satisfying the allowed claims of Pioneer Bank, the judgment decreed herein and the Order together with any cost, cost of advertisement and publication, and a reasonable Special Master's fee which has been fixed by the Court in the amount of $150.00 plus gross receipts tax. Sale is subject to entry of an order of the Court approving the sale. _______________________________ Anderson Dirk Jones, Special Master PO Box 1180 Roswell, New Mexico 88202 (575)-622-8432

FOUND COCKER spaniel in vicinity of Roswell High. Call to describe 622-7105.

hundred yards (meters) to a triage station for a medical check. They will gather with a few relatives in an area also closed to the media, before being taken by helicopter to a hospital. Each ride up the shaft is expected to take about 20 minutes, and authorities expect they can haul up one miner per hour. When the last man surfaces, it promises to end a national crisis that began when 700,000 tons of rock collapsed Aug. 5, sealing the miners into the lower reaches of the mine. The only media allowed to record them coming out of the shaft will be a government photographer and Chile’s state TV channel, whose live broadcast will be delayed by 30 seconds or more to prevent the release of anything unexpected. Photographers and camera operators are on a platform more than 300 feet (90 meters) away. The worst technical problem that could happen, rescue coordinator Andre Sougarett told The Associated Press, is that “a rock could fall,” potentially jamming the capsule partly up the shaft. Panic attacks are the rescuers’ biggest concern. The miners will not be sedated — they need to be alert in case something goes wrong. If a miner must get out more quickly, rescuers will accelerate the capsule to a maximum 3 meters per second, Health Minister Jaime Manalich said. The rescue attempt is risky simply because no one else has ever tried to extract miners from such depths, said Davitt McAteer, who directed the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration in the Clinton administration. A miner could get claustrophobic and do something to damage the capsule. Or a

EMPLOYMENT

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DOMINO'S PIZZA is now hiring drivers. Earn up to $13 per hour. Apply online today at careers.dominos.com COMFORT KEEPERS NOW HIRING! The TOP in-home care agency serving Roswell & Artesia seeks F/T or P/T Reliable, experienced caregivers and/or CNAs for immediate work. Week-ends or bilingual a plus. You’ll make every day special for someone and this will be the best job you ever had! Call Carol @ 624-9999 and apply in Roswell at 1410 S. Main or at 502 W Texas, Ste C, Artesia.

falling rock could wedge it in the shaft. Or the cable could get hung up. Or the rig that pulls the cable could overheat. “You can be good and you can be lucky. And they’ve been good and lucky,” McAteer told the AP. “Knock on wood that this luck holds out for the next 33 hours.” Golborne, whose management of the crisis has made him a media star in Chile, said authorities had already thought of everything. “There is no need to try to start guessing what could go wrong. We have done that job,” Golborne said. “We have hundreds of different contingencies.” As for the miners, Manalich said, “It remains a paradox — they’re actually much more relaxed than we are.” Rescuers finished reinforcing the top of the 2,041-foot (622meter) escape shaft Monday, and the 13-foot (four-meter) capsule descended flawlessly in tests. The capsule — the biggest of three built by Chilean navy engineers — was named Phoenix I for the mythical bird that rises from ashes. It is painted in the white, blue and red of the Chilean flag. The miners were to be closely monitored from the moment they’re strapped in the capsule. They were given a high-calorie liquid diet donated by NASA, designed to keep them from vomiting as the rescue capsule rotates 10 to 12 times through curves in the 28-inch-diameter escape hole. A small video camera is in the escape capsule, trained on each miner’s face for panic attacks. The miners will wear oxygen masks and have two-way voice communication. Their pulse, skin temperature

SEASONED PROFESSIONAL wanted to provide administrative support to CEO on a flexible but part time basis. Duties include, but are not limited to, typing, filing, faxing, document creation, answering phones, maintaining file system, and ordering supplies. Must be detail oriented and effectively handle multiple projects. Prefer 3-5 years of administrative experience. Must be able to pass pre employment criminal background check. Please send resume with references to: Position, 400 North Pennsylvania, Suite 940, Roswell, NM 88201

www.comfortkeepers.com.

Legals

Legals

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish October 13, 2010 K50IA, Roswell, NM

On September 14, 2010, Trinity Christian Center of Santa Ana, Inc. filed an assignment application with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) seeking approval to transfer the license for K50IA, Channel 50, Roswell, NM to Minority Media Telecommunications Council, Inc. K50IA is authorized to broadcast at 5.4kw kilowatts from its transmitter site located at 9.65 Km WSW of Roswell NM, at geographical coordinates 33 degrees, 21 minutes, 47 seconds North Latitude, 104 degrees, 38 minutes, 11 seconds West Longitude. Individuals who wish to advise the FCC about any facts relevant to this assignment application or the public interest can contact the FCC at Federal Communications Commission, Washington, DC 20554. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish October 10, 13, 2010 VILLAGE OF CLOUDCROFT NOTICE OF REQUEST FOR PROPOSALS

The Village of Cloudcroft, contracting agency, is requesting sealed proposals to retain the services of experienced legal counsel, either as sole proprietorship or a law firm, to represent the Village in pending or threatened construction litigation involving a claim by the contractor for damages with possible counterclaims, cross-claims and third party claims involving other parties having contractual relationships with the Village. The other entities known to have an interest in this matter are Carl Kelley Construction, Livingston & Associates and the Nationwide Insurance Company. The project scope includes as a minimum, the representation of the Village of Cloudcroft in threatened or pending litigation in the 12th Judicial District Court or U.S. District Court when filed, and any possible appeals. Copies of the Scope of Services required, may be obtained in person at the Office of the Village Clerk, 201 Burro Avenue, Cloudcroft, NM, Monday thru Friday, 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m., or will be mailed upon written or telephone request, to the Village Clerk, PO Box 317, Cloudcroft, NM 88317, or (575) 682-2411. No faxed or emailed proposals will be considered. Proposals will be received at the Village Clerk’s Office, 201 Burro Avenue (PO Box 317), Cloudcroft, NM 88317, until 2 p.m., Wednesday, October 20, 2010. No faxed or emailed proposals will be considered.

____________________ Jini S. Turri, Village Clerk

and respiration rate will be constantly measured through a biomonitor around their abdomens. To prevent blood clotting from the quick ascent, they took aspirin and will wear compression socks. The miners will also wear sweaters because they’ll experience a shift in climate from about 90 degrees underground to near freezing on the surface after nightfall. Those coming out during daylight hours will wear sunglasses. Engineers inserted steel piping at the top of the shaft, which is angled 11 degrees off vertical before plunging like a waterfall. Drillers had to curve the shaft to pass through “virgin” rock, narrowly avoiding collapsed areas and underground open spaces in the overexploited mine, which had operated since 1885. Seconds before each miner surfaces, a siren will sound and a light will flash for a minute to alert doctors to an arriving miner. After initial medical checks and visits with family members selected by the miners, the men will be flown to the hospital in Copiapo, a 10-minute ride away. Two floors have been prepared where the miners will receive physical and psychological exams and be kept under observation in a ward as dark as a movie theater. Chilean air force Lt. Col. Aldo Carbone said helicopter pilots have night-vision goggles but won’t fly unless it is clear of the thick Pacific Ocean fog that rolls in at night. Families were urged to wait and prepare to greet the miners at home after a 48-hour hospital stay. Manalich said no cameras or interviews will be allowed until the miners are released, unless the miners expressly desire it.

045. 045. 045. 045. Employment Employment Employment Employment Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities

HVAC TECHNICIAN MJG is currently accepting application for an HVAC tech, which includes repairing restaurant equipment. We will negotiate top salary, paid vacation and benefits. Send work history or pick up application at 204 W. 4th St. Roswell NM 88201 or fax to 575-623-3075.

Legals

Date Signed: September 29, 2010

Roswell Daily Record

-------------------------------------------Publish October 6, 13, 20, 2010

NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF CURRY STATE OF NEW MEXICO

Cheryle Diane Clayton Powers Petitioner,

vs.

Scott Powers, Respondent.

No. D-0905DM0201000588

NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF SUIT

TO: Scott Powers, upon whom constructive service is sought by publication. GREETINGS: You are hereby notified that a Petition for Dissolution of Marriage has been filed against you by Diane Clayton, Petitioner, pro se, in the District Court of New Mexico, Curry County. The object of this suit is an absolute dissolution of marriage on the ground of incompatibility. The Petitioner represents himself/herself and his/her address is 1201 Norris Room 316B Clovis NM 88101. You are further notified that unless you file a responsive pleading or motion, by November 30 2010, Judgment or other appropriate relief will be rendered against you in this cause by default. WITNESS my hand and seal of the District Court this 1st day of October, 2010. SHELLY BURGER DISTRICT COURT CLERK

ARBY’S AND Dairy Queen of NM is currently accepting applications for a Maintenance Tech. Must have general knowledge of repairing restaurant equipment. Send work history to 204 W. 4th St. Roswell, NM 88201 or fax 575-623-3075

CLIENT SERVICES Specialist/Clerk To be considered for this position interested individuals shall have a minimum of a high school diploma, higher education preferred. The perfect candidate will have experience and be comfortable working with diverse cultures and communities, be self motivated, and have experience in direct client contact. This would be the perfect opportunity for anyone who wants to have fun, make a difference, and is interested in serving their community. Bilingual is a plus! 20 hours per week, Monday – Friday. Send resume or apply in person at 200 W. Hobbs Street, Roswell, NM 88203, or send resume via email to Sashua@alianzanm.org. Deadline to apply is October 12, 2010 or until position is filled. EEOE” FULL-TIME BABYSITTER needed 24-48 hrs at a time. Please call 637-4715 if interested. 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. NOW TAKING applications for server/cashier positions. Please apply in person at Zen Asian Diner, 107 E. Country Club Rd. BUSY NEPHROLOGY practice seeking an RN, LPN, or MA with an Internal Medicine background. Responsibilities will include office management of patients with medical problems related to kidney disease. Please send resume to Office Manager, Renal Medicine Associates, 313 W. Country Club, #12, Roswell, NM 88201. Resume may be faxed to Attention: Susan (575)6275835 or emailed to susan.d@renalmed.com BETWEEN HIGH School and College? Over 18? Drop that entry level position. Earn what you’re worth!!! Travel/ w Successful Young Business Group. Paid Training. Transportation, Lodging Provided. 1-877-646-5050

NEEDED SERVER/BARTENDER. Must be available to work days, nights, and weekends. Apply Tuesday-Saturday at the Roswell Country Club; 2601 N. Urton Road, Roswell, NM, 88201 SALES REPRESENTATIVE - For Las Vegas, NM area. The Las Vegas Optic is seeking applications for a full time position in sales. Successful candidates must have good people skills as well as the ability to sell advertising and help businesses grow, Experience isn't a requirement. Resumes should be mailed to the attention of Vincent Chavez, Optic advertising manager, P.O. Box 2670, Las Vegas, NM 87701, or e-mail to vchavez@ lasvegasoptic.com.

ALL CASH VENDING ROUTE! Be Your Own Boss! 25 machines +Candy All for $9995. 877-9158222 MEDICAL OFFICE Positions: KYMERA Independent Physicians Primary Care Clinic

Is seeking Three Qualified Applicants for: - RN/BSN for CLINICAL OFFICE DIRECTOR: Supervisory/management skills required. - RN/BSN - LVN

All positions are Full-Time and require experience in Family Practice/Internal Medicine. 2 - 3 years working in a medical office setting preferred.

Please fax resume with cover letter to: (575) 627-9520 -----------------------------------Medical Office Positions: KYMERA Independent Physicias Cancer Center Roswell

Full Time Office Assistant -Customer Service Skills and Computer Knowledge required. Applicants should demonstrate friendly/outgoing attitude, organization skills, and the ability to work with patients in a medical office setting. Prior experience working in a medical office a plus. KYMERA Independent Physicians Primary Care Clinic

Full Time Medical Records Clerk Knowledge of Medical Records, Computer Knowledge and organizational skills required. Prior experience working in a medical office. Please fax resume with cover letter to: (575) 627-9520 Include “Application for Roswell Clinic” in cover letter.

EASTERN NEW MEXICO UNIVERSITY: NOW HIRING! Groundskeeper, Graphic Designer, Instructional Designer. All jobs in Portales, NM. Must pass a pre-employment background check. AA/EO/Title IX Employer. (575)562-2115. www.enmu.edu/services/hr. WRITE A Marketable Children’s Book in 7 Weeks http://writechildrensbook .com SERVICE COORDINATOR High Desert Family Services, Inc. has an immediate opening for a Service Coordinator for our Roswell office. Responsibilities include management of a caseload of consumers, support and supervision of providers, and customer service to consumers, providers, guardians and case managers. The Service Coordinator will oversee the implementation of ISP, provide pre-service and inservice training. Home visits to evaluate quality of service, monitor documentation and participate in quality assurance activities, such as, Incident Management, Health and Safety, and/or Human Rights committees and unit utilization. Bachelor's degree and 1 year direct experience in DD preferred, experience without a degree will be considered. Excellent organizational, communication and customer service skils required. Competitive salary and benefit package. Send cover letter and resume to lgeurin@highdesertfs.com or drop off at 604 W. 2nd, Roswell, NM. PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATION seeks permanent part-time clerical/accounting assistant 20 hrs/wk. Word, Xcel and attention to detail required. Email resume with cover letter to nwhittin@bsamail.org or fax to 622-3493. PYRAMID SERVICES is now accepting applications for one HVAC Technician $17.38 hr. Applications are available at the NM Workforce Solutions or resumes can be faxed to 575-748-7395 or e-mailed to esartain@pyramidsvc.com. Please include a coversheet stating the job you are applying for. EMTS COME join our healthcare staff at the New Mexico Military Institute (Roswell, NM) PRN available! Apply online at www.correctioncare.com or submit resume to Brian Mason at: Fax: 309-272-1563 Toll Free: 866-670-3331 x562 Email: brian.mason@ correctioncare.com EOE


Roswell Daily Record 045. 045. Employment Employment Opportunities Opportunities A BRAND- New Comfort Suites is seeking Front Desk Agent and Housekeeper. Please apply @ 3610 N. Main. CITY OF ROSWELL Police Clerical Assistant

Full-time clerical and secretarial work with the Police Department. Hours include weekday, evenings, nights, holidays and weekends. Salary range $9.8871 to $13.7797 per hour. Information sheet, required application and waiver forms are available from the Human Resources Office, 425 N. Richardson, 624-6700 ext. 268 or online at www.roswellnm.gov. Deadline to submit a required application package is 5:00 pm, October 22, 2010. EOE CITY OF ROSWELL Clerical Assistant III Museum Membership Coordinator

Advanced, skilled clerical and secretarial work involving providing advanced clerical and secretarial support for the Museum Membership Program and the Museum Director. Salary range $10.6089 to $13.5399 per hour with excellent benefits. Information sheet, required application and waiver forms are all available from the Human Resources Office, 425 N. Richardson, 575-624-6700 ext. 268 or on-line at www.roswell-nm.gov. Deadline to submit required application and waiver form is 5:00pm, October 20, 2010. EOE

SERVICES

105. Childcare

AVON, Buy or Sell. Pay down your bills. Start your own business for $10. Call Sandy 317-5079 ISR.

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

CITY OF ROSWELL Museum Attendant I Regular Part-Time

Part-Time specialized security work performed at the Roswell Museum and Art Center involving the application of routine security principles in protecting the Museum’s collection and assisting the visiting public. Salary range $7.6497 to $11.0814 per hour with excellent benefits. Information sheet, required application and waiver forms are all available from the Human Resources Office, 425 N. Richardson, 624-6700 ext. 268 or on-line at www.roswell-nm.gov. Deadline to submit a required application package is 5:00 pm, October 20, 2010. EOE

LICENSED HOME accepting private pay & CYFD kids. All shifts. 4206803

115. Bookkeeping

BOOKKEEPING, PAYROLL Processing, CRS taxes specializing in Quickbook installation and training Call 914-0142

140. Cleaning

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

TEMPORARY PART Time Yard maintenance position. Apply at Saddle Creek Apartments, 1901 South Sunset. No phone calls, please.

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

ROSWELL HONDA is seeking a Full and Part time Porter. Must be energetic, enthusiastic and a Team player. Must be insurable, pass back ground Check and drug test. Must be 18. Apply in person With Mike Holstun @ Roswell Honda on West Second. No PHONE calls. EOE.

HOUSE/OFFICE Cleaning low prices. Excellent work call anytime. 575-973-2649 or 575-973-3592 RELIABLE, EXPERIENCED, Christian Lady will do house cleaning. Have references. 575-921-7928

150. Concrete

BILINGUAL SALES help to work at Roswell Fair Grounds this weekend only Friday-Sunday. $10/hr, must be well groomed. 407-687-5392

RUNNING BEAR Concrete Construction. Patios, foundations, driveways & curbing, 317-6058

CLASSIFIEDS

195. Elderly Care

HOME HEALTH Care 20 years of experience, hourly or long hours. Leave message. 627-6267

200. Fencing

M.G. Horizons Install all types of fencing. Free estimates. Chain link, wood, or metal. 623-1991. Rodriguez Construction FOR WOOD, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100

210. Firewood/Co al SEANSONED MOUNTAIN wood $110 1/2 cord. 626-9803. SEASONED WOOD, mixture of cedar, pine, & pinon. Delivery in town. 626-8466 or 840-7849

HANDYMAN SPECIALIZING in Masonary needs. Also sell firewood $175 cord delivered. 575-736-7813 or 575-973-2787 CORDOVA CHIMNEY 623-5255 or 910-7552 after 3pm.

GUARANTEED, SEASONED, all hardwoods, split, preview. Free delivery & stack locally. $200/1, $375/2. 575-317-4317

225. General Construction

COMMERCIAL/RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION and remodeling. Concrete, framing, drywall/painting, roofing, new homes, additions, and renovations. 575-317-6921 TEE TIME Construction Commercial/Residential Construction - Framing, cement, roofing, drywall/painting, New Construction of Homes, Additions and Remodeling. Licensed and Bonded. Call 575-626-9686

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

ROOFING “ALL Types” Commercial, residential, complete remodeling 30 yrs exp. Lic-Bonded-Insured 317-0115 or 637-2222

235. Hauling TRASH HAULING. Also clean barns, attics, garages, & basements. Call 625-1429.

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

• Ads posted online at no extra cost

(includes tax)

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

CLASSIFICATION

PROPERTY CLEANUPS Will tear down old buildings, barns, haul trash, old farm equipment. 3470142 or 317-7738

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

WEEKEND WARRIOR Lawn Service mowing, property cleanup, residential rain gutter cleaning, and much more 575-626-6121

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

Greenscapes Sprinkler Systems Lawn mowing, field mowing, gravel, sod-hydro seed, pruning, tilling, For dependable & reliable service call 622-2633 or 910-0150. LAWN SERVICE & much more work at low price. 914-0803 or 914-1375

Roswell Lawn Service: Mow’n trim bushes/shrubs, general cleanup, 420-3278

ALL TYPES of landscaping sprinklers odd jobs brush hog just ask we may do it. 914-3165 WEED MOWING, Lots & Fields light tractor work scraping. Also, lawns mowed & trimmed. Free est. John 317-2135

LAWN SERVICE and much more. Low rates! Call 914-0586 or 622-8263.

LAWN MAINTENANCE and odd jobs, flexible prices to fit your budget. 3475648

285. Miscellaneou s Services

TRANSLATIONS ENGLISH, Spanish, fast & accurate. http://www.123fasttranslations.com/ ines_5785@yahoo.com WATER SOFTENER and reverse Osmosis Sales and Service of all major brands. Need salt delivered to your home? Call the Water Mechanix for the best prices and service at 575910-4265

305. Computers

9YR OF Computer Repair Experience. Virus? Mal-Ware? Computer Problems? Call Angelo “Your Computer Solutions”. 575-3177372.We come to you. PHILLIPS COMPUTER, 20 yrs exp., PC repair, data retrieval, virus removal, free estimates and reasonable rates, senior discounts, credit cards accepted. Call Brian 914-0788 or 623-2411.

310. Painting/ Decorating

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

312. Patio Covers

SOLARA ADJUSTABLE PATIO COVER...OPEN or CLOSED...you decide! See at All About Spas, 3700 N. Main Street, Roswell. Free Estimate. MG HORIZONS. Patio, curbing, driveways, sidewalks, slab, etc. Free estimates. 623-1991

345. Remodeling

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

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

345. Remodeling

Dennis the Menace

HANDYMAN: FREE estimates, complete remodeling including tile work, painting, plumbing, roofing, additions, storage rooms, laminate floor, texture, granite countertops, kitchen & bath renovation. Guaranteed Work. 910-7035 Miguel. NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552.

350. Roofing Need A Roof?

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

395. Stucco Plastering

GUILLERMO STUCCO & Lath, concrete, roofing, dyrwall & cinder block. Will do stucco of any kind at a very reasonable rate. Quality guaranteed. Call 637-1217 M. G. Horizons All types of Stucco and Wire lath. Free Estimates 623-1991

490. Homes For Sale

ADVERTISE YOUR HOME ALL OVER NEW MEXICO. CALL THE DAILY RECORD FOR DETAILS. 622-7710 201 S. Sherman, 2br, 1ba, $59,500. 626-9499 rani.rubio@gmail.com.

405. TractorWork

FSBO: COUNTRY Property close to town, 4/2/2, 2112 sf, 24x30 shop, 10x10 storage shed on 1.8 acres, open floor plan, sprinkler system, $225,000. Call 420-0397 or 420-1464

410. Tree Service

4 BR 1 BA, fncd yrd, new paint, carpet, doors, ceiling fans, $59,500. 624-1331 MTh 8am-4pm

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

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

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

440. Window Repair AQUARIUS GLASS all types of glass replacements, 623-3738.

FINANCIAL

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 any preference, advertise 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.

3305 RIVERSIDE Dr. 2,222 sq. ft., 4/2.5/2, fp, hot tub, custom cabinets, $256k. 622-7010 2507 N. Orchard, 4/2/2, near schools, 2,000 sq ft, $162K. 622-2520 1806 WESTERN Ave 3/2, 149k OBO. Consider owner financing w/15k dn. Se Habla Espanol. 317-0177 HOMES FOR sale, 2/1 ba. 3/2 ba., Real-estate Contract avail. Petroglyph Properties. Owner/Broker. Call Julie 505-220-0617 or 505-899-4829. 3BR, 1 ba $50k inside remodeled. Please call 575-317-2722 SUPER SALE! $19,995, 3BR, 2x6 WALLS, FURNISHED, W/AIR+MORE, STATE WIDE DELIVERY, 8X32 PARK MODEL W/AIR, ONLY $6900!! CALL A-1 HOMES, 1-877-294-6803, D01157 1001 AVENIDA Del Sumbre, 3/2, $119,000 Possible owner financing w/$10,000 down 8%. New carpet, 1458 sq ft, new point, roof, clean ready to move in. 622-2361 or 622-6218 PRICE REDUCED more Open House Daily - 1PM to 7PM - Now $122,500 #3 Forest Drive. 2050 SF 4 Br, 1 3/4 Bath. Brokers welcome. Esquibel Real Estate (575) 626-7550 (575) 312-3529 Cisco

PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE

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

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WORD AD DEADLINE To Place or Cancel an Ad

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

CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS

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.

B7

FACILITIES SUPPORT SERVICES Omni Corporation is preparing an offer to FLETC for the Facilities Support Services contract. We are seeking highly qualified local professionals and support personnel with the following disciplines to include as part of our team: • Project Manager • Assistant Project Manager • Warehouse Manager (with National Property Management Association Certification) • Janitorial Supervisor • Landscape Supervisor/Gardener If you are currently working in any of these positions, or have experience performing facilities support services functions we want to hear from you. Please email or fax your resume identifying “FLETC Artesia” in the subject and attention line: Omni Corporation Attn: FLETC Artesia 505-338-3223 Fax: 505-338-3233 dbowen@omnicorporation.com All responses kept confidential EOE

495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale 4 ACRES on Brenda Rd, off Pinelodge Rd, $25,000. Terms, $2,500 dn, 0% int., $250 mo., (575)361-3083; 887-5915.

WATER, WATER, WATER. 3 acres with central water, hard surfaced streets, near Ruidoso. Only $17,900. Call NMLR 1-866906-2857.

505. Investment/ Commercial/ Business Property

Restaurant bldg, $275K, cash or will trade for Ruidoso property, 624 1331 for appt, M-Th, 8AM-4PM 5.26 ACRES commercially zoned, east of Allsup’s at RIAC entrance. $60,000. $7,000 down/$745 mo. @ 8% int. for 8 yrs. John Owen, Inc., Owner/Broker 623-3322.

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY formerly C&J Nursery, 410 S. Sunset, $49k, obo 317-6099 or 6231092 813-B RICHARDSON $310 a mo, $310 Dep., Water Paid.Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 624-2262 www.roswellforrent.com 813-A RICHARDSON $310 a mo, $310 Dep., Water paid. Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 624-2262 www.roswellforrent.com

515. Mobile Homes - Sale

WE BUY used mobile homes. Single and double wides 622-0035. D01090

520. Lots for Sale

OWNER FINANCING for a limited time. Ready to build 5 acre lots w/ great views & good covenants. Located 9 miles West of Roswell @ the Club House Banquet Facility. Free land maps and at entrance. 575-623-1800. www.BuenaVidaLand.com LOT FOR sale w/house on it. 408 E. Albuquerque, asking $8K or make offer. 623-0008 PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, Owner will finance with 10% down, New Construction only (no mobile homes), , Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd. between Country Club & Berrendo Rd. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 6266791, 626-4337

Mobile Home Lots for Sale $18,000. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. We Take Visa and Mastercard! 625-9746 or 420-1352.

ARTESIA Sun Country Estates, 5 acre lots on Sagebrush Trail, $12,000 each lot. Covenants, quiet, rural. 505-324-1196 Enchanted Hills on Sanders St. $30,000. Call 910-3247 for info

RENTALS

535. Apartments Furnished

1 & 2 BR’s, 1BA, utilities paid, No HUD, no pets, 2 person max, 6241331 for appt, M-Th, 8am-4pm 1 BD, fenced yard, no pets, no smoking, no HUD furnished available 6236281

DRIVER

Now Hiring Route Drivers

Food Grade Tank Based in Roswell, NM * Medical, Dental, Vision * Excellent 401k plan * Paid Holidays and Vacation CDL-A w/ tank end. & 2 yrs. T/T exp.

800-879-7826 www.ruan.com

Dedicated to Diversity EOE


B8 Wednesday, October 13, 2010 540. Apartments Unfurnished

VALLE ENCANTADA YOUR BEST $ RENTAL VALUE! LARGE 1,2,3 BEDROOMS. FREE UTILITIES. unfurnished, laundry room, playground, pool, ample parking. 2001 South Sunset. 6233722. 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. Good credit? Pay less rent! 575-623-2735 BEST VALUE IN TOWN 3br/2ba, $580+elec, newly remodeled, only a few apts left, 1br $380, 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944 3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, 930 sf, $580 plus electric. 502 S. Wyoming. 2 bedroom, 1 bath $480 or 1 bedroom $380. Call 622-4944.

EFFICIENCY 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

VERY SMALL 1 bedroom w/large fenced in yard. $300 mo., $200 dep. 6259208

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

1 & 2 BR’s, 1BA, 3 locations, No HUD, no pets, rental history req., 6241331 for appt, M-Th, 8am4pm 2 BDR. No Pets, No HUD, 500.00 + Dep. 1702 E. 2nd St. 773-396-6618 100 S. Kansas, 2 BR, big storage, big backyard, no pets, HUD. $600 626-9530

110 W Alameda 1br, 1ba, $325 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604

1700 N. Pontiac Dr., Corner of Montana/17th St., 2 BR apt for rent $600, Utilities are included. (626) 864-3461 APTS FOR rent 1,2,3, bedrooms some all bills paid call mike roswell area cell (575)637-2753.

1 BR, 1 ba, $450/mo., $200 dep. Wtr. paid, no pets/Hud 609 1/2 W. 8 St. 910-1300 2 BR, 2 ba $600 mo. $350 dep. No pets/Hud water pd. 2802 W. 4th Call 910-1300

2 BR, 1 ba, $350dep. $600 mo. No pets/Hud wtr pd 300 W.Mescalero 910-1300 DUPLEX NE location, 2br 2ba, w/d, appliances, fireplace, $990 mo., water, lawn care & assoc. dues pd. 625-0014 or 626-7768

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

PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHAN TED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN. 1049 POE.-$800 a mo, $800Dep., 2/2, 2 Car Gar, All paid -Stove, Frig, DW Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-6242262 www.roswellforrent.com

711 BAHIA.-$1025 a mo, $1000 Dep., 2/2, 2 Car Gar -Stove, Frig, DW Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-6242262 www.roswellforrent.com 2806-B W. Fourth.-$595 a mo, $450 Dep., 2/1, Water paid -Stove, Frig, DW Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-6242262 www.roswellforrent.com SPACIOUS & comfortable apt. close to shopping. Storage, laundry facilities. $550 water + gas paid. 1114 S. Kentucky. 9100851 or 626-8614 VERY CLEAN duplex, stove/ref., water pd., no pets/smoking, no HUD, $485/mo $450/dep. 4200720

545. Houses for RentFurnished

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 2 BR, 2 BA, lawn care incl, No HUD, no pets, 2 person max, 624-1331 for appt, MTh, 8AM-4PM 3 BR, 2 BTH, 1 Car Garage, FLETC Ready. Totally Remodeled. Inside & out. 575-626-5742

545. Houses for RentFurnished

3 BR, 1 BTH, Car Port, FLETC Ready. Totally Remodeled. Inside & out. 575-626-5742 515 CHAMISAL 3br, 2ba, Fletc ready $2100 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N Main 575-622-4604

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262 707 Plaza, 3br, 1 1/2 ba, 1 car garage, covered patio & fenced yard, new kitchen, fridge, stove, micro, $750 mo. plus dep., no smoking or HUD. Call 317-6180 or 622-4077 FOR LEASE: 1yr, 3br, 1 3/4ba, din. rm, den, 2 car carport, covered patio, walled backyard 1008 Rancho Rd. $1000mo., $600dep. Ref required. 626-4072

LARGE TRILEVEL home, 4 BR, 2 bath, 1 car garage, fenced yard. $1095 per mo., $1000 deposit. Located at 2404 S Baylor in Roswell. (575) 623-1800 or (575) 420-5516. 317-6409 2&3 BRs Houses, NO HUD, no pets, good pmt history req'd, 624 1331 for appt, M-Th 8AM-4PM

3/2/2 North side, $950 mo. plus dep. 87 Bent Tree. Call Ben at 317-6408 LARGE EXECUTIVE Townhome NE location 3 br, 3 ba. 2 car garage, many extras $1250 mo. $800 dep. 420-4535

1720 N. Michigan, 3br, 2ba, ref. air, w/d hookups, no pets, $850 mo, $500 dep., 637-8234. 2008 CLOVER, 2br, 2ba, $900 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604.

1406 CIRCLE Diamond, 4br, 3ba, $1900 month, Century 21 H, 3117 N. Main 575-622-4604. 3011 LA Jolla, 3br, 2ba, $1500 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604. 807 W Albuquerque 3br, 1ba $600 month, Century 21 HP 3117 N Main 575622-4604

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

62 E. Street, 3 BR, 1 BA, $500 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604

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

1521 N. Missouri, 2br, 1ba, $525 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604

#9 HUNSICKER, 2br, 1ba, $500 month, Century 21 HP, 3117 N. Main 575-6224604.

305 S. Missouri, 2br, 1ba, $500 month Century 21 HP 3117 N Main 575-622-4604 3BR, 2BA, N. Missouri $675. 3br $575, Al 7030420 or 202-4703

3BR/2ba ref. air stove fridge 910 Davidson Dr $625mo. $500 dep. Oct. 3 taking applications from 10am-12pm 420-6396

3BR, 1BA, all bills pd, $675 mo., $300 dep., no HUD. 420-5604. 607 SWINGING Spear, nice 3br, 2ba, stove, frig, d/w, fenced yard, refrig. air, fp, garage, $1000mo. $500 dep., 622-3250.

2BR, 2BA townhouse, FP, w/d hookups, patio, 1 car garage, quiet neighborhood. $325 dep., $650 mo., no pets, no smoking. 623-8021 or 9105778. 1511 W. Walnut, 2 BR, stove + Ref. $475.00 + deposit. No pets/Hud must have reference 625-0512 3 bd/2 ba. 1 car garage. Ref. Air. $850/$300dep. 2006 Barnett 910-1605

POSITION

CLASSIFIEDS

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

580. Office or Business Places

3BR, 1BA fenced yard pets OK, electric paid $600 month $250 dep. 1706 N. Missouri Ave. 625-1367 or inquire at 1704 N. Missouri. 50 MARK Rd 3br, 2ba $1400 month available 10/15. Century 21 HP 3117 N Main 575-622-4604 2BR, 1BA, $700 mo, $450 dep., 1005 N. Washington. Julie 505-220-0617 QUIET, SAFE area near ENMU-R, Leprino. 3br, new flooring & paint. W/D hookups, $550 mo., water pd., $350 dep. 575-5200305 or 575-527-0875 3BR, 1BA, stove, frig., fenced, no bills pd, quiet, 636 E. Apple, $575 mo., $575 dep. 626-0935

707 N Kansas.-$1300 a mo, $1000 Dep., 3/2, 1 Car Gar- Stove, Frig, DW Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-6242262 www.roswellforrent.com

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

595. Misc. for Rent

NORTH MAIN Self Storage, 3020 N. Main, spaces from 5x10 to 10x20 units, lighted, fenced and secure, reasonable rates. Office located at 200 W. 1st Suite 300, Petroleum Building. Please call 622-5385 or come by.

MERCHANDISE

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.

‘07 SOLITAIRE 16x66 (1056 sq ft), + carport, skirting $35,500 Senior Mobile Home Park-North. Gary 910-3320.

580. Office or Business Places

OFFICE SPACE for Rent. Prime downtown area, 2,061 sq.ft. Please call 622-8711. Modern Medical Office for Rent Large reception/clerical area, 4 exam rooms, lab, break room, storage. 342 W. Sherrill Lane, Ph. 575-622-2911 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. Office Space For Lease. Excellent Down Town Location. Various size spaces available. Ownerpaid utilities. Building Located 200 West 1st. Suite 300 Petrolium Building. Please call 6225385 or come by.

KENMORE WASHER & dryer, super capacity, matched se $220. Hotpoint washer & dryer, super capacity, matched set $180. Both sets in good condition. 626-7470. FOR SALE: Beautiful 1960’s Maple China cabinet $500 obo. 637-1917 or 208-9074 DARK WOOD dining room table w/4 chairs $350. Dark wood coffe table w/glass $100. Both in excellent condition. 317-8875

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 Miscellaneou s 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

605. 650. Washers Miscellaneou & Dryers s for Sale WE BUY washers & dryers,

NEWLY REMODELED 4BR, 2 BA. $900m. $600 dep. No pets, no HUD. 403 S. Birch 626-3816

3 bd/2 ba. 1 car garage. Ref. Air. $97,500. 2006 Barnett 910-1605

DALTON PROGRAMABLE electric power chair, 300lb weight capacity, never out of box, red, $1500. 6245351 leave message.

585. Warehouse and Storage

2 BDRM, 1 bath, $410 mo., $410 dep., No HUD. Call or text after 5pm 317-6159

2BR, 109 W. Hendricks, $500/month, $300/deposit. 420-2229

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

OFFICE SUITE- 900 sf. ft. 4 room office- Ground Floor, Great Parking and Easy Access. Large Reception Area with Three Individual Offices each connected to the reception area. Small utility/kitchen area. $800 a month plus electrical. Call 623-2414 for information.

{{{RENTED}}}

3BR, 1.5BA, 1cg, NE location, 407 Northwood, freshly painted, pets ok, $900 mo., $900 dep., no HUD. Call Tom 317-3447.

RIDING LAWN mower 16.5 HP 42” cut yard machine $400. Call 6241293

OFFICE SPACE for rent. Prime Downtown area, 2500sq.ft..Please call 4206300.

2406 1/2 North Grand. Near hospitals/shopping 2/2 carport, ref. air, appliances, looking for professional or retiree $600.

CLEAN 2 BR, 1527 N. Michigan $450.00 + Dep. No Pets. No HUD. Call 626-2190

STOREFRONT/Retail/ 2500 sqft 58 ft frontage at 3106 N. Main 1200/month 627-9942

MEDICAL PLAZA office, N. Union, approx. 800 sq. ft, $500 month. Steve @ 420-2100.

58 RIVERSIDE.-$1575 a mo, $1200 Dep., 4/2, All paid- Stove, Frig Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors 575-6242262 www.roswellforrent.com

605. Miscellaneou s for Sale

ROLL ENDS. Use for packing, mulch, art projects and other uses. Buy day old paper by the bundles, also boxes 15x12x10. Roswell Daily Record Circulation Department. 622-7710. Wheelchair lift, hospital bed, wheelchair, elevated toilet seat. 622-7638

CAROUSEL HORSES on a stand, natural wood made by Ken Gross. 622-0518 LIFT CHAIR, bath transfer bench power wheelchair, commode. 622-7638

NEED FURNITURE? Shop Blair’s Trading Post for the best prices in town for your household items. We buy & sell furniture, appliances, home decor, collectibles, electronics, saddles, jewelry, tools, fishing & camping items, movies plus everything else from A-Z. Including many hard to find items. Serving Roswell for 40 years. Open daily 9-5. Accept Visa & MC. 5611 Hummingbird Ln. 627-2033 ATTENTION ROCKHOUNDS I have quality rocks and fossils at discount prices. 622-8945

GE ELEC. dryer $199, GE washer $199 or $375 for both. Maple wood Credenza $99, oak chest of drawers $75, oak 6 drawer dresser $199, 26” men’s Schwinn classic bike $149, 2 floor & 2 table lamps $10$35, live plants $10-$25, 3 wood chairs $25 & $35, antique computer desk $175, window unit w/remote 10,000 BTU $150 Call 505-504-3224 9am-6pm LAZYBOY SOFA for sale and coffee table and misc. Call 626-1787

UTILITY TRAILER for sale, 6x12, one axle. Call 6376559. 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.

FRIGIDAIRE WASHER $100, gas dryer $50, ceiling fan w/light $20. 623-0583 PORTABLE AIR conditioner $250. Treadmill Weslo $150. Jerry Childress- Home 6231835 or Cell 626-1918.

working or not. Call 637-6559.

715. Hay and Feed Sale

ALFALFA - EXCELLENT quality: Small & Large square bales and round bales. Occasional availability for striped or cow quality. Also wheat hay. Roswell, NM. The Hay Ranch 575-973-2200 Alfalfa Hay- small bales, all grades $5.50-$9.00 per bale. Big bales available. Open 8:00-5:30 Mon- Sat 1:00-5:00 Sunday, Graves Farm & Garden 622-1889 Credit Cards Accepted ALFALFA HAY! Good, small hay bales from local Roswell farm. $5-7 per bale. Ryan 505-400-8736

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

BOSTON TERRIER puppies for sale, registered & papered, 3 males $450 ea, 1 female $550. Chihuahua puppies ready on 10/10/10 $200 ea. Call 840-9436. FREE ADULT & puppy Chihuahua mix. Must be animal lover & have an animal friendly home. 9103579

AKC CHIHUAHUA pups unique rare blue merle color females $450 each, 1 black & tan male, 1 white & fawn male $350 each LVmsg on machine 623-2897 PUREBRED BOXER pups 12 wks. old, tails docked, dew claws removed, 1st shots, 1F Brindle, 2M + 1F Fawn/Black Face $200 each. 622-6190 or 9108311 GORGEOUS PURE bred Dachshund puppies for sale. Parents on premises. Call 8am-10pm for info. 626-2360 FREE KITTENS for good home. Leave message @ 637-6414. NEEDING SMALL male Shih Tzu for breeding. Call 317-0455

FREE TO good home, 1yr old Pitbull/Boxer mix. 1 male & 2 female & 1 small black dog w/brown spot.

EASTERN NEW MEXICO UNIVERSITY-ROSWELL

Plumber *Dental Hygiene Program Director

Job Announcements

DEPARTMENT

(Plus $4000 Program Director Increment for 12mos.)

Physical Plant Health

CLOSING DATE 10/15/10 10/22/10

SALARY

$32,051.65 $49,824.24

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

Specific information on the above position(s) may be obtained by calling (575) 624-7412 or (575) 624-7061 or our website www.roswell.enmu.edu.

TO APPLY: All applicants must submit an application for each job for which they are applying. A complete application packet consists of a letter of interest, resume, an ENMU-R Application form, and complete transcripts for those positions requiring a degree and/or if claiming college education. Failure to submit a complete application packet and all its requirements will invalidate your application. The ENMU-R application and job announcement(s) for the above position(s) are available in the Human Resources office at ENMU-Roswell, 61 University Blvd. Roswell, NM 88203 or on our website www.roswell.enmu.edu. Completed applications MUST be in the Human Resources office by 12:00 p.m. on Friday of the closing day, to be considered for this position. HR office hours are Monday - Thursday 7:30 - 6:00 and Friday from 8:00 - 12:00. Successful applicants will be subjected to a Background Investigation prior to appointment. Appointment will be conditional upon satisfactory completion of Background Investigation. New Mexico is an open record state. therefore; it is the policy of the University to reveal to the public the identifies of the applicants for whom interviews are scheduled. ENMU-Roswell reserves the right to cancel. change, or close any advertised position at any time. The decision to do so will be based upon the needs of the University and the final determination will rest with the President.

ENMU-Roswell is an EOE/AA/ADA Employer

Roswell Daily Record 780. RV’s & Campers Hauling

RECREATIONAL

750. Sports Equipment

GULF CLUBS, personal collection of Jerry Childress. Taylor made R-9 D-3-5 (shift adjustments) 4-GW graphite like new $600. Taylor made look 37 Hybrids 89 PW AW sandwedge regular heads $200. Wilson X31 blades collectible recromed 3woods $200. Adams A-7 Hybrid set new $300. Jerry Childress 6231835 or 626-1918.

MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. Your dealer of choice. Sales, parts, service, consignments, purchases, propane, dump station. 2900 West Second. 622-1751, 1-800-929 0046 FOR SALE 2005 36ft GeorgeTown Forest River motor home w/2 slideouts, only 10,604 miles, loaded, leather seats, fireplace, generator, satellite TV. Asking $59,900. Call 480282-1838 or view at 2803 W. 2nd. Roadway Inn Hotel

760. Hunting & Camping Equipment HUNTERS SPECIAL classic 1983 J10 Jeep p/u 4whl drive runs good 626-7506

765. Guns & Ammunition

MARLIN .30/.30 lever action hardwood stock, sling less than 20 rounds fired. New 2009. $350 317-1366 or 623-3635 SAVAGE 110.7MM ultra mag new BSA scope ammo $500 obo. 505-9804497

775. Motorcycles & Scooters

07 Harley 1200 sportster very clean low miles, few extras selling below blue book $6900 575-653-4124.

97 CROWN Victoria runs great, 1k dn. owner finance 420-1352 ‘07 CHEVY Cobalt, 4dr, auto, $40k, 624-2961 or 626-6942

1994 HONDA Prelude, new tires, 5 speed, a/c, great gas mileage, good condition, checked by mechanic. $2495. 6272266

795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans HUNTERS SPECIAL classic 1983 J10 Jeep p/u 4whl drive runs good 626-7506 2004 KIA Sedona sliding rear doors, 3rd seat, 84k mi, excellent cond. $4800 w/1k down owner finance. 420-1352

2001 ALPENLITE Fifth Wheel 29 foot, RK 2-100 watt solar panels, heat pump 2000 watt inverter, excellent condition. See at Main Trailer Sales, Roswell 24FT TELSTAR motor home by Champ. Mint condition, loaded w/extras, all fiberglass. Call 317-3726

TRANSPORTATION

790. Autos for Sale

2005 HERITAGE softail deluxe, 10k miles, fully dressed, $15,900 obo 625-1667. One owner. ‘05 H-D 1200C sportster. $5000 OBO, 7800 miles, always garaged, never dropped,1 owner.420-5153

790. Autos for Sale

2001 FORD F350 super duty 4x4 extended cab, dual rear wheels, 64K miles, extra clean truck, $13,000. 626-7488

2008 FORD F-250 Twin Turbo Diesel 18,000 miles 623-1537 ‘08 SILVERADO, half ton, crew cab, 4x4, loaded, $59k, 624-2961 or 6266942

2006 TOYOTA Tacoma, 5 speed, low miles, $11,500. One owner. 2000 Ford Explorer, low miles, $3650, one owner serious calls only. 623-2852

‘98 BMW Z-3 roadster convertible, 100k miles, great condition, $6200 obo. 626-0229 1997 BUICK Park Ave., good condition, well maintained, economical. good a/c. $2600. 575-6237148 or 575-317-9582

796. SUVS

2004 CHEVY Sub. A-1 condition, Work Horse/Limousine, 62,100 miles, $15,000 obo. 623-3284 or 575-973-8934.

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


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