10-03-14 Roswell Daily Record

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Roswell Daily Record

Vol. 123, No. 238 75¢ Daily / $1.25 Sunday

THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

October 3, 2014

Man found guilty of molesting 13-year-old girl BY JEFF TUCKER RECORD STAFF WRITER

The credibility of a 15year -old Roswell girl was central in a jury trial Thursday in Chaves County District Court where Abery Miller was found guilty of sexual assault involving a minor. Miller, of 307 W. Summit St. in Roswell, was found guilty by the 12-person jury of criminal sexual penetration in the fourth degree.

The victim was 13 years old at the time of the assault in February 2013, while Miller was 22. Miller, now 24, is scheduled to be sentenced by District Judge Freddie Romero on Nov. 5 after a pre-sentence report. Miller faces a maximum possible sentence of 18 months in prison and the requirement of registering as a sex of fender for 10 years. Miller is currently in the Chaves County Adult

FRIDAY

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Detention Center on robbery and other charges stemming from incidents in Chaves and Eddy counties. The credibility of the 15year-old girl was in question at Thursday’s trial. No forensic evidence was introduced in the case, which hinged on the girl’s testimony and a love letter she admitted writing Miller in 2013. The girl told Roswell police detective Kim Northcutt in March 2013 she had had consensual sex

with Miller. On Thursday, she testified she was raped. The girl testified she awoke in a pickup truck and found that Miller was sexually penetrating her. Roswell attorney Doug Jones Witt, who represented Miller, said he was surprised with the verdict the jury reached after deliberating for about 2-1/2 hours. The 12-person jury had nine men and three women. “I was genuinely sur-

prised,” Jones Witt said after the trial. “I thought there was some doubt there.” The sordid and implicating love letter was given to the jurors as they went into deliberations. In it, the girl said she might be pregnant with Miller’s child. “You’re still sexy as (expletive),” states the letter, which deputy district attorney Michael Murphy

Host family of US Ebola patient confined to home See MILLER, Page A3

Abery Miller

DALLAS (AP) — Four members of a family the U.S. Ebola patient was staying with were confined to their Texas home under armed guard Thursday as the circle of people possibly exposed to the virus widened, while Liberian authorities said they would prosecute the man for allegedly lying on an airport questionnaire. The unusual confinement order was imposed after the family failed to comply with a request not to leave their apartment, according to Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins. Texas State Health Commissioner David Lakey said the order would help

ensure the four can be closely watched, including checking them for fevers over the next three weeks. “We didn’t have the confidence we would have been able to monitor them the way that we needed to,” he said. The family will not be allowed to receive visitors, officials said. The case has raised questions about whether a disease that has killed 3,300 people in West Africa could spread in the United States. U.S. health officials say they remain confident they can keep it in check. A woman who lives in the

STAFF REPORT

from those who wish to strip arms from American citizens. Our Founding Fathers considered the right to bear ar ms absolutely essential in order to preserve the republic. I feel that this sentiment is just as true now as it was then. If I am re-elected, I will continue to fight to ensure that this fundamental right is protected.” Pearce, of Hobbs, faces Democrat Rocky Lara, of Carlsbad, in the general

NRA endorses Pearce

A Great Escape

The National Rifle Association Political Victory Fund has announced its endorsement of Steve Pearce in the race for New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District. Pearce received an “A” rating from the NRA. “I would like to thank the National Rifle Association for endorsing me for reelection,” Pearce said. “I have always fought to protect the 2nd Amendment

Bill Moffitt Photos at the fair through Saturday.

A b o v e : Indianapolis native Kristin Johnson picks open a pair of handcuffs while underwater during her performance at the Eastern New Mexico State Fair. Billed as “The Lady Houdini,” Johnson will be performing

R ig ht: Johnson frees herself from a straitjacket while hanging upside down in the treetops at the Eastern New Mexico State Fair Monday afternoon. Officials expect 55,000 visitors at this year’s fair.

See EBOLA, Page A3

‘Legal Flyer’ app aims Ministry to give away electric wheelchairs to protect drone flyers BY LIAM CARY-EVANS NEW MEXICO DAILY LOBO

ALBUQUERQUE — Talk of drones can conjure concerns about privacy, safety and ethics for many, but one man has a dif ferent worry. He wants protection for himself while controlling any of his personal unmanned aerial vehicles. Paul Aitken uses his drones to take photos and videos, a practice that is at the intersection of new technology and privacy laws. He needed a solution that would protect him from lawsuits by ensuring that he wasn’t taking footage of people without their consent, he said. “Most people are worried about drones ruining their privacy. They think that they are weaponized, unmanned vehicles,” Aitken said. “Drones bring perspective. It’s a new style.” In order to prevent such problems, Aitken teamed up with Jason Bache of Nerds Limited, a local elec-

tronics shop, to come up with an application called “Legal Flyer.” The app is meant to ensure people in commercial footage are aware they are being recorded in addition to preventing lawsuits. Bache created “Legal Flyer” under Aitken’s ownership. “‘Legal Flyer’ is the easy and convenient way for pilots to obtain flight permission and property releases all from the iPad,” Aitken said. “It is illegal to take footage of people on their property or in their homes without their permission.” The two work with real estate companies, using their drones to take photos and video of properties from a unique perspective that is otherwise hard to achieve. Although the team has per mission to take footage of a particular house, they must get permission from neighbors in case footage of their properties was to slip in. See DRONES, Page A2

HIGH 72 LOW 47

TODAY’S FORECAST

BY RANDAL SEYLER RECORD CITY EDITOR

Prison Door Ministry, run by longtime community volunteer Johnny Gonzales, is collecting health and medical supplies for distribution to needy residents in Roswell and Chaves County. Gonzales, 64, is no stranger to medical emergencies and needs. During his lifetime, he has undergone a kidney transplant and went through years of dialysis. On Thursday, Gonzales was flown to Albuquerque to have a surgical procedure to clear blocked arteries around his heart. In spite of being in poor health, Gonzales said on Wednesday that he intended on being back by Oct. 19 so he could hold a giveaway drawing for the two electric wheelchairs he has had donated to his cause. “The calls have really been coming in asking for help with wheelchairs and canes,” Gonzales said,

• LOIS CANTRELL

Randal Seyler Photo

Johnny Gonzales, seated at right, is joined by his family at his Prison Door Ministry office on Wednesday. Gonzales is collecting medical supplies, especially wheelchairs, canes, crutches, and adult diapers for distribution to needy residents. Seated next to Gonzales is his wife, Mary, and behind them are their children and grandchildren, Mariah Martinez, from left, Michele Martinez, Malena Martinez and Josiah Paredes.

“and I have been going to different service organizations asking for donations.”

Gonzales had several cases of adult diapers that had been donated, and which he was redistribut-

• BETTY COMPTON

TODAY’S OBITUARIES PAGE A10

ing as people need them, and he has two electric wheelchairs that have been donated to the ministry.

“I want to be able to give these chairs to people from the dialysis center,

CLASSIFIEDS ..........B8 COMICS .................B6 ENTERTAINMENT .....B7 FINANCIAL ..............B5

who have lost their foot or leg due to their declining health,” Gonzales said. He intends to have a drawing for the two chairs he has available, but he hopes to See GONZALES, Page A3

INDEX GENERAL ...............A2

HOROSCOPES .........B7 LOTTERIES .............A2

OPINION .................A4

SPORTS .................B1

WEATHER ............A12


A2 Friday, October 3, 2014

GENERAL

Rio Arriba County ousts Rodella Bike, tools stolen ESPANOLA (AP) — A northern New Mexico sheriff who refused to resign after being convicted of abusing a driver during a bizarre traffic stop that prosecutors called a fit of road rage was removed Thursday by county officials. Rio Arriba County commissioners voted 3-0 to oust Sheriff Thomas Rodella, once one of the state’s most powerful political figures. The lawman was found guilty Friday of brandishing a firearm and deprivation of rights following a four-day trial. He faces 17 years in prison over the March encounter, in which he is accused of pulling a gun on Michael Tafoya and striking him in the face with his badge because Tafoya cut him off in traffic. Rodella said Tafoya was a reckless driver that he was trying to stop in the interest of public safety. James Lujan, a deputy Rodella once fired, was sworn in as the county’s new sheriff. Lujan, 53, defeated Rodella in the June Democratic primary for sheriff by 200 votes and was set to take the office since he had no Republican challenger. Attorney Robert Gorence has said Rodella wouldn’t step down and that he plans to appeal the conviction. He didn’t immediately respond to an email from The Associated Press seeking comment on the commission’s ruling. District Attorney Angela “Spence” Pacheco this week asked a state district court to declare Rodella’s position automatically vacant upon his conviction.

Drones

Roswell Daily Record

AP Photo

This Aug. 12 file photo shows Rio Arriba County Sheriff Tommy Rodella, center, leaving the US Federal Courthouse in Albuquerque.

A hearing on the petition before First District Court Judge Sheri Raphaelson in Tierra Amarilla isn’t scheduled until Oct. 9. Carlos Trujillo, a spokesman for Rio Arriba County Manager Tomas Campos, told the Santa Fe New Mexican the county stopped paying Rodella’s $56,000 annual salary Friday, when he was taken into custody by the U.S. Marshals Service.

Rodella remains jailed in federal custody.

Last year, the FBI searched the sheriff’s office to investigate whether his staf f accepted donations to a scholarship fund and then looked the other way on donors’ traffic offenses. Rodella said the program helped students, and he denied any wrongdoing. No charges were ever filed.

Stolen tools

The Roswell Police Department responded to a forced entry burglary call in the 400 block of South Kentucky Avenue at 4:31 p.m. Wednesday. A $100 bicycle, a $120 table saw, and two trim routers, one valued at $70 and the other at $40, were stolen. There was also $450 worth of damage.

Teacher battered in fight

Police responded to a battery at Sierra Middle School at 2:50 p.m. A fight between two stu-

Continued from Page A1

After speaking at the National Association of Broadcasters show in Las Vegas, Aitken said that he needed to ensure that his method of recording video and photos was protected from a legal standpoint. “We realized that there was going to be a problem with flight releases and property releases,” Aitken said. “Getting each and every individual involved to sign a release is a nightmare, which is why we created the app.” Bache said that “Legal Flyer” was particularly designed with the explicit intent of creating something that the two would use regularly. “Everything was carefully thought out for this particular app that Paul and I would use,” Bache said. “It is designed for cinematographers to integrate very quickly into the Hollywood workflow.” Following the law is vital for the two entrepreneurs’ success when filming and shooting commercially. Bache said that covering every inch of the law is something that they two want to abide by. For more than two years, Aitken said he has been piloting his drones in the sky, recording public events like tailgates, lake trips and even pumpkin carvings. Aitken was the first to be approved by the Federal Aviation Administration to use drones to

The arrest records available in the police blotter are public information. Any indication of an arrest on a charge and/or multiple charges does not mean the individual identified has been convicted of a crime. All persons arrested are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. If a charge has been dropped and you wish to have a retraction published in the newspaper, please submit written documentation from a court or law enforcement agency showing that the charge was dropped.

dents left a teacher battered, according to police.

Stolen PlayStation and accessories

Police responded to a forced entry burglary in the 1500 block of Poplar Avenue at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday, where a $250 PlayStation 3, a $55 PlayStation controller, a $60 game and a $500 TV were stolen.

Arrest for possession

Police arrested Alicia Pinkerton, 31, of Roswell, in the 400 block of West Second Street at 1:16 p.m. Wednesday for possession of drug paraphernalia.

Found narcotics

Police found 642.9 grams of marijuana in the 400 block of East Brasher Road at 9:03 a.m. Wednesday.

Woman arrested for possession of drug paraphernalia

arrested Police Stephanie Nicole Sena, 26, of Roswell, in the 1700 block of North Missouri Avenue at 5:14 a.m. Wednesday for possession of drug paraphernalia.

DRONES BANNED FROM BALLOON FIESTA

Sergio Jiménez Photo/New Mexico Daily Lobo

Paul Aitken flies a personal unmanned aerial vehicle, or UAV, around his neighborhood. Aitken helped create “Legal Flyer,” an application that lets drone pilots obtain flight permission and property releases to prevent lawsuits and ensure people in commercial footage are aware they are being recorded.

record an air show, he said. He was also the first to record a city marathon using drones approved by the FAA in Pittsburgh. Being in a public place gives Aitken a pass when piloting his UAVs, or unmanned aerial vehicles. But there is room for error when unwanted photos or videos are taken on private property, even if the footage was taken accidentally. According to privacy laws, flying or extending a camera onto private property is considered trespassing and subject to legal action. State statutes have five categories that are in place to prohibit certain

types of invasion of property. Two of those categories can be accidentally triggered without any malicious intent with the new capabilities of drones. The “intrusion upon seclusion” statute states that invading an individual’s private affairs such as home or private property is illegal. Without intent, drones are naturally above walls and fences that are not generally accessible by foot photographers. The statute also says that the materials don’t have to be published to be considered as trespassing — simply gathering the footage is considered illegal activity.

Another statute involving invasion of privacy that can be potential trouble is when commercial publication exploits an individual using photos, a name, voice, or other personal attributes without the individual’s consent.

Bache and Aitken said “Legal Flyer” protects them from every problem they could think of “and then some,” allowing them to continue to take photos and video in the air as long as the individuals involved give permission through the application. “We can’t enforce the laws,” Bache said. “But we can make it easier.”

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — Hundreds of hot air balloons fill the sky just as the sun rises over the mountains bordering the city’s eastern edge. In the opposite direction, the view is just as awesome, with the wave of colorful orbs and special shapes standing out against the backdrop of a cottonwood forest and the Rio Grande. There might not be a more perfect event to document with a drone than the annual Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta. Too bad. Don’t even think about it. Fiesta organizers on Thursday said no drones will be allowed within a four -mile radius of the launch field throughout the duration of the nine-day event. The entire area is covered by a temporary flight restriction approved by the Federal Aviation Administration. Until the FAA develops fir m regulations for the unmanned aircraft, fiesta organizers see all drones as a potential threat to the flight operations of the more than 550 pilots who are participating in this year’s fiesta. “It’s a safety issue,” said Don Edwards, the event director. “There are enough distractions in the air with 550 balloons around you without all of a sudden having to ask, ‘What’s that little thing buzzing around?’” Drones are a relatively new issue for the fiesta. Last year, there were only a couple of requests to fly drones during the balloon launches. Those were politely turned down, but federal authorities ended up knocking on the door of one Albuquerque resident who flew a drone over the restricted airspace without permission.

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GENERAL

Roswell Daily Record

Miller

Continued from Page A1

introduced as state’s evidence one. “I still owe you a (expletive) job, but that’s only if you still want it and you owe me a kiss.” The girl, who became acquainted with Miller because she and her mother cleaned house for Miller’s mother, said she longed for Miller to get out of jail. “When you get out, I’m gunna rape you,” she wrote. “I’ll yell ‘surprise’ first so it won’t be rape, but I’m still gunna (expletive) the (expletive) out of you and I will do whatever you want me to do, and by that I mean anything in the world.” The letter was intercepted by the girl’s uncle, who turned it over to police. “I wish I was older so I could be with you, but I’m too young and that’s what (expletive) sucks,” she wrote. “If I could be with you, that would be so amazing. Then I wouldn’t have to hide my feelings for you and then you would be able to show that the baby is yours and not have to hide it around my mom and (expletive).” Northcutt testified DNA evidence could not be obtained because the sexual assault had taken place about a month before it was reported to police. On cross-examination by Jones Witt, Northcutt acknowledged he never spoke with two other people who were hanging out with the girl and Miller on the day of the sexual assault. Northcutt said the other two people were not in the pickup at the time of the

Gonzales Continued from Page A1

assault. Northcutt also acknowledged the girl changed her story about the location of the assault. “The story changed. Is that a fair statement?” Jones Witt asked. “Yes, sir,” Northcutt replied. Jones Witt called no witnesses. Miller did not testify. In his closing arguments, Murphy said the girl thought of Miller as a brother, who took advantage of her. Murphy said kids lie to get attention, explaining why the girl told Miller she might be pregnant with his baby. Murphy said the girl would not have told Miller she might be pregnant with his baby if they had not had sex. The girl testified Thursday she wrote the letter so that it would come to the attention of authorities. “This letter was an attempt to get a boyfriend or a joke,” Murphy said. Murphy said the girl took the brave course and told the truth Thursday. In his closing arguments, Jones Witt said all the jury needed to hear was the girl’s testimony Thursday when she said the letter was a setup to come to court. Jones Witt said the girl could not keep her story straight. “Yet she comes to court today and says ‘he molested me,”‘ Jones Witt said. “That’s completely different than what she told the detective in March. “Was she lying then or is she lying now? We don’t

get more donated electric wheelchairs. “You think about things like canes or crutches; you might have them and only use them for a month or two,” Gonzales said. “But for someone who has no money, the $30 a crutch costs may be too much.” Gonzales said in spite of his own health difficulties, he has no intention of slowing down. “I don’t know what is going to happen with my heart, and you never know how much time you have left.” Gonzales said his family’s support of his work makes him confident that his ministry will continue on if anything should happen to him. “We all die eventually,” Gonzales said, “but we all hope we have a family that

Ebola

Continued from Page A1

apartment, Louise T roh, said she has been quarantined with her 13-year-old son and two nephews.

“Who wants to be locked up?” she said in an interview with The Associated Press.

Troh said she was waiting for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to collect a bag of the bed sheets and towels

know. It calls in the credibility of her entire story.” Jones Witt said the girl’s testimony Thursday about waking up during sex wasn’t credible. “I think I would have woken up when a person tried to take off my clothes, or when he gets on top of me,” Jones Witt said. “Her entire story didn’t make sense.” Jones Witt said the detective’s investigation was lacking because Northcutt did not interview the other two people with the girl and Miller on the day of the assault. “There’s absolutely no follow-up investigation on where it might have happened,” Jones Witt said. “It is a rush to judgment. This young woman said so, so it must have happened. “She’s a liar. Can you really convict Abery Miller based on this evidence? The many different say-sos. It’s not enough to convict him beyond a reasonable doubt.” Murphy said Jones Witt was attacking the victim. Murphy said the girl’s version of events were not that different. “She’s consistently said she had sex and she might be pregnant,” Murphy said. Murphy said interviewing the other two people hanging out with the girl and Miller was unnecessary. “They weren’t there in the truck,” Murphy said. “What would it show?” Staff writer Jeff Tucker may be contacted at 6227710, ext 303, or at reporter01@rdrnews.com.

supports us and can keep our dream, our vision alive.” Gonzales said his wife, Mary, understands what he is doing and how important his ministry is to both Gonzales and all the people his ministry touches. “Having children and a wife who can stand with you, and who understand what you stand for, is a great blessing,” Gonzales said. “You don’t get that from Wal-Mart. You don’t get your family from Kmart.” Gonzales takes donations of all types of medical supplies and accessories at his office, located on the fifth floor of the Petroleum Building in downtown Roswell. “Anyone interested in donating or needing help with a medical supply can contact me at gonzalesjohnny @hotmail.com,” he said. City Editor Randal Seyler may be contacted at 622-7710, ext. 311, or reporter02@rdrnews.com.

Thomas Eric Duncan used. A hazardous material crew arrived to decontaminate the apartment Thursday evening but did not have the required permits to clean the home and remove hazardous waste, city spokesman Richard Hill said. He said the crew, contracted by the county and state, will return to complete the job on Friday. The family must also be relocated before the cleanup can begin, Hill said. He had no information on where the family

will go. Visitors from the American Red Cross were seen Thursday bringing food to the apartment door. The North Texas Food Bank said it sent three days of cereal, tuna, produce and other supplies. Outside, the management of the 300-unit complex in northeast Dallas was passing out flyers about Ebola to residents. Private security guards and local sherif f’s deputies blocked off the entrance to dozens of reporters.

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Has the trap already been set? A4 Friday, October 3, 2014

OPINION

Tony Blinken, President Obama’s deputy national security adviser, was outlining administration policy in the Middle East. “We’re not going to fall into their trap of sending hundreds of thousands of Americans back,” he told Fox News. “That’s exactly what they want us to do. They want to bog us down.” The question hanging over Washington now is: How can that trap be avoided? The president has set out two clear principles. The first is to “degrade and ultimately destroy ISIL,” the extreme jihadist movement also known as ISIS and Islamic State that now occupies large swaths of Iraq and Syria. The second is to accomplish that goal without deploying American combat troops. “As your commander in chief,” he told soldiers based in Tampa, Florida, “I will not commit you and the rest of our armed forces to fighting another ground war in Iraq.” But what if those two principles are not compatible? What if the resources Obama is prepared to commit — American airpower and

COKIE AND STEVEN ROBERTS

SYNDICATED COLUMNISTS

advisers, working with local military assets — are not sufficient to accomplish the mission of crippling ISIL? Then what? The situation on the ground is highly fluid and uncertain, but one fact is clear. As Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told reporters last Friday, “No one is under any illusions ... that airstrikes alone will destroy ISIL.” That means ground troops will have to be part of the mission. But which troops? Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, says that “the ideal (ground) force, in fact the only truly effective force that will actually be able to reject ISIL from within its own population, is a force comprised of Iraqis and Kurds and moderate Syrian opposition” fight-

Roswell Daily Record

ers. He’s right about that, but there’s very little evidence that the force he describes can actually accomplish the mission he defines. The Iraqi army has repeatedly fled in the face of ISIL advances. Even the president says that “moderate Syrian” fighters have been a huge disappointment. The Kurds are good soldiers, but they’re far more interested in defending their home area than driving ISIL out of captured territory. This obvious weakness in military capacity threatens to undermine the whole plan. If airstrikes are not sufficient, if ground troops are essential, if the surrogate forces we are training and equipping fail to fight effectively, then pressures on Obama to change his strategy will escalate sharply. In fact, they’re already mounting. Dempsey made that very clear when he said: “The president gave me a mission — destroy ISIL — and I will recommend to him what it takes to destroy ISIL.” Speaker John Boehner went even further, saying on ABC’s “This Week” that American ground forces

will probably be needed: “We have no choice. These are barbarians. They intend to kill us. And if we don’t destroy them first, we’re going to pay the price.” The comparisons between Iraq and Vietnam are unnerving but unavoidable, and Director of National Intelligence James Clapper has drawn them directly. In both cases, he told David Ignatius of the Washington Post, “What we didn’t do was predict the will to fight. ... We underestimated the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese and overestimated the will of the South Vietnamese. In this case we underestimated ISIL and overestimated the fighting capability of the Iraqi army.” The basic scenario Clapper describes is uncomfortably similar in both war zones: Faulty intelligence (plus domestic dissent) leading to the deployment of insufficient resources to accomplish a stated mission. Vietnam resulted in the worst of both worlds: a rising commitment of assets that was never enough to win. There are important distinctions here. Defeating ISIL is clearly in

America’s national interest, whereas the Viet Cong never vowed to “kill us” directly. Extreme jihadists have repeatedly demonstrated both the will and the capacity to threaten our homeland. And continuing turmoil stirred up by ISIL could spill over porous borders and destabilize such key allies as Turkey, Jordan and Israel. Still, there are a lot of unanswered questions. When Steve Kroft on “60 Minutes” asked the president to describe an endgame in the battle against ISIL, Obama declined. “I’m not going to speculate on failure at the moment,” he said. “We’re just getting started. Let’s see how they do. I think that right now, we’ve got a campaign plan that has a strong chance for success in Iraq. I think Syria is a more challenging situation.” Fair enough. We hope he’s right. But what if he’s wrong? Has the trap the president desperately wants to avoid already been set? Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at stevecokie@gmail.com.

EDITORIAL

Tell candidates to support the ERA

When politicians come asking for your vote this fall, especially those seeking to serve or remain in Congress, ask them what they think of the ERA. It’s alive and well and gaining momentum. We’re not talking about the old Equal Rights Amendment that fizzled in the late 1970s. Today, ERA means the Employee Rights Act (employeerightsact.com) and it may take shape as the decade’s leading civil rights crusade. It’s a common sense solution to provide an array of protections in the workplace. The proposal is long overdue and has more than 80 percent support across all major voter demographics. Consider a candidate out of touch if he or she says something like “ER what?” Challenge candidates who say they’re undecided or against the ERA. Here’s what it would do, if passed by both chambers of Congress and signed into law: • Guarantee the right to federally supervised secret paper ballot elections to counter union pressure on employers to deny privacy in votes on company matters. This provision would also redefine “majority” to mean a majority of the entire collective bargaining organization, not just a majority of those who vote. • Require routine union recertification in the workplace, giving employees the right to determine by secret ballot whether they want to continue their union representation or move on to another arrangement. It’s important because data from the National Labor Relations Board says only an average of 7 percent of union employees were part of the vote to unionize. • Ensure employees the right to a secretballot before union leaders declare a strike. This one is the most compassionate element of the proposal. Strikes impose substantial hardship on workers, who typically receive 10-20 percent compensation from the union for the wages they lose. In some instances, strikes result in the permanent loss of good jobs. • Establish an opt-in requirement before any union could use an individual member’s dues for causes other than collective bargaining — namely political lobbying. An astonishing 91 percent of union political support goes to Democrats, even though 2012 exit polls showed 43 percent of union households vote Republican. • Protect each employee’s right to opt out of a union’s sharing of personal information. Employees complain of union organizers using private information to show up at their homes and pressure them to vote in a particular way. • Protect employees from union threats of violence, to coerce their support, with criminal penalties. Though not a common practice today, the NLRB has received 155 complaints of union violence in the past five years. Any violence, or threats of such behavior, should not be part of any worker’s life. • Prohibit unions from intimidating or coercing employees from exercising their rights, including their right to decertify the union, by improving the National Labor Relations Act. Collective bargaining has its place in a free market, but unions have taken their role far beyond ensuring reasonable work conditions and wages for their members. Today’s unions are a powerful political force with annual revenues of more than $24 billion. In a quest to maintain disproportionate political influence — mostly in arenas that have little or no serious nexus to labor — union leaders too often treat their members like chattel. We see it in manufacturing, all major service industries, education and other segments of government employment. The ERA, to protect employee rights, just makes common sense. Make sure it’s a top agenda for candidates this year and ask for commitments to support it. R EPRINTED GAZETTE

FROM THE

C OLORADO S PRINGS

Supreme Court justice Eric Holder? After 5½ bumpy years of controversial service, the besieged but bolstered attorney general, Eric Holder, resigned. But is this close friend and confidant of President Barack Obama’s really stepping down for some benign reason at a critical time for our country, or is there a sinister and strategic plan behind it all? First, it’s far more than a coincidence that the United States’ chief lawyer is leaving office with more unanswered questions about crucial lifeand-death national dilemmas than any previous attorney general. Though most have been accused of sitting on issues, none has been so assailed as Holder for person-

CHUCK NORRIS

SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

ally stonewalling investigations, covering up government involvement and refusing to deal with politically explosive controversies. Holder has not prosecuted such monumental and rights-infringing crimes as the Fast and Furious debacle; the Benghazi, Libya, tragedy; National Security Agency wiretappings; press infringements; drone attacks on U.S. citizens; and the Inter nal Revenue Service

scandal. The Bronx, New York-born 63-year -old Holder proudly boasted that he had “taken steps to protect the environment,” taken swift action in Ferguson, Missouri, and even opened a broad probe into the police department in Ferguson. However, he — like our president and even Secretary of State John Kerry — hasn’t said a single word over the past six months about Marine reservist Sgt. Andrew Tahmooressi’s being wrongly imprisoned in Mexico. Sadly, it has been recently reported that Tahmooressi, who suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder, is “highly despondent” because of the drastic deterioration of his

mental health. And still, Holder refuses to speak up on behalf of this suf fering, imprisoned American patriot. Can you say resignation of denial and avoidance? If Obama invoked executive privilege when Holder sat before Congress to protect him from his role in Fast and Furious, who’s to say he isn’t protecting him again — or vice versa — through Holder’s resignation? What better way to avoid the line of fire than to move completely out of the way? And what if Obama and Holder are not only protecting themselves from some past public sin through his resignation but also prepping

• Stage 3. Memory can fluctuate daily or even hourly. People sometimes forget major events in their lives. Often they are unaware of the date or the time of year. Their conversations may become disjointed and veer off track. You may see episodes of paranoia or anger. Stressful situations can trigger shouting, cursing or hitting. At this stage, people with Alzheimer’s can still manage many basic activities of daily living. But they can no longer live independently. • Stage 4. In this stage, you’ll see dramatic changes. Language skills drop sharply. Memory impairment becomes profound. A person remembers only bits and pieces of his or her past. People become less withdrawn, but they often develop

behavior and emotional problems, including delusions and hallucinations. Sleep disturbances and wandering are also common. By this stage, the person will likely require help to bathe, toilet, dress and eat. • Stage 5. This stage has been called “the long goodbye.” There seems to be very little left of the person’s “self.” Motor skills decline until the person can no longer walk, sit up, chew and swallow food, or control bladder and bowel movements. As the brain shuts down, the person becomes unresponsive, lapses into a coma and finally dies. I am sorry to paint such a bleak picture, but unfortunately today we have no way of preventing or treating this

See NORRIS, Page A6

Bleak reality of Alzheimer’s may be brighter in the future

DEAR DOCTOR K: My mother has Alzheimer’s disease. What should I expect in the coming years? DEAR READER: It’s impossible to predict exactly how Alzheimer’s disease will affect someone. Symptoms of the disease, and how quickly they progress, can vary widely from person to person. In some people, for reasons we don’t understand, the disease progresses very slowly. However rapidly Alzheimer’s disease progresses, it generally unfolds in five stages: • Stage 1. Memory problems begin. The person may misplace valuable objects. Their performance at work or in social situations begins to suffer. They may have more trouble expressing their thoughts. Personality changes also

ASK DR. K UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE

begin. A person may become withdrawn, apathetic, moody, depressed, irritable or anxious. • Stage 2. Memory problems are more obvious. It may be difficult for someone with Alzheimer’s to follow conversations. The person may have difficulty recalling current events or even bits of information from their own lives. Depression often becomes prominent. Reasoning and judgment skills are impaired.

See DR. K, Page A5


Unity says goodbye to Mrs. Jane Batson OPINION II

Roswell Daily Record

The Unity Center lost a great supporter in Mrs. Jane Batson this past weekend. Jane and Jack Batson were huge supporters of the Unity Center, sacrificing their time to spend with teens who were looking for an escape of everyday life. She helped provided a safe place for teens and watch and listen to music by bands or performers, even though the music was probably not something that she would enjoy, much less understand the lyrics. She spent her nights chaperoning concerts, even when she could be anywhere else, but she chose to be there for us. My brother and I had the privilege to work with the Unity Center in 2009, and it was a great honor to work with Mrs. Batson. I was honored to know her and grateful that she was allowed to be in our lives, especially with Bobby who was diagnosed with his own battle with cancer. Jane was more than just a mentor to me growing up in 2008 during my high school years. She showed me how to become a responsible young man and to give back to the community. I was amazed on how many different organiza-

Dr. K

Continued from Page A4

terrible disease. However, there is reason to hope that the picture will become brighter in the future. In the past 20 years, scientists have begun to unravel what goes wrong with the chemistry of the brain in Alzheimer’s. I am cautiously optimistic that this knowledge will lead to true breakthroughs. But like the pace of the disease itself, the pace of our growing knowledge is hard to

tions and committees she was part of, but no matter what, she always made time for the teens of The Unity Center. She kept believing in the program when no one else did and she drove us teens to keep it alive. The one thing I admired about her was her unselfishness and compassion for others, even with the bands that came to play. If a band member was sick or they were hurting financially she would give them money even though she didn’t have to, or she made sure we took them to an urgent care to have them treated. She drove the Unity Center staf f to be more proactive in the community through helping or volunteering. It was something we are grateful for. Without it, we would not have had as many supporters come along and share our vision for teens in

Roswell. Mrs. Batson was always pushing for us to do better, even when it came to help spell check and edit our columns for the newspaper. Especially when I was a horrible at completing a sentence and I’m still bad at it. I hope to be one day the old man at the “Heavy Metal” concerts with a bunch of teens hardcore dancing. Matt Garcia

Jane, since the day we meet you have showed me how to serve God and our community. You have been a mentor, colleague and friend. You always believed in me and supported me to the fullest. I will miss our talks and prayers. You have been a great part of me, my business and the building of Embrace, Inc. For this I will be forever grateful. Nathan Padilla Mrs. Batson. Where to start about this amazing woman? She was a mentor, an idol. I would even call her a second mother. She gave me my first job at the Unity Center and many other side projects that benefited this community. I owe so much to her. She understood the difficulty of

Friday, October 3, 2014

being a teenager in today’s world. She never judged soul. She saved my life and taught me it was worth living for. No matter how many times I thanked her, she was too humble to accept my gratitude. I’ll never forget all she taught me. I could go on forever, but even that’s not long enough. I looked up to Jane Batson and will continue. I’d be happy if I could be half the woman she was. I miss you, Mrs. Batson. Amanda Dolen

Mrs. Batson always showed a genuine interest in the well-being of concert goers, myself included. She would stay and make sure the kids had a way home. I remember she would often ask me how work or school was going, as well as encourage me to further pursue my education. She also would make pushes to help my career in art by recommending me to people and offering me jobs. My favorite thing about her would have to be how she was so accepting of everyone. She didn’t care if the music wasn’t to her liking, just that it was keeping kids from harm. She was just there. She didn’t judge. All she asked

from the kids was to keep from swearing. Carlos Sanchez

From N.O.T.E Council, summer band, to the Unity Center, Jane always had some way to involve me in the community. Through these activities Jane showed me that I could accomplish great things. The one thing that I learned from Jane is anything is possible, if you are willing to work and stand up for it. When I think about Jane one thing comes to mind, she always had a plan. Every time I talked to her she was working on something to better our community. As I told my mother many times, if there is one person I was to take after, it’s Jane. Her heart is full of love for the youth and this community and the lives she has impacted will continue her work to make this place better. Petra Gonzales

Dear Mrs. Batson, It’s hard to think you are gone. You had been a blessing to our family in so many ways. I can remember the first time I met you, when I walked in those doors at the old Unity Center. You welcomed us with a big smile,

predict. It may take decades, but I think medical research will make major advances. I know that gives little comfort to people who must deal with this terrible illness today. Dr. Komaroff is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. To send questions, go to AskDoctorK.com, or write: Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

A5

greeting us and telling us, “Girls, make sure to have fun.” From there on you asked us to join the Unity Center team to help with booking, managing the doors and make sure that the teens enjoyed themselves while they were there. You were not just a boss; you were also an amazing mentor helping us learn how to give back to our community and making sure that we pursued a higher education. Ten years have gone by, I have received my Bachelor’s degree and I’m giving back to my community by helping first generation and lowcome students pursue a higher education. I am trying to be that positive role model that I had in you. Thank you for being there for my family. You have helped my brothers and I grow to be amazing citizens and gave us hope when we didn’t think there was any. Just letting you know we will not disappoint you in any way, but do everything we can in your honor and make sure that your dream of the Unity Center lives on for generations to come. You will be truly missed, but you will forever be in our hearts and in the lives that you have touched. Daniela A. García

RECYCLE THIS PAPER

Dr. Mahsa Matloobi Introduces

Neurologist

She will be joining our family of providers in October 2014 at our Roswell office.

Please call 575-627-9500 to schedule an appointment or have your primary care provider fax a referral and records to 575-627-9535

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Kymera continues to be “here when you need us.”


A6 Friday, October 3, 2014 LETTERS

Dear editor,

I’m curious as to how you determine your selection of the front-page news. The first case of Ebola in the United States is reported, and the Roswell Daily Record didn’t find it important enough to place on the front page. A woman is decapitated in Oklahoma by a man ranting Islamic chants and that doesn’t make the front page. Illegal immigration is rampant, yet your paper writes nothing about the costs to the American citi-

Norris

Continued from Page A4

Holder for some future position by his absence from the public stage? That’s exactly what Rush Limbaugh proposed this past week. He explained the scary scenario this way: “After you perform your six years of government service, you then retire to the private sector and get paid off for it. People hire you who are grateful for what you did, or you go back to your law fir m, where you are a rainmaker, don’t even have to do any work. “They put your name on the letterhead, on the door, and you attract clients and get a percentage of what walks in the door. There is any number of ways this can happen. But there’s also another

LOCAL zens’ taxes, impact to the schools and curriculum. Border Patrol agents and Immigration Customs Enforcement have been directed by the current federal government to curtail their operations and allow the illegal immigrants of all flavors to enter the country; and the RDR ignores it. The commander in chief of the United States directs the military to reduce its force strength by at least 75,000 (that means that a lot of military American citizens will be looking for possibility regarding Eric Holder. I just want you to prepare yourself. It may happen. We still have two years to go. “There may be a Supreme Court vacancy, and I can see Barack Obama nominating Eric Holder to fill it, and it would be much easier for Eric Holder to make the jump from private-sector law firm rainmaker after six years at (the Department of Justice) to the Supreme Court than from DOJ straight to the Supreme Court. I don’t know how much that would matter, but don’t rule any of that out. I don’t think there’s any scandal. I don’t think it’s Fast and Furious. I don’t think he’s worried about the Republicans investigating anything if they win the Senate.” It is worth noting that Rahm Emanuel resigned

work); yet, directs the military to initiate special consideration for recruiting illegal immigrants to replace these American warriors. As best as I could determine, there are approximately 103 million Americans currently enrolled in this expensive taxpayer web (in 2012, the federal government paid out a whopping $114 billion for this). By the federal government’s own statistics, over 91 million working age Americans do not have jobs. All of this is not on the RDR front page. The as Obama’s chief of staff two years before the end of the president’s first term in order to attain the post of mayor of Chicago — a resignation that Obama labeled as “bittersweet,” which he also did with Holder’s. Hillary Clinton was next, with her resignation as secretary of state, which most people think was in order to run for president in 2016. Now, two years before the end of the president’s second ter m, could Obama and Holder’s scope be set on SCOTUS? Given they are the kings of corrupt calculated chess moves, I believe the odds are incredibly high. Having finished their insider dirty work, this trinity of terror (Emanuel, Clinton and Holder) is being sent out like apostles onto the mission field to infuse Obama’s Cabi-

Roswell Daily Record

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have released data on the current fast-spreading disease Enterovirus 68. E68 has caused respiratory illnesses and paralysis primarily in children. The CDC has reported that approximately 277 individuals in 40 states and the District of Columbia have been infected with E68. Yet, this has also failed to make RDR front-page news. I might have missed a front-page article on what I have stated above, but I do read the paper on net’s secular progressive agenda into the deepest roots of the land.

Liberal legacy and progressive perpetuity is the name of their game and their master plan.

Next week, I will give even more evidence of this master plan and explain exactly how and when a SCOTUS seat replacement would occur.

Follow Chuck Norris through his official social media sites, on Twitter @chucknorris and Facebook’s “Official Chuck Norris Page.” He blogs at chucknorrisnews. blogspot.com. To find out more about Chuck Norris and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at creators.com.

Kostow: Failing up from philosopher to top chef

Napa Valley chef Christopher Kostow started out studying philosophy. At least until he discovered he was “better at most things” than he was at philosophy. Still, his classes at Hamilton College in upstate New York weren’t time wasted. A thoughtful, disciplined approach is evident in the inventive, deceptively simple dishes that have won him three Michelin stars for his work at The Restaurant at Meadowood, located in a lush Napa Valley resort. “Studying philosophy did teach me to absorb a lot of information with a critical eye and then use that information in a singular and personal manner,” he writes in his first book, “A New Napa Cuisine,” coming out this month. In cooking, with its dif ferent flavor memories and techniques,

AP Photo

In this July 27, 2012, file photo, U.S. chef Christopher Kostow talks to a vendor as he shops at a food market in Mexico City.

“whether or not I am successful is driven by my ability to retain this information, distill it through my lens.” Beautifully photographed, the book weaves together recipes, Kostow’s evolution as a chef and insights on the farmers and

craftspeople who help create the Meadowood dining experience. Kostow, who had his first Michelin star before age 30, and in 2013 was named top chef in the region by the James Beard Foundation, cut his teeth culinarily speaking with a summer

job frying chicken with a cast of characters that included a guy called Shaky the Clown. David Duncan, president and CEO of Silver Oak Cellars and a St. Helena Montessori parent, has been impressed by Kostow's work with the school., has been impressed by Kostow’s work with the school. “He is a cool customer. He is beyond his years in terms of maturity,” says Duncan. Duncan also recently worked with Kostow to prepare a 1,000-person dinner at the annual Auction Napa Valley last June.

a daily and regular basis.

Gilbert Alvarado Roswell

Editor’s note: The Roswell Daily Record is a local newspaper and most of our front-page stories focus on local topics and events. Much of the news found in the RDR is published nowhere else. While we do agree that all of the stories mentioned by Mr. Alvarado are important national stories, it is easy to find multiple versions of any one of those articles by

searching on Google or by turning on the television set. The RDR just brought home several New Mexico Press Association awards in recognition of our local coverage and commentary. We also were selected this year by the Associated Press as the best member newspaper for the State of Mexico for our contributions of local news to the national news agency. The RDR will continue its efforts to bring Roswell and Chaves County readers news they can read nowhere else.

Flexible mummies for Halloween decor

Count me among those who find the “Elf on the Shelf” just a bit creepy. That said, wouldn’t it make more sense to have a slightly spooky creature keeping an eye on your kids around Halloween instead of Christmas? With just a few inexpensive craft materials, you can make a miniature mummy perfect for perching on shelves, bookcases, pumpkins and more this fall. They’re easy enough for kids to make on their own with a wooden bead, pipe cleaners, cotton balls and fabric. Overachieving parents and fans of the “elf” might be inspired to move these mummies from place to place each night — their flexible frames make them easy to bend in silly poses. But they’re just as cute sitting in one place until Halloween.

Materials:

• ¾-inch round wooden craft beads • two 12-inch pipe cleaners • 1 cotton ball • strips of muslin fabric • black permanent marker • optional: glue

Instructions:

1. Cut muslin into ½-inch wide strips. I purchased 45inch-wide muslin, and used four strips for each mummy. While you can also tear fabric instead of cutting it, I found the muslin frayed too much with tearing, so I cut it with a

rotary cutter instead. 2. Slide bead to the midpoint of one of the pipe cleaners, and twist the pipe cleaner around the bead to form the head and neck. 3. Continue twisting the pipe cleaner together for about an inch to form the torso. 4. Using your fingers or a pencil, make a hole through the middle of a cotton ball, hold the ends of the pipe cleaner together, and slide the cotton ball onto the twisted section to add padding to the torso. This step can be skipped if you want an especially skinny mummy, or you can add extra cotton balls to the arms and legs later for a chubbier version. 5. Spread the ends of the pipe cleaner apart under the torso to form the legs. 6. Wrap the second pipe cleaner around the body, just under the head, to form the arms, folding each end inward to shorten the arms. 7. Starting at the head, wrap strips of muslin around the mummy body. A bit of glue is helpful on the rounded surface of the bead, and at the ends of the arms and legs. Two strips should be enough to cover the head, torso and arms, with two more for the legs. Add extra strips of muslin to any areas that look too skimpy or if you want a bulkier mummy. 8. Use a black marker to make two small dots for eyes.

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Roswell Ladies Newcomers Club to meet LOCAL

Roswell Daily Record

Roswell Adult Center, located at 807 N. Missouri Ave. Cost is $15 for AARP members and $20 for nonmembers. People must be 55 years or older to participate. For more information call 575-624-6718.

The Roswell Ladies Newcomers Club will meet for lunch and cards at noon, Oct. 7, at the Elks Lodge, located at 1720 N. Montana Ave. Reservations must be called in by Oct. 3. For more information call Sandra at 575-627-3262 or Pat at 575-622-5069.

Attorneys to give free legal help

A free legal clinic will be hosted in Roswell from 1-5 p.m., Oct. 3, at the Roswell Adult Center, located at 807 N. Missouri Ave. Roswell attorneys will provide consultations on a first-come, first-serve basis. For more information call Aja Brooks at 505-7976040.

Healthsense to take place

Dr. Akbar Ali will speak at Healthsense at 11:30 a.m., Oct. 3, at Senior Circle. The talk is open to the public. For more information call 575-623-2311.

Chautauqua program to take place

“Diamond Bessie: A Tale of Love and Murder,” a Chautauqua program, will take place at 3 p.m., Oct. 4, at the Artesia Public Library. Admission is free. For more information call Geri Dosalua at 575-7464252.

Refuge Discovery Tour to be hosted

Bitter Lake National Wildlife Refuge will host a Refuge Discovery Tour starting at 9 a.m., Oct. 4. The tour will start at the Joseph R. Skeen Visitor Center and will last two and a half hours. For more information call 575-625-4009.

Friday, October 3, 2014

Chapter Z of P.E.O. to meet

Country Charm to perform

Country Charm will perform from 7-10 p.m., Oct. 4, at the Roswell Adult Center, located at 807 N. Missouri Ave. Admission is $5 and refreshments will be served. For more information call Carla Cobb at 575-6273400.

Chaparral Rockhounds to host annual show

The Chaparral Rockhounds will host its annual gem and mineral show from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Oct. 4 and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Oct. 5 at the Roswell Convention Center. For more information call 575-622-5679.

Corporation Communion to take place

p.m., Oct. 5, at St. Andrew’s Church, located at 505 N. Pennsylvania Ave. For more information call Sally Pretty at 575-6225578.

Author to speak

L ynda Sanchez, author of “Apache Legends and Lore,” will speak at 3 p.m. on Oct. 5 at the Archive Building, located at 208 N. Lea Ave. For more information call 575-622-8333.

Desk and Derrick Club to meet

The Desk and Derrick Club will host its monthly meeting at noon, Oct. 7, at the Elks Lodge, located at 1720 N. Montana Ave. For reservations call 575625-2222.

Roswell Women’s Club to meet

Catholic Daughters of America will celebrate Corporation Communion at 9 a.m., Oct. 5, at Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary, located at 2808 N. Kentucky Ave. For reservations call 575420-6515.

The Roswell Women’s Club will meet at 11 a.m., Oct. 8, at the ENMU-R Campus Union Building/Cafeteria. Scholarship recipients will be presented their awards and join for lunch. For reservations call Pat at 575-622-7707.

The annual blessing of the animals and memorial service will be held at 2

The AARP driver safety course will be offered from noon-5 p.m. Oct. 9 at the

Blessing of the animals Driver safety course to be offered to take place

Chapter Z of P.E.O. will meet at 1 p.m., Oct. 9 at the home of R yann Putman, located at 3207 Dow Drive. Linda Gilmore will serve as co-hostess. The program will be “Reminiscing About Chapter Z” by Sally Herbein. For more information call Linda Gilmore at 575-6276204.

Morning Garden Club to meet

The Mor ning Garden Club will meet at 9:30 a.m., Oct. 9, at Dean Day’s home, located at 419 Viale Bond St. We will be learning all about caring for our skin and protecting it from damage caused by the sun. The program will be by Dr. Jacqueline Youtsos, dermatologist.

Chapter B, P.E.O. plans Bunco/Bridge party

The Chapter B, P.E.O. will hold its major fundraising event, a Bunco/Bridge & Brunch Party, from 10 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 11, in the St. Andrew’s Parish Hall, 505 N. Pennsylvania Ave. Tickets are $8 and include games, brunch and two complimentary raffle tickets. Additional tickets will be available for the many raffle items and prizes will be awarded to game winners. The funds raised will go to benefit the scholarship programs of the P.E.O. Sisterhood. For more infor-

mation, call Pat Walker at 622-5069.

Chautauqua program to take place

“Seven String Barbed Wire Fence: The Many Faces of Latino Immigration in the U.S.” will be presented at 2 p.m., Oct. 11, at the Artesia Public Library. For more information call the library at 575-7464252.

Life Chain to take place

Citizens for Life is sponsoring Roswell’s fourth annual Life Chain from 23:30 p.m., Oct. 12, at Pioneer Plaza on North Main Street. For more information call Margaret Rodriguez at 575623-5836.

Healthsense to take place

Managers of Eastern New Mexico Medical Center physician clinics will speak at Healthsense at 11:30 a.m., Oct. 17, at Senior Circle. The talk is open to the public. For more information call 575-623-2311.

The Human Race to be presented

The Senior Circle Players will present The Human Race, a three-act comedy on life in the Garden of Eden at The Senior Circle, located at 2801 N. Main St. The play will be Oct. 17 and 18 at 6 p.m. and admission is free. The show on Oct. 25 will be at the Roswell Adult Center, located at 807 N. Missouri Ave. at 2 and 6 p.m. For more information call John at 575-626-7548.

Senior Expo to be hosted

The senior expo, flu shot

and clinic will be hosted from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 21, at the Elk’s Lodge, located at 1720 N. Montana Ave. Seniors can get their flu shots and enjoy entertainment and food and prizes. For more information call Sean Davis at 575-6233960.

Little League to hold board elections

Eastside Little League Baseball will hold board elections at 7 p.m., Oct., 22, at the ESLL Field House. Volunteers ar e needed. To volunteer or for mor e infor mation, call Milo Silva at 637-1050 or Smiley Olivas at 6261079.

Join the chamber for annual tailgate party

Join the Roswell Chamber of Commerce Thursday, Oct. 23, from 4:30-6:30 p.m., for the annual Roswell Chamber Tailgate. Come enjoy some great food in your favorite jerseys and network with local businesses. For more information contact the Chamber at 575-623-5695. Around Town is a free community calendar provided for community organizations. Submissions should be 100 words or less and include the time and date of the event, physical address and a contact number. Submissions should be submitted at least two weeks before the date of the event. Email Around Town submissions to vistas@rdrnews.com.

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A7


A8 Friday, October 3, 2014

Smith takes Best of Barn

FAIR RESULTS

Roswell Daily Record

Hein wins Best Baker

Shawn Naranjo Photo

Shawn Naranjo Photo

Tara Smith, 17, of Artesia, won for Best of Barn. She is a member of Artesia 4H.

Rachel Hein, 10, of Roswell, won for Best Baker. She is a member of Shepherd’s Flock 4H.

Barraza wins for Best Fancy

Wagner is Champion Broiler

Shawn Naranjo Photo

Sage Barraza, 15, of Yeso north of Roswell, won for Best Fancy. She is a member of Barn Buddies 4H.

Shawn Naranjo Photo

Colton Wagner, 11, of Roswell, won Champion Broiler. He is a member of Diamond H 4H.

Jones wins Reserve Champion Broiler

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Shawn Naranjo Photo

Addison Jones, 10, of Roswell, won Reserve Champion Broiler. She is a member of Barn Buddies 4H.

Daniel wins Grand Champion Meat Pen

Call now for a FREE energy audit and FREE weatherization of your home provided by the Home Energy Services Program by XcelEnergy

Shawn Naranjo Photo

Brittany Daniel, 10, of Roswell, won for Grand Champion Meat Pen. She is a member of Berrendo 4H.

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FAIR RESULTS

Roswell Daily Record

Friday, October 3, 2014

A9

Winn wins Grand Champion Lamb, Kline is Reserve Champion Shawn Naranjo

Photo

Kaylin Kline,

11, of Artesia,

won Reserve

Champion Lamb. He is a member of Cottonwood 4H.

Laura Winn, 15, of

Moriarty,

won for Grand

Champion

Lamb. She is a

member of Torrence County

4H.

Chaves County Legal Fair

FREE Consultations with Attorneys

CHISUM CHALLENGE

Fri. Oct. 3 & Sat. Oct. 4

• Divorce

• Child Support

• Power of Attorney

ENMS Fairgrounds

• Custody

• Guardianship/Kinship

• Public Benefits

• Landlord/Tenant

• Wills/Probate

• Unemployment

FRIDAY NIGHT

• Bankruptcy

• Personal Injury/

• Immigration

• Creditor/Debtor

Worker’s Comp.

First-come, first-served basis. Bilingual attorneys and staff available. Abogados bilingües y funcionados estarán disponibles.

Friday, October 3, 2014 1:00–5:00 p.m. Roswell Adult & Senior Center, 807 N. Missouri, Roswell

6 pm

Wild Cow Milking ~ Trailer Loading Stray Gathering

15 teams in each event ~ Childrens Events

SATURDAY NIGHT

Some of the Top 5 Teams ~ Wild Cow Milking best broncs in the world Trailer Loading ~ Stray Gathering NFR Quality

40 Bronc Riders

Top 10 riders to short go $5000 added money

FREE WITH PAID ADMISSION Lots TO THE FAIR Of Presented by the 5th Judicial District (Chaves County) Pro Bono Committee

(Except thru Poe Street) ChavesCountyRodeo.com

Prize s


A10 Friday, October 3, 2014 BRIEFS

5 suspected drug smugglers arrested

SANTA TERESA (AP) — Federal authorities say they have arrested five suspected drug smugglers west of the Santa Teresa and seized more than $176,000 worth of marijuana. A U.S. Border Patrol agent patrolling the international boundary with Mexico about 4 a.m. Tuesday noticed multiple shoe prints heading north. The footprints led agents to four abandoned duffel bags full of prepackaged bundles of marijuana that were buried in heavy desert brush. The agents continued to follow the trail of shoe prints through the rugged terrain, which tur ned south toward the border. Authorities say three Mexican men were found hiding in the desert brush and two others were arrested a few miles away. They say none of the men had U.S. immigration documents. Border Patrol officials say the marijuana bundles totaled nearly 221 pounds.

2 men arrested in fatal shooting in Albuquerque

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — Bernalillo County Sheriff’s of ficials say two Albuquerque men have been arrested in connection with a homicide case last weekend. They say 36-year -old Fredarico Quintana and 31-year-old Richard A. Gallegos were taken into custody Wednesday night. Both men are being held without bond on suspicion of open counts of murder in the Sep. 28 death of Michael Giron. It was unclear Thursday if either Quintana or Galle-

OBITUARIES

Lois Cantrell

Funeral services for Lois Cantrell, 99, of Portales, will be at 10 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 4, 2014, at Wheeler Mortuary of Portales, with Rev. Dr. Keith Wilks officiating. Burial will follow at Portales Cemetery with Joe Blair, Joe Spalding, Mark McCool, Chris Spalding, Mark Spalding, and Darryl Bond as Pallbearers. Lois was born on Sept. 17, 1915, in Staf ford, Kansas, to the home of Harry and Cora (Ross) Black, and passed away on Oct. 2, 2014. She was raised in Kiowa, Kansas. She attended school there and graduated from Kiowa High School. Lois moved to Portales in the 1930s and attended Eastern New Mexico Junior College with an Associate Degree. She taught at Lindsey Elementary School, teaching fifth grade in the morning and music in the afternoon and for med the first string orchestra in the Portales

SUPPORT ROSWELL

RECYCLE

OBITUARIES/STATE

Roswell Daily Record

gos has an attorney yet.

Giron was found fatally shot Sunday.

Authorities say Quintana and Giron had been recently living together in Veguita. According to a criminal complaint, Quintana had been looking for Giron to collect a debt on a scooter which Quintana had previously given Giron.

University of New Mexico apologizes on ‘sex week’

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — An effort to promote sex education and raise awareness of sexual assault at the University of New Mexico backfired, forcing administrators to apologize.

Vice President for Student Affairs Eliseo Torres issued an apology Wednesday after officials received dozens of complaints about “Celebrate Sex Week at UNM.” The four -day program by the Women’s Resource Center and the Graduate and Professional Students Association began Monday. Critics say some workshops’ titles seemed to endorse promiscuity and multiple-partner encounters. Student fees paid for the event.

Torres says a lack of supervision allowed for the inclusion of topics that were “sensational and controversial.” Angela Catena, a gender violence program assistant, told the Daily Lobo topics bondage and like masochism were scheduled to be discussed. Women’s Resource Center director Summer Little says the week was meant to promote safe sex.

Public Schools. Lois was best known as a piano and organ teacher to many in Portales for 60-plus years. She was also the organist for the Portales United Methodist Church for 50 years. Lois was preceded in death by her husband, John Cantrell, in 1992, her parents, Harry and Cora Black, her brother, Ralph Black, her sisters, Vera Cleary, Gladys Circle, and Helen Riggenbach, and one great-grandchild, Rebecca Denise Johnson. She is survived by her daughters, Gail Bond and husband Darryl of Clovis, and Barbara Spalding and husband Joe of Roswell, her grandchildren, Verena Johnson, Sheryl McCool, Chris Spalding, Katie Noffsker, and Mark Spalding. Also surviving her are six great-grandchildren. Arrangements are under the direction of Wheeler Mortuary of Portales. Condolences can be made at wheelermortuary.net

Betty Compton

Services are pending at LaGrone Funeral Chapel for Betty Compton, age 86, of Roswell, who passed away on Oct. 1, 2014. A complete announcement will be made when arrangements are finalized. Condolences can be made online at lagronefuneralchapels.com. Arrangements are under the personal care of LaGrone Funeral Chapel.

Vintage 66 Route motel to get $16M renovation AP Photo

In this Aug. 3, 2010, photo, a sign stands in front of the boarded up El Vado Motel near the BioPark in Albuquerque. The crumbling motel along Route 66 will get a $16 million upgrade as part of an ongoing plan to revitalize a section of the iconic highway as it winds through Albuquerque.

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — A crumbling motel along U.S. Route 66 will get a $16 million upgrade as part of an ongoing plan to revitalize a section of the iconic highway as it winds through Albuquerque. Under the renovation proposal, the Pueblo-style El Vado Motel will be redeveloped into a boutique motel with an amphitheater and restaurants. It also will have dozens of apartment units. “The El Vado Motel is a

great opportunity to preserve a historic Route 66 gem while encouraging economic redevelopment near Old Town,” Albuquerque Mayor Richard Berry said. Other Route 66 projects in the city include the renovation of the Sundowner Motel, where Bill Gates and Paul Allen lived while launching Microsoft, and a request for proposals to improve the De Anza Motor Lodge, which features Tony Edaakie

murals depicting a Native American ceremonial procession. Also, city councilors approved measures last year to encourage businesses to add neon lights along Albuquerque’s 15mile stretch of the historic roadway. The El Vado, built in 1937, sits on a stretch of cultural sites that extend up the Paseo del Bosque from the National Hispanic Cultural Center to Old Town and the museum

YELLOW-BILLED CUCKOO NAMED A THREATENED SPECIES

TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — The yellowbilled cuckoo has been disappearing from its home in the Western U.S., a decline that prompted the federal Fish and Wildlife Service to announce Thursday that the bird has been listed as a threatened species. The yellow-billed cuckoo will now be protected under the Endangered Species Act. The bird resides in 12 western

states and in Mexico and Canada, but Arizona has the largest population. There are about 350 to 495 pairs in the U.S., according to the American Bird Conservancy, which says none has been spotted in Oregon, Washington, or Montana recently. A large portion of the yellow-billed cuckoo population lives in southern Arizona around the San Pedro River

district.

The building was listed on the state Register of Cultural Properties and the National Register of Historic Places in 1993.

Palindrome Communities, a partnership of the Sawmill Community Land Trust and Portland, Oregon-based Pacificap, was selected for the restoration. Work is expected to begin in 2016.

and at Cienega Creek, which conservationists also hope will be protected. “We’re gonna have to look at the federal actions that affect the cuckoo, such as grazing,” Steve Spangle, who manages the Fish and Wildlife’s ecological services field office in Arizona, said. “We’re looking forward to working with all the agencies on how we can help the species. It’s doing pretty well in Arizona.”

Roswell Symphony Orchestra Celebrating 55 Years of Excellence! Presents

Violinist

Alexi Kenney

Saturday, Oct. 4 - 7:30 pm Pearson Auditorium, NMMI For tickets and info call 623-5882

www.roswellsymphony.org *Season and Single Concert Tickets Available* Sponsored in part by

STUDENT RUSH: ANY STUDENT 8 YEARS OR OLDER AND ACCOMPANYING ADULT(S) ADMITTED FREE.


PECOS DINING GUIDE

A11

Make Taste of Thai Cuisine part of your Family!

Roswell Daily Record

Appetizer: Fried Tofu ..................................................................$4.95 Vegetable Egg Rolls (4) ...............................................$4.95 Imperial Rolls (4)........................................................$4.95 Deep-fried rice paper stuffed w/silvernoodles, vegetables and pork. Fried Chicken Wings..................................................$5.95 Look Chin Ping (grilled meatballs) .............................$5.95 Fried Dumplings ........................................................$5.95 Crispy fried dumplings stuffed w/chicken, vegetable and special sauce. Chicken Satay............................................................$6.95 Charbroiled chicken on skewers, marinated in Thai spices and served w/Peanut Sauce Grilled Thai Shrimp Cocktail (grilled w/Thai sauce) .$6.95 PuPu Tray for Two .....................................................$7.95 A variety of delicious appetizers well arranged around a flame for roasting. For each additional person, please add $4.95

Thai Curries are not to be mistaken w/Indian Curry Thai Curry is unique - taste it to believe it! (Served w/steamed rice, brown or sticky rice $3.00 additional) Massaman Curry, Sapparud = red curry, Garee = yellow curry, Keow Wan = green Curry Here is a sample (you can choose between tofu, chicken, pork, beef, shrimp or vegetarian):

Salads: (Served w/steamed rice, brown or sticky rice $3.00 additional) Som Tam (papaya salad)............................................$7.95 Yam Woon Sen (silver noodle/ground pork salad) ....$8.95 Laab (ground beef or chicken salad w/hot chili)......$10.95 Yam Nuea (charbroiled sliced beef salad).................$9.95 Phala Goong (shrimp salad w/kaffir lime)................$10.95 Yam Pla Muk (squid salad w/fresh ginger) ..............$10.95 Yam Poh Taek (seafood salad w/kaffir lime & garlic) ...................................................................$12.95

Fried Rice (huge portion with your choice of vegetables, Pineapples, chicken, pork, beef, shrimp or combinations) Depending on your choice ........................................$7.95 ........................................................................to$10.95

Taste of Thai Cuisine offers great seating and parking. Call them for pick up or reservations.

Friday, October 3, 2014

A huge variety (28) of Thailands favorite Main Dishes (get a menu to keep at home) - choices of beef, chicken, pork and seafood (Served w/steamed rice, brown or sticky rice $3.00 additional) Here a little sample: Pud Nuea Namman Hoi (beef w/broccoli in oyster sauce) ...............................$9.95 Pud Med Ma-Muang Himapan ..................................$8.95 (chicken or pork stir-fried w/mushrooms, bamboo shoots, onions, water chestnuts, crispy celery, roasted cashew nuts) Pud King Goong ......................................................$10.95 Shrimp sauteed w/ginger, onion, mushroom, crispy celery & bell pepper) Pla Rad Prik ...........................................................$12.95 (fresh, lightly fried fish to crispy finish and topped w/ chile garlic sauce) Pud Ped Poh Taek...................................................$12.95 (Seafood stir-fried w/mushroom, bamboo shoots, onion & sweet basil in chili sauce)

Massaman Gai (Chicken with potatoes, peanuts, onion in Massaman curry sauce ................................................................$8.95 Gaeng Ped Sapparud ................................................$8.95 (Pineapple Curry with Tofu or Chicken, pineapple, potato, onion, sweet basil in red coconut curry sauce) Gaeng Garee Goong .................................................$10.95 (Shrimp cooked with potatoes and onion in yellow curry) Gaeng Kow Wan Tofu................................................$8.95 (Sauteed tofu with bamboo shoots, bell pepper and sweet basil in green curry in coconut milk)

Taste of Thai offers also a variety of Soups, Noodles and Noodle Soups.

Remember: You can have any dish mild, hot or original hot, just tell your server!

Cool it off with an ice-cold glass of white or red Sangria, Thai Beer or tropical juices, soft drinks or the famous Thai Tea or Coffee. Leave some room for their delicious desserts: baked bananas, homemade ice-cream, fresh young coconut or Mango with sweet sticky Rice.

Taste of Thai Cuisine has GLUTEN FREE menu items!

RESTAURANT DIRECTORY

Adobe Rose Restaurant ........................575-746-6157 1614 North 13th St., Artesia, NM Cattle Baron Steak and Seafood Restaurant ..............................................575-622-2465 1113 North Main St., Roswell, NM Cottonwood Wine and Brewing..............................888-959-9342 or 1 E Cottonwood Rd, Artesia, NM ............575-365-3141 Domino’s Pizza North ............................575-623-3030 2417 North Main St., Roswell, NM Domino’s Pizza South ............................575-622-3030 1124 South Union Ave, Roswell, NM Farley’s Food Fun & Pub ......................575-627-1100 1315 North Main St., Roswell, NM Galactic Sushi ........................................575-910-1959 4311 C. North Main St., Roswell, NM - Next to AT&T Mama Tuckers Bakery............................575-625-1475 3109 North Main St., Roswell, NM Martin’s Capitol Cafe ..............................575-624-2111 110 West 4th St., Roswell, NM Pasta Cafe Italian Bistro ........................575-624-1111 1208 North Main St., Roswell, NM Peppers Grill & Bar ................................575-623-1700 500 North Main St., Roswell, NM Taste of Thai Cuisine..............................575-622-2412 1303 West Second St., Roswell, NM

Interested in joining the Pecos Dining Guide with your business? Call Christina Stock at 575-622-7710, ext. 203 at the Roswell Daily Record or talk to our Advertising Team

Find us on Social Media @Pecos Dining Guide.

Check out the featured restaurants at www.rdrnews.com - Every Friday - Click on the Local Business Review


A12 Friday, October 3, 2014

WEATHER

Roswell Daily Record

Roswell Seven-day forecast Today

Tonight

Mostly sunny and pleasant

Mainly clear and cool

Saturday

Sunny and nice

National Cities Sunday

Monday

Sunlit and pleasant

Sunny and pleasant

Tuesday

Plenty of sunshine

Wednesday

A full day of sunshine

Thursday

Sunny

High 72°

Low 47°

81°/50°

81°/51°

79°/52°

79°/54°

82°/56°

81°/54°

WNW at 10-20 mph POP: 0%

WNW at 7-14 mph POP: 0%

WNW at 10-20 mph POP: 0%

WNW at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

W at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

W at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

NNW at 3-6 mph POP: 5%

SSE at 3-6 mph POP: 5%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

New Mexico Weather

Roswell through 8 p.m. Thursday

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

Temperatures High/low ........................... 79°/50° Normal high/low ............... 80°/52° Record high ............... 99° in 2000 Record low ................. 35° in 1965 Humidity at noon .................. 18%

Farmington 71/38

Clayton 60/39

Raton 63/33

Precipitation 24 hours ending 8 p.m. Thu. 0.00" Month to date ....................... 0.00" Normal month to date .......... 0.08" Year to date ........................ 16.98" Normal year to date ........... 10.54"

Santa Fe 72/40

Gallup 74/33 Albuquerque 76/48

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Tucumcari 66/43 Clovis 67/43

Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading

Ruidoso 68/45

T or C 79/51

Source:Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

Sun and Moon The Sun Today Sat. The Moon Today Sat. Full

Oct 8

Rise 6:54 a.m. 6:54 a.m. Rise 3:20 p.m. 4:05 p.m. Last

Oct 15

New

Oct 23

Set 6:40 p.m. 6:39 p.m. Set 1:30 a.m. 2:36 a.m. First

Oct 30

Alamogordo 79/50

Silver City 78/48

ROSWELL 72/47 Carlsbad 79/50

Hobbs 76/48

Las Cruces 80/51

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

Regional Cities Sat. Today Alamogordo Albuquerque Angel Fire Artesia Carlsbad Chama Clayton Cloudcroft Clovis Deming Espanola Farmington Gallup Hobbs Las Cruces Las Vegas Los Alamos Los Lunas Lovington Portales Prewitt Raton Red River Roswell Ruidoso Santa Fe Silver City T or C Tucumcari White Rock

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

79/50/s 76/48/s 62/28/s 74/49/s 79/50/s 64/31/s 60/39/s 65/41/s 67/43/s 81/49/s 75/47/s 71/38/s 74/33/s 76/48/s 80/51/s 65/36/s 68/41/s 78/45/s 76/49/s 69/44/s 72/33/s 63/33/s 61/32/s 72/47/s 68/45/s 72/40/s 78/48/s 79/51/s 66/43/s 70/42/s

82/53/s 80/50/s 66/30/s 81/52/s 83/55/s 67/33/s 73/47/s 66/43/s 76/48/s 84/52/s 79/49/s 75/41/s 77/36/s 76/52/s 83/54/s 75/42/s 72/44/s 82/49/s 77/54/s 77/49/s 75/37/s 74/40/s 64/34/s 81/50/s 72/51/s 77/41/s 80/53/s 83/55/s 80/48/s 75/44/s

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

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

Today

Sat.

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

47/34/c 78/53/t 73/63/c 63/53/pc 75/57/t 61/38/r 71/43/t 81/51/s 58/38/pc 69/43/t 82/56/s 89/74/pc 85/58/pc 67/39/t 56/36/c 91/66/s 99/66/s 71/47/s

44/32/c 64/44/s 68/42/pc 67/54/r 66/40/s 49/36/pc 53/38/c 78/59/s 74/45/s 51/39/sh 85/60/s 88/74/sh 78/57/s 52/37/pc 57/43/s 93/65/s 100/67/s 75/51/s

U.S. Extremes

Today 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

Hi/Lo/W

90/78/t 81/51/s 46/34/c 85/63/t 70/60/pc 54/35/c 89/73/t 75/61/pc 95/67/s 74/45/t 78/50/s 81/63/pc 63/42/c 68/45/s 91/66/s 71/54/pc 97/65/s 76/65/c

88/72/t 81/58/s 48/33/pc 75/58/s 70/50/r 56/40/pc 84/59/t 73/46/r 97/69/s 52/38/c 79/56/pc 70/44/pc 58/42/s 70/47/s 92/67/s 70/55/c 97/66/s 70/47/pc

(For the 48 contiguous states)

State Extremes

High: 102° ...............Fullerton, Calif. Low: 16° .....Bodie State Park, Calif.

High: 81° ........................ Lordsburg Low: 32° .............................. Grants

National Cities

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

Fronts Cold

-10s

Warm

-0s

0s

Precipitation Stationary

10s

20s

Showers T-storms

30s

40s

50s

Rain

60s

Flurries

70s

80s

Your neighborhood pharmacy since 2002

Fast, Friendly Service Drive-Thru Window Check out our $5 generic prescription program. Consultation by Registered Pharmacists. We accept insurance plans including: Tri-Care, Express-Scripts, Medicare-D and Medicaid Accepting new customers. Transfer your prescription today, ask us how.

575-622-1984

Your Town - Your Store

Sat.

Hi/Lo/W

Snow

Ice

90s 100s 110s


SPORTS B Packers destroy Vikings 42-10 Friday, October 3, 2014 Phone: 575-622-7710, ext. 304

Section

Roswell Daily Record

GREEN BAY, Wis. (AP) — Julius Peppers returned an interception 49 yards for a touchdown, Aaron Rodgers threw for three scores, and the Green Bay Packers led the Minnesota Vikings 42-7 early in the fourth quarter Thursday night. Dropped back in coverage, Peppers picked off a pass over the middle from a pressured Christian Ponder. The 34-year-old Peppers veered left across the field and waited for blocks before chugging the final 10 yards along the sideline to give Green Bay a 21-0 lead with 7:06 left in the second quarter. Peppers, the Packers’ prized free-agent acquisition, stopped for a second in the end zone before safety Morgan Burnett came up and pointed at the stands. Peppers took his first Lambeau Leap. Peppers became the first player in NFL history with 100 sacks and 10 interceptions. Things only got worse for Ponder, who started at quarterback with rookie Teddy Bridgewater out with a sprained left ankle. Jamari Lattimore inter-

cepted Ponder’s pass over the middle on Minnesota’s next drive, setting up Rodgers’ 11-yard touchdown pass to Davante Adams to give Green Bay a four-touchdown lead with 4:55 left in the half. Rodgers and the rest of the of fense essentially toyed with Minnesota the rest of the way. A holding penalty during a long incomplete pass on the Packers’ first drive of the third quarter pushed Green Bay back to the 35. The Packers ran nearly the exact same on second-and17, but this time cornerback Josh Robinson was whistled for pass interference on an incompletion. Eddie Lacy had an 11yard touchdown run on the next play, breaking one tackle left before changing direction to find a clear path right across the goal line for a five-touchdown lead with 13:32 left in the third quarter. The Packers’ struggling running game got back on track, with Lacy running for a season-high 105 yards on 13 attempts. Lacy added a 10-yard touchdown run later in the third

E-mail: sports@rdrnews.com

AP Photo

Green Bay Packers' Julius Peppers reaches for the end zone as he runs back an interception 49-yards for a touchdown during the first half of an NFL football game against the Minnesota Vikings, Thursday, in Green Bay, Wis. after barreling over safety Robert Blanton into the end zone. The fans chanted “Eddie! Eddie!” before the extrapoint attempt.

Rodgers was 12 of 17 for 156 yards, including a 66yard scoring strike to Jordy Nelson in the first quarter. Rodgers found Nelson off play-action, and the NFL’s

leading receiver hauled in the pass at the 20. He easily outraced safety Harrison Smith into end zone for the Packers’ second touchdown.

Rodgers also connected with Randall Cobb for an 8yard touchdown pass set up by three straight long

Scherzer, Tigers hit hard in 12-3 loss to Orioles BAL TIMORE (AP) — Max Scherzer wasn’t as sharp as usual, yet the Detroit Tigers were still just one run behind heading into the eighth inning of Game 1 in their AL Division Series against the Baltimore Orioles. That’s when things got ugly. Aided by two Detroit errors, the Orioles scored eight runs and pulled away to a 12-3 victory Thursday night. Baltimore led 4-3 before sending 12 men to the plate and getting six hits against Scherzer, the reigning Cy Young Award winner, and three ineffective relievers. “Up until that point, it was a pretty good game,” Tigers manager Brad Ausmus said. “Just got away from us. You’ve got to

credit the Baltimore Orioles hitters as well.” Nelson Cruz homered and drove in three runs, and J.J. Hardy also connected for the Orioles, who led the majors with 211 homers during the regular season. The 12 runs set a postseason record for Baltimore, making its second playoff appearance since 1997. Game 2 of the best-offive series is Friday at Camden Yards. Justin Verlander, the second of three straight Cy Young winners the Orioles will face, is set to go against AP Photo left-hander Wei-Yin Chen. Detroit Tigers starting pitcher Max Scherzer throws in the secScherzer didn’t face ond inning against the Baltimore Orioles. Baltimore this season, and in his 2014 postsea- direction. ting ballclub. You give son debut he learned that “I just left too many them a chance to extend a bad pitch can go a long pitches up,” Scherzer their arms, they can realway — in the opposite said. “This is a great-hit- ly hit it. I’ve got to find a

way to get the ball down. I wasn’t quite able to do that tonight, and I paid for it.” Clearly, facing Scherzer was not too daunting a task for the hard-hitting Orioles. “It’s the same game,” said Alejandro De Aza, who had two hits and two RBIs. “Yes, this is a good pitcher, but it’s the same game. You have to throw the ball to home plate for a strike to get us out.” The Tigers hit three solo homers, but very little else went right. An uncharacteristic error by shortstop Andrew Romine opened the door to that eight-run eighth, but afterward Ausmus wasn’t pointing fingers. “In baseball, team effort is if someone makes an error, you hope the pitch-

See PACKERS, Page B2

er picks them up,” Ausmus said. “If a pitcher struggles, you hope the lineup picks him up. Tonight, we just didn’t get it done.” Scherzer allowed five runs and seven hits in 7 1/3 innings. The righthander was 18-5 during the regular season, but in this one he was burned by the long ball and outpitched by the Orioles. Cruz, who led the majors with 40 homers during the regular season, put the Orioles up 20 with a first-inning drive before Detroit’s Victor Martinez and J.D. Martinez connected off Chris Tillman in the second to tie it. A bloop single by Nick Markakis made it 3-2 in

Rockets blast Rams; Schmidt sets school record us. We needed that going into district,” stated a happy coach Betty Elizondo. “It got our spirits built up and just to have a good time and get ready for district.” The Rocket seniors – Angelica Lara, Miranda Saavedra, Bianca Banda, and Danielle Hubbard – played their hearts out in the sunny contest, but Schmidt let everyone know that she was going to have a special night from the onset. With 5:53 gone in the match, Schmidt had her initial goal as she went in

unassisted and drilled one in from point blank range. At about the 9-minute mark, the Rockets started to begin to tee off on the Ram goalie as Hubbard was shooting from close range and Idali Sifuentes attempting two shots herself. Desarae Flores set up Schmidt goal no. 2 at the 11:42 mark and less than 4 minutes later she had her hat trick as she scored from close range again. The Goddard defense, who had been mostly spectators, finally got to play a bit as the Rams (6-6-1)

$

Rockets continue to pepper shots at the Rams’ goalie as they continued to control the game. Schmidt served up a per fect pass that Delilah Sandoval blasted in to make the score 7-0 Rockets. Of course, Schmidt wasn’t done with her own scoring as she would boot in the last three goals. With 15 minutes down, Schmidt stole a goalie kick, dribbled once and put it in to the left side. The score was 8-0 Rockets. Five minutes later, she went in

29.

REG. $42.70

Up U p to to 5 q quarts uarts off oi oil il

*With this coup coupon. oupo ponn. n LLi Limit imit one per cus imit custome customer. tomerr. Not tome N t vali valid lid wi with ithh aany ny oth oother ther spe specials. cial i ls. sO Offer ffer end ends ds Oct O Oc October tobe 9, 2014.

Goddard at Fabins Tx 7 p.m. • Roswell at Piedra Vista 7 p.m. • Gateway Christian at Ramah 7 p.m. • NMMI at Capitan 7 p.m. • Lake Arthur at Clovis Christian 7 p.m. FOOTBALL (VARSITY)

NMMI TBA

See ROCKETS, Page B2

95

— FRIDAY, OCTOBER 3 —

two others who had their shots rewarded with goals. Schmidt dribbled around two defenders and easily booted in her fourth of the evening at the 31:16 mark and then, following the only foul of the half (on Goddard), Miranda Saavedra dribbled down the middle unassisted and scored off of a high kick. The Saavedra goal left the half time score at 6-0 as the Rams had no shots on goal, there was only one total foul called, and there were no offsides called on either side. The second half saw the

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started to press – but with Jeanette Aragon, Banda, and Lara all marking well and clearing passes, the Rams could never get a shot on a goal. Lara Carrica was the first goal scorer not named Schmidt to get one to go in as she got a header off the goalies save of a Hubbard attempt to trickle past and the Rockets were up 4-0. Carrica had spent the majority of the half directing the Rocket offense from her middle position. Hubbard continued to press the action as the half winded down, but it was

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All Times MDT Friday, Oct. 3 AUTO RACING 10 a.m. FS1 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, practice for Kansas Lottery 300, at Kansas City, Kan. 11 a.m. FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Hollywood Casino 400, at Kansas City, Kan. 2 p.m.

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On a night when the Goddard seniors were being honored, it was a precocious sophomore that stole the spotlight. Caitlyn Schmidt scored a schoolrecord 7 goals in leading the Rockets to a 10-0 mercy-rule win over the visiting Portales Rams. The Rockets dominated in every phase of the game as they wrapped up the pre-district schedule in convincing fashion. Goddard controlled the majority of the possessions and shot at will against a beleaguered Ram defense. “That was a good win for

See ORIOLES, Page B2

TV

ESPN2 — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, practice for Kansas Lottery 300, at Kansas City, Kan. 3:30 p.m. ESPN2 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole qualifying for Hollywood Casino 400, at Kansas City, Kan. 11 p.m. NBCSN — Formula One, qualifying for Japanese

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B2 Friday, October 3, 2014

SPORTS

Football Prep Thursday’s Scores By The Associated Press PREP FOOTBALL Cibola 53, Highland 6 Hondo 12, NMSD 10 La Cueva 42, Del Norte 0

NFL

At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times MDT AMERICAN CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Buffalo . . . . . . . . .2 2 0 .500 79 Miami . . . . . . . . .2 2 0 .500 96 New England . . .2 2 0 .500 80 N.Y. Jets . . . . . . .1 3 0 .250 79 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Houston . . . . . . .3 1 0 .750 87 Indianapolis . . . . .2 2 0 .500 136 Tennessee . . . . .1 3 0 .250 60 Jacksonville . . . .0 4 0 .000 58 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Cincinnati . . . . . .3 0 0 1.000 80 Baltimore . . . . . . .3 1 0 .750 103 Pittsburgh . . . . . .2 2 0 .500 97 Cleveland . . . . . .1 2 0 .333 74 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF San Diego . . . . . .3 1 0 .750 102 Denver . . . . . . . .2 1 0 .667 75 Kansas City . . . .2 2 0 .500 102 Oakland . . . . . . .0 4 0 .000 51

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Philadelphia . . . .3 1 0 .750 122 Dallas . . . . . . . . .3 1 0 .750 115 N.Y. Giants . . . . .2 2 0 .500 103 Washington . . . . .1 3 0 .250 95 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Atlanta . . . . . . . . .2 2 0 .500 131 Carolina . . . . . . .2 2 0 .500 73 New Orleans . . . .1 3 0 .250 95 Tampa Bay . . . . .1 3 0 .250 72 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Detroit . . . . . . . . .3 1 0 .750 85 Green Bay . . . . .3 2 0 .600 134 Chicago . . . . . . . .2 2 0 .500 92 Minnesota . . . . . .2 3 0 .400 101 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Arizona . . . . . . . .3 0 0 1.000 66 Seattle . . . . . . . . .2 1 0 .667 83 San Francisco . . .2 2 0 .500 88 St. Louis . . . . . . .1 2 0 .333 56

———

PA 75 97 90 96

PA 67 95 110 152 PA 33 60 99 77

PA 63 67 79 103 PA 104 86 91 109 PA 113 96 110 119

PA 62 106 100 126 PA 45 66 89 85

Orioles

Thursday’s Game Green Bay 42, Minnesota 10 Sunday’s Games Cleveland at Tennessee, 11 a.m. Tampa Bay at New Orleans, 11 a.m. Houston at Dallas, 11 a.m. Chicago at Carolina, 11 a.m. St. Louis at Philadelphia, 11 a.m. Atlanta at N.Y. Giants, 11 a.m. Buffalo at Detroit, 11 a.m. Baltimore at Indianapolis, 11 a.m. Pittsburgh at Jacksonville, 11 a.m. Arizona at Denver, 2:05 p.m. Kansas City at San Francisco, 2:25 p.m. N.Y. Jets at San Diego, 2:25 p.m. Cincinnati at New England, 6:30 p.m. Open: Miami, Oakland Monday’s Game Seattle at Washington, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 9 Indianapolis at Houston, 6:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 12 Jacksonville at Tennessee, 11 a.m. Detroit at Minnesota, 11 a.m. Baltimore at Tampa Bay, 11 a.m. Denver at N.Y. Jets, 11 a.m. New England at Buffalo, 11 a.m. Carolina at Cincinnati, 11 a.m. Pittsburgh at Cleveland, 11 a.m. Green Bay at Miami, 11 a.m. San Diego at Oakland, 2:05 p.m. Dallas at Seattle, 2:25 p.m. Washington at Arizona, 2:25 p.m. Chicago at Atlanta, 2:25 p.m. N.Y. Giants at Philadelphia, 6:30 p.m. Open: Kansas City, New Orleans Monday, Oct. 13 San Francisco at St. Louis, 6:30 p.m.

AP Sportlight

Oct. 3 1942 — With a victory in the Jockey Club Gold Cup, Whirlaway becomes the first horse to total more than $500,000 in lifetime earnings. 1951 — Bobby Thomson hits a threerun homer off Ralph Branca of the Brooklyn Dodgers with one out in the bottom of the ninth to give the New York Giants a 5-4 playoff victory and the National League pennant. 1971 — Billie Jean King wins the Virginia Slims-Thunderbird tournament in Phoenix to become the first female tennis player to win $100,000 in one year. 1973 — The formation of the World Football League is announced. 1974 — Frank Robinson signs a $175,000-a-year player-manager contract with the Cleveland Indians, making him the first black manager in major league history. 1981 — Southern California’s Marcus Allen rushes for 223 yards against Oregon State, his fourth straight 200plus rushing game. 1990 — Cecil Fielder completes a startling season by homering for the 50th

the Orioles’ half, and Hardy led off the seventh by driving a poorly thrown changeup from Scherzer over the centerfield wall for a two-run cushion. “The one that stings is that J.J. Hardy home run,” Scherzer said. “That home run really changed the game in my eyes, gave them that insurance run.” Cruz added his third RBI with a single during the wild eighth inning. T illman (1-0) allowed two runs in five innings before Andrew Miller got five outs — three by strikeout. Darren O’Day gave up an eighth-inning homer to Miguel Cabrera, but the drive followed a

double play. Orioles manager Buck Showalter then called upon closer Zach Britton, who had 37 saves during the regular season. Britton got the last out in the eighth, and by the time the ninth inning rolled around, he wasn’t needed anymore. Miller had a 1.35 ERA in 23 games with Baltimore, O’Day finished at 1.70 and Britton closed at 1.65. That’s one big reason why the AL Eastchampion Orioles were 80-4 when leading after eight innings. Meanwhile, Detroit’s revamped bullpen looked shaky — although it was Romine’s error that got the big eighth inning going. “I can’t remember the last time he made an error at shortstop,” Ausmus said. “This was an

ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) — Mike Moustakas homered leading of f the 11th inning, and the Kansas City Royals kept rolling in their first postseason in 29 years with a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Angels in the AL Division Series opener Thursday night. Moustakas hit the first extra-inning homer in postseason history for the Royals, a high shot off Fernando Salas that barely reached the elevated rightfield stands at Angel Stadium. Alcides Escobar had an early RBI double for the Royals, and their bullpen repeatedly escaped trouble in Kansas City’s first game since that spectacular, 12inning comeback victory over Oakland in the wildcard playoff Tuesday night at Kauffman Stadium. Game 2 in the best-offive series is Friday night at the Big A, with Angels 16-game winner Matt Shoemaker taking on fellow rookie Yordano Ventura. Chris Iannetta and David Freese homered early in the Angels’ first playoff game since 2009, but the majors’ most productive offense stranded eight runners in the five innings before Greg Holland’s perfect 11th. Winning pitcher Danny Duffy worked the 10th for Kansas City, and Holland picked up the save after arriving at the ballpark around the fourth inning. He went to North Carolina on the Royals’ off day to attend his child’s birth.

Mike Trout was 0 for 4 with a walk in his playoff debut. The favorite for AL MVP grounded into a fielder’s choice in the 10th before Albert Pujols popped out to end his 0for-4 Angels playoff debut. Josh Hamilton popped out to end the game, capping his 0-for -5 return to the lineup. Jered Weaver, Joe Smith and Huston Street combined to retire Kansas City’s final 15 batters before extra innings — and that’s when the Royals went to work. Kevin Jepsen let two runners on in the 10th, but retired Salvador Perez and Omar Infante to escape. Salas wasn’t as lucky, giving up a homer to the Royals’ No. 9 hitter. Moustakas grew up in the San Fer nando Valley and played at UCLA before making his big league debut and hitting his first homer at the Big A in 2011. A raucous crowd banged balloons and cheered on the Angels throughout their postseason return after a half-decade away, but the fans got tense while the teams managed just three hits apiece in the first nine innings. Los Angeles earned home-field advantage throughout the postseason with a big league-best 98-64 record in the regular season, winning the AL West while scoring 773 runs. The Royals can’t match Los Angeles’ of fense on paper, but they’ve got some remarkable postseason mojo.

Continued from Page B1

SCOREBOARD

and 51st times as the Detroit Tigers beat the New York Yankees 10-3. Fielder is the first American Leaguer since 1961 to hit 50 home runs. 1993 — The Toronto Blue Jays become the first team in American League history to have teammates finish 1-2-3 in the batting race. John Olerud leads the league with a .363 batting average, Paul Molitor finishes at .332 and Roberto Alomar at .326. 1997 — Sixty-nine-year-old Hall of Famer Gordie Howe skates the first shift with the Detroit Vipers in their International Hockey League opener, becoming the only professional in his sport to compete in six decades. 1998 — Ricky Williams rushes for a school-record 350 yards and five touchdowns to set NCAA records with 65 career rushing touchdowns and career points by a non-kicker (394) as Texas defeats Iowa State 54-33. 2004 — Roger Federer routs an injured Andy Roddick 6-4, 6-0 to capture the Thailand Open, joining John McEnroe and Bjorn Borg as the only players to win 12 straight ATP Tour finals in the last 25 years. 2008 — Candace Parker of Los Angeles Sparks receives the WNBA’s most valuable player award along with the rookie of the year awards, becoming the first player to win both. Parker, the top overall draft pick this year from Tennessee, averaged 18.5 points and 9.5 rebounds. 2009 — Aqib Talib has three interceptions in Tampa Bay’s 16-13 loss at Washington. 2009 — Peyton Manning sets a franchise record by throwing for 300 or more yards in four consecutive games, going 31 of 41 for 353 yards in a 34-17 victory over Seattle. Manning connects with Reggie Wayne and joins Dan Marino as the only quarterbacks in league history to throw 55 TD passes to two different receivers. 2010 — Angel McCoughtry scores 18 points as the United States wins gold at the women’s basketball world championship with an 89-69 victory over the Czech Republic. 2010 — Josh Scobee kicks a 59-yard field goal — the eighth-longest field goal in NFL history and longest in franchise history — as time expires to give Jacksonville a 31-28 victory over Indianapolis. Oct. 4 1895 — Horace Rawlins wins the first U.S. Open at the Newport Golf Club in Newport, R.I. Rawlins beats Willie Dunn

unfortunate one, but it doesn’t change my mind on him as a shortstop.” Although he had a 5.56 ERA in the first inning during the regular season, T illman began his initial foray into the playoffs in impressive fashion by striking out the side on 14 pitches. Cruz hit an oppositefield drive to right in the bottom half after Markakis hit a leadof f single. It was his 15th career postseason home run, tied with Babe Ruth for 10th place on the career list. “It’s just I like to enjoy this moment, you know,” Cruz said. “I think as a player, you want to be in the situation. And, you know, it’s no reason.” The rollicking, towelwaving sellout crowd of 47,842 had barely settled down when Victor Mar-

with 36-hole total of 173. 1927 — John Longden rides the first official winner of his career, named Hugo K. Asher, in Salt Lake City. 1940 — Fritzie Zivic scores a 15-round decision over Henry Armstrong to win the world welterweight title in New York. Armstrong had 20 successful title defenses. 1964 — Kansas City’s Bobby Hunt ties an AFL record with four interceptions as the Chiefs post a 28-7 victory over the Houston Oilers. 1964 — Mary Wills captures the LPGA championship with a two-stroke victory over Mickey Wright. 1969 — Mississippi’s Archie Manning becomes the first player in college football history to throw for 300 yards and rush for 100 yards in the same game as the Rebels fall short in a 33-32 loss at Alabama. Manning passes for 436 yards and two touchdowns while adding 104 yards rushing yards and three touchdowns. 1970 — O.J. Simpson of Buffalo gains 303 combined yards and scores two touchdowns as the Bills edge the New York Jets 33-31. 1987— The NFL continues the regularseason schedule with replacement players while the players’ association strikes. Average attendance is 16,947, down from 57,205 the first week and 59,824 the second week. 1991 — The San Jose Sharks surrender 52 shots and lose 4-3 to the Vancouver Canucks in their first NHL regular-season game. 1998 — Atlanta scores three touchdowns in a 48-second span of the third quarter — the quickest trio of TDs since the NFL-AFL merger in 1970 — and routs Carolina 51-23. 2003 — B.J. Symons of Texas Tech tosses a Big 12-record eight touchdown passes and tops 500 yards passing for the third straight game when the Red Raiders beat Texas A&M 59-28. 2008 — The New York Rangers beat the Tampa Bay Lightning 2-1 in Prague, Czech Republic, and the Pittsburgh Penguins down the Ottawa Senators 43 in overtime in Stockholm, Sweden, as the NHL opens its regular season outside North America for the fifth time. 2010 — The Europeans reclaim the Ryder Cup winning 14 1/2-13 1/2. The Americans rally from a three-point deficit to tie the score, but Graeme McDowell beats Hunter Mahan in the final singles match. 2011 —The NBA cancels the entire 114game preseason schedule because a new collective bargaining agreement was not reached with the National

tinez led off the second with a towering shot over the right-field wall. Four pitches later, J.D. Martinez hit a tying homer in his first postseason atbat. TRAINER’S ROOM Tigers: CF Rajai Davis (pelvic strain) was cleared to play after passing a series of drills early in the day before rosters were finalized. Davis started and batted ninth. UP NEXT Tigers: Verlander (1512, 4.54 ERA) makes his 16th postseason start following what Ausmus called “a down season overall” for the 2011 Cy Young Award winner. Orioles: Chen (16-6, 3.54) seeks his first win since Sept. 15 after losing his final two starts in the regular season.

Roswell Daily Record Basketball Players Association. 2012 — The NHL cancels the first two weeks of the regular season, the second time games had been lost because of a lockout in seven years. Unable to work out how to split $3 billion in hockey-related revenues with the players’ association, the NHL wipes out 82 games from Oct. 11-24.

Rockets

Continued from Page B1

unassisted through three defenders to make it 9-0. As the game started to wind down, one had to wonder – would Rocket Goalie Averi Mann face a shot (she did, once) and would Hubbard score as she continually pressed the action in the box (she wouldn’t). With 10 minutes left, the sun went down and the mosquitos came out, but it was the Rams’ defense that would be bit one final time. Hubbard got a nice assist as Schmidt would score the final one for the 10-0 win with 6:55 remaining. Coach Elizondo was very complimentary of her seniors on their big night. “Those four seniors – they’ve been excellent leaders for me this year. They’ve been positive, real strong leaders … and they are going to leave a hole in us next year.” The Rockets (8-4) begin district play with their annual home-and-home match with Roswell High on Tuesday evening.

Packers

Continued from Page B1

runs by Lacy. Cobb scored his league-leading sixth touchdown of the season. Green Bay’s league-worst run defense also got off to good start, holding Minnesota’s Matt Asiata to 67 yards on 14 carries. Minnesota rarely advanced past midfield. Their only venture across the 50 in the first half ended with Burnett forcing Asiata to fumble after an 11-yard run, and Casey Hayward recovered the Vikings’ third consecutive turnover. Under pressure much of the night, Minnesota could rarely get anything going through the air in Ponder’s first start since Dec. 3. Ponder was 13 of 27 for 122 yards. The Vikings finally broke the shutout when Ponder

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Grand Prix, at Suzuka CANADIAN FOOTBALL LEAGUE 8 p.m. ESPN2 — Calgary at Saskatchewan COLLEGE FOOTBALL 7 p.m. ESPN — Louisville at Syracuse 10:15 p.m. ESPN — Utah St. at BYU GOLF 8 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Alfred Dunhill Links Championship, second round, at St. Andrews, Angus, and Kingsbarns, Scotland 11 p.m. TGC — LPGA, Reignwood Classic, third round, at Beijing MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Noon TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 2, Detroit at Baltimore 3 p.m. FS1 — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 1, San Francisco at Washington 6:30 p.m. FS1 — Playoffs, National League Division Series, game 1, St. Louis at Los Angeles 9:30 p.m. TBS — Playoffs, American League Division Series, game 2, Kansas City at Los Angeles PREP FOOTBALL 7 p.m. ESPN2 — Norcross (Ga.) at North Gwinnett (Ga.) SOCCER 8 p.m. NBCSN — MLS, Kansas City at DC United

ran for a 6-yard touchdown on the first play of the fourth quarter. But they still trailed 42-7. Ponder is Minnesota’s third starting quarterback of the year, following Matt Cassel and Bridgewater. Cassel is out for the season with a broken left foot. The Packers had four sacks, including 1 1/2 for Mike Daniels. Peppers combined with A.J. Hawk to sack Ponder on Minnesota’s opening drive of the third quarter. Minnesota had the most notable injury when receiver Cordarelle Patterson left with a hip injury early in the third quarter after making a 6-yard catch. His return was questionable. For Green Bay, defensive lineman Datone Jones left in the second quarter with an ankle injury.

Moustakas’ HR in 11th puts Royals past Angels, 3-2

AP Photo

Los Angeles Angels' Kole Calhoun watches his base hit against the Kansas City Royals during the 10th inning of Game 1 of baseball's AL Division Series in Anaheim, Calif., Thursday. Even before Moustakas’ homer, Nori Aoki made dramatically awkward catches on the right-field warning track to end the sixth and seventh, twice making up for poor routes to the Angels’ drives with a last-instant stab. Lorenzo Cain also made two exceptional plays in center field in the first two innings, underlining Kansas City’s stellar defense. Weaver yielded three hits over seven strong

innings for the Angels while his good friend, Jason Vargas, pitched six innings of three-hit ball for Kansas City. Weaver and Vargas played together at nearby Long Beach State and again with the Angels last year. They’re taking a vacation together after the season — but first, the former Dirtbags dueled through 6 1/2 tense innings in Orange County. After Escobar put the

Royals ahead, Los Angeles tied it when Iannetta drove a fastball into the bullpens in his first career playoff at-bat. While Trout’s October debut received all the pregame attention, the Angels’ tough catcher also got his first postseason experience after sitting out twice when his Colorado Rockies made the playoffs. Kansas City went back ahead in the fifth when Alex Gordon doubled and scored on Infante’s sacri-

fice fly, but Freese tied it again with another drive to the bullpens in left. Freese, the MVP of the 2011 World Series and NLCS for St. Louis, got his 24th postseason extrabase hit and 30th RBI in his Angels playoff debut. The Angels put two runners on against a tiring Vargas in the sixth, and Royals fans might have had bitter flashbacks to manager Ned Yost’s muchdebated, sixth-inning pitching decisions in the wild-card game. But Aoki saved Kansas City when he blindly nabbed Howie Kendrick’s drive to the warning track in right. TRAINER’S ROOM Royals: RHP Kelvin Herrera walked Freese on five pitches leading off the seventh and then left the game with right forearm tightness. Herrera is a key member of Kansas City’s vaunted bullpen. Angels: Hamilton played left field and batted seventh after missing 21 of the Angels’ final 22 regular -season games with upper-body injuries. UP NEXT Shoemaker (16-4, 3.04 ERA), the 28-year -old rookie who gets credit from manager Mike Scioscia for saving the Angels’ season, makes his playoff debut. He hasn’t pitched since Sept. 15, when he strained an oblique muscle. Kansas City counters with Ventura (14-10, 3.20), who struggled in the sixth inning of the wildcard game, but possesses a 100 mph fastball.


SPORTS

Roswell Daily Record

B3

Michigan AD suggests coach Hoke safe for now ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) — Michigan athletic director Dave Brandon said Thursday he prefers to wait until the end of the season before evaluating his coaches, suggesting Brady Hoke is safe for now at the helm of the school’s storied football program. “We feel strongly at the University of Michigan athletic department that coaches deserve every opportunity to compete through the season that they have prepared for and that their studentathletes are committed to, and then we evaluate coaches at the end of the season,” Brandon said in an interview with The Associated Press. “We do that with every one of our 31 coaches. It’s no different for football.” Brandon and Hoke have both received criticism for the handling of injured quarterback Shane Morris in last weekend’s loss to Minnesota — and that’s not the only issue facing the athletic director following a rough September. Michigan is 2-3 and showing little progress in Hoke’s fourth season as coach. Attendance at Michigan Stadium has dipped and there was even a student protest this week calling for Brandon to be fired. Hoke has been criticized for not immediately sitting Morris for the rest of the game after the sophomore took a hard hit in the fourth quarter of Saturday’s 30-14 loss to Minnesota. Hoke said Monday he didn’t see the hit on Morris, and that as far as he knew, that quarterback still hadn’t been diagnosed with a concussion.

Brandon released a statement about 12 hours later saying Morris had in fact been diagnosed with a probable concussion — as of Sunday. On Thursday, Brandon reiterated that communication was a problem — both during the game when Morris was hit, and over the next couple days. “When Brady went out at whatever time it was on Monday, we were still gathering facts and trying to create a clear depiction of the sequence of events that took place on that bench on Saturday,” Brandon said. Brandon has made some changes intended to have more staff watching for potential injuries, and the university president has weighed in, saying the athletic department will be transparent in figuring out what went wrong. Brandon said diagnosing injuries isn’t the coach’s responsibility. “Coaches are supposed to coach, and medical staff are supposed to go over and tell the coach at any given time, ‘There’s a player on the field that shouldn’t be out there. Get him of f.’ Or, ‘We’ve just examined a player and they are not able to participate any more. We’ve taken away their helmet,”’ Brandon said. “And that’s all coaches need to hear, and that’s their only responsibility in these cases.” Even if Morris hadn’t been hurt, pressure on Hoke would have been substantial after an embarrassing home loss to open Big Ten play. Brandon called Hoke a “terrific football coach” on Thursday, saying he

Friday, October 3, 2014

AP Photo

In a photo taken Tuesday, law student Edward Mears holds a "Fire Brandon" sign during a protest on the campus of the University of Michigan over the recent football game against Minnesota where quarterback Shane Morris was left in the game after receiving a concussion. About 1,000 University of Michigan students marched to the home of school President Mark Schlissel to protest against the performance of athletic director Dave Brandon and football coach Brady Hoke.

hopes fans of the program aren’t about to give up on the season. “Brady and his staff are clearly disappointed, as we all are, that after five games this season, we’re not where we want to be or where we expected to be,” Brandon said. “But what we need to do, those of us who care a lot about Michigan football — and we’re passionate about it — is we need to support our players, support our coaches and recognize that we have seven and hopefully eight more games to play, before this season is over. And until

this season is over, these coaches and these players have great opportunities ahead of them.” Michigan’s mediocre record has been accompanied by a growing sense of malaise among fans. Empty seats in the area where students sit have become common. Brandon acknowledged that the decision to replace assigned seating for students with general admission in 2013 did not go over well. “We put it in place, and it was just a complete failure,” Brandon said. “And looking back, the mistake

that we felt we made is, we didn’t really engage with the student body and get their support and buy-in and clear understanding for what we were doing and why we were doing it.” Brandon said after that debacle, the athletic department made a point of engaging with student organizations, and the school switched to a modified program for student seating this year. “We launched this program with great anticipation and excitement, because we now had the endorsement and the participation of the students,

and we quickly lear ned that our season ticket sales for students went from 20,000 to 12,000,” Brandon said. “So I look at that, and I go, ‘Well, that’s strike two.’ That’s another effort that we made that was well intended and we thought was going to help us advance our purpose, that sadly hasn’t worked.” “My message to our students — and I met with our student newspaper this morning — my message is, we’ve got to get this fixed,” Brandon added. “And everything’s on the table.”

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AP Photo

Syracuse coach Scott Shafer, left, and Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly shake hands after an NCAA college football game.

Brian Kelly understands suspended player’s frustration

SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) — Notre Dame coach Brian Kelly says he understands the frustration expressed on a social media account belonging to one of five players being held out of practices and games while they go through hearings to determine whether they are guilty of academic dishonesty. Postings Wednesday on an Instagram account owned by cor nerback KeiVarae Russell, that have since been deleted, read: “This school is becoming ridiculous.” A posting also indicated that the hearing before the honesty committee had gone well and he had been able to refute “near every suspicion they had.” But it also said no decision would likely be known until next week. “I feel for him,” Kelly said after practice Thursday. “My role in this whole thing is to try to keep our

guys together, the guys that are on the field. I can certainly understand how he could be frustrated. But hopefully we’re nearing an end and we’re hoping we get him back soon.” Kelly said he had not spoken to Russell or any of the other four players involved since the hearings began. Russell did not respond to telephone messages or text messages from The Associated Press on Wednesday and Thursday asking him to confirm he posted the messages. The university announced Aug. 15 that it was investigating whether Russell, receiver DaVaris Daniels, defensive end Ishaq Williams and linebacker Kendall Moore had submitted papers and homework that had been written for them by others. On Aug. 28, it added safety Eilar Hardy to the list. Kelly said he wouldn’t describe himself as frus-

trated with the process. “I think for me, I feel for my players. I feel bad for them. I guess that’s the feelings I have,” he said. “They’re missing a significant amount of playing time. It’s hard to give up playing time. I know when I was in college, you missed a game, you’re 18, 19, 20 years old, that’s catastrophic. So I understand what they’re going through.” Kelly believes the hearings will be done by Friday. Kelly says he doesn’t have any firsthand knowledge of when the players will learn their fates, but says he expects it to be next week. University rules give students a week to appeal those decisions. The ninth-ranked Irish (4-0) play No. 14 Stanford (3-1) on Saturday. Kelly has said if the players are cleared he will let them play immediately.

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B4 Friday, October 3, 2014

SPORTS

Texans, Cowboys square off with matching 3-1 marks ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — J.J. Watt will leave it to others to decide if the Texans’ visit to the Dallas Cowboys qualifies as a matchup of surprise teams. Houston’s dynamic defensive end is probably just glad he doesn’t have to answer “here we go again” questions since his team turned its second straight 2-0 start into a 3-1 record after finishing last season with 14 consecutive losses. So now a Texas rivalry that didn’t look as if it would amount to much when the season started features a pair of 3-1 teams, along with the league’s leading rusher in Dallas’ DeMarco Murray. “Throughout the whole season I’m going to be saying we can still play better because no matter how you play, you can still play better,” said Watt, whose 80yard interception return for a touchdown put the Texans ahead to stay in last week’s 23-17 victory over Buffalo. “But to be at 3-1 right now is definitely a good place to be.” Same with the Cowboys, who bounced back from a season-opening loss to San Francisco that included three interceptions by Tony Romo. They’re trying to win four straight for the first time since coach Jason Garrett’s first full season in 2011. The difference is, back then Dallas was trying to

dig out of a 3-5 hole. Now the Cowboys go into Sunday’s game tied with the Eagles atop the NFC East, while the Texans are alone in first in the AFC South. Dallas is coming of f a surprisingly dominant 3817 win over New Orleans and has missed the playoffs just twice in franchise history when starting 4-1 or better. “What you try and do is just get rid of the emotional attachment to each week,” said Romo, who has one interception since the opener. “If you don’t come back and work as hard on this Wednesday-ThursdayFriday as you did last week, you’ll get embarrassed in this league real fast.” The Texans don’t shine statistically, while former NFL rushing champion Arian Foster has missed a game and is almost 300 yards behind Murray a quarter of the way through the season. Quarterback R yan Fitzpatrick has as many touchdown passes as interceptions (five). But Houston is finding ways to win, as Watt showed when he put up his hands to block a pass from EJ Manuel, tipped it to himself and ran untouched to the end zone. “It’s not always pretty, but they really have a never-say-die attitude and I think that’s what’s fun about coaching them,” coach Bill O’Brien said.

“They’re trying to play smart. They’re trying to play physical. In some games we’ve done better than others.” Things to consider in the fourth meeting of a series that started with Houston’s stunning 19-10 win at home in the franchise’s first game in 2002. WATT VS. SMITH: Watt and Dallas left tackle Tyron Smith were drafted two spots apart in 2011, starting with Smith at No. 9 overall. Watt would have been a great fit for the Cowboys because they were playing the 3-4 then, but they’re obviously not complaining about a 23-year -old cornerstone who just got the second $100 million contract in franchise history after Romo. The pair won’t line up against each other every play because the Texans move Watt around, but they figure to see plenty of each other. “You can tell that he studies a lot, prepares a lot so all you can do is just prepare for it, study about the same way he’s studying,” Smith said. WITTEN FOR 10,000: Dallas’ Jason Witten needs 45 yards to join Tony Gonzalez and Shannon Sharpe as the only tight ends in league history with 10,000 yards receiving. There’s just one problem in his mind. When the season started, he needed 201. “I

Roswell Daily Record

AP Photo

Houston Texans' J.J. Watt (99) reacts after he was penalized for roughing the passer during the second quarter of an NFL football game against the Buffalo Bills, Sunday, in Houston. really didn’t think it would be Week 5 when I was reaching that,” Witten said. GETTING FOSTER GOING: The Texans are coming off one of the 10 worst rushing games in franchise history after getting 37 yards against the Bills. Foster was admittedly not at full strength with a hamstring problem after missing the previous game and had just 6 yards on eight carries. Fitzpatrick was the leading rusher (14 yards) against Buffalo. “It’s going to be a big part of who we are going

forward here throughout the year,” Fitzpatrick said. “We’ve got to get back on track there.” ELITE COMPANY: Murray can tie O.J. Simpson (Buffalo, 1975) for second on the all-time list with his fifth straight game of at least 100 yards rushing and one touchdown to start the season. Cleveland’s Jim Brown set the record of six in 1958. Murray has already matched Emmitt Smith’s franchise record of four straight in 1995. “I’ve been hearing that

from you guys a little bit, but that’s so far out of my head and out of my mind,” said Murray, whose 534 yards are 156 better than Pittsburgh’s Le’Veon Bell at No. 2. MORE MILESTONES: Texans receiver Andre Johnson needs one catch and 77 yards receiving to reach 950 receptions and 13,000 yards in the second-fewest games. It’s his 159th game. Marvin Harrison got to 950 catches in 158 games, while Jerry Rice needed 154 games to reach 13,000 yards.

Stakes high for Saints, Bucs in upcoming matchup NEW ORLEANS (AP) — In a search for evidence that things could get better — quickly — coach Sean Payton and the New Orleans Saints had to look no further than their next opponent. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who visit New Orleans on Sunday, looked like a lost cause during a humiliating, mistake-filled 56-14 pummeling at the hands of the Atlanta Falcons in a Thursday night game to open Week 3. They responded in Week 4 with a stirring 27-24 comeback victory at Pittsburgh. So as the Saints got back to work after their own prime-time embarrassment — a 38-17 loss at Dallas last Sunday night — they were comforted, somewhat, by Tampa Bay’s example of how fast fortunes can change in the NFL. “At times in this league, scores can be overrated. No one wants to get blown out ... but you don’t want to see a score and jump to conclusions,” Saints center Jonathan Goodwin said. “In this league, everybody’s good, everybody’s capable of winning. It’s

just about getting in that groove where you’re doing way more things right than you’re doing wrong.” Payton pointed out that while Tampa Bay is 1-3, the Buccaneers have been competitive in 75 percent of their games. “If you look at their three losses, one of them obviously was a big differential but the other two weren’t,” Payton said. “They played some pretty close games to start the year and just didn’t come up on the winning end.” That’ll sound familiar to Saints fans. New Orleans (1-3) had leads in the final 10 seconds of each of its first two road games, only to lose both by a field goal or fewer. The Saints broke into the win column with a 209 victory over undermanned Minnesota in Week 3 before falling flat in Dallas. Fortunately for New Orleans and Tampa Bay, no one is showing signs of separating themselves in the NFC South. Carolina and Atlanta both lost last week to fall to 2-2, meaning the Saints and Bucs are just one game out of first place with 12 games left, despite their disappointing starts.

AP Photo

New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees walks off the field following their last offensive play against the Dallas Cowboys during the second half of an NFL football game, Sunday, in Arlington, Texas. The Cowboys won 38-17. “This week is a big week for both us and New Orleans,” Bucs quarterback Mike Glennon said. “Whoever wins will be 2-3 and could end up at the end of week being tied for first place in the division.” Here are some things to know about the Bucs’ visit to New Orleans. WRECKED RYAN: Rob Ryan was celebrated like a hero during his first season in New Orleans. His second hasn’t gone so

well. The Saints’ defense, which finished 2013 ranked fourth in the NFL, ranks 29th through the first four games this season. They’re allowing 396 yards per game, 90 more yards, on average, than last season. New Orleans is struggling to get pressure on quarterbacks, with only five sacks so far, and turnovers have been hard to come by as well, with no interceptions and one fumble recovery.

very finicky and they’re very unpredictable,” Palmer said. “It’s not like a sprained ACL where it’s a 2-4 week thing. It’s just something where I’ve got to continue to work and when it’s ready, it’s ready.” He said this isn’t a typical football injury. “The doctor I saw yesterday sees them a lot in car accidents,” Palmer said. “So it’s not something that’s just kind of run of the mill.” He acknowledged being frustrated but said it’s his nature to have a positive attitude. “I’m taking it one day at a time,” Palmer said. “I’m coming in every day. I’m the first in here and the last to leave every day. I’m preparing that when it turns on, I’m ready to go.”

Arizona (3-0) enters Sunday’s game as a touchdown underdog but as one of two unbeaten teams remaining in the NFL. Palmer’s shoulder was hurt when he landed on it while trying to run for a first down in the Cardinals’ 18-17 season-opening win over San Diego. Stanton, who had not taken a snap in a regular -season game in four years, came on to direct Arizona to a road victory over the New York Giants, followed by a home win over San Francisco. The team had a bye last

TIMELY RETURN: With Bucs rookie WR Mike Evans’ status up in the air because of a groin injury, Louis Murphy could play a key role against the Saints. Murphy, who also played for Oakland, Carolina and the New York Giants during a six-year career, was released after the final preseason game but resigned on Sept. 28. Five days later, he had six catches for 99 yards in his Tampa Bay debut at Pittsburgh, including a 41-yarder that to set up Glennon’s game-winning TD pass to Vincent Jackson. GOOD COOKS: One area in which the Saints continue to be exceptional is the passing game, which has been aided by the addition of first-round pick Brandon Cooks. His 23 catches lead all rookies. He has 199 yards and one TD receiving. “He’s been really productive,” quarterback Drew Brees said. “We can line him up all over the field.” Cooks, along with star tight end Jimmy Graham, are the main reasons Brees ranks third in the NFL with 1,203 yards passing. REJUVENATED D’ LINE: Improving the pass

rush was one of Tampa Bay’s top priorities during the offseason, and Bucs coach Lovie Smith is beginning to get some results for the effort. In addition to Pro Bowl tackle Gerald McCoy returning to the lineup after missing one game because of a broken left hand, the team’s big catch in free agency — end Michael Johnson — also played a key role last week after sitting two weeks with an injured ankle. The tandem set the tone for the defense against the Steelers, sacking Ben Roethlisberger on the first two plays, with Johnson forcing a fumble that led to an early touchdown. Another lineman slowed by injury, Da’Quan Bowers also had one of the team’s five sacks of Roethlisberger. HOME COOKING: While the Saints have started the season 0-3 on the road, they’ll be looking for their 19th straight win in the Superdome, including playoffs, with coach Sean Payton on the sideline (Payton was suspended in 2012). The last team to beat Payton in the Superdome? Tampa Bay, on the final day of the 2010 regular season.

No structural damage for Palmer, just more waiting

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — A visit to a spine specialist confir med what already had been diagnosed: Arizona quarterback Carson Palmer has a “dead” nerve in his throwing shoulder. Palmer visited the specialist on Wednesday, and said Thursday that no structural damage was detected. “No surgery,” he said. “It’s not career ending, it’s not season ending, nothing like that. So that was all positive. I’m just going to continue to do the rehab I’ve been doing with our guys and I’m very confident it’s going to wake back up.” Palmer said the doctor told him the chances were one in 100,000 of him falling on the shoulder in just the wrong way to put pressure on the nerve and

“shut it down.” “I can get tackled thousands of times,” he said, “it just happened that my arm was in the wrong position.” Palmer has not officially been ruled out of Sunday’s game at Denver, but all signs point to Drew Stanton making his third straight start. The shoulder felt better a week ago so he did some throwing, activity that irritated the nerve again. “I threw 20 percent of what I typically throw as far as velocity is concerned,” he said. “I haven’t gone out there and just chucked the ball all over the field. That’s not what they’ve told me to do.” It was enough to cause his shoulder to regress. “One of the things I’ve learned is that nerves are

week, and Palmer was hopeful that time off would allow him to be ready to play. “I’m just going to stick with the protocol and hope and pray that it wakes back up,” he said. “... We’ve tried everything. They (his doctors and trainers) have done a great job of doing research, calling different doctors all over the place, calling people all over the country, trying to find out if anybody has any information on it.” He has tried “dry needle” treatment, deep-tissue

massage and acupuncture. While he waits for the nerve to respond, Palmer said he’s doing what he can to help the team. “I’m going to do everything I can to help guys around me,” he said, “to help Drew obviously, and I’m always on the receivers and skill position guys during practice and in meetings, helping out any way I can. And I’m going to continue to stay positive and be as influential as I can without getting in the way.”


FINANCIAL

B5

Gun foes plan to match NRA spending in fall races Roswell Daily Record

WASHINGTON (AP) — Gun control groups say this is the year they finally go toe-to-toe with the National Rifle Association and match their foe’s imposing campaign spending for congressional candidates. Their long-awaited financial parity with the gun lobby, however, underscores the importance of timing in politics. Firearms violence has faded as a top tier public concern, a turnabout from the issue’s high profile immediately following the December 2012 massacre of 20 first-graders and six aides at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut. The subject barely registers in polling that shows voters far more focused on the economy and terrorism. This week’s Associated Press-GfK poll showed less than 1 percent of likely voters named guns as the nation’s top issue — a view that many House and Senate contests reflect. “I can’t think of one race where the gun issue has been prominent in any way,” said Democratic pollster John Anzalone, who is involved in two dozen congressional campaigns. That isn’t stopping each side in the gun debate from planning to pump tens of millions of dollars into this fall’s races. There are numerous close contests, particularly for seats in a Senate that both parties hope to control next year. “It’s an important issue to segments of voters on both sides” of the gun issue, said Neil Newhouse, a Republican pollster. “You don’t need to make a huge dif ference, you just need to make a little difference because these races are all so close.” Few doubt that organizations led by billionaire Michael Bloomberg and the wounded former Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, DAriz., will unleash huge sums in

Friday, October 3, 2014

campaign’s closing days. “It’s a strategy that we think is effective.” Americans for Responsible Solutions, headed by Giffords and husband Mark Kelly, the one-time astronaut, has said it will at least match the $20 million the NRA spent during the entire 2012 campaign, which included a presidential race. Giffords and Kelly plan getting involved in at least a dozen congressional races this month, including backing incumbent Democratic senators in Colorado, Louisiana, Minnesota, New Hampshire and North Carolina. Their group reported having $9 million in cash this summer and spending $2.5 million so far this year for candidates favoring gun control. That has included support for the re-election of both Democratic congresswomen from New Hampshire and Pennsylvania Rep. Mike Fitzpatrick, a Republican gun control backer. They’ve also helped Democratic Rep. Ron Barber battle a challenge by Republican Martha McSally for Giffords’ old House seat. Barber, a former top aide to Giffords, was wounded in the 2011 mass shooting that injured her. The group ran a TV spot featuring the crying mother of a shooting victim and that accused McSally of opposing efforts to keep stalkers from getting firearms. “I don’t think she really understands how important that is to a lot of women,” the tear ful woman said. Giffords’ group pulled that ad after McSally said she’s always backed barring stalkers from having guns. Gif fords’ senior adviser Pia Carusone said they dropped the ad after McSally “changed her mind” on the issue.

AP Photo

In this Jan. 28 photo, former Arizona Rep. Gabrielle Giffords testifies before a Washington state House panel in Olympia, Wash. Gun control groups say this is the year they finally go toe-to-toe with the National Rifle Association and match their foe's imposing campaign spending for congressional candidates.

the campaigns’ closing weeks to back candidates favoring firearms curbs. They’re off to modest starts — unlike the NRA. Barely a month from Election Day, the nation’s most powerful gun rights group has so far reported spending over $10 million for ads and other ef forts either for or against more than 60 congressional candidates. The efforts include sending NRA field representatives to gun shows to tout favored candidates. That spending — which is supposed to be done independently and not coordinated with candidates — makes the NRA the ninth highest spender of more than 300 groups tracked by the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics, which monitors political spending. Virtually all NRA spending has been to help Republicans. As of

Aug. 31 it reported having $18.5 million banked and was still raising money. NRA expenditures include over $1 million in each of five states — North Carolina, Arkansas, Iowa, Colorado and Louisiana — to help GOP hopefuls capture Senate seats held by Democrats. All those races seem tight. Some NRA ads have targeted Bloomberg, the former New York City mayor who is bankrolling two groups that back gun curbs. In one recent NRA spot, a Colorado woman, Kimberly Weeks, describes an assault she survived in her home and says, “Michael Bloomberg wants to take away my gun rights for selfdefense while he surrounds himself with armed guards” at his New York home. The NRA’s early spending advantage could be short-lived. Bloomberg has pledged to

spend $50 million this year to advance his gun control goals. Some of that is to support his Everytown for Gun Safety, which is focusing largely on state contests, including backing a Washington state ballot initiative to require background checks for private sales of firearms. Bloomberg’s separate political committee, Independence USA PAC, has reported no significant campaign spending since helping two Democrats win special congressional elections last year. Bloomberg has reported contributing $11.4 million since January 2013 to several committees, mostly to Independence USA. “We tend to spend late and heavy,” said Bloomberg adviser Howard Wolfson, referring to 2012, when the then-new Independence USA spent virtually all of its $8.2 million on ads in that

FAA chief to visit sabotaged Chicago-area facility

CHICAGO (AP) — The head of the Federal Aviation Administration will visit a regional control center sabotaged by a fire that shut down Chicago’s two international airports and snarled air traffic nationwide, the agency said Thursday. Administrator Michael P. Huerta will visit the center in Aurora, Illinois and meet with Illinois’ congressional delegation on Friday, a week after a contract employee started a fire in the basement telecommu-

CATTLE/HOGS

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

low

settle

CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. 162.40 163.35 161.65 162.85 Oct 14 Dec 14 165.82 166.95 165.32 166.42 Feb 15 165.62 166.97 165.60 166.27 Apr 15 163.40 164.70 163.40 164.25 Jun 15 153.00 153.77 152.45 153.10 Aug 15 151.25 151.65 151.05 151.50 Oct 15 153.00 153.50 153.00 153.50 Dec 15 153.25 153.80 153.25 153.80 Feb 16 153.25 153.60 153.25 153.60 Last spot N/A Est. sales 52856. Wed’s Sales: 82,258 Wed’s open int: 321271, up +3604 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 14 239.50 241.40 239.32 241.10 Nov 14 239.00 240.75 238.25 240.07 Jan 15 232.15 234.25 231.90 233.87 Mar 15 232.00 232.30 230.75 232.27 232.20 232.40 231.00 232.40 Apr 15 May 15 232.00 232.00 231.00 231.80 Aug 15 232.20 232.32 231.55 232.32 Sep 15 229.00 230.25 229.00 230.25 Last spot N/A Est. sales 13590. Wed’s Sales: 8,340 Wed’s open int: 44981, up +807 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 14 107.15 107.20 105.90 106.77 Dec 14 94.62 95.40 93.62 94.92 91.60 91.95 91.20 91.95 Feb 15 Apr 15 91.40 92.00 91.17 91.80 May 15 90.80 90.80 90.80 90.80 94.30 94.65 94.25 94.45 Jun 15 Jul 15 92.40 92.50 92.40 92.50 89.55 89.70 89.55 89.70 Aug 15 Oct 15 76.20 76.40 76.20 76.40 72.80 72.80 72.70 72.80 Dec 15 Feb 16 73.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 29102. Wed’s Sales: 45,218 Wed’s open int: 252615, up +35905fl

chg.

+.38 +.52 +.40 +.70 +.10 +.15 +.20 +.30 +.10

+2.68 +2.02 +2.10 +2.50 +2.70 +2.33 +2.45 +2.75

-.83 +.05 +.10 +.13 +.30 -.10 +.15 +.20 +.30 +.55

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. Oct 14 62.45 Dec 14 61.83 62.56 61.25 61.85 Mar 15 60.58 61.14 59.65 60.53 May 15 61.57 61.71 60.50 61.15 Jul 15 62.10 62.32 61.33 61.81 Oct 15 62.56 Dec 15 63.95 63.95 62.85 63.39 Mar 16 64.25 May 16 64.88 Jul 16 65.52 Oct 16 67.22 Dec 16 67.17 Mar 17 67.72 May 17 68.70 Jul 17 68.72 Last spot N/A Est. sales 14824. Wed’s Sales: 18,134 Wed’s open int: 185083, up +2705

chg.

-.31 -.31 -.46 -.67 -.71 -.71 -.62 -.62 -.70 -.62 -.62 -.62 -.62 -.62 -.62

GRAINS

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

low

settle

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 14 477ø 489fl 477ü 482fl Mar 15 491 503 490fl 496 May 15 501ü 511ø 501ü 504fl Jul 15 508ø 519ø 508ø 513ü Sep 15 525 531 520fl 525ü Dec 15 542 547ø 537ø 541ü

chg.

+3fl +3fl +3ø +4ü +4ø +3fl

nications room before attempting to commit suicide by slashing his throat. The fire caused widespread damage, and the FAA said it would replace the entire central communications network at the center. Huerta has said crews are working around the clock to replace equipment, and he hopes to return the facility to full service by Oct. 13. Although the center’s responsibilities have been transferred to other Midwest

548ü 552ü Mar 16 553 554 May 16 552fl 556ü 552fl 556ü 546ø 549ü 546ø 549ü Jul 16 Sep 16 553ø 556ü 553ø 556ü Dec 16 560 564ü 560 564ü Mar 17 562fl 565ø 562fl 565ø May 17 571ü 574 571ü 574 542fl 545ø 542fl 545ø Jul 17 Last spot N/A Est. sales 91960. Wed’s Sales: 68,096 Wed’s open int: 425017, up +1835 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 14 320ø 323ü 319ü 322fl Mar 15 333 336ü 332 335fl May 15 342ø 344fl 340fl 344ü Jul 15 350 352ü 348 352 Sep 15 356 360 356 359fl Dec 15 367fl 370ü 365fl 370 Mar 16 377ü 379fl 376fl 379fl May 16 384ø 387 384ø 387 Jul 16 390ø 393 389fl 393 Sep 16 389fl 390ü 389fl 390ü 392 394fl Dec 16 392ø 395 Jul 17 412 413ü 411ü 413ü Dec 17 405ø 406fl 405ø 406fl Last spot N/A Est. sales 214329. Wed’s Sales: 171,350 Wed’s open int: 1287386, up +2219 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 14 340ø 346fl 335 344ø 321ø 330 Mar 15 325fl 332 May 15 314ü 324ü 314ü 321 Jul 15 319ü 321 314 316ø Sep 15 318ü 320ø 318ü 320ø Dec 15 314ø 315fl 314ø 315fl Mar 16 314ø 315fl 314ø 315fl May 16 314ø 315fl 314ø 315fl Jul 16 315ø 316fl 315ø 316fl Sep 16 315ø 316fl 315ø 316fl Jul 17 315ø 316fl 315ø 316fl Sep 17 315ø 316fl 315ø 316fl Last spot N/A Est. sales 2188. Wed’s Sales: 1,320 Wed’s open int: 9276, up +122 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Nov 14 915ü 925ø 912ø 924ø Jan 15 923ü 934 921ü 933 Mar 15 932fl 942ø 929ø 941ø May 15 941ü 950 938 949ü Jul 15 948 956 945 955fl Aug 15 948 958ü 948 958ü Sep 15 940fl 950fl 940fl 950fl Nov 15 940ø 950 937ü 949ø Jan 16 948 955fl 948 955fl Mar 16 953 961fl 953 961fl May 16 960ø 966ø 960ø 966ø Jul 16 970 973ü 967ø 973ü Aug 16 968ü 973fl 968ü 973fl 965ø Sep 16 960 965ø 960 Nov 16 961 966 957ø 965fl Jul 17 980ü 985fl 980ü 985fl Nov 17 963ü 968fl 963ü 968fl Last spot N/A Est. sales 219674. Wed’s Sales: 197,221 Wed’s open int: 772179, off -2480

FUTURES +4 +3ø +2fl +2fl +2fl +2fl +2fl +2fl

+1ø +1fl +1ø +1fl +2 +2ü +2ø +2ø +2ø +ø +1ø +2 +1

+5fl +4fl +2ø +2ü +2ü +1ü +1ü +1ü +1ü +1ü +1ü +1ü

+7fl +8 +7fl +7ü +7ü +7 +7 +7ü +7ü +7 +6 +5fl +5ø +5ø +5ø +5ø +5ø

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. 90.74 91.54 88.18 91.01 Nov 14 Dec 14 89.81 90.31 87.22 89.88 Jan 15 89.08 89.47 86.57 89.08 88.67 88.77 86.17 88.47 Feb 15 Mar 15 88.32 88.37 85.95 87.99 Apr 15 87.99 88.00 85.62 87.56 87.60 87.69 85.35 87.26 May 15 Jun 15 87.40 87.42 85.20 87.02 Jul 15 87.15 87.17 85.61 86.73 86.69 86.72 85.15 86.51 Aug 15 Sep 15 86.74 86.74 85.10 86.38 Oct 15 86.44 86.44 85.42 86.31 Nov 15 86.28 Dec 15 86.62 86.74 84.72 86.25 Jan 16 86.11 85.98 Feb 16 Mar 16 85.11 85.85 85.09 85.85 Apr 16 85.70 85.58 May 16 Jun 16 85.82 85.82 84.37 85.51 Jul 16 85.32 Aug 16 84.90 85.18 84.90 85.18 84.80 85.07 84.80 85.07 Sep 16 Oct 16 84.73 84.99 84.73 84.99 Nov 16 84.75 84.96 84.75 84.96 Last spot N/A Est. sales 989106. Wed’s Sales: 803,148 Wed’s open int: 1501612, up +15756 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Nov 14 2.4410 2.4520 2.3755 2.4091 Dec 14 2.3910 2.3951 2.3268 2.3610 Jan 15 2.3794 2.3803 2.3166 2.3513 2.3874 2.3874 2.3290 2.3610 Feb 15 Mar 15 2.4023 2.4023 2.3466 2.3803 Apr 15 2.5452 2.5752 2.5360 2.5673 May 15 2.5619 2.5732 2.5399 2.5692 Jun 15 2.5516 2.5650 2.5200 2.5560 Jul 15 2.5215 2.5373 2.5160 2.5373 Aug 15 2.5040 2.5155 2.4957 2.5155 Sep 15 2.4696 2.4895 2.4696 2.4895

chg.

+.28 +.14 -.03 -.19 -.33 -.43 -.47 -.48 -.48 -.48 -.48 -.48 -.48 -.48 -.47 -.45 -.44 -.44 -.45 -.46 -.47 -.47 -.48 -.49 -.49

-.0406 -.0321 -.0283 -.0268 -.0268 -.0238 -.0236 -.0237 -.0243 -.0246 -.0250

cities, delays and cancellations have persisted. On Thursday, a combination of bad weather and lingering effects of the fire caused about 750 flight cancellations at O’Hare and Midway international airports, Chicago aviation officials said. At the height of the travel misery last Friday, more than 2,000 flights in and out of the airports were canceled, causing a ripple effect that disrupted travel across the country.

2.3375 2.3647 2.3375 2.3614 Oct 15 Nov 15 2.3334 Dec 15 2.3388 2.3388 2.2935 2.3209 Jan 16 2.3237 2.3210 2.3301 2.3210 2.3301 Feb 16 Mar 16 2.3441 Apr 16 2.5116 2.5156 May 16 Jun 16 2.5056 Jul 16 2.4906 Aug 16 2.4726 2.4516 Sep 16 Oct 16 2.3206 Nov 16 2.2956 2.2806 Dec 16 Last spot N/A Est. sales 136128. Wed’s Sales: 160,451 Wed’s open int: 286645, up +947 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Nov 14 4.032 4.059 3.908 3.932 Dec 14 4.101 4.126 3.986 4.012 Jan 15 4.168 4.191 4.058 4.081 Feb 15 4.153 4.170 4.047 4.070 4.076 4.095 3.978 4.000 Mar 15 Apr 15 3.803 3.819 3.735 3.760 May 15 3.790 3.792 3.717 3.737 3.812 3.812 3.747 3.764 Jun 15 Jul 15 3.844 3.844 3.780 3.793 Aug 15 3.843 3.843 3.790 3.803 Sep 15 3.816 3.819 3.780 3.793 3.877 3.877 3.804 3.825 Oct 15 Nov 15 3.970 3.970 3.901 3.921 Dec 15 4.124 4.125 4.059 4.075 Jan 16 4.218 4.218 4.172 4.186 Feb 16 4.180 4.201 4.144 4.169 Mar 16 4.115 4.115 4.095 4.101 Apr 16 3.895 3.897 3.885 3.885 May 16 3.886 3.913 Jun 16 Jul 16 3.940 Aug 16 3.949 Sep 16 3.937 Oct 16 4.005 4.005 3.966 3.966 Nov 16 4.050 4.053 4.050 4.051 Dec 16 4.230 4.230 4.224 4.224 Jan 17 4.350 4.356 4.350 4.356 Last spot N/A Est. sales 278675. Wed’s Sales: 249,888 Wed’s open int: 931034, off -6681

METALS

NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Thu. Aluminum -$0.8611 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$3.0639 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper -$2.9965 N.Y. Merc spot Thu. Lead - $2071.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.0241 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1211.75 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1214.20 troy oz., NY Merc spot Thu. Silver - $17.080 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $17.001 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Thu. Platinum -$1273.00 troy oz., Handy & Harman. Platinum -$1269.10 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Thu. n.q.-not quoted n.a.-not available r-revised

-.0239 -.0236 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231 -.0231

-.091 -.077 -.072 -.068 -.064 -.035 -.035 -.034 -.033 -.034 -.034 -.035 -.033 -.031 -.031 -.029 -.028 -.016 -.016 -.016 -.016 -.016 -.016 -.015 -.015 -.015 -.015

Lawmakers have called for an investigation into how the employee entered the building with a suitcase without causing suspicion. Huerta has said the FAA is reviewing security at all of its facilities, as well as contingency plans for unexpected events like the fire. 5 to 10 years Brian Howard, 36, of Naperville, is accused of the starting the fire that destroyed the airport facilities.

NYSE

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

MARKET SUMMARY AMEX

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Name Vol (00) Last Chg S&P500ETF1457883194.38+.03 BkofAm 1140193 16.88 +.06 iShEMkts 878553 40.93 +.22 iShR2K 659600108.83 +1.03 B iPVix rs 623338 31.56 -.33

Name Vol (00) Globalstar 146694 VantageDrl 87250 CheniereEn 85450 NwGold g 55053 GastarExp 52855

Name RealD WalterEn Vectrus n LithiaMot PlatfmSp n

Last 11.78 2.35 21.71 80.79 25.59

Chg +2.51 +.27 +2.27 +7.36 +2.30

Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg AmpioPhm 3.94 +.38 +10.7 XTL Bioph 3.38 +1.73 +104.8 CT Ptrs 16.70 +1.07 +6.8 GlobeIm n 10.73 +2.84 +36.0 TherapMD 4.83 +.28 +6.2 FemaleHlt 4.41 +1.09 +32.8 3.12 +.17 +5.8 KitePhm n 34.68 +6.37 +22.5 BioTime NanoViric 3.32 +.18 +5.7 AccelrDiag 25.94 +4.18 +19.2

Name BS IBM96 JonesEngy VivintSol n DBCmdyL C&J Engy

Last 51.00 16.98 14.70 14.39 27.01

Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg -6.08 -10.6 AmEagE rs 3.50 -.29 -7.7 WashFd wt 4.21 -.90 -17.6 -1.51 -8.2 VirnetX 5.16 -.43 -7.7 Enphase 12.51 -1.93 -13.4 -1.31 -8.2 MexcoEn 6.09 -.46 -7.0 BioFuel rt 2.00 -.30 -13.0 -1.11 -7.2 ERBA Diag 3.32 -.24 -6.7 Cree Inc 34.86 -4.76 -12.0 -2.02 -7.0 PacBkrM g 3.36 -.21 -5.9 MokoSoc n 5.30 -.70 -11.7

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

%Chg +27.1 +13.0 +11.7 +10.0 +9.90

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

DIARY

Volume

AT&T Inc Aetna BkofAm Boeing Chevron CocaCola Disney EOG Res s EngyTsfr ExxonMbl FordM HewlettP HollyFront Intel IBM JohnJn

Chg +.04 ... -2.03 +.06 -.15

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Vol (00) Last PwShs QQQ51563297.21 SiriusXM 512875 3.39 Apple Inc s 464525 99.90 Facebook 359548 77.08 Zynga 356084 2.62

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

DIARY

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

161 247 25 433 2 47

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

DIARY

124,918,816 Volume

INDEXES

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

Last 16,801.05 8,305.81 552.51 10,555.71 4,430.20 1,946.17 1,355.37 20,500.46 1,096.38

PE

Last

Chg

YTD %Chg Name

1.84 .90 .20f 2.92 4.28 1.22 .86f .67f 3.82f 2.76 .50 .64 1.28a .90 4.40 2.80

10 14 20 19 11 23 21 22 ... 12 9 13 18 17 11 19

34.97 79.39 16.88 124.17 117.11 42.66 86.79 97.06 65.23 93.30 14.56 34.51 42.92 33.52 186.91 103.85

+.01 -.43 +.06 -.50 -.54 -.08 -.70 +.21 +.70 +.44 -.03 -.04 -.29 -.47 -.26 -.45

-.5 +15.7 +8.4 -9.0 -6.2 +3.3 +13.6 +15.7 +13.9 -7.8 -5.6 +23.3 -13.6 +29.1 -.4 +13.4

Merck Microsoft OneokPtrs PNM Res PepsiCo Pfizer Phillips66 SwstAirl TexInst TimeWarn TriContl VerizonCm WalMart WashFed WellsFargo XcelEngy

1,724 956 135 2,815 23 181

2,132,196,751

Net % Chg Chg -3.66 -.02 +66.53 +.81 -1.12 -.20 -15.85 -.15 +8.11 +.18 +.01 ... +3.52 +.26 +23.92 +.12 +10.97 +1.01

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

Div

Chg ... -.04 +.72 +.53 -.07

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

3,985,053,215 Volume

52-Week High Low 17,350.64 14,719.43 8,714.94 6,401.51 576.98 476.05 11,334.65 9,441.66 4,610.57 3,650.03 2,019.26 1,646.47 1,452.01 1,216.78 21,329.33 17,563.18 1,213.55 1,037.86

Name

1,683 1,476 98 3,257 12 258

Last 3.02 1.19 76.02 5.12 5.69

NASDAQ

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

YTD % Chg +1.35 +12.23 +12.63 +1.49 +6.07 +5.29 +.96 +4.03 -5.78

52-wk % Chg +12.03 +26.34 +15.37 +9.74 +17.38 +15.94 +8.61 +14.14 +2.38

Div

PE

Last

Chg

YTD %Chg

1.76 1.24f 3.04f .74 2.62 1.04 2.00 .24 1.36f 1.27b .71e 2.20f 1.92 .59f 1.40 1.20

31 17 21 18 21 17 15 20 23 16 ... 11 16 13 13 16

58.85 +.14 45.76 -.14 56.11 +.66 25.23 +.05 92.58 -.07 29.06 -.09 77.76 -1.87 32.46 -.09 46.84 -.04 73.20 -.51 20.51 -.09 49.29 -.14 76.23 +.11 20.00 +.14 51.40 +.14 30.38 -.09

+17.6 +22.3 +6.6 +4.6 +11.6 -5.1 +.8 +72.3 +6.7 +9.5 +2.7 +.3 -3.1 -14.1 +13.2 +8.7

If you would like your stock to been seen here please contact editor@rdrnews.com


B6 Friday, October 3, 2014 DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE

DEAR ABBY: My father is dating a woman who is not only my ex-boyfriend’s mother, but also the woman he cheated on my mother with and left her for. I don’t want to be around her and have told my father this, but he doesn’t accept or respect my feelings. Being around them causes stress on my marriage because my husband doesn’t want to be around her either, and we don’t want her around our children. This is causing so much stress that at times I’m afraid it could end our marriage. When I try to

talk to Dad about this, he acts like there is no reason for me to be uncomfortable and blames my husband for these feelings. It’s like he completely denies that there is any way I could feel the way I do, even though she has brought nothing but negativity into my life. I don’t know what to do. I want to still have a relationship with my dad, but my marriage comes before this. How can I keep both? IN THE MIDDLE IN PENSACOLA DEAR IN THE MIDDLE: Your father refuses to acknowledge your feelings because he sees you only as an extension of himself. Your opinions “surely” must match his own, and if they don’t, then they must have been planted there by someone else. In his mind, he and his lady friend have done nothing wrong, so how could you possibly object? That you could have a moral compass that

COMICS

points in a different direction is not on his radar. Because your dad insists on imposing this woman on your family, recognize that you probably can’t have one without the other. That will mean seeing your father far less than you would like, and away from your husband and children — if at all. Under no circumstances should you allow your father to destroy your marriage as he did his own.

#####

DEAR ABBY: I was wondering if you could help me out with a co-worker who is constantly on her phone. Four, five, sometimes eight times a day she is making and accepting personal calls. It’s very distracting to the rest of the office. When she’s not at her desk, it’s then my responsibility to cover for her. I would like to find a polite way to say “these phone calls can be made after hours.” I do NOT want to ruffle any feathers. Any

advice would be greatly appreciated. TOO CHICKEN TO TALK

Family Circus

DEAR TOO CHICKEN: The company’s policy on personal calls during business hours should be a part of the employee handbook. If it isn’t, it should be brought to the attention of your employer or supervisor so it can be included when the handbook is updated. Ideally, the person to speak to your co-worker about this would be your boss. Because these calls are distracting the other employees, your boss should be made aware of it so he or she can deal with it.

#####

TO MY JEWISH READERS: Tonight at sundown, Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the Jewish calendar, begins. It’s a day of fasting, reflection, prayer and repentance. To all of you, may your fast be an easy one.

The Wizard of Id

HINTS

Beetle Bailey

Blondie

FROM HELOISE

KING FEATURES SYNDICATE Dear Heloise: I love fresh flowers, and I buy a small bouquet at the grocery store now and then. You wrote about how you keep them LASTING A LONG TIME. Please share your hints. Barbara in Texas

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

Happy to, and they do make me happy, too! Here is what I do: Cut off an inch or so of the stem at an angle. Remove all leaves and foliage that will be below the waterline. Do leave (very bad pun) intact the leaves that will be above the waterline. Those leaves act like sponges and soak up the fresh water. Don’t place in direct sunlight or near a heat source — not on top of a TV, etc. Do change the water every few days or when it gets yucky! Re-cut the stem so the flower can drink up more fresh water. Sometimes, I put a small vase of roses in the refrigerator at night to prolong the life. Remember, florists keep fresh flowers in a “cool” room, and so should you. Heloise

#####

SEND A GREAT HINT TO: Heloise P.O. Box 795000 San Antonio, TX 78279-5000 Fax: 1-210-HELOISE Email: Heloise@Heloise.com Dear Heloise: This is the best idea I have had in years for organizing space in a car. I always had problems with maps, travel guides, tissues and other objects you travel with staying orderly. Haven’t we all had the problem of objects on the front seats falling down where they can’t be seen or found? The solution: I went to the dollar store and got two scaled-down cat-litter trays. I slid them under the two front seats. (Heloise here: Please don’t put ANYTHING under the driver’s side seat that could slide forward and become a safety hazard.) They fit perfectly and hold all our stuff right where we can find it when sliding the trays out from the back seat. D.E. in Virginia Dear Heloise: I have glass shower doors that are a pain to clean because of the hard-water residue. Here is a hint I learned from my sister: A cheap, plastic shower curtain and extra rod solved the problem. I hung them just inside the doors. When taking a shower, I pull the shower curtain closed, and it keeps the doors from getting splashed with water. I put it into the washer once in a while, or I buy a cheap, plastic liner. C.W., via email Dear Heloise: I often have a napkin or paper towel that has been partially used but is not really dirty. I hate to waste them, so I put them in an empty tissue box under the sink. They are perfect for wiping up a small floor spill, and especially for wiping that grease out of the skillet rather than pouring it into a container. Linda in Colorado Springs, Colo.

Dilbert

For Better or For Worse

Garfield

Hagar the Horrible

Snuffy Smith

Zits

Roswell Daily Record


ENTERTAINMENT

Roswell Daily Record The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3Average; 2-So-so; 1-Diffi- JACQUELINE cult BIGAR ARIES (March 21-April 19) You’ll want to go along with the majority, but a partner could worry you. You come from a point of carYOUR HOROSCOPE ing, but you also would like to spend time with your immediate circle. Follow your intuition, and consider blending everyone together. Tonight: Just don’t be alone. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might want to move in a new direction, but a loved one could have many questions. You are likely to feel overwhelmed from dealing with as much negativity as you seem to be getting. You will need to pull back and do some thinking. Tonight: Out and about. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Reach out to someone at a distance. You might not be comfortable with what you are hearing, and you could have a lot of questions. The answers you get could force you to hit the pause button until you gain a broader perspective. Trust your instincts. Tonight: Take off ASAP. CANCER (June 21-July 22) A partner will make a decision that forces your hand. A discussion could point

to more disagreement. Accept what you are hearing, and respect this person’s point of view. You might be taken aback by what happens as a result. Tonight: Enjoy the moment. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) A roommate or loved one loves teasing you. However, you could close down unintentionally. Is this behavior really what you want to do? Consider your role in this situation. Keep conversations light and easy. Tonight: Follow someone else’s cue. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Consider what needs to happen with a close friend who often unnerves you. You could opt to meet a trusted loved one for a late lunch to discuss this situation. Recognize what is happening at home and in your immediate circle. Tonight: Go with the flow. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Your imagination will come out in conversations, particularly through your word choice. A misunderstanding could have you asking yourself how you could have avoided a difficult situation. A flirtation could start up from out of the blue. Tonight: Let the fun begin. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) You are likely to trigger a key person in your life by making a sharp comment. You might be hearing only what you want to hear. You could be overwhelmed and more negative than you realize. Clear your mind, and take a walk. Do something you love. Tonight: Head home early. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Your interest

Friday, October 3, 2014

B7

might be piqued, and you could have a lot of questions. Let a friend reveal as much as he or she feels comfortable revealing. You might decide to leave well enough alone; otherwise, you could see a problem evolving. Tonight: Catch up on others’ news.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Be aware of the cost of proceeding as you have been. Your ability to remain positive lies largely in the fact that you know when to take a step back. Follow through when you think you are on better ground; you will be a lot happier that way. Tonight: Your treat.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You don’t need to explain anything, or at least you feel that way. Be careful — a problem could ensue at a later date when this attitude could be thrown back in your face. Though you might be annoyed at everything you are hearing, be diplomatic. Tonight: Kick up your heels.

PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You might want to slow down and do some thinking before you take action. One-on-one relating will result in some interesting ideas. Take your time, and don’t feel pressured by what is happening around you. T ime is your friend right now. Tonight: Keep a secret. BORN TODAY

Netflix signs Adam Sandler to four-film deal NEW YORK (AP) — In its bid to upend the movie business the way it has television, Netflix has secured one of the big screen’s biggest box-office draws and most irreverent comedic talents. Adam Sandler has signed a four -film deal with Netflix, the streaming service announced early Thursday. The actor will star in and produce each feature, all of which will premiere exclusively on Netflix. “When these fine people came to me with an offer to make four movies for them, I immediately said yes for one reason and one reason only: Netflix rhymes with wet chicks,” Sandler said in a statement. “Let the streaming begin!” Netflix declined to say how much it was paying Sandler. But the streaming giant has a history of reaching deep into its pocket to lure big-name talent. To land “House of Cards,” with director David Fincher and star Kevin Spacey, Netflix reportedly spent $100 mil-

AP Photo In this Sept. 6 file photo, actor Adam Sander smiles during a press conference for “Men, Women, and Children” at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival in Toronto. Sandler has signed a deal with Netflix to star in and produce four films for the streaming service.

lion for the show’s first two seasons.

On Tuesday, Netflix signaled its long-planned entry into original movies, announcing that it will stream a sequel to 2000’s Oscar-winning “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon” — one of the most lucrative

foreign language releases ever. The sequel, produced by the Weinstein Co., will open in August 2015 simultaneously in Imax theaters and on Netflix.

Sandler is one of Hollywood’s most reliable draws, with films that have collectively grossed

more than $2.4 billion domestically. But his track record has recently been rocky. His last film, the romantic comedy “Blended,” with Drew Barrymore, sputtered with a meager haul just $46.3 million for Warner Bros.

Musician Tommy Lee (1962), musician Stevie Ray Vaughan (1954), actress Neve Campbell (1973)

tent officer for Netflix, said Sandler’s films are regularly among the mostviewed by Netflix members. “People love Adam’s films on Netflix and often watch them again and again,” Sarandos said. “His appeal spans across viewers of all ages. Everybody has a favorite movie, everyone has a favorite line, not just in the U.S. but all over the world.” Sandler’s international appeal fits Netflix’s global aspirations. The company has been rapidly expanding overseas, most recently in Europe, and is now available in nearly 50 countries. The four features, which are currently planned without any theatrical release component, are expected to be comedies. Those are the kind of movies Sandler -starring that rate highly on Netflix. Among Netflix’s Sandler titles available for streaming are “Happy Gilmore” and “Click.” The first movie in the deal, to be jointly developed between Netflix and

Sandler’s Happy Madison Productions, could come as early as late 2015. Netflix’s plans with “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: The Green Legend” have already upset the movie industry’s traditional patter ns. The nation’s three largest exhibitors — AMC, Regal and Cinemark — quickly refused to carry it on their screens. “We will not participate in an experiment where you can see the same product on screens varying from three stories tall to 3 inches wide on a smartphone,” Regal spokesman Russ Nunley said. But many analysts see the disruption caused by Netflix’s entry into original movies, in an era of everproliferating screens, as an overdue challenge to Hollywood’s carefully controlled theatrical model. “This is just the start of what Netflix is going to do,” said Rich Greenfield, media analyst for BTIG Research. “Stay tuned. This is the beginning.”

‘Real Housewives of Miss Universe to take place in Miami New Jersey’ couple get prison for fraud

NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — The married stars of “Real Housewives of New Jersey” are trading the drama of reality TV for prison. Teresa Giudice was sentenced Thursday in U.S. District Court to 15 months in prison on conspiracy and bankruptcy fraud charges while her husband, Giuseppe “Joe” Giudice, was sentenced to 41 months by a judge who castigated them for failing to disclose all their assets yet gave both a measure of leniency. In a nod to the couple’s four young daughters, Judge Esther Salas staggered the sentences so that Teresa Giudice will serve her sentence first. Teresa Giudice is scheduled to report to prison in early January. Teresa Giudice, 42, cried as she apologized in court before her sentencing. “I fully take responsibility for my actions. I need to learn to take responsibility for myself,” she said. “I can’t even explain the pain that I have gone through. I am more sorry than anybody will ever know or understand.” Joe Giudice also apologized and said he had disgraced many people. He faces an immigration hearing when he completes his sentence and likely will be deported. His attorney has said Giudice came to the U.S. as an infant and didn’t know he wasn’t an American citizen until he was an adult. A spokeswoman for NBCUniversal, which owns Bravo, the channel that airs “Real Housewives,” said Thursday that the network wasn’t commenting on the Giudices’ position with the

show. Thursday’s sentencing drew a mob of media, with an overflow courtroom to accommodate spectators. At several junctures, the judge criticized the couple for omitting numerous assets from a presentencing report, including ATVs and other vehicles and jewelry. During Teresa Giudice’s sentencing, Salas said she had even considered giving her probation combined with home confinement and community service but changed her mind because of the omissions. “You are a savvy businesswoman. You know how to brand yourself,” she said. “You tell me you didn’t understand you had to cooperate? It defies logic.” Assistant U.S. Attor ney Jonathan Romankow called the omissions “the same pattern of obstruction, concealment and manipulation as they showed in the bankruptcy case.” The couple had pleaded guilty in March, admitting they hid assets from bankruptcy creditors and submitted phony loan applications to get some $5 million in mortgages and construction loans. Joe Giudice also pleaded guilty to failing to pay taxes totaling more than $200,000. Despite the admonitions, the judge gave Teresa Giudice a sentence below the agreedupon range in her plea agreement, 21 to 27 months. She cited “significant mitigating circumstances” including the Giudices’ four daughters, Teresa Giudice’s aging parents and the fact that she had a lesser role in the conspiracy than her husband.

Ted Sarandos, chief con-

DORAL, Fla. (AP) — In the world of beauty pageants, Venezuela is queen. Three of the last six Miss Universe titles have gone to Venezuelan contestants. An entire industry exists in Venezuela to prepare young women to compete. Donald Trump’s announcement Thursday that the upcoming Miss Universe pageant will be in Miami, home to the largest Venezuelan population in the United States, however, could add a dose of politics to the pageantry. The majority of Venezuelans in Florida fiercely oppose the Venezuelan government. In the past, current Miss Venezuela Migbelis Castellanos has been scrutinized by the opposition for some of her viewpoints. After tweets surfaced in 2013 lamenting the death of the late President Hugo Chavez, one Florida paper proclaimed she was a “Miss Venezuela with a Chavista heart.” Venezuelans in Florida said they don’t have any plans to protest, and Castellanos has distanced herself from any other overtly political statements. But with the pageant taking place in Miami, the subject is almost certain to surface. “Venezuelans in Miami will question her,” said Patricia Andrade, human rights director for the Venezuelan Awareness Foundation, a nonprofit organization. “Remember, this is a community of exiles. There is a lot of pain from having had to leave our country.” Beauty pageants carry enormous significance in Venezuela. In addition to seven Miss Universe titles, the country is a six-time winner of the Miss World competition. When beauty pageants air, eyes are glued to televisions across the nation. Streets go quiet. “It’s something we are very proud of, as Venezuelans,” Andrade said. Venezuelan Gabriela Isler won last year’s Miss Universe title and

AP Photo Donald Trump, right rear, sits near as Miss Universe, Gabriela Isler, of Venezuela, speaks during a news conference, Thursday, in Doral, Fla. Three of the last six Miss Universe titles have gone to Venezuelan contestants. This year’s Miss Universe competition has a unique undertone: It will take place in South Florida, home to the largest number of Venezuelans in the U.S., the majority strongly against the current Venezuelan government.

was present Thursday at the Trump National luxury hotel and golf course to make the announcement. The pageant and coronation itself will take place at Florida International University, but a number of the surrounding activities will take place at the hotel and throughout Doral, known in Miami as “Doralzuela” for its many Venezuelan residents. “Every time I come here I feel at home,” Isler said. Isler herself was questioned about a tweet she purportedly made, complaining about coming home to a house without electricity after a long day’s work and blaming Chavez, before winning the title. She has from time to time chimed in on events in Venezuela during her reign, including participating in the (hash)Misses4Peace social media campaign, calling for peace in the wake of violent protests in Venezuela earlier this year. Castellanos participated in that

campaign as well, posing with a piece of paper that had her name, title, and several hashtags calling for peace. The campaign was clear in stating that it was not political. “It’s a beauty contest. It’s not about political ideology or who you do or don’t’ support,” Isler said Thursday. “We are representing an entire nation.” She said she felt confident Castellanos would as well. Ernesto Ackerman, resident of the Independent VenezuelanAmerican Citizens, a nonprofit group, said Venezuelans in the U.S. are much more preoccupied at the moment with resolving their relatives’ immediate needs, like access to food and medicine, than a beauty pageant. But he said it undoubtedly could strike a nerve. “If she gives an opinion in favor of Chavez, I am 100 percent certain people will go out and protest,” he said.


B8 Friday, October 3, 2014

AN ACT AUTHORIZING THE ISSUANCE AND SALE OF CAPITAL PROJECTS GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS TO MAKE CAPITAL EXPENDITURES FOR SENIOR CITIZEN FACILITY IMPROVEMENTS AND ACQUISITIONS, FOR LIBRARY ACQUISITIONS AND FOR CAPITAL IMPROVEMENTS AND ACQUISITIONS AT INSTITUTIONS OF HIGHER EDUCATION, STATE SPECIAL SCHOOLS AND TRIBAL SCHOOLS; PROVIDING FOR A TAX LEVY FOR PAYMENT OF PRINCIPAL OF, INTEREST ON AND CERTAIN COSTS RELATED TO THE BONDS; REQUIRING APPROVAL OF THE REGISTERED VOTERS AT THE 2014 GENERAL ELECTION OF THE STATE; DECLARING AN EMERGENCY. BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO: SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.--This act may be cited as the “2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act”. SECTION 2. PURPOSE.--For the purpose of providing funds for capital expenditures as authorized in the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act, general obligation indebtedness of the state is authorized for the purposes and in the amounts set forth in Section 10 of that act. SECTION 3. BOND TERMS.— A. The state board of finance, except as limited by the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act, shall determine the terms, covenants and conditions of bonds issued pursuant to that act, including but not limited to: (1) date or dates of issue, denominations and maturities; (2) principal amounts; (3) rate or rates of interest; and (4) provisions for redemption, including premiums, registration and refundability, whether the bonds are issued in one or more series and other covenants relating to the bonds and the issuance thereof. B. The bonds shall be in such form as the state board of finance determines with an appropriate series designation and shall bear interest payable as set forth in the resolution of the state board of finance. C. Payment of the principal of the bonds shall begin not more than two years after the date of their issuance, and the bonds shall mature not later than ten years after the date of their issuance. Both principal and interest shall be payable in lawful money of the United States at the office of the paying agent within or without the state as the state board of finance may direct. D. The bonds shall be executed with the manual or facsimile signature of the governor or the state treasurer, and the seal or a facsimile of the seal of the state shall be placed on each bond, except for any series of bonds issued in book entry or similar form without the delivery of physical securities. E. The bonds shall be issued in accordance with the provisions of the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act, the Supplemental Public Securities Act and the Uniform Facsimile Signature of Public Officials Act and may be issued in accordance with the Public Securities Short-Term Interest Rate Act. F. The full faith and credit of the state is pledged for the prompt payment when due of the principal of and interest on all bonds issued and sold pursuant to the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act. SECTION 4. EXPENDITURES.--The proceeds from the sale of the bonds shall be expended solely for providing money to be distributed for the purposes and in amounts not to exceed the amounts set forth in Section 10 of the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act and to pay expenses incurred under Section 6 of that act. Any proceeds from the sale of the bonds that are not required for the purposes set forth in Sections 6 and 10 of that act shall be used for the purpose of paying the principal of and interest on the bonds. SECTION 5. SALE.--The bonds authorized under the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act shall be sold by the state board of finance at such time and in such manner and amounts as the board may elect. The bonds may be sold at private sale or at public sale, in either case at not less than par plus accrued interest to the date of delivery. If sold at public sale, the state board of finance shall publish a notice of the time and place of sale in a newspaper of general circulation in the state and may also publish the notice in a recognized financial journal outside the state. The required publications shall be made once each week for two consecutive weeks prior to the date fixed for the sale, the last publication thereof to be at least five days prior to the date of the sale. The notice shall specify the amount, denomination, maturity and description of the bonds to be offered for sale and the place, date and hour at which the sealed bids shall be received. At the time and place specified in the notice, the state board of finance shall open the bids in public and shall award the bonds to the bidder or bidders offering the best price for the bonds. The state board of finance may reject any or all bids and readvertise and may waive any irregularity in a bid. All bids, except that of the state, shall be accompanied by a deposit of two percent of the principal amount of the bonds in a form acceptable to the state board of finance. The deposit of an unsuccessful bidder shall be returned upon rejection of the bid. The state board of finance may also sell the bonds or any part of the bonds to the state treasurer or state investment officer. The state treasurer or state investment officer is authorized to purchase any of the bonds for investment. The bonds are legal investments for any person or board charged with the investment of any public funds and may be accepted as security for any deposit of public money. SECTION 6. EXPENSES.--The expenses incurred by the state board of finance in or relating to the preparation and sale of the bonds shall be paid out of the proceeds from the sale of the bonds, and all rebate, penalty, interest and

other obligations of the state relating to the bonds and bond proceeds under the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, shall be paid from earnings on bond proceeds or other money of the state, legally available for such payments. SECTION 7. TAX LEVY.--To provide for the payment of the principal of and interest on the bonds issued and sold pursuant to the provisions of the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act, there shall be and there is hereby imposed and levied during each year in which any of the bonds are outstanding an ad valorem tax on all property in the state subject to property taxation for state purposes sufficient to pay the interest as it becomes due on the bonds, together with an amount sufficient to provide a sinking fund to pay the principal of the bonds as it becomes due, and, if permitted by law, ad valorem taxes may be collected to pay administrative costs incident to the collection of such taxes. The taxes shall be imposed, levied, assessed and collected at the times and in the manner that other property taxes for state purposes are imposed, levied, assessed and collected. It is the duty of all tax officials and authorities to cause these taxes to be imposed, levied, assessed and collected. SECTION 8. TREASURER--DUTIES.--The state treasurer shall keep separate accounts of all money collected pursuant to the taxes imposed and levied pursuant to the provisions of the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act and shall use this money only for the purposes of paying the principal of and interest on the bonds as they become due and any expenses relating thereto. SECTION 9. IRREPEALABLE CONTRACT-AUTHORITY FOR ISSUANCE.--An owner of bonds issued pursuant to the provisions of the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act may, either at law or in equity, by suit, action or mandamus, enforce and compel the performance of the duties required by that act of any officer or entity mentioned in that act. The provisions of that act constitute an irrepealable contract with the owners of any of the bonds issued pursuant to that act for the faithful performance of which the full faith and credit of the state is pledged. Without reference to any other act of the legislature, the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act is full authority for the issuance and sale of the bonds authorized in that act, and such bonds shall have all the qualities of investment securities under the Uniform Commercial Code, shall not be invalid for any irregularity or defect in the proceedings for the issuance and sale of the bonds and shall be incontestable in the hands of bona fide purchasers or holders thereof for value. All bonds issued under the provisions of that act, and the interest thereon, are exempt from taxation by the state and any subdivision or public body thereof. SECTION 10. PROJECTS.--The proceeds from the sale of bonds issued under the provisions of the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act shall be distributed as follows for the purposes and in the amounts specified: A. for senior citizen facility improvement, construction and equipment acquisition projects, to the aging and long-term services department: (1) two hundred thousand dollars ($200,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to Los Volcanes senior center in Albuquerque in Bernalillo county; (2) three hundred sixty-five thousand dollars ($365,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the North Valley senior center in Albuquerque in Bernalillo county; (3) one hundred seventy-seven thousand dollars ($177,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Palo Duro senior center in Albuquerque in Bernalillo county; (4) forty-six thousand dollars ($46,000) to purchase and install equipment in senior centers countywide in Bernalillo county; (5) one hundred eighty-three thousand four hundred dollars ($183,400) to purchase and install meals equipment for senior centers countywide in Bernalillo county; (6) two thousand dollars ($2,000) to purchase and install equipment in the Tijeras senior center in Bernalillo county; (7) one hundred twenty-three thousand dollars ($123,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Tijeras senior center in Bernalillo county; (8) one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars ($125,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Catron county; (9) four thousand ten dollars ($4,010) to purchase and install equipment in the Roswell Joy center in Chaves county; (10) sixty-seven thousand two hundred forty dollars ($67,240) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Roswell Joy center in Chaves county; (11) eleven thousand two hundred dollars ($11,200) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Roswell Joy center in Chaves county; (12) seventeen thousand dollars ($17,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the senior center in the Pueblo of Acoma in Cibola county; (13) fifty-two thousand dollars ($52,000) to purchase and install meals equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Acoma in Cibola county; (14) forty-five thousand dollars ($45,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for Pueblo of Acoma senior centers in Cibola county; (15) two thousand seven hundred thirty dollars ($2,730) to purchase and install equipment in the Cibola senior center in Grants in Cibola county; (16) nineteen thousand eight hundred dollars ($19,800) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Cibola senior center in Grants in Cibola county; (17) two hundred seventy thousand dollars ($270,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Cibola senior center in Grants in Cibola county; (18) seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the senior center in the Pueblo of Laguna in Cibola county; (19) eighty thousand dollars ($80,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior

CLASSIFIEDS Legals

centers countywide in Colfax county; (20) twenty-six thousand two hundred fifty dollars ($26,250) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Eagle Nest senior center in Colfax county; (21) eleven thousand one hundred eighty dollars ($11,180) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Eagle Nest senior center in Colfax county; (22) six thousand five hundred dollars ($6,500) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Raton senior center in Colfax county; (23) seventy-nine thousand two hundred dollars ($79,200) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Raton senior center in Colfax county; (24) ten thousand dollars ($10,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Springer senior center in Colfax county; (25) one thousand three hundred twenty dollars ($1,320) to purchase and install equipment in Clovis senior centers citywide in Curry county; (26) forty-eight thousand four hundred ten dollars ($48,410) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to Clovis senior centers citywide in Curry county; (27) ten thousand three hundred eighty dollars ($10,380) to purchase and install meals equipment for Clovis senior centers citywide in Curry county; (28) eighty-six thousand dollars ($86,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for Clovis senior centers citywide in Curry county; (29) nine hundred dollars ($900) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Melrose senior center in Curry county; (30) one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Melrose senior center in Curry county; (31) thirty-four thousand dollars ($34,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Melrose senior center in Curry county; (32) thirteen thousand nine hundred seventy dollars ($13,970) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Fort Sumner senior center in De Baca county; (33) seventy-two thousand dollars ($72,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Fort Sumner senior center in De Baca county; (34) twenty thousand seven hundred sixty dollars ($20,760) to purchase and install meals equipment in senior centers countywide in Dona Ana county; (35) one hundred twenty thousand dollars ($120,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Dona Ana county; (36) two thousand thirty dollars ($2,030) to purchase and install equipment in the Dona Ana senior services site in Mesilla in Dona Ana county; (37) one hundred sixty thousand dollars ($160,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Eastside community center and meals on wheels in Las Cruces in Dona Ana county; (38) one hundred forty-one thousand dollars ($141,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Munson senior center in Las Cruces in Dona Ana county; (39) one hundred fifty-five thousand dollars ($155,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Eddy county; (40) eight thousand seven hundred dollars ($8,700) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Gila senior center in Grant county; (41) thirty-three thousand six hundred seventy dollars ($33,670) to purchase and install meals equipment in senior centers countywide in Grant county; (42) seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Grant county; (43) seventy-two thousand five hundred dollars ($72,500) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Silver City senior center in Grant county; (44) ninety-three thousand five hundred fifty dollars ($93,550) to plan, design, renovate and equip La Loma senior center in Guadalupe county; (45) seven thousand nine hundred twenty dollars ($7,920) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Campos senior center in Santa Rosa in Guadalupe county; (46) fifty thousand four hundred fifty dollars ($50,450) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Puerto de Luna senior center in Santa Rosa in Guadalupe county; (47) forty-eight thousand dollars ($48,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Puerto de Luna senior center in Santa Rosa in Guadalupe county; (48) five hundred seventy dollars ($570) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Vaughn senior center in Guadalupe county; (49) one hundred sixty-three thousand six hundred dollars ($163,600) to plan, design, renovate andequip the Vaughn senior center in Guadalupe county; (50) five hundred dollars ($500) to purchase and install equipment in the Ena Mitchell senior and wellness center in Lordsburg in Hidalgo county; (51) three thousand dollars ($3,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Ena Mitchell senior and wellness center in Lordsburg in Hidalgo county; (52) one hundred thirty-eight thousand dollars ($138,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Ena Mitchell senior and wellness center in Lordsburg in Hidalgo county; (53) five thousand nine hundred ninety dollars ($5,990) to purchase and install equipment in the Eunice senior center in Lea county; (54) six thousand dollars ($6,000) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Eunice senior center in Lea county; (55) fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Eunice senior center in Lea county; (56) four thousand five hundred dollars ($4,500) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Jal senior center in Lea county; (57) twenty-nine thousand dollars ($29,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Bill McKibben senior center in Lovington in Lea county; (58) fifty-nine thousand dollars ($59,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Tatum senior center in Lea county; (59) thirty-one thousand eight hundred twenty dollars ($31,820) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Hondo Valley

CLASSIFIEDS INDEX Announcements 005 Special Notice 010 Card of Thanks 015 Personals/Special 020 Transportation 025 Lost & Found Instruction 030 Education 035 Music – Dance/Drama 040 Instructions Wanted Employment 045 Employment Opportunities 050 Salesperson/Agents 055 Employment Agencies 060 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

Roswell Daily Record

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

senior site in Hondo in Lincoln county; (60) one thousand three hundred ninety dollars ($1,390) to purchase and install equipment in senior centers countywide in Lincoln county; (61) forty-two thousand dollars ($42,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Zia senior center in Ruidoso Downs in Lincoln county; (62) one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars ($125,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Deming Luna county commission on aging in Luna county; (63) two hundred fifty thousand dollars ($250,000) to construct, renovate and improve infrastructure at the senior center in the Chichiltah chapter of the Navajo Nation in McKinley county; (64) seventeen thousand eight hundred dollars ($17,800) to purchase and install equipment in the senior center in the Chichiltah chapter of the Navajo Nation in McKinley county; (65) seven thousand two hundred ninety dollars ($7,290) to purchase and install meals equipment in the senior center in the Chichiltah chapter of the Navajo Nation in McKinley county; (66) one million eight hundred fifty thousand dollars ($1,850,000) to construct, renovate and improve infrastructure at the senior center in the Church Rock chapter of the Navajo Nation in McKinley county; (67) seven thousand eight hundred thirty dollars ($7,830) to purchase and install equipment in the senior center in the Church Rock chapter of the Navajo Nation in McKinley county; (68) twenty-nine thousand dollars ($29,000) to purchase and install meals equipment in the senior center in the Church Rock chapter of the Navajo Nation in McKinley county; (69) forty thousand dollars ($40,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Ford Canyon senior center in Gallup in McKinley county; (70) thirteen thousand four hundred ten dollars ($13,410) to purchase and install equipment in the Neighborhood senior center in Gallup in McKinley county; (71) ninety thousand dollars ($90,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Neighborhood senior center in Gallup in McKinley county; (72) thirty-five thousand dollars ($35,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Neighborhood senior center in Gallup in McKinley county; (73) one hundred sixty thousand dollars ($160,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Neighborhood and Ford Canyon senior centers in Gallup in McKinley county; (74) sixteen thousand four hundred dollars ($16,400) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Neighborhood senior center and the Ford Canyon senior center in Gallup in McKinley county; (75) one thousand one hundred forty dollars ($1,140) to purchase and install equipment in the Ramah and Thoreau senior centers in McKinley county; (76) nine thousand ten dollars ($9,010) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Ramah and Thoreau senior centers in McKinley county; (77) sixty-five thousand dollars ($65,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Ramah and Thoreau senior centers in McKinley county; (78) twenty-eight thousand eighty dollars ($28,080) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Ramah senior center in McKinley county; (79) forty-two thousand one hundred twenty dollars ($42,120) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Thoreau senior center in McKinley county; (80) eight hundred forty dollars ($840) to purchase and install equipment in the Mora senior center in Mora county; (81) two hundred ninety thousand dollars ($290,000) to construct, renovate and improve infrastructure at the Wagon Mound senior center in Mora county; (82) forty-six thousand dollars ($46,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for Sacramento Mountain senior services in Cloudcroft in Otero county; (83) seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Mescalero Apache senior center in Mescalero in Otero county; (84) three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Mayhill community center in Otero county; (85) three hundred seventy-five thousand dollars ($375,000) to construct, renovate and improve infrastructure at the Tularosa senior center in Otero county; (86) two hundred eighty-seven thousand one hundred thirty dollars ($287,130) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Tularosa senior center in Otero county; (87) one thousand three hundred dollars ($1,300) to purchase and install equipment in the Logan senior center in Quay county; (88) five thousand seven hundred dollars ($5,700) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Logan senior center in Quay county; (89) three thousand four hundred ninety dollars ($3,490) to purchase and install meals equipment in senior centers countywide in Quay county; (90) one hundred ninety thousand dollars ($190,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Quay county; (91) one hundred eight thousand nine hundred dollars ($108,900) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Tucumcari senior center in Quay county; (92) twenty-two thousand dollars ($22,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the eight northern Indian pueblos council in Ohkay Owingeh in Rio Arriba county; (93) thirty-four thousand nine hundred dollars ($34,900) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Espanola senior center in Rio Arriba county; (94) fifty-four thousand dollars ($54,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Jicarilla Apache senior center in Dulce in Rio Arriba county; (95) thirty-four thousand dollars ($34,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Ohkay Owingeh senior center in Rio Arriba county; (96) twelve thousand one hundred dollars ($12,100) to plan, design, renovate

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

and equip the Coyote senior center in Rio Arriba county; (97) sixty-one thousand seven hundred dollars ($61,700) to plan, design, renovate and equip El Rito community center serving seniors in Rio Arriba county; (98) two thousand eight hundred dollars ($2,800) to purchase and install equipment in senior centers countywide in Rio Arriba county; (99) four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Rio Arriba county; (100) ten thousand nine hundred thirty dollars ($10,930) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the adult daycare facility in the Pueblo of Santa Clara in Rio Arriba county; (101) seventy-four thousand five hundred thirty dollars ($74,530) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the senior center in the Pueblo of Santa Clara in Rio Arriba county; (102) twenty-one thousand one hundred twenty dollars ($21,120) to purchase and install meals equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Santa Clara in Rio Arriba county; (103) five thousand dollars ($5,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the senior center in the Pueblo of Santa Clara in Rio Arriba county; (104) ninety thousand dollars ($90,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the senior center in the Pueblo of Santa Clara in Rio Arriba county; (105) one hundred twenty-five thousand dollars ($125,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers in Portales in Roosevelt county; (106) seven thousand seven hundred dollars ($7,700) to purchase and install equipment in the Aztec senior center in San Juan county; (107) sixteen thousand nine hundred dollars ($16,900) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Aztec senior center in San Juan county; (108) sixteen thousand dollars ($16,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Aztec senior center in San Juan county; (109) fifty-four thousand dollars ($54,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Aztec senior center in San Juan county; (110) forty-eight thousand dollars ($48,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Bloomfield senior center in San Juan county; (111) twenty-three thousand dollars ($23,000) to purchase and install equipment in the Bonnie Dallas senior center in Farmington in San Juan county; (112) fourteen thousand six hundred forty dollars ($14,640) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Bonnie Dallas senior center in Farmington in San Juan county; (113) one hundred sixty-eight thousand six hundred dollars ($168,600) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Bonnie Dallas senior center in Farmington in San Juan county; (114) seventy thousand dollars ($70,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Bonnie Dallas senior center in Farmington in San Juan county; (115) twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Bonnie Dallas senior center in Farmington in San Juan county; (116) thirteen thousand two hundred ten dollars ($13,210) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Hogback senior center in the Tse’Daa’Kaan chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (117) thirty-four thousand dollars ($34,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Hogback senior center in the Tse’Daa’Kaan chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (118) one hundred eighty thousand dollars ($180,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the senior center in the Newcomb chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (119) twelve thousand five hundred dollars ($12,500) to purchase and install meals equipment in the senior center in the Newcomb chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (120) one thousand dollars ($1,000) to purchase and install equipment in the Mitten Rock senior center in the Red Valley chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (121) nine thousand three hundred fifty dollars ($9,350) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Mitten Rock senior center in the Red Valley chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (122) four thousand six hundred dollars ($4,600) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Blanco senior center in San Juan county; (123) seventy-eight thousand dollars ($78,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Blanco senior center in San Juan county; (124) two thousand five hundred ten dollars ($2,510) to purchase and install equipment in the senior center in the Sheepsprings chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (125) seven thousand three hundred eighty dollars ($7,380) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Sheepsprings chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (126) twelve thousand eight hundred dollars ($12,800) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Lower Valley senior center in the Upper Fruitland chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (127) eleven thousand dollars ($11,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Lower Valley senior center in the Upper Fruitland chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (128) twenty-seven thousand dollars ($27,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Lower Valley senior center in the Upper Fruitland chapter of the Navajo Nation in San Juan county; (129) sixty thousand dollars ($60,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip Las Vegas senior center in San Miguel county; (130) thirty-three thousand five hundred dollars ($33,500) to purchase and install meals equipment in

435 Welding 445 Wrought Iron 450 Services Wanted Financial 455 Money: Loan/Borrow 456 Credit Cards 460 Insurance Co. 465 Oil, Mineral, Water, Land Lease/Sale 470 Investment: Stocks/Sale 475 Mortgages for Sale 480 Mortgages Wanted 485 Business Opportunities 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

the Las Vegas, Pecos and San Miguel senior centers in San Miguel county; (131) four hundred twenty-five thousand dollars ($425,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Las Vegas, Pecos and San Miguel senior centers in San Miguel county; (132) one million eight hundred fifty thousand dollars ($1,850,000) to construct, renovate and improve infrastructure at the Bernalillo senior center in Sandoval county; (133) three thousand five hundred dollars ($3,500) to purchase and install equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Cochiti in Sandoval county; (134) six thousand seven hundred dollars ($6,700) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the senior center in the Pueblo of Cochiti in Sandoval county; (135) seventy-nine thousand dollars ($79,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the senior center in the Pueblo of Cochiti in Sandoval county; (136) twenty-one thousand five hundred ninety dollars ($21,590) to purchase and install meals equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Cochiti in Sandoval county; (137) three thousand eighty dollars ($3,080) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Cuba senior center in Sandoval county; (138) two thousand eight hundred ninety dollars ($2,890) to purchase and install meals equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Jemez in Sandoval county; (139) one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the senior center in the Pueblo of Jemez in Sandoval county; (140) fifty-five thousand six hundred dollars ($55,600) to purchase and install equipment in the Meadowlark senior center in Rio Rancho in Sandoval county; (141) seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Meadowlark senior center in Rio Rancho in Sandoval county; (142) forty-six thousand eight hundred seventy dollars ($46,870) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Meadowlark senior center in Rio Rancho in Sandoval county; (143) forty-six thousand two hundred dollars ($46,200) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Meadowlark senior center in Rio Rancho in Sandoval county; (144) ninety thousand dollars ($90,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the senior center in the Pueblo of San Felipe in Sandoval county; (145) five thousand nine hundred dollars ($5,900) to purchase and install equipment in senior centers countywide in Sandoval county; (146) three thousand three hundred thirty dollars ($3,330) to purchase and install meals equipment in senior centers countywide in Sandoval county; (147) two hundred fifteen thousand dollars ($215,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Sandoval county; (148) six thousand six hundred dollars ($6,600) to plan, design, renovate and equip the senior center in the Pueblo of Santo Domingo in Sandoval county; (149) four hundred forty thousand dollars ($440,000) to construct, renovate and improve infrastructure at the senior center in the Torreon chapter of the Navajo Nation in Sandoval county; (150) two thousand nine hundred ninety dollars ($2,990) to purchase and install equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Nambe in Santa Fe county; (151) nine thousand nine hundred seventy dollars ($9,970) to plan, design, renovate and equip the senior center in the Pueblo of Nambe in Santa Fe county; (152) twelve thousand ten dollars ($12,010) to purchase and install equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Pojoaque in Santa Fe county; (153) twenty-seven thousand dollars ($27,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the senior center in the Pueblo of Pojoaque in Santa Fe county; (154) twenty thousand seven hundred thirty dollars ($20,730) to purchase and install meals equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Pojoaque in Santa Fe county; (155) forty-two thousand dollars ($42,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the senior center in the Pueblo of Pojoaque in Santa Fe county; (156) two thousand nine hundred ninety dollars ($2,990) to purchase and install equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of San Ildefonso in Santa Fe county; (157) five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers citywide in Santa Fe in Santa Fe county; (158) seventy-six thousand dollars ($76,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Santa Fe county; (159) one hundred seventy-eight thousand one hundred dollars ($178,100) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Mary Esther Gonzales senior center in Santa Fe in Santa Fe county; (160) seventy-seven thousand three hundred eighty dollars ($77,380) to purchase and install equipment in the Mary Esther Gonzales and Villa Consuelo senior centers in Santa Fe in Santa Fe county; (161) one hundred seventy-five thousand dollars ($175,000) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Mary Esther Gonzales and Villa Consuelo senior centers in Santa Fe in Santa Fe county; (162) one hundred forty-seven thousand nine hundred dollars ($147,900) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Villa Consuelo senior center in Santa Fe in Santa Fe county; (163) three thousand seventy dollars ($3,070) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Arrey community center in Sierra county; (164) fifty-four thousand dollars ($54,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Sierra joint office on aging in Truth or Consequences in Sierra county; (165) one thousand five hundred ninety dollars ($1,590) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Hacienda Orgullo meal site in Truth or Consequences in Sierra county;

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,

(166) twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) to purchase and install equipment in senior centers countywide in Socorro county; (167) eight thousand two hundred fifty dollars ($8,250) to purchase and install meals equipment in senior centers countywide in Socorro county; (168) fifty-four thousand dollars ($54,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Socorro county; (169) twenty-six thousand dollars ($26,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Chamisal senior center in Taos county; (170) two thousand nine hundred ninety dollars ($2,990) to purchase and install equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Picuris in Taos county; (171) seven thousand dollars ($7,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the senior center in the Pueblo of Picuris in Taos county; (172) nine thousand eight hundred seventy dollars ($9,870) to purchase and install meals equipment in the senior center in the Pueblo of Picuris in Taos county; (173) sixty-three thousand dollars ($63,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the senior center in the Pueblo of Picuris in Taos county; (174) fifty-two thousand five hundred forty dollars ($52,540) to purchase and install meals equipment in senior centers countywide in Taos county; (175) two hundred ninety-five thousand dollars ($295,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Taos county; (176) nineteen thousand eight hundred forty dollars ($19,840) to purchase and install equipment in the Phil Lovato senior center in Taos in Taos county; (177) one hundred sixty-two thousand five hundred dollars ($162,500) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Phil Lovato senior center in Taos in Taos county; (178) twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Phil Lovato senior center in Taos in Taos county; (179) seven thousand six hundred dollars ($7,600) to plan, design, renovate and equip the senior center in the Pueblo of Taos in Taos county; (180) two thousand dollars ($2,000) to purchase and install equipment in the Estancia senior center in Torrance county; (181) nine thousand nine hundred sixty dollars ($9,960) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Mountainair, Estancia and Moriarty senior centers in Torrance county; (182) sixty-eight thousand one hundred dollars ($68,100) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Clayton senior center in Union county; (183) twenty-seven thousand dollars ($27,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for the Clayton senior center in Union county; (184) fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) to purchase and install equipment in the Belen senior center in Valencia county; (185) twenty thousand dollars ($20,000) to purchase and install meals equipment in the Belen senior center in Valencia county; (186) one hundred fifty-four thousand dollars ($154,000) to plan, design, renovate and equip the Belen senior center in Valencia county; (187) three hundred thousand dollars ($300,000) to construct, renovate and improve infrastructure at the Fred Luna senior center in Los Lunas in Valencia county; (188) fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) to make improvements for building code compliance, including purchase and installation of equipment, to the Meadowlake senior center in Los Lunas in Valencia county; and (189) two hundred eighty thousand dollars ($280,000) to purchase and equip vehicles for senior centers countywide in Valencia county; B. for library acquisitions at public libraries, public school libraries, academic libraries and tribal libraries statewide: (1) to the cultural affairs department: (a) three million dollars ($3,000,000) for equipment and supplemental library resource acquisitions, including print, non-print and electronic resources, for non-tribal public libraries statewide; and (b) eight hundred thousand dollars ($800,000) for equipment and supplemental library resource acquisitions, including print, non-print and electronic resources, at tribal libraries statewide; (2) to the higher education department, three million five hundred thousand dollars ($3,500,000) for supplemental library resource acquisitions, including books, equipment, electronic resources and collaborative library resources and information technology projects, for academic libraries statewide; and (3) to the public education department, three million five hundred thousand dollars ($3,500,000) for library resource acquisitions, including library books, at public school libraries statewide; and C. for capital improvements at institutions of higher education, special schools and tribal schools statewide: (1) to the board of regents of eastern New Mexico university: (a) three million dollars ($3,000,000) for critical health and safety infrastructure improvements campuswide, including demolition, at the Roswell branch campus of eastern New Mexico university in Chaves county; (b) three hundred twenty-five thousand dollars ($325,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish the main entrance at the Ruidoso branch community college of eastern New Mexico university in Lincoln county; and (c) eleven million dollars ($11,000,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish the Golden library, including renovating additional space to be part of the Golden student success center, at eastern New Mexico university in Portales in Roosevelt county; (2) to the higher education department: (a) ten million dollars ($10,000,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish Smith Brasher hall at central New Mexico community college in Albuquerque in Bernalillo county; (b) five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) for roof repairs and replacement campuswide at Clovis community college in Curry county; (c) five million dollars ($5,000,000) to plan, design, construct, equip and furnish a health and wellness learning center for New Mexico junior college in

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Hobbs in Lea county; (d) one million three hundred eighty thousand dollars ($1,380,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish improvements at the satellite campuses of Luna community college in Santa Rosa in Guadalupe county and Springer in Colfax county; (e) six hundred fifty thousand dollars ($650,000) for roof renovations and replacement of buildings A, C and D and for critical infrastructure improvements, including heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems, at Mesalands community college in Tucumcari in Quay county; (f) four million dollars ($4,000,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish the school of science, math and engineering, including improvements to erosion control, at San Juan college in Farmington in San Juan county; and (g) two million dollars ($2,000,000) for critical health and safety infrastructure improvements campuswide at Santa Fe community college in Santa Fe county; (3) to the board of regents of New Mexico highlands university, five million dollars ($5,000,000) for critical health and safety infrastructure improvements, including electrical distribution and fire systems, campuswide at New Mexico highlands university in Las Vegas in San Miguel county; (4) to the board of regents of New Mexico institute of mining and technology, fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000) to plan, design, construct, equip and furnish a facility to house the chemistry department at the New Mexico institute of mining and technology in Socorro in Socorro county; (5) to the board of regents of New Mexico military institute, four million eight hundred thousand dollars ($4,800,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish Marshall hall at the New Mexico military institute in Roswell in Chaves county; (6) to the board of regents of New Mexico state university: (a) one million three hundred thousand dollars ($1,300,000) to plan, design, construct and renovate critical health and safety infrastructure improvements to Martinez hall and for other infrastructure improvements campuswide at the Grants campus of New Mexico state university in Cibola county; (b) nineteen million two hundred thousand dollars ($19,200,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip, furnish and make additions to Jett hall, Jett annex, Rentfrow hall and surrounding areas, including additions and improvements to utilities infrastructure, at New Mexico state university in Las Cruces in Dona Ana county; (c) two million dollars ($2,000,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate and equip critical health and safety infrastructure improvements campuswide at the Dona Ana community college branch of New Mexico state university in Dona Ana county; (d) one million six hundred thousand dollars ($1,600,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate and equip health and safety infrastructure improvements campuswide at the Carlsbad campus of New Mexico state university in Eddy county; and (e) one million dollars ($1,000,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate and equip infrastructure upgrades and replacement at the Alamogordo campus of New Mexico state university in Otero county; (7) to the board of regents of northern New Mexico state school, two million dollars ($2,000,000) for land acquisition and critical health and safety infrastructure improvements at the El Rito and Espanola campuses of northern New Mexico state school in Rio Arriba county; (8) to the board of regents of the university of New Mexico: (a) twenty million five hundred thousand dollars ($20,500,000) to design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish the Farris engineering building to house the chemical and nuclear engineering and computer science programs in the school of engineering at the university of New Mexico in Albuquerque in Bernalillo county; (b) twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish a health education building, including laboratories, study space and classrooms, at the health sciences center at the university of New Mexico in Albuquerque in Bernalillo county; (c) five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish the emergency medical services classroom laboratory and training area at the Los Alamos branch campus of the university of New Mexico in Los Alamos county; (d) one million dollars ($1,000,000) to plan, design, renovate, construct, equip and furnish the Zollinger library and lower shell space at the Gallup branch campus of the university of New Mexico in McKinley county; (e) four million dollars ($4,000,000) to design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish the health career training center for the Taos branch campus of the university of New Mexico in Taos county; and (f) one million dollars ($1,000,000) for critical health and safety infrastructure improvements campuswide at the Valencia branch campus of the university of New Mexico in Los Lunas in Valencia county; (9) to the board of regents of western New Mexico university, six million dollars ($6,000,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and furnish Light and Harlan halls and to plan, design, construct and renovate, including utility infrastructure, Fleming hall at western New Mexico university in Silver City in Grant county; and (10) to the Indian affairs department: (a) two million dollars ($2,000,000) to plan, design, construct, equip and furnish the multipurpose wellness and education center at Navajo technical university in Crownpoint in McKinley county; (b) five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) to plan and design a math and science building at Dine college in Shiprock in San Juan county; (c) two million dollars ($2,000,000) to plan, design, construct, equip and furnish a multipurpose fitness and performing arts center at the institute of American Indian arts in Santa Fe county; and (d) five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000) for upgrades to the youth

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activity complex ments to the gro lighting and dra school in Santa SECTION 11. EL A. Bonds issued Capital Projects Act shall be sub the registered v the general elec November 2014 majority of all th such election, s tification of the announcing the No bonds shall that act until the state have voted the bonds and p in this section. A that act shall be months from th B. The ballots us election shall co following langua (1) “The 2014 C Obligation Bond suance and sale improvement, c ment acquisition be authorized to bonds in an am seventeen millio to make capital senior citizen fa construction an projects and pro erty tax imposit payment of prin expenses incurr the issuance of lection of the ta For__________ Against______ (2) “The 2014 C Obligation Bond issuance and sa bonds. Shall the issue general ob amount not to e dollars ($11,000 expenditures fo school, tribal an acquisitions and property tax imp payment of prin expenses incurr the issuance of lection of the ta For__________ Against______ and (3) “The 2014 C Obligation Bond issuance and sa special schools capital improvem bonds. Shall the to issue general an amount not t forty-one million to make capital higher educatio tribal schools ca acquisitions and property tax imp payment of prin expenses incurr the issuance of lection of the ta For__________ Against______ C. Each questio includes a spec be financed by t question is not a vote of the elect general election for the work or question shall b shall not be par Projects Genera The failure of a by the electorat election shall no that are approve D. The secretary the submission general obligati at the 2014 gen be included in th lamation of eac The secretary o 2014 Capital Pr Bond Act to be p least one newsp the state if one once each week weeks next prec election as requ of New Mexico. SECTION 12. AR -Pursuant to Se 1978 and where appropriations a Capital Projects Act include mon places fund. SECTION 13. PR DITURES--REVE A. If an appropri rized in the 201 eral Obligation B to complete all the appropriatio any portion of th the appropriatio be made for pur specified in the B. The state age tions to which m propriated in the General Obligati responsible for funded in that a with the constit Mexico and sha any unexpended balance remain third full fiscal y bonds or the ter of the specific p shall be deposit fund established for the purpose of and interest o obligation bonds SECTION 14. SE or application o ects General Ob invalid, the rem to other situatio be affected. SECTION 15. EM necessary for th and safety that immediately.


Roswell Daily Record

sand dollars Hobbs in Lea county; and install equip- (d) one million three hundred eighty countywide in thousand dollars ($1,380,000) to plan, design, construct, renovate, equip and wo hundred fifty furnish improvements at the satellite chase and install campuses of Luna community college nior centers in Santa Rosa in Guadalupe county and county; Springer in Colfax county; nd dollars (e) six hundred fifty thousand dollars and equip ($650,000) for roof renovations and ters countywide replacement of buildings A, C and D and for critical infrastructure improvements, and dollars including heating, ventilation and air gn, renovate and conditioning systems, at Mesalands nior center in community college in Tucumcari in Quay county; ne hundred ninety (f) four million dollars ($4,000,000) to chase and install plan, design, construct, renovate, equip r center in the and furnish the school of science, math os county; and engineering, including improvedollars ($7,000) ments to erosion control, at San Juan s for building code college in Farmington in San Juan county; and on of equipment, (g) two million dollars ($2,000,000) for the Pueblo of critical health and safety infrastructure improvements campuswide at Santa Fe ght hundred community college in Santa Fe county; 0) to purchase (3) to the board of regents of New pment in the Mexico highlands university, five million eblo of Picuris in dollars ($5,000,000) for critical health and safety infrastructure improvements, and dollars including electrical distribution and fire and equip systems, campuswide at New Mexico center in the highlands university in Las Vegas in San os county; Miguel county; d five hundred (4) to the board of regents of New to purchase Mexico institute of mining and technolpment in senior ogy, fifteen million dollars Taos county; ($15,000,000) to plan, design, construct, ety-five thousand equip and furnish a facility to house urchase and the chemistry department at the New or centers Mexico institute of mining and technolunty; ogy in Socorro in Socorro county; nd eight hundred (5) to the board of regents of New to purchase and Mexico military institute, four million e Phil Lovato eight hundred thousand n Taos county; dollars ($4,800,000) to plan, design, y-two thousand construct, renovate, equip and furnish 162,500) to make Marshall hall at the New Mexico military ding code compli- institute in Roswell in Chaves county; se and installation (6) to the board of regents of New hil Lovato senior Mexico state university: county; (a) one million three hundred thousand dollars ($20,000) dollars ($1,300,000) to plan, design, te and equip the construct and renovate critical health and safety infrastructure improvements county; to Martinez hall and for other infrastrucsix hundred dol- ture improvements campuswide at the esign, renovate Grants campus of New Mexico state enter in the university in Cibola county; county; (b) nineteen million two hundred llars ($2,000) thousand dollars ($19,200,000) to plan, equipment in design, construct, renovate, equip, nter in Torrance furnish and make additions to Jett hall, Jett annex, Rentfrow hall and surroundne hundred sixty ing areas, including chase and install additions and improvements to utilities e Mountainair, infrastructure, at New Mexico state senior centers in university in Las Cruces in Dona Ana county; and one hundred (c) two million dollars ($2,000,000) to an, design, plan, design, construct, renovate and e Clayton senior equip critical health and safety infra; structure improvements campuswide at ousand dollars the Dona Ana community college branch and equip of New Mexico state university in Dona n senior center in Ana county; (d) one million six hundred thousand dollars ($15,000) dollars ($1,600,000) to plan, design, equipment in the construct, renovate and equip health Valencia county; and safety infrastructure improvements dollars ($20,000) campuswide at the Carlsbad campus meals equipment of New Mexico state university in Eddy nter in Valencia county; and (e) one million dollars ($1,000,000) -four thousand to plan, design, construct, renovate lan, design, and equip infrastructure upgrades and e Belen senior replacement at the Alamogordo campus nty; of New Mexico state university in Otero ousand dollars county; ct, renovate and (7) to the board of regents of northern at the Fred Luna New Mexico state school, two million nas in Valencia dollars ($2,000,000) for land acquisition and critical health and safety infrastrucllars ($50,000) ture improvements at the El Rito and s for building Espanola campuses of northern New ding purchase Mexico state school in Rio Arriba county; pment, to the (8) to the board of regents of the nter in Los Lunas university of New Mexico: d (a) twenty million five hundred thousand hty thousand dol- dollars ($20,500,000) to design, chase and equip construct, renovate, equip and furnish ters countywide in the Farris engineering building to house the chemical and nuclear engineering ns at public librar- and computer science programs in the ries, academic school of engineering at the university of aries statewide: New Mexico in Albuquerque in Bernalillo rs department: county; s ($3,000,000) (b) twelve million dollars ($12,000,000) plemental library to plan, design, construct, renovate, including print, equip and furnish a health education c resources, for building, including laboratories, study es statewide; and space and classrooms, at the health sand dollars sciences center at the university of New ent and suppleMexico in Albuquerque in Bernalillo e acquisitions, county; nt and electronic (c) five hundred thousand dollars aries statewide; ($500,000) to plan, design, construct, tion department, renovate, equip and furnish the red thousand emergency medical services classroom or supplemental laboratory and training area at the Los sitions, including Alamos branch campus of the university ctronic resources of New Mexico in Los Alamos county; ry resources and (d) one million dollars ($1,000,000) to y projects, for plan, design, renovate, construct, equip ewide; and and furnish the Zollinger library and tion department, lower shell space at the Gallup branch red thousand campus of the university of New Mexico or library resource in McKinley county; library books, at (e) four million dollars ($4,000,000) statewide; and to design, construct, renovate, equip ments at and furnish the health career training ducation, special center for the Taos branch campus of ools statewide: the university of New Mexico in Taos ents of eastern county; and : (f) one million dollars ($1,000,000) for s ($3,000,000) for critical health and safety infrastructure ty infrastructure improvements campuswide at the Vaswide, including lencia branch campus of the university well branch cam- of New Mexico in Los Lunas in Valencia exico university in county; (9) to the board of regents of western nty-five thousand New Mexico university, six million plan, design, dollars ($6,000,000) to plan, design, quip and furnish construct, renovate, equip and furnish he Ruidoso branch Light and Harlan halls and to plan, eastern New design, construct and renovate, includncoln county; and ing utility infrastructure, Fleming hall at rs ($11,000,000) western New Mexico university in Silver uct, renovate, City in Grant county; and Golden library, (10) to the Indian affairs department: dditional space to (a) two million dollars ($2,000,000) tudent success to plan, design, construct, equip and Mexico university furnish the multipurpose wellness and t county; education center at Navajo technical tion department: university in Crownpoint in McKinley $10,000,000) to county; , renovate, equip (b) five hundred thousand dollars sher hall at central ($500,000) to plan and design a math ty college in and science building at Dine college in llo county; Shiprock in San Juan county; and dollars (c) two million dollars ($2,000,000) pairs and replace- to plan, design, construct, equip and Clovis community furnish a multipurpose fitness and y; performing arts center at the institute $5,000,000) of American Indian arts in Santa Fe uct, equip and county; and ellness learning (d) five hundred thousand dollars junior college in ($500,000) for upgrades to the youth

CLASSIFIEDS

Legals

activity complex, including improvements to the grounds and site, security lighting and drainage, at Santa Fe Indian school in Santa Fe in Santa Fe county. SECTION 11. ELECTION.-A. Bonds issued pursuant to the 2014 Capital Projects General Obligation Bond Act shall be submitted to the registered voters of the state at the general election to be held in November 2014, and, if they receive a JOINT majority of HOUSE all the votes castRESOLUTION thereon at 51STshall LEGISLATURE - STATE such election, take effect upon cer- OF - FIRSTboard SESSION, tificationNEW of theMEXICO state canvassing announcing the results of2013 the election. BY issued or sold under No bonds shall beINTRODUCED that act until the registered voters of this A JOINT RESOLUTION state have voted upon and approved PROPOSING TO AMEND ARTICLE 7, the bonds and property tax as provided SECTION 1 OF THE CONSTITUTION section. bonds issued under THAT in thisOF NEWAny MEXICO TO PROVIDE that act shall be ELECTIONS issued within thirty SCHOOL SHALL BE months from the date of such election. HELD AT DIFFERENT TIMES FROM B. ThePARTISAN ballots usedELECTIONS. at the 2014 general election shall contain substantially the BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEGISfollowing language: LATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW 2014 Capital Projects General (1) “The MEXICO: Obligation Bond Act authorizes the isSECTION 1. It is proposed suance and sale of senior citizen facility to amend construction Article 7, Section 1 of the improvement, and equipconstitution of New Mexico to read: ment acquisition bonds. Shall the state “A. Every citizen of the United be authorized to issue general obligation States who is over the age of bondstwenty-one in an amount years not to exceed and has resided seventeen million dollarstwelve ($17,000,000) in New Mexico months, to make capital expenditures certain in the county ninety for days, and facility improvement, seniorincitizen the precinct in which [he] the equipment acquisition construction personand offers to vote thirty days, andpreceding provide for athe general propprojects next election, except idiots, insane persons and erty tax imposition and levy for the persons convicted of aonfelonious payment of principal of, interest and or infamous unless expenses incurred incrime connection withrestored to political shall the issuance of therights, bonds and thebe col-qualified to vote at all elections for lection of the tax as permitted by law?public officers. The legislature may enact For________________ laws providing for absentee voting Against___________________”; by qualified electors. All school (2) “The 2014 Capital General elections shallProjects be held at different Obligation Act[other] authorizes the electimesBond from partisan and sale of library acquisition issuance tions. be authorized bonds. Shall B. the Thestate legislature shallto have general obligation bonds the in anregistraissue the power to require tion qualified electors as a notoftothe exceed eleven million amount for voting shall regudollarsrequisite ($11,000,000) to makeand capital late theformanner, and places expenditures academic,time public of voting. The legislature shall school, tribal and public library resource enact and such lawsforasa will secure the provide general acquisitions of the ballot the purity secrecy property tax imposition and levyand for the of elections and guard against the payment of principal of, interest on and abuse of elective franchise. Not expenses incurred in connection with more than two members of the the issuance of the bonds and the registration andcolnot more board of of thetwo tax judges as permitted by law? shall lectionthan of election For________________ belong to the same political party Against___________________”; at the time of their appointment.” and SECTION 2. The amendment proposed by this resolution (3) “The 2014 Capital Projects General shall be submitted to the people Obligation Bond Act authorizes the for their approval or rejection at the next issuance and sale of higher education, at any special schools election and tribal or schools specialgeneral priorand to that date that may capitalelection improvement acquisition called for that purpose. bonds.beShall the state be authorized to issue general obligation bonds in SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION an amount not to exceed one hundred 51ST LEGISLATURE - STATE OF forty-oneNEW million dollars ($141,000,000) MEXICO - FIRST SESSION, to make capital expenditures 2013for certain higher education,INTRODUCED special schools and BY tribal schools capital improvements and acquisitions andRESOLUTION provide for a general A JOINT PROPOSING TOand AMEND property tax imposition levy forARTICLE the 12,ofSECTION 13interest OF THE principal of, on CONSTITUand payment TIONincurred OF NEW MEXICO with TO CHANGE expenses in connection THE BOARD OF REGENTS the issuance of the bonds and the col-OF NORTHERN NEW MEXICO lection of the tax as permitted by law?STATE SCHOOL BY FILLING ONE REGENT For________________ POSITION WITH A STUDENT. Against___________________”. set forth BY in this section C. Each BEquestion IT RESOLVED THE LEGISincludes a specific object OF to NEW LATURE OFwork THE orSTATE be financed by the bonds. If any such MEXICO: questionSECTION is not approved majority to 1. It by is aproposed vote ofamend the electorate theSection state’s 2014 Articleat12, 13 of the general election, the of issuance of bonds to read: constitution New Mexico “A.or The objectlegislature specified byshall the for the work provide forexcluded the control and question shall be from and management of each of shall not be part of the 2014 Capital[said] the institutions, exceptBond the Act. university of General Obligation Projects New ofMexico, by toa be board of regents a question approved The failure for each institution, consisting of by the electorate at the 2014 general five members, four of whom shall election shall not affect those questions be qualified electors of the state that are at the election. of approved New Mexico, one of whom shall D. Thebe secretary of state include body a member of shall the student of the capital the submission of the institution andprojects no more than obligation bondsattothe the people general three of whom time of their at theappointment 2014 general election, it shall of shall beandmembers the same party; procprovided, be included in thepolitical general election however, student lamation of each that of thethe county clerks.body memberof provision in thisthe[section] state shall cause The secretary shall not Obligation apply to the 2014 subsection Capital Projects General school Act to Mexico be published in fullforin the at deaf, Bond New the New Mexico military of least one newspaper in each countyinstitute [the northern New Mexico state the state if one be published therein, school] or the New Mexico school once each week, for four successive for the blind and visually [handiweekscapped] next preceding the general impaired, and for each election required by three the constitution of as those [four] institutions of NewallMexico. five members of the board of 12. ART IN PUBLIC PLACES.SECTION regents shall be qualified electors -Pursuant to Section NMSA of the state of13-4A-4 New Mexico. Theapplicable, governortheshall nominate 1978 and B. where and by and with the authorized in theconsent 2014 of the appropriations appoint the Bond members Projectsshall General Obligation Capitalsenate of each board of regents for each Act include money for the art in public [said] the institutions. The terms of places fund. of [said] nonstudent members SECTION 13. PROJECT SCOPE--EXPENshall be for staggered terms of six DITURES--REVERSION.-years, [provided that of the five first appropriation a project authoA. If anappointed theforterms of two shall Gen- for two rized in bethe for2014 twoCapital years,Projects the terms eral Obligation Bond Act is not sufficient shall be for four years, and the to complete all one the purposes term of shall bespecified, for six years. the appropriation be expended Following may the approval byforthe any portion purposes specified and in upon votersofofthethis amendment the first vacancy of a position the appropriation. Expenditures shall not held by a nonstudent member on be made for purposes other than those each eligible in theinstitution’s appropriation.board of respecified the governor shall nominate B. Thegents, state agencies and state instituand by and with of tions to which money has the beenconsent apsenate shall appoint a student the propriated in the 2014 Capital Projects member to serve a two-year term] General Obligation Bond Act shall be and the terms of student members responsible for monitoring shall be two years.the projects thatThe act togovernor ensure compliance funded in C. shall select, with the constitution andand lawsconsent of New of the with the advice and shall cause to be reverted from Mexico senate, a student member any unexpended or unencumbered a list provided by the president of remaining the institution. In making balance at the earlier of the the list,fiscal the year president of the ofinstitution third full after issuance the due consideration bondsshall or thegive termination or completion to the of the student specific project. Reverted funds of therecommendations body president theservice institution. shall be deposited in theof debt Following the approval by fund established by the state treasurerthe voters of this 2014 amendment and for the purpose of paying the principal upon the first vacancy of a position of and interest on the state’s general on the northern New Mexico obligation statebonds. school board of regents, the SECTION 14. SEVERABILITY.--If any and part by governor shall nominate of the Capital or application and with the2014 consent ofProjthe senate ects General Obligationa Bond Act ismember held shall appoint student to invalid, the remainder or itsterm. application serve a two-year D. The orlegislature shall to other situations persons shall not provide for the control and management be affected. of the university of New Mexico by SECTION 15. EMERGENCY.--It is a board of public regents consisting necessary for the peace, health of seventhatmembers, of whom shall and safety this act takesixeffect be qualified electors of the state immediately.

upon the first vacancy of a position held by a nonstudent member on the university of New Mexico’s board of regents, the governor shall nominate and by and with the consent of the senate shall appoint a student member to serve a two-year term. The governor shall select, with the advice and consent of the senate, a student member from a list provided by the president of the university of New Mexico. In making the list, the president of the university of New Mexico shall give due consideration to the recommendations of the student body president of the university. E. Members of the board shall not be removed except for incompetence, neglect of duty or malfeasance in office. Provided, however, no removal shall be made without notice of hearing and an opportunity to be heard having first been given such member. The supreme court of the state of New Mexico is hereby given exclusive original jurisdiction over proceedings to remove members of the board under such rules as it may promulgate, and its decision in connection with such matters shall be final.” SECTION 2. The amendment proposed by this resolution shall be submitted to the people for their approval or rejection at the next general election or at any special election prior to that date that may be called for that purpose.

the charter. D. If the charter of an urban county provides for a governing body composed of members elected by districts, a member representing a district shall be a resident and elected by the registered qualified electors of that district. E. The purpose of this section is to provide for maximum local self-government. A liberal construction shall be given to the powers of urban counties. F. The provisions of this section shall be self-executing.” SECTION 2. The amendment proposed by this resolution shall be submitted to the people for their approval or rejection at the next general election or at any special election prior to that date that may be called for that purpose. HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION 51ST LEGISLATURE - STATE OF NEW MEXICO - SECOND SESSION, 2014 INTRODUCED BY

A JOINT RESOLUTION PROPOSING TO AMEND ARTICLE 12, SECTION 7 OF THE CONSTITUTION OF NEW MEXICO TO PRESERVE THE LAND GRANT PERMANENT FUNDS BY INCREASING THE DUTY OF CARE, REMOVING THE RESTRICTIONS ON THE TYPE OF INVESTMENT THAT MAY BE MADE AND INCREASING SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION 51ST LEGISLATURE - STATE OF THE THRESHOLD AMOUNT FOR NEW MEXICO - SECOND SESSION, ADDITIONAL DISTRIBUTIONS. 2014 INTRODUCED BY BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW A JOINT RESOLUTION MEXICO: PROPOSING AN AMENDMENT TO SECTION 1. It is proposed to ARTICLE 6 OF THE CONSTITUTION amend Article 12, Section 7 of the OF NEW MEXICO TO ALLOW THE constitution of New Mexico to read: LEGISLATURE TO SET THE DATE “A. As used in this section, FOR FILING DECLARATIONS OF CANDIDACY FOR JUDICIAL RETEN- “fund” means the permanent school fund described in Article 12, TION ELECTIONS. Section 2 of this [article] constituBE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEGIStion and all other permanent funds LATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW derived from lands granted or MEXICO: SECTION 1. It is proposed confirmed to the state by the act of to amend Article 6, Section 34 of congress of June 20, 1910, entitled the constitution of New Mexico to “An act to enable the people of read: New Mexico to form a constitution “The office of any justice or and state government and be judge subject to the provisions of [Section 33 of] Article 6, Section 33 admitted into the union on an equal of this constitution becomes vacant footing with the original states.”. B. The fund shall be invested on January 1 immediately following by the state investment officer in the general election at which the justice or judge is rejected by more accordance with policy regulations promulgated by the state investthan forty-three percent of those voting on the question of [his] ment council. retention or rejection or on January C. In making investments, 1 immediately following the date the state investment officer, [he] the justice or judge fails to file under the supervision of the state a declaration of candidacy for the investment council, shall [exercise retention of [his] the judgment and care under the the justice’s or judge’s office in circumstances then prevailing that the general election at which the businessmen of ordinary prudence, justice or judge would be subject discretion and intelligence exercise to retention or rejection by the in the management of their own electorate. Otherwise, the office becomes vacant upon the date of affairs not in regard to speculation but in regard to the permanent the death, resignation or removal disposition of their funds, considerby impeachment of the justice or judge. [The date for filing a decla- ing the probable income as well as ration of candidacy for retention of the probable safety of their capital] office shall be the same as that for invest and manage the fund in acfiling a declaration of candidacy in cordance with the Uniform Prudent a primary election.]” Investor Act. SECTION 2. The amendment D. The legislature may proposed by this resolution shall establish criteria for investing the be submitted to the people for their fund if the criteria are enacted by a approval or rejection at the next three-fourths’ vote of the members general election or at any special election prior to that date that may elected to each house, but investment of the fund is subject to the be called for that purpose. following restrictions: (1) not more than sixty-five SENATE JOINT RESOLUTION 51ST LEGISLATURE - STATE OF percent of the book value of the NEW MEXICO - SECOND SESSION, fund shall be invested at any given 2014 time in corporate stocks; INTRODUCED BY (2) not more than ten percent of the voting stock of a corporation A JOINT RESOLUTION shall be held; and PROPOSING AN AMENDMENT TO (3) stocks eligible for ARTICLE 10, SECTION 10 OF THE purchase shall be restricted to CONSTITUTION OF NEW MEXICO TO ALLOW CERTAIN COUNTIES TO those stocks of businesses listed upon a national stock exchange or BECOME URBAN COUNTIES AND included in a nationally recognized TO CLARIFY THE MAJORITY VOTE list of stocks [and NEEDED TO ADOPT A COUNTY (4) not more than fifteen perCHARTER. cent of the book value of the fund BE IT RESOLVED BY THE LEGISmay be invested in international LATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW securities at any single time]. MEXICO: E. All additions to the fund and SECTION 1. It is proposed to all earnings, including interest, amend Article 10, Section 10 of the dividends and capital gains from constitution of New Mexico to read: investment of the fund shall be “A. A county that is less than credited to the fund. one thousand five hundred square F. Except as provided in Submiles in area and has [at the time section G of this section, the annual of this amendment] a population of three hundred thousand or more distributions from the fund shall be five percent of the average of the may become an urban county by year-end market values of the fund the following procedure: for the immediately preceding five (1) the board of county commissioners shall [by January calendar years. 1, 2001] appoint a charter comG. In addition to the anmission consisting of not less than nual distribution made pursuant to three persons to draft a proposed Subsection F of this section, unless urban county charter; suspended pursuant to Subsection (2) the proposed charter shall H of this section, an additional provide for the form and organizaannual distribution shall be made tion of the urban county governpursuant to the following schedule; ment and shall designate those provided that no distribution shall officers that shall be elected and those officers and employees that be made pursuant to the provisions shall perform the duties assigned of this subsection in any fiscal year if the average of the year-end by law to county officers; and (3) within one year after the market values of the fund for appointment of the charter comthe immediately preceding five mission, the proposed charter shall calendar years is less than [five be submitted to the qualified voters billion eight hundred million dollars of the county and, if adopted by a ($5,800,000,000)] ten billion dolmajority of those [voters] voting, lars ($10,000,000,000): the county shall become an urban (1) in fiscal years 2005 county. If, at the election or any through 2012, an amount equal to subsequent election, the proposed eight-tenths percent of the average charter is not adopted, then, after at least one year has elapsed after of the year-end market values the election, pursuant to this sec- of the fund for the immediately preceding five calendar years; tion another charter commission provided that any additional distrimay be appointed and another proposed charter may be submitted bution from the permanent school to the qualified voters for approval fund pursuant to this paragraph or disapproval. shall be used to implement and B. An urban county may maintain educational reforms as exercise all legislative powers and provided by law; and perform all governmental functions (2) in fiscal years 2013 not expressly denied [to municipali- through 2016, an amount equal to ties, counties or urban counties] one-half percent of the average of by general law or charter and may exercise all powers granted to and the year-end market values of the fund for the immediately preceding shall be subject to all limitations [granted to] placed on municipali- five calendar years; provided that ties by Article 9, Section 12 of the any additional distribution from the permanent school fund pursuant constitution of New Mexico. This to this paragraph shall be used to of New Mexico, one of whom shall grant of powers shall not include be a member of the student body implement and maintain educationthe power to enact private or of the university of New Mexico civil laws except as incident to al reforms as provided by law. and no more than four of whom at the exercise of an independent H. The legislature, by a threethe time of their appointment shall municipal power, nor shall it fifths’ vote of the members elected be members of the same political include the power to provide for a to each house, may suspend any party. The governor shall nominate penalty greater than the penalty additional distribution provided for and by and with the consent provided for a misdemeanor. No in Subsection G of this section.” of the senate shall appoint the tax imposed by the governing body SECTION 2. The amendment members of the board of regents. of an urban county, except a tax proposed by this resolution shall The present five members shall authorized by general law, shall serve out their present terms. The become effective until approved by be submitted to the people for their two additional members shall be a majority vote in the urban county. approval or rejection at the next general election or at any special appointed in 1987 for terms of six C. A charter of an urban election prior to that date that may years. Following the approval by county shall only be amended in the voters of this amendment and accordance with the provisions of be called for that purpose.

________________________________________________

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Publish October 3, 10, 2014

Publish October 3, 10, 2014

Notice of Sale to Satisfy Lien... NOTICE OF SALE TO SATISFY LIEN Minnie Davidson CJ Huebner

The above named persons are hereby notified that the goods/merchandise left by them in South Main Self Storage will be sold by said company at public sale if not claimed by 10-15-2014. The purpose of the sale is to satisfy the lien of said company for storage of said goods, together with incidental and proper charges pertaining thereto including the reasonable expenses of the sale all as allowed by the laws of the State of New Mexico.

Notice of Sale to Satisfy Lien... NOTICE OF SALE TO SATISFY LIEN Marie and Jose Lozano

The above named persons are hereby notified that the goods/merchandise left by them in Linda Vista Lock-Up will be sold by said company at public sale if not claimed by 10-15-2014. The purpose of the sale is to satisfy the lien of said company for storage of said goods, together with incidental and proper charges pertaining thereto including the reasonable expenses of the sale all as allowed by the laws of the State of New Mexico.

Friday, October 3, 2014

002. Northeast NEIGHBORHOOD SALE North Sky Loop, Saturday, October 4th, 7am-Noon.

GARAGE SALES

002. Northeast

819 E. Berrendo, Saturday, 8am-3pm. Some furniture, mostly odds & ends. 1105 E. Madrid, Fri-Sat, 7am-1pm. Clothes, tools, potted parenial flowers.

2727 WILSHIRE Blvd, Annual Yard Sale Oct 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 8am-2pm. Come out and drive or walk, units 1-90 to see what treasures Wilshire Gardens residents have to offer.

GARAGE SALE 306 Broken Arrow Thurs & Fri. 8am-12pm. Furniture, toys, clothes, home decor. THE ROSWELL Refuge for Battered Adults will be holding an Indoor Garage Sale at our Thrift Store on Friday, 10/3 and Saturday, 110/4, from 8am-12pm. The Refuge Thrift Store is located at 1215 N. Garden Ave., North side of the building. All Thrift Store items are marked at low prices to move. Bring 2 canned goods for $1.00 off on your purchase. All profits go to the operations of the Roswell Refuge.

Legals

________________________________________________

Regular Board Meeting...

002. Northeast

311 E. Country Club Rd., Saturday only, 7:30am. Children’s clothing, toys, furniture, Christmas decor & much more. 605 TIERRA Berrenda, Fri-Sat, 7am. Multi family. Furniture, patio cushions, electronics, quality clothes. Wardrobe/moving boxes, shelled pecan $5 per lb. new tempurpedic pillows. 3 PARTY Yard Sale Sat. 8am-? 726 E. Pear A little bit of everything 1108 SAN Juan, Saturday, 7am-12pm. Some furniture, men’s & women’s clothing, Christmas decor. GARAGE SALE Saturday 7-11am. 3210 N. Bandolina Day bed, girl’s desk, fabric, yarn, clothes & more. 414 E. 4th, Fri-Sun, 8am-2pm Baby clothes, women’s clothes, kitchen ware, tools, lots of misc. FRI & Sat. 7am-3:30pm. clothes, bump beds, and more! 632 E. 6th

004. Southeast

Publish October 3, 2014

Public Notice

Regular Board Meeting

Notice is hereby given the Board of Education of the Roswell Independent School District, County of Chaves, State of New Mexico, will hold its regular board meeting on Tuesday, October 7, 2014 at 6:00 p.m. in the Gymnasium of Berrendo Elementary School, 505 W. Pine Lodge, Roswell, NM 88201. ________________________________________________

Notice of Regular Meeting...

Publish October 3, 2014

Public Notice of Regular Meeting of the Southeast Regional Transportation Planning Organization (SERTPO)

A Regular Meeting of the Policy Committee of the Southeast Regional Transportation Planning Organization (SERTPO) will be held on Wednesday, October 15, 2014, at 10:00 am at the Bondurant Room, Roswell Public Library, 301 N. Pennsylvania, Roswell, New Mexico.

If you are an individual with a disability who is in need of a reader, amplifier, qualified sign language interpreter, or any other form of auxiliary aid or service to attend or participate in the meeting, please contact the Southeastern New Mexico Economic Development District (SNMEDD) at (575) 624-6131 at least one (1) week prior to the meeting or as soon as possible. Public documents, including the agenda and minutes, can be provided in various accessible formats. Please contact SNMEDD at (575) 624-6131 if a summary or other type of accessible format is needed.

Legals

1403 & 1501 E. Beech St., East off S. Atkinson, 2 Sales, Fri-Sat, 7am. Furniture, glassware tools, linens, books, plants, craft supplies, rifles, hunting/camping items, lots of misc. BIG BACKYARD sale, 308 E. Poe, Fri-Sat, 7am-? Good stuff & a lot more being added on Saturday. Come check us out. 325 E. Poe, Thurs-Mon, 7am-2pm. Glass computer desk, filing cabinet, & more. YARD SALE 3 Coronado Circle Sat 8am-noon. 319 E. Poe Fri & Sat. Raider’s Jacket, full size refrigerator, too much to mention. BIG YARD Sale, 203 E. Conner St., Fri-Sat only. Freezer, furniture, lamps, boys clothes 8 mos-2 yrs, collectibles. Too much to mention. CARPORT SALE 1205 E. Hobbs Fri & Sat. 6am-? A lot of baby clothes, toddlers, new & used princess house items, household items.

_________________________________________________________________________

Application No. RA-1485 (T)...

Publish September 26, October 3, 10, 2014

NOTICE is hereby given that on September 10, 2014, Dominic Batista, 342 Morgan Road, Hagerman, New Mexico 88232; c/o Atkins Engineering Associates, Inc., Richard C. Cibak, P.O. Box 3156, Roswell, New Mexico 88202- 3156 filed application No. RA-1485 (T) with the STATE ENGINEER for permit to temporarily change place of use and to supplement the shallow groundwater in the Roswell Underground Water Basin in the State of New Mexico.

The applicant seeks authorization to use existing shallow wells as supplemental points of diversion for the diversion of 216.60 acre-feet per annum plus carriage allowance (151.62 acre-feet per annum Consumptive Use) of shallow groundwater as follows: WELLS Existing: RA-1485 RA-1485-S RA-1485-S-3

SUBDIVISION

NE1/4SW1/4NW1/4 W1/2NE1/4NW1/4 NE1/4SW1/4NW1/4

Proposed Supplemental Wells: SW1/4NW1/4NW1/4 RA-1369 RA-1369-S SW1/4NW1/4NW1/4

SECTION 18 18 18

18 18

TOWNSHIP 14 S. 14 S. 14 S.

RANGE 26 E. 26 E. 26 E.

14 S. 14 S.

26 E. 26 E.

RANGE

ACRES

The current place of use of shallow groundwater is on land described as below:

SUBDIVISION Parts of E1/2NW1/4 and Parts of SW1/4NW1/4 and Commercial Dairy

SECTION

TOWNSHIP

18

14 S.

26 E.)

Up to 72.2

Under the proposed application, said shallow groundwater will continue to be used for the irrigation of up to 72.2 acres of land and/or commercial dairy purposes described as below:

SUBDIVISION SECTION Parts of E1/2NW1/4 and Parts of SW1/4NW1/4 and Commercial Dairy 18 Parts of Lot 4, SW1/4SW1/4 07 Parts of Lot 1, NW1/4NW1/4 18

TOWNSHIP 14 S. 14 S. 14 S.

RANGE 26 E.) 26 E.) 26 E.)

ACRES

Up to 72.2

This application is made to temporarily add two existing shallow wells and to expand the place of use and will expire on October 31, 2021. Applicant has also requested authorization to cancel all or part of any permit resulting from this application, prior to the requested expiration date, by written request. The above described points of diversion and places of use are located near the intersection of East Morgan Road and Cherokee Road, south west of the Town of Hagerman, Chaves County, New Mexico.

Any person, firm or corporation or other entity having standing to file objections or protests shall do so in writing (legible, signed, and include the writer’s complete name and mailing address). The objection to the approval of the application must be based on: (1) Impairment; if impairment you must specifically identify your water rights; and/or (2) Public welfare/conservation of water; if public welfare or conservation of water within the state of New Mexico, you must show you will be substantially affected. The written protest must be filed, in triplicate, with Scott A.Verhines, P.E., State Engineer, 1900 West Second Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, within ten (10) days after the date of last publication of this Notice. Facsimiles (fax) will be accepted as a valid protest as long as the hard copy is sent within 24-hours of the facsimile. Mailing postmark will be used to validate the 24-hour period. Protest can be faxed to Office of the State Engineer, (575) 623-8559. If no valid protest or objection is filed, the State Engineer will evaluate the application in accordance with Sections 72-2-16, 72-5-6, and 72-12-3.

B9

004. Southeast 1613 S. Stanton Fri, Sat, Sun. 7am. A little bit of everything.

10 MULTI Family Garage Sale 310 E. Poe Saturday 8am. Baby girl, boy clothes, baby swing, baby girl crib, beautiful jewelry, women’s and men’s clothes, shoes, coach, Michael Kors purse Home decorations. Too much to list. Don’t Miss out. Something for Everyone!! 1401 S. Monroe, Fri-Sun, 7am. A little bit of everything.

006. Southwest 803 S. Richardson, October 1st-5th. Hunting and fishing equip. of all kinds, & misc. items.

HUGE ESTATE/GARAGE Sale, Oct. 2-5, 8am-6:30pm. Lots of furniture, kitchenware, Dutch oven cookware, camping, hunting & fishing gear, framed wildlife & western (Wayne Baize) prints. Auto parts, and more. Something for everyone. All items priced to sell. 1000 W. Mathews (one block south of Deming on Union).

HUGE YARD Sale 2100 Barnett Dr. Corner of Poe and Barnett Thurs, Fri, Sat. 8am-4pm. 4702 W. Jefferson, Friday-Saturday, 7am-?

2200 W. Alameda, Fri-Sat, 9am-? Handcrafted greeting cards, storm windows w/screens, large show time rotisserie, exercise glider, old glassware, lots & lots of misc.

1402 MEADOW Lane, Fri-Sat, 8am. 2 party sale. Furniture & misc. items. CARPORT SALE Sat only 8-12. Antique sewing machine, grill, and more! 2002 S. Adams Dr. BACKYARD SALE, 702 S. Kansas, Fri-Sat. 2 motor homes, chain link parts, storm door parts, foundation stones, volleyball goals & net. KELLY’S GARAGE Sale Ceramic dolls, records, baby misc., lots of misc. 409 Ave. D, West of Roswell across from Hwy Dept., end of road. Fri-Sat, 7am-?

503 S. Kentucky Sat. 8am. Queen/double beds, loveseat, clothes, misc.

BIG BACKYARD Sale, 605 S. Birch, Sat., 6:30am? Stove, fridge, house decor, TVs, knick knack’s, lots of ladies clothes & shoes, men’s jackets, children’s clothes, jewelry, blankets, curtains & computers. A LITTLE bit of everything, clothes, shoes, toys, some furniture. Fri & Sat. 7am-3pm. 2703 S. Lea 1805 S. Sunset Storage, Saturday, Oct. 4th, 9am-2pm.

YARD SALE 4702 W. Jefferson Fri & Sat. 7-? Hunt-fish-camping. 50 Cal. Rifle, Supply’s 2300 Watt Gen.

007. West

4801 W. 2nd & Brown Rd., Inside & Outside, Today & Sunday.

008. Northwest 1401 SIMPSON Dr., Sat 7am-2pm. baby high chair, exercise bike, boys clothes 18-24 mos, serger, sandbox, Halloween customs, lots of misc.

1805 N. Washington, October 3rd-7th, 9am-6pm. New & Old. FRIDAY-SATURDAY, 8AM, 1108 & 1109 N. Delaware. Misc. items, 50’s classic dinette set.

1814 N. Michigan Friday 7am firm. Ladies recliner, bandsaw, misc. 602 ESTRELLITA (Enchanted Hills), Saturday, 7am. Misc. items.

2 TAOS Ct, off North Washington on NMMI golf course. Saturday, 7am-2pm, October 4. Antiques & collectibles, glassware, lamps, milk bottles, flower pots, Tonkas, bicycles, wagons, Coke items, pictures, jewelry & music boxes, small tables, stools, tools, ladders, fishing & camping equip., Graniteware, traps, knives, marbles, brass & much more. GARAGE SALE Fri & Sat. 6am-4pm. 1006 N. Kentucky


B10 Friday, October 3, 2014 008. Northwest 704 N. Heights, Friday-Saturday. A little bit of everything.

INSTRUCTION

EMPLOYMENT

045. Employment Opportunities

4708 ACACIA Friday 7am By Berrendo Elementary. Tools, Xmas decor, misc. 1010 W. 4th, Saturday, 7am-11am. Some furniture, dishes, dryer, car stuff, lots of misc. 905 W. Berrendo Household goods, clothing, nails & bolts, lots of misc. Fri & Sat. 7:30-2pm. FURNITURE, TOOLS, freezer, TVs, lots of winter clothes & misc items. Fri & Sat. 7am 904 W. 9th 3202 W. 8th, Saturday, 8am-1pm.

ANNOUNCEMENTS 025. Lost and Found

PUT GRAPHICS IN YOUR AD! ADD A PICTURE OF YOUR PET, YOUR HOUSE, YOUR CAR, YOUR COMPANY’S LOGO!

045. Employment Opportunities

PASTA CAFE NOW HIRING for all positions. Apply in person between the hours of 2-4pm.1208 N. Main St. in Roswell, NM CATTLE BARON NOW HIRING for all positions. Apply in person between the hours of 2-4pm.1113 N. Main St. in Roswell, NM

Apartment Maintenance Worker needed. Painting, plumbing, carpet, A/C, landscaping. You will be doing a bit of everything. Must be honest, reliable, hard working & pass a drug test. Pay based on experience $9-$11 per hr. 622-4944 PHYSICIAN NEEDED for Saturday physicals Roswell, Alamogordo, Carlsbad and or Hobbs on Saturdays. $800 per day, more depending on travel. Call Dr. Fox 443-838-1168

E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

$1000 REWARD per cat! Lost 7 toed cats, Cali and Princess, long hair black & white, Calico with sagging stomach. Base area 575-420-7153 or 432-244-8204 FOUND FEMALE puppy with collar, on S. Kentucky near Yucca Center. Call to identify after 6 days free to good home 623-1789 LOST THURSDAY 10/2 Female, white salt & pepper color, German Shepherd mix. Looks like a white wolf, “Gracy” very friendly. Broke off collar. 503 S. Delaware. 575-637-0828 or 317-2781, 623-3578 or 623-1513

PECOS VALLEY Broadcasting has immediate openings for Advertising Sales Representatives. Help local businesses grow their business by selling them advertising our or many platforms including radio, video and digital. Base salary plus generous commission program. We’ll train! Apply with Gene Dow VP & GM, hireme@pvbcradio.com PVBC is an Equal Opportunity Employer! Women and minorities are strongly encouraged to apply. FARLEYS, FOOD, FUN & PUB NOW HIRING for all positions. Apply in person between the hours of 2-4pm.1315 N. Main St. in Roswell, NM

MEDICAL OFFICE BILLING: Full-time 8-5 M-F. Experience with medical insurance billing, payment posting, CPT and ICD-coding preferred. Insurance contracting a plus. Competitive salary and full benefits including health insurance, 401K, and profit sharing. Pre-employment testing will be conducted. Send cover letter with resume and three references to medicalbillingroswell@ gmail.com. Applicants will be held in strictest confidence.

Do you like to write about sports? The Roswell Daily Record is seeking freelance sports writers to cover football and other prep and college sports. Email resume and writing samples to editor@rdrnews.com.

CLASSIFIEDS

045. Employment Opportunities

KYMERA INDEPENDENT PHYSICIANS is Seeking Qualified Candidates for the following FT position:

RN BSN and/or OCN preferred. Knowledge of EMR & PIXIS systems, Computer skills and ACLS required. Fax Resume w/ Cover Letter to KYMERA HR 575-627-9520

DEAN BALDWIN Painting is currently seeking a Purchasing Manager for its Roswell, NM facility. The right candidate should have a Strong Knowledge of inventory Control practices, and is responsible for entering purchase orders and coordinating delivery. Please apply at Dean Baldwin Painting or Online at www.deanbaldwinpainting.com

FALL into a new career with our growth oriented company in the Roswell area. These positions offer the advancement potential not found in an ordinary 9-5 job.

No experience necessary, training provided.

Those accepted will start immediately. Neat appearance and ability to work with other people is a plus. For an appointment call 575-208-2364 HEAVY EQUIPMENT operator dozer, maintainer, class A CDL helpful. 622-6983, leave message.

$2000 BONUS! Oilfield drivers. High hourly, Overtime. Class A-CDL/Tanker. 1 year driving Experience. Home 1 Week Monthly. Paid Travel, Lodging. Relocation NOT necessary. 1-800-588-2669. www.tttransports.com BEALLS NOW HIRING Cosmetics and Sales Associates. Minimum 2 yrs experience. Apply online at www.stagestoresinc.com/c areer.search

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 (575)-622-7710 --- 625-0421 Fax 2301 N. Main TO BUY-SELL-RENT-TRADE ANY AND EVERYTHING

CLASSIFICATION

PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE

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

EXPIRES ________

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

WORD AD DEADLINE To Place or Cancel an Ad

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

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

CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS

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

LEGALS

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

www.rdrnews.com

Add 12 word count to word ad for approved addressing directions.

L&F DISTRIBUTORS Class A CDL Drivers For Roswell, NM Area Qualified applicant must have good driving record. Current commercial license preferable. Previous experience delivering product a plus. Good communication and customer service skills. Interested applicants apply at: L&F Distributors 2200 North Atkinson Roswell, NM 88201 575-622-0380 An Equal Opportunity Employer GATEWAY CHRISTIAN PRESCHOOL is currently taking applications for a full-time preschool teacher and kitchen help. We’re looking for Christian workers with high-energy and good people skills who love children. Minimum High School Diploma or higher is needed, and experience working with children is also a requirement. Apply at 1900 N. Sycamore, no phone calls please ATTENTION 10 people needed to start immediately in customer service, $400 a week per written agreement. Rapid advancement, no experience necessary. Apply today, start tomorrow. 575-208-2364

FRONT DESK ATTENDANT Come Grow With Us! As we expand we are looking for front desk applicants who can work flexible schedules. Apply in-person @ 2803 W 2nd

045. Employment Opportunities

Avon, Buy/Sell. I can help you build your business or team. Sandy 317-5079 ISR MJG CORPORATION is currently accepting applications for experienced HVAC Techs. WE WILL NEGOTIATE AND BEAT YOUR EXSITING PAY! Send resume or employment history to 204 W. 4th St. Roswell, New Mexico 88201: Call 575-622-8711 or fax to 575-623-3075 email to: mjgcorp@cs.com

PRICE’S CREAMERIES is seeking Route Sales Driver in Roswell with one to two years experience in direct delivery route sales in the food and/or beverage industry with a valid CDL A or B. Work Schedule (M T-Th-F) with great benefits and competitive pay. Submit resume to www.deanfoods.com by October 7, 2014. EEOE M/F/D/V Medical front office, PT, medical billing experience preferred. 415-260-2618

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

Environmental Services Techs (housekeeping) - Full and Part Time Positions Available

Medical Assistants Various Clinics - Full Time

ENMMC offers a competitive benefit package. Apply online at www.enmmc.com. EOE/Drug Free Employer

LEARN TO drive in 5 short weeks. Artesia Training Academy has new classes forming. CDL Class A with endorsements. VA approved. 20 years of service to South East New Mexico. Call for more information 575-748-9766 or 1-888-586-0144 visit us at www.artesiatraining.com or visit us on Facebook. EXPERIENCED SHOP WELDER WANTED. Apply in person at Key’s Drilling & Pump Service, 1012 E. 2nd, Roswell.

PORTOFINO REST. Hiring food servers. Apply in person between 2-4pm. Must be 19 yrs and older. KYMERA NEW MEDICAL OFFICE POSITION: As a growing Independent Physicians Office, Kymera is now seeking Qualified Applicants for:

Lab Technologist / CLS – FT: 3-4 yrs exp preferred. CLIA qualified Medical Technologist. Ability to work independently. Supervisory & Administrative Exp req. Working knowledge of Federal regulations.

Office Support Staff: FT - Customer Svc Skills & ability to work with multi-line telephone system required. Applicants should demonstrate friendly/outgoing attitude, and organizational skills. 1 – 2 yrs working in Medical Office Setting and computer knowledge required. Experience with Electronic Medical Records preferred. Please fax resume with cover letter to: Human Resources 575-627-9520

Roswell Daily Record

045. Employment Opportunities

Accountant/Bookkeeper needed for a friendly, growing CPA firm. Duties include general ledger preparation through financial statement presentation. Experience in basic tax return preparation is a plus. Experience with Microsoft Word and Excel would be helpful, but not required. We offer flexible hours, a pleasant working environment and excellent benefits including medical insurance reimbursement, profit-sharing and pension plans. You will be the sixteenth person in our office family and you will enjoy working with us. E-mail your resume or letter of introduction to dsc.classified@gmail.com or mail to DSC, PO Box 2034, Roswell, NM 88202-2034.

AGAPE HOME Care needs part time dependable caregiver in Roswell. Apply at 606 W. 2nd. FIRST UNITED Methodist Church seeks full time staff member in faith development, with an emphasis on children’s programming. Will consider part-time position in children’s program. Applications reviewed beginning October 3 until position is filled. Detailed job description available. 200 N Pennsylvania Ave, Roswell, NM 88201. 575.622.1881. Emerald AdvanEdge NOW HIRING! Looking for Full-time Sales and Customer Services Representative. Call for more information, 575-208-4934 from 10am-5pm or submit resume to

Dennis the Menace

045. Employment Opportunities

COMFORT KEEPERS is pursuing experienced caregivers to work in the Roswell, Dexter, Hagerman and Artesia areas. We offer flexible schedules both part time and full time with competitive pay. Stop by our Roswell office at: 1410 South Main to visit with us today or call Kim at 575-624-9999 for more information.

ELECTRICAL WIRING INSTRUCTOR – Roswell HBI’s program at the Roswell Job Corps Center is seeking a full-time electrical wiring instructor. Must have a HS diploma or equivalent. Five years’ experience in electrical wiring also required plus the ability to teach young adults. Competitive salary plus full benefits including paid leave. Learn more and apply at www.hbi.org. EOE/AA/M/F/D/V CAREER OPPORTUNITIES, Inc., contractor for the Roswell Job Corps is currently recruiting for Career Technical Instructor substitutes. We are in need of applicants with expertise in one of the areas of electrical, facilities maintenance, painting, culinary arts, law enforcement, and health occupations. Salary range is $15.00-$16.00/hr. Join the Job Corps Team and share your talent and experience and see the end result of students becoming productive citizens. Our motto “Leadership Begins With Me”. Send resumes to gonzalez.mary@jobcorps.org. An EO Employer M/F/D/V.

PART-TIME HUMAN RESOURCES CLERK

Leprino Foods Company, the nation’s premier manufacturer of mozzarella cheese, is seeking a highly motivated individual with strong administrative skills to fill this entry-level position. The successful candidate will be responsible for providing part-time clerical support to the HR department with an emphasis on assisting the clerical needs of the plant’s training and development initiatives.

Qualifications: • Skilled in Microsoft Office Suite, SAP, Kronos, Groupwise, Print Shop, Internet etc. • Knowledge of office operations, i.e. knowledge of operating printer, copier, fax etc. • Ability to complete tasks in a timely manner. • High degree of detail orientation and accuracy. • Must have strong organizational and communication skills. • Must be able to work independently. • Must be able to work with a high degree of confidentiality and within HIPPA regulations.

Responsibilities/Duties • Hardcopy document filing (safety training, job training, personnel information, medical information & legal information) • Data input in the Learning Management System. • Creation and maintenance of various spreadsheets. • Special projects/requests as assigned by HR team. • Run job training and safety reports from the LMS. • This position serves as the backup for the Staff Management Secretary.

If you meet the qualifications and are interested please apply online at www.leprinofoods.com. Leprino Foods is an equal opportunity employer supporting a drug and tobacco free workplace M/F/D/V

DO YOU LOVE LOCAL SPORTS? The Roswell Daily Record is seeking a sports reporter/copy editor. The position will require a combination of covering games and sports events along with working at night to produce sports pages and post stories to the website. Experience with QuarkXpress and/or InDesign preferred. Some travel required to nearby cities like Hobbs, Artesia and Carlsbad. Email resume and writing clips (required) to editor@rdrnews.com.

SERVICES

080. Alterations

hr@emeraldadvanedge.com

THE ROSWELL Chamber of Commerce is now accepting resumes please include professional references. This position is a full time Membership Coordinator and Special Events planning, this position is in a very busy organization. Qualifying candidate must be detail oriented, well organized and dependable, high energy, excellent grammar and communication skills, and possess excellent time management skills. Applicant must enjoy working with the public. Computer skills are critical in word, excel, publisher. Must have knowledge of social media and email correspondence. To apply send resume and references to candace@roswellnm.org, or you can deliver your resume to 131 W. 2ndStreet. Serious Individuals who want to work please inquire.

045. Employment Opportunities

Transcription/Case Entry: Full Time M-F 9am-6pm. Excellent grammar, punctuation, spelling, and communication skills mandatory. Typing and grammar testing will be conducted. Please send cover letter with resume and three references to roswellscript@gmail.com BUTCH’S RATHOLE & ANCHOR SERVICE Now hiring Class A CDL drivers for Artesia, NM yard. Insurance & 401K. 575-513-1482, Garry.

Interim Health Care of Roswell is seeking part time LPN/LVN and part time RN. Please stop by 1210 N. Main, Suite 200, between 8-2, Mon-Fri for application or call 575-625-8885. www.interimhealthcare.com ATTENTION $400/week per written agreement. Local corporation wants 15 sharp and motivated people. Excellent opportunity for career minded people. No experience necessary. For personal interview call Monday and Tuesday only. 575-578-4817 DAYS INN: Now Hiring Part time Front desk clerk. Experience Preferred, But Not Required. Will Train. Must Be Able To Work Weekends. Please Apply At 1310 N. Main St. Between 9am-2pm. NO PHONE CALLS.

Veterinary Technician Casa Querencia Animal Health Center, LLC, is looking for a full time veterinary technician. Commensurate determined by experience. Please submit resumes to Casa Querencia Animal Health Center, LLC, 1607 Fowler Rd., Roswell, NM 88201 or email at casaquerencia@gmail.com Attn: Office Manager. Closing date is October 16, 2014. SOUTHEAST NM Community Action Corporation Head Start Program is accepting applications for the following locations: Carlsbad: Site Supervisor ~ 21.05 (DOQ) Roswell: Teacher ~ $15.42 to $21.69 (DOQ) Teacher Assistant ~ $10.23 Education Assistant~ $15.42~$21.69 (DOQ)

ALTERATIONS & Misc. Sewing - Call 840-8065

140. Cleaning

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

150. Concrete

Running Bear Concrete Foundations, Driveways, Stamping, Sidewalks, Curbing, Stucco. Lic: 373219. Call 317-6058

185. Electrical

ELECTRICAL SERVICES Meter loops, service upgrades, remodels, additions, service calls. Lowest prices in town. Free estm. Lic#360025 513-4816

195. Elderly Care

CAREGIVER FOR your loved ones. Loving Christian experience. 575-291-4840 PRIVATE CAREGIVER with over 10 years experience. Looking to provide personal care, take to Dr. appts., cooking, housekeeping, bathing, dressing & companionship for your loved ones. Very flexible hours & available to work overnight if needed. References. 575-317-3629

200. Fencing

Rodriguez Construction FOR WOOD, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100 M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991

210. Firewood/Coal

JIM’S WOOD pile has your firewood ready. Seasoned splite 575-208-2870

225. General Construction

Alpha Construction New Construction, remodels, additions, concrete & painting. Lic. & Bonded Call Adam 626-2050

230. General Repair

MINOR REPAIRS can make major changes in your home, Call Home Solutions 575-420-9183. HOME REPAIRS No Job to Small/Large. Reasonable Rates. 575-317-2357

232. Chimney Sweep

Benefits for above positions:g Medical/Dental, Life/LTD, retirement plans, sick leave, annual leave, paid Holidays (if eligible)

CHIMNEY SWEEP Have your woodstove, fireplace, or pellet stove inspected and cleaned. Dust free Guarantee. 39 yrs Exp., Licensed, Insured. Bulldog Janitorial Services 575-308-9988

Benefits g Retirement plan after two years

PROPERTY CLEANUPS Tear down old bldgs, barns, haul trash, old farm equip. 347-0142/317-7738

Substitutes (Teacher Assistant & Cook Assistant) ~ $9.26

Monday ~ Thursday Four Day Work Week!! Review Deadline October 16, 2014 Positions will remain open until filled

Review job description/work schedule at Department of Workforce Solutions 2110 W Main, Roswell NM or mail application to 1915 San Jose Blvd, Carlsbad, NM 88220 Go to www.snmcac.org to print out application packet. SNMCAC is an EEOE

235. Hauling 270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

WE WORK Yard & alley cutting, tree pruning, hauling. Call Will at 317-7402 or 317-2573. Emerald Landscaping Lawn & sprinkler installation, sprinkler repair, sod, gravel, lawn maintenance. Maintenance/Free Estimates/accept credit cards. Lic#89265. Call: Aaron, 575-910-0150 or Chris, 420-3945


Roswell Daily Record 270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

LIGHTHOUSE LAWN-SERVICE affordable basic lawn care. No job too big or small, we do it all! Free estimates, call 575-626-0200. LAWN SERVICE and trees cut down. 575-420-0965

285. Miscellaneous Services

FINGER PRINTING in Roswell. Traditional INK Printing! By appointment only. 1401 W. 2nd, 626-1244 SHARI`S BERRIES Order Mouthwatering Gifts for any Occasion! SAVE 20 percent on qualifying orders over $29! Fresh Dipped Berries starting at $19.99! Visit www.berries.com/big or Call 1-800-406-5015 DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. 800-948-7239 BUNDLE AND SAVE! DIRECTV, INTERNET& PHONE From $69.99/mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, starz, SHOWTIME & CINEMAX FREE GENIE 4-Room Upgrade LOCK IN 2 YR Savings Call 1-800-264-0340 Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-661-3783, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping. DIRECTV starting at $24.95/mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, starz, SHOWTIME & CINEMAX FREE RECEIVER Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-418-7949 REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL!* Get a whole-home Satellite system installed at NO COST and programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/DVR Upgrade to new callers, SO CALL NOW 1-800-719-8092 DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-315-7043 A.S.A.P. MOBILE Wash. Call us, we come to you. 420-4375 or 420-5858

310. Painting/ Decorating

TIME TO PAINT? Quality int./ext. painting. Call 637-9108. Quality Painting! Affordable prices, Sr. Discounts. Mike 622-0072

330. Plumbing

REASONABLE REPAIRS plumbing, new construction, heat pumps, lic 27043. 317-4147

345. Remodeling

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

345. Remodeling

NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552. Reasonable Remodeling Contractor Specializing on kitchen & bathrooms. New Additions & Roofing. NM Lic. 27043. 317-4147.

350. Roofing

IB CONSTRUCTION & Roofing specializing in Ins. claims, re-roofs, roof-leak & all types of construction Lic# 368776 www.ibcnm.com 575-805-9313 I HAVE experience installing metal roofs or leaks. Free estimates. Call Fernando 575-308-3461

395. Stucco Plastering

490. Homes For Sale 3/2/1, Great condition, lots of features, must see interior, $83,900. 622-1204. VERY NICE completely remodeled 3br/2ba, must see, 38 Wildy Dr. 840-8160 FSBO, serious inquiries only. N. Sky Loop, 2,437 Sq ft., 4bd/2ba/3 car gar. Adam 575-914-0927 NW BEST deal! 3001 Sq Ft+ 3bd/2ba/2 car gar. Formal dining and living room, den, laundry room. $165K Call 622-6170

492. Homes for Sale/Rent

400. Tax Service

ARE YOU in BIG trouble with the IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Seen on CNN. A BBB. Call 1-800-921-5512 REDUCE YOUR Past Tax Bill by as much as 75 Percent. Stop Levies, Liens and Wage Garnishments. Call The Tax DR Now to see if you Qualify 1-800-912-0758

405. TractorWork LOTS MOWED & demolition of houses. 575-420-0100

Tractor work Lots mowed, discing, blading, post holes. 347-0142 or 317-7738

410. Tree Service

MAJESTIC TREE Service Free estimates 622-1792 or 940-577-0968 PROFESSIONAL TREE trimming and removal. Licensed/insured 910-4581 Allen’s Tree Srvc. Tree top removal, good clean up, free estimates 626-1835

FINANCIAL

REAL ESTATE

490. Homes For Sale PUBLISHER’S NOTICE:

All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.

540. Apartments Unfurnished

VALLE ENCANTADA YOUR BEST $ RENTAL VALUE! LARGE 1,2,3 BEDROOMS. FREE UTILITIES. unfurnished, laundry room, playground, pool, ample parking. 2001 South Sunset. 623-3722. Town Plaza Apartments NO HUD ACCEPTED ALL UTILITIES PAID Seniors receive 10% discount Friendly managers. New Renovated 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. 575-623-2735. FIRST MONTH FREE 3br/2ba, $777, 1000 sqft, all bills paid, cable inc. cold central AC, newly remodeled, 502 S. Wyoming, 622-4944.

Stucco, Lath, Synthetic, guaranteed work. Memo 575-637-1217 M. G. Horizons All types of Stucco and Wire lath. Free Estimates 623-1991

CLASSIFIEDS

SELL OR RENT YOUR HOUSE FASTER! INCLUDE A PICTURE FOR JUST $5! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale 20 Y 40 acres con bajo entre se puede financiar. Puedo agarrar una troca de entre. 575-910-0644

510. Resort-Out of Town

ADVERTISE YOUR VACATION PROPERTY, to more than 284,000 New Mexico newspaper readers. Your 25-word classified ad will appear in 32 newspapers around the state for only $100. Call this newspaper for more details or visit www.nmpress.org for more info.

515. Mobile Homes - Sale

28X80 DOUBLE wide mobile home 4bd/3ba great room and dining room, large kitchen and living room, all appliances, fireplace, cathedral ceiling $44,000. 623-1321

520. Lots for Sale

PREMIUM 5 acre tracts, good covenants (no mobile homes), Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd between Country Club & Berrendo. Owner will finance with 10% down. 622-3479, 624-9607, 910-1913, 626-6791, 626-3848. Mobile Home Lots for sale: Lot size 50x134 $19,500. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. 420-1352.

RENTALS

535. Apartments Furnished 1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331

ALL BILLS PAID cable inc. 1BR $569, 2BR $677, 3br/2ba $777/mo., ref air, newly remodeled. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944 EFF, 1 & 2br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348. PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOME SERVICES, 501 NORTH MAIN. EFF, 1,2 BR, downtown, clean, wtr pd. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD. 623-8377 1 & 2 bedrooms for rent at the Southbrook Apartment & Townhomes. Call 622-1260 between 8am-5pm, Monday-Friday. Townhome 2br 2ba 1 car gar. 16 C Bent Tree no pets $800 mo. $800 dep. 575-520-7242 712 & 714 E. 3rd HUD APPROVED $450 month 2 bed, Water pd. Call Stephanie 622-0021 SENIOR 60+ Giant 1bd $500, Giant 2 bd $600, Giant 3bd $700. All utilities paid, wonderful location, nice managers. Call now 623-2735. BETTER LIVING is within reach! 2br/1ba $592, 3br/2ba, $674, 5br/2ba $812, central H/C, fridge, stove, DW, GD, W/D hookups, 2 refreshing pools, Section 8 Vouchers accepted, 623-7711, Villas of Briar Ridge. 1704-A W 1st, 525.00 mo., wtr pd. Call American Realty & Mgmt 575-623-9711 1700 N. Pontiac Apartment. 2br&1br, washer/ dryer hookup, stove & fridge, 1-626-864-3461

1&2Bd, 3 locations, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331

545. Houses for Rent-Furnished 1 or 2bd, furnished-unfurnished, no smoking/Hudpets. all bills pd. 623-6281

CONDO IN Ruidoso Downs 2br/2.5ba, $1000/mo $500/dep, 575-910-1300.

Friday, October 3, 2014

550. Houses for 555. Mobile RentHomes for Rent Unfurnished 2BD/2BA MOBILE home TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Berkshire Hathaway Home Services. 575-624-2262 502 W. Albuquerque 2bd washer/dryer hookup, refrigerator air, stove & fridge, no Hud no pets. $550mo $500dep. 914-5402 504 W. Albuquerque 2bd washer/dryer hookup, refrigerator air, stove & fridge, No Hud no pets. $600mo $500dep. 914-5402 305 W Deming-C 1bd/1ba new tile throughout $550mo $300dep. All bills paid. 623-8922 413 S. Cypress 2bd w/d hookup, refrig. air, stove & fridge, No Hud/Pets $700mo $500dp 914-5402

VERY NICE- Avail. Oct 1st 3bd/2ba. Refrig. Air, Db garage, fenced backyard, nice area, 1,000 mo-1,000dep. Call 622-5806 or 420-3252 1801 WESTERN Ave 3bdr 1 3/4 bath located on double lot. New kitchen updates + appliances & large front yard. $975mo $500dep. No Hud. Call 420-5006 or 420-9565 3BR/3BA, 2 living areas, fenced yard, 610 S. Aspen, No HUD, $1100/mo. 575-626-4374 EXECUTIVE HOME, 1304 Alicia Ln, 4 bed/2.5 bath/2 car, $1925.00 mo. NO PETS/Smoking, 905 N. Pecan, 3/1, $650.00 mo., 1201 N. Union, 2/1, $525.00 mo., call American Realty & Mgmt, 575-623-9711 3/2, $800mo, $800dep. No Hud/pets Call or txt 575-420-1579 or 420-5930 2/2/1, $1050/$1050dep. No Hud/pets. Call or txt 575-420-1579 or 420-5930 NW AREA, extra nice 3br/2.5ba,2 living areas, $1200/mo, no HUD 622-9107 3BR/1BA, $300/dep, $500/mo, no utilities paid. No pets, HUD maybe, 410 SE. Beech 575-578-0971. 2BR HOUSE for rent, Hagerman, 575-626-7205. Clean 2BR, 1527 N. Michigan $500 + Dep. No Pets. No HUD. Call 626-2190. Clean 2br, 303 S. Missouri, all bills pd., $550/mo + dep, no pets or HUD. 626-2190 1400 S. Madison, 2br/1ba, hardwood floors, 1 car gar., dogs w/fee, no HUD or bills paid, some appliances, $850/$700 dep, 575-405-0163 kilok9s@gmail.com 2&3Bd, 1&2Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 704 GREENWOOD 4bd, 2 living area, 2 baths, refrigerator air, stove & fridge, washer/dryer hookup. No HUD, No pets. $1000mo. $800dep. 914-5402 1BR, 1BA, 600 A. S. Wyoming $425 mo., $300 dep. Call Julie 505-220-0617. 2BR/1BA, FENCED yard, central air, w/d hookups, 2 blks from school, no pets, $500/mo, $500/dep. 575-420-6328

Furnished Efficiency $400 mo. $200 dep. Bills pd. No pets. 1-2 people only. 423 E. 5th 622-5301.

3br/1ba, 607 S. Kansas, $800/mo, $500/dep, stove, fridge, w/d hookups, ref. air, HUD okay. 626-9509

1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331

2br house for rent, $650/dep, $650/mo, wtr pd. 575-624-8849

for rent $450mo $450dep. No pets 575-622-0580

558. Roommates Wanted

ROOM FOR rent, cable, phone, washer/dryer, $350/mo. 575-578-7004

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

Power wheelchair, hospital bed, CPAP breathing unit, patient lifter, 622-7638 2012 FUJI Sunfire 4.0 Bycicle $400. Call after 2:30pm 575-914-9179

569. Mobile Home Spaces/Lots

SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-591-5109 to start your application today!

580. Office or Business Places

2006 TAHITIAN Jacuzzi by Caldera for sale $2,000. 575 317 9572 for inquiries.

PRIVATE LOT near Home Depot $200/month 2411 North Cole 626-0934

STOREFRONT or professional office Suite at 105 W. 6th. 575-420-6050 2100/2102 S. Main for lease, 627-9942

PROFESSIONAL OFFICE Lease – 111 S Kentucky Ave (@ Walnut St) 150 or 185 SF, utilities pd – PH 575/623.8331 SMALL OFFICE, 311 W. 2nd. Great location, Call John Grieves 575-626-7813 FOR LEASE, space in Sunwest Centre Office Complex at 500 N. Main St. Various size spaces. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. High floor space available for larger tenants. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 575-623-1652 or mobile 575-420-2546 301 W Mcgaffey, 100 E Linda Vista 204 W 2nd Call 637-5315 OFFICE SPACE in down town Roswell. Available Now Approx. 900 sq. ft; 2 bath rm; 4 rooms: $775.00 per month, utilities paid Kraft & Hunter Law Firm 575-625-2000 OPEN A Victorian Tea House for under 15K. Furniture, appliances, decorations, carpets, tea sets, crystal, silverware, teas, servers, recipes, schedules and much, much more. Sold as an entire lot only. Can be seen by appointment only. 575-618-0221 EXECUTIVE OFFICE Space For Lease Roswell, NM

Will lease all or part of the 3000 square feet newly finished, professional use, office space. Building is monitored by local security service with surveillance cameras, well maintained parking lot, and quite peaceful surroundings. Options available: utilities, in house receptionist, and use of modern Multi Media/Conference room. For details please call Cheri at 575-622-1127 Ext. 11.

MERCHANDISE

CORN ROASTERS for sale. $1300. 575-626-3072 MIRRORED ENTRYWAY table with hat rack, couch and loveseat set, coffee and end tables, recliners, desk with hutch, beds, day bed, dinette set, dryer, small chest freezer, side by side refrigerator, lots of used name brand jeans. Call or text 575-317-6285.

615. Coins, Gold, Silver, Buy, Sell, Trade

U.S. & FOREIGN coins and currency, buy, sell or trade, gold and silver coins. 622-7239, 2513 W. 2nd

620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous TOP DOLLAR Paid for furniture, collectibles, appliances, antiques, tools, saddles, plus anything else of value. We pay cash with same day removal of all items. Compete/partial households & personal estates welcome. 623-0136 or 910-6031

WANTED WHEAT pennies & Indian Head pennies. Call 813-240-1342 I AM interested in buying furniture and appliances. Call 575-317-6285.

630. Auction Sales

PUBLIC AUCTION Mechanic Lien 2007 Chevy HHR 3GNDA33P87S507456 $8300 1995 Chevy Blazer 1GNCS13W7S2232705 $4280 Oct 10th 2014 10am to 10:30am. 405 Husky Rd Roswell Nm

640. Household Goods

WHIRLPOOL 5 spd dishwasher, $200 & heavy duty dryer, $150. 575-637-9983

715. Hay and Feed Sale

2 STRING alfalfa bale $10 each, 4x8 oat bales $140. 4X8 alfalfa bales $200, 626-0159

745. Pets for Sale

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

NEED FURNITURE Shop Blair’s for the best prices on used furniture, beds, dressers, table & chairs, living room sets, patio sets, bookshelves, appliances, antiques, collectibles, home decor & housewares, saddles, tools, movies, plus lots more. Open daily 9-5, closes Wed. 627-2033

B11

745. Pets for Sale

CATS, KITTENS, free to loving home, tame, box trained. 575-444-6227 or 575-208-9715 10 WEEK old AKC Tea Cup Pomeranian, all papers and shots. Asking $650. 575-626-0905 BOSTON TERRIER puppy, male, 7 wks old, has first set of shots. $300. 575-910-3488

RECREATIONAL

775. Motorcycles & Scooters

‘06 Yamaha, 2500 original miles, new clutch & battery, tune-up, $3k. 625-2477

780. RV’s & Campers Hauling

MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. New & Used Travel Trailers & 5th Wheels. Parts & Service. 2900 W. 2nd St. 575-622-1751. Mon-Fri, 8-5:30, Sat. 9-2. maintrailersalesinc.com 1996 HOLIDAY RAMBLER motorhome, 35K miles, $14,000 OBO. 914-0357 FOR SALE: 2008 KZ Spree Ultralite 28’ Travel Trailer Tongue Pull. A MUST see to appreciate. Excellent Condition, $18K 317-8095 or 317-1282

TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale

SHOW US WHAT YOU’RE SELLING! INCLUDE A PICTURE IN YOUR AD FOR JUST $5! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM 2006 CHEVY Equinox $6,500. 123,000 miles. 347-7110 or 910-2820

1990 TOYOTA Land Cruiser; ‘95 Astro Van; ‘87 F250; 110 Kawasaki; YZ80 Yamaha; Honda 50. Call 575-914-3318 Tired of the Hassle In Trading Or Selling Your Car or Truck? Economy Motors Will Either Purchase Your Vehicle Or Consign It For Sale At No Cost To You!! Call Or Come By For Details. Economy Motors 2506 N. Main Roswell, NM 88201 625-2440 •18 Years In Business •Family Owned & Operated •Licensed, Bonded & Insured Classic 1985 Chrysler 5th Ave., V8, auto, 64k original miles, like new, 317-9287

ADD A PICTURE OF YOUR PET FOR SALE FOR JUST $5! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans

1998 DODGE 1-ton 4X4, 5.9 diesel, flat bed, 134k miles, $6500. 910-7460 ‘88 FORD Ranger, 4 cyl, 5 spd, low miles, runs excellent, 317-9287 after 3pm.


B12 Friday, October 3, 2014

CLASSIFIEDS

Roswell Daily Record

ROSWELL FORD’S USED VEHICLES What is NADA Clean Trade-In Value?

CLEAN TRADE-IN PRICES 2013 Ford F150 Super Cab #19171

$

2007 Dodge Ram Ram m 2500 Diesel #19110

$

21,675

21,975

2012 Ford F150 FX2 #19166

$

27,275

CERTIFIED $34,900

1

R

UNDE 0 Userds Ca

2010 Ford Fusion SEL

R

0

$

5 ,0 0

$

2007 Toyota Camry Solara

$

#19007

2007 GMC Yukon SLE 4x4 #19206

$

2011 Ford Escape XLT #18997

$

2006 Chevy Silverado Z71 #19068

$

2009 Lincoln MKX AWD #19181

$

2012 Chevy Traverse #19109

$

2012 Dodge Ram 1500 Crew Cab #19127

$

2013 Dodge Durango #19201

$

2013 Honda Crosstour #19195

$

2012 Nissan Frontier 4x4 #19189

$

8,325 11,125 12,720 13,575 15,700 19,900 20,925 24,075 24,320 25,525 25,825 33,875

Each one comes with the 172-point inspection (200-point for Lincoln), 24-hour roadside assistance, vehicle history report. Ford vehicles come with a 12-month/12,000-mile comprehensive limited warranty PLUS a 7-year/100,000-mile powertrain limited warranty. Lincoln vehicles come with a 7-year 100,000-mile comprehensive limited warranty*.

2012 Ford F150 Super Crew Fx4 #18954

2011 Lincoln MKX

$38,900

$38,900

$31,900

#19115

“As-Is" used vehicles 2006 Hyundai Tiburon $

$

#19042

2004 Hyundai Santa Fe LX

6,900

2002 Chevy Silverado 2500

$

2007 Pontiac G6 GT

$ #19176

$

$

$

$ 9,900

#19190

2005 Hyundai Sonata $

#19124

$ 9,900

#19122

4,900 1998 Lincoln Mk VIII $

#19194

#18835

$ 9,900

2007 Toyota Camry #19026

4,900

2002 Chrysler PT Cruiser

9,900

2006 Ford Explorer XLT 4x4 #19158

3,900

1997 Ford Crown Victoria

#19117

2006 Volkswagen Beetle Conv.

9,900 2001 Mercury Sable

#19204

6,900

#19203

9,900

$

UNDE d e s U rs Ca

2003 Ford Excursion Limited #18636

2012 Ford Explorer Limited #18950

2006 Nissan Titan SE

#19170

9,900

5

$

,0 0

0

$

10

nada example

with 7 yr/100,000-mile warranty and 0.9% APR financing!

PRE-OWNED #18879

You’ll save thousands and the NADA book proves it!

2012 Ford Expedition Limited EL #19173 $

Prices do not include tax, registration and dealer service transfer fee. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Pictures are for illustrative purposes only and may not represent the actual vehicles. Not ot responsible for typographical errors.

2013 Lincoln MKZ

Right from the current NADA Used Car Guide, it’s the amount you would expect to receive for your vehicle when you trade it in. Except now it’s the price you’ll actually pay!

#18726

4,900

Prices do not include tax, registration and dealer service transfer fee. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Pictureas are for illustrative purposes only and may not represent the actual vehicles. Not responsible for typographical errors.

4,900 Se habla espanol

Apply on-line today!

www.roswellford.com 821 N. MAIN ST. OPEN: MON. - FRI. 8AM - 7PM, SAT. 8AM - 5PM TOLL-FREE: 877-624-3673 SERVICE DEPT: 623-1031

www.roswellford.com


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