Roswell Daily Record
Vol. 120, No. 15 50¢ Daily / $1 Sunday
INSIDE NEWS
THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY
TUESDAY
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City’s land lease temporarily halted MATTHEW ARCO RECORD STAFF WRITER
GIFFORDS IS IMPROVING
January 18, 2011
Roswell’s mayor is standing by his and other city officials’ decision to temporarily reject bid proposals for leasing city land to outside sources, following an eleventh hour plea from a Chaves County commissioner to toss the bids and reconsider the agenda item. The vote took place during the council’s Jan. 13 regular monthly meeting. Mayor Del Jurney said Monday that he and the city councilors who
voted to reject the bids acted appropriately, despite concerns from other officials who called the last-minute decision unfair to the other bidders.
“I think it’s our responsibility to maximize our opportunities, especially with our real estate assets,” said Jurney, four days after his tiebreaking vote on the Kerr Ranch lease. The city retains the roughly 3,500 acres of land for its water rights, but leases it to outside sources who typically use the property for grazing cattle. The council
voted 4-4 on Thursday to reject the bids after the land’s current occupant, Commissioner Kim Chesser, told councilors that his use of the land goes beyond using it simply for grazing purposes. City staff recommended that the bid be awarded to someone other than the county of ficial, who offered about $1,500 less for the property than the highest bidder. According to state procurement code, of ficials are required to accept the lowest bid for services and the highest bid when dealing with selling city services.
Chesser, who operates a guest house on his ranch that offers outsiders from around the globe a glimpse inside the life of ranchers, explained to councilors that his business — the Burnt Well Guest Ranch — brings worldwide attention to Roswell. He argued that the bidding process didn’t take other benefits to leasing the property into account. “I did not receive the bid,” said Chesser, during the meeting. “But,
RPD is looking to hire officers
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — The husband of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords says his wife’s condition has improved so much that she has been able to smile and give him a neck rub as he has kept a near-constant vigil at her hospital bedside. - PAGE A2
JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER
TOP 5 WEB
many of us were focused on the tragedy, it’s good for us to remind ourselves of what this country is all about,” he said. National and local politicians joined members of the King family at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta to mark what would have been the civil rights icon’s 82nd birthday. Members of the King family also laid a wreath at the tombs of King and his widow, Coretta Scott King, on the 25th anniversary of the federal holiday established to honor the 1964 Nobel Peace Prize winner. The largely African-American audience of about 2,000 gathered at Ebenezer — where King preached
The Roswell Police Department has begun actively recruiting more officers. The RPD has 12 positions to fill, although two people have received conditional offers. “They still have to undergo psychological and medical evaluations and the final interview,” said Travis Holley, public information of ficer for the Roswell Police Department. The vacancies have been created in a number of ways. “It’s part of natural attrition. We have people leave to go to other agencies. We have had some unfortunate firings. ... We have had two people promoted which creates spaces at the bottom,” said Holley. “It’s important that we recruit top quality people,” Holley said, adding that new recruits must have a clean criminal record, a clean driving record and a good work history. In addition, they must be a U.S. citizen, have a high school diploma and be at least 21 years of age and men must be registered with the selective service. “We don’t need perfect people,” Holley said. “Everybody has a history, but we need honest people. There’s a tremendous
See KING, Page A3
See RPD, Page A3
For The Last 24 Hours
• Woman killed in accident, child injured • Two 3rd-graders caught smoking pot • Two bound in home invasion • After 40 years, Miss Minnie to take final bow this spring • Wooley to fill vacant state House seat
INSIDE SPORTS AP Photo
Kathy Butler, center, and Brenda Burch, both of Atlanta, react during a service at Ebenezer Baptist Church honoring the 25th federal observance of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s birthday, Monday, in Atlanta.
King’s legacy of peace praised PITTSBURGH UPENDS SYRACUSE PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pittsburgh coach Jamie Dixon almost couldn’t believe it as the Panthers built their lead — 5-0, 11-0, 13-0 and finally to 19-0. - PAGE B1
TODAY’S OBITUARIES • Johnny “John” Owen • Victor DeLaCruz • Rose Vocarro DiPaolo • William Armstrong McCubbing • Virginia Molina • Jean Hale • William “Bill” McMullen - PAGE A6
HIGH ...72˚ LOW ....30˚
TODAY’S FORECAST
CLASSIFIEDS..........B5 COMICS.................B3 ENTERTAINMENT.....B8 GENERAL ..............C4 HOROSCOPES ........A8 LOTTERIES ............A2 OPINION ................A4 SPORTS ................B1 WEATHER ..............A8 WORLD .................D4
INDEX
See LEASE Page A3
ATLANTA (AP) — The nation observed the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday on Monday with thousands volunteering for service projects and more reflecting on his lessons of nonviolence and civility in the week following the shootings in Arizona. Six people were killed in Tucson and Democratic Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords is fighting for her life. The violent outburst was a reminder to many gathered at King’s former church in Atlanta that the Baptist preacher’s message remained relevant nearly four decades after his own untimely death at the hands of an assassin. Attor ney General Eric Holder praised him as “our nation’s great-
est drum major of peace” and said the Jan. 8 bloodshed was a call to recommit to King’s values of nonviolence, tolerance, compassion and justice. “Last week a senseless rampage in Tucson reminded us that more than 40 years after Dr. King’s own tragic death, our struggle to eradicate violence and to promote peace goes on,” Holder said. President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle volunteered to paint for a service project at a middle school in Washington’s Capitol Hill. He urged Americans to get out into their communities — a step he suggested would have special meaning following the shootings. “After a painful week where so
Educators rally Stolen items placed on view against budget cuts at the Roundhouse JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER
SANTA FE (AP) — On the eve of a new legislative session, Republican Gov. Susana Martinez and educational groups were on a collision course over budget cuts and tax increases. More than 300 educators, parents and children rallied at the Capitol on Monday against budget proposals by the governor and a legislative committee to reduce spending on schools and colleges. They called for tax increases to provide additional money for public education. The Legislature convenes Tuesday for a 60-day session that will be dominated by financial issues because the state faces a budget shortfall of up to $400 million next year. “Our lawmakers must do what it takes to raise revenues instead of cutting education no matter how politically uncomfortable it is ... because our children are worth it,” Christine Trujillo, president of the American Federation of Teachers-New Mexico, said at the rally. She and others suggested raising taxes on liquor, upper-income New Mexicans or large corporations. As rally participants cheered the calls for tax increases, Martinez was in Albuquerque vowing to oppose higher taxes to balance the budget. “Instead of digging deeper into the pockets of New Mexico families and small businesses, what we have to do is change how the state spends money,” Martinez said at a news conference. “We are not undertaxed. The state govSee LEGISLATURE, Page A3
Roswell Police Department placed items confiscated from area burglaries on display Monday, at the Unity Center, 1500 W. College Blvd. in Cielo Grande Park. Detectives obtained the items while serving an arrest warrant. All totaled, the RPD has recovered nearly $33,000 in stolen goods since Dec. 30. Many items came from the burglaries of storage units. Nearly 100 people had gone to view the display before noon on Monday. The event will last two days. “We had a line of some 50 to 60 people earlier today,” said Detective Kim Northcutt. According to investigating Detective Albert Aldana, five people were able to reclaim items and two police reports were completed. “If you have items
Jessica Palmer Photo
The Roswell Police Department opened property from burglaries to the public to allow people to claim their items on Monday.
stolen from a storage unit, you should come,” said Aldana. “Even if you don’t find anything, it’s worthwhile.” Police suspect the confiscated goods come from a number of dif ferent burglaries. “There’s no way to know for sure (how many
burglaries are represented),” said Officer Travis Holley, public information officer for the RPD. “We have to have victims identify specific items.” Victims who have reported a crime to the police should bring a copy See ITEMS, Page A3
A2 Tuesday, January 18, 2011
GENERAL
Roswell Daily Record
Giffords smiles; contines improving
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — The husband of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords says his wife’s condition has improved so much that she has been able to smile and give him a neck rub as he has kept a near -constant vigil at her hospital bedside. The interactions with astronaut Mark Kelly are new signs of Gif fords’ impressive progress in recovering from a gunshot wound to the head at a political event nine days ago. Giffords still cannot speak, because of a tube in her throat that is helping her breathe. “She’s in the ICU. You know, gone through this traumatic injury. And she spent 10 minutes giving me a neck massage,” Kelly explained in an interview with Diane Sawyer to air Tuesday on ABC. “It’s so typical of her that no matter how bad the situation might be for her, you know, she’s looking out for other people.” Such encounters indicate higher levels of functioning, implying that “she’s recognizing him and interacting, perhaps in an old familiar way with him,” said Dr. Michael Lemole. Dr. Randall Friese said Kelly also told doctors he saw Giffords smile. He said sometimes people see what they want to see, but that “if he says she’s smiling, I buy it.” Kelly has also been helping Giffords’ staff through the tragedy, said Mark Kimble, a Tucson staf f member who stood only a few feet from Giffords when she was shot. “There is not a doubt in his mind and not a doubt in any of our minds that she’s going to be back,” Kimble said. “He’s been cheering us up. He’ll come over and when we’re down, he’ll say, ‘Gabby’s going to make it, Gabby’s a little better today.’ That’s a big help to all of us.” The steady progress for Giffords came on the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday to remember the legacy of the civil rights leader who was killed by an assassin’s bullet 42 years ago. Political leaders invoked the assassination attempt against Giffords as they asked Americans to recommit to King’s values of nonviolence, tolerance, compassion and justice. “Last week a senseless rampage in Tucson reminded us that more than 40 years after Dr. King’s own tragic death, our struggle to eradicate violence and to promote peace goes on,” Attorney General Eric Holder said at King’s for mer church in Atlanta. Doctors upgraded Giffords’ condition from critical to serious over the weekend and say they carried out three successful procedures that demonstrate she is recovering well.
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Burglary reported
A good Samaritan called the police to the 100 block of South Lea Avenue on Monday, when a burglar alarm woke him. The police cleared the scene, but were unable to talk to the residents. Police investigation revealed pry marks on the door, but nothing appeared to be missing from the home. • Police were dispatched to the 200 block of South Pennsylvania Avenue on Sunday, after someone broke a window while the victim was inside the residence. Nothing was taken; however, the victim feared that the subjects would gain entry into the home. Window replacement costs are estimated at $50.
Noise complaint
Police were called to the 1100 block of South Kentucky Avenue, Saturday, following the report of a disturbance. Officials made contact with the individual inside the residence where the noise originated. The subject stated she was blowing a horn to scare away the evil spirits that had been urinating inside her stove.
Threatening phone calls
Police were called to the 600 block of South Hemlock Avenue on Sunday, where a family was receiving a series of harassing calls. The victim reported that the calls had started on Thursday. The caller made sexual noises and threats. The victim did not know who the caller might be, but said she heard the sound of children playing in the background.
Missing person
The police were dispatched to Eastern New Mexico Medical Center on Saturday, after a patient left the building. He was last seen wearing a hospital gown, and he had an IV port. Hospital personnel are concerned and would like the patient to return because the risk of infection with the IV port is high.
Criminal damage
A good Samaritan called the police to the 500 block of East Albuquerque Street on Saturday, when they heard the sound of breaking glass and saw subjects smashing windows on a vehicle. The person reporting the incident said the subjects left in a 2000 blue Chevy side-step pickup.
Burglary
AP Photo
Two unidentified women pause at a makeshift memorial outside the office of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords in Tucson, Ariz., on Monday. Giffords is recovering from a gunshot wound to the head suffered at a political event nine days ago outside a Tucson grocery store. Six people were killed and 13 others were injured.
A breathing tube was moved from her mouth to her throat along with a separate feeding tube that was shifted from her nose to her stomach. Dr. Randall Friese said removing the tubes in her nose and mouth reduces the risks of infections. Doctors also said they performed a surgery on Giffords’ eye socket to remove bone fragments to relieve pressure on her eye. There were no complications from the surgery; doctors needed to perform the eye procedure all along but waited until her condition improved to do it. Elsewhere, doctors have transplanted the corneas from the youngest victim of the Jan. 8 shooting that left a total of six dead and 13 wounded. Christina Taylor Green’s father said Monday that the Donor Network of Arizona told him and his wife that the transplants from the 9-year -old have saved the eyesight of two children. Also, more details emerged Monday about one
of the shooting victims who became distraught and was arrested during a televised town hall meeting. James Eric Fuller, a military veteran and selfdescribed liberal, started ranting at the end of the program Saturday. He took a picture of Tucson tea party leader T rent Humphries and yelled “you’re dead.” Fuller apologized Monday through his girlfriend, Dorothy Deruyter. Fuller has been in a hospital since being involuntarily committed Saturday for a mental health evaluation but wrote a statement and called Deruyter, who read it to The Associated Press on Monday. Fuller apologized to Humphries for his “misplaced outrage.” “It was not in the spirit of our allegiance and warm feelings of each other as citizens of this great country,” Fuller said in the statement. The suspect in the shooting, 22-year -old Jared Loughner, remained jailed
in a federal lockup in Phoenix. Investigators have described him as a mentally unstable man who was kicked out of a community college last year and became increasingly erratic in recent months. He apparently became obsessed with inflicting violence on Gif fords since attending one of her campaign events in 2007.
Kelly said he would be willing to meet with the parents of Loughner, who have remained in seclusion since the shooting. Kelly, who has two teenage daughters from a previous marriage, said the parents have to be in a tremendous amount of pain. “I don’t think it’s their fault. It’s not the parents fault,” Kelly told ABC. “You know, I’d like to think I’m a person that’s, you know, somewhat forgiving. And, I mean, they’ve got to be hurting in this situation as much as much as anybody.”
SUPPORT ROSWELL
RECYCLE “Real Estate Corner”
“WHAT IS THE MLS”
by Connie DeNio of Roswell 622-7191 or 626-7948
If you’re buying or selling a home you probably have heard the term Multiple Listing Service, or MLS, but maybe you’re not quite sure what it means. Multiple Listing Service is a cooperative listing organization formed by local real estate companies to share the listings they receive from sellers. Listing brokers enter information into the MLS computer - information
which is then immediately available to every real estate office on the MLS system. This way, a buyer can work with only one broker who has access to all properties listed and who can identify homes which fit the buyer’s needs and price range. When a property is sold, the listing broker and the selling broker share the commission.©
Call Me Today!
Police were dispatched to the 1600 block of South Madison Avenue on Saturday, after a woman discovered jewelry, worth $5,115, missing from her home.
Anyone with information about these and any other crimes is asked to call Crime Stoppers, 1888-594-TIPS (8477). Callers can remain anonymous and may be eligible for a reward.
Home invasion case nearing conclusion
A home invasion case, in which multiple subjects forced their way into a home on Resolana Drive on Jan. 13, is moving toward a conclusion, according to Travis Holley, public information officer for the Roswell Police Department. “We’ve recovered the vehicle, along with some other evidence,” Holley said. The vehicle, a 2010 white Kia Sportage, was found in a parking lot, although Holley was unwilling to say which one. “We would welcome any additional information,” said Holley. People should contact Crime Stoppers at 1-888594-4877, or the RPD. Those with information leading to an arrest may be eligible for a reward.
Free flu shots available
It is not too late to get a flu shot this season. The Department of Health and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Mexico are offering free seasonal flu shots for adults and children and childhood immunizations. On Wednesday, at the McDonald’s UFO Restaurant on Main Street, nurses will be on hand from 8 a.m. to noon. Parents are encouraged to bring their children’s shot records to the BCBSNM Care Van Clinic. Help prevent the flu with a flu shot.
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Roswell Daily Record
Lease
Continued from Page A1
what I wanted to tell you ... is I would love for you all to consider that there’s more of an advantage to me having the property than someone just grazing cattle.” Visitors to the Burnt Well Guest Ranch are taken onto city property to drive cattle. The nearly hour -long discussion regarding the bid during the council meeting raised concern from some city officials, who said they didn’t agree with changing paths so late in the process. “I do not think it is fair to other citizens to go through a bid process and then after the process has taken its course ... to change ball games,” said Councilor Jason Perry on Monday, chairman of the Building and Lands Committee. “It was too late,” he said. “At the end, you just can’t change.” Perry, along with Councilors Barry Foster, Steve Henderson and Art Sandoval voted against rejecting the bids. Councilors Dusty Huckabee, Bob Maples, Judy Stubbs and Elena Velasquez voted in favor of the action. Councilor Jimmy Craig
RPD
Continued from Page A1
amount of responsibility with this job. We issue thousands of dollars of equipment to each employee.” The RPD provides all the necessary education — 12 weeks of field training and 22 weeks in the academy. If the potential recruit is a lateral transfer or certified in law enforcement in another state, the RPD needs a copy of the certification, transcripts or a list of the curriculum to ensure that their certification meets New Mexico state requirements. All new of ficers, whether they are lateral transfers or a rookie, start at the bottom. “New recruits will spend two years as a patrol officer,” Holley said. “Even lateral transfers must start on patrol.” The pay scale is com-
abstained from the vote because his law practice works with the county and Chesser is on the commission. The bid was prepared to be awarded to Steve Oldfield, the highest bidder. “I’m upset about the deal,” Oldfield said. “It just seems odd that he did not get the bid, (but) he was able to change it within a weeks time. I don’t know.” The mayor and council indicated during the meeting that city staff would likely rebid the Kerr Ranch lease as a request for proposal, which would allow other factors to be taken into consideration to determine a bidder’s overall value. “Really, what we’re learning is that in a lot of dif ferent areas, the low bid — or, the high bid in this case — is not always the best opportunity,” Jurney said. The mayor added that he doesn’t think that the last-minute decision to reject the bids was unfair. “Nothing is final until the council votes,” he said. “Even if you change it on the eleventh hour, is it ever the wrong time to do the right thing? I don’t think (so).”
mattarco@roswellrecord.com
petitive with elsewhere in the state and significantly higher than some other places. Holley described the benefits and retirement package as excellent. “We have take-home cars, a clothing allowance, medical, dental and vision insurance,” he said. “It goes without saying it’s an interesting and a rewarding career. No two days are ever alike. “On the local level, there’s no definite advantage to the certified applicant. When you are looking at 12 positions, certification is not mandatory. ... I would encourage anybody to apply,” Holley said. People who are interested can obtain an application online at www.roswellpolice.com, or the human resources department at the city, 425 N. Richardson Ave. or directly from the RPD, 128 W. Second St.
j.palmer@roswell-record.com
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King
GENERAL
Continued from Page A1
from 1960 until his death in 1968 — included parents and children, members of the clergy, politicians and footsoldiers of the civil rights movement. Two of the Kings’ four children, Martin Luther King III and the Rev. Bernice King attended Monday’s ceremony. Their brother, Dexter King, was unable to attend the service because he is recovering from injuries he received in a car crash last year. Yolanda King, the eldest of the King siblings, died in 2007. Bernice King is also president-elect of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, which her father co-founded in 1957. Rep. John Lewis of Georgia, who worked with King during the civil rights movement, issued a renewed call for Americans to unite in peace and love as King preached during his lifetime. “If Dr. King could speak to us today, he would tell us that it does not matter how much we disapprove of another person’s point of view, there is never a reason to deny another human being the respect he or she deserves,” Lewis said. The Rev. Raphael Warnock, pastor of Ebenezer, called for members of Congress to show solidarity during the State of the Union Address this month. Quoting the Bible and Abraham Lincoln, Warnock said, “A house divided against itself cannot stand.” “Maybe after Arizona what our children need to see is us sitting together,” Warnock said. In Philadelphia, hundreds of volunteers including Mayor Michael Nutter helped refurbish computers for needy residents as part of the city’s “day of service” events to mark the King holiday. “The computer is your passport, not only to the
Legislature Continued from Page A1
ernment overspends.” Public schools account for the largest share of the state budget — about $2.4 billion this year — even though the state has cut school spending by about 7 percent since the 2009 fiscal year. Lawmakers avoided deeper cuts by using nearly $300 million in temporary federal economic stimulus money to replace aid for school operations. Stephanie DeBellis, a kindergarten teacher in Albuquerque, said her class sizes have increased because of budget cuts. “Parents, children and school employees have given and given to this state to shore up the budget ... in the name of shared sacrifice, but today that is no longer acceptable. We have cut to the bone,” she said at the rally. The opening day of the legislative session will decide a leadership race in the House. Speaker Ben Lujan, a Santa Fe Democrat, faces a challenge from Las Cruces Democrat Joseph Cervantes.
Items
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of the report to the Unity Center. Otherwise, the individual will need to bring some sort of proof, photographs of the items, receipts, or other documentation. Crime Stoppers have set up a table. Steve Wolfe explained that a
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
future but to knowing what’s going around you,” Nutter said. The effort was part of the $25 million federally funded Freedom Rings Partnership, which aims to deliver 5,000 computers over the next few years to people in the city, where 41 percent of residents lack Internet access.
Coloradans marked the day with marches and parades in Denver and Greeley, and the National Western Stock Show was set to host its annual Martin Luther King Jr. African-American Heritage Rodeo on Monday evening. In South Carolina, the day was an opportunity for the NAACP to underscore its opposition to a Confederate flag that flies outside the Statehouse. It was moved from atop the Capitol dome in 2000 after protests by the group.
“Take down that flag,” North Carolina NAACP president, the Rev. William Barber, told the audience at a rally in Columbia. He argued the flag’s presence disrespects people not only in South Carolina but across the nation. But the South Carolina commander of Sons of Confederate Veterans disagreed.
“They have the right to view it any way they wish. ... But I’m telling you it is. It is our heritage, and we will honor it,” said Mark Simpson of Spartanburg, whose great-great-grandfather was a Confederate soldier. In Maine, Gov. Paul LePage changed plans and attended a King memorial breakfast just days after saying critics could “kiss my butt.”
King is the only American who was not a U.S. president to have a federal holiday named in his honor. He has been recognized on the third Monday in January since 1986. The governor also will deliver her first State of the State address to a joint session of the House and Senate. Cervantes is trying to assemble a coalition of Republicans and Democrats to oust Lujan, who has served as speaker for a decade. Republicans picked up eight seats in the general election, narrowing the Democratic advantage in the House to 37-33. Lujan and Cervantes said the leadership race was close. Cervantes predicted that a majority of Republicans would support a change in the House leadership, but said he had not agreed to any power-sharing arrangement with Republicans if he’s elected speaker. No Republican, he said, would be named as a committee chairman. “I am a Democrat. I am proud to be a Democrat. I’ve made very clear to my Republican colleagues that I am going to try and advance a ... Democratic Party agenda but I would like to do so with a new commitment to ethics, a new commitment to openness and transparency,” said Cervantes. Tea party activists urged House Republicans not to back a Democrat for the speakership.
person calling in a Crime Stoppers tip will receive an identification number. Rewards are given in cash only because checks can be identified, he said.
ROSWELL DAILY RECORD
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Officials urge people who have infor mation about burglaries, contact Crime Stoppers 1-888594-TIPS (8477) or RPD at 624-6770.
j.palmer@roswell-record.com
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A4 Tuesday, January 18, 2011
OPINION
Roswell Daily Record
Jack Schmitt would be a poor fit in energy department
After announcing a string of appointees with solid professional credentials, the new governor made her first purely political pick. Harrison “Jack” Schmitt has little in his resume to support the decisions he would need to make as secretary of the Energy, Minerals and Natural Resources Department. He is, however, a luminary among conservatives for publicly denouncing the many who believe global warming is human-caused. Some might agree with him, but we need to ask how his convictions will serve New Mexicans. Everyone knows Schmitt was an astronaut and the last man to walk on the moon. Educated as a geologist (Cal Tech and Harvard), he was the only scientist astronaut. Some may remember that he served one unremarkable term from 1977 to 1982 as U.S. senator from New Mexico and was voted out of office after showing scant interest in New Mexico
SHERRY ROBINSON ALL SHE WROTE
issues. Schmitt then faded from the public eye — consulting, writing and speaking, teaching engineering physics at the University of Wisconsin. From 1994 to 1998, he became chairman and president of the Annapolis Center for Science-Based Public Policy, which has questioned the impacts of fossil fuels on climate, air pollution on asthma and crop pesticide residues on health. In 2008, Schmitt resigned abruptly as chair man of the NASA Advisory Council. A month later he left the Planetary Society over differences in goals for the
space program and views of global warming. “I am sorry, but I can no longer support the society in its goals as they seem to have gone back to being more political than rational,” he wrote in a widely circulated email. He questioned the consensus that “humans are causing global warming when human experience, geologic data and history, and current cooling can argue otherwise. ‘Consensus,’ as many have said, merely represents the absence of definitive science. You know as well as I, the ‘global warming scare’ is being used as a political tool to increase government control over American lives, incomes and decision making. It has no place in the Society’s activities.” Schmitt drew more attention in 2009 when he spoke at the rightleaning Heartland Institute’s International Conference on Cli-
mate Change, an event for doubters. (The institute describes Schmitt as a “global warming expert,” even though he’s not a climate scientist and has never published a peer -reviewed paper.) There he described himself as a true denier of humancaused global war ming. “The conclusion seems inescapable that nature produces the primary influences on climate,” he said. Schmitt criticized the Intergover nmental Panel on Climate Change and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, saying, “There is no historical or scientific basis” to believe CO2 increases were responsible for climate change. In an interview with Fox News, he continued his assault. Back in the limelight for the first time since his moon-walk days, “Schmitt seemed to revel in his status as a doubter of manmade climate change,” observed a
conservative publication in Denver. If confir med, Schmitt the denier can hold forth as a cabinet secretary, and Democrats have already opened fire. My purpose isn’t to re-argue climate change, but we need to ask if an ideologue can effectively steer sensitive negotiations and set state policy. The infamous pit rule, for example, grew out of legitimate concern for ground water. It was a heavy-handed solution and needs to be rewritten, but that will require diplomacy. Energy producers can argue that it’s their turn, that they’ve suffered at the hands of ideologues, but is it progress to shift from industry lawsuits to environmental lawsuits? The public wants to see meaningful compromise, not more litigation, but compromise doesn’t appear to be Schmitt’s strong suit. © New Mexico News Services 2011
EDITORIAL
Obama in Arizona
A little girl was buried Thursday in Tucson, Ariz. Christina Taylor Green was 9. She was an A student, a member of her student council, born on Sept. 11, 2001, and, as a result, interested in American politics. “She saw public service as something exciting and hopeful,” President Barack Obama said at a memorial service Wednesday night. The tragedy at that shopping center in Arizona revealed some of what is worst in America. But also what is best. Courage. Selflessness. The need to comfort. The need to heal. Daniel Hernandez, a young aide to U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, ran to her when he heard the gunshots. He gave basic first aid, covering her wounds with his bare hands, sitting her upright so that she wouldn’t choke on her own blood. He likely saved her life. Dorwan and Mary Stoddard were in the crowd, waiting to hear what their elected representative had to say. Dorwan dove on top of his wife when the shooter opened fire. He lost his life, but he saved hers. In each of these stories, and in dozens more that day, is an element of instinctive heroism and goodness. Obama honored their sacrifice and then said that reflecting on how we talk to one another would be a fitting way to remember the dead: “If this tragedy prompts reflection and debate — as it should — let’s make sure it’s worthy of those we have lost. ... Let us remember it is not because a simple lack of civility caused this tragedy — it did not — but rather because only a more civil and honest public discourse can help us face up to the challenges of our nation in a way that would make them proud.” And he called on Americans to look to the idealism of this child and, perhaps, recapture their own. Echoing the biblical reference about faith, the president said: “She saw all this through the eyes of a child, undimmed by the cynicism or vitriol that we adults all too often just take for granted. I want to live up to her expectations. I want our democracy to be as good as Christina imagined it.” The losses in Arizona are unalterable. What comes next is not. Guest Editorial The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
TODAY IN HISTORY
Tragedy in Tucson touched countless lives
TUCSON, Ariz. — Stationed in front of the University of Arizona Medical Center for three days covering the tragic massacre that took the lives of six people and left 13 wounded, including U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, I got to see firsthand what it is to show compassion. The front lawn was full of flowers, candles, pictures and heartfelt messages of support for the victims. People from different walks of life, political ideologies, socio-economic levels and ethnic backgrounds came to pay their respects. Most of them didn’t know any of the victims, yet they felt
Doonesbury
MARIA ELENA SALINAS SYNDICATED COLUMNIST
as if one of their own had been attacked. “Gabby Giffords is a good woman; she cares about Latinos,” one woman told me, who’d arrived with her husband and youngest daughter. But tears rolled down her face when she began to talk about little Christina Taylor Greene, the
9-year-old who was killed in the shooting. “I have a daughter her age and son 18 years old. To think of having a child like mine killed by someone close to his age is frightening,” she said. “What is happening in our country, this is the type of violence you see in Third World countries,” she added. All loss of life is tragic, but the killing of someone so young with such a promising future was particularly unsettling. Christina was a bright and active child who was the only girl on her Little League Baseball team. She had just been elected to the student
council and was interested in politics. Her neighbor believed it would be a good experience for her to meet Giffords. They held hands as they stood in line waiting to greet her, when the shooting began. The neighbor survived and is healing from her wounds, but the emotional recovery will most likely take longer. At Mesa Verde Elementary School, where Christina was in the third grade, there were flowers and stuffed animals hanging on the gate, and signs that read “Christina, we will miss you.”
See SALINAS, Page A5
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 18, the 18th day of 2011. There are 347 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight On Jan. 18, 1911, the first landing of an aircraft on a ship took place as pilot Eugene B. Ely brought his Curtiss biplane in for a safe landing on the deck of the armored cruiser USS Pennsylvania in San Francisco Harbor. DEAR DR. GOTT: I am begging for help, please. I am 73 years old and have lost 120 pounds on Weight Watchers. My problem is that when I walk, take a bath, get excited, angry or upset, I break out in hives that look like measles. And they’re so itchy! I have been to a few doctors, and they tell me to take antihistamine tablets, but I cannot tolerate them. I need to walk to keep my weight down and my “new” knees working. This started four years ago after having bilateral knee replacement, but I’m not sure if there is any connection. I walked three miles a day before but cannot do that any longer. I know you are busy but hope you will reply. I am willing to try anything.
ASK DR. GOTT UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE
DEAR READER: Hives are red or white, raised, itchy welts that appear on the skin. They can be either acute or chronic. Acute hives can last from several minutes to up to six weeks. Chronic hives last longer — perhaps for more than six months. As a general rule, hives are harmless and don’t leave any lasting marks, even when left untreated.
A condition known as angioedema resembles hives but is more serious. It occurs deeper in the skin and can present with swelling, blisters, pain, abdominal cramping, severe swelling of the face, arms, hands, legs, feet and genitalia and, in severe cases, dif ficulty swallowing and/or breathing. Both conditions are triggered when mast cells release histamine and other chemicals into the bloodstream and skin. Causes might include exposure to latex, pollen, animal dander, insect stings, shellfish, nuts, most medications, heat, cold, sunlight, emotional stress, exercise and a host of other possibilities. Hives and angioedema can occur in response to the body’s production of antibodies because
of immune-system disorders such as cancer, lupus, some thyroid disorders, hepatitis and other infections, and the common cold. Hereditary angioedema is linked with low levels or the abnormal functioning of specific blood proteins that play a rule in regulating how the immune system functions. If symptoms of either condition occur regularly and your physician cannot deter mine the cause, try a patch test, where an allergen is applied to the patch that is placed on the skin. Latex and medication reactions might be discovered. An intradermal test uses purified allergen extracts that are injected into the skin of the arm and will likely See GOTT, Page A5
25 YEARS AGO
Jan. 18, 1986
• Seventeen students at El Capitan Elementary School were named Students of the Month. Students being honored are: Sixth grade — Mindi Anderson and Robert Sanchez; Fifth and sixth grade — Lisa Medrano; Fifth grade — Sheira Caspi and Tania Garcia; Fourth grade — Hattie Horner and Brent Nichols; Third grade — Justin Forrest, Josh Lorton and Jessica Toya; Second grade — Vanessa Candelaria, Jamie Flores and Monica Pena; First grade — Eric Helmstettler and Matthew Villegas; and Kindergarten — Amande Huddleston and Amanda Munoz.
LOCAL
Roswell Daily Record
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
A5
Medicare or Medicaid? Learn which one does what
The most knowledgeable people in town use these two ter ms, Medicare and Medicaid, interchangeably, but they are as different as Heineken and Old Milwaukee. Medicare is a federal program, the same in every state, mostly for your hospital and doctor bills, for a short nursing home stay, and for drugs, all once you hit 65. Medicaid is a state program, essentially welfare, great for all ages, covering drugs, doctors, hospitals and long nursing home stays, different in every state, and you only get it when you have “spent down.” Maybe you were born spent down, in which case you understand the meaning already, that being broke flatter than gravy on a plate (the old cowboys mentioned a fluid other than gravy). This is the first in a many-part series on M&Ms, mostly Medicaid, after we introduce Medicare this time. Quite frankly, Medicare is not very interesting. Think you know the difference yet? Let’s see, there’s Medicare and Old Milwaukee.
TOM
DUNLAP ELDER LAW TIDBITS
Right! Medicare is boring because you don’t have a lot of input with respect to how it affects you. If you are 65 and still alive, Medicare will pay for its approved portion of your hospital stay and doctor bills, most of 20-100 days or so for rehab in a nursing home, and after that then it is up to the doctor, nursing home or hospital to decide whether they will sue you for the balance. Many doctors and institutions need your money more than you do, and they have lawyers and collection agencies to help them get it. Some doctors and hospitals won’t come after you for the part
that Medicare won’t pay because they accept Medicare assignment. Medicare bases its approval on what the government considers a reasonable charge on a regional basis. Hopefully, you can afford a Medicare supplement insurance policy to cover most charges that Medicare will not approve. A little long-term care insurance helps too if you are younger, healthy and want to pay. The new health care law may phase in some longterm care options, and it will definitely phase in colorectal screening, mammograms and annual checkups under Medicare. Ask your doctor. Medicare also offers a prescription drug benefit called Medicare Part D. If you have questions about Medicare then call the number (1-800 Medicare), or the number on their paperwork, or visit them on their website, www.medicare.gov. If you want a face-to-face with an expert, then call Senior Circle and find when Lucas Zurtuche of the New Mexico Aging Department is making his monthly visit (he also comes
to The J.O.Y. Center periodically), or you can call him at 1-800-7628690 or 575-647-2023. Another resource is your local congressman’s office. If you think your doctor, hospital, home care provider or any kind of medical service provider is ripping off Medicare then that means they are ripping off us all, since we, as taxpayers, fund the entire program. Report suspicions of fraud to the fraud numbers on your paperwork. Enough on Medicare, except to say that if I live long enough to get it then I’ll finally be able to get myself a checkup and fix whatever’s broke. In the meantime, my remedy is good, clean living and plenty of Old Milwaukee. Dad was waiting until 65 to get his heart fixed so he could have Medicare coverage instead of losing his entire retirement nest egg to the profitable medical industry ... another six months and he would have made it, but at least my mom still had the nest-egg. Dad could have made it anywhere over there in Europe, Japan, Canada
or Australia because they have those Commie government run health care systems. In the next several issues, we’ll focus on the state run Medicaid system, the nature of “spend down” and how you really have nothing to fear from Medicaid but fear itself. A healthy spouse is allowed to keep many assets and still qualify the other spouse for Medicaid. Nobody comes and takes your house, and if you give things away then you have made a big mistake. So relax, read the articles and don’t react to rumors and the know-it-all. Tom Dunlap is a Roswell lawyer, vice president of the J.O.Y. Center, former vice president of the New Mexico Alzheimer Association and vice president of the Roswell City Commission on Aging (which meets every third Wednesday at 3 p.m., usually at 208 N. Lea Ave., but always check the location, with the public invited). You can reach Tom with your comments at 622-2607 or dunlaplawoffice@cableone.net.
Local author Burleson to speak at library this Saturday LORETTA CLARK ROSWELL PUBLIC LIBRARY
Storytimes for children and visiting authors for adults and teens are some of the exciting free activities provided each month by the Roswell Public Library, 301 N. Pennsylvania Ave. A monthly Calendar of Events showcasing the programs is available at the library and on the library’s website at www.roswellpubliclibrary.org . Local author Donald Burleson will be presenting a program this Saturday at 2 p.m. as he shares information on several of his books, including “A Capitalist Christmas Carol” and “UFOs and the Murder of Marilyn Monroe.”
Book Talk
Burleson, who has master’s degrees in mathematics and English with a Ph.D. in English literature, is semiretired from ENMU-Roswell. He has written numerous short stories and novels, including “Flute Song,” “Arroyo” and “A Roswell Christmas Carol,” as well as non-fiction books on the topic of UFOs. Burleson is a certified UFO field investigator, research consultant, and
Gott
Continued from Page A4
New Mexico state director for MUFON, the Mutual UFO Network. Scott May, Adult Services librarian, invites readers to uncover the information in his books before the program. His newest title, “A Capitalist Christmas Carol,” is a very loose adaptation of the Dickens classic, “A Christmas Carol.” However, Burleson promotes the viewpoint that it is beneficial to the economy and enhances the income of ordinary employees for an entrepreneur to be successful and make a good profit. Edward Scrooch is a skilled businessman, but he has become troubled by the notion that there is something basically evil about making more money than the average person. Just like in the original story, Scrooch is visited by the ghost of Christmas Past, the ghost of Christmas Present and the ghost of Christmas Future. They try to show him that there is nothing inherently evil about being a successful businessman, making a legitimate profit, and having
determine whether a person is allergic to one or more substances, such as penicillin or insect venom. Testing that punctures, scratches or pricks the skin should identify food, pollen, animal dander and reactions to other substances. Treatment includes over-the-counter diphenhydramine, loratadine, cetirizine and chlorpheniramine; the application of cool, wet compresses; bathing with tepid water sprinkled with baking soda and/or uncooked or colloidal oatmeal; and prescription levocetirizine, hydroxyzine and desloratadine. Severe cases might require the use of an oral corticosteroid. It appears your hives might be trig-
more wealth than ordinary people. Burleson has been fascinated with the death of Marilyn Monroe for many years and had heard rumors of a UFO connection with Monroe’s death. In “UFOs and the Murder of Marilyn Monroe,” he proposes the theory that she was murdered by government operatives because she knew too much about the Roswell UFO incident and cover -up. Using toxicology reports and other evidence, he asserts that Monroe did not commit suicide, but was actually murdered. Burleson devotes much of the book to reviewing the available information about that fateful evening in 1962, when her body was discovered. He argues that she died several hours earlier than the official report states. Then he discusses the extent and nature of her relationships with John Kennedy and Bobby Kennedy and shows that Bobby Kennedy was at her house about the time of her death. He speculates that she learned a considerable amount about secrets and classified information from these two government leaders and argues that she was murdered to
gered primarily by physical and emotional stress. Consider yoga or tai chi instead of walking. Experiment with different water temperatures and soaps when bathing. Try to reduce your exposure to emotionally charged situations, and practice relaxation techniques such as meditation or deep breathing. When something triggers the hives, make a mental note (or keep a journal) and avoid it in the future. In other words, take whatever steps are necessary to reduce your stress level. Dr. Peter H. Gott is a retired physician and the author of several books, including “Live Longer, Live Better,” “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Diet” and “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Cookbook,” which are available at most bookstores or online. His website is www.AskDrGottMD.com.
prevent her from having a news conference to divulge Kennedy secrets, as she supposedly threatened Bobby that she would do. Then Burleson shows reasons why he believes that most of those secrets were related to UFOs and quite likely the Roswell UFO incident. It is interesting reading, whether you are a believer or a skeptic, and should appeal to anyone who enjoys reading about history, politics, celebrities or conspiracy theories. Burleson’s visit is sponsored by the Friends of the Library and refreshments will be served. He will also have books available for purchase and signing.
Salinas
Continued from Page A4
What’s Happening?
Each week, children enjoy three free story and craft hours. For more than 7,000 years, popcorn has been a healthy food that is delicious, easy to prepare and fun to eat. Popcorn Day will be celebrated during the 10 a.m. and 3:30 p.m. Wednesday storyimes. A popcorn snack will be provided with a puppet dramatization of “‘Not Now’ Said the Cow!” For the crafts, precut paper and other materials will be provided for projects which might include decorating a cone cup for holding popcorn; making a refrigerator magnet that looks like a movie popcorn box; designing a popcorn animal using
At Giffords’ office, mourners came by to leave handwritten messages, and staffers and interns stood around, visibly moved by the tragedy. Her office had been vandalized months earlier when she voted in favor of health-care reform. She had received numerous threats, yet chose not to have security at her public events. “She is the kind of person who likes to talk to people and listen to their concerns,” Tucson City Council Member Regina Romero told me. She knows Giffords well and considers her a friend. On that tragic day, Giffords called her to invite her to the event, but she was holding one of her own. She remembers thinking, “I’ll call her Monday to see how things went.” Several staffers were with Giffords at the Safeway supermarket that morning. Gabe Zimmerman, her 30-year-old director of community outreach, who was engaged to be married, died in the attack. Another two staffers are recuperating from their wounds. Among those assisting her that day was a young intern who is now being hailed as a hero, responsible for saving Giffords’ life. Twenty-year -old Daniel Hernandez is a political-science student and had been interning with Giffords for only five days. His quick thinking,
a handprint and popcorn; as well as coloring a popcorn bookworm and “family night at the movies” bookmark. The stories may vary between the programs and the quantities of some craft items may be limited. Turtle Time will be the theme of the 2 p.m. Saturday storytime. The books could include “Turtle Song,” “A Turtle in the Toilet,” “Ocean Pop-up” or “Jump, Frog, Jump!” For the related crafts, precut paper and other materials will be used to create a mosaic “Southwest” turtle, make a felt turtle on a used CD, or assemble a stand-up turtle. The quantity of some craft items may be limited.
strength of character and first-aid training led him to react immediately. Hernandez ran toward Giffords while Jared Lee Loughner was still shooting. When Hernandez saw her down, with a bullet through her head, he raised her head, applied pressure to the wound and held her hand. “All I could do at that point was wait for the paramedics and try to calm her down and give her emotional support,” he said. Councilwoman Romero says that knowing what a strong woman Giffords is, she is probably fighting for her life, for her family and for her future. Romero believes the power of her strength will get Giffords through this. A lot of questions remain unanswered: What motivated Loughner to commit this heinous crime? Why were signs of his mental instability ignored? How was he able to buy a semiautomatic weapon so easily? Should gun laws be strengthened? Should elected officials always have security? Did the divisive political discourse influence the already-deranged young man? The answers might or might not come. But now is the time for grieving, as a nation, along with the families of the victims, and for searching in our souls as a society for lessons learned from the tragedy in Tucson. (Maria Elena Salinas is the author of “I am my Father’s Daughter: Living a Life Without Secrets.” Reach her at www.mariaesalinas.com) © 2011 by Maria Elena Salinas
A6 Tuesday, January 18, 2011 OBITUARIES
Johnny “John” Owen
Memorial services are scheduled for 10 a.m., on Tuesday, Jan. 18, 2011, at LaGrone Funeral Chapel for Johnny “John” Owen, 78, who passed away Jan. 8, 2011. Dr. Thomas Ramage will officiate. John was born on Aug. 29, 1932, in Roswell, to Omer and Ruthia Owen. They have both preceded him in death. He is also preceded in death by his brothers: Donald R. Owen and Dr. Oliver E. Owen. John married Ruth Warrer on Oct. 7, 1970, in Santa Fe. She survives him at the family home. John is survived by a son: David Michael Owen, of Victoria, Texas; daughters: Debora K. Owen, of Victoria, Texas, and Susan E. Owen, of North Little Rock, Ark.; grandchildren: Logan Rogers, Julie Alvarez, John D. Owen, Michael D. Owen, Megan Bull, Sheldon Bull, and Morgan Bull; great-grandchild: Cameron Roger; sister in-law: Paula Owen, of Gladwyne, Penn. John graduated from Roswell High School in 1950. While attending high school, he became the state high school lightweight boxing champion and later the state Golden Glove lightweight boxing champion. He then advanced to the semi-finals in Chicago as the N.M. lightweight boxing champion in 1951, while attending NMMI on a scholarship obtained from the Roswell Sertoma Club. John graduated college in 1954, from NMMI with a bachelor of science degree. John was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the U.S. Army Armor Division. After basic ar mor training at Ft. Knox, John was sent to Ft. Benning, Ga., for airborne training and became a paratrooper, Ft. McClelland, Ala., for chemical warfare training, Gary Air Force Base in San Marcos, Texas, for fixed wing flight training and then graduated as a fixed wing pilot. He was sent to Fort Rucker, Ala., and graduated from helicopter training. John was then assigned to Straubing, Germany. From 1956 to the early part of 1959, John’s primary duty in Germany was to patrol the Czechoslovakian border from Passau to Nuremberg during the Cold War period between the United States and Russia. While in Germany, John obtained his commercial pilot ratings in single engine fixed wing, helicopter and instrument ratings prior to returning to the United States. John was discharged in New York on April 3, 1959. John returned to Roswell and joined the N.M. Army Reserve, flying missions for and with the reserve for approximately 10 years, and was promoted to captain during that time. John became a real estate broker, selling new
OBITUARIES homes for C.F. Smith construction Co. He later became a partner with Charles F. Smith of C.F. Smith Construction Co., who had built approximately 600 homes over the years in Roswell. Upon the closing of Walker Air Force Base, Mr. Smith discontinued the construction of new homes. There was no longer a market for new homes as FHA and VA repossessions were piling up due to the closing of the 509th Bomb Wing of Walker Air Force Base, the missile sites shut down, the major oil companies and related businesses left Roswell along with many of their associates and employees. Roswell’s economy changed drastically, and the real estate of fice of John Owen, Inc., was for med. He became the president of the Roswell Board of Realtors in 1965. During his Board of Realtors’ presidency, he and Mayor Gail Harris assisted in the start-up of “Retire in Roswell” program, along with VA and FHA for the handling of approximately 3,000 foreclosures when Walker Air Force Base closed. The program helped Roswell work itself out of this problem, and became known as a good example of what could be done by other cities having base closures. John Owen received “The Realtor of the Year Award” in 1984. He became the first Certified Commercial Investment Member in Roswell and has participated in residential and commercial properties, investments and partnerships for more than 50 years. John and his wife, Ruth, primarily managed their own properties. They have enjoyed being in Ruidoso, mainly in the summer months, for more than 20 years. John is a former member of Sertoma and Rotary Inter national. He holds memberships in the Experimental Aircraft Association and has attended national EAA, Oshkosh, Wis. annual meetings, as well as other states’ EAA meetings. Memorials can be made to Roswell Assurance Home, 1000 E. 18th St., Roswell, National Arthritis Foundation, 5801 Osuna NE, Suite A 108, Albuquerque 87109, or the charity of your choice. Friends and family may leave condolences online at www.lagronefuneralchapels .com. Arrangements are under the direction of LaGrone Funeral Chapel.
will be held at 10 a.m., Friday, Jan. 21, 2011, at South Park Cemetery. Victor passed away Wednesday, Jan. 12, 2011, in the comfort of his home. Victor was born July 27, 1953, to Victor DeLaCruz Sr., and Josephine Ferriera DeLaCruz in Roswell. He was a kind-hearted man who will be missed by all who love him. Those left behind to cherish his memory are his siblings: Patricia Flores and husband Martin, of Albuquerque, Rachel Gomez of Albuquerque, Mary Helen Martinez of Roswell, Esther Chico of Roswell, and Joe DeLaCruz and wife Lupe, of Sacramento, Calif.; cousins of Roswell: Freddie Renteria, Martin Renteria, Connie Salinas and Christina Sanchez; cousins of California: Genie, Rosie, Gloria, Mary Ann, Danny, Sam, Gene, Tommy, Joe, Gabriel and Steven Molina; numerous nieces and nephews; and many great-nieces and great-nephews. He was preceded in death by his wife, Sherry DeLaCruz; his parents, Victor and Josephine DeLaCruz; a brother, Ray Ben DeLaCruz; and his grandmother, Tomasita Ferriera. Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com. Services are under the direction of AndersonBethany Funeral Home & Crematory.
Rose Vocarro DiPaolo
A rosary will be held by The Catholic Daughters of America at Assumption Parish at 9 a.m., Saturday, Jan. 22, 2011. A memorial service for Rose will be held at 9:30 a.m. Father Andrew Miles will officiate. Burial will immediately follow at South Park Cemetery. A
reception with family and friends will follow.
Roswell Daily Record comfortable, so casual dress is requested. The family would like to say thank you to the staff at Kymera and ENMMC. In lieu of flowers, please donate to the Good Samaritan.
Roy Sanchez and Carlos Sosa; her best friend who was like a sister, Liz Sanchez; special nieces and nephews whom she considered as her children: Jacob Molina of Dumas, Texas, Fer nando Molina of Phoenix, Ariz., Fer min Molina of Juarez, Mexico, and Elsa Valdez of Atlanta, Ga.; and numerous other nieces and nephews. She was preceded in death by her parents; a daughter, Virginia Ann Molina; two brothers, Manuel Sanchez, Jr., and Jimmy Sosa.
William Armstrong McCubbing
William Ar mstrong McCubbing was born Feb. 13, 1939, in Bo’Ness Scotland; he was the first of seven brothers and sisters. He met his first love, Sheena Watson, and they were married and, due to the sponsorship of Eddie and Nancy Clanahan moved to California. Willie was a coal miner, dairy worker, worked for “Caterers to the Stars” and in aerospace; he loved to dance, sing, shoot darts and play bingo. He retired to Roswell in 1995, where he went to work for Pioneer Bank, then Budget Inn and finally part time at Allsup’s. He was preceded in death by his parents, Andrew and Joanna McCubbing; his first wife, Sheena; brothers, Walter and George; sisterin-law Janette; and stepson Stephen Skjold. He leaves behind his daughter, Heather, and husband Peter Flores, and grand-dog Shotzy; his son, Andrew McCubbing, and granddaughter Linsy-Ann, and grandson Lane; stepdaughter Stephanie, and granddaughter Jasmine Skjold; his sister, Nan, and husband Murray; brothers Andrew and wife Marion, Robert, Alex and wife Jennifer; plus numerous nieces and nephews; his wife, Helen-Mae, of the family home; and his special friends Nan and Chuck Gardner, Gary and Nancy Brooks and the very special people of Villa Park. Funeral services will be held at at 11 a.m., Saturday, Jan. 22, 2011, at St. Peter’s Church. Immediately after the service a reception will be held at Villa Park Clubhouse, 410 E. 23rd St. Willie liked to be
Pallbearers will be Albert J. Molina, Marcelino Molina, Richard Sanchez, Roy Sanchez, Job Molina, Albert Sanchez, David Sanchez and Nathan Sanchez.
Virginia Molina
A funeral service will be held for Virginia Molina, 63, of Roswell, at 2 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 19, 2011, at Anderson Bethany Funeral home with Minister Raymond Flores officiating. Burial will follow at South Park Cemetery. She passed away Saturday, Jan. 15, 2011, in the comfort of her home surrounded by her family. Visitation will be from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Tuesday, Jan. 18, 2011, at Anderson Bethany Funeral Home & Crematory. Virginia was born Dec. 25, 1947, to Manuel Sanchez and Reducinda Cardona in Roswell. She married Alberto Molina on Jan. 26, 1970, in Roswell. She spent her entire life in the Roswell area and enjoyed spending time with her son and granddaughter, as they were the loves of her life. She enjoyed watching the TV shows “Gunsmoke” and “Bonanza.” She was baptized Jehovah’s Witness in 1977, and has been a member for the last 34 years. Virginia was a loving mother, wife, sister and special aunt who will be deeply missed by all who knew her. Those left behind to cherish her memory are her loving husband of almost 41 years, Alberto Molina; her son, Albert J. Molina, and his wife, Julianna; granddaughter Casandra (Casey) Molina; sisters, Elisa Sanchez Espinosa and Helen Sosa; brothers: Ricardo Sanchez, Albert Sanchez, David Sanchez,
Honorary pallbearers will be Jacob Molina, Fernando Molina, Fer min Molina, Abraham Molina, Nathaniel Molina and Adrian Molina.
Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com. Arrangements are under the direction of Anderson Bethany Funeral Home and Crematory.
Jean Hale
Arrangements are pending for Jean Hale, 83, of Roswell at Anderson Bethany Funeral Home. She passed away Saturday, Jan. 15, 2011.
William “Bill” McMullen
Services are pending at LaGrone Funeral Chapel for William “Bill” McMullen, age 79, of Roswell, who passed away on Jan. 15, 2011. A complete announcement will be made when arrangements are finalized. Condolences may be made at lagronefuneralchapels.com. Arrangements are under the direction of LaGrone Funeral Chapel.
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Victor DeLaCruz
Funeral services for Victor DeLaCruz, 57, of Roswell, will be held at 10 a.m., Thursday, Jan. 20, 2011, at Anderson Bethany Funeral Home with Pastor Shawn Kelly of ficiating. Visitation will be from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., Tuesday and Wednesday. Burial
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to claim their Monday, Jan. items 17, 2011 on Monday. in Atlanta. The (AP chest Photo/David of drawers Goldman) and the desk were stolen from storage units. Numerous tools, CDs, DVDs and jewelry are also on display inside the building.
against budget cuts A8 Tuesday, January 18, 2011
WEATHER
Roswell Seven-day forecast Today
Tonight
Plenty of sunshine
A moonlit sky
Wednesday
Mostly sunny
Thursday
Friday
Rain and drizzle possible
Saturday
Sunny, but chilly
Mostly sunny
Roswell Daily Record
National Cities
Sunday
Monday
Partial sunshine
Sunshine and warmer
High 72°
Low 30°
80°/36°
45°/20°
50°/24°
56°/27°
59°/30°
60°/24°
NNW at 4-8 mph POP: 0%
VAR at 2-4 mph POP: 0%
VAR at 2-4 mph POP: 10%
WNW at 7-14 mph POP: 30%
SSE at 4-8 mph POP: 0%
NNW at 4-8 mph POP: 5%
SW at 4-8 mph POP: 5%
SSW at 8-16 mph POP: 5%
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Almanac
New Mexico Weather
Roswell through 5 p.m. Monday
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Temperatures High/low ........................... 75°/27° Normal high/low ............... 55°/24° Record high ............... 82° in 1974 Record low ................... 9° in 1949 Humidity at noon ................... 20%
Farmington 46/28
Clayton 56/27
Raton 54/20
Precipitation 24 hours ending 5 p.m. Mon. Month to date ....................... Normal month to date .......... Year to date ......................... Normal year to date .............
0.00” 0.00” 0.25” 0.00” 0.25”
Santa Fe 52/26
Gallup 49/25
Tucumcari 60/29
Albuquerque 55/32
Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast
Clovis 60/29
Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading 32 0-50
51-100
Good
Moderate
Source: EPA
101-150
151+
Unhealthy Unhealthy sensitive
T or C 62/35
Ruidoso 58/42
Sun and Moon The Sun Today Wed. The Moon Today Wed. Full
Jan 19
Rise 7:01 a.m. 7:01 a.m. Rise 4:18 p.m. 5:27 p.m. Last
Jan 26
New
Feb 2
Set 5:16 p.m. 5:17 p.m. Set 5:54 a.m. 6:42 a.m.
Alamogordo 66/31
Silver City 67/37
First
Feb 11
The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHH Pressure starts feeling like the nor m. A boss makes demands that really cannot be met at this point. Brainstorm away, and you’ll find solutions that could appeal to both parties. Do not stay longer at work than need be. Tonight: Home is where the heart is. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHHH Keep stretching past an original plan or concept. You might need more feedback in order to get past a self-imposed restriction. You are in the process of liberating your thinking, which could impact many different areas. Tonight: Dodge a problem person. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHH Do you feel pressured? Is it of your own design or a realistic problem? Be careful in your deal-
ROSWELL 72/30 Carlsbad 73/35
Hobbs 71/33
Las Cruces 65/37
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2011
JACQUELINE BIGAR YOUR HOROSCOPE
ings with others. Someone might be far more manipulative than you realize. Keep your eyes wide open! Tonight: If hitting a wall, back off or jump over; stop walking into it. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH Your best efforts could get thwarted. You have hit a major road block, be it a person, several people or a structure in the system. When this type of event occurs, back off. Use this blockage to take a break or to change plans. Tonight: Play it low-key. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHH Assuming a low-key role with
Regional Cities Today Wed. 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
66/31/s 55/32/s 44/14/s 73/43/s 73/35/s 43/15/pc 56/27/s 53/29/s 60/29/s 68/32/s 54/31/s 46/28/pc 49/25/pc 71/33/s 65/37/s 54/28/s 50/23/s 58/25/s 67/34/s 63/28/s 49/18/pc 54/20/s 42/12/s 72/30/s 58/42/s 52/26/s 67/37/s 62/35/s 60/29/s 53/25/s
66/40/pc 57/32/pc 43/16/r 83/50/s 83/51/pc 41/6/r 53/16/c 53/15/pc 68/21/pc 69/38/s 56/31/pc 44/22/r 48/19/c 73/37/pc 68/43/s 54/18/pc 46/20/pc 58/32/pc 67/39/pc 64/21/pc 49/21/c 54/12/c 40/15/r 80/36/s 64/29/pc 51/24/c 63/40/pc 65/39/pc 64/19/c 51/22/c
W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice
others remains the smart action. Use extra time well, doing research or going off to do what you want. Pressure builds around people and crowds. Imagine having time just for you. Tonight: Secretive work. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH One person makes a demand that puts you in a position of disappointing others. You might be juggling far more than any one person can handle. Understanding will evolve, and solutions appear if you do not act but detach. T rust your mind. Tonight: Know when to call it a night. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHH You handle the lion’s share of responsibility at home and at work. You might feel most uncomfortable with what is on your plate. Do not react, but consider letting go of one responsibility or consolidating, if possible. Tonight: Choose a stressbuster. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH Just as you seem to be on
Suppor t the U n i t e d Wa y
Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Boston Charlotte Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit El Paso Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Lubbock
Today
Wed.
Today
Wed.
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
Hi/Lo/W
8/8/s 52/35/c 39/33/r 39/36/sn 49/37/sh 30/10/sn 39/23/r 60/33/pc 48/25/pc 39/18/r 68/39/s 77/61/s 62/41/pc 38/21/r 22/6/pc 66/46/s 80/54/s 63/32/s
23/21/sn 49/30/s 45/22/pc 43/26/c 54/30/s 19/11/pc 27/12/sf 60/47/s 40/8/sn 21/10/c 70/44/s 74/66/sh 61/55/pc 30/21/c 23/9/c 62/39/s 72/50/s 67/23/pc
78/62/pc 65/37/s 6/-14/c 66/43/sh 38/34/i 11/-2/pc 74/57/pc 39/34/i 75/50/s 41/30/i 45/34/r 50/40/c 34/16/c 44/32/c 69/53/s 47/35/r 77/48/s 42/35/r
80/64/pc 71/34/s 4/-6/c 59/48/pc 42/27/pc 10/-2/sn 74/49/pc 44/25/pc 71/47/s 32/18/sf 44/32/pc 54/30/pc 25/21/pc 37/16/sn 65/48/s 45/34/pc 77/46/s 48/27/pc
U.S. Extremes
Miami Midland Minneapolis New Orleans New York Omaha Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, OR Raleigh St. Louis Salt Lake City San Diego Seattle Tucson Washington, DC
(For the 48 contiguous states)
State Extremes
High: 88°......... Palm Springs, Calif. Low: -29° .........Saranac Lake, N.Y.
High: 78°..........................Carlsbad Low: 16°..................................Taos
National Cities Seattle 47/35
Billings 30/13
Minneapolis 6/-14 Detroit Chicago 39/18 30/10
San Francisco 59/47
New York 38/34
Washington 42/35
Kansas City 22/6 Denver 48/25
Los Angeles 80/54 Atlanta 52/35
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
El Paso 68/39
Houston 62/41
Miami 78/62
Fronts Cold
-10s
Warm
-0s
0s
Precipitation Stationary
10s
Showers T-storms
20s
cruise control, a boomerang lands in your path. You make an adjustment, internalizing and acting on the implications of the boomerang. Once more on cruise control, another boomerang lands on your path, and once more ... Such is your day. Tonight: Hang out on the computer! SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH Restructure your finances so they work for you, not someone else. If you look at a money situation openly and without bias, you might understand where someone is coming from, whether or not you choose that path. Focus on the long term. Do not sell yourself out. Tonight: Accept an offer. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHH If you see a lot of flak around you, hold up the mirror. Is it possible that you are being demanding, controlling and/or caustic? Yes, you. If involved in a power play, the only way to win is not to play. Let others play out
30s
40s
50s
Rain
60s
Flurries
70s
80s
Snow
Ice
90s 100s 110s
their stuff without you. Tonight: What you want. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHH It might be easier to revamp your thinking than demanding that others change, which is unlikely to happen. Maintain your schedule, even if working through an issue. Relax by doing errands, working and distracting yourself. Tonight: Go for a walk, or find another stressbuster. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Your creative drive points to a special path, one which others might balk at and back off from. You understand the implications but decide the risk is probably worth it. Do not allow others’ manipulations to impact you. Tonight: Go where spontaneity dominates. BORN TODAY Songwriter and musician Jonathan Davis (1971), actor Kevin Costner (1955), actor Cary Grant (1904)
Shop the classifieds
SPORTS
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
LOCAL TUESDAY JANUARY 18 HIGH SCHOOL BOYS BASKETBALL 7 p.m. • Ruidoso at Dexter • Gateway Chr. at Hondo Valley • Goddard at Santa Teresa • Tatum at Hagerman • Lovington at NMMI • Roswell at Hobbs HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL 5 p.m. • NMMI at Hondo Valley 5:30 p.m. • Tatum at Hagerman 7 p.m. • Goddard at Lovington
LOCAL BRIEFS RTA VALENTINE TOURNEY SET FOR FEB. 5
Roswell Daily Record
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Don’t believe Brett Favre is finally done? Well, NFL’s all-time leader of almost every major passing mark has at least filled out the forms. Favre has made another move toward leaving the game for good by filing retirement papers with the league, NFL spokesman Greg Aiello confirmed Monday. This is merely a procedural matter, to start the clock on a player’s pension and Hall of Fame eligibility. It’s worth noting, too, that Favre has done this before, only to change his mind. Retired players can request to be reinstated at any time. But the news, first reported by Fox Sports on its website, was another sign that Favre’s thrillfilled 20-year career has come to an end, as he repeatedly insisted throughout a painfully disappoint-
ing 2010 season for the Minnesota Vikings. The 41-year-old threw for only 11 touchdowns in 13 games and was intercepted 19 times, finishing with a career-low 69.9 passer rating that ranked third-worst in the NFL among qualifying quarterbacks. His body took quite a beating, getting knocked out of three different games while dealing with injuries to his elbow, foot, chin, neck, back, ribs and calf — plus the sprained throwing shoulder that ended his all-time record streak of 297 straight regular-season games started. Then he suffered a concussion in what wound up being his last game, on Dec. 20 against the Chicago Bears. See FAVRE, Page B2
AP Photo
In this file photo, Brett Favre walks to the locker room at Lambeau Field after a Vikings loss to the Packers. On Monday, Favre filed his retirement papers with the NFL.
No. 5 Pittsburgh upends No. 3 Syracuse
• More briefs on B2
NATIONAL RAIDERS HIRE HUE JACKSON AS NEW COACH
Jackson has extensive experience as an assistant in the NFL, working in Washington, Cincinnati, Atlanta and Baltimore for nearly a decade before joining the Raiders. He has coached quarterbacks, receivers and running backs, along with serving three stints as an offensive coordinator.
SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS 1994 — The Los Angeles Clippers and the Miami Heat combine for an NBA-record 23 3-point baskets. Los Angeles sets a team record with 11 3pointers in a 126-124 win. 1996 — Baseball owners break with more than a century of tradition by unanimously approving interleague play in 1997.
ON THIS DAY IN...
COMMENT OR IDEA? E-mail • sports@roswell-record.com Twitter • www.twitter.com/rdrsports Phone • 575-622-7710, ext. 28 Fax • 575-625-0421
B
Favre files retirement papers with NFL
The Roswell Tennis Association will hold its annual Valentine Tournament on Feb. 5 at 9 a.m. at the Cahoon Park tennis courts. The competition will be a mixed doubles adult tournament with a round-robin format in two levels. The tournament is open to RTA members and the entry fee is $20 per player. The deadline to enter is Feb. 1. A Valentine dinner for all tournament participants will also be held on the night of the tournament at 6 p.m. at Peppers Grill & Bar. For more information, or to enter the tournament, call Faye Stokes at 622-3889.
ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) — The Oakland Raiders promoted offensive coordinator Hue Jackson to head coach on Monday after he helped the team more than double its scoring output in his first year with the franchise. Jackson will be formally introduced at a news conference Tuesday — two weeks after the Raiders announced they were not picking up an option to keep coach Tom Cable. “The fire in Hue will set a flame that will burn for a long time in the hearts and minds of the Raider football team and the Raider Nation,” owner Al Davis said in a statement. Jackson was widely considered the leading contender to get the job as soon as the Raiders announced Cable’s departure. This is Jackson’s first head coaching job at any level. Jackson was hired a year ago to take over the playcalling duties from Cable and oversaw a transformation on offense. Oakland scored more than twice as many points in 2010 as it did in ’09 — and the Raiders won eight games and avoid an eighth straight losing season.
Section
AP Photo Syracuse's C.J. Fair (5) shoots around Pittsburgh's Brad Wanamaker (22) in the second half of Pittsburgh’s victory over the Orange, Monday.
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Pittsburgh coach Jamie Dixon almost couldn’t believe it as the Panthers built their lead — 5-0, 110, 13-0 and finally to 190. The larger the lead got, the more he fretted. This wasn’t IllinoisChicago or North Florida, teams that Pitt wiped out by big margins in November. This was No. 3 Syracuse in mid-January, and he knew it couldn’t last. And it didn’t. Pittsburgh lost its huge early lead, then came back behind Nasir Robinson’s 21 points to hand the Orange their first loss Monday night, winning 74-66 in a game of remarkable runs. “It was a strange game,” Dixon said While the start was r emarkable, the finish wasn’t — Pitt’s eighth victory in nine games against Syracuse, which played
without leading scor er Kris Joseph after he received a concussion Saturday against Cincinnati. Brad Wanamaker added 15 points to help the fifthranked Panthers (18-1) improve to 6-0 in the Big East for the first time and halt a long Syracuse winning streak for the second successive season. The Orange (18-1, 5-1) couldn’t match the 19992000 team’s school record by winning their first 19 games. Syracuse won its first 13 last season, only to lose to Pitt 82-72 at the Carrier Dome. C.J. Fair had 16 points and nine rebounds while Scoop Jardine added 12 points for Syracuse, which answered Pitt’s big start with a 17-0 run that helped tie the score at 41 with 13:46 remaining. But Pitt scor ed nine of the See PITT, Page B2
Local roundup: Broncos fall by 10 at Cahoon RECORD STAFF REPORTS
The New Mexico Military Institute men’s basketball team again struggled from the field on Monday and dropped its third straight Western Junior College Athletic Conference title in a 6858 loss to shorthanded Howard College at Cahoon Armory. The Broncos made just 22 of their 59 attempts from the field and missed all 17 of their trys from beyond the arc in the loss to the Hawks, who played with just five players for most of the game due to disciplinary issues. Despite being shorthanded, the Hawks led for a large majority of the game. NMMI held just one lead in the game — at 5-4 — and tied the
game once prior to taking its only lead on a free throw by Pat Moore. Howard led by 12 at the break, but the Broncos closed that gap to get back within striking distance. NMMI got to within two in the latter half of the second, but Howard answered with a five-point run to make it a seven-point game. NMMI trimmed that lead by two shortly therafter, but could never get any closer. Howard’s Tramel White and Carlos Emory led all scorers with 22 points apiece. Cory Stern also added 10 points and 13 rebounds for the Hawks. For NMMI (8-9), Mike Buffalo had 14, Mike Pinson had 10 and Josh Gener had 10. Jon Marsh finished with six points after shooting 2 for 17 from the field and missing all eight of his
3-point attempts. Buf falo also led the Broncos with eight boards.
Prep girls basketball
NMMI 37, Gateway Christian 31 Caitlin Duree posted her second straight 20point game and led the Colts to a six-point win over Gateway Christian on Monday at the Godfrey Athletic Center. Duree poured in 21 for the Colts (5-4) and Colt coach Marisha Olesinski talked about her performance after the game. “She is just, overall, a very good player. She See ROUNDUP, Page B2
NFL Playoffs: Jets, Bears headed to title
Ryan’s rowdies 1 win away from AFC title Chicago win sets up rivalry game for NFC
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. (AP) — All that trash talk didn’t stop the Jets from winning. So why not keep it going? Soon after New York stunned the New England Patriots with a 28-21 upset Sunday, they were already wagging their tongues at the next team standing in the way of their Super Bowl goal, the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Jets will go for their third straight road win this postseason when they face the third top quarterback in their three playoff games, Ben Roethlisberger. “Big Ben, he’s next on our list,” wide receiver Braylon Edwards said. The Jets already have AP Photo beaten Peyton Manning of Indianapolis and Tom Brady Jets quarterback Mark Sanchez gestures to of New England to reach the the crowd after leading his team to a win over AFC championship game. the Patriots, Sunday. Now they’re going for the trifecta against a quarteragainst him in his last 12 games. back who led Pittsburgh to a 31-24 Brady had ended the season with win over the Baltimore Ravens on 335 consecutive passes without Saturday after trailing 21-7. one, an NFL record. “Mission impossible,” Jets coach Now his season is over and, he Rex Ryan said. “Now on to round admitted, it’s a shock. After all, the three on mission impossible.” Patriots’ 14-2 record was the best in The Jets disguised their defenses, the NFL entering the playoffs. sacked a confused Brady five times and got the first interception See JETS, Page B2
CHICAGO (AP) — Cheeseheads, get ready for the Monsters of the Midway. As if the league’s oldest rivalry needed an extra kick, Jay Cutler and the Chicago Bears gave it a big one by beating the Seattle Seahawks 35-24 in a divisional playoff game Sunday. That means they’ll host Green Bay in the NFC championship game. That’s right, it’s Packers and Bears again, only this time, a spot in the Super Bowl is at stake. “I’m sure there’s going to be a lot of hype around this game building up to it,” Chicago linebacker Brian Urlacher said. Well, let the hype begin. AP Photo The Bears have played the Packers 181 times, but Chicago running back Matt Forte dives never have they met for the toward the end zone during Chicago’s win NFC title. If they beat over the Seahawks, Sunday. Green Bay, they’ll have a shot at their first champiCutler threw for two touchdowns onship since Walter Payton, Mike and ran for two more in his first Singletary and the “punky QB” Jim postseason appearance, and the McMahon shuf fled all over the Bears pounded the Seahawks from opposition 25 years ago. the start, jumping out to a 28-0 Before they could think about a lead against the first division winrematch with Green Bay, the Bears ner with a losing record. did their part against Seattle in Now, they’re staring at a rather their first playoff game since the 2006 Super Bowl season. See BEARS, Page B2
B2 Tuesday, January 18, 2011
SPORTS
Pitt
Continued from Page B1
next 12 points as Wanamaker hit a 3-pointer and a pair of free throws. “We got off to a horrible start and Pitt got off to a great start,” Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim said. “We had a long way to come from back from the beginning. ... That’s as good a Pitt team as I’ve seen. That’s probably the best team we’ve played.”
Jets
Continued from Page B1
“It’s like you’re on the treadmill running at 10 miles an hour and then someone just hits the stop button,” Brady said. “I think we’re a pretty good football team, but not when we play like today.” Brady lost his third straight postseason game and was outplayed by second-year pro Mark Sanchez, who is 4-1 in his playoff career. Sanchez threw three touchdown passes — a 7yarder to LaDainian Tomlinson, a 15-yarder to Edwards and a 7-yarder to Santonio Holmes — as the Jets took a 21-11 lead two minutes into the fourth quarter. Sanchez completed 16 of 25 passes for 194 yards and no interceptions. Brady went 29 of 45 for 299 with two touchdowns and one interception, throwing more than he would have liked
Favre
Continued from Page B1
“I know it’s time, and that’s OK. It is,” Favre said after the season finale. “Again, I hold no regrets, and I can’t think of too many players offhand that
Basketball
National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct Boston . . . . . . . . . . . .31 9 .775 New York . . . . . . . . . .22 18 .550 Philadelphia . . . . . . . .17 23 .425 Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . .13 28 .317 New Jersey . . . . . . . .10 31 .244 Southeast Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . .30 12 .714 Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . .27 15 .643 Orlando . . . . . . . . . . .26 15 .634 Charlotte . . . . . . . . . .15 24 .385 Washington . . . . . . . .12 27 .308 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct Chicago . . . . . . . . . . .28 13 .683 Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . .16 22 .421 Milwaukee . . . . . . . . .14 24 .368 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . .15 26 .366 Cleveland . . . . . . . . . .8 32 .200 WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L San Antonio . . . . . . . .35 6 Dallas . . . . . . . . . . . . .26 14 New Orleans . . . . . . .26 16 Memphis . . . . . . . . . .19 22 Houston . . . . . . . . . . .19 23 Northwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Oklahoma City . . . . . .27 13 Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27 14 Denver . . . . . . . . . . . .23 17 Portland . . . . . . . . . . .22 20 Minnesota . . . . . . . . .10 32
because the Patriots trailed much of the game. “We treated them with respect all week, at least I did with my comments,” Sanchez said. Others didn’t. Antonio Cromartie calling Brady an expletive. Bart Scott said Wes Welker’s “days in a uniform are numbered” after the Patriots wide receiver used several foot references — a shot at Ryan’s foot-fetish video controversy — during a press conference. Belichick benched Welker for the Patriots’ first series, apparently because of those comments. “We don’t care what people say or whether they like us,” Jets cornerback Darrelle Revis said. “We just focus on what we need to do to win games.” About a half hour before the game, R yan got his first boos when he was shown on the Gillette Stadium video screens hugging Jason Taylor as the can walk away and say that. Individually and from a team standpoint, it was way more than I ever dreamed of.” After years of waffling, Favre cried as he announced his retirement from the Green Bay Packers in March 2008. With Pacific Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L.A. Lakers . . . . . . . .30 Phoenix . . . . . . . . . . .18 Golden State . . . . . . .17 L.A. Clippers . . . . . . .15 Sacramento . . . . . . . .9
GB — 9 14 18 1⁄2 21 1⁄2 GB — 3 3 1⁄2 13 1⁄2 16 1⁄2 GB — 10 1⁄2 1 12 ⁄2 13 19 1⁄2
Pct GB .854 — .650 8 1⁄2 1 .619 9 ⁄2 .463 16 .452 16 1⁄2 Pct .675 .659 .575 .524 .238
Syracuse appeared to have a chance to make a final push after Dixon drew a rare technical foul and Dion Waiters made the two free throws, cutting it to 57-53. But Pitt scored the next eight points, and Syracuse never got closer than five points after that. “It’s the first time I’ve played in a game like that,” Wanamaker said. “They made their run, but we stuck with it the whole game.” Brandon T riche had 11
GB — 1⁄2 4 6 18
LOCAL BRIEFS RACE FOR BACKPACKS TO BE HELD FEB. 5 The Boy Scouts Conquistador Council, in conjunction with the Roswell Parks & Recreation Depar tment and the Roswell Runners Club, will hold the inaugural Race for Backpacks on Feb. 5 at Cahoon Park. The event will feature a 5K walk and a 5K run. The entry fee to participate is a school backpack, which will be donated to Chaves County CASA. Race day registration begins at 7:30 a.m. and the race will begin at 9 a.m. For more information, call the Parks & Recreation Department at 624-6720 or Matt Gardner at 623-2627.
ENMU-R TO HOST SNOWBALL HOOPS TOURNAMENT The Eastern New Mexico University - Roswell Intramurals department will host the annual 3-on-3 Snowball basketball tournament on Saturday, Feb. 5, at the PE Center on the ENMU-R campus. The fee is $60 per team and each team may have four players. The deadline to enter is Feb. 3. For more information, call 6247338.
L 12 21 23 25 30
Pct GB .714 — .462 10 1⁄2 .425 12 .375 14 1 .231 19 ⁄2
Sunday’s Games L.A. Clippers 99, L.A. Lakers 92 San Antonio 110, Denver 97 Monday’s Games Chicago 96, Memphis 84 Phoenix 129, New York 121 Washington 108, Utah 101 Philadelphia 96, Charlotte 92, OT Houston 93, Milwaukee 84 New Orleans 85, Toronto 81 L.A. Clippers 114, Indiana 107 Detroit 103, Dallas 89 Golden State 109, New Jersey 100 Atlanta 100, Sacramento 98 Boston 109, Orlando 106 Portland 113, Minnesota 102 Oklahoma City at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Atlanta at Miami, 5:30 p.m. Charlotte at Chicago, 6 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Phoenix at Cleveland, 5 p.m. Utah at New Jersey, 5 p.m. Philadelphia at Orlando, 5 p.m. Detroit at Boston, 5:30 p.m. Washington at Milwaukee, 6 p.m. Memphis at New Orleans, 6 p.m. New York at Houston, 6:30 p.m. Toronto at San Antonio, 6:30 p.m. Oklahoma City at Denver, 7 p.m. L.A. Lakers at Dallas, 7 p.m. Portland at Sacramento, 8 p.m. Indiana at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. Minnesota at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m.
Football
NFL Playoff Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain Wild-card Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 8 Seattle 41, New Orleans 36 N.Y. Jets 17, Indianapolis 16 Sunday, Jan. 9 Baltimore 30, Kansas City 7 Green Bay 21, Philadelphia 16 Divisional Playoffs Saturday, Jan. 15 Pittsburgh 31, Baltimore 24 Green Bay 48, Atlanta 21 Sunday, Jan. 16
TV SPORTSWATCH TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press All times Mountain Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Tuesday, Jan. 18 MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. ESPN — Michigan St. at Illinois ESPN2 — Colorado at Nebraska 7 p.m. ESPN — Kentucky at Alabama NHL HOCKEY 5:30 p.m. VERSUS — Montreal at Buffalo TENNIS 7 p.m. ESPN2 — Australian Open, early round, at Melbourne, Australia 1 a.m. ESPN2 — Australian Open, early round, at Melbourne, Australia
Roswell Daily Record
points and Rick Jackson added 10 points and 11 rebounds for the Orange. Pitt is 9-0 in the Petersen Events Center against Top 5 clubs, including a 78-63 victory over then-No. 4 Connecticut on Dec. 27. Pittsburgh’s 19-0 run lasted nearly eight minutes, beginning with Robinson’s nine consecutive points to start the game — he came in averaging 7.5 — and ending with Wanamaker’s dunk.
Bears
“We practiced all week with me attacking the middle of their (2-3) zone and then passing to Brad or Ashton (Gibbs),” Robinson said. “Getting inside opens up a lot against that zone.” The deficit was Syracuse’s largest since it trailed Oklahoma by 27 in an NCAA tournament game two seasons ago. “If you’re going to get behind by 19, it’s better to do it early,” said Boeheim, whose team rallied fr om 18 down to beat
linebacker was loosening up. The fans had little to cheer about early in the game. Brady was pressured as much as ever. The defense allowed the Jets to have a balanced attack that produced 120 yards on the ground, led by Shonn Greene’s 76 on 17 carries. The last one, with 1:41 left in the game, was a 16-yard touchdown that he celebrated in an unusual manner. Greene set the ball down in the end zone and lay his head on it as if it were a pillow. By the time he got up, the excited but decidedly slower R yan had already run down the sideline waiting to pat him on the helmet. “Maybe everybody else never believed, but we believed,” Ryan said. “We’re moving on. Same old Jets, back to the AFC championship. The only difference is this time we plan on winning.”
scary No. 6 seed. Green Bay dominated top-seeded Atlanta 48-21 on Saturday behind a superb ef fort by Aaron Rodgers, who threw for 366 yards and three touchdowns. “They looked good and we knew we had to come out and kind of make a statement like they did last night,” Bears tight end Greg Olsen said, “and I think for the most part we did.” Olsen did his part with three catches for 113 yards, including a 58-yard touchdown in the opening minutes that set the tone. Cutler threw for 274 yards, completing 15 of 28 passes, and finished with a 111.3 rating. When he was not beating the Seahawks with his arm, he was doing it with his feet, running for touchdowns of 6 and 9
the Vikings interested but the Packers unwilling to let him join their rival, he was traded to the New York Jets. Following one season there, he declared he was done again in February 2009. The Vikings wooed him back to the field that
summer, though, and they rode his renaissance perfor mance — 33 touchdowns and a mere seven interceptions — to the NFC championship game. After needing another summer of persuasion to return in 2010, however, Favre wasn’t the same and
Continued from Page B1
SCOREBOARD
Chicago 35, Seattle 24 N.Y. Jets 28, New England 21
Conference Championships Sunday, Jan. 23 Green Bay at Chicago, 1 p.m. (FOX) N.Y. Jets at Pittsburgh, 4:30 p.m. (CBS) Pro Bowl Sunday, Jan. 30 At Honolulu AFC vs. NFC, 5 p.m. (FOX)
Super Bowl Sunday, Feb. 6 At Arlington, Texas AFC champion vs. NFC champion, 4:30 p.m. (FOX) ————— Seahawks-Bears Stats SCORE BY QUARTER Seattle . . . . . . . . .0 0 3 21 — 24 Chicago . . . . . . .14 7 7 7 — 35
SCORING SUMMARY First Quarter Chi—Olsen 58 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 12:08. Chi—Taylor 1 run (Gould kick), 1:19. Second Quarter Chi—Cutler 6 run (Gould kick), 10:01. Third Quarter Chi—Cutler 9 run (Gould kick), 4:12. Sea—FG Mare 30, 1:52. Fourth Quarter Sea—Williams 2 pass from Hasselbeck (Mare kick), 11:21. Chi—K.Davis 39 pass from Cutler (Gould kick), 4:40. Sea—Williams 3 pass from Hasselbeck (Mare kick), 2:16. Sea—Stokley 9 pass from Hasselbeck (Mare kick), 1:24. A—62,265.
TEAM STATISTICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Sea . . . . . . Chi First downs . . . . . . . . . . . .18 . . . . . . . . 21 Total Net Yards . . . . . . . . .276 . . . . . . 437 Rushes-yards . . . . . . . . .12-34 . . . 45-176 Passing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .242 . . . . . . 261 Punt Returns . . . . . . . . . .1-11. . . . . . 2-30 Kickoff Returns . . . . . . . .5-143 . . . . . 3-24 Interceptions Ret. . . . . . . .1-23 . . . . . . 0-0 Comp-Att-Int . . . . . . . . .26-46-0. . 15-29-1 Sacked-Yards Lost . . . . . .2-16 . . . . . 3-13 Punts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9-35.0 . . . 5-39.0 Fumbles-Lost . . . . . . . . . .1-0 . . . . . . . 2-0 Penalties-Yards . . . . . . . .3-20 . . . . . 8-71 Time of Possession . . . . .22:50 . . . . 37:10
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—Seattle, Tate 1-13, Forsett 4-9, Washington 1-9, Lynch 4-2, M.Robinson 1-
Roundup Continued from Page B1
1, Hasselbeck 1-0. Chicago, Forte 25-80, Taylor 11-44, Cutler 8-43, Bennett 1-9. PASSING—Seattle, Hasselbeck 26-46-0258. Chicago, Cutler 15-28-0-274, Forte 01-1-0. RECEIVING—Seattle, Stokley 8-85, Obomanu 4-68, Williams 4-15, Forsett 3-25, Morrah 3-25, Carlson 1-14, Martin 1-13, Washington 1-10, M.Robinson 1-3. Chicago, Knox 4-48, Olsen 3-113, Forte 3-54, K.Davis 2-42, Hester 2-4, Bennett 1-13. MISSED FIELD GOALS—None. ————— Jets-Patriots Stats SCORE BY QUARTER N.Y. Jets . . . . . . .0 14 0 14 — 28 New England . . .3 0 8 10 — 21 SCORING SUMMARY First Quarter NE—FG Graham 34, 1:12. Second Quarter NYJ—Tomlinson 7 pass from Sanchez (Folk kick), 10:24. NYJ—Edwards 15 pass from Sanchez (Folk kick), :33. Third Quarter NE—Crumpler 2 pass from Brady (Morris run), :13. Fourth Quarter NYJ—Holmes 7 pass from Sanchez (Folk kick), 13:00. NE—FG Graham 35, 1:57. NYJ—Greene 16 run (Folk kick), 1:41. NE—Branch 13 pass from Brady (Graham kick), :24. A—68,756.
TEAM STATISTICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .NYJ . . . . . . .NE First downs . . . . . . . . . . . .14 . . . . . . . .26 Total Net Yards . . . . . . . . .314 . . . . . .372 Rushes-yards . . . . . . . . .29-120 . . .28-113 Passing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .194 . . . . . .259 Punt Returns . . . . . . . . . . .2-4 . . . . . .2-42 Kickoff Returns . . . . . . . .5-103 . . . .5-108 Interceptions Ret. . . . . . . .1-58 . . . . . .0-0 Comp-Att-Int . . . . . . . . .16-25-0 . .29-45-1 Sacked-Yards Lost . . . . . .0-0 . . . . . .5-40 Punts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6-36.0 . . .4-47.0 Fumbles-Lost . . . . . . . . . .1-0 . . . . . . .3-0 Penalties-Yards . . . . . . . .3-35 . . . . .6-44 Time of Possession . . . . .25:04 . . . .34:56
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING—N.Y. Jets, Greene 17-76, Tomlinson 10-43, McKnight 1-2, Sanchez 1(minus 1). New England, Woodhead 14-46, Green-Ellis 9-43, Edelman 1-11, Tate 1-11, Brady 2-2, Chung 1-0. PASSING—N.Y. Jets, Sanchez 16-25-0194. New England, Brady 29-45-1-299. RECEIVING—N.Y. Jets, Cotchery 5-96, Holmes 3-20, Keller 3-15, Edwards 2-52,
can do everything. She handles the ball very well and makes good choices. She is just very smart when it comes to basketball,” she said about Duree. “She is, overall, my big star and the rest try to step up and help her as much as they can. And they are doing better because of her.” NMMI led by six at the break and secured the win after both teams posted 17 in the second half. “We played pretty good. We tried to press a little bit, which worked,” Olesinski said. “We forced (Gateway)
DePaul last season. Syracuse missed its first 10 shots and nearly half of them weren’t close. But as inexplicable as the 19 consecutive points were, so was Syracuse answering with a 17-0 run — a burst in which the Orange held the Panthers scoreless for 6 minutes, 35 seconds. “We wer e missing easy shots,” Jar dine said. “They wer e making them, and the crowd really got into it.”
yards. The Bears defense, meanwhile, shut down an of fense that scored 41 points in a stunning win over defending champion New Orleans last week. The Seahawks wound up with 276 yards but had just 111 through three quarters, and all their points came after the game got out of hand. The Bears harassed Matt Hasselbeck, who threw for 258 yards. Chicago also held Seattle to 34 on the ground. Marshawn L ynch finished with two yards on four attempts a week after delivering that spectacular TD run against New Orleans. Chicago stumbled into its off week at 4-3 following a 3-0 start. The team that emerged had a dif ferent look, particularly on offense, and went on a season-saving 7-1 run before a consequence-free 10-3 loss at Green Bay before the playoffs. the Vikings slumped badly to 6-10 while going through all kinds of drama. So now Favre has headed home to Mississippi, presumably for good as his two-year contract with the Vikings is expiring. Favre’s official website even sent Tomlinson 2-2, Greene 1-9. New England, Welker 7-57, Woodhead 6-52, Branch 5-59, Gronkowski 4-65, Crumpler 3-39, GreenEllis 2-11, Edelman 1-12, Hernandez 1-4. MISSED FIELD GOALS—N.Y. Jets, Folk 30 (WL).
Golf
Sony Open Scores The Associated Press Sunday At Waialae Country Club Honolulu Purse: $5.5 million Yardage: 7,044; Par 70 Final Round Mark Wilson . . . . . . . .65-67-65-67—264 Tim Clark . . . . . . . . . .68-68-66-64—266 Steve Marino . . . . . . .65-67-66-68—266 Jimmy Walker . . . . . .68-65-66-68—267 Matt Bettencourt . . . .68-65-68-67—268 Matt Kuchar . . . . . . . .65-68-66-69—268 Shigeki Maruyama . . .65-65-70-69—269 Roland Thatcher . . . .67-65-68-69—269 Chris Riley . . . . . . . . .66-69-66-69—270 Jerry Kelly . . . . . . . . .68-67-69-66—270 Steve Stricker . . . . . .69-67-68-66—270 Davis Love III . . . . . . .68-66-67-69—270 Rory Sabbatini . . . . . .69-66-67-69—271 Anthony Kim . . . . . . .71-64-68-68—271 Chad Campbell . . . . .67-67-68-69—271 Tag Ridings . . . . . . . .68-67-68-68—271 Justin Rose . . . . . . . .65-68-68-70—271 Stuart Appleby . . . . . .64-66-69-72—271 Brian Gay . . . . . . . . . .69-68-70-64—271 Brendon de Jonge . . .68-67-66-71—272 Jeff Overton . . . . . . . .67-68-68-69—272 John Senden . . . . . . .71-65-67-69—272 Jason Day . . . . . . . . .69-67-66-70—272 Kevin Na . . . . . . . . . .67-67-69-69—272 Cameron Beckman . .69-67-68-68—272 Alex Prugh . . . . . . . . .70-67-66-69—272 Fredrik Jacobson . . . .68-66-69-70—273 Boo Weekley . . . . . . .68-66-69-70—273 Marc Leishman . . . . .65-69-73-66—273 Arjun Atwal . . . . . . . . .67-68-69-70—274 Chris Kirk . . . . . . . . . .68-67-70-69—274 John Merrick . . . . . . .69-67-72-66—274 Chris DiMarco . . . . . .67-67-71-69—274 Daniel Summerhays .71-64-70-70—275 D.J. Brigman . . . . . . .70-66-71-68—275 Jarrod Lyle . . . . . . . . .68-65-71-71—275 Colt Knost . . . . . . . . .68-69-68-70—275 Steven Bowditch . . . .67-70-69-69—275 Aaron Baddeley . . . . .73-64-70-68—275 Jonathan Byrd . . . . . .69-68-68-70—275 Spencer Levin . . . . . .70-67-71-67—275 Ernie Els . . . . . . . . . .70-65-67-74—276 Nate Smith . . . . . . . . .65-68-69-74—276 Brandt Jobe . . . . . . . .67-70-70-69—276 Kevin Chappell . . . . .70-67-68-71—276 Charlie Wi . . . . . . . . .68-68-70-71—277 WC Liang . . . . . . . . . .66-70-70-71—277 Webb Simpson . . . . .68-69-68-72—277 Jason Bohn . . . . . . . .68-69-72-68—277 Michael Connel . . . . .65-69-68-76—278 Billy Mayfair . . . . . . . .67-70-70-72—279 Ryan Palmer . . . . . . .68-69-70-73—280 Michael Sim . . . . . . . .68-67-72-74—281
to make turnovers and turned those into baskets. I’m very happy to win this game.” Angela Cross added eight for the Colts. Robrena Wade led Gateway Christian with 10 points. Emily Nobles added six.
Capitan 39, Dexter 33 DEXTER — The Demons lost their fourth varsity player to injury and dropped their 13th game of the year on Monday, falling to Capitan at home. Capitan won the first quarter, 63, and led at the intermission after the teams deadlocked at 8-8 in the second quarter. The T igers then won the second half 25-22 to secure
By then, the Bears were locked into the second seed after winning the NFC North and earning a firstround bye. The Packers, on the other hand, were fighting to get into the postseason. Now, after splitting two regular-season games, they meet again with the Super Bowl at stake. It’s their second playoff meeting, the first coming at Wrigley Field on Dec. 14, 1941. The Bears won that one 33-14 on their way to the NFL title. “I’ve been a part of it for two games and I know what it means,” Pro Bowl defensive end Julius Peppers said of the rivalry. “There is going to be a lot of talk about it this week. I don’t want to really talk about it right now to be honest with you because we just got a great playoff win. There will be a lot of time to talk about that game coming up this week.” out a marketing e-mail blast over the weekend, advertising a “Thanks for the Memories” poster for sale. A portion of the proceeds go to the Favre 4 Hope Foundation, which helps disadvantaged and disabled children and breast cancer patients. Jesper Parnevik . . . . .70-66-73-73—282 Matt McQuillan . . . . . .68-69-71-74—282 Jason Dufner . . . . . . .69-67-72-79—287
Transactions
Monday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Agreed to terms with RHP Robinson Tejeda on a one-year contract. TAMPA BAY RAYS—Agreed to terms with CF B.J. Upton on a one-year contract. TORONTO BLUE JAYS—Agreed to terms with RHP Jon Rauch on a one-year contract. National League CINCINNATI REDS—Agreed to terms with 1B Joey Votto on a three-year contract. COLORADO ROCKIES—Agreed to terms with RHP Matt Lindstrom on a two-year contract and 1B Jason Giambi on a minor league contract. NEW YORK METS—Agreed to terms with OF Willie Harris on a minor league contract. WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Agreed to terms with LHP John Lannan on a one-year contract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association NBA—Suspended Charlotte F Tyrus Thomas one game for his Flagrant Foul, Penalty Two against New Orleans C Emeka Okafor in a Jan. 15 game. HOUSTON ROCKETS—Assigned G Ishmael Smith to Rio Grande Valley (NBADL). FOOTBALL National Football League CAROLINA PANTHERS—Announced defensive coordinator Ron Meeks accepted a demotion to secondary coach AND Sam Mills III will return as assistant defensive line and quality control coach. Named Brian Murphy special teams coordinator. DENVER BRONCOS—Named Dave Magazu offensive line coach and Tyke Tolbert wide receivers coach. HOCKEY National Hockey League ATLANTA THRASHERS—Recalled G Peter Mannino from Chicago (AHL). Released F Tim Miller. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS—Assigned D Nick Leddy to Rockford (AHL). OTTAWA SENATORS—Reassigned F Corey Locke to Binghamton (AHL). MINNESOTA WILD—Recalled C Cody Almond from Houston (AHL). VANCOUVER CANUCKS—Recalled D Chris Tanev and F Sergei Shirokov from Manitoba (AHL). COLLEGE SOUTHLAND CONFERENCE—Named Kenny Bybee communications and media services intern. AUBURN—Announced junior WR Darvin Adams entered the NFL draft.
the win. “I didn’t have them ready to play,” said Dexter coach Kim Hamill. “We weren’t mentally ready to play and we came out flat.” Sylvia Mediano led the Demons (5-13) with 12 points. Jenna Garcia added nine. Anissa Ybarra went down with a foot injury in the second quarter for the Demons. She is the fourth varsity player to go down with an injury this season. “It’s hard when you can’t get the same lineup out there and can’t get consistency,” said Hamill. “It’s hard to learn how to play as a team when you can’t get the same lineup out there. We’ve got to have some consistency with the same girls playing
Roswell Daily Record
COMICS
Garfield
Jumble
Family Circus
Beetle Bailey
DEAR ABBY: I am writing in response to “Blue at Christmas” (Dec. 13). I think the card-making tradition she has with her niece is beautiful. In a time when so many people are rushed, and so many of us are focused on finding the “best deal” for Christmas, it is wonderful that “Blue” is teaching her niece the importance of thinking of others and spending time with loved ones. I hope they will carry on their tradition because I’m sure many people look forward to those handmade cards and treasure them every year. LINDSEY IN GRANITE CITY, ILL. DEAR LINDSEY: If the avalanche of mail that poured into my office is any indication of how popular homemade cards are, the major greeting card companies had better look out. Read on:
HHHHH DEAR ABBY: “Blue’s” niece does not need to hear that she should quit a project just because some miserable, jealous “friend” makes ugly comments about it. Insulting other people’s efforts, while attempting nothing on her own, indicates that the person is unwilling to tap into her own creativity and is jealous of anyone who does. “Blue” should show those people how much their opinion Dear Readers: Recently, one of my assistants was shopping for a sofa. She was greeted at the door by a SALES ASSOCIATE, asked specifically what she was looking for, walked right over to two sofa choices, then asked which one she liked. From that point on, the sales associate would not leave Laura’s side, showing fabric swatches and pushing for selections to be made (even following polite attempts to ask for time to consider all the choices). Laura stated that she felt there was no
DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE
really matters, which is not at all, and continue their tradition because they enjoy creating the cards together. If they continue, “Blue” and her niece can learn two Christmas lessons: Traditions are worth continuing, and what THEY think, not what others think, of their tradition is what matters CHRIS IN ATLANTA
DEAR ABBY: I have sent homemade cards for some time, for all major life events. I consider it my “ministry” because when I make them and enclose a personal note in each one, I’m thinking of and saying prayers for the recipient. That poor buffoon who doesn’t grasp the significance of a handmade card doesn’t deserve to get one. MARGARET IN THE SOUTH DEAR ABBY: I’m appalled that “Blue’s” dear friends didn’t appreciate the handmade Christmas cards she and her niece created. A pox on them all! But that’s too
HINTS
FROM HELOISE
KING FEATURES SYNDICATE
way she could take her time in selecting a sofa, much less wander the entire store (she was actually interested in other furniture pieces as well, but just
Today’s Crossword Puzzle
harsh. Those people have already been cursed — with the taint of commercialism. If a store-bought card is what it takes to impress them, maybe they’ll get all they can stand. Meanwhile, “Blue” and her niece should continue their creative and loving efforts and send their blessings to veterans, our troops, children or elders in hospitals and homes, or to others who will appreciate the value of time and love. I know I’d appreciate one of those masterpieces. ROSEMARY IN MURRELLS INLET, S.C.
DEAR ABBY: In no way should they stop their tradition just because one “Scrooge” put a damper on things. This is a great teaching moment for the aunt to talk with her niece about human nature, how some people see the glass half-full while others see it halfempty. We should never allow the “half-empties” to steal the joy we derive from the little things in life. MELISSA IN SPRINGDALE, ARK. DEAR ABBY: Looks like we already have a winner for this year’s Bah-Humbug Sourpuss Ingrate Award. I could barely comprehend the letter from “Blue,” whose insensitive friends did not appreciate the lovely gesture of handmade cards. CHERYL IN ELK GROVE, CALIF.
never stated that), and because of this pressure, she left and never went back. Discussing this in the office, we all agreed that we appreciate the sales associate’s attentiveness and understand she is most likely working on commission, but some thought the technique was a bit rushed. Do you like to browse alone, or do you prefer to have a knowledgeable salesperson there with you to answer questions, give you options, etc.? And let’s hear from salespeople. What do you expect from consumers? Heloise HHHHH Dear Heloise: Recently, a reader suggested putting a deadbolt on the bedroom door for people who live alone. When my mother utilized her emergency alert system, which automatically calls the paramedics and/or fire department, they found her door locked. This increased the time it took to get to her. They told her not to lock the bedroom door in the future. Anne, via e-mail
Hagar the Horrible
Blondie
Zits
Snuffy Smith
Dilbert
Anne, thanks for the information. Most times, this should not be a problem. Readers, keep this in mind when deciding whether to lock your door. Heloise HHHHH
Dear Heloise: I have an aunt who is bedridden. We put a multipocketed shoe bag under the lamp base and let it hang off the night table. She is no longer frustrated when grabbing for something. We put her eyeglasses, tissues, candy, magazines, comb and everything else in these easy-toreach and organized pockets. It is amazing how well it works. Danny in New York Keeping organized is important in any situation. Just be sure the shoe bag is secure and does not cause the lamp to fall. Heloise
HHHHH
Dear Heloise: After having my pillbox (with the press-open lids) come open in the baggage area during a plane flight, I didn’t want the same thing to happen again. I found the best solution ever — plastic wrap wound around the box! G.F. in Carrollton, Texas
The Wizard of Id
For Better or For Worse
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
B3
ANNOUNCEMENTS TRANSPORTATION GARAGE RECREATIONAL MERCHANDISE EMPLOYMENT INSTRUCTION REAL FINANCIAL SERVICES RENTALS ESTATE SALES 490. 650. 305. 550. 545. 006. 620. 220. 015. 495. 185. 105. 232. 580. 310. 795. 485. 405. 025. 440. 140. 715. 230. 225. 745. 200. 235. 520. 350. 780. 195. 569. 570. 515. 790. 615. 635. 796. 410. Legals Homes Washers Computers Houses Personals Southwest Wanted Childcare Electrical Furniture Acreages/ Painting/ 380. 270. 605. 045. 540. 345. 505. 775. 535. Cleaning Hay 210. Chimney Pickups/ Office TractorLost Business Window Pets General Hauling Elderly Roofing Lots Fencing Mobile Mobile RV’s Coins, Autos SUVS Tree Good and for & For or for to & Business Rent-Furnished Motorcycles Firewood/Coal Miscellaneous Special Opportunities Home Homes Employment Construction Trucks/Vans things Gold, Investment/ Remodeling Apartments Sharpening Landscape/ Decorating Feed Campers for Service Dryers Repair Farms/ Sweep Found Home Work RentCare Sale Buy Silver, Sale Courts to Notice Sale -Places Sale Eat& Buy, Miscellaneous Opportunities Ranches/Sale Commercial/ Unfurnished Spaces/Lots Lawnwork Furnished Scooters Hauling for Sell, Sale Trade Business Property
B4 Tuesday, January 18, 2011
WORLD
Roswell Daily Record
UN peacekeepers in Ivory Coast fire warning shots
ABIDJAN, Ivory Coast (AP) — United Nations peacekeepers in Ivory Coast fired warning shots in the air on Monday to disperse a mob allied with the president who is refusing to give up power, and a regional envoy arrived to try to persuade the defiant leader to cede office in the interest of peace. The crowd descended on a parking lot near the luxury Pullman hotel where African Union envoy Raila Odinga was expected to stay. The hotel was being guarded by United Nations armored personnel carriers, and reporters including an Associated Press Television News cam-
eraman saw the mob encircle the vehicles, shouting and pumping their fists in the air. Seconds later, there was the crack of gunfire; a cloud of birds flew out of nearby trees and protesters scattered. Odinga, the prime minister of Kenya, spent the afternoon with incumbent president Laurent Gbagbo, who is insisting he won the Nov. 28 presidential election even though results tallied by his country’s electoral commission and double-checked by a special United Nations observation mission showed opposition leader Alassane Ouattara had won.
Attacks against the U.N. have been mounting. Last week six of their cars were destroyed by proGbagbo mobs, who accuse the U.N. of bias, and of being part of “a foreign plot” to remove the leader. Odinga’s trip is the fifth highlevel visit by an African leader trying to find a solution to the standoff. In a statement released Monday, Odinga said Gbagbo’s unwillingness to respect the results could create a crisis of confidence for Africa and lead people to think their votes do not matter in a year when 17 presidential elections are scheduled. “The refusal to respect the will
of the Ivorians as expressed in the November elections will deal a deadly blow to the wave of democracy that is sweeping Africa,” Odinga said, according to the statement. On Monday night after leaving the presidential palace, Odinga was expected to visit Ouattara, who is holed up in a hotel across town, unable to leave except by helicopter because troops loyal to Gbagbo have sealed off the roads. The latest attempt at diplomacy comes as the chiefs of staff of the armies of 15 neighboring nations planned to meet this week to consider military intervention to oust Gbagbo.
There are fears, though, that military action could spark retaliatory attacks by the Young Patriots, a militia-like organization allied with Gbagbo. The group’s members were behind the attempted attack on the U.N. at the Pullman. Over the weekend, the group’s leader, Charles Ble Goude, held a rally to warn he would soon give “the command” — implying that he planned to unleash the mobs — as he did in 2004 and 2005, when the group gang raped foreign women, beat French citizens and attacked peacekeepers.
Egyptian man sets himself on fire
CAIRO (AP) — An Egyptian man set himself on fire Monday outside the country’s parliament, security officials said, in an apparent protest emulating the self-immolation of an unemployed Tunisian man last month that helped trigger a popular uprising. Egyptian security officials said policemen guarding the parliament building in central Cairo and motorists driving by at the time used fire extinguishers to quickly put out the blaze engulfing the man. Health Ministry spokesman AbdelRahman Shahine said the man was taken to the hospital with light burns, mostly to his face, neck and legs. The officials identified the man as Abdou Abdel-Monaam Hamadah, a 48-year-old owner of a small restaurant from Qantara, an area close to the Suez Canal city of Ismailia east of Cairo. They said Hamadah was protesting a government policy preventing restaurant owners from buying cheap subsidized bread to resell to their patrons. A subsidized loaf of typical Egyptian flat bread sells for about 1 U.S. cent apiece, but sells for five times that much to restaurant owners. Hamadah asked policemen guarding the parliament building to meet speaker Fathi Sorour, officials said. When they refused, Hamadah stepped back, took out a bottle filled with petrol from his pocket, doused himself with the liquid and set himself alight. The policemen and passing motorists rushed to him with fire extinguishers to put out the flames. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to brief the media. The website of Egypt’s leading Al-Ahram daily said Hamadah was a father of four and had repeatedly entered heated arguments with local officials over the bread issue. Hamadah’s act follows that of Tunisian Mohamed Bouazizi, a 26-year-old with a university degree, who set himself on fire after police confiscated the fruits and vegetables he was selling without a permit. He later died in a hospital near Tunis, and his desperate act touched a nerve with educated, unemployed youths nationwide in Tunisia, and sparked the mass protests that toppled President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. It also follows a similar act in Algeria on Saturday. Algeria’s Liberte daily said that a 37-year-old man set himself alight over the weekend in a village near the Tunisian border, and died hours later in the hospital. News of the Tunisian uprising has dominated the Egyptian media over the past few days, with opposition and independent newspapers lauding the fall of Ben Ali and drawing parallels between his toppled regime and that of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, who has ruled for nearly 30 years. Egypt has posted impressive economic growth rates over the past few years, in part fueled by a host of ambitious reforms. But the growth has failed to filter down to many of the estimated 80 million Egyptians. Nearly half of all Egyptians live under or just below the poverty line set by the U.N. at $2 a day. Mubarak and his ruling National Democratic Party have been pledging to ensure that the fruits of economic reforms benefit more Egyptians.
AP Photo
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak attends a press conference in the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, in Jerusalem, Monday.
Israel’s defense minister defects from Labor Party JERUSALEM (AP) — In a shocking move that instantly shook up Israel’s political scene, Defense Minister Ehud Barak defected from his Labor Party Monday, leaving in shambles the iconic movement that founded the country and ruled it invincibly for decades. The move appeared to shore up Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s governing coalition by leading to the resignation of the other Labor members, who had been at loggerheads with the government over stalled peacemaking efforts. But it could weaken the Israeli leader in the long run by reducing his majority and undermining his attempts to portray himself as a centrist leader. Barak, the departing party leader and former prime minister, will stay in the ruling coalition with four other followers in a new party. But Labor’s eight remaining lawmakers — including three ministers — will withdraw. Netanyahu’s remaining majority of 66 seats in the 120-member parlia-
ment now seems safer than before, and it will be dominated even more by hawks opposed to serious concessions to the Palestinians. The Palestinians refuse to negotiate until Israel completely freezes settlement construction in the West Bank and east Jerusalem — captured areas they claim for a future state. It’s unlikely the current coalition, dominated by nationalist and Orthodox Jewish parties, will do so. Barak, 68, said he was tired of the infighting within Labor and accused his former partners of being too soft on issues of war and peace. His colleagues have been agitating to leave the government, and had been pushing for a party decision to withdraw from the government entirely, which would have made it more awkward for Barak to stay. “We are embarking on a new path,” he said during a news conference at Israel’s parliament. “We want to wake up without having to compromise, apologize and explain.”
He said his new party — to be called Independence — would be “centrist, Zionist and democratic.” For Labor, the dramatic announcement marked another chapter in its stunning fall from grace. The once proud party dominated Israeli politics for the country’s first three decades, producing a string of prime ministers that included David Ben-Gurion — Israel’s founding father — Levi Eshkol, Golda Meir and the slain prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin. Barak himself briefly served as prime minister from 1999 to 2001. Labor led Israel to independence in 1948 and left its imprint on all important aspects of Israeli life for decades. Its stalwarts founded the kibbutz movement — communal farms that for a time captured the world’s imagination — and set up the basic institutions of state that live on today. It was finally unseated by the more hard-line Likud in 1977, beginning a period of two-party domination that has ended with Labor’s drop in support.
Prosecutors: Italian Premier Berlusconi had many prostitutes
ROME (AP) — Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi had sex with a significant number of prostitutes, Milan prosecutors alleged Monday in documents seeking authorization to search some of his properties. The prosecutors are leading a probe aimed at determining if the 74-year-old media mogul paid for sex with a 17-year-old Moroccan girl nicknamed Ruby who attended parties at one of his villas last year. Prostitution isn’t a crime in Italy, but exploiting or aiding prostitution with minors is. The prosecutors alleged in documents examined by a parliamentary committee Monday that Berlusconi had sex with a “significant” number of young female prostitutes and used apartments to compensate the women, along with cash payments. Berlusconi has denied wrongdoing and Ruby has said she never had sex with him. The scandal, which exploded Friday with word that Berlusconi was under investigation, gained momentum Monday with the arrival in parliament of a nearly 400-page dossier from prosecutors on the case. And it was having political implications, with one of Berlusconi’s party leaders, Fabrizio Cicchitto, raising the prospect of early elections if the already weakened government can’t muster more parliamentary support. The prosecutors asked the Chamber of Deputies to authorize a search of offices in a residential complex near Milan that belong to Berlusconi, who is both a member of the Chamber and premier. Members of the Chamber enjoy parliamentary immunity, including from arrest or searches in criminal probes, unless a Chamber committee decides otherwise on a case-by-case basis. The Chamber posted the prosecutors’ request on its website Monday. The teen, now 18, has said she was
AP Photo
In this photo taken on Dec. 11, 2010, Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi greets supporters as he walks in downtown Milan, Italy. among a bevy of young women invited to parties at Berlusconi’s Arcore villa near Milan. She has said in a TV interview that the premier last year gave her 7,000 ($9,000) to help her financially. Prosecutors want police to search an apartment complex in Segrate, near Milan, which includes the offices they alleged could contain documentation that young women were given money and rent-free apartments — in another residential complex — by Berlusconi in compensation for prostitution. In the request, Prosecutor Edmondo Bruti
Liberati wrote that one of the premier’s lawyers said the offices are part of Berlusconi’s property and thus enjoy parliamentary immunity from searches. Prosecutors alleged in their request that these parties were a cover for prostitution, and that besides the rent-free arrangement, cash payments doled out by a go-between compensated the prostitutes. Liberati alleged that three close associates of the premier “continuously carried out an activity of inducing and abetting prostitution,” by selecting and accompanying to Berlusconi’s various residences, a
“significant number of young women, who prostituted themselves with Silvio Berlusconi, receiving payment of money” from him. Among the prostitutes, prosecutors alleged, was the 17-year-old Ruby. Liberati in his request to parliament said investigators’ analysis of the girl’s cell phone data indicated she “frequented” Berlusconi’s Arcore residence in a period spanning February to May of last year. The teenager has said she was first invited to Arcore for a soiree of dinner, song and dance with Berlusconi and several other young women on Valentine’s Day in 2010. She claimed she had given her age as 24, so others at the party, including Berlusconi, wouldn’t know she was a minor. For three days running, culminating in a recorded video message shown on Italian TV Sunday night, Berlusconi has dismissed allegations that he paid for prostitutes, including a minor, as “grotesque.” He railed against prosecutors’ use of telephone interceptions as a violation of privacy; wiretaps of participants at the Arcore dinners were also part of the prosecutors’ documentation turned over Monday to parliament. Berlusconi claimed to have found a steady girlfriend following his separation from his second wife, Veronica Lario. Lario has cited his frequenting of “minors” and “infatuation” with young women as a reason she wanted to end the marriage. Italian news reports say prosecutors want to question Berlusconi later this week. The premier could invoke protection from prosecution in his role as premier. Italy’s constitutional court recently ruled that judges could determine, instance by instance, if commitments connected to his role as head of government could excuse him from attending trial or appearing before prosecutors.
CLASSIFIEDS
Roswell Daily Record ROSWELL DAILY RECORD
CALL 622-7710 Legals ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish December 28, 2010, Jan. 4, 11, 18, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT No. CV-2009-1021 THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON TRUST COMPANY, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK TRUST COMPANY, N.A. AS SUCCESSOR TO JPMORGAN CHASE BANK N.A. AS TRUSTEE FOR RAMP 2003RS8, Plaintiff, vs. OSCAR RUBIO; THERESA R. RUBIO; and JOHN DOE and JANE DOE, (true names unknown), tenants, Defendants. FIRST AMENDED NOTICE OF SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on January 25, 2011, at the hour of 11:45 a.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the south door of the Roswell Police Department, 128 West Second Street, Roswell, New Mexico, sell all the right, title and interest of the above-named Defendants in and to the hereinafter described real estate to the highest bidder for cash. The property to be sold is located at 1906 W. Juniper, Roswell, and is situate in Chaves County, New Mexico, and is particularly described as follows: The West 39 feet of Lot Three (3) and the East 20 feet of Lot Four (4) in Block One (1) of KRAUSE SUBDIVISION, in the City of Roswell, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat filed in the Chaves County Clerk's Office on November 7, 1955 and recorded in Book C of Plat Records, Chaves County, New Mexico, at Page 47. THE FOREGOING SALE will be made to satisfy a judgment rendered by the above Court in the above entitled and numbered cause on February 24, 2010, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the above described property. Subsequent to the entry of the judgment, the Debtor(s) made payments in Bankruptcy Case No. 13 10-11713 SR and partially satisfied Plaintiff's judgment. The amount now due on the judgment is $56,587.20, plus interest thereon at the rate of 11.0000% per annum from December 16, 2010, to the date of sale. The amount of such interest to the date of sale will be $699.21. The Plaintiff and/or its assignees has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to a one month right of redemption. ______________________________ AD Jones, Special Master P.O. Box 1180 Roswell, NM 88202-1180 (575) 622-8432 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 18, 25, 2011 Notice is hereby given that on February 2nd, 2011, the UHaul Co of New Mexico will be offering for sale under the Statutory Lien Process, by public auction, the following storage units. The goods to be sold are generally described as household goods. The terms of the sale will be cash only. U-Haul Co of New Mexico reserves the right to refuse any and all bids. The sale will be at Roswell U-Haul Co of New Mexico reserves the right to refuse any and all bids. The sale will be at Roswell U-Haul & Storage, 1309 S Virginia, Roswell New Mexico 88201, on or after 10:00am. Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
119 Ruben Dixon 2101 Barnett Roswell NM 88203
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
122 Paul Samuels 501 S 20th Apt 28 Artesia NM 88210
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
131 Patrick Dooley 403 West Pine Lodge Roswell NM 88203
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
141 Linda R Smith 508 S Kansas Roswell NM 88203
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
155 Reach 2000 P.O. Box 3068 Roswell NM 88201
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
158 Joshua Archuleta 909 W 8th Roswell NM 88201
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
166 Jane Baston 1306 W Third Roswell NM 88201
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
169 Jody U Hyder P.O. Box 654 Artesia NM 88211
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
178 Michael J.C. Burkhead 152 N Sun Arbor Teer #1046 Salt Lake City UT 84116
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
181 Guadalupe A Perez 703 E 3rd Roswell NM 88201 191 Cynthia McKinney 5 Briarwood Place Roswell NM 88203
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
B5
Italian designers do classic tailor-
MILAN (AP) — As the menswear preview winter showings wind down it is clear that designers are not in the mood for sports. After several seasons of safe casual clothes, Italian designers return to their first love — classic tailoring — and in more than one case, go beyond. Earlier in the week Dolce&Gabbana presented a latter-day dandy who flaunts a velvet tuxedo jacket worn with distressed jeans. On the third of the four day preview presentations for the fall-winter 20112012 Monday, Frida Giannini for Gucci created a new dandy based on the rock-star atmosphere of the 1970s. While every show has devoted a lot of space to revisited suit wear, luxurious fur and ample outerwear also play a big part in the winter fashion scene. Fur-trimmings, an extrava-
GARAGE SALES
DON ’T’ MISS A SALE BY MISSING THE 2:00 PM DEADLINE FOR PLACING YOUR ADS
006. Southwest 1204 W. Hobbs 10-5pm, TuesSat. Just back Deep South antiques, vintage collectibles, snow skis & poles old buttons, marbles, Pecos diamonds, unusual rocks, unbelievable selection & clothes by the pound, tool world, manland, 6400 sqft of fun & deals. 914-1855
015. Personals Special Notice
ANNOUNCEMENTS PLAZA MOVIE Center, 301 W. McGaffey, 623-4816. Mon-Sat, 2-8pm. New releases every Tuesday.
025. Lost and Found
YOU’RE WHITE dog has been found in Enchanted Hills. Please call after 4pm & describe him & pick him up. 622-2016
AP Photo A model wears a creation from the Missoni men's Fall-Winter 2011/2012 collection, at the Milan Fashion Week unveiled in Milan, Italy, Sunday
gant detail, are present in almost every collection. Ostentatious jackets, long coats and big furs are another sign that the good life is back.
025. Lost and Found
LOST LONGHAIRED black & white cat answers to Tuxie in the vicinity of Brown & Berrendo. 627-2278
FOUND SUNDAY, small white dog. Call to identify. 623-0207
045. Employment Opportunities
OFFICE ASSISTANT with bookkeeping and payroll experience, flexible work hours, and pleasant work environment. Send resume to John Jerge, CPA PC at 101 South Union, Roswell, New Mexico 88203.
INSTRUCTION EMPLOYMENT
045. Employment Opportunities AVON, Buy or Sell. Pay down your bills. Start your own business for $10. Call Sandy 317-5079 ISR.
FRESENIUS MEDICAL Care/Southeastern New Mexico Kidney Center is seeking 1 Staff RN. Full benefits, 401, medical, vision, dental. PTO after 6 months. Other company benefits. Open Mon-Sat. Off Sundays.12 hour shifts. Competitive pay. Apply in person at 2801 N. Main St. Suite H.
Legals
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 11, 18, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN THE MATTER OF THE KINSHIP GUARDIANSHIP OF: Tye Ashton Wilson, d/o/b: 3/22/1999, Dykota Cheyanne Wilson, d/o/b: 5/8/2000 No. DM-2010-556 NOTICE TO: Keith Howard Payne Sue Wilson has filed suit for kinship guardianship of your child, Dykota Cheyanne Wilson. She has been appointed temporary guardian. A hearing to determine whether Sue Wilson will be appointed permanent kinship guardian of Dykota Cheyanne Wilson will be held on February 21, 2011 at 9:00 A.M. before the Honorable Charles C. Currier, 400 N. Virginia, Roswell, NM 88201. Failure to appear could result in Ms. Wilson becoming permanent kinship guardian of your son. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 11, 18, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN THE MATTER OF THE KINSHIP GUARDIANSHIP OF: Tye Ashton Wilson, d/o/b: 3/22/1999, Dykota Cheyanne Wilson, d/o/b: 5/8/2000 No. DM-2010-556 NOTICE TO: Warren Michael Evans Sue Wilson has filed suit for kinship guardianship of your son, Tye Ashton Wilson. She has been appointed temporary guardian. A hearing to determine whether Sue Wilson will be held on February 21, 2011 at 9:00 A.M. before the Honorable Charles C. Currier, 400 N. Virginia, Roswell, New Mexico. Failure to appear could result in Ms. Wilson becoming kinship permanent kinship guardian of your son. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish January 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 18, 2011 LEGAL ADVERTISEMENT INVITATION TO BID Sealed bids will be received at Community Action Agency of Southern New Mexico, 3880 Foothills Road, Suite A, Las Cruces, NM 88011 for the following: BID# 01-12011 is for vehicles. BID# 02-12011 is for laptop computers. BID# 03-12011 is for blower door systems. BID# 04-12011 is for combustion analysis devices. BID# 05-12011 is for infrared cameras. For a bid specification package, contact Greg Garcia, Energy$mart Program Director, Community Action Agency of Southern New Mexico, at 2320 Westgate, Las Cruces, NM 88005 or call (575) 523-1639.
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
193 Janet Marie Benson General Delivery Salida Co 81201
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
194 Jacqueline L Williams 411 E 5th St Apt B Roswell NM 88201
Community Action Agency of Southern New Mexico reserves the right to reject any and all bids submitted. BIDS WILL BE ACCEPTED UNTIL January 20, 2011 @ 4:30 P.M. Public Opening of Bids will take place on January 21, 2011 @ 2:00 P.M. at same address.
Storage Room: Contracted To: Last Known Address:
202 Guadalupe A Perez 703 E 3rd Roswell NM 88201
ALL ENVELOPES MUST BE CLEARLY MARKED AS FOLLOWS: SEALED PROPOSAL FOR BID # (specify which bid) DATE RECEIVED__________ TIME _________
COASTAL TRANSPORT is seeking OWNEROPERATORS at least 23 years of age, Class A CDL with X Endorsement and 1 year driving experience. Apply at 2408 N. Industrial, Artesia, NM or call 575748-8808 HELENA CHEMICAL Company, a national agricultural-chemical company, has an immediate opening for an experienced truck driver at our Artesia location. This position will make deliveries, utilize a forklift and perform general warehouse duties. Requires a high school diploma or equivalent, CDL with HAZMAT endorsement. We offer an excellent working environment and outstanding compensation and benefits package. For consideration, please Apply in person: Helena Chemical Company 504 Lake Arthur Highway Lake Arthur, NM 88253 (575) 365-2148 Pre-employment drug screen required. EOE M/F/V/H
THE ROSWELL JOB CORPS CENTER is currently taking applications for the following positions: Career Preparation Counselor: Serve as liaison between the student, center and training partners for the development of employability skills. Bachelor’s degree in related field, one or two years related experience and/or training; or equivalent combination of education and experience. Starting salary is $30,000. Career Technical Instructor Health Occupations-PT: Certified Licensed Practical Nurse or Registered Nurse with two years experience in the nursing field. Must have a valid driver’s license with an acceptable driving record. Hourly salary is $20.00. Recreation Advisor-PT: Responsibilities include carrying out general student recreation activities. Must have a High School Diploma or GED and two years of related experience in recreation or working with youth. Must have a valid driver’s license with an acceptable driving record in order to obtain a Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) with passenger endorsement and obtain and maintain CDL medical certification. This position pays $10.50 per hour. Residential Advisor, PartTime: Responsibilities include monitoring the dorms, ensuring a safe living environment, assisting students in maintaining cleanliness of the dorms, and assisting students in developing social skills and independent living skills. High school diploma or equivalent and one year experience required. Starting rate of pay is $10.50 per hour. View Job Description and Apply online at: www.chugachjobs.com Applications will only be accepted online Deadline to apply: Open Until Filled An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F, D/V
The new Gucci suit has a classic cut spiffed up by silk ties and pocket handkerchiefs. The jacket is cut short, the pants have a carefree loose-
045. Employment Opportunities
BIG D’S is taking resumes for cook, cashier & delivery driver. Bring resume to 100 S. Richardson between 2-4pm Mon.-Fri. only.
DRIVERS Come join our team! Coastal Transport is seeking Drivers with Class (A) CDL. Must be 23 yrs old (X) Endorsement with 1 yr experience, excellent pay, home everyday! Paid Vacation, saftey bonus, company paid life inc. We provide state of the art training program. $2000 sign on bonus. For more information call 1-877-2977300 or 575-748-8808 between 8am & 4pm, Monday-Friday.
SCHLUMBERGER IN Roswell currently has openings for Equipment Operators. Equipment Operators are responsible for preventative maintenance, operation of logging/transport vehicles & oilfield equipment out on sites. Operators are provided extensive and ongoing training in troubleshooting, technical procedures and safety. Schlumberger offers a competitive salary, training, advancement opportunities and one of the best benefit packages in the U.S. Candidates must have a HS diploma or GED, must be at least 21 yrs of age, possess a clean driving record and the ability to pass a background check and extensive drug testing. A CDL is preferred but not required. Applicants must be hardworking, self motivated and dependable. To apply for this position call 575-625-1136. Apply in person at SOS Staffing, 315 W. 2nd St. or log onto www.sosstaffing.com.
PHLEBOTOMY CERTIFICATION Class January 22 & 23. Fairfield Inn, Roswell, 1201 North Main $300 To register call 505-620-3025 or 505-4109559 or swphlebotomy.com LOS PASITOS Learning Center currently has a Daycare Teacher position open for the infant room. Position requires a professional appearance, a love for children, a high school graduate with at least 45 hours course training and must be a team player. Salary based on experience and drug test required. Please bring current resume with completed application, police background check, and driving record. Come join the Tobosa Team. Closing date: 01/19/2011. (Apply @ 110 E. Summit or call 575-623-6402 and ask for Naomi. (EEOC Employer.)
TELLER Bank of the Southwest is seeking a qualified candidate to fill a fulltime Teller position at our Roswell South Branch. Primary duties include, but not limited to: understanding and promoting bank products and services, cash handling and customer service. Requirements: Must have a good attitude and basic computer skills. Must be detailed oriented with excellent time management and people skills. Previous bank experience is preferred. Company offers excellent work environment, salary and benefits. Background screen required. Apply in person with Lawrence at the Bank of the Southwest, 800 W. Hobbs, Roswell, NM, by January 19, 2011. EOE/AA
ness, and the plaids are strictly British. But where Gucci really goes to dandy town is in the outerwear. Oversized double-breasted shearling jackets, sleek ostrich leather coats, and a big coat in shaggy Mongolian goat are all superbly over the top. Donatella Versace created a futuristic 3-dimensional fashion, a sort of menswear Avatar wardrobe, for the winter 20112012. Nothing was flat — from the bubbled wool fabric, to the embossed leather, and the fluffy Astrachan fur. In contrast, the styles were streamlined. The new jacket is double-breasted and slides down to the hips cinched by a warrior-like leather belt complete with bullet holders. Pants are narrow, and stop short of the ankle, the favorite new hemline.
045. Employment Opportunities
045. Employment Opportunities
PECOS VALLEY Equipment is seeking career-minded individuals for long term employment. Current openings include service technician and sales professional. For more information, stop by 312 West Richey, Artesia, NM, to submit your resume or complete an application. May be faxed to 575-748-1401.
MAKE EXCELLENT money. Looking for sharp well represented individual to demonstrate a new kind of air cleaner in Roswell & Artesia area. Part time and evenings. Must have reliable car. Call Shawn after 11am 575-4468571
ACCOUNTANT Central Valley Electric Cooperative has an opening for a full-time accountant. A Bachelor's degree in Accounting from an accredited university is required. For a complete position description and application form, go to our website at www.cvecoop.org and click on the employment tab. Application forms also may be obtained at our offices located at 1505 N. 13th Street in Artesia, NM. LOOKING FOR an honest dependable Christian person to help with my housekeeping services. Call to set up appointment 575-749-4900 or 578-1447 OCCUPATIONAL THERAPIST Assistant. Full-Time Rehab Coordinator at SNF in Truth or Consequences. Excellent income, rich benefits + annual bonuses up to $6K! Call Janelle at SYNERTX 1-888-796-3789. www.synertx.com CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE/ROUT E DRIVER Requisition Number-102673 High School Diploma/GED, experience with Route Sales desired, ability to work directly with our customers, build relationships with our customers by providing resolution to problems and/or complaints, conduct customer satisfaction reviews, clean driving record, ability to lift up to 50 lbs, and ability to pass a Department of Transportation Drug Screen and physical. Competitive salary and benefits. Application available at 515 N. Virginia, Roswell, NM 88201 from 01/14/11 to 01/20/11. EOE EMPLOYER CHRISTMAS BY Krebs is now hiring production workers for our 2011 season We have the following positions available: Machine Operators Line Workers Material Handlers Custom Paint Formulator Sample Coordinator Darkroom Coordinator Entry Level Maintenance Workers Applications are accepted Monday - Friday from 910:30 am and 1-2:30 pm Christmas by Krebs is an equal opportunity employer and drug free workplace DRIVER – Drive Knight in 2011! Daily or Weekly Pay, Top equipment, 27 Service Centers, Van and Refrigerated. CDL-A with 3 months OTR experience. 800-414-9569. www.driveknight.com ACADEMIC ADVISOR: Job is located in Portales, NM. www.enmu.edu/service/hr 575-562-2115 AA/EO/Title IX Employer
LAW OFFICE seeking a full-time file clerk/runner effective immediately. Candidate must have office skills, be proficient in Word and WordPerfect, and have own transportation with proof of insurance. Send resumes with cover letter to: PO Box 1897 Unit 255, Roswell, NM 88202
ARTESIA TRAINING ACADEMY CDL Driving Instructor needed Must have Class A CDL Clean Driving Record 5 Years Experience Bring your work history and MVR With you to apply 3205 W Main Artesia, NM. WANTED: WORKING Shop Foreman Roswell, NM Fortune Transportation is an over-the-road reefer freight trucking company with terminals in Roswell, NM & Windom, MN. Our service departments perform basic preventative maintenance and mechanical repairs for our fleet of 135 late model sleeper tractors and 225 reefer trailers. Fortune is seeking a working shop foreman to lead our Roswell team. If you have diesel experience, good communication skills, and the ability to prioritize repairs and positively motivate people, we'd like to hear from you. Qualified applicants are encouraged to mail or fax a resume, send an email, visit our terminal or call to discuss. Fortune's employee benefits include medical flex-plan, company supplied uniforms, paid holidays and vacation time, monthly medical allowance, and 401-K retirement plan. Curt Langstraat Fortune Transportation 3306 East Grand Plains Road, Roswell, NM 88203 Phone: 1-507-831-2335 Fax: 1-507-832-8634 Email: curt@ fortunetransportation.com
SUPPORTED EMPLOYMENT SpecialistDo you enjoy helping others? If the answer to this is yes this may be the job for you! For details & more information come by 200 E. 4th St. Suite 200 and apply. Applications will be taken until 12 PM on 1/21/11. COMFORT INN is hiring for experienced Night Auditor. Please apply in person 3595 N. Main Roswell. No phone calls please. THE ROSWELL Refuge is seeking resumes for a Victim Advocates position. High school diploma or GED required. $10 per hour. Must have ability to communicate effectively orally and in writing. Must have a clean driving record and pass a background check. Must be able to work independently and make judgment calls that help stabilize clients in crisis due to domestic violence. Bilingual preferred. Submit resume by January 21st, to 1306 W. College. THE ROSWELL Refuge Intervention Program is seeking male and female part-time facilitators. Facilitators will need to be able to organize and co-facilitate batterers groups for court-ordered and voluntary individuals. Group sessions are one and a half hours long. There are several group dates and times to choose from. $14 per hour. Must have 4 years of college education or equivalent experience working with domestic violence. Submit resume to P.O. Box 184 or drop them off at 1215 N. Garden.
B6 Tuesday, January 18, 2011 SERVICES
105. Childcare NEED CHILD care? Find the widest range of available childcare for your children and their needs. 1-800691-9067 or www.newmexic okids.org. You may also call us; Family Resource & Referral 6229000 and we can help you navigate the system.
195. Elderly Care
220. Furniture Repair
ADVANCED HOME Care. All caregivers are licensed bonded & have passed federal criminal back-ground checks. Loving care since 1994. 6276256
REPAIR & Refinish furniture, build furniture, firewood. Southwest Woods. 1727 SE Main. 623-0729 or 6268466 By appointment only.
225. General Construction
WILL CARE for your loved ones. Will cook, light housekeeping, laundry, bathe, 627-6363 good ref.
MILLIGAN CONTRACTING Bathroom remodels, painting, tile, home repairs & more. Licensed, bonded & insured. Call Geary at 578-9353.
200. Fencing
HOME DAYCARE providing weekend childcare. 626-6203
M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991
LICENSED PROVIDER has opening for day/night, 622-7423 Mary
140. Cleaning
Rodriguez Construction FOR WOOD, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100
JD CLEANING Service, Licensed and bonded. References. 623-4252
HOUSEKEEPING - Home and/or office. Honest & dependable. 575-749-4900 or 575-578-1447 HOUSEKEEPER FOR house/offices. Home & commercial experience, ref. avail. 627-6335 or 3173302 HOUSEKEEPER incl. windows & seasonal cleaning wkly, bi., mo. honest & dep. ref. 347-5270 Elizabeth
185. Electrical BIG HORN Electric Professional work, affordable price. 575-317-8345 NM Lic#367662.
210. Firewood/Coal
270. Landscape/ Lawnwork
LAWN SERVICE & much more work at low price. 914-0803 or 914-1375
Roswell Lawn Service rake leaves, trim trees, general cleanup, 420-3278 WEEKEND WARRIOR Lawn Service mowing, property cleanup, residential rain gutter cleaning, and much more 575-626-6121
TEE TIME Construction Commercial/Residential Construction - Framing, cement, roofing, drywalln painting, New Construction of Homes, Additions, Remodeling, and Metal Buildings. Licensed & Bonded. Call 575-626-9686
MOW GRASS, Trim Bushes, Flower Beds, Clean Ups, Pull Weed, Leaf Raking, Pecan pick up, Tree Pruning, Rock Yards. Call Pedro or Virginia 575-9105247 or 623-1826
T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Handyman for a day. Call John for all your misc. repairs. 317-1477
Greenscapes Sprinkler Systems Lawn mowing, field mowing, gravel, sodhydro seed, pruning, tilling, For dependable & reliable service call 622-2633 or 910-0150.
230. General Repair
SEANSONED MOUNTAIN wood $100 1/2 cord. Free delivery/stack. 626-9803.
FIREWOOD Seasoned cedar & juniper: split, stacked & delivered, sale any amount call for pricing. 575-910-4842 GRAVES FARM oak and elm. Cord and 1/2 cord delivered. 622-1889 QUALITY FIREWOOD. Guaranteed. Free del. & stacked. More great incentive. 7th season. Native & Marine Vet. John 317-4317
232. Chimney Sweep
305. Computers
CHIMNEY SWEEP Have your woodstove or fireplace inspected and cleaned. Dust free Guarantee. 35 years Experience, Licensed, Insured. Bulldog Janitorial Services 575-308-9988
COMPUTER DOCTOR
235. Hauling
FIREWOOD-SPILT, CURED & Delivered. Oak 1 Cord-$280, 1/2 Cord-$160. Elm 1 cord-$190, 1/2 Cord$115. Discount if Picked up. Credit Cards accepted. Graves Farm 622-1889.
BNX ELECTRIC Residential/Commercial, Bonded, Lic#368212, Free Estimates. Se Habla Espanol. Call Benito 6379413 or 317-9259.
CLASSIFIEDS
PROPERTY CLEANUPS Will tear down old buildings, barns, haul trash, old farm equipment. 347-0142 or 317-7738
Microsoft Certified 50% off any repair (Labor only) 575-208-9348 Call Billy
310. Painting/ Decorating Quality Painting! Interior, Exterior at prices you can afford. Mike 910-7012
INTERIOR/EXTERIOR PAINTING, water damage repairs, drywall, blown shingles, carpentry/license. 25 yrs exp. Call 208-0888
345. Remodeling
BERRONES CONSTRUCTION. Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing. Licensed, Bonded. Ray: 6259924/ 626-4153.
NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552.
350. Roofing
Guaranteed Shingle Roof jobs. Locally owned. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const. 6264079 or 622-2552.
Need A Roof? Call R & R Construction 18 years in Roswell. 622-0072
3 LINES OR LESS . . . ONLY $ 68 9 NO REFUNDS • Published 6 Consecutive Days
• Ads posted online at no extra cost
(includes tax)
MAIL AD WITH PAYMENT OR FAX WITH CREDIT CARD NUMBER Call (505)-622-7710 #45 --- 625-0421 Fax 2301 N. Main TO BUY-SELL-RENT-TRADE ANY AND EVERYTHING
CLASSIFICATION PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE
T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Call John 317-1477
380. Sharpening
SHARPENING SERVICE Knives & Chainsaws. Professional & affordable. 6245370 or 637-2211
405. TractorWork
LANGFORD TRACTOR work. Septic tanks installed/inspected. Blade work and backhoe work. Gravel, topsoil. 623-1407.
410. Tree Service
STUMP GRINDING. Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 6234185
ALLEN’S TREE Service. The oldest tree service in Roswell. Million $ ins. 6261835
SEND TO: Roswell Daily Record, Classified Department, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell, N.M. 88202 WE ACCEPT: ❏
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440. Window Repair
AQUARIUS GLASS For Less. Screens, Patio & Shower Drs., Table Tops & Mirrors. 623-3738.
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485. Business Opportunities
WORD AD DEADLINE
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Personal Advertising totaling less than $20 will not be billed on an open account, unless the advertiser already has a history of good credit with us. Visa, Master Card & Discover are accepted as prepayment. There will be no refunds or credit on prepaid cancellations. All individuals who are not in our retail trade zone must prepay their advertising. All new commercial accounts must have a standard application for credit on file. If we do not have an approved credit application on file, the advertising must be charged on a credit card until credit is approved. CORRECTING AN ERROR — You are responsible for checking your ad the first day it appears in the paper. In the event of an error, call the Classified Department immediately for correction. THE ROSWELL DAILY RECORD WILL ONLY ALLOW ONE ADDITIONAL DAY FOR INCORRECT INSERTIONS.
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FINANCIAL
ARE YOU tired of exchanging your time for money and watching life pass by in an instant? Do you seem to spend more time at your job than at home with your family doing what you actually enjoy? I’m involved in an opportunity that can change that, and give you complete freedom of time. Not to mention, the income potential is outstanding. ACN Independent Representative Ronika Thomas 575-626-9409. FOR SALE FENCED COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 210x115 w/3200 SQFT SHOP & OFFICE IN & OUTSIDE PARKING. 100 N. PINE. CALL 575-910-2070. DO YOU earn $800 in a day? Your Own Local Candy Route! 25 Machines and Candy All for $9995. 877-915-8222 All Major Credit Cards Accepted!
REAL ESTATE
490. Homes For Sale ADVERTISE YOUR HOME ALL OVER NEW MEXICO. CALL THE DAILY RECORD FOR DETAILS. 622-7710 EQUAL HOUSING NOTICE All real estate advertised in the Roswell Daily Record is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion or sex, family status and handicap or national origin or an intention to make any such preference limitation or discrimination. The Roswell Daily Record will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. REDUCED Must sell charming 2 bed 1 bath, located at 601 S. Missouri. Basement, huge lot, new fencing. $59,995, owner financing avail. 637-5530 OPEN HOUSE Call 6227010/910-6104. 3305 Riverside, 2222 sq. ft., 4/3/2, will negotiate 1% finders fee. 3 BR 1 3/4bath 1239 sq ft. remodeled & updated, lots of potential. $82k 303 S. Balsam Ave. 626-5752 Best offer or $103,000, Brokers welcome. #3 Forest Dr. OPEN HOUSE DAILY 1PM TO 6PM, 2050 square feet. 4 Bedroom, 1 3/4 bath. Esquibel Real Estate. 575626-7550 CISCO 575-312-3529 FSBO 2715 N Orchard beautiful 2 story, 2400 SF 4 br, 2 living areas, office or 5th br, laundry Rm, ref. air. Wonderful neighborhood across from Del Norte Park & Elem. Sch. 2 blks Goddard High a deal at $162k. 420-3606 for appt. to see. 2 HOUSES-2BR/1BA, $60k each , owner will finance w/$6k down. 623-0459
1305 W. 7th, 2/1, $44,900, owner fin., $450mo. 10% dn., central ht/air.626-5290 3 BD, 2 ba, garage, completely remodeled in & out house @ the base. $60k, owner will finance w/$8k down. 910-1886 FSBO: NEWLY remodeled 3/2/2. 804 E. La Paloma. Call for appt. 575-317-2563 4Bd, 1 Ba, new paint, carpet, doors,fncd yrd, $59,500, M-Th 624-1331
495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale COUNTRY HOME HORSE PROPERTY W. of Roswell, 5ac, 1800sf home, 4br, 2ba, fl. sz arena w/roping chutes, covered runs, metal barn, tack hse, shop, trees - ready to sell. 623-2538
505. Investment/ Commercial/ Business Property
Restaurant bldg, $275K cash/trade for Ruidoso prprty, MTh 624-1331
515. Mobile Homes - Sale
‘94 SOUTHERN Energy 16x80, 3br, 2ba, quality built 2x6 walls, hardboard siding shingle roof. Well equipped, has ref. air. Selling $18,900. Call 575-6220035 D01090. 1997 CLATON, 3/2 in adult park, can be moved, nice. Call 575-317-6489. WE BUY used mobile homes. Single & double wides. 575-622-0035 D01090.
520. Lots for Sale
OWNER FINANCING for a limited time. Ready to build 5 acre lots w/ great views & good covenants. Located 9 miles West of Roswell @ the Club House Banquet Facility. Free land maps and at entrance. 575-623-1800. www.BuenaVidaLand.com
Mobile Home Lots for Sale $15,000. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. We Take Visa and Mastercard! 420-1352. PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, Owner will finance with 10% down, New Construction only (no mobile homes), , Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd. between Country Club & Berrendo Rd. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 6266791, 626-4337
Roswell Daily Record
RENTALS
535. Apartments Furnished
Dennis the Menace
1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 6241331
540. Apartments Unfurnished
VALLE ENCANTADA YOUR BEST $ RENTAL VALUE! LARGE 1,2,3 BEDROOMS. FREE UTILITIES. unfurnished, laundry room, playground, pool, ample parking. 2001 South Sunset. 623-3722.
Town Plaza Apartments New Owners, friendly new managers. New Remodeled EXTRA LARGE 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Each 2 & 3 bedroom is multi level, upstairs/downstairs w/ large closets, stove & refrigerator, private patios, and private parking. Complex has a pool, laundry room, and a quiet garden setting environment. Friendly managers on-site. Seniors 55yrs plus, will receive discount. No HUD. Good credit? Pay less rent! 575-623-2735
3 BEDROOM, 2 Bath, 930 sf, $559 plus electric. 502 S. Wyoming. 2 bedroom, 1 bath $480 or 1 bedroom $380. Call 622-4944. 1 BD, all bills pd, no pets, no smoking, no HUD - 6236281 1&2Bd, wtr pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331 305 W. Deming alley apartment, 1br, refrig. air, utilities pd., $450 mo, $400 dep. No pets. 623-7678 2 BDR. No Pets, No HUD, 1702 E. 2nd St. 773396-6618 2BR, 1BA, no pets. Also avail. 2br, 1ba mobile home, rent to own & 3br, 2ba mobile home rent to own. 624-2436 2 BED, 2 ba, 1 car garage, central air, fenced yard, 26-A Bent Tree Rd, $700/mo, $700/dep., 6279942 PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHAN TED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN. 1BR APT., all bills paid $575, $200 dep. 420-5604 BEST VALUE IN TOWN 3br/2ba, $559+elec, newly remodeled, only a few apts left, 1br $380, 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
545. Houses for Rent-Furnished 2/1, carport, sec. alarm, water, $695/1mo. dep., No HUD, 637-8467 Nice, NMMI area, safe, quiet, home, updated decor, 2/2 + office, hardwood floors, deco fireplace, gas patio grill, HP internet, LCD TV w/DVD, everything furnished, FLETC ready. 910-7148 903 S. Wyoming, FLETC READY, 2BR 2BA, all bills paid, $2,310 month, 3305 Trailing Heart, FLETC READY, 3BR 2BA, all bills paid, $2,310 month, 1915 Clover, FLETC READY, 3BR, 2BA, all bills paid, $2,310 month, #4 Jardin, 3BR 2BA, all bills paid, $2,310 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-622-4604.
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 30D BENT Tree Rd, 2/2/1, FP, $675mo., $500dep. No Smoking, No Pets Katherine (702)2327735 3 BD/1 ba. 1 car gar. 66 G St., ref air, RIAC $650 mo., $650 dep. 6279942. NOW AVAIL. 3br, 2ba, new carpet & tile, $900 mo., $600 dep., no HUD, no pets. 420-5930 2&3 Bd, 1&2 Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331 OLDER LADY to share 2br home in Artesia. 575746-3912 LOOKING FOR a place to rent? Let us help you!! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors, 501 N. Main. (575) 624-2262 Stop by to pick up a list of our available rentals or check them out online at www.roswellforrent.com!
ALL BILLS PAID 3br, 2ba, $680 mo., brand new everything. 1br $480. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
400 1/2 E 5th 1 bedroom stove, refrig., water paid, $325 mo. $200 dep. No HUD & No Pets. 910-9648
908 W. 8th #C, 1br, 1ba, all utilities pd., $375 mo., $250 damage dep., background check req. 505-296-4057
3/2, REFRIGERATOR, stove, w/d, over 2000 sq. ft., all wood floors in this Historic home @ 709 N. Pennsylvania, $1050 mo., $700 dep. 910-7969
1BR, 650 sq ft, $380 + elec. Central heating, ref air, new carpet, paint & tile. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944 EFFICIENCY 2 BR, downtown, clean, water paid. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD Call 623-8377 CUTE 2br/1ba, all electric, w/d hookup, $575/$350. 910-0827 EFFICIENCY 1 br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348. THE BEST OF BOTH WORLDS!! Become the newest member of our proud community. Income qualify, and your rent could be even lower! Efficiency $355, Small One Bedroom $390, Large One Bedroom $400, One Bedroom w/Study $420, Two Bedroom, one Bath $465, Two Bedroom, two Bath $550. All deposits are $200 Saddlecreek Apartments 1901 S. Sunset 622-3042 Set Aside Units for AHDP. saddlecreek@cableone.net
LARGE 1 bedroom apartment. References and background check required. Washer and Dryer hookups. Private parking. 420-0100
545. Houses for Rent-Furnished FLETC Homes for rent. Long & short term rentals. 5 minutes from FLETC. Brand new & beautiful! Visit our website: www.lgrentalhomes.com or Call 420-0519 or 910-7670
EXCEPTIONAL 2/2 furnished home in NW location convenient to hospitals/shopping. No HUD. All utilities paid/security system. Pet considered w/additional deposit. Owner/Broker. 626-7663
NO PETS, No HUD, 3br, $600 mo., $500 dep. 9140101 1BR, 12031/2 N. Lea Ave., $450 mo., $400 dep, great quiet neighborhood, wtr pd. 627-3403 902 MULLIS, 3 Bd, 2 ba, new home in Enchanted Hills. $1500 mo. + dep. Call 973-2466 2/1/1, appl included, $600/$550, 1706 N. Kentucky, 575-937-7491 1305 W. College, 2br, 1ba, garage, all elec., nice & clean, $595. 626-9530 NICE NE area, 3/1.5ba, no HUD or pets, non-smoking, month to month rent special $625/$500dep. Call for details 627-0726. ENCHANTED HILLS Townhome, 2/2/2, lawn maintenance provided. New appliances in kitchen & laundry. All window coverings. $1100 mo. $1000 damage deposit. 625-5229 406 W. Tilden, 2br, garage, ht pump, w/d hookups, $600 mo., $500 dep., no pets. 637-8234 1205 N. Maple, 2br, ht pump, w/d hookups, $550 mo., $500 dep., no pets. 637-8234 2BR, 1BA, $550, $200 dep., no HUD, you pay bills. 420-5604 502 W. Albuquerque, 2br, ht pump, w/d hookups, $500 mo., $500 dep., no pets. 637-8234 1103 MONTERREY 3 bedroom, 2 bath 2 living areas, total electric. $1,200 Month. $1,000 Deposit 6251952 TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262
550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 710 S. Wyoming Apt. A, 2BR, Appl. $500/m, $300 dep., water paid. Call 625-1952 1616 N. Delaware 2 br, 1 ba. $575 month $300 dep. You pay all bills good rental history req. 578-9668 504 W. Albuquerque, 2br, w/d hookups, heat pump, no pets, $550 mo., $500 dep. 637-8234 NE TOWNHOUSE 3br 1 3/4 bath fireplace 2 car garage, 1200 Seville $895 month 420-7380 500 S Evergreen, $900 mo, $450 dep. 4 bed/2 ba, lots of storage, central air, stove, fridge, D/W included, close to schools and parks, no hud, 622-3250. 409 LA Fonda - Nice and Clean 3 bedroom, 2 bath, one car garage - $1,100 a month. Call 627-7595 or 840-7411. 200 S. Washington Ave. - 3 Bedroom, 2 bath, detached garage on an extra large lot. $700.00 per month with 1 month security deposit. Renter pays all utilities. No indoor pets, no smokers. Hud accepted. Call 575317-5322 or 575-625-8627. 1105 W. 14th St. 2br/1ba. $500/mth, $500/deposit. Edgar 420-4038, 420-3167 218 E. Hervey 3BR 2BA, $625 month, 322 E. Bonney, 3BR 1BA, $550 month, 43 A Street, 2BR, 1BA, $350 month, 1514 W. Tilden, 2BR, 1BA, $600 month, 314 S. Birch #C, 1BR, 1BA, $400 month, 213 N. Michigan, 2BR, 1BA, $750 month, 314 S. Birch #A, 1BR, 1BA, $550 month, 1310 N. Lea, 3BR, 2BA, $1,400 month, 2301 N. Garden, 3BR, 1BA, $600 month, 2611 N. Kentucky #119, 2BR 2BA, $1,150 month, 1504 Tulane, 3BR, 2BA, $800 month, 505 W. College, 3BA 2.5 BA, $1,200 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-6224604. 906 W. Deming, 3br, 1ba, stove, fridge, no bills pd, $600 mo., $600 dep. Call 575-624-2464 or 575-3172483
569. Mobile Home Spaces/Lots
EASY LIVING community - 1337 McCall Loop, Roswell. Long term RV’s welcome. 624-2436
570. Mobile Home Courts
SOUTH FORK. A 55 & above community w/large quiet and attractive lots for people that care. 624-1742 500 W Brasher Rd.
580. Office or Business Places OFFICE SPACE for Rent. Prime downtown area, 2,061 sq.ft. Please call 622-8711. EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITE for lease: Newly decorated, private rest room, covered parking at 1210 North Main. Contact David McGee, Owner / Broker 622-2401 STOREFRONT - Retail - Or Customized professional office suite. Everything new inside & out, 105 W. 6th, across from Peppers. 575-420-6050 EXCELLENT PROFESSIONAL building, 7 offices, 1550 square feet, water paid $1,050 per month. North Roswell. Available first of February. Call 420-2100 to see property. 212 W. 1st, office for lease, 1200sqft, A/C, $400 mo., $400 dep. 575-317-6479 BEAUTY SHOP for lease, 103 N. Pennsylvania. A/C, plubming & stations ready to go, $595 mo., $500 dep. 575-317-6479 STOREFRONT/Retail/ 800 sqft 20ft utilities pd. 2102 S. Main $550mo. 627-9942
Roswell Daily Record 580. Office or Business Places STOREFRONT Retail 2500 sqft 58ft frontage at 3106 N Main $1200mo 627-9942 FOR LEASE - Space in Sunwest Centre aka the Bank of America Building. Various size spaces available. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 623-1652 or mobile 4202546.
MERCHANDISE
605. Miscellaneous for Sale ROLL ENDS. Use for packing, mulch, art projects and other uses. Buy day old paper by the bundles, also boxes 15x12x10. Roswell Daily Record Circulation Department. 622-7710. NEED FURNITURE? Shop Blair’s Trading Post for the best prices in town for your household items. We buy & sell furniture, appliances, home decor, collectibles, electronics, saddles, jewelry, tools, fishing & camping items, movies plus everything else from A-Z. Including many hard to find items. Serving Roswell for 40 years. Open daily 9-5. Accept Visa & MC. 5611 Hummingbird Ln. 627-2033 ATTENTION ROCKHOUNDS I have quality rocks and fossils at discount prices. 622-8945 POWER WHEELCHAIR, walker, commode chair, wheelchair lift. 622-7638 FOR SALE by owner: Tutnour Autoclave originally $3500 will sell for $2000, Also Gurney- tiltable $500 both in good condition great for medical office or hospital call Connie 626-9155 ANTIQUES, DISHES, cookware, old trunk, cowhide Bernard sofa. By appt. only, 910-0014 FOR SALE by owner: 12’ outdoor kitchen $4500, Minolta 4000 office copier $2000 obo, Carved beds King & Queen $600-$800, dining table & china hutch lighted upper end $3000, 11’6” entertainment center wood $2500, cubes of brick & ceramic tile 1/2 price, 1900 wood burning cooking stove. Call for appointment must see, Dave 626-5837 FARM FRESH eggs from free roaming chickens, Lg & XLg only. Call Rocky 3179290 4 12FT upholstered Church Pews $500. 347-2514 or 626-2524 THE TREASURE Chest 1204 W. Hobbs see our Antique Mall Fiesta, large selection depression, carnival unusual Antiques 914-1855 Tues-Sat. 10-5 WASHER & Dryer for sale. Call 622-6846. SINGLE BED, blonde w/headboard & mattress, drawers below, $150 obo. 622-2523 POWER WHEELCHAIR never used $3500, sell for $1000. 317-1587/623-5936 REACH OVER 500,000 READERS in more than 30 newspapers across the state for one low price. Contact your local newspaper’s classified department or visit nmpress.org for details.
605. Miscellaneous for Sale
620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous
NICE WOOD heater/electric blower/glass door w/vent pipe & cap $985. 575-317-1587 or 6235936
HARD TIMES? Get the most cash for your old & broken gold & silver jewelry. Also, US silver coins. Call Skeets in Roswell, 578-0805.
SAWMILLSBAND/CHAINSAW cut lumber any dimension, anytime. Build anything from furniture to homes. IN STOCK ready to ship. From $4090.00. www.NorwoodSawmills.co m/300N 1-800-661-7747 HD TRAILER 16ft, tandem axle electric brakes, ramps, new tires $1250. 317-1587 or 623-5936 2.5 TON folding engine hoist w/engine stand $250 obo. 626-6121 SLEEPER SOFA $100 perfect back chair paid $1500 sale for $700 6223553 BOYS’ BUNKBED, wood, twin/double $150, girls’ bunkbed, white wood, twin w/drawers $150. 625-9833 FRIGIDAIRE 19.8 c.f. side by side refrigerator/freezer, w/ice maker; light brown recliner; Zieman 3 rail motorcycle trailer, radial tires plus spare & rim, excellent condition, pulled very little. (575) 623-9702. SPRAGUE & Carlton solid maple dining set, 6 chairs w/3 extensions, 50 yrs old in excellent condition $700. 806-647-6098 or 575-6534182 ANTIQUE FURNITURE, Singer pedal sewing machine, hall tree, desk, duck decoy, old buttons & misc. Call for appt. 6247912.
615. Coins, Gold, Silver, Buy, Sell, Trade U.S. & FOREIGN coins and currency, buy, sell or trade, gold and silver coins. 622-7239, 2513 W. 2nd
620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous
WE BUY Home furnishings, furniture, appliances, collectibles, tools and everything else from A-Z including personal estates and whole house fulls. 627-2033 or 623- 6608 WE BUY PECANS Top Prices Paid. Up to $1.80 lb. On Grand Ave. between 4th & 5th St. Behind Courthouse. SELL THOSE Pecans Haley Farms paying up to $1.75 per pound for your pecans. Monday-Friday 2:00 to 5:00 Sat. 9:00-2:00 5018 W. Country Club Rd.
BUYING PECANS N. Main & Berrendo Rd. Mon. & Weds. 575-399-2212 GUITAR WANTED! Local musician will pay up to $12,500 for pre-1975 Gibson, Fender, Martin, Rickenbaker and Gretsch guitars. Fender amplifiers also. Call toll free! 1-(800) 995-1217. I AM interested in buying furniture, appliances and household items. 637-9641
635. Good things to Eat
GRAVES FARM & Garden Frozen green chile, extra hot, regular hot, big Jim & mild. Dried red chile pods. New crop in January. Convenient store items available. We accept EBT, Credit cards and debit cards, we ship anywhere. 7 1/2 miles South on old Dexter Hwy. 622-1889 hours Monday thru Saturday 8-5:30 Sunday 1-5
650. Washers & Dryers WE BUY washers & dryers, working or not. Call 622-6846.
715. Hay and Feed Sale
Alfalfa Hay- small bales, oat hay & sudan all grades $4.50-$9.50 per bale. Big bales available $110-$140 each. Open 8:005:30 Mon- Sat.1:00-5:00 Sunday, Graves Farm & Garden 622-1889 Credit Cards
745. Pets for Sale
AKC REG. Miniature Schnauzer, white male puppy, ready mid Jan. $500, 420-2006 or 6241858 FREE CATS! Some older cats, some spayed, neutered, shy now but will be friendly, all need good homes. 626-4708. PUPPY LOVE Grooming Large Dogs Welcome, Cats also - 575-420-6655 BLUE EYED Great Pyrenees/Siberian Husky puppies. 623-4295 Joe 1 YR old male Rottweiler $200 call Richard 317-6045 or 347-2051 7 ADORABLE Chi-Weiner pups, 7 wks. old, $100 each. 347-0118 Old Victorian Bulldogge Pups! Ready 2/14/11 taking deposits 575-495-1015
New Mexico Psychiatric Services Inc.
is seeking for a Full Time M.D. Psychiatrist in New Mexico. Must be Board Certified or Board Eligible. Job Description:
• Working in medically underserved area in New Mexico
• Covering In Patient and Out Patient Services with participation in hospital On Call coverage. • Competitive Salary & Benefits
Please send resume to: New Mexico Psychiatric Services Inc. 1700 N Union Roswell, NM 88201
CLASSIFIEDS
745. Pets for Sale
790. Autos for Sale
FULL BLOODED German Shepherd pups 2 males left in Artesia. $300 ea. 308-9013 or 308-9967
‘01 DODGE Stratus, red, 2dr, 105k, runs great, lots of extras, $3500 obo. 575-840-4708
RECREATIONAL
775. Motorcycles & Scooters 2000 YAMAHA YZF 600R $1,500 for information call 575-840-9609
780. RV’s & Campers Hauling MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. Your dealer of choice. Sales, parts, service, consignments, purchases, propane, dump station. 2900 West Second. 6221751, 1-800-929 0046
TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale
FORD CONTOUR 83k miles, runs great, $2850, no financing. 420-1352
2002 ACURA RSX, Black, 5 speed, AC, CD, sunroof, alarm, cruise, power locks & windows, new tires & brakes, $5600. 420-5240. 2005 MITSUBISHI Lancer OZ Rally never been raced silver, moon roof, 62k mi. really good cond. $11k obo 840-9888 or 626-1213
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
796. SUVS
796. SUVS
‘93 JEEP Grand Cherokee, runs great, clean, 4x4 132k $3500. Call 622-6692.
1992 GMC S-10 Blazer, 4x4, V6, auto, 20mpg, good condition, $2300 obo. 623-7208
CLASSIFIEDS INDEX
795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans 1997 GMC 2500- extended cab 98,800 actual miles Granpas “Cream Puff” all extras incl. step rails tool box, headache rack, bed liner, wheels- terrific stereo. $6495 Call 910-1328 between 10am-9pm
2006 FORD F250, excellent cond., ext. cab, $10,800, 626-7488. 2004 KIA Sedona sliding rear doors, 3rd seat, 84k mi, excellent cond. $3650 w/1k down owner finance. 420-1352 1995 CHEVY work van 3500 auto, diesel shelves, side/back doors $1500. 575-317-1587 or 623-5936 1964 CHEVY Pickup, new paint, red/white, new seat, NADA $7000, sell for $3500. 317-1587/623-5936 2000 FORD super duty F350 7.3 diesel DRW. After 5pm call 734-4924
1986 CHEVY Silverado 4x4 pickup long bed. Runs good needs a little body work $1500 OBO. Call 626-3608 or 626-3609 2006 FORD F350, 4dr, pwr stroke diesel, dual rear wheel 10ft flat bed, excellent cond., $13,800. 626-7488
B7
005 010 015 020 025
Announcements Special Notice Card of Thanks Personals/Special Transportation Lost & Found
Instruction
030 Education 035 Music – Dance/Drama 040 Instructions Wanted 045 050 055 060
Employment
Employment Opportunities Salesperson/Agents Employment Agencies Jobs Wanted – M & F
Services
070 Agricultural Analysis 075 Air Conditioning 080 Alterations 085 Appliance Repair 090 Auto Repair 100 Babysitting 105 Childcare 110 Blade Work 115 Bookkeeping 120 Carpentry 125 Carpet Cleaning 130 Carpeting 135 Ceramic Tile 140 Cleaning 145 Clock & Watch Repair 150 Concrete 155 Counseling 160 Crafts/Arts 165 Ditching 170 Drafting 175 Drapery 180 Drilling 185 Electrical 190 Engraving 195 Elderly Care 200 Fencing 205 Fertilizer 210 Firewood – Coal 215 Floor Covering 220 Furniture Repair 224 Garage Door Repair 225 General Construction 226 Waterwell 230 General Repair 232 Chimney Sweep 235 Hauling 240 Horseshoeing 245 House Wrecking 250 Insulation 255 Insurance 260 Ironing & Washing 265 Janitorial 269 Excavating 270 Landscape/Lawnwork 280 Masonry/Concrete 285 Miscellaneous Service 290 Mobile Home Service 293 Monuments 295 Musical 300 Oil Field Services 305 Computers 306 Rubber Stamps 310 Painting/Decorating 315 Pest Control 316 Pets 320 Photography 325 Piano Tuning 330 Plumbing 335 Printing 340 Radio/TV’s/Stereo’s 345 Remodeling 350 Roofing 355 Sand Blasting 356 Satellite 360 Screens/Shutters 365 Security 370 Sewer Service & Repair 375 Sewing Machine Service 380 Sharpening 385 Slenderizing 390 Steam Cleaning 395 Stucco Plastering 400 Tax Service 401 Telephone Service 405 Tractor Work 410 Tree Service 415 Typing Service 420 Upholstery 425 Vacuum Cleaners 426 Video/Recording 430 Wallpapering 435 Welding
440 441 445 450
Window Repair Window Cleaning Wrought Iron Services Wanted
455 456 460 465
Money: Loan/Borrow Credit Cards Insurance Co. Oil, Mineral, Water, Land Lease/Sale Investment: Stocks/Sale Mortgages for Sale Mortgages Wanted Business Opportunities
470 475 480 485
Financial
Real Estate
490 Homes for Sale 495 Acreage/Farm/Ranch 500 Business for Sale 505 Commercial Business Property 510 Resort Out of Town Property 515 Mobile Homes/Sale 520 Lots for Sale 525 Building Transfer 530 Real Estate Wanted
Rentals
535 Apartments, Furnished 540 Apartments, Unfurnished 545 Houses, Furnished 550 Houses, Unfurnished 555 Mobile Homes – Rental 560 Sleeping Rooms 565 Rest Homes 569 Mobile Home Lots/Space 570 Mobile Home Courts 571 RV Parks 575 Resort Homes 580 Office/Business Rentals 585 Warehouse & Storage 590 Farms/Acreage – Rent 595 Miscellaneous for Rent 600 Want to Rent
Merchandise
605 Miscellaneous for Sale 610 Garage Sales, Individuals 611 Garage Sales, Businesses 615 Coins/Gold/Silver 620 Want to Buy – Miscellaneous 625 Antiques 630 Auction Sales 635 Good Things to Eat 640 Household Goods 645 Sewing Machines 650 Washers & Dryers 652 Computers 655 TV’s & Radios 660 Stereos 665 Musical Merchandise 670 Industrial Equipment 675 Camera/Photography 680 Heating Equipment 685 Air Conditioning Equipment 690 Business/Office Equipment 695 Machinery 700 Building Materials 705 Lawn/Garden/Fertilizer 710 Plants/Flowers 715 Hay & Feed Sale 720 Livestock & Supplies 721 Boarding Stables 725 Livestock Wanted 730 Poultry & Supplies 735 Poultry Wanted 740 Show Fowl 745 Pets for Sale
Recreational
750 Sports Equipment 755 Bicycles for Sale 760 Hunting & Camping Equipment 765 Guns & Ammunition 770 Boats & Accessories 775 Motorcycles 780 RV’s/Campers 785 Trailers Wanted
Transportation
790 Automobiles for Sale 795 Trucks & Vans 796 SUV’s 800 Classic Automobiles 805 Imported Automobiles 810 Auto Parts & Accessories 815 Wanted – Autos
B8 Tuesday, January 18, 2011
ENTERTAINMENT
Roswell Daily Record
‘Boardwalk Empire,’ ‘Glee’ big winners at Globes
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) — It was a good night for HBO, “Glee” and probably the bartenders at Hollywood’s annual Golden Globe awards. HBO’s Prohibition-era drama “Boardwalk Empire” dethroned “Mad Men” as television’s top drama — in the estimation of Golden Globe voters. Al Pacino and Claire Danes both won acting awards for their roles in HBO movies. “Glee,” meanwhile, won the Globe for television’s best comedy or musical, its second Globe for the two years the exuberant Fox series has been on the air. Actors who play two of its indelible characters, Jane L ynch and Chris Colfer, won supporting actor awards. NBC’s broadcast Sunday was loose and colorful, as it usually is at an awards show where alcohol is openly served. The night’s first award winner, movie actor Christian Bale, uttered a swear word that was wiped out by censors. Robert De Niro, who won a lifetime achievement award, also joked about foreign press association members and waiters being deported and was censored for saying “Christ” at one point. Host Ricky Gervais got off several zingers. He touched on personal
problems of Charlie Sheen and Robert Downey Jr., for example. Gervais “used to be a slightly chubby, but very kind comedian,” Tom Hanks said in presenting a late award. “Neither of which he is now,” chimed in Tim Allen. Gervais later thanked the audience for being good sports. Besides beating “Mad Men,” HBO’s “Boardwalk Empire” also topped another hot new show, AMC’s “The Walking Dead.” Steve Buscemi, the Atlantic City boss who is the star of “Boardwalk Empire,” won his first Golden Globe as best actor in a drama. “I hope we do it for years and years and years,” Buscemi said. T erence Winter, who created “Boardwalk Empire,” seemed ready to pinch himself. “To my family and friends in Brooklyn, I can’t believe I’m sitting at a table with Al Pacino, either,” he said. Pacino had his own walk to the stage, picking up his fourth Golden Globe, for acting in a television movie. Pacino, who portrayed suicide doctor Jack Kevorkian in HBO’s “You Don’t Know Jack,” talked about how interesting it was for him to play real people instead of fictional charac-
ters. The lead “Glee” actors — Matthew Morrison and Lea Michele — were nominated but did not win. Instead, the best actress award for a comedy went to Laura Linney of Showtime’s “The Big C,” for her portrayal of a cancer patient. She was not there to accept the Globe. (Her father, playwright Romulus Linney, died Saturday at his home in upstate New York.) Jim Parsons of CBS’ “The Big Bang Theory” was honored as best actor in a comedy. He thanked his writers for creating a character that “I enjoy playing and have so much interest in playing week after week.” Katey Sagal won the award for best actor in a TV drama for her role in “Sons of Anarchy” on the FX network, the motorcycle drama created by her husband Kurt Sutter. She had been nominated four times for her work on Fox’s comedy “Married ... With Children” and never won. “This is awesome,” she said. The Sundance Channel’s story of a drug kingpin, “Carlos,” won the Globe for best miniseries or television movie. The drama beat three different HBO productions in the category, including the World War II drama “The Pacific.”
AP Photo
Jim Parsons, who plays Sheldon Cooper in “The Big Bang Theory,” poses with his Golden Globe after he was honored as best actor in a comedy.
“Hometown Proud”
Lawrence Brothers IGA the place where you
ALWAYS SAVE! TUESDAY ONLY! JANUARY 18, 2011
WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!
1
HOMO/SKIM/2% ONE GALLON
BROTHERS BEST MILK
$ 98
32 OZ. BAG
ALWAYS SAVE CEREALS
2 5 99
¢
FOR
4 LB. BAG
ALWAYS SAVE PINTO BEANS
LB.
18 LB. BAG
ALWAYS SAVE DRY CAT FOOD
4 1 $
LBS.
LB.
PORK BUTTS
$
ROSWELL STORE ONLY GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS
18 OZ. JAR
ALWAYS SAVE PEANUT BUTTER
2 3 $
FOR
16.5 LB. BAG
ALWAYS SAVE CHUNK DOG FOOD
ALWAYS SAVE CHILI WITH BEANS
5 5 $
FOR
8 OZ. CAN
ALWAYS SAVE
TOMATO SAUCE
2 6 2 15 2 10 5 1 $
FOR
$
FOR
$
FOR
$
FOR
Don’t Forget Our Convenient 900 W. Second St Roswell, NM Drive-Thru Window In Our Pharmacy Hours: Sun. - Thurs. 7am till 9pm Pharmacy Hours: 9am-6pm Mon-Fri • 9am-1pm Sat. Fri. & Sat. 7am -10pm EVERY TUESDAY IS “BANANA TUESDAY” 39¢ LB. Closed Sundays
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