Roswell Daily Record THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY
Vol. 124, No. 104 75¢ Daily / $1.25 Sunday
May 1, 2015
Friday
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NMMI Board of Regents approves $47M budget By Jeff Tucker Record Staff Writer The board of regents of New Mexico Military Institute has approved a $47.7 million budget for the military school for the 201516 fiscal year that includes small increases in staff salaries and fees for cadets, but no increase in in-state tuition. The $47,667,410 budget entails $34,097,339 for operational expenses and $13,570,071 for infrastructure expenditures. The 2015-16 budget is a reduction of almost $2 million from the military school’s 2014-15 budget, said Col. Judy Scharmer,
NMMI’s chief financial officer. The budget unanimously approved by the board of regents Thursday afternoon includes a 5 percent tuition increase for non-residents of New Mexico, equating to a tuition increase of $326 per year. The budget does not raise tuition for in-state cadets. Resident tuition in the 2014-15 school year was $11,716. Non-resident tuition was $16,235. Major Gen. Jerry Grizzle, superintendent of NMMI, said roughly 10 percent of NMMI’s 730 current cadets are from New Mexico.
About 14 percent of NMMI’s cadets are international, from 20 foreign countries, Grizzle said. Mexico is the largest foreign contributor of cadets, Grizzle said. He said a little more than 100 cadets in the current corps of cadets are from Mexico. Cadets from Mexico pay tuition at the resident rate, said Brig. Gen. Doug Murray, chief academic officer/ academic dean at NMMI. Fees for all cadets were increased $280 in the 2015-16 budget, which takes effect July 1. The board of regents on Thursday also approved summer school fees of
$195 per online course, and $3,250 for the summer program, which runs July 6 through Aug. 5. The summer program costs include room, board and instruction. The 2015-16 budget includes a 1 percent increase in all staff salaries and 3 percent increases in medical insurance premiums for staff. Scharmer said the 201516 budget includes several capital outlay expenditures, including $600,000 for upgrades at NMMI Ballpark. The upgrades entail artificial turf for the baseball field’s infield and a new backstop. The upgrades
Paint on a happy face
Bill Moffitt Photo
Kortney Davidson, left, checks her work on Jacqueline Loranzo, 5, at the face painting booth during the annual Spring Carnival at Sunset Elementary School Thursday. More than 400 visitors attended, according to Principal Mireya Trujillo.
are expected to be completed by the fall, said Athletic Director Jose Barron. The 2015-16 budget also includes new helmets for NMMI’s football teams, Scharmer said. Another capital outlay in the new budget is $3 million for the second phase of renovations at Bates Dining Hall. The new budget also includes the addition of an English teacher that Scharmer said is necessary for freshmen and sophomore cadets for whom English is a second language. Other new budget expenditures include $800,000
for roofing at Pearson Auditorium and $352,000 for facility requests, including a a new tractor for groundskeeping and a man-lift to be used by various departments. Board member Phillip Ingram said the Finance Committee of the board of regents had gone over the budget. Ingram motioned for approval and the board voted 4-0 in approval. In other business, the board of regents approved hiring Axiom of Albuquerque for its external audit of NMMI and the NMMI Foundation.
ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — The Energy Department will funnel more than $73 million toward road and water projects around New Mexico as part of a settlement over a radiation leak that forced the indefinite closure of a troubled nuclear waste dump. The agreement, announced by Republican Gov. Susana Martinez and state Environment Secretary Ryan Flynn, follows months of tense and slow negotiations. The settlement is the largest ever reached between a state and the department, Flynn said, noting that the agency needed to be held accountable for putting people at risk.
“We have a shared responsibility to protect the citizens that work at these facilities as well as the communities that host these facilities,” Flynn told The Associated Press. The state initially levied more than $54 million in penalties against the agency and its contractors for numerous permit violations at Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant that were identified following the repository’s shutdown. The newly announced settlement comes after a drum of waste was inappropriately packed with incompatible ingredients
See NMMI, Page A3
Feds, NM reach settlement over radiation leak
See LEAK, Page A2
Suspicious-death case ‘It’s a hoax,’ says homeless man in video to be closed based on autopsy findings By Jared Tucker Multimedia Journalist
Staff Report The investigation into what had been considered a suspicious death that occurred in a Roswell home last November will be officially closed with no criminal charges filed against anyone following a determination by the state medical investigator that David Duer died as a result of alcohol and health issues. The medical investigator’s report released this week found, “Mr. Duer died from the effects of alcohol, high blood pressure and obesity on his heart. There was no evidence at autopsy that injury was involved with his death.” Roswell Police Department investigators initially looked into the possibility Duer, 43, had died as the result of another man’s actions while the two men were wrestling inside Duer’s home in the 2600 block of Sherrill Lane following a gathering at the house Nov. 20. Emergency medical personnel and police were called to the house shortly before 5 a.m., Friday, Nov. 21, where Duer was found to be unresponsive and not breathing. He was transported to Eastern New Mexico Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead.
Duer The Roswell man Duer had allegedly been wrestling with left the house prior to the arrival of emergency responders. Other people at the house identified the man as Justin Tyler Mendenhall, who was 27 at the time, and considered Mendenhall a person of interest in the case. Mendenhall was arrested two days later on an unrelated warrant, but was never charged in connection with Duer’s death. The lead detective in the case explained that the five-month wait for the medical investigator’s findings was longer than expected, but awaiting the results of the autopsy was necessary before determinSee DUER, Page A2 Today’s Forecast
HIGH 88 LOW 52
You’ve probably seen it over your Facebook feed: The viral video of a homeless man pulling out his cellphone and swiping a credit card on a mobile card reader near the Roswell Mall. The man in that video, Elwood Parkins, spoke exclusively to the Roswell Daily Record Thursday and said the video was completely staged. Now he wants to know why the video’s creator, Michael Trujillo, is insisting the video is real. “It’s a hoax, yeah. It’s all staged,” Parkins said. Parkins said he was approached by Trujillo while eating a sandwich, after his camp neigh-
Jared Tucker Photo
Jeneva Martinez (left), a Roswell advocate for the homeless community, listens as Elwood Parkins explains Thursday how he was told to put a credit card reader close to the camera during a staged viral internet video. bor near the Roswell Mall refused Trujillo’s offer of $5 to do the video. “I’m like keep your five bucks, I’ll do it because
this is fun,” Parkins said. “I thought it was going to be a comedy.” Parkins said Trujillo has mislead him, the public,
and the media. “His agenda was completely different than what See HOAX, Page A3
Lovington sends representatives to nevada in attempt to boost local business LOVINGTON — The city and its Economic Development Corporation will be sending representatives to Las Vegas, Nevada, in May to try to bring new businesses into town. In preparation for the International Council of Shopping Centers Convention, taking place May 17-20, EDC and city officials held a retail meeting at the Troy Harris Center to discuss what retail establishments the public would like to see in the city. The convention will feature about 1,602 exhibitors from
different businesses and organizations. — Lovington Leader
Public participates in superintendent search
LOVINGTON — It started as a quiet forum but once the ball got rolling the Lovington Municipal Schools board heard about 32 qualities the public would want in a new superintendent. The board held a meeting April 23 to get input from the public as to what qualities they
would want for a new superintendent after former superintendent Darin Manes resigned in February. Manes currently serves in a consultant position until his contract ends at the end of the school year while assistant superintendent Leanne Gandy was named interim superintendent. — Lovington Leader
County seeks input on enlarging commission
SILVER CITY — The Grant
• David Newsom
• Maria Elena Resley
• Barbara Kathleen Small
See BRIEFS, Page A2
Index
Today’s Obituaries Page A6
• Peggy M. Holloway Collins • Herbert Pruit “Pat” Joyce Jr.
County Commission further entertained the idea of growing from three to five commissioners with a public hearing on the subject at their regular meeting on April 23. Before they make any decision, commissioners hope for as much public input as possible through several of these hearings, though they heard little this round. Despite the change’s enormous potential impact on the lives of Grant County
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A2 Friday, May 1, 2015
General
Roswell Daily Record
CCSO: Missing persons case could be suspicious
Staff Report The Chaves County Sheriff’s Office is investigating what could be a missing persons case with suspicious circumstances. The missing persons are identified as Raquel Rodriguez, 54, and Abraham Jimenez, 74. The two live on West Chickasaw Road, near the Roswell Correction Center, southwest of Roswell. CCSO investigation have determined the two
were last seen on or about April 19. A van they were known to be using was discovered abandoned within the last week on East Chickasaw Road. The vehicle was drivable and did not appear to have broken down in that location. While there is no evidence of foul play, there are several things that lead the CCSO to be very concerned for the welfare of this couple. Beside the concerns with their aban-
doned vehicle, Rodriguez and Jimenez own a number of animals that were left unattended on their property without any person being asked to care for them. At this time, CCSO believes all other vehicles they normally use have been accounted for. Authorities have searched their property and several other locations without discovering any clues as to their whereabouts. The CCSO is seeking help from the public on this case.
If anybody thinks they might have any information about this couple, they are encouraged to contact the CCSO at 575-624-6500 during regular business hours and 575-6247590 after hours. You may also contact Chaves County Crime Stoppers at 1-800-594TIPS (8477). Courtesy Photo
Raquel Rodriguez, left, and Abraham Jimenez.
Rotary club announces scholarship winners Submitted
The Roswell Pecos Valley Rotary Club awarded three $1,000 JoAnn S. Jaramillo scholarships to local high school students. They are Miranda Saavedra and Jordan Young, Goddard High School; and Thalia Pantoja, Hagerman High School. The club congratulates these students for their outstanding achievement.
Pantoja
Saavedra
Young
Leak Continued from Page A1
at Los Alamos and shipped to the repository, starting a chemical reaction and radiation leak on Feb. 14, 2014. Federal investigators determined it could have been prevented. Poor management at multiple levels, lapses in safety and a lack of proper procedures combined to cause the radiation release, they said in a report this month. The Energy Department and the head of the Los Alamos lab say they’re working to ensure greater oversight of the handling and disposal of radioactive waste. The settlement requires the department to follow through with corrective measures. Department Secretary Ernest Moniz said in a statement that the projects outlined in the settlement will benefit New Mexico communities and will not detract from cleanup at Los Alamos or the Waste Isolation site. Most of the infrastructure spending outlined in the settlement is expected to come from the bonuses and other incentive pay the
Briefs Continued from Page A1
residents, only two opted to speak at the commission’s first public hearing. The hearing included another presentation by Michael Sharp, of Research & Polling Inc., about the requirements and realities of redistricting to a five-member commission. Redistricting a county into five sections is an option if
New Mexico drivers are now paying $2.48 for a gallon of regular unleaded fuel, according to the AAA New Mexico Weekend Gas Watch. That price is 11 cents more than last week but 98 cents less per gallon than last year. Of the major metropolitan areas surveyed in the Land of Enchantment, drivers in Santa Fe are paying the most on average at $2.46 per gallon while drivers in Albuquerque are paying the least at $2.41 per gallon. New Mexicans are paying 10 cents less than the national average which now sits at $2.58. The recent increase in prices at the pumps has been the product of rising global crude prices, the seasonal switch to summer-blend gasoline and regional refinery issues, particularly on the West Coast. Despite inching higher both the national and statewide averages continue to reflect a significant discount compared to this same date last year.
The deadline for terminals to switchover to summer-grade gasoline is May 1. Following the transition to summer-blend gasoline and as refineries complete seasonal maintenance, analysts say the national and state averages may decline again, though much of the forecast will depend on what happens with the cost of crude oil. “Drivers in New Mexico are now paying $35 for a 14-gallon size fuel tank, which is about ten dollars less per tank than last year,” said AAA Texas/ New Mexico Representative Doug Shupe. “Drivers can maximize fuel efficiency by keeping vehicles maintained, not driving aggressively, and removing unneeded weight from their cars and trucks.” AAA New Mexico branch offices throughout the state can be found by visiting AAA.com. Follow AAA New Mexico on Twitter: @AAANewMexico and Facebook: facebook.com/AAANewMexico.
Road work on NM 409 to begin
AP Photo
New Mexico Environment Secretary Ryan Flynn, right, announces a $73 million settlement between the state and the U.S. Department of Energy while flanked by Gov. Susana Martinez during a news conference in Albuquerque on Thursday. The settlement resolves a dispute over permit violations that stemmed from a radiation release at the federal government’s nuclear waste repository. department withheld from Los Alamos and Waste Isolation contractors in the wake of the radiation release. The difference will be reassigned from other Energy Department sites. More than half of the settlement funds will pay for repairs and improvements for roads in southeastern New Mexico that are used
to haul waste to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant. Another $12 million will go to roads in and around Los Alamos. Nearly $20 million will go toward water projects in Los Alamos, from replacing old drinking water lines to monitoring and controlling storm runoff from the canyons surrounding the lab. There’s also funding for a
new emergency operations center in Carlsbad and training for first responders and mining rescue teams. Nearly $3 million will be used for a triennial review of all operations at the lab, and the repository to ensure state and federal requirements are being met and policies are being followed.
the county has more than 13,000 residents. Grant County, with around 29,500, nearly doubles that figure, making it an ideal candidate for a five-person commission, according to Sharp. In the redistricting process, the commission must consider the four leading requirements for any new district: equal population, minority voting, compactness and contiguity. — Silver City Daily Press
Duer
may have been committed. The Fifth Judicial District Attorney’s Office has told the detective the office will decline prosecution in this case based on the medical investigator’s report. RPD will officially close its investigation.
Continued from Page A1
ing whether to proceed. The official cause-of-death determination was critical to determining if a crime
Pretty at 6, Gorgeous at 60!
Vera Ortiz
The New Mexico Department of Transportation (NMDOT) District Two will begin a project to improve nearly 7 miles of NM 409 (Bottomless Lakes Road) in Chaves County. The project is expected to improve pavement and improve shoulders along the route. Work will begin May 5 and is expected to be complete in two months, weather permitting. Drivers will have access
from US 380 to NM 409 lower road for 75 percent of the project, the last portion of work performed will require a detour through Dexter. Message boards will be used to notify motorists of detour and keep vehicles moving safely. For up-to-date information on this project, go to the statewide road information website at: nmroads. com.
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More exciting changes to come.
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Published daily except Monday at 2301 N. Main St., Roswell, N.M. 88201. Copyright Notice The entire contents of the Roswell Daily Record, including its flag on Page 1, are fully protected by copyright and registry and cannot be reproduced in any form for any purpose without written permission from the Daily Record. SUBSCRIPTION RATES by carrier delivery in Roswell: $11 per month, payable in advance. Prices may vary in some areas. MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ALL NEW MEXICO 882 ZIP CODES, $13 ONE MONTH, $39 THREE MONTHS, $78 SIX MONTHS, $156 ONE YEAR. All other New Mexico zip codes, $13 one month, $39 three months, $78 six months, $156 one year. All other states in USA, $18 one month, $54 three months, $108 six months, $216 one year. Periodical-postage paid at Roswell, N.M. Postmaster: Please mail change of address to Roswell Daily Record, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell, N.M. 88202-1897. All postal subscriptions will stop at expiration unless payment is made prior to expiration.
General
Roswell Daily Record
Friday, May 1, 2015
Ashley Shaw is Noon Optimist Student of the Month for March Ashley Brooke Shaw, 18, a senior at Goddard High School, was named the Noon Optimist Student of the Month for March. Hobbies: Reading. Music, working with her dad, and improving or fixing up her jeep. School activities and honors: Key Club, Stargazers, Honor Society, FCA, MESA, Honors and AP
English, Science, Algebra 1 and II; Geometry and Honors German. Community and church activities: a member of LDS Church, and does community service with her church as well as with Key Club. Future plans: Shaw plans to attend New Mexico State University and major in Psychology.
Shaw
NMMI
tute and the NMMI Alumni Association Inc. Tim Paul, vice chair of the board of regents, said the board came to no conclusions about the lawsuit in the executive session and no votes were taken. After the board reconvened in open session, there was no discussion of the litigation. However, after the meeting, Paul said the lawsuit had been a divisive issue in the NMMI community. “These are fellow alums, so I’m never personally ... (going) to never declare a victory or a defeat,” Paul said. “These are our brothers and sisters. What I would hope is we find accommodation and middle ground. Unfortunately, we had to go through a legal process to do this.” Paul noted Fifth Judicial
District Judge Jane Shuler-Gray has not yet issued her final order in the case, although Shuler-Gray did issue her findings of fact and conclusions of law last week. “We don’t know what the judge is going to rule, so we have not taken any final action,” Paul said. “There are so many possible outcomes. “We want very much to have a very good, strong bond and relationship with all alumni. So we don’t want to have a rift. It’s time to solve it. This board is very motivated to heal and to move forward.” The board’s next meeting is May 15. Staff Writer Jeff Tucker may be contacted at 575622-7710, ext. 303, or at reporter01@rdrnews.com.
said, after viewing the RDR interview video with Perkins. Trujillo’s Facebook video library consists of self-produced “Vines,” short snips of videos that are intended to be funny. In one video called, “Moral of the Story,” Trujillo makes what most would consider tasteless jokes when comparing the “best part” about dating skinny or overweight women. Trujillo doubles down his comedic attempts in a bathroom scene as he pretends to panic after discovering he’s ran out of toilet paper. Since Trujillo’s video has gone viral, Parkins said the public has been less than willing to give. “It’s gotten slow out there. They don’t get (it) ... this is how I eat,” Parkins said. Homeless advocate Jeneva Martinez of Embrace, Inc, a verified non-profit organization, is outraged and feels Trujillo exploited Parkins for fame and internet popularity. Trujillo’s original video post was hash tagged, “#SquareUp.” “Make sure you hold the reader into the camera,” Perkins recalled Trujillo saying during rehearsal, but
never elaborated as to why. “Who benefitted from this viral video? He (Trujillo) did, not him (Parkins),” Martinez said. Martinez, who knows Trujillo and follows him on Facebook, says he needs to come clean about the video. We reached out to Square, Inc. for comment but got no reply. “If you’re going to make a funny video, make a funny video. But make sure you tell people...it was staged” Martinez said. Parkins and his neighbors at their tent community behind the mall are only $100 away from being able to purchase a new electric generator, after the one they were using broke down. Parkins isn’t mad at Trujillo, but said the video has done more harm than good. Anyone wishing to help Parkins and his tent community purchase the generator can go to 1717 W. Second Street Suite 100, or call 575-623-1220. Multimedia journalist Jared Tucker can be contacted at 575-622-7100, ext. 301, or mmnews@rdrnews. com.
Continued from Page A1
Scharmer said NMMI has contracted with Heinfeld, Meech & Co., P.C. of Tucson, Arizona, for the last six years. Scharmer said NMMI put out a request for proposals and a committee recommended Axiom as the military school’s new external auditor. The board of regents unanimously approved contracting with Axiom for one year, with an option for two more years. The board of regents met in executive session for about two hours Thursday. One of the items discussed in the closed session was the recent lawsuit between New Mexico Military Insti-
Hoax Continued from Page A1
he offered,” Parkins said. The video, originally posted to Trujillo’s Facebook page, has 111,367 views and 2,718 shares as of press time Thursday, tagged with #SquareUp. “This is old Carrot Top stuff, this isn’t original ... it just has a modern twist,” Parkins said. A Youtube search of Carrot Top revealed a stand-up comedy routine in which the comedian puts on a belt with an analog credit card swiper attached. Trujillo stands by his claim the video is real, and the transaction portrayed is authentic. The only problem is, Trujillo couldn’t produce a receipt to KOAT-TV the station reported, and claims during our interview the video was paused just before Parkins swipes the card. Square card readers require users enter a dollar amount before swiping, something Parkins didn’t do in the video. “There’s always three sides to a story: his side, my side and the truth,” Trujillo
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A4 Friday, May 1, 2015
Opinion
Roswell Daily Record
Let’s be smart, not soft, on crime
“In this time of increased political polarization,” writes Bill Clinton, “there is one area where we have a genuine chance at bipartisan cooperation: the over-imprisonment of people who did not commit serious crimes.” Clinton makes this observation in a new collection of essays compiled by the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University. He’s right on target, and for a significant reason. Serious folks across the political spectrum are taking a hard look at the facts behind “over-imprisonment.” They’re seeing what is true, not what ideology tells them should be true. And the harsh verity is inescapable: The current system of criminal justice is badly broken. Too often these days, politicians in both parties substitute fantasies for facts. Liberals say trade hurts American workers, when the opposite is plainly proven. Conservatives claim immigrants damage the American character, when they have clearly been enriching our culture for over 200 years. When facts are dismissed, when reality is denied, there is no common language — no basis for
Cokie and Steven Roberts Syndicated Columnists conversation or compromise. The result is paralysis. That’s why the emerging debate over incarceration is so heartening. It’s reviving one of the oldest American traditions: pragmatism. Do what works. And change what doesn’t. Clinton has credibility here. He was president in the ‘90s, when “our communities were under assault” from a vast increase in violent crime, he writes, and he helped impose draconian policies that “acted to address a genuine national crisis.” “But much has changed since then,” admits the former president, and any “clear-eyed” assessment reveals that those policies caused “unintended long-lasting consequences.” Clinton concludes: “We have overshot the mark.” That’s true. The U.S. has 5 per-
cent of the world’s population, but 25 percent of its prisoners, reports the Brennan Center. More than 2.2 million Americans are behind bars, a population larger than 14 states. Incarceration costs taxpayers $260 billion a year. At a moment when anti-police rioting is dominating the news, racial disparities take on added meaning. “More black men serve time in our correctional system today than were held in slavery in 1850,” says the Brennan Center. “One in 3 black men will spend time behind bars.” Presidential candidates in both parties — from Hillary Clinton to Ted Cruz — are coalescing around a reform agenda. “This really does reflect a huge change in the political momentum from decades when parties and candidates competed to see who could be the most flamboyantly punitive,” Michael Waldman, president of the Brennan Center, told The New York Times. Many of the key ideas command bipartisan backing: • Republican Rand Paul and Democrat Cory Booker are co-sponsoring a Senate bill that would enable youthful offenders
to seal or expunge their criminal records, enhancing their chances of getting jobs and supporting their families. The point, says Booker, is to “make sure a youthful mistake does not follow them all of their lives.” Paul has joined liberals like Pat Leahy of Vermont in drafting measures that would slash mandatory minimum sentences and give judges more leeway in applying them. “Few policies have been as deeply flawed or destroyed as many lives,” says Paul. In the first major policy speech of her presidential campaign, Hillary Clinton called for ending “an era of mass incarceration.” • An estimated 2.1 million ex-prisoners cannot vote, even after completing their sentences. The Democratic leader in the Senate, Harry Reid, has worked with Paul and other Republicans on a bill to restore those voting rights. • Angus King, a Maine independent, and Mike Lee, a Utah Republican, are backing a proposal to limit the ability of police departments to seize the assets of criminal defendants — and cripple their families’ finances. A number of innovations are
being tested on the state level with notable success, often by conservative Republican governors. Gov. Nathan Deal of Georgia, reports the New Republic, has given prisoners “enhanced access to educational resources, including a program that enables two charter schools in the state to go into prisons to teach inmates.” In Texas, former Gov. Rick Perry pioneered a plan to substitute drug treatment for jail time, and his state was able to close three prisons and six juvenile detention centers. “Our approach to criminal justice policy is all about results,” says Perry, a likely presidential candidate. “This change did not make Texas soft on crime. It made us smart on crime.” That’s exactly what voters want: a smart government that’s “all about results.” And they know that locking up vast numbers of nonviolent offenders in “schools for crime” is not smart. It’s stupid. Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at stevecokie@ gmail.com.
Student journalists would benefit from summer workshop
The New Mexico Press Association is holding another summer workshop for high school journalism students throughout the state. The workshop is open to high school students entering their junior or senior year. The program will be held at the University of New Mexico June 14-17. It never disappoints and many people in the newspaper business today can trace their roots back to this basic, informative event. Association Director Phil Lucey said he has a crack team of editors, reporters and photographers working hard to produce another edition of The Future Press, the manifestation of the weekends’ learning. Lucey promises students will: • Meet and work with newspaper professionals; • Learn reporting, photography and editing; • Gain skills to use on their high school newspaper or yearbook; • Get a taste of college life; • Enjoy an unforgettable experience. While Lucey has done his part and coordinated a learning space, housing, instructors and chaperons (these are teenagers) high schools throughout the state must supply the main ingredient, the students. This is an annual challenge. We understand the decline in interest by students to become journalists. It’s not the profession to provide a great retirement and, with corporate ownership, many reporter positions are no longer for idealistic writers wishing to make a difference in their community. But it’s such an important part of the community, culture, history and democracy. We always need new writers coming into the field, stretching their legs, challenging editors, learning the craft and making us better. This workshop provides several things for budding journalists. High school students will have the opportunity to work with some of the best writers, editors, photographers and designers in the business. These folks come from award-winning newspapers and they’re a large part of why those newspapers are so good. This is an opportunity to meet peers, who are possibly publishing a newspaper at their high school. Sharing experiences, similar and different, gives these same students a different perspective than life at their high school, a fish bowl, if you will. After training and learning, the doing starts. The group collaborates to publish The Future Press. Everyone gets to contribute and know what it’s like to actually have your work in print. Lastly, attendees will be exposed to the state’s newspapers. Publishers are always looking for new talent to improve their product and we know that talent is coming up through our state universities that have “mass media” programs. So if you are a student or know a student who would benefit from this long weekend, please go to www.nmpress.org and download the application and information. The cost is $150. As always, the Rio Grande SUN will pay the tuition for any student wishing to attend who doesn’t have the cash. We’ll also provide transportation, if needed. Just
See EDITORIAL, Page A5
If inequality worries GOP, why do they make it worse? You can tell things have gotten very bad when the issue of economic inequality — a serious national problem mostly ignored for more than three decades — is suddenly in political vogue. And you can be sure things have gotten very, very bad when Republicans — who usually insist that inequality is natural, inevitable, even beneficial — suddenly claim they’re worried about it, too. As the 2016 contenders officially declare their intentions, all of them seem aware that voters want to restore a vestige of fairness to the American economy. Regardless of personal ideology or political reliance on plutocratic billionaires, every presidential candidate must, at the very least, display concern for work-
Joe
Conason
Syndicated Columnist ing families, single mothers, indebted students and everyone struggling to achieve or maintain a decent living. Yet how concerned are they, really? In the video that announced her candidacy, Hillary Clinton spoke briefly but bluntly: “Americans have fought their way back from tough economic times, but the deck is still stacked in favor of those at the top. Everyday Americans need a champion,
and I want to be that champion.” The only Democrat in the race so far, Clinton realizes that a populist agenda will be required to excite her party base — and to answer those who regard her as too wealthy and too well-connected to empathize with the downtrodden. That unflattering portrait omits many relevant facts about Clinton’s life, from her own modest origins to her many years of advocacy for the disadvantaged, especially women and children. She spoke out publicly about economic fairness long before doing so became politically fashionable, both as a United States Senator and during her last presidential campaign. Now the skeptics can listen and decide for themselves.
But voters should also listen closely to the Republicans who mock Clinton’s populist tone — and assert that they are the true spokesmen for the working class. What do they propose to address inequality? And how “authentic” is their concern? At least two of the Republican candidates, Senator Rand Paul, R-Ky., and Senator Ted Cruz, R-Texas, want to institute a so-called flat tax — which would severely exacerbate inequality by reducing tax levies on the wealthy and increasing the burden on everyone else. Such plans would cost the Treasury an annual amount estimated between $700 billion and $1 trillion. Yet Paul and Cruz insist that they will simultane-
See CONASON, Page A5
Learning to relax is valuable antidote to stress D E A R D O C T O R K : I’m under a lot of stress, and I’d like to learn more about the “relaxation response.” What is it? How can I achieve it? DEAR READER: At Harvard Medical School, we do a lot of traditional “Western” scientific research. But we also have a long history of studying “Eastern” concepts of how the body works, disease and treatment. In the late 1970s, Harvard cardiologist Herbert Benson conducted research into the health hazards of stress -- and the body’s potential to heal itself. One antidote to stress that Dr. Benson studied was the relaxation response. To understand the relaxation response, it helps to know how
Ask Dr. K United Media Syndicate your body responds to stress. Let’s say you see a menacing dog approach. Instantly, your senses sharpen, your muscles tighten, your heart beats faster, your blood pressure rises and your breathing quickens. (I’ve put an illustration of the body’s stress response on my website, AskDoctorK.com.)
In the short term, the stress response can be very helpful: It prepares you to fight or to flee danger. And the stress response doesn’t help only in situations of life or death. At work, for example, stress can improve your performance in the face of a tight deadline. In the long term, however, stress contributes to a number of health problems. It elevates blood pressure and makes your body less able to fight off infection and disease. The relaxation response counters the stress response. Heartbeat and breathing slow down. The body uses less oxygen, and blood flows more easily through the arteries and veins.
Many techniques may be used to elicit the relaxation response. These include: • BREATH FOCUS. You breathe slowly and deeply while disengaging your mind from distracting thoughts and sensations. • BODY SCAN. You focus on one part of the body or group of muscles at a time and release any tension you feel there. • GUIDED IMAGERY. You use pleasing mental images to help you relax and focus. • MINDFULNESS MEDITATION. You breathe deeply while staying in the moment. You deliberately focus on thoughts and sensations that arise
See DR. K Page A5
Local
Roswell Daily Record
Friday, May 1, 2015
A5
Baltimore mother Graham could save this nation
Three cheers for the Baltimore mother who was slapping and whipping the heck out of her son. Mommy Toya Graham saw her 16-year-old son Michael in the rioting crowd with a hoodie and a mask this past week and immediately went to him and took him off the street. She should be America’s poster mom this Mother’s Day for parenting. Kids in this country are starving for a mom and a dad to step up to the plate and be real parents. As much as ever before
Conason Continued from Page A4
ously slash taxes, increase defense spending, and balance the budget — and so does Senator Marco Rubio, R-Fla., who proposes his own regressive tax breaks for the rich. Those promises are mathematically impossible — unless, perhaps, the federal government permanent-
Dr. K
Continued from Page A4
during the meditation session. • YOGA, TAI CHI OR QIGONG. You breathe rhythmically while moving through a series of postures or flowing movements. • REPETITIVE PRAYER. You use a short prayer to help enhance breath focus. A mind-body program, relaxation response CD, or meditation or yoga classes may help you to learn these techniques. When I joined the faculty of Harvard Medical School, I had a slightly older colleague who was particularly brilliant and very intense. He
the youth of America need to be loved, mentored and tutored through school. Along with time with loving parents, they also need a good kick to the backside every now and then. My mother slapped my face once. She slapped me
hard enough that I honestly don’t remember what I sassed her about. She took me out to the peach tree and whipped me with a peach tree limb (switch) on more than one occasion. My daddy gave me the belt more than once. Honestly, these are not my fond family memories. However, they were on the scene. They weren’t missing in action. They were at home being parents. They cared enough about me to try to drive me in the right direction. I regret every spanking I gave my two sons. I
wish I could go back and undo every swat I ever gave them on the rear end. I never enjoyed that. However, they both finished school, never have been arrested and both are serving our country today in the military. We had some tough times like all families do but God by his grace gave me enough strength and wherewithal to stay with my family and stay with my boys. Looking back I know they needed even more than what I gave but I am so glad I gave everything I did.
During her childhood our youngest daughter would occasionally threaten that she was calling social services on us. This was usually due to our insistence that she do some homework, clean her room a little or just go to bed. It was amusing but we encouraged her to go ahead if she thought she could find a better deal. She backtracked on that threat. Like Toya Graham, moms and dads are the answer to many of America’s problems. We must step up to the plate and
be adults. Take responsibility for our family’s welfare, education and what they are doing. And when necessary go to the warzone like Mommy Graham and take action in order to save our children and this nation. Glenn Mollette is the author of 11 books and his column “American Issues” is read across the country. This column does not necessarily reflect the view of any organization, institution or this paper or media source. Like his facebook page at facebook.com/ GlennMollette.
ly ended all discretionary spending on student aid, unemployment insurance, health care, veterans benefits, environmental protection, food safety and dozens of other programs necessary to working and middle-class families. Somehow they never mention that part. While decrying economic inequality, Republicans tend not to emphasize their other proposed giveaways that would benefit wealthy donors, such as Paul’s plan
to end capital gains taxes, or Rubio’s plan to end not only all taxes on capital gains but on interest and inherited estates, too — leaving only wage earners to be taxed. Schemes like this delight the Koch brothers precisely because they would heighten inequality to an even more astronomical level. Although Republicans often mention the “right to rise,” as Jeb Bush would put it, they’re hostile to any
measure that would actually elevate the incomes of those at the bottom — for example, increasing the minimum wage. Indeed, they tend to be opposed to the very idea of a legislated wage floor because, as Rubio once said, “I don’t think a minimum wage law works.” The Florida Senator’s economic knowledge is as weak as his budgetary arithmetic. The most recent studies show that in states with-
out a minimum wage law, inequality is considerably worse than in states with a minimum wage that is at least a dollar above the federal minimum. But don’t worry; Rubio says he knows a better way to reduce inequality than either higher wages or fairer taxes. Instead, for people languishing in low-wage jobs, government should “incentivize the creation of innovations in education that are accessible.”
So he offers something for everyone: The wealthy get still more big tax cuts; and the not-so-wealthy get a few phrases of incomprehensible, pseudo-wonkish jargon. How can you think that Republicans don’t care? To find out more about Joe Conason and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at creators.com.
commanded respect for his intellect, but it was tough to warm up to him. As a result, people didn’t always listen to what he had to say. It was their loss, and his. About a year after I first met him, I was astonished to learn that he had started practicing the relaxation response in his office every afternoon. Some said his wife had suggested it. Within a few months, he had become one of our most revered colleagues. It was our gain, and his. Dr. Komaroff is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. To send questions, go to AskDoctorK. com, or write: Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.
Editorial
Glenn Mollette Guest Columnist
Continued from Page A4
fill out the form and Phil will know to come pick our pockets. The deadline to register is May 22, but don’t wait. Please make the commitment and get it done today. Editor’s note: The Roswell Daily record will sponsor two local students. Contact Tim Howsare at 6227710, ext. 310, or editor@ rdrnews.com to find out how to apply. Reprinted from Rio Grande Sun
Letters Dear editor, The Yucca Recreation Center would like to thank the following for their donations of goods and time to help make the Easter Egg Hunt at the Spring River Park and Zoo a success. We would like to thank the Prince Hall Mason’s, Wal-Mart, Cowboy Café, Carl’s Jr., McDonalds, Keith Paceley, Micah Cheatem, Jonathan Benitez, Samantha and Brooke Beardsley and the staff from the Spring River Park and Zoo for volunteering their time.
We would like to send a big thank you to McBride Oil & Gas Corp. for donating the 3 bikes. The staff from Yucca included Damian Cheatem, Yucca supervisor; Sara Hall, senior recreation leader; April Hunter and Daniel Franco, Recreation Leader’s and Andrew Manzanares, Floyd Bell and Vicky Stringer our Recreation Aides. Sara Hall Roswell
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A6 Friday, May 1, 2015
Nation/Obituaries
Roswell Daily Record
Obituaries John D. Roark and Brianna Small, and two great-grandchildren, Reagan and Lylah Kathleen McGlothlen. “We will miss you mom.” A celebration of Barbara’s life will be held at Meadowlark Church of Christ in Fort Collins, May 11 at 11 a.m. Donations in lieu of flowers can be made to Rocky Mountain Children’s Home or Larimer County Humane Society.
Barbara Kathleen Small
Barbara Kathleen Small, formerly of Fort Collins, Colorado, died April 28 in Roswell, NM. Barbara passed away peacefully in her sleep at her home. She loved God, her family and her dog Jazzie. She is preceded in death by her loving husband, Douglas B. Small and her parents, Fred Engle and Obera Engle. Survived by her brother, David Engle and sister, Betty Sessums, her children, Lauri Duty (David), Ed Small (Lore), and Jane Roark (John), her five grandchildren, Austin Duty, Afton McGlothlen (Sean), Jessica Roark,
David Newsom
David Newsom, 59, passed away on April 29, 2015, in Roswell. He was born on May 22, 1955, in Roswell, NM. David was
raised by Bill Wheeler from the time he was seven years old. On December 16, 2005, David married Melissa Vela, she survives him at the home. After graduating from Roswell High School, David went into the Army serving for four years, 13 months of that time he served on the 38th Parallel in Korea. Upon leaving the Army he continued his education at ENMU-R in nursing and ENMU-P where he received his BSN degree. David went to work as a BSN in Health Care. David was preceded in death by his grandparents; Leroy and Jewel Newsom; paternal grandmother, Olivia Keeth; birth father; Owen Lee Newsom; William (Jack) Huddleston and Bertha Huddleston. Surviving him are his children: Chrysta Bates and Christian Malone of Roswell, NM; Casandra Rios of Corpus Christi, TX; a brother; Steven Newsom of Roswell, NM; parents; Bill and Barbara Wheeler of Roswell, NM. Also surviving David is a grandchild; Armando David Louis Gallardo of Roswell; and an aunt; Ruth-
ie Baughman. A memorial service will be held on Monday, May 4, 2015 at 2 p.m. at Anderson-Bethany Funeral Home Chapel. Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories of David with his family in the online registry at andersonbethany.com. Services are under the direction of Anderson-Bethany Funeral Home and Crematory.
Peggy M. Holloway Collins
Peggy M. Holloway Collins, 79, of Albuquerque, passed away on Saturday, April 25, 2015, in Albuquerque. She was born April 12, 1936, in Roswell. She worked in the Lovington Public Schools in the early 1960s. She married Clifford Harold Collins in 1955 and he preceded her in death in 1967. She is survived by two sons, Alan Collins and Evan Collins both of Parker, CO; one grandson, Ryan Collins of Golden, CO; a brother, Prentice Newton White of Espanola, NM and a sister, Paula Sue White of Oklahoma City, OK.
DHS No. 2 regrets perception of favoritism in visa cases WASHINGTON (AP) — Homeland Security Deputy Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas steadfastly defended his work on three foreign-investor visa cases while testifying before a House committee Thursday, following allegations that he used his post to help well-connected Democrats. But Mayorkas said he did regret creating a perception of favoritism when he got personally involved in the visa cases as head of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. “I regret the perception my own involvement created,” Mayorkas told members of the House Homeland Security Committee. “I did my job and fulfilled my responsibility,” He told lawmakers that he was involved in “more (visa) cases than I can count” to help ensure that the agency was doing its job. “I was involved in these
cases, as I was in many, many cases, and the level of my involvement depended on the need for my involvement to help resolve difficult issues,” Mayorkas said. Mayorkas was testifying for the first time about a 99-page report from his agency’s inspector general that concluded he violated ethics rules when he intervened as head of USCIS in three foreign-investor visa cases involving prominent Democrats. He insisted he only got involved to deal with complicated legal questions. Inspector General John Roth didn’t accuse Mayorkas of breaking the law. But Roth said the deputy secretary violated agency rules that Mayorkas had drafted as head of USCIS. Mayorkas’s defense didn’t seem to convince Republicans on the committee. “I think you also violated your own ethics policy,” said Committee Chairman Michael McCaul of Texas.
Chicago chosen for presidential library WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama has chosen his hometown of Chicago to host his future presidential library. That’s according to a source with direct knowledge of the decision who requested anonymity because Obama’s decision hasn’t been announced. The University of Chicago, where Obama once taught law, will develop the library along with the Barack Obama Foundation. The nonprofit screened about a dozen
proposals before recommending a winner from the final four, which also included the University of Illinois at Chicago. Obama and his foundation are expected to officially announce the winner within the next few weeks. The University of Hawaii and Columbia University were the other two schools on the short list. Both are expected to be involved in supplementary programming surrounding the president’s legacy. Support the United Way
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“Political appointees should be held to the same ethical standards, I believe, as the rank and file.” McCaul said the report and a committee review of other documents raised serious questions about Mayorkas’s role as director of USCIS. He said he plans to investigate further the agency’s foreign-investor visa program, known as EB-5. “There may be nothing there, but I think it warrants further review,” McCaul said. Rep. Bennie Thompson, the top Democrat on the committee, said Thursday that Roth’s report was incomplete and didn’t highlight that Mayorkas was responsive to both Republicans and Democrats. “I am disappointed that, after expending months of resources to investigate these cases, the inspector general produced an incomplete report,” the Mississippi Democrat said.
Roth found that Mayorkas improperly meddled with three visa cases involving the youngest brother of Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, Virginia Gov. Terry McAuliffe, former Pennsylvania Gov. Ed Rendell and Senate Democratic Leader Harry Reid of Nevada. At a March hearing in front of McCaul’s committee, Roth told lawmakers that “in each of these three instances, but for Mr. Mayorkas’ intervention, the matter would have been decided differently.” The EB-5 program allows foreigners to obtain visas to live permanently in the United States with their spouse and children if they invest $500,000 to $1 million in projects or businesses that create jobs for American citizens. Approved investors can become permanent residents after two years, and later can become U.S. citizens.
Graveside services will be Saturday, May 2, 2015, at South Park Cemetery at 10 a.m. Condolences may be sent to the family at lagroneruidoso.com.
Herbert Pruit “Pat” Joyce Jr.
Services are pending at Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory for Herbert Pruit “Pat” Joyce Jr., 81, who passed away Tuesday, April 28, 2015, in Roswell. A further announcement will be made once arrangements have been finalized.
Maria Elena Resley
A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m., Saturday, May 2, 2015, at LaGrone Funeral Chapel for Maria Elena Resley, age 74, who passed away on April 27, 2015. Cremation will follow. Inurnment will be held at 10:30 a.m., Saturday, May 9, 2015, at Masonic Cemetery, 760 S. Compress Road in Las Cruces, NM. Maria was born on January 23, 1941, to Augustine and Antonia Romero Ortega in Chihuahua, Chihuahua Mexico. Maria is preceded in
death by her father, Augustine Ortega; mother, Antonia Strickland; her husband James W. Resley; brothers, Guillermo Ortega, Sergio Ortega, Arturo Ortega; sister, Graciela Jackson; uncle, Guillermo Jones and niece, Cynthia Ortega. She is survived by her son Luis (Bert) Ortega and his wife Robin Ford; daughter, Mary Helen Ormseth and her husband Terry Ormseth; granddaugh ters, April Barreras and her husband Andrew Barreras, Chloe’ Ormseth; great-granddaughters, Amaya Belle and Azura Kwai Barreras; brother, Ruben Rascon; aunt, Rita Jones and Uncle Merejildo Romero, numerous nieces, nephews and extended family. Honorary pallbearers will be Luis (Bert) Ortega, Terry Ormseth, Andrew Barreras, Jose Ortega, Bill Ortega, Frankie Ortega, Rob Ormseth, Mickey Ormseth and Denny Ormseth. Arrangements are under the personal care of LaGrone Funeral Chapel. Online condolences may be made at lagronefuneralchapels.com.
Hawaii lava lake overflows HONOLULU (AP) — A lake of lava on Hawaii’s Kilauea volcano has been rising over the past week and, at times, overflowing in a spectacular show. Video posted online by visitors shows lava splashing over the side of the vent rim. Janet Babb, a geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey Hawaiian Volcano Observatory, said Thursday that this is the first time lava from this vent has come into view from a public platform within Hawaii
Volcanoes National Park on Hawaii’s Big Island. “It’s always been out of view for visitors who were in the park public viewing areas,” she said. But this past week, because of lava rising inside the volcano, the lava lake rose high enough that it was visible, she said. The last time molten lava was visible in the crater was in 1982 when a fissure erupted. The last time there was a lake was in 1974.
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$13.99
Hours of Operation Tues. 11am—2pm 5—9pm Remember us for Mother’s Day Wed. 11am—2pm 5—9pm Thurs. 11am—2pm 5—9pm Fri.11am—2pm 5—10pm Sat. 5—10pm • Sun. 11am—2pm Closed Mondays 2010 S. Main 575.208.0543
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Roswell Daily Record
Pecos Dining Guide
Friday, May 1, 2015
A7
Pairing Wine to your favorite dish!
By Christina Stock Pecos Dining Guide Editor
fully wine country. Visitors and locals can enjoy today a generation of wines that are well established and benefit from New Mexico is not only known as the the sun-drenched soil and the cool des“Land of Enchantment,” green chile and ert nights. outlaws. Over the last several years, the wine and champagnes of New Mexico reHere a little guide, how to pair the ceived worldwide recognition for their ex- delicious specialties of the New Mexican cellent quality and flavors. kitchen to our locally grown wines:
Tip: The spicier your dish — the drier your wine should be.
This should come to nobody’s surprise. While the Roman Empire spread the culture of vineyards in Europe 2000 B.C., the Spanish Conquistadors and especially the monks brought their favorite vines to the territory of New Mexico as early as 1629 to grow in the shadow of their monasteries and churches. By the 1800s the Territory of New Mexico was
Any dish with green chile (from Green Chile Stew to Enchilada’s) will be enhanced with a delicious sparkling Cava champagne or a refreshing Riesling.
Especially spicy New Mexico dishes can be tricky to pair with wine.
The smoky adobe-based sauces call for a fruity dry Merlot. The traditional Tacos, Taco Salads or Enchilada’s (red) pair perfectly with the Nebiollo, whose semi-sweet and tannic finish adds to your dining experience.
But do not forget, it is you who decides and you can pair your favorite wine, Tequila or one of the local Micro-brew beers with any dish you like.
RestauRant DiRectoRy
Adobe Rose Restaurant.........................575-746-6157 1614 North 13th St., Artesia, NM Cattle Baron Steak and Seafood Restaurant ...............................................575-622-2465 1113 North Main St., Roswell, NM Cottonwood Wine and Brewing ............................. 888-959-9342 or 1 E Cottonwood Rd, Artesia, NM .............575-365-3141 Domino’s Pizza North ............................575-623-3030 2417 North Main St., Roswell, NM Domino’s Pizza South ............................575-622-3030 1124 South Union Ave, Roswell, NM Farley’s Food Fun & Pub .......................575-627-1100 1315 North Main St., Roswell, NM Galactic Sushi.........................................575-910-1959 4311 C. North Main St., Roswell, NM - Next to AT&T Mama Tuckers Bakery ...........................575-625-1475 3109 North Main St., Roswell, NM Martin’s Capitol Cafe..............................575-624-2111 110 West 4th St., Roswell, NM Pasta Cafe Italian Bistro ........................575-624-1111 1208 North Main St., Roswell, NM Peppers Grill & Bar ................................575-623-1700 500 North Main St., Roswell, NM Taste of Thai Cuisine .............................575-622-2412 1303 West Second St., Roswell, NM
Join us for Party on the Patio starting May 6 Serving Lunch & Dinner
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Interested in joining the Pecos Dining Guide with your business? Call Christina Stock or Curtis Michaels at 575-622-7710 or talk to our Advertising Team Find us on Social Media @Pecos Dining Guide.
Check out the featured restaurants at www.rdrnews.com - Every Friday and Saturday - Click on the Local Business Review
A8 Friday, May 1, 2015
Weather
Roswell Seven-day forecast Today
Tonight
Mostly cloudy and warm
Patchy clouds
High 88°
Low 52°
SSW at 4-8 mph POP: 5%
SSE at 3-6 mph POP: 5%
POP: Probability of Precipitation
Almanac
Saturday
Partly sunny and warm
89°/53°
S at 4-8 mph POP: 10%
Sunday
Monday
Partly sunny and warm
Tuesday
A thunderstorm around
88°/54°
88°/55°
WSW at 6-12 mph POP: 5%
NE at 7-14 mph POP: 40%
Sunny to partly cloudy
79°/50°
ESE at 6-12 mph POP: 10%
New Mexico Weather
Roswell through 8 p.m. Thursday
Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.
Temperatures
High/low ........................... 86°/41° Normal high/low ............... 81°/50° Record high ............... 96° in 2013 Record low ................. 27° in 1903 Humidity at noon .................. 13%
Farmington 81/48
Clayton 76/50
Raton 71/42
Precipitation 24 hours ending 8 p.m. Thu. 0.00" Month to date ........................ 1.74" Normal month to date .......... 0.61" Year to date .......................... 3.94" Normal year to date ............. 1.92"
Gallup 77/42
Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast
Santa Fe 78/47 Tucumcari 85/53
Albuquerque 81/57
Clovis 82/48
Moderate Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading
T or C 86/55
Source:Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
Sun and Moon
The Sun Today Sat. The Moon Today Sat. Full
May 3
Rise 6:10 a.m. 6:09 a.m. Rise 5:39 p.m. 6:34 p.m.
Last
May 11
Set 7:40 p.m. 7:41 p.m. Set 4:49 a.m. 5:23 a.m.
New
ROSWELL 88/52 Carlsbad 90/50
Hobbs 82/50
Las Cruces 88/50
Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015
May 25
The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You will need to defer to others in order to accomplish anything. You might be surprised by how helpful a touch of wit and humor can be. Someone of authority could be very controlling. You will surprise this person with your unpredictability. Tonight: Uncork your imagination. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHHH You could overextend yourself in an effort to turn a situation around. Call a loved one who cares a lot about you. Work with what appears to be a far-out idea; you’ll see the positives with ease. Someone you respect proves to be
Alamogordo 88/54
Silver City 82/51
First
May 17
Ruidoso 72/49
Jacqueline Bigar Your Horoscope
more rigid than you thought. Tonight: Join friends. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Your originality mixed with ingenuity will prove to be today’s problem-solver. You might choose to keep many of your judgments to yourself, as they will not help move a situation forward. Your smile and wit make the impossible nearly possible. Tonight: Be a wild thing. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You seem to be coming from an anchored position. Others see where you are
coming from and naturally will want to delegate more responsibility to you. Be willing to say “no” if it could have a negative impact on the quality of your personal life. Tonight: TGIF with a favorite person. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Listen to news from various sources. It could be difficult to get only the facts. By the end of the day, you might be chuckling at the many different versions attached to one event. Recognize your limits, especially with your daily life. Tonight: At a favorite haunt. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH Before you head out, be sure to balance your checkbook. A mistake made now easily could mar not only the weekend but also other future happenings. Once you know the lay of the land, you will
Wednesday
Sunshine
83°/50°
ESE at 7-14 mph POP: 5%
Roswell Daily Record Thursday
Sunny
83°/49°
SE at 8-16 mph POP: 5%
Regional Cities Today Sat. 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
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88/54/s 81/57/s 63/30/pc 87/52/c 90/50/c 67/38/pc 76/50/pc 68/44/pc 82/48/s 88/49/s 78/51/pc 81/48/s 77/42/s 82/50/s 88/50/s 72/42/pc 71/49/pc 84/54/s 84/51/s 83/50/s 75/43/pc 71/42/pc 60/30/pc 88/52/c 72/49/pc 78/47/pc 82/51/pc 86/55/pc 85/53/pc 75/50/pc
88/59/s 78/53/pc 63/31/pc 88/55/pc 89/54/s 65/36/pc 80/51/pc 67/44/pc 84/50/s 88/52/pc 76/48/pc 79/48/pc 75/41/pc 84/53/s 88/53/s 71/43/pc 68/47/c 82/49/pc 86/53/s 86/51/s 72/40/c 75/42/pc 60/31/c 89/53/pc 72/49/pc 74/45/pc 81/50/pc 87/55/pc 86/54/pc 72/47/c
W-weather, s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow, i-ice
feel better. Make time for an important discussion. Tonight: Your treat! LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Tap into the energy around you in order to draw in more of what you want. Listen to news, and be direct in what you choose to do. Honor a change, and you will be far better off than you originally had thought. Tonight: All smiles wherever you are. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Intuitively you know it is best to maintain a low profile. The people you care about will seek you out anyway. You’ll want to avoid some strong headwinds from an associate who must have it his or her way. Let it go for now. Tonight: Reach out to a friend at a distance.
National Cities Today
Hi/Lo/W
Anchorage Atlanta Baltimore Boston Charlotte Chicago Cleveland Dallas Denver Detroit El Paso Honolulu Houston Indianapolis Kansas City Las Vegas Los Angeles Lubbock
51/38/s 71/50/s 63/47/c 50/40/c 69/48/pc 65/47/s 65/45/pc 79/56/s 66/47/t 71/48/s 90/60/s 82/70/pc 83/59/s 70/49/s 73/53/s 95/68/pc 83/60/s 82/53/s
Sat.
Hi/Lo/W
55/39/sh 77/55/s 71/50/pc 57/46/pc 76/51/s 74/53/s 69/50/pc 80/59/s 75/48/pc 73/52/s 89/65/pc 82/70/s 82/58/s 71/50/pc 75/59/pc 92/66/s 80/59/pc 83/54/s
U.S. Extremes
(For the 48 contiguous states)
High: 105° .........Death Valley, Calif. Low: 21° ............. Embarrass, Minn.
Today
Hi/Lo/W
Miami 84/69/s Midland 84/55/s Minneapolis 66/51/c New Orleans 80/61/s New York 60/49/c Omaha 68/53/pc Orlando 84/61/s Philadelphia 63/48/c Phoenix 100/72/pc Pittsburgh 68/44/pc Portland, OR 70/45/pc Raleigh 61/46/c St. Louis 71/54/s Salt Lake City 77/56/pc San Diego 78/62/s Seattle 64/47/pc Tucson 95/66/s Washington, DC 66/52/c
Sat.
Hi/Lo/W
82/70/s 85/57/s 79/59/pc 79/59/s 68/52/pc 79/59/pc 82/62/s 70/52/pc 97/72/s 72/48/pc 69/45/s 72/49/s 77/58/pc 78/55/pc 72/60/pc 64/44/pc 93/65/s 73/56/pc
State Extremes
High: 86° ............................Roswell Low: 27° ......................... Angel Fire
National Cities
Shown are noon positions of weather systems and precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Fronts Cold
-10s
Warm
-0s
0s
Precipitation Stationary
10s
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Showers T-storms
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SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You might want to gain a better understanding of the dynamics between you and someone else. Emphasize the importance of your friendship, no matter what is occurring. Detach, so that you don’t trigger this person. Listen to what he or she has to say. Tonight: Accept an offer. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHH One-on-one relating draws in positive results. You might feel as though you can handle a problem and get past it with ease. Open up to different possibilities more often; you are sure to like the outcome. Tonight: Be the ringmaster of the party. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Reach out to some-
50s
Rain
60s
Flurries
70s
80s
Snow
one at a distance. This person will be thrilled to hear from you, even if he or she gives you some flak. Examine what is going on behind the scenes that allowed a situation to become more difficult than need be. Tonight: Feel as free as a bird. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH You might want to be more expressive than you have been in a while. Your way of handling a problem, with the help of a key person in your life, is likely to work. Let others know how closely knit you are, as it will explain some of your choices. Tonight: Dinner for two. BORN TODAY Frontierswoman Calamity Jane (1852), novelist Joseph Heller (1923), film director Wes Anderson (1969)
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Ice
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Sports
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Friday, May 1, 2015
Roswell Daily Record
Section
B
Olivas leads Coyotes to sweep, district title
By Jeff Jackson Record Sports Writer
Delivering with her arm and delivering with her bat, Mykaya Olivas was a one-player wrecking crew for the Roswell Coyotes softball team Thursday. The sophomore Olivas pitched all 14 innings and slammed two home runs to lead the host Coyotes to a doubleheader sweep over Goddard, 4-0 and 5-3, and also delivered a district championship for her team. Her second home run, a three-run soaring blast over the left field fence in the fourth inning, tied the game at 3 and squashed the mojo the Rockets had built after being blanked in the opener. “I had to pick my team up and that’s the best I could do. It was down the middle, easy pitch,” Olivas said of her game-tying hit off the Rockets’ Danielle Hubbard. “As soon as you hit it you could feel it.” Hubbard had thrown strike three on the pitch before for the second out of the inning, Goddard coach Jay Edgett said, but the
right-handed senior did not get the call. “When we had the 3-0 lead we had a lot of confidence. We had heard in between games that Artesia had lost their first game, which meant that if we won this second game then we were going to be district champs,” Edgett said. “It just ended up being one of those things. I was positive we had a third strike and it wasn’t called. Next pitch was a home run, put them back in the ball game at 3-3. “There was a couple of real close calls that went Roswell’s way instead of Goddard’s way and created a tough situation for us. Hat’s off to them for coming to play hard. (The) pitcher was on her game both games.” The Coyotes (18-7, 9-3 in district) needed a sweep to claim the district championship, whereas the Rockets (18-8, 7-5) needed to win just one. After winning the opener, Roswell would have been a shoe-in regardless of game two except that Artesia lost its first game at last-place Loving-
ton, preventing a three-way tie. That scenario required a run-differential tiebreaker, and Roswell had held a plus-19 advantage over Goddard. Olivas’ performance nullified Roswell’s bad luck regarding Artesia’s outcome. She held the Rockets to five hits in the shutout and had five strikeouts. Goddard leadoff hitter Mileena Sanchez reached on a three-base error in the first but was stranded after a strikeout and pitcher-toshortstop-to-first double play. Olivas retired nine straight Rockets and was one out away from a 10th to end the opener before Goddard loaded the bases on a hit batter and two singles. Sanchez lined a shot to third baseman Adrianna Horton who backhanded the ball and stepped on third for a game-ending force out. The second game ended similarly. Olivas retired eight of 10 batters but with one out in the seventh two
Shawn Naranjo Photos
Right: Roswell’s Mykaya Olivas delivers a pitch during a crucial district twinbill against Goddard High School Thursday evening at Roswell High School. Below: Olivas celebrates with her Lady Coyotes teammates at home plate after a big home run in game one. Roswell won game one 4-0 and game two, 5-3, for the regular season District 4-5A crown.
See ROSWELL, Page B2
Lady Coyotes best Lady Rockets in crosstown hardcourt matchup
Shawn Naranjo Photos
Goddard’s Jessica Lewis (left) and Roswell’s Alicia Romero (right) hit forehands during their No. 2 singles match Thursday afternoon at Roswell High School. For full scores from all the matches Thursday, see the “Scoreboard” on Page B2.
Top 2 picks prove importance of QBs in NFL Draft
AP Photos
Left: Former Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota reacts to being drafted by the Tennessee Titans with the second pick in the first round on NFL Draft Day Thursday in Honolulu. Right: Jameis Winston takes the call from the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, who selected Winston with the first overall pick of the NFL Draft. in the road,” Fisher said. “But as far as on the field, he’ll learn. He has an unbelievable ability to learn and learn fast. “Off the field he’s an
Gas engines only!
extremely great guy. People will be shocked with how he represents (the Bucs).” That’s a high priority, Winston said. “It’s a family town. And
great men like Derrick Brooks and coach Lovie Smith and people like Mike Alstott make that town the way it is, and that’s part of the football communi-
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this process started.” Some questioned Mariota having barely taken any snaps behind center in Oregon’s quick-tempo attack, but Titans coach Ken Whisenhunt, who has done big things with such veteran quarterbacks as Ben Roethlisberger, Kurt Warner and Philip Rivers, clearly isn’t concerned. “He’s a talented young man who has a very good feel for the position and how to process those things,” Whisenhunt said, “and we’re excited to get a chance to work with him.” Winston and Mariota, who each had a year of eligibility remaining, will meet in the season opener in Tampa Bay. The next two picks also were underclassmen. Linebacker Dante Fowler Jr. of Florida headed upstate a bit to Jacksonville, then See DRAFT, Page B3
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CHICAGO (AP) — You don’t pass up a potential franchise quarterback. Not in today’s pass-happy NFL. So Jameis Winston is headed to Tampa Bay as the first overall selection and Marcus Mariota goes to Tennessee at No. 2. They’ll take their Heisman Trophies (Winston in 2013, Mariota last year) and try to turn two downtrodden franchises into contenders, maybe even champions. Neither was in Chicago, choosing to watch — and celebrate — at home with their families. It was the sixth time since 1967 that quarterbacks went 1-2, and this was no surprise. The biggest question was whether Florida State’s Winston had too much off-field baggage for the Bucs. Obviously not. His college coach, Jimbo Fisher, has no doubts either. “There are always bumps
B2 Friday, May 1, 2015 Sports on TV All Times EDT Friday, May 1 AUTO RACING 11:30 a.m. FS1 — NASCAR, XFINITY Series, final practice for Winn Dixie 300, at Talladega, Ala. 2 p.m. FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for GEICO 500, at Talladega, Ala. 4:30 p.m. FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, “Happy Hour Series,” final practice for GEICO 500, at Talladega, Ala. 6 p.m. FS1 — ARCA, International Motorsports Hall of Fame, 200, at Talladega, Ala. BOXING 10 p.m. TRUTV — Champion Mikael Zewski (26-0-0) vs. Konstantin Ponomarev (27-0-0), for NABF welterweight title; Takahiro Ao (27-3-1) vs. Ray Beltran (29-7-1), for vacant WBO lightweight title, at Las Vegas GOLF 10:30 a.m. TGC — LPGA, North Texas Shootout, second round, at Irving, Texas 12:30 p.m. TGC — Web.com Tour, United Leasing Championship, second round, at Newburgh, Ind. 2:30 p.m. TGC — Champions Tour, Insperity Invitational, first round, at The Woodlands, Texas 5 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour-WGC, Cadillac Match Play, Day 3, at San Francisco HOCKEY 10 a.m. NBCSN — IIHF, World Championship, preliminary round, United States vs. Finland, at Ostrava, Czech Republic HORSE RACING 12:30 p.m. NBCSN — Thoroughbreds, Kentucky Oaks, at Louisville, Ky. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 2 p.m. MLB — Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs 7 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, N.Y. Yankees at Boston or Tampa Bay at Baltimore NBA 8 p.m. ESPN — Playoffs, first round, game 6, Atlanta at Brooklyn 10:30 p.m. NFL 7 p.m. ESPN2 — Draft, rounds 2-3, at Chicago NHL 7 p.m. NBCSN — Playoffs, conference semifinals, Game 1. Tampa Bay at Montreal 9:30 p.m. NBCSN — Playoffs, conference semifinals, Game 1, Minnesota at Chicago PARALYMPICS 10:30 p.m. NBCSN — IPC, Ice Sledge Hockey World Championships, semifinals, teams TBD, at Buffalo, N.Y. (same-day tape)
NBA Playoffs All Times EDT FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Thursday, April 23 Cleveland 103, Boston 95 Chicago 113, Milwaukee 106, 2OT Golden State 123, New Orleans 119, OT Friday, April 24 Houston 130, Dallas 128 Washington 106, Toronto 99 San Antonio 100, L.A. Clippers 73 Saturday, April 25 Brooklyn 91, Atlanta 83 Milwaukee 92, Chicago 90
Sports
Golden State 109, New Orleans 98, Golden State wins series 4-0 Memphis 115, Portland 109 Sunday, April 26 Cleveland 101, Boston 93, Cleveland wins series 4-0 L.A. Clippers 114, San Antonio 105 Washington 125, Toronto 94, Washington wins series 4-0 Dallas 121, Houston 109 Monday, April 27 Brooklyn 120, Atlanta 115, OT Milwaukee 94, Chicago 88 Portland 99, Memphis 92 Tuesday, April 28 Houston 103, Dallas 94, Houston wins series 4-1 San Antonio 111, L.A. Clippers 107, San Antonio leads series 3-2 Wednesday, April 29 Atlanta 107, Brooklyn 97, Atlanta leads series 3-2 Memphis 99, Portland 93, Memphis wins series 4-1 Thursday, April 30 Chicago 120, Milwaukee 66, Chicago wins series 4-2 L.A. Clippers 102, San Antonio 96, series tied 3-3 Friday, May 1 Atlanta at Brooklyn, 8 p.m. Saturday, May 2 San Antonio at L.A. Clippers, 8 or 9 p.m. Sunday, May 3 x-Brooklyn at Atlanta, 1 p.m. -----CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Sunday, May 3 y-Washington at Atlanta or Brooklyn at Washington, 1 p.m. Memphis at Golden State, 3:30 p.m. y-If game 7 of Brooklyn-Washington series not necessary Monday, May 4 Chicago at Cleveland, 7 p.m. L.A. L.A. Clippers-San Antonio winner at Houston, 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 5 Memphis at Golden State, 10:30 p.m.
NHL Playoffs All Times EDT FIRST ROUND (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Saturday, April 25 N.Y. Islanders 3, Washington 1 Detroit 4, Tampa Bay 0 Chicago 4, Nashville 3, Chicago wins series 4-2 Calgary 7, Vancouver 4, Calgary wins series 4-2 Sunday, April 26 Minnesota 4, St. Louis 1, Minnesota wins series 4-2 Montreal 2, Ottawa 0, Montreal wins series 4-2 Monday, April 27 Tampa Bay 5, Detroit 2 Washington 2, N.Y. Islanders 1, Washington wins series 4-3 Wednesday, April 29 Tampa Bay 2, Detroit 0, Tampa Bay wins series 4-3 SECOND ROUND (Best-of-7) Thursday, April 30 Washington 2, N.Y. Rangers 1, Washington leads series 1-0 Anaheim 6, Calgary 1, Anaheim leads series 1-0 Friday, May 1 Tampa Bay at Montreal, 7 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago, 9:30 p.m. Saturday, May 2 Washington at N.Y. Rangers, 12:30 p.m. Sunday, May 3 Tampa Bay at Montreal, 6 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Calgary at Anaheim, 10 p.m. Monday, May 4 N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, May 5 Chicago at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Anaheim at Calgary, 9:30 p.m.
Scoreboard American League East Division W L Pct GB New York 13 9 .591 — Boston 12 10 .545 1 Tampa Bay 12 10 .545 1 Baltimore 10 10 .500 2 Toronto 11 12 .478 2½ Central Division W L Pct GB Detroit 15 7 .682 — Kansas City 14 7 .667 ½ Minnesota 10 12 .455 5 Chicago 8 11 .421 5½ Cleveland 7 14 .333 7½ West Division W L Pct GB Houston 14 7 .667 — Los Angeles 11 11 .500 3½ Seattle 10 11 .476 4 Oakland 9 14 .391 6 Texas 7 14 .333 7 -----Wednesday’s Games Tampa Bay 3, N.Y. Yankees 2, 13 innings Detroit 10, Minnesota 7 Baltimore 8, Chicago White Sox 2 Houston 7, San Diego 2 Cleveland 7, Kansas City 5 Boston 4, Toronto 1 Seattle 5, Texas 2 L.A. Angels 6, Oakland 3 Thursday’s Games L.A. Angels 6, Oakland 5 Toronto 5, Cleveland 1 Minnesota 12, Chicago White Sox 2 Kansas City 8, Detroit 1 Houston 3, Seattle 2 Friday’s Games Tampa Bay (Colome 0-0) vs. Baltimore (Tillman 2-2) at St. Petersburg, FL, 7:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees (Sabathia 0-4) at Boston (Masterson 2-0), 7:10 p.m. Toronto (Buehrle 3-1) at Cleveland (Carrasco 2-2), 7:10 p.m. Oakland (Kazmir 2-0) at Texas (Lewis 1-2), 8:05 p.m. Chicago White Sox (Quintana 1-1) at Minnesota (Gibson 1-2), 8:10 p.m. Detroit (Lobstein 2-1) at Kansas City (C.Young 1-0), 8:10 p.m. Seattle (Elias 0-0) at Houston (Deduno 0-0), 8:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 1-2) at San Francisco (Heston 2-2), 10:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 1:35 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. Toronto at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m. Tampa Bay vs. Baltimore at St. Petersburg, FL, 7:05 p.m. Detroit at Kansas City, 7:10 p.m. Seattle at Houston, 7:10 p.m. Oakland at Texas, 8:05 p.m. Sunday’s Games Toronto at Cleveland, 1:10 p.m. Tampa Bay vs. Baltimore at St. Petersburg, FL, 1:35 p.m. Chicago White Sox at Minnesota, 2:10 p.m. Detroit at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m. Seattle at Houston, 2:10 p.m. Oakland at Texas, 3:05 p.m. L.A. Angels at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. N.Y. Yankees at Boston, 8:05 p.m.
National League East Division
W L Pct GB New York 15 8 .652 — Atlanta 10 12 .455 4½ Miami 10 12 .455 4½ Washington 10 13 .435 5 Philadelphia 8 15 .348 7 Central Division W L Pct GB St. Louis 15 6 .714 — Chicago 12 8 .600 2½ Pittsburgh 12 10 .545 3½ Cincinnati 11 11 .500 4½ Milwaukee 5 17 .227 10½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 13 8 .619 — Colorado 11 10 .524 2 San Diego 11 12 .478 3 Arizona 10 11 .476 3 San Francisco 9 13 .409 4½ -----Wednesday’s Games Milwaukee 8, Cincinnati 3 Houston 7, San Diego 2 Miami 7, N.Y. Mets 3 Washington 13, Atlanta 4 Pittsburgh 8, Chicago Cubs 1 St. Louis 5, Philadelphia 2 Arizona 9, Colorado 1 L.A. Dodgers 7, San Francisco 3 Thursday’s Games St. Louis 9, Philadelphia 3 Cincinnati 5, Atlanta 1 Washington 8, N.Y. Mets 2 Friday’s Games Milwaukee (W.Peralta 0-3) at Chicago Cubs (Lester 0-2), 2:20 p.m. Philadelphia (Williams 2-1) at Miami (Koehler 2-2), 7:10 p.m. Washington (Scherzer 1-2) at N.Y. Mets (Harvey 4-0), 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati (DeSclafani 2-1) at Atlanta (Foltynewicz 0-0), 7:35 p.m. Pittsburgh (Burnett 0-1) at St. Louis (Lynn 1-2), 8:15 p.m. Arizona (R.De La Rosa 2-1) at L.A. Dodgers (Frias 1-0), 10:10 p.m. Colorado (E.Butler 2-1) at San Diego (Kennedy 0-1), 10:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (C.Wilson 1-2) at San Francisco (Heston 2-2), 10:15 p.m. Saturday’s Games Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m. Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m. L.A. Angels at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Miami, 4:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Atlanta, 7:10 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Mets, 7:10 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 8:40 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 9:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Philadelphia at Miami, 1:10 p.m. Washington at N.Y. Mets, 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Atlanta, 1:35 p.m. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, 2:15 p.m. Milwaukee at Chicago Cubs, 2:20 p.m. L.A. Angels at San Francisco, 4:05 p.m. Arizona at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m. Colorado at San Diego, 4:10 p.m.
NFL Draft By The Associated Press At Chicago Thursday, April 30 First Round 1. Tampa Bay, Jameis Winston, qb, Florida State. 2. Tennessee, Marcus Mariota, qb, Oregon. 3. Jacksonville, Dante Fowler Jr., lb, Florida. 4. Oakland, Amari Cooper, wr, Alabama.
Roswell Daily Record 5. Washington, Brandon Scherff, ot, Iowa. 6. New York Jets, Leonard Williams, de, Southern Cal. 7. Chicago, Kevin White, wr, West Virginia. 8. Atlanta, Vic Beasley, de, Clemson. 9. New York Giants, Ereck Flowers, ot, Miami. 10. St. Louis, Todd Gurley, rb, Georgia. 11. Minnesota, Trae Waynes, db, Michigan State. 12. Cleveland, Danny Shelton, nt, Washington. 13. New Orleans, Andrus Peat, ot, Stanford. 14. Miami, Devante Parker, wr, Louisville. 15. San Diego (from San Francisco), Melvin Gordon, rb, Wisconsin. 16. Houston, Kevin Johnson, db, Wake Forest. 17. San Francisco (from San Diego), Arik Armstead, de, Oregon. 18. Kansas City, Marcus Peters, db, Washington. 19. Cleveland (from Buffalo), Cameron Erving, g, Florida State. 20. Philadelphia, Nelson Agholor, wr, Southern Cal. 21. Cincinnati, Cedric Ogbuehi, ot, Texas A&M. 22. Pittsburgh, Bud Dupree, lb, Kentucky. 23. Denver (from Detroit), Shane Ray, de, Missouri. 24. Arizona, D.J. Humphries, ot, Florida. 25. Carolina, Shaq Thompson, lb, Washington. 26. Baltimore, Breshad Perriman, wr, UCF. 27. Dallas, Byron Jones, db, UConn. 28. Detroit (from Denver), Laken Tomlinson, g, Duke. 29. Indianapolis, Phillip Dorsett, wr, Miami. 30. Green Bay, Damarious Randall. db, Arizona State. 31. New Orleans (from Seattle), Stephone Anthony, lb, Clemson. 32. New England, Malcom Brown, dt, Texas.
This Day in Sports May 1 1920 — Joe Oeschger of the Boston Braves and Leon Cadore of the Brooklyn Dodgers both pitch 26 innings in a 1-1 tie, the longest game in major league history. 1943 — Count Fleet, ridden by Johnny Longden, wins the Kentucky Derby by three lengths over Blue Swords. 1948 — Citation, ridden by Eddie Arcaro, wins the Kentucky Derby by 3½ lengths over Coaltown. It’s Citation’s toughest race in winning the Triple Crown. 1965 — The Montreal Canadiens beat the Chicago Blackhawks 4-0 in Game 7 to capture the Stanley Cup. 1991 — Nolan Ryan pitches his seventh no-hitter in a 3-0 victory over the Toronto Blue Jays. Ryan faces 29 batters, striking out 16 and walking two. 1991 — Rickey Henderson of the Oakland Athletics sets a major league record by stealing his 939th base, eclipsing Lou Brock’s career mark. 1992 — The Pittsburgh Penguins become the 11th team in NHL history to rebound from a 3-1 deficit and win a playoff series, with a 3-1 victory over the Washington Capitals. 1992 — Rickey Henderson, baseball’s career stolen base leader, steals his 1,000th career base in the first inning of Oakland’s 7-6 win over Detroit. 1993 — Bruce Baumgartner wins his 11th straight national wrestling title by beating Joel Greenlee 6-0 in the 286-pound freestyle division at the U.S. championships in Las Vegas. 1999 — Charismatic, a 30-1 shot who ran in a claiming race in February, charges to victory in the 125th Kentucky Derby, giving trainer D. Wayne Lukas his third victory of the 1990s. 2002 — With a save against the Chicago Cubs, San Diego closer Trevor Hoffman sets the major league record for the most saves with one team, 321. He breaks Dennis Eckersley’s record of 320 with Oakland. 2003 — The three-time defending champion Lakers beat Minnesota 101-85 to win the series 4-2. It’s the 13th straight playoff series won under Phil Jackson, and Jackson-coached teams have an NBA-record 25 consecutive series wins. 2004 — Smarty Jones splashes his way past Lion Heart in the stretch to win the Kentucky Derby. Smarty Jones runs his record to 7-for-7
and becomes the first unbeaten Derby winner since Seattle Slew in 1977. 2006 — Detroit, winner of the President’s Trophy by leading the league in points (124) this season, is eliminated in the first round for the third time in five postseasons after a 4-3 loss to Edmonton in Game 6. 2006 — Memphis suffers its third consecutive four-game sweep after a 102-76 loss to Dallas. The Grizzlies’ 12 consecutive playoff losses is an NBA record, six more losses than any NBA team had before its first victory. 2008 — Johan Franzen records his second hat trick in three games with three more goals and helps Detroit complete the four-game sweep of Colorado with an 8-2 win. His three goals makes him the first player with two hat tricks in one playoff series since Jari Kurri did it for Edmonton in 1985. 2010 — Jockey Calvin Borel steers Super Saver through the mud to win his third Kentucky Derby in four years, beating Lookin At Lucky by 2 1/2 lengths. The win ends trainer Todd Pletcher’s Derby drought. Pletcher, who had four horses in the race, came into the race 0 for 24 since 2000.
Local Tennis RHS vs GHS (girls prep tennis) Roswell girls win 5-0 No. 1 singles: Jesse Jennings (RHS) def. Noor Osmani (GHS), 6-2, 6-1 No. 2 singles: Alicia Romero (RHS) def. Jessica Lewis (GHS), 7-5, 6-4 No. 3 singles: Stephanie Robertson (RHS) def. Alex Casario (GHS), 6-1, 6-2 No. 4 singles: Karly Kunko (RHS) vs. Eden Wiggins (GHS), 6-4, 4-6, 4-4 (DNF) No. 5 singles: Becsave Pacheco (RHS) def. Calli McGuire (GHS), 6-2, 6-1 No. 6 singles: Evelyn Williams (RHS) def. Tatiana Villa (GHS), 6-2, 6-4
Transactions BASEBALL American League KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Announced RHP Yordano Ventura has dropped the appeal of his seven-game suspension for an on-field incident in a game on April 23. MINNESOTA TWINS — Placed RHP Casey Fien on the 15-day DL. Recalled RHP Michael Tonkin from Rochester (IL). National League LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Claimed LHP Eury De La Rosa off waivers from Oakland. Moved RHP Brandon McCarthy to the 60-day DL. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Selected the contract of LHP Tim Cooney from Memphis (PCL). Optioned C Cody Stanley to Memphis. Transferred RHP Adam Wainwright from the 15to the 60-day DL. American Association AMARILLO THUNDERHEADS — Traded RHP Kevin Thomas to Trois-Rivieres (Can-Am) for future considerations. FARGO-MOORHEAD REDHAWKS — Released RHP Steven Thompson. GRAND PRAIRIE AIR HOGS — Released OF Eric Baker. JOPLIN BLASTERS — Released OF Sawyer Carroll. Can-Am League NEW JERSEY JACKALS — Traded INF Anthony Phillips to St. Paul (AA) for a player to be named. QUEBEC CAPITALES — Signed RHP Derek Dubois. ROCKLAND BOULDERS — Traded OF Byron Wiley to Laredo (AA) to complete an earlier trade. TROIS-RIVIERES AIGLES — Traded OF Will Walsh to Rockland for future considerations. Frontier League JOLIET SLAMMERS — Signed LHP Brett Maus. LAKE ERIE CRUSHERS — Signed RHPs John Kovalik and Kyle McMillen, C Ty Nelson, OF Warren Stehn, and 1B Greg Toliver.
Roswell-native Gerina Piller fires 4-under 67
Roswell
Continued from Page B1
Shawn Naranjo Photo
Goddard’s Desi Flores makes contact with a pitch during the Lady Rockets’ doubleheader against the Lady Coyotes Thursday evening at Roswell High School. soft singles put Rockets on first and second. Jackie Dacanay lined out to first baseman Alexis Acevedo, who lunged to her right for the ball, and Acevedo flipped the ball to second baseman CeeAudra Mein who scampered to tag first base for a double play. “You have to depend on your team and I knew that they were going to back me up. I knew they backed me up. It was exciting. It was
really good,” she said. A two-run double by Cheyenne Lopez put Goddard up 2-0 in the first inning of game two, and the Rockets plated a third run the next inning, but Roswell coach Art Sandoval remained upbeat. “That was the worst-case scenario. We knew we had to sweep,” Sandoval said, who earned his first district championship in his 10 years as Roswell coach.
“Right before the first game I said ‘When things so south you stay positive, you pick your head up.’ And that’s what we did. Mykaya did a fabulous job on the mound, fabulous job with the home run, but ultimately it takes a team.” Reporter Jeff Jackson can be contacted at 575622-7710, ext. 311, or reporter02@rdrnews.com.
Dunleavy scores 20, Bulls clobber Bucks 120-66 to advance to 2nd round
MILWAUKEE (AP) — The Chicago Bulls finally delivered a knockout blow to the Milwaukee Bucks — not literally, although it sure seemed to come close at times. And for all of Chicago’s star power, it was Mike Dunleavy in the middle of it all. Dunleavy scored 20 points and the Bulls came close to an NBA playoff record, finally putting away the Bucks with a 120-66 victory in Game 6 to clinch their first-round series Thursday night. Dunleavy seemed to have his biggest impact away from the ball, getting under the young Bucks skins with physical play that drew retaliation. “They had some momentum in the series, won a couple in a row,” Dunleavy said. “We came out on their court and put it on them. That’s frustrating. If anybody’s been there before,
that’s frustrating, and I understand that.” The Bulls, who move on to face the Cleveland Cavaliers in the second round, finished four points from the NBA playoff record for largest margin of victory. Minnesota beat St. Louis 133-75 on March 19, 1956. “It looks a lot better when the ball goes in,” Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau said. “The thing that you want to make sure of is, sometimes you don’t have control over when the ball goes in or doesn’t go in. If they are the right shots, you want to shoot them. You do have control over your intensity, your concentration.” The game was over early, but it still featured plenty of the intensity and bad blood that marked the first five games of the series. Dunleavy drew the foul that led to the ejection of Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokounmpo for a flagrant 2
foul just before halftime. Pau Gasol scored 19 points and Jimmy Butler added 16 for the Bulls, who started the series with a 3-0 lead before two straight wins by the defensive-minded Bucks put them back in position to tie it. Derrick Rose scored 15 points and all five Chicago starters were in double figures. “It was definitely a tough battle all series,” Joakim Noah of the Bulls said. “To just win like that is exactly what you needed. You go into the next series with a lot of confidence. We had to do a lot of soul searching this series.” In an indication of Milwaukee’s misery on offense, no Bucks starter scored more than ZaZa Pachulia’s eight points. It was the biggest playoff loss in team history. The Bucks lost by 36 points at New York in 1970.
AP Photo
Gerina Piller watches her tee shot on the 10th hole during first round play at the LPGA North Texas Shootout golf tournament, Thursday in Irving, Texas. By Doug Walp Record Sports Editor Roswell-native and LPGA Tour golfer Gerina Piller shot a 4-under 67 in the opening round of the North Texas Shootout in Irving, TX, on Thursday afternoon, and currently sits just one shot behind Cristie Kerr, Juli Inkster and Sydnee Michaels, who are tied for first-place at 5-under. Piller went out with a
2-under 34 on the frontnine, with biridies at the par-5 third and the par-4 fifth. She then birdied the par-5 10th and the par-4 14th to come in with a 2-under 33 on the back. Piller didn’t bogey a single hole on the day. Piller played well in last week’s Swinging Skirts LPGA Classic, finishing in a tie for 15th-place, after missing the cut the week before at the Lotte Championship. Piller, who was born
in Roswell and graduated from Goddard High School after winning a state golf championship in 2003, currently sits 48th in the Rolex rankings, with one Top-10 finish this year. Piller has 17 career Top-10 finishes and $1,514,360 in career earnings. Piller will return to action this afternoon at 1:22 p.m. EST for her second round at the North Texas Shootout.
Rickie Fowler wins to secure spot Saturday in Match Play
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Rickie Fowler escaped with three big putts and beat Shane Lowry of Ireland on Thursday to secure his spot in the round of 16 at the Match Play Championship. Fowler still has one more match to play on Friday, which effectively is a practice round in the middle of a tournament. He already has won two matches in round-robin play and is assured of having the best record to advance from his four-man group. The second day at TPC Harding Park brought out a strange element for match play — scoreboard watching. J.B. Holmes went 19 holes to beat Russell Hen-
ley and then stayed on the course to watch the match behind him. He knew Brooks Koepka had to win or else Holmes would be eliminated. Koepka won the last three holes and wound up beating Marc Warren of Scotland. Fowler knew he would win his group provided Harris English beat Graeme McDowell, because Fowler had already defeated English. McDowell had a 3-up lead until English rallied to win five out of six holes for a 2-and-1 victory. “I knew if I won and Harris won, I had a chance at being locked,” Fowler said. “Obviously, all I can do is take care of my match. Didn’t exactly take care
of it the way I wanted to. And the end of the day, I’m happy with it.” The match was all square when Fowler made a 15-foot putt to halve the 15th hole, an 18-foot putt to halve the 16th hole and a 30-foot putt to halve the 17th. A birdie on the par-5 18th hole gave Fowler a 2-0 record and a match Friday against McDowell that is irrelevant. “Definitely a stress reliever right there,” Fowler said. “Obviously, I still want to go out and play a good match and win the match. In a way, it will give me time to work on stuff and ... see if we can tighten the game up a little bit.”
Sports
Roswell Daily Record
Oklahoma City Thunder hire Florida’s Billy Donovan OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — The Thunder hired Florida’s Billy Donovan as their coach Thursday, hoping he will help the franchise win an NBA championship in Oklahoma City. “We warmly welcome Billy and his family to Oklahoma City,” team chairman Clayton Bennett said. “He is the perfect fit for our organization and for our community and we look forward to a long and successful relationship.” The 49-year-old Donovan led Florida to two national championships, four Final Fours, seven Elite Eights and 14 NCAA Tournament berths in 19 years. He signed a one-year contract extension with the Gators in December that would have paid him an average salary of $4 million through 2020. But, eight years after leaving Florida to coach the Orlando Magic and then changing his mind the following day, Donovan is back in the NBA. It’s not likely he’ll head back to Gainesville this time — he inherits 2013-14 MVP Kevin Durant and 2014-15 scoring champion Russell Westbrook. “I am honored and humbled to be named the head coach of the Oklahoma City Thunder,” Donovan said. “I knew that it would take a
AP Photo
This Oct. 15 file photo, shows Florida basketball coach Billy Donovan at a press conference during media day in Gainesville, Fla. unique opportunity to leave the University of Florida, and that is clearly how I look at this situation.” Donovan replaces Scott Brooks, who was fired last week. The pressure will be on Donovan immediately in Oklahoma City. Brooks went 338-207 (.620) in seven seasons with the Thunder and was the 2009-10 NBA Coach of the Year. Starting in 201011, he led the team to the Western Conference finals three out of four years, and the franchise reached the NBA Finals in 2012. This season, a broken right foot limited Durant to
27 games and right knee surgery kept Ibaka out for the final month of the season. Westbrook posted nine triple-doubles after the AllStar break while trying to salvage the season, but the Thunder were knocked out of the playoff race on the final night of the regular season. Durant, Westbrook and defensive stalwart Serge Ibaka spoke highly of Brooks during exit interviews. Now, Donovan will have to prove he can coach at the NBA level, win over the fans and help Durant feel comfortable enough to re-sign instead of testing free agency.
Friday, May 1, 2015
Draft
Continued from Page B1
Oakland grabbed Alabama wide receiver Amari Cooper. The first senior taken was Iowa tackle Brandon Scherff by Washington in the fifth spot, a bit of a surprise. Tampa has the receivers to help Winston in Vincent Jackson and Mike Evans, both of whom went over 1,000 yards last year despite shoddy quarterbacking. Tennessee can’t make the same claim. Each of those teams went 2-14 in 2014, but coaches Smith and Whisenhunt, in their first seasons in charge, survived the awful record. Now, they presumably have the main building tool. After Scherff, the Jets, normally heavily cheered when the draft was held in New York — it’s in Chicago
for the first time in 51 years — were loudly booed when they went on the clock. And when they went for Southern Cal DT Leonard Williams, rated by some as the best overall player in this crop, the jeers increased exponentially. Why? Because the Bears were next up and need a dynamic player at the position. Still, the local team was cheered as if Jay Cutler had just thrown for a TD when it grabbed West Virginia’s game-breaking receiver, Kevin White. After trading top wideout Brandon Marshall to the Jets, the Bears had a big void there. Dan Quinn, the Falcons’ new coach after he helped build Seattle’s dynamic defense, got a nice tool in Clemson linebacker Vic
B3
Beasley. The Giants selected Miami offensive tackle Ereck Flowers and St. Louis finished off the top 10, in which there were no trades, by taking Georgia running back Todd Gurley, who comes off a major knee injury. The pick drew some reactions of disbelief from the crowd; no RBs went in the first round of the past two drafts. Minnesota took the first defensive back, Michigan State’s Trae Waynes, and then the proceedings got a big lift. Well, it was actually Roger Goodell who got the lift when 339-pound DT Danny Shelton of Washington bear-hugged him and elevated the commissioner about a foot off the ground.
Rookie of the year Wiggins on MN: ‘I hope I’m here forever’
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Andrew Wiggins sat down on a black leather couch, his navy blue tuxedo jacket and bow tie bunching up at the neck as his 6-foot-8 frame plopped down for a break. The first rookie of the year in Minnesota Timberwolves history was sitting in a no-frills room in the back alleys of Target Center with cinder block walls and empty lockers that house the WNBA’s Lynx in the summer. There is nothing fancy about the 25-year-old building that is home to an NBA franchise that has gotten so many things wrong over the last decade. In Wiggins, the hope is that the Timberwolves finally got something right in a big way. And as difficult as his first season was for the team on the court, as hopeless as it has seemed at times for the team’s fans during an 11-year playoff drought, Wiggins said he feels like he got it right by landing here as well. “I hope I’m here forever,” Wiggins told The Associated Press on Thursday after collecting his rookie of the year award. “I hope. It would be nice.” That’s a startling revelation for a 20-year-old Canadian who showed signs of being one of the league’s next big stars during a superb rookie season. The Timberwolves haven’t been to the playoffs since 2004. They’ve botched draft picks, free-agent signings, trades, hires and firings over the years and suffered an array of season-derailing injuries that led some to joke that franchise was cursed. But that was all before Wiggins arrived. The cerebral kid who has been in the basketball spotlight since he was a 14-yearold prodigy playing in the Toronto area looks around and sees a roster stocked with young talent, a coaching staff he can relate to, a front office that understands the needs that must be filled and a community that has embraced him as a potential savior. “I don’t believe there’s any curse or nothing like that,” Wiggins said. “We just needed the right pieces. I feel like now we’ve got them. We’ve got a nice young core.”
AP Photo
Minnesota Timberwolves’ Andrew Wiggins holds his trophy at a news conference after he was named NBA basketball Rookie of the Year Thursday in Minneapolis.
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Baltimore riot damage adds burden to small businesses
BALTIMORE (AP) — Richard Sung Kang’s American dream came crashing down in a shower of broken glass. His West Baltimore liquor store and bar, the Oxford Tavern, was hit by looters during a riot over the police-involved death of neighborhood resident Freddie Gray. The business wasn’t torched like the nearby CVS pharmacy, but its doors and windows were broken and cash and inventory stolen, leaving shelves bare. Now the 49-year-old South Korean immigrant must decide whether to reopen. If so, it could mean taking on more debt and paying higher insurance premiums. “I don’t know yet,” said Kang, looking dejected and exhausted Wednesday after rioters damaged scores of businesses in pockets of the city. About 200 small businesses were unable to open the day after the violence, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said. The predominantly black neighborhood around Khan’s store, which also includes CVS, took some of the worst of it. The area has already been abandoned by many businesses, with vacant storefronts on every block of North Avenue and many boarded-up homes on side streets. Korean-Americans were particularly hard-hit: They run many small businesses in black neighborhoods in Baltimore, and there have been tensions between owners and residents. In the 1990s, according to a 2004 study by the Maryland Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, there were complaints by residents over the quality of food sold in local stores, while owners expressed concerns about crimes targeting them and their businesses. CVS Health Corp. is already making plans to rebuild the burned-out pharmacy, spokeswoman Carolyn Castel wrote in an email. She said the company doesn’t yet have a damage estimate to share, but said “we have a long history of serving inner-city communities and we remain
CATTLE/HOGS
Open high low settle CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Apr 15 161.07 161.07 157.95 159.50 Jun 15 151.05 151.30 148.12 149.70 Aug 15 149.25 149.50 146.50 148.10 Oct 15 150.70 150.92 148.10 149.67 Dec 15 151.27 151.70 148.82 150.47 Feb 16 151.17 151.35 148.72 150.50 Apr 16 149.90 149.90 148.50 149.80 Jun 16 143.40 143.65 142.50 143.52 Aug 16 141.60 141.60 140.50 141.50 Oct 16 142.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 84012. Wed’s Sales: 37,399 Wed’s open int: 276665, off -737 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Apr 15 217.00 217.70 217.00 217.55 May 15 213.47 214.12 210.60 212.97 Aug 15 215.00 215.82 212.25 214.70 Sep 15 214.60 214.60 211.80 213.92 Oct 15 213.35 214.02 210.62 213.25 Nov 15 212.05 212.60 210.20 212.07 Jan 16 206.60 206.60 204.00 205.55 Mar 16 204.60 204.60 202.50 204.15 Apr 16 202.45 Last spot N/A Est. sales 17058. Wed’s Sales: 7,558 Wed’s open int: 38372, up +405 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. May 15 76.60 77.20 76.60 76.95 Jun 15 81.87 82.62 80.37 81.42 Jul 15 82.90 83.65 81.65 82.52 Aug 15 83.00 83.77 81.90 82.37 Oct 15 72.70 73.00 71.72 71.87 Dec 15 69.15 69.20 68.50 68.65 Feb 16 71.20 71.20 70.80 70.87 Apr 16 73.05 73.05 72.80 72.82 May 16 77.20 Jun 16 79.32 Jul 16 77.87 Aug 16 76.27 Last spot N/A
COTTON
Open high
low settle COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. May 15 68.10 68.12 68.10 68.12 Jul 15 67.66 68.05 67.30 67.88 Oct 15 66.65 66.85 66.58 66.83 Dec 15 66.55 66.95 66.29 66.64 Mar 16 66.00 66.40 65.99 66.11 May 16 65.98 66.41 65.98 66.04 Jul 16 66.09 66.51 66.08 66.08 Oct 16 66.56 Dec 16 66.28 Mar 17 66.90 May 17 67.83 Jul 17 67.87 Oct 17 67.87 Dec 17 67.87 Mar 18 67.18 Last spot N/A Est. sales 31303. Wed’s Sales: 18,311 Wed’s open int: 186383, up +3886
GRAINS
Open high
low
settle
committed to serving our patients and customers in Baltimore.” Rebuilding after riots is difficult and sometimes impossible for small businesses because most don’t have the cash reserves of larger companies. Kang doesn’t even own a home. He said he got a bank loan to buy the bar last year, after working nearly 10 years in Maryland as a biochemical researcher. “Everybody says America is a dream come true,” Kang said as locksmiths worked on his doors. “The most important thing is, I have to move on. But is it better to rebuild and start again or give up and find some other place? I don’t know.” He said he was insured but didn’t know if his policy would cover his losses. Although damage from civil unrest is covered under standard business insurance policies, many businesses don’t have adequate coverage. Insurance claims usually result in higher premiums, said Maryland Insurance Commissioner Al Redmer, Jr. He said insured losses from the riots will likely exceed $1 million. About a half-dozen of the hundreds of insurers regulated by the commission have declared temporary moratoriums on accepting new business in affected areas, Redmer added. State regulations allow this, to protect consumers and taxpayers from attempts to take advantage of situations where the governor has declared a state of emergency or a special curfew is imposed — both true in this case. Help may be forthcoming from the Small Business Administration, which has offered low-interest loans after civil unrest elsewhere, including Ferguson, Missouri, last year. Gov. Hogan, a Republican, said his administration will “do what we can” to get SBA loans for uninsured businesses. Once the state formally requests help, the SBA would have to declare a disaster to make businesses eligible for loans of up to $2 million at 4 percent annual interest, said SBA spokes-
woman Carol Chastang. However, many business owners don’t want loans, Chastang said. They don’t want the burden of debt, and many, particularly small retailers, may not have the cash flow to make the payments. Many companies would prefer grants, which they need not repay, but governments have little grant money available. Small businesses would have to hope that corporations or nonprofit organizations would make grants to help them recover. Even companies that can rebuild face challenges. When a business is closed
-1.30 -1.20 -1.05 -.93 -.83 -.52 -.30 -.13
+1.03 -.08 -.03 +.18 -.08 -.50 +.15
+1.63 +.22 +.05 -.20 -.63 -.35 -.23 -.28 -.10 -.23 -.23 -.23
chg. +.80 +.79 +.32 +.37 +.33 +.38 +.37 +.21 +.21 +.21 +.21 +.21 +.21 +.21 +.21
chg.
WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 15 477 481.75 465 467 -10.25 Jul 15 484 488.75 471.75 474 -9.50 Sep 15 493.75 498.50 482.25 483.75 -9.50 Dec 15 512 516.50 500.75 502.25 -9.25 Mar 16 532.25 533.25 518.75 520 -8.75 May 16 544 544 530 531 -8.75 Jul 16 538.50 539.50 533.25 534.50 -7.75 Last spot N/A Est. sales 149419. Wed’s Sales: 99,739 Wed’s open int: 442244, off -300
Open high
low
settle
Jason Park, left, and his friend business owner Sung Kang, second left, leave Kang’s damaged store Tuesday in the aftermath of rioting following Monday’s funeral for Freddie Gray, who died in police custody.
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18,200
Dow Jones industrials
CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 15 364.25 366.25 360 362.50 -1.25 Jul 15 368 370 364 366.25 -1.50 Sep 15 374.75 377 370.75 372.75 -2 Dec 15 385.75 387.25 381.50 383.50 -2 Mar 16 396.75 398.50 392.50 394.75 -2.25 May 16 406 406 400 402.50 -2.25 Jul 16 413 413.25 407 409.25 -2.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 363167. Wed’s Sales: 357,146 Wed’s open int: 1300283, off -19544 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 15 238.25 241.50 233.25 239.75 +6.50 Jul 15 240.50 245 237 244.25 +3.50 Sep 15 247 250.25 243.50 250.25 +2.75 Dec 15 256.25 257.75 252 257.25 +.50 Mar 16 262.25 266 262.25 266 +.25 May 16 273.25 273.50 273.25 273.50 +.25 Jul 16 274.25 274.50 274.25 274.50 +.25 Last spot N/A Est. sales 1101. Wed’s Sales: 1,244 Wed’s open int: 7439, up +5 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 15 989 997.25 975 978.50 -10 Jul 15 987.75 995 972.50 976 -12 Aug 15 982.25 988.75 967.50 971 -11.25 Sep 15 967.50 973.75 955.50 958.75 -10 Nov 15 961.25 967.50 949 952.25 -9.50 Jan 16 968 972.50 955 958.25 -9.50 Mar 16 970.50 976 958.50 962 -9.25 May 16 973.25 977.25 960.75 963.75 -9.50 Jul 16 978.75 983.25 965.50 969.25 -9.75 Last spot N/A Est. sales 269659. Wed’s Sales: 235,313 Wed’s open int: 676560, off -16251
OIL/GASOLINE/NG
AP Photo
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FUTURES
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for an extended period, customers seek alternatives and may not return, said Jeffrey Robinson, a professor of entrepreneurship at Rutgers University. The stigma attached to a riot-torn area is another obstacle for small businesses, making banks and investors uneasy about committing money, said Derek Hyra, a professor of public administration and policy at American University. “It takes a long time in people’s collective memory to remember these are vibrant, safe communities worth investing in,” he said.
chg.
LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. Jun 15 58.55 59.85 58.38 59.63 +1.05 Jul 15 59.78 60.91 59.56 60.71 +.85 Aug 15 60.44 61.48 60.19 61.31 +.79 Sep 15 60.85 61.93 60.61 61.78 +.75 Oct 15 61.21 68.35 61.05 62.21 +.71 Nov 15 61.74 62.79 61.59 62.64 +.66 Dec 15 62.23 63.19 61.89 63.07 +.63 Jan 16 62.42 63.43 62.42 63.39 +.61 Feb 16 62.99 63.61 62.71 63.59 +.58 Mar 16 62.92 63.84 62.81 63.74 +.55 Apr 16 63.51 63.91 63.03 63.88 +.51 May 16 63.27 64.00 63.27 64.00 +.48 Last spot N/A Est. sales 680033. Wed’s Sales: 866,853 Wed’s open int: 1736693, up +19276 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon May 15 2.0072 2.0556 2.0070 2.0497 +.0318 Jun 15 2.0054 2.0502 2.0024 2.0451 +.0326 Jul 15 1.9929 2.0330 1.9850 2.0293 +.0306 Aug 15 1.9712 2.0108 1.9712 2.0070 +.0280 Sep 15 1.9493 1.9920 1.9469 1.9803 +.0258 Oct 15 1.7984 1.8760 1.7946 1.8282 +.0225 Nov 15 1.7760 1.8430 1.7630 1.7956 +.0205
Dec 15 1.7490 1.7777 1.7446 1.7760 Jan 16 1.7589 1.7776 1.7483 1.7776 Feb 16 1.7707 1.7889 1.7604 1.7889 Mar 16 1.7784 1.8058 1.7784 1.8058 Apr 16 1.9928 Last spot N/A Est. sales 127349. Wed’s Sales: 162,321 Wed’s open int: 376810, off -6662 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Jun 15 2.590 2.770 2.557 2.751 Jul 15 2.647 2.850 2.613 2.802 Aug 15 2.672 2.837 2.641 2.820 Sep 15 2.683 2.848 2.656 2.828 Oct 15 2.727 2.883 2.701 2.863 Nov 15 2.851 2.984 2.828 2.965 Dec 15 3.040 3.150 3.019 3.133 Jan 16 3.147 3.249 3.124 3.236 Feb 16 3.135 3.235 3.120 3.222 Mar 16 3.088 3.184 3.071 3.170 Apr 16 2.952 3.029 2.948 3.011 May 16 2.962 3.035 2.962 3.022 Last spot N/A Est. sales 446858. Wed’s Sales: 212,329 Wed’s open int: 1032738, up +5078
METALS
Last
Gold (troy oz) Silver (troy oz) Copper (pound) Aluminum (pound) Platinum (troy oz) Lead (metric ton) Zinc, HG (pound)
$1182.40 $16.124 $2.8865 $0.8574 $1140.40 $2085.00 $1.0377
+.0181 +.0164 +.0150 +.0139 +.0129
Close: 17,840.52 Change: -195.01 (-1.1%)
AT&T Inc Aetna BkofAm Boeing Chevron Citigroup CocaCola Disney EOG Rescs EngyTsfr ExxonMbl FordM HewlettP HollyFront HomeDp HonwllIntl Intel IntlBcsh IBM JohnJn
Div 1.88 1.00 .20 3.64 4.28 .20f 1.32 1.15f .67 4.06f 2.92f .60 .64 1.28a 2.36f 2.07 .96 .58f 5.20f 3.00f
Last
+.145 +.143 +.139 +.134 +.126 +.105 +.086 +.085 +.078 +.072 +.043 +.042
$1209.80 $16.670 $2.7950 $0.8472 $1161.50 $2095.00 $1.0441
17,600 17,200 16,800
N
D
YTD Chg %Chg
+3.1 +20.3 -11.0 +10.3 -1.0 -1.5 -3.9 +15.4 +7.5 -11.1 -5.5 +1.9 -17.8 +3.5 +1.9 +1.0 -10.3 -2.1 +6.8 -5.1
J
18,288.63 15,855.12 Dow Jones Industrials 9,310.22 7,521.18 Dow Jones Transportation 657.17 524.82 Dow Jones Utilities 11,248.99 9,886.08 NYSE Composite 5,119.83 4,014.17 Nasdaq Composite 2,125.92 1,820.66 S&P 500 1,543.48 1,269.45 S&P Midcap 22,522.83 19,160.13 Wilshire 5000 1,278.63 1,040.47 Russell 2000
Name Merck Microsoft OneokPtrs PNM Res PepsiCo Pfizer Phillips66 SwstAirl TexInst TimeWarn TriContl VerizonCm WalMart WashFed WellsFargo XcelEngy
Div
Last
1.80 1.24 3.16 .80 2.62 1.12 2.00 .24 1.36 1.40 .78e 2.20 1.96f .52f 1.50f 1.28f
59.56 48.64 41.95 27.78 95.12 33.93 79.31 40.56 54.21 84.41 21.78 50.44 78.05 21.60 55.10 33.91
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+4.9 +4.7 +5.9 -6.2 +.6 +8.9 +10.6 -4.2 +1.4 -1.2 +1.7 +7.8 -9.1 -2.5 +.5 -5.6
Dividend footnotes a- extra dividends were paid, but are not included b - annual rate plus stock e - amount declared or paid in last 12 months f- current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement
Get Noticed!
10 DAYS
18,000
Prev. Day
34.64 -.12 106.87 -1.14 15.93 -.05 143.34 -2.81 111.06 -.67 53.32 -.44 40.56 +.07 108.72 -1.09 98.95 -.79 57.78 +2.48 87.37 -.50 15.80 -.22 32.97 -.35 38.78 -.93 106.98 -1.73 100.92 -.82 32.55 -.34 25.98 -.59 171.29 -3.11 99.20 -1.19
17,720
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STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST
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17,960
M
Last
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17,840.52 8,592.89 586.63 11,049.75 4,941.42 2,085.51 1,500.19 22,034.30 1,220.13
-195.01 -108.58 -6.93 -104.37 -82.22 -21.34 -18.40 -242.72 -26.82
-1.08 -1.25 -1.17 -.94 -1.64 -1.01 -1.21 -1.09 -2.15
Yelp
A
YTD 52-wk % Chg % Chg +.10 -5.99 -5.09 +1.94 +4.34 +1.29 +3.29 +1.68 +1.28
STORY STOCKS
+7.74 +11.32 +5.60 +3.96 +19.72 +10.71 +10.42 +10.30 +8.36
YELP
Close: $39.39 -11.89 or -23.2% The online business reviews company reported worse-than-expected first-quarter financial results and a weak fiscal outlook. $60 50 40 30 $38.75
F M 52-week range
Vol.: 25.3m (7.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $2.56 b
A $86.88 PE: 82.9 Yield: ...
Statoil
STO
Close: $21.23 0.76 or 3.7% The Norwegian oil and gas company reported a fiscal third-quarter loss on lower oil prices, but the results topped expectations. $22 20 18 16 $15.76
F M 52-week range
Vol.: 3.3m (1.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $67.69 b
A $31.95
PE: 3.1 Yield: 4.5%
Roswell Daily Record
Dear Abby
Universal Press Syndicate DEAR ABBY: May is Lyme Disease Awareness Month. I'm a longtime Canadian reader who has suffered from it for many years. More than 300,000 people are infected by this tick-borne illness every year, yet people know little about it. If someone doesn't recognize the symptoms and seek treatment immediately, Lyme disease becomes chronic and debilitating. For many years it wasn't well understood, and many sufferers like me have gone from doctor to doctor with their long list of symptoms, becom-
ing increasingly frightened and depressed. Please suggest your readers learn about Lyme disease by visiting ILADS.org or canlyme.com. It isn't as rare as some people believe. It has been found everywhere on the planet except Antarctica. LYN D. IN "ABBYLAND" DEAR LYN: I'm glad to do that. Several years ago, my husband caught Lyme disease while sitting in a friend's living room in California. Our friend's dog had been running loose through some marshland that afternoon, and several ticks it picked up bit my husband. When he noticed the bulls-eye inflammation, we called our doctor, who said to come in right away and have it checked. After taking one look, the doctor called in his partner -- a doctor from Connecticut -- to take a look. (Lyme disease is named for a city in Connecticut.) They said the rash was "classic." My husband was lucky for
Comics the quick and accurate diagnosis. Because it was caught early, strong antibiotics headed off any serious problems. But not everyone is so fortunate, and people with chronic Lyme disease have been known to suffer for life. A word to the wise: Be informed. HHHHH DEAR ABBY: My father always wanted a son, but he and Mom had only one child -- me. Now that I am the mother of two boys, he has taken over their schedule and signs them up for activities they often are not interested in pursuing. This results in my spending my time away from work taking them to activities and sports they don't enjoy. How can I respectfully tell Dad I don't want him doing this? He often calls my children and me lazy if we say we don't want to participate in the swimming, karate, soccer, baseball, gymnastics and other activities he constantly signs them up for. We just want some downtime once in a while. This has caused
Friday, May 1, 2015
many angst-ridden arguments. Please help! NOT INTERESTED IN ILLINOIS DEAR NOT INTERESTED: Everyone enjoys downtime once in a while, but if your children are spending their days sitting around, your father may have a right to be concerned. Daily physical exercise is important for good health. Because none of the activities your father has chosen "for" your sons appeals to them, talk with them, suggest they choose a sport that DOES interest them and have them sign THEMSELVES up for it. Then inform your dad that you no longer want to hear critical comments about your boys because they are not constructive, and if it doesn't stop, he will be seeing less of all of you. P.S. Because your dad signed his grandkids up for activities, I'm mystified that he wasn't more involved in providing their transportation.
Beetle Bailey
The Wizard of Id
Blondie
Hints
from Heloise
King Features Syndicate Dear Readers: Most of us have taken a ROAD TRIP at some points in our lives. Whether driving across the country or just a few hours away, here are some hints on driving safety and courtesy: * The left lane is for passing. When driving on a highway or multilane road, use the left lane for passing slower vehicles only. * Pay attention to speed-limit signs! When passing through a town, speed limits can be lower. * When driving at night, using your high beams can be very helpful to see. Just be sure to dim them whenever you see an oncoming car! * Do not tailgate. It not only reduces the amount of time you have to react, it also is rude. * Be sure to use your signals when changing lanes, turning, etc. The more information you give other drivers, the more you can reduce the likelihood of an accident happening. * Take breaks! Plan to stop to eat, stretch your legs and rest. Road trips are a lot of fun. Just remember to be safe out there, and courteous! Heloise HHHHH Dear Heloise: When I complete a task on my cellphone, I set it on the first page of contacts, where emergency numbers for fire or police are listed. In case of an emergency, I open my phone and hit "Contacts," and my emergency numbers are available. Richard R. in Houston
Dilbert
For Better or For Worse
Garfield
Good advice, but if it's really an emergency, call 911 first. Heloise HHHHH Dear Heloise: I have an old sewing machine that has been in my basement. I brought it upstairs, and it smells of mildew -- the case and everything. What can I do? I tried baking soda in a cloth bag, and it still smells. B.S., via email Baking soda does help remove odors, as does vinegar. For the case, sprinkle baking soda into the case, pat it into the surface, then stuff the case with crunched-up newspaper. The newspaper absorbs odors, and the baking soda neutralizes them. Use white or apple-cider vinegar to wipe down the inside and outside of the case. Don't overwet -- just a light brush with a damp cloth. Vinegar is a product you always should keep on hand. It can be used for so many things! To find out some of my favorite uses, order my pamphlet. There are two ways you can get a copy: Go to www.Heloise.com, or send $5 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (70 cents) envelope to: Heloise/Vinegar, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 782795001. Give the sewing machine itself a good wipe-down with a cloth moistened with vinegar. Heloise HHHHH Dear Heloise: Just one quick step to aid in cleaning that down blanket/ comforter or coat. I always add a clean tennis ball or two to the dryer to puff the item back up. V.A., Erie, Pa. An old, old hint, and one that many readers swear by. Can't hurt. Heloise
Hagar the Horrible
Snuffy Smith
Zits
B5
B6 Friday, May 1, 2015
Classifieds
Roswell Daily Record 008
LEGALS
LEGALS
LEGALS
________________________________________________
________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
Notice of Hearing...
Application No. RA-2470...
Board of Regents to Meet... Publish May 1, 2015 LEGAL NOTICE EASTERN NEW MEXICO UNIVERSITY BOARD OF REGENTS NOTICE OF MEETING Friday, May 15, 2015 9:30 a.m., Regents Room, Administration Building, ENMU-Portales
Publish May 1, 8, 15, 2015
Northwest
GARAGE SALE 2601 Resolana Dr in Enchanted Hills. Lots of home goods, appliances, furniture in good condition, Sat. 7am-12pm. THURS-SAT. 8-2 1400 N. Michigan. Furniture, collectables, wagner/griswold skillet, jewelry, knives, bass guitar-bass amp, PA speakers & misc, guitar amps. (practice guitar)
Publish April 17, 24, May 1, 2015
NOTICE is hereby given that on January 29, 2015, Herbert M. Corn, 163 Eden Valley Road, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, filed Application No. RA-2470 into RA-2419 (T) with the STATE ENGINEER for permit to temporarily change location of well and place of use of 451.3829 acre-feet per annum, plus carriage allowance, of IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATESOF JOHN R. artesian groundwater by ceasing the diversion of said waters from the following deENCHANTED HILLS, 1406 McMINN and NEALMA NAOMI McMINN STANG, scribed wells: Mossman Dr., 8am-2pm, both deceased Fri-Sat. Garden pots & WELL NO. SUBDIVISION SECTION TOWNSHIP RANGE supplies, fencing, Roper The Eastern New Mexico University Board of Regents RA-2470 NW1/4SW1/4SW1/4 32 7 S. 24 E. boots, music on cassettes will hold its next regular meeting on Friday, May 15, No. D-504-PB-2014-46 RA-2470-S NE1/4NE1/4SE1/4 31 7 S. 24 E. & CDs, camera tripod, 2015 in the Regents Room of the ENMU-Portales Adpower washer, bedside ministration Building. Regents will act upon business NOTICE OF HEARING TO RE-OPEN PROBATE; and temporarily severing the aforesaid water right from the irrigation of 150.461 commode, computer acso presented and may meet in the executive session. FOR FORMAL APPOINTMENT OF SUCCESSOR acres of land, described as follows: cessories, cordless phones, The agenda is available 72 hours prior to the meeting CO-PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES; craft supplies, shelving, and is accessible at the President’s Office located in bowling ball, bag & shoes, DETERMINATION OF HEIRSHIP; SUBDIVISION SECTION TOWNSHIP RANGE ACRES the ENMU-Portales campus Administration Building RV sewer hose caddy, APPROVAL OF DEEDS OF DISTRIBUTION; E1/2E1/2 31 7 S. 24 E.) and on the ENMU website drawer pulls, car vacuum, AND COMPLETE SETTLEMENT OF ESTATES W1/2W1/2 32 7 S. 24 E.) 150.461 bud vases, red chili center http://www.enmu.edu/about/board-meetings.shtml. pieces, jewelry, ceramic The public is invited to attend the meeting. Eastern TO: Rory A. McMinn, Megan L. Heil, Shari Howard The applicant proposes to temporarily commence the diversion of 451.3829 acreNew Mexico University is an EEO/AA institution. McMinn and All Unknown Heirs of John R. McMinn feet per annum, plus carriage allowance of artesian groundwater from well No. RA- molds, return air grates, air filters, motorcycle rain suit ________________________________________________ and Nealma Naomi McMinn Stang, both deceased, 2419 located at a point in the SW1/4SW1/4SW14 of Sectin 6, Township 8 South, XL, makeup, facial treatand All Unknown Persons claiming any right, title or in- Range 24 East, N.M.P.M., and stack the water rights for the irrigation of up to 125.0 ments, & much more. terest in or to the Estates of John R. McMinn and acres described as being the SW1/4 of Section 6, Township 8 South, Range 24 Nealma Naomi McMinn Stang, both deceased East, N.M.P.M.
Proposed Ordinance and Public Hearing...
FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO
YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT:
1) Decedent John R. McMinn died testate on December 12, 1991. Decedent Nealma Naomi NOTICE OF PROPOSED ORDINANCE McMinn Stang died March 15, 2011. AND PUBLIC HEARING 2) On March 13, 2015, Rory A. McMinn and Megan L. Heil filed a Petition to Re-Open Probate; For Notice is hereby given that the Hagerman Town Coun- Formal Appointment of Successor Co-Personal Repcil will consider the following proposed Ordinance at its resentatives; Determinations of Heirship; Approval of Regular Meeting scheduled for May 12, 2015, 5:00pm, Deeds of Distribution; and Complete Settlement of EsTown Hall, 209 E. Argyle. The Council will at that time tates in the above named Court. and place first conduct a Public Hearing to hear com3) A hearing has been set to consider said Petition ments in favor of or against said proposed Ordinance, on the 1st day of June, 2015, at 9:00 a.m. in the Fifth and may thereafter take final action approving all or Judicial District Court, Chaves County Courthouse, part of the proposed Ordinance. Roswell, New Mexico, 88201. 4) Pursuant to NMSA 1978, §45-1-401, notice of ORDINANCE #051215-1, AN ORDINANCE ENACT- the time and place of the hearing on the Petition is givING A CODE OF ORDINANCES FOR THE TOWN en to you by publication, once a week for three conOF HAGERMAN, NEW MEXICO, REVISING , secutive weeks. AMENDING, RESTATING, CODIFYING AND COM5) The name of Rory A. McMinn and Megan L. PILING EXISTING GENERAL ORDINANCES OF Heil’s attorneys are Carson Ryan LLC (Elizabeth A. THE POLITICAL SUBDIVISION DEALING WITH Ryan and Elizabeth A. Shields), whose address is P. SUBJECTS EMBRACED IN SUCH CODE OF OR- O. Box 1612, Roswell, New Mexico, 88202, and DINANCES. whose phone number is (575) 291-7606. WITNESS my hand and Seal of the Court this 28th With sufficient prior notice a translator will be provided day of April, 2015. for non-English speaking residents. FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT CLERK A copy of the complete proposed Ordinance is available for inspection at Town Hall during normal busi- ( S E A L ) ness hours, or may be purchased upon payment of a copying fee. By:/s/Cynthia Brackeen Deputy Clerk Gina Sterrett, CMC ________________________________________________ Clerk-Treasurer Publish May 1, 2015
Foreclosure Sale...
________________________________________________
Notice of Sale... Publish May 1, 8, 15, 22, 2015 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT No. D-504-CV-2012-00187 BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., Plaintiff,
Publish April 17, 24, May 1, 8, 2015 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PIONEER BANK f/k/a PIONEER SAVINGS AND TRUST, F.A. Plaintiff, v.
vs.
D-504-CV-2015-00034
BILLY R. MCDANIEL, ELISHA MCDANIEL AND FIRESIDE BANK FKA FIRESIDE THRIFT CO., Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE Notice is hereby given that on May 27, 2015, at the hour of 11:30 AM, the undersigned Special Master, or her designee, will, at the west steps of the Chaves County Courthouse, at 400 N. Virginia Ave, Roswell, NM 88201, sell all of the rights, 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 307 South Evergreen Avenue, Roswell, NM 88203-1239 (if there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control), and is more particularly described as follows: Lot 4 in Block 2 of McLellan Subdivision, in the City of Roswell, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat recorded August 11, 1954, in Plat Book C, Page 26, Plat Records of Chaves County, New Mexico,
GEORGIA ANN WATTERS, IF LIVING; IF DECEASED,HER UNKNOWN HEIRS OR ANY UNKNOWN PERSONSWHO MAY CLAIM A LIEN, INTEREST OR TITLE, ADVERSE TO THE PLAINTIFF Defendants. NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE Notice is hereby given that pursuant to a Judgment entered in the above styled and numbered cause on April 13, 2015, said cause being an action on certain Promissory Note and to foreclose certain Real Estate Mortgage, the undersigned Special Master will, on May 15, 2015, at 1:15 o’clock p.m., on the front entrance of the Chaves County District Courthouse at 400 North Virginia in Roswell, New Mexico, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash, the following described property located in Chaves County, New Mexico:
Lot One (1) in Block Nine (9) of South Park Addition, in the City of Roswell, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat thereof filed in the Chaves County Clerk’s Office on May 16, 1947 including any improvements, fixtures, and attach- and recorded in Book B of Plat Records, Chaves ments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes. County, New Mexico, at Page 79. Subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to a one (1) TOGETHER with a tract of land located in the month right of redemption by the Defendants upon NE¼SW¼ of Section 9, in Township 11 South of entry of an order approving sale. The foregoing sale Range 24 East of the New Mexico Principal Meridian, will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment more particularly described by metes and bounds as rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and follows; to-wit: numbered cause on July 25, 2014, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the above-described prop- Beginning at the NW corner of Lot 1, Block 9 of said erty. The Plaintiff’s judgment is $94,921.08, and the South Park Addition, thence Northwesterly along the same bears interest at the rate of 6.000% per annum, alley line of said Lot 1, extended 25 feet, thence Northwhich accrues at the rate of $15.60 per diem, com- easterly and parallel to the Northwest line of Lot 1, mencing on April 18, 2014, with the Court reserving 126.72 feet, thence Southeasterly along the Northeast entry of final judgment against said Defendants Billy R. line of Lot 1, extended, to the tangent point of the 25 McDaniel and Elisha McDaniel for the amount due foot radius curve, thence back along the curve of the after foreclosure sale, for costs and attorney's fees, 25 foot radius to the Northwest line of Lot 1, thence plus interest as may be assessed by the Court. The Southwesterly along the Northwest line of Lot 1 to the Plaintiff has the right to bid at such sale all of its judg- point of beginning. ment amount and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment Known also as 1800 South Monroe, Roswell, NM to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The sale may be 88203. postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master. The sale is to satisfy the above Judgment, togethThe Court's decree, having duly appointed its Spe- er with all costs and amounts due as follows: cial Master to advertise and immediately offer for sale the subject real estate and to apply the proceeds of Amount of the Judgment in favor of Pioneer Bank with sale, first to the costs of sale and the Special Master's interest, late charges and any advances for taxes, infees, then to pay the above-described judgment, in- surance, or property preservation/maintenance costs terest, and costs of sale, and to pay unto the registry due $17,697.38 of the Court any balance remaining to satisfy future Estimated costs of publishing adjudication of priority mortgage holders; Notice of Foreclosure Sale $600.00 NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that in Special Master Fee $250.00 the event that said property is not sooner redeemed, the undersigned will as set forth above, offer for sale TOTAL $18,547.38 and sell to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, the lands and improvements described above for the The redemption period for this sale shall be one purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorit- month from the date the Order Approving ies, the judgment described herein and decree of foreclosure together with any additional costs and attorSpecial Master’s Sale is approved and filed with ney's fees, costs of advertisement and publication, a the Court herein. reasonable receiver and Special Master's fee to be fixed by the Court. The total amount of the judgment WITNESS my hand and seal this 14th day of April, due is $94,921.08, plus interest to and including date 2015. of sale of $6,318.00, for a total judgment plus interest of $101,239.08. Sale is subject to the entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of Belle Joy Peralta this sale. Witness my hand this 28th day of April, 2015. Steven P. Fisher /s/ Bernadette Gutierrez _ SANDERS, BRUIN, COLL & WORLEY, P.A BERNADETTE F. GUTIERREZ, Special Master P.O. Box 550 PO Box 91988 Roswell, New Mexico 88202-0550 Albuquerque, NM 87199-1988 (575) 622-5440 Telephone: (505) 433-4576 Facsimile: (505) 433-4577 002 Northeast E-mail: bernadette@ancillaryls.com GARAGE SALES ________________________________________________ GARAGE SALE:
Proposals from NMDOT...
Publish May 1, 2, 3, 2015
002
Northeast
APARTMENT COMPLEX Yard Sale! Units 1-90 Friday and Saturday only from 7-? 2727 N. Wilshire Blvd A little bit of everything!
Mesa Verde Enterprises, Inc. is taking proposals from NMDOT certified DBE Contractors on the construction of the Roswell International Air Center Improvements. All interested DBE contractors, please contact Pat Ma- 2801 N. Elm, Fri, Sat., 7am. gill, PH 575-437-2995 FAX 575-437-8358 by close of Washer, fishing items business Monday, May 4th. A little of everything.
3210 Futura, May 2nd and 3rd starting at 8:00am. Patio furniture, child car seats, high chair, oven, outdoor heater, vehicle rims, Nissa Altima KYB gas shocks and springs new in box, paint ball guns and outfit, pool table, clothes, and lots and lots of misc. stuff including vehicles.
This is a temporary permit to revert back to the original place and purpose of use on or before October 31, 2016. The above described move-from and move-to points of diversion and places of use are located near the intercsectio nof Eden Valley Road and Hwy 285, approximately 18 miles north of the city of Roswell in Chaves County, New Mexico. Any person, firm or corporation or other entity having standing to file objections or protests shall do so in writing (objection must be legible, signed, and include the writer's complete name, phone number and mailing address). The objection to the approval of the application must be based on: (1) Impairment; if impairment, you must specifically identify your water rights; and/or (2) Public Welfare/Conservation of Water; if public welfare or conservation of water within the state of New Mexico, you must show how you will be substantially and specifically affected. The written protest must be filed, in triplicate, with the State Engineer, 1900 West Second Street, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, within ten (10) days after the date of the last publication of this Notice. Facsimiles (faxes) will be accepted as a valid protest as long as the hard copy is hand-delivered or mailed and postmarked within 24-hours of the facsimile. Mailing postmark will be used to validate the 24-hour period. Protests can be faxed to the Office of the State Engineer, (575)623-8559. If no valid protest or objection is filed, the State Engineer will evaluate the application in accordance with the provisions of Chapter 72 NMSA 1978. ________________________________________________
Special Master's Sale... Publish April 24, May 1, 8, 15, 2015 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT JAMES POLK STONE COMMUNITY BANK, a New Mexico chartered banking association, Plaintiff, vs. THEODORE J. RICCI AND JEANETTE M. RICCI, HUSBAND AND WIFE; and, ANY AND ALL UNKNOWN CLAIMANTS OF INTEREST IN PREMISES ADVERSE TO PLAINTIFF, Defendant. D-504-CV-2015-00070 NOTICE OF SPECIAL MASTER'S SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that an Judgment of Foreclosure was entered in this proceeding on the 13th day of April, 2015, in favor of the Plaintiff and against the Defendants Ricci in the following amounts: $81,619.37 principal, together with daily interest accruing thereon at the rate of $18.52 per day from January 28, 2015 until paid as per the indebtedness of the Defendants Ricci; attorneys fees in the amount of $7,500.00; costs in the amount of $508.70 ; plus future attorney's fees and costs incurred through date of sale in the anticipated amount of $1,200.00. Pursuant to said Judgment, the Plaintiff has a valid first lien interest in and to the following described real properties situated in Chaves County, New Mexico, and more particularly described real properties, towit: LOT THIRTEEN (13) IN BLOCK FIVE (5) OF LINDA VISTA ESTATES NO. 5 REDIVISION, 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 APRIL 13, 1962 AND RECORDED IN BOOK D OF PLAT RECORDS, CHAVES COUNTY, NEW MEXICO, AT PAGE 9. A/K/A 904 E. La Paloma, Roswell, NM and having been ordered by said Judgment to sell at public sale the real estate just above described to satisfy said judgment. NOW, THEREFORE, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on the 20th day of May, 2015, at the hour of 10:30 a.m., on the east steps of the Chaves County Courthouse, Roswell, New Mexico, I, as the Court appointed Special Master herein, will offer for sale to the highest bidder the above-referenced real property. You or your representative must be present at the sale to bid. Terms of the sale are cash. Any and all inquiries should be directed to me at the address shown below. /s/Kenneth Berry Special Master
Northeast
NEIGHBORHOOD YARD SALE May 2, Saturday 8:00-2:00 off East Pine Lodge Road, (behind Roswell Mall.) Cielo Lane, Verde Drive, Ranchito Drive and Corralito Drive. Art, antiques, collectibles, vintage items, Indian jewelry, household items, glassware, furniture, sports equipment, Harley parts, youth & adult clothes. Something for Everyone! 2 FAMILY garage sale, Saturday only, May 2nd, 1111 W. Country Club, 8am-3pm. Lots of stuff. MULTI FAMILY sale, #5, #6, #7 Holly Loop, Saturday, 7am. Electric stove, TVs, microwave, dishes, tons of clothes for all ages. 212 E. 4th Huge Multiple Family Sale scrubs, home decor, furniture, too much to mention. Sat 7-2 GARAGE SALE Sat. 7:30am 55 N. Sky Loop 3121 NOTTING Hill Ave, Saturday, 8am-1pm. Dryer, lawn mower, exercise equipment, clothes, lots of misc. 1105 MONTERREY, Saturday, 6am. Furniture, clothes, & other items.
Southeast
GARAGE SALE Thurs., Fri., Sat. 7am-7pm. 321 E. Poe. Futon, file cabinet, tools, books, lawn furniture, guns, tables & chairs, framed prints & originals, clothes, electronics, grills. #3 HOBBS Pl., Thurs-Sat. Misc. items, clothes, & furniture. CLOTHES, COFFEE tables, shelves, dishes, odds and ends. 301 E. Poe Fri & Sat. 8am A LITTLE bit of everything. Fri, Sat & Sun 8am. 1613 S. Stanton 3 FAMILY Yard Sale Sat. 8am-3pm. 1101 E. Beech YARD SALE Fri & Sat. 7am-? 517 Reed St. A little bit of everything 005
South
340 TEE Pan (YO Acres), Fri-Sat, 7am. Big 4 family yard sale. Lots of stuff and good clothes. Follow the signs.
002
Northeast
YARD SALE Thurs, Fri & Sat. 8am. Clothes, toys, electronics, vacuums, rugs, lawn mowers, luggage. 601 E. Country Club YARD SALE 4405 N. Atkinson Fri & Sat. 7am-3pm. No early birds. Lots of tools, household items, and women and children's clothing. 1108 KACHINA, Saturday, 8am, no early sales. Multi family sale. Some of everything, tools, children's items & toys, household goods. 315 SWINGING SPEAR Yard sale Saturday May 2, 7:00-12:00 Furniture, kitchen items, appliances, home decor, books, crafts, jewelry, exercise equipment & many more items. 1005 E. Mescalero, Sat-Sun, 7am. Some furniture, clothes, & misc. YARD SALE 2307 N. Davis Sat. 7am. Lots of children's clothing, misc. items 2414 N. Garden, Fri-Sat, 7am-4pm. Lots of Legos, DVD movies, & household items. 23 WESTERN Briar, Sat., 7am. Furniture, electronics, Crystal, & misc.
030
Education & Instructions
FOUND FEMALE dog black and white, medium size, wearing beige harness. 575-910-5125
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES 045
Employment Opportunities
SEEKING TALENTED sports writer/copy editor The Roswell Daily Record is currently accepting applications for a talented sports writer/copy editor. Job responsibilities include coverage of local sports teams and events, writing sports columns, posting stories to the web and laying out pages for sports sections. Experience with QuarkXpress and/or InDesign preferred. The position offers medical benefits, a gasoline allowance and compensation for travel outside the immediate area. We�Äôre a family-owned, communityoriented, award-winning daily in southeastern New Mexico with a circulation of about 11,000. Send a cover letter, resume, writing clips and page design samples to editor@rdrnews.com. Submissions can be mailed to: Roswell Daily Record, Attn: Tim Howsare, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell Daily Record, NM, 88202. No phone calls please. AVON, BUY/Sell. I can help you build your business or team. Sandy 317-5079 ISR
GARAGE SALE 15 W. Lake Court Sat. 8am-3pm. 006
Southwest
1305 W. Bonita Dr., ThursSun, 8am-5pm, No Early Birds. A lot of everything. Table, credenza, & desk. 2105 FULKERSON Dr., Thurs-Sat, 8am. Tires, furniture, dishes, men & baby clothes, & misc. 2 FAMILY sale, 403 S. Aspen, Saturday, 8am. Clothes, toys, electronics. A little bit of everything. GARAGE SALE no early birds, Sat. only 7:30 808 S. Heights. TOOLS, FURNITURE, electronics and more. Fri & Sat. 9am. 105 S. Montana YARD SALE tools, van. 501 S. Kansas. Fri & Sat. MOVING SALE 24 Dover Rd. Fri & Sat. 8am-4pm. TOOLS, FURNITURE, clothes, burritos, dishes. Sat. 7am. 10 Wildy Dr. 3 CORONADO Circle (off of S. Washington), Sat. only, 8-12pm 1211 S. Washington, Fri-Sat, 8am-2pm. Clothes, toys, household items, decorations, handicap assist items, Toyota Paseo parts, push blades for rototiller & riding lawn mower & lots of misc.
Respectfully Submitted: DOERR & KNUDSON, PA "Electronically Filed" By:/s/Stephen Doerr Stephen Doerr, Esq. 212 W. 1st Street Portales, NM 88130 (T)575/359.1289 002
004
2600 N. Kentucky Friday & Saturday 7am-? Lots of clothes, toys, furniture
715 S. Cedar, Saturday, 8am-Noon. 4 party garage sale. Furniture, household items, children's clothing & toys & many more items. 714 S. Fruitland, Sat-Sun, 7am. Nice clothes, household items, & misc. YARD SALE 1611 W. Hendricks Fri & Sat 8am odds and ends CLOTHES, SHOES, Coach purses and more. Sat. 7am4pm. 1001 N. Plains Park. YOUTH FUNDRAISER Yard Sale at Roswell Seventh-Day Adventist Church. Come support our youth May 3rd, 7am-2pm. 2915 S. Union St. 008
Northwest
1400 W. 8th, Fri-Sun, 8am-1pm. A little bit of everything. Furniture, clothes, weights, storm windows, TV, air compressor, purses, shoes, dog house, books & much more. MOVING SALE Fri, Sat. 8am-3pm. 411 N. Missouri Lots of stuff!! 903 W. Pine Lodge Rd., Fri-Sat. 3 closets of women's clothing, RV & men's stuff, garden tractor, trailer, 1941-1946 Chevrolet truck parts & mechanical parts or 230 Chevy. YARD SALE Sat-Sun 9am-4pm. 1405 W. Berrendo
PUT GRAPHICS IN YOUR AD! ADD A PICTURE OF YOUR PET, YOUR HOUSE, YOUR CAR, YOUR COMPANY'S LOGO! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM CADD DRAFTING Position Full Time - Salary based on experience. Send resume to HR Dept. PO Box 728 Clovis, NM 88102-0728 UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT The Rodeway Inn is hiring for housekeeping and breakfast attendant. We need applicants who can work morning shifts and who are ready to work in a fun and team oriented environment. Come apply today @ 2803 W 2nd DAIRY QUEEN North is remodeling to a grill and chill. We are looking for the best general manager and assistants. Pay is negotiable depending on experience. All benefits available. Send resume or job history to rpdaymjg@qwestoffice.net or drop off at 204 W. 4th Street, Roswell, NM 88201 only, or call 575-649-2496 OILFIELD SERVICE Company Full Charge Bookkeeper DOT experience, not Required Good pay Send Resume to jmcwhortercpa@gmail.com OILFIELD SERVICE Company Seeking Experienced Vac Truck Drivers Apply at: 1510 W. Fairgrounds Ave. Artesia, NM 88210 BUSY LOCAL law firm seeks professional, organized, detail-oriented individual for full-time legal assistant position. Must be bilingual, have exceptional computer skills and excellent written and oral communication skills. Should be skilled transcriptionist, with minimum typing speed of 60 wpm. Compensation based on experience and education. Please mail resume to PO Box 1897, Unit 398, Roswell, NM 88202. EXPERIENCED HEAVY Equipment Operator. Leave Message, 575-622-6983. SADDLE BARN, Inc. is currently looking for a full time industrial sewing machine operator, experience preferred. Applicant must be dependable. Please come by 1102 N. Garden Ave. between 8:00a.m. and 11:00a.m. MondayThursday to receive an application.
Classifieds
Roswell Daily Record 045
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
045
FAMILY PRACTICE seeking a part-time CMA. Please bring your resume with references to 111 W. Hobbs St.
FULL-TIME TELLER Bank of the Southwest is looking to immediately fill a Full-Time Teller position. Job duties to include, but not limited to customer service and cash handling. Requirements: Must have a good attitude and basic computer skills. Must be detailed oriented with excellent time management skills. 1 year bank experience preferred. Bank offers excellent work environment, salary and benefits. Pre-employment drug test and background screen required. Apply in person at Bank of the Southwest, 226 N Main, Roswell NM by Monday, May 4th EOE/AA
ROSWELL DAILY Record is now accepting applications for Part Time, 20-25 hours, mail room help. Fill out our application at 2301 N. Main. No Phone Calls Please. VALLEY CHRISTIAN Academy is currently accepting applications for experienced school principal and elementary/secondary teachers for the 2015-2016 school year. Interested candidates may obtain an application at 1500 S. Main or call 575-627-1500
AMERIPRIDE LINEN Requisition# 778340
TOWNEPLACE SUITES by Marriott, 180 E. 19th St. is accepting application for Full Time Front Desk person and Part Time housekeepers. Please apply in person, no phone calls please.
April 23, 2015 to May 23, 2115 Route Driver- CSR Job Description is listed on line at Career Builders Application must be filled out on line at careerbuilders.com. This is a full time position Must be able to pass drug test Competitive salary and benefits.
BUSY LAW firm seeking motivated student for afternoon hours. Applicant must have a valid driver's license, auto insurance, and a dependable vehicle. Must be computer literate and able to quickly learn our filing system. Bring resume and references to Kraft and Hunter, LLP, 111 West Third Street, Roswell or mail to Human Resources, PO Box 850 Roswell, NM 88202-0850
045
Employment Opportunities
A DYNAMIC property management company has an immediate opening for a Site Manager at the Pecos Apts in Dexter and the Rio Felix Apts in Hagerman. Candidate must have good communication, customer service, and computer skills. Related experience, preferably in Affordable Housing, is a plus. Competitive salary + employer paid BC/BS Medical/Dental/ Vision Ins, a 401(k), 9 Paid Holidays, 2 weeks PTO and a rent free three bedroom apartment with utilities is provided. Apply at the Workforce Center or send resume to mjgoodpeopleandmore@ gmail.com EOE THE HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS & Suites is located at 2300 N Main Street. Our hotel is looking for a friendly and professional Part time Night Audit to join our busy team. Please apply in person M-F 9am to 5pm. PASTA CAFE NOW HIRING servers. Apply in person between the hours of 2-4pm.1208 N. Main St. in Roswell, NM
EOE EMPLOYER THE HOLIDAY Inn Express & Suites located at 2300 N Main Street is looking for a part time breakfast bar attendant. Must work weekends please apply in person.
RENAL MEDICINE Associates (Roswell office) is accepting resumes for a part time (Monday, Thursday and Friday) Certified Medical Assistant. Approximately 24 hours weekly. Please submit resume to Renal Medicine Associates, 313 W. Country Club, Suite 12, Roswell NM 88201 or fax to 575-627-5835. Call Susan at 575-627-5828 to schedule an interview.
KELLY CABLE of N.M. Inc. has immediate openings for laborers, backhoe operators, directional drillers and linemen. These positions are for local area, full-time work with good pay and benefits. Applicants must pass a driving record review, criminal background check and drug screen. Training for entry level jobs will be provided to candidates with the right work ethic. Apply in person at 5701 N. Main in Roswell.
NEED YOUR days free? Comfort Keepers is hiring evening and weekend caregivers in Roswell and Artesia. If you are dependable, caring and looking for that second job with night and weekend hours, we have them! Experience preferred but not necessary to provide non-medical, in-home care. Must pass background check and have reliable transportation. Come by our office or call today! 1410 S. Main St. Roswell, NM 88203 575-624-9999
045
Employment Opportunities
DWI COORDINATOR
Experience:
Chaves County is accepting applications for the current open position of DWI Coordinator. Entry level salary range: $15.45 $18.36/hr D.O.Q. This position is responsible for planning, implementing, monitoring, evaluating, coordinating, and overseeing all DWI Grant Program efforts in consultation with the Chaves County DWI Planning Council. Must plan activities, provide evaluation of project progress and impact, and supervise staff and contractors. Must meet regularly with the DWI Planning Council and any other entities as needed. Prepares quarterly and end of year progress and financial reports. Ability to assess and prioritize multiple tasks, projects and demands; effectively communicate verbally and in writing; and establish and maintain effective working relations with co-workers and customers. Bachelor’s Degree along with any specialized training/ experience in grant writing/administration, DWI assessment, screening, counseling preferred.
· Knowledgeable in Microsoft Office – All of the programs! · Benefits enrollments · Knowledgeable of I9 process · Organized · Multi task · Office equipment such as printers, copiers, fax machines Requirements: · Minimum of High School Diploma or Equivalent · 2 years working in HR · Excellent skills in Excel spreadsheets · Able to Pass Background Check (10 Years) · Valid Driver’s License · Able to Pass Pre-employment Drug Test/Screening · Must be able to work flexible hours at times up to 12 hour days. (A FEW TIMES MONTLY). · Able to come in at 6am or able to work until 7 or 8pm (A FEW TIMES MONTHLY). This position is very busy and the heart of the HR Dept. It requires attention to detail, organization of correspondence, excellent tracking and fluent in Spanish. Fax resume to 575-347-2589 or email your resume to teresac@ deanbaldwinpainting.com
DRIVERS (DAY and night) in Artesia. Class A CDL with tanker endorsement required. Standard Energy Services. Apply in Artesia at 11376 Lovington Hwy or call Larry at 575-390-3517. EEO EVENT MARKETING COMPANY seeking energetic, enthusiastic individuals for in-store sampling events on Saturdays & Sundays. Great job for teachers, seniors, or students. Must be able to interact well with people! Pays $64+/6 hours. Call Sales Builders Marketing 1-800-747-8861
CRIMINAL LAW OFFICE seeking legal assistant. Requirements: secretarial experience; professional; detail oriented; minimum typing speed of 60 wpm. Resume needs to include office machines experience and computer skills. Salary DOE. Please mail resume to PO Box 3330, Roswell, NM 88202. CATTLE BARON NOW HIRING servers. Apply in person between the hours of 2-4pm.1113 N. Main St. in Roswell, NM
• Published 6 Consecutive Days
• Ads posted online at no extra cost
(includes tax)
MAIL AD WITH PAYMENT OR FAX WITH CREDIT CARD NUMBER Call (575)-622-7710 --- 625-0421 Fax 2301 N. Main TO BUY-SELL-RENT-TRADE ANY AND EVERYTHING CLASSIFICATION
PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE
SEND TO: Roswell Daily Record, Classified Department, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell, N.M. 88202 WE ACCEPT: o
o
o
o
EXPIRES ________
Card # __________________ 3 Digit # (on back of card)________ NAME ____________________________________________ ADDRESS _________________________________________ PHONE ___________________________________________
WORD AD DEADLINE To Place or Cancel an Ad
COMMERCIAL ACCOUNT..........................................................................NOON SUNDAY....................................................................................FRIDAY, 2:00 PM MONDAY....................................................................................FRIDAY, 2:00 PM TUESDAY............................................................................... MONDAY, 2:00 PM WEDNESDAY........................................................................ TUESDAY, 2:00 PM THURSDAY......................................................................WEDNESDAY, 2:00 PM FRIDAY............................................................................... THURSDAY, 2:00 PM POLICY FOR CLASSIFIED ADTAKING Personal Advertising totaling less than $20 will not be billed on an open account, unless the advertiser already has a history of good credit with us. Visa, Master Card & Discover are accepted as prepayment. There will be no refunds or credit on prepaid cancellations. All individuals who are not in our retail trade zone must prepay their advertising. All new commercial accounts must have a standard application for credit on file. If we do not have an approved credit application on file, the advertising must be charged on a credit card until credit is approved. CORRECTING AN ERROR — You are responsible for checking your ad the first day it appears in the paper. In the event of an error, call the Classified Department immediately for correction. THE ROSWELL DAILY RECORD WILL ONLY ALLOW ONE ADDITIONAL DAY FOR INCORRECT INSERTIONS.
CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS
NOON - Two Days Prior To Publication. OPEN RATE $10.18 PCI NATIONAL RATE $11.26 PCI. _________________________________________ Contract Rates Available _________________________________________
LEGALS
11:00 AM Two Days Prior To Publication. _________________________________________ CONFIDENTIAL REPLY BOXES Replies Mailed $6.00 - Picked Up $3.50
Add 12 word count to word ad for approved addressing directions.
www.rdrnews.com
Employment Opportunities
HR ASSISTANT:
ATTN; COMPUTER WORK. Work from anywhere 24/7. Up to $1,500 Part time to $7,500 /mo. Full Time. Training provided. www.WorkServices7.com
3 LINES OR LESS . . . ONLY $ 68 9 NO REFUNDS
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FARLEYS, FOOD, FUN & PUB NOW HIRING servers. Apply in person between the hours of 2-4pm.1315 N. Main St. in Roswell, NM MEDICAL OFFICE Full Time office manager small but growing practice, medical office experience is required, pick up application at 612 W. 8th. No phone calls please.
Chaves County offers a competitive benefit package consisting of paid vacation and sick leave, holiday pay, medical, life, disability, vision and dental insurances plus a retirement plan. Chaves County is a drug free employer. All applicants for this position will be required to pass a background check and will be subject to pre-employment, post-offer drug testing. Required application forms are available at the County’s Job Posting Board located in the west wing of the County Administrative Center or by accessing the website at www.co.chaves.nm.us. Applications may be returned to the County Manager’s Suite #180, Chaves County Administrative Center, #1 St. Mary’s Pl, Roswell, NM 88203 or mailed to Human Resources, PO Box 1817, Roswell, NM 88202-1817. Applications will be accepted until Monday, May 11, 2015. EOE.
LOS PASITOS Learning Center is currently seeking applications for a Speech Language Pathologist with a minimum of 2 years' experience to include a Master's Degree in related field. Please submit completed application, police background check, copy of High School Diploma and driving record at 110 E. Summit, Roswell, NM, 88203 or call (575)624-1025. Salary is based on experience and education level. Applications open until positions are filled. EOE
LOS PASITOS Learning Center is currently seeking applications for a developmental Specialist with a minimum of 3 years' experience to include a Bachelor's Degree in related field. Please submit completed application, police background check, copy of High School Diploma and driving record 110 E. Summit, Roswell, NM 88203 or call (575)624-1025. Salary is based on experience and education level. Applications open until positions are filled. EOE
Friday, May 1, 2015 045
Employment Opportunities
Dennis the Menace
B7
FAMILY RESOURCE and REFERRAL is looking for quality individuals to work the 2015 Summer After School Program. Must be at least 18 years old and enjoy working and playing with school age children. Previous childcare experience is preferred but not required. Please apply at 118 E. 4th St. or call 623-9438. EOE HELP WANTED- Health & Wellness director- FT position LPN/RN Req. Benefits included. Apply @ 2801 N. Kentucky Emeritus @ Roswell I NEED a caregiver for about 29 hours per week, $8.00/hr, must have drivers license. Serious, mature, Inquiries only. 622-4340 KYMERA INDEPENDENT Physicians Roswell is now seeking Qualified Applicants: Office Support Staff: FT - Customer Svc Skills & ability to work with multi-line telephone system required. Applicants should demonstrate friendly/outgoing attitude, and organizational skills. 1 – 2 yrs working in Medical Office Setting and computer knowledge required. Experience with Electronic Medical Records preferred. Billing/Coding Specialist: FT - Customer Svc Skills and computer skills, with emphasis on EMR knowledge required. 1-2 yrs working in medical office setting preferred CMA/EMT-I/EMT-B: FT –1-2 yrs exp working in a medical office. Applicants must possess the ability to work with multiple patients in a high volume office setting, chart preparation familiarity, and have multi-tasking skills. EMR & basic computer knowledge Fax Resume w/coversheet to: HR Mngr 627-9520 LEARN TO drive in 5 short weeks. Artesia Training Academy has new classes forming. CDL Class A with endorsements. VA approved. 20 years of service to South East New Mexico. Call for more information 575-748-9766 or 1-888-586-0144 visit us at www.artesiatraining.com or visit us on Facebook. KENNEL HELP needed. Experience preferred, need to be able to pass background & drug test. Must be 18 or over. No phone calls. Resume only, to 705 E. McGaffey after 2pm, Mon-Fri. Ask for Kennel Manager. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Position looking for experienced office administrator, previous church work preferred, need to be experienced in MS Office and have excellent communication skills. Please submit a resume to: 1st Presbyterian Church Attn: Pastor 400 3rd Street, Roswell, NM 88201 HELP WANTED: Looking for Tire Tech. Apply in person at Powell Tire. 2007 SE Main.
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Employment Opportunities
LOOKING FOR customer service and sales person with outgoing personality, must be a self started, Spanish speaker is a plus, must be able to work Saturdays. Position can be full or part time, position will require good driving record, and a neat and pleasant appearance. Applications taken in person only at 101 S. Main St. Monday -Friday 8am-5pm. Sat 8am-noon. LINCOLN, NM. Small irrigated livestock farm seeks mature top notch full time hand. Must have valid driver's license, pass drug test when necessary, and speak English. Duties include cattle/horse Mgnt, barn mgnt, tractor, welding, fence, irrigation, and all around chores. Must be healthy, no smoking, and a hard worker. Good pay for right person/couple. 575-653-4041 120
Fencing
M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991 RODRIGUEZ CONSTRUCTION For wood, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100 225
General Construction
Cleaning
ALPHA CONSTRUCTION New Construction, remodels, additions, concrete & painting. Lic. & Bonded Call Adam 626-2050
JD CLEANING Service, Licensed and bonded. References 623-4252 WANT CLEAN windows? Sunshine Window Service 575-626-5458 or 626-5153 CRUZ MOBILE Car Wash, Quick and reliable, pressure washer. We will come to you! 575-910-6288 DO YOU need help? Need someone to clean, cook or run errands? (Avail. wknds). Senior discounthonest & dependable. 575-622-3314 WE CLEAN houses for more information call 910-8831. Limpiamos casas, para mas informacion hablar al 910-8831 195
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Ceramic Tile
TILE SETTER 20yrs of experience. Call Ben after 4:00 p.m. 575-910-3467 140
Elderly Care
COMFORT KEEPERS will help your loved one maintain a full and independent life in the comfort of their own home. All of our caregivers are thoroughly screened, bonded and insured. It is our goal to provide the most trusted in-home care service in Chaves County. We would be happy to arrange a free in home assessment to help you learn more. Before you decide on your home care provider, give us a call at 624-9999. www.comfortkeepers.com
BREAKTHROUGH CONSTRUCTION We do it all when it comes to construction. We have 15 plus years of experience doing new construction, additions and remodel. For all your construction needs give us a call at 575-420-3009
Carpentry
HIGHLY EXPERIENCED carpenter needs work. Just moved back to Roswell. 420-3825 Gerry 135
195
Elderly Care
CAREGIVER FOR your loved ones. Experience, Christian, give meds, run errands, light housekeeping, etc. 575-291-4840
230
General Repair
RESIDENTIAL AND Commercial Remodeling and New Interior and Exterior 575-973-1019 www.senaconstruction.com 235
Hauling
TRASH HAULING. Also clean barns, attics, garages, and basements. Call 575-625-1429. PROPERTY CLEANUPS Tear down old bldgs, barns, haul trash, old farm equip. 317-7738/347-0142. 240
Horseshoeing
HORSE SHOEING services 15 plus years experience. Bill 575-208-9472 270
Landscape/ Lawnwork
GARCIA'S Lawn Service, Maintenance, trimming, pruning, re-seeding, trash. Free Est. 575-914-0803 or 575-317-7282 SPRING CLEAN-up rake leaves, tree trimming, weed eating, haul trash, property clean-up & much more. Call Joseph, 317-2242. EMERALD LANDSCAPING Lawn & sprinkler installation, sprinkler repair, sod, gravel, lawn maintenance. Maintenance/Free Estimates/accept credit cards. Lic#89265. Call: Aaron, 575-910-0150 or Chris, 420-3945 LIGHTHOUSE LAWN-SERVICE Free estimates. Affordable lawn care. Call 575-626-0200. SPRINKLERS & LANDSCAPING. Over 15 yrs exp. 317-9657 MOW LAWNS, pickup trash, & clean-up jobs. 575-308-1227 YARD WORK, clean-ups, lawns. Handyman svc. David 637-9580. RETIRED GUYS will mow & edge. Reasonable! Call Charlie & Mike, 910-1358 or 622-7852. MR. GREEN THUMB Lawn Services. Free estimates. 575-420-4696 GREEN BRO's - Lawn Care affordable, free est. and entire lawn service. 575-910-6436 JOHN DEER Tractor w/front end loader, backhole & deck mower. Call EVE: 575-755-7555 MOW GRASS, trim bushes, clean ups, flower beds, pull weeds, repair sprinklers, concrete, 575-347-8157 or 347-8156 285
Miscellaneous Services
MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Become a Medical Office Assistant! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Online training can get you job ready! HS Diploma/GED & PC/Internet needed! 1-888-589-9683. GOT KNEE PAIN? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1- 800-918-6159
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Miscellaneous Services
ADVERTISE YOUR driver jobs in 23 New Mexico newspapers for only $100. Your 25-word classified ad will reach more than 142,000 readers. Call this newspaper to place your ad or log onto www.nmpress.org for more information. SELL YOUR structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don't have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-614-1524 SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-591-5109 to start your application today! DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. Call 1-800-948-7239 DISH NETWORK – Get MORE for LESS! Starting $19.99/month (for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet for $15 more/month.) CALL Now 1-800-315-7043 DIRECTV'S the Big Deal special! Only $19.99 per month - Free premium channels HBO, Starz, Cinemax and Showtime for 3 months and Free Receiver upgrade! NFL 2014 Season Included. Call Now 1-800-264-0340. REDUCE YOUR Past Tax Bill by as much as 75 Percent. Stop Levies, Liens and Wage Garnishments. Call The Tax DR Now to see if you Qualify 1-800-309-5124 STOP OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! Save up to 93%! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharmacy service to compare prices and get $15.00 off your first prescription and FREE Shipping. Call 1-800-661-3783 310
Painting/ Decorating
TIME TO PAINT? Quality int/ext. painting. Call 637-9108 QUALITY PAINTING at prices you can afford, Senior discount. Mike 622-0072 345
Remodeling
NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552. BERRONES CONSTRUCTION Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing, roofing. Licensed. Ray, 626-4153 350
Roofing
GUARANTEED SHINGLE ROOF JOBS Locally owned. Licensed and insured. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 622-2552. EXPERIENCE IN installing metal roofing or leaks. Free estimates. Fernando at 575-308-3461. 395
Stucco Plastering
M.G. Horizons All types of Stucco and Wire lath. Free Estimates 623-1991
Classifieds 410
Tree Service
STUMP GRINDING. Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 317-8037 or 623-4185 ALLEN'S Tree Srvc. Tree top removal, good clean up, free estimates 626-1835 MONTOYA'S Tree Service, Tree pruning and removal, lawns and various yard work. Call for a free estimate, 575-386-6851.
REAL ESTATE OPPORTUNITY
490
Homes For Sale
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise "any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make an such preference, limitation or discrimination." This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which in in violation of the law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
FOR SALE BY OWNER. 4bd, 3ba, 2600SF all brick home located at 2512 N. Cambridge. $250,000 Tile and hardwood floors. Large yard with fruit trees and workshop. 575-740-2496 2BD $90K w/house in bk & 3Bd $65K, fncd yrds, call M-Th 8a-noon 624 1331 OPEN HOUSE Lake Van home 111 Fairway Dexter, Sat 9-6pm. 706-2114
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Tree Service
TREE TRIMMING & tree removal. Licensed/insured, Free Estimates, 910-4581
40, 80 & 160 +/- acre tracts approx. 12 miles south of Roswell. Owner financing avail. Call Melodi Salas at Ranchline/Taylor & Taylor Realtors, 575-626-7663.
Businesses for Sale
SELF STORAGE facility 98% occupied 317-0029 510
Resort-Out of Town
TRAILER FOR sale, newly renovated, 3bd, 2ba 102 Davis Dr. Ruidoso. Owner financing, call 627-6087 or 575-937-5840 515
Mobile Homes - Sale
FOR SALE Lancer Mobile home 14X72 2bd+2bath to be moved. 575-420-8454 or 575-910-1501 520
Lots for Sale
SPECIAL 1 MONTH ONLY Price reduced to $14,000. Mobile Home Lots for sale: Lot size 50x134. Owner financing w/$4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. 420-1352 PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, good covenants (no mobilehomes), Pecan Lands West on Brown Road between Country Club & Berrendo Road. Owner will finance with 10% down. 622-3479, 624-9607, 910-1913, 626-6791, 626-3848 1 ACRE, mol, old south mesa pool, may get 4-6 lots in great SW area, 2400 Carver Dr. 53K. Call 910-7969 530
Real Estate Wanted
LOOKING FOR home for rent, rent-to-own or owner financing in the north part of Roswell. We are responsible & immaculate. Please email pics & info to hopeandhappy2@gmail.com
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Apartments Furnished
INVESTMENT RENTAL property for sale, townhouse 3br/1.75ba, $71K. 1017 Plaza Del Sol. Call 575-910-7127 for details.
1&2BD, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331
NEW ON the market! 804 N. Washington 3bd, 1 3/4ba, 1 carport, move in ready, new central heat. refrig. air, cabinets, granite, paint, flooring $124,900. 575-937-8031 or 937-7984
ALL BILLS PAID cable inc. 1BR $569, 2BR $677, 3br/2ba $777/mo., ref air, newly remodeled. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944
FSBO - 4BR/2ba + office or 5th bdrm, gorgeous home, 2541 sqft, granite, crown molding, stainless steel appliances, just some of the many upgrades. Bank loan or cash only, shown to pre-approved buyers, 3117 Notting Hill, $294k. Jim, 575-910-7969. FSBO: $77K, owner finance w/$7K down, 66 G St., 627-9942. FOR SALE Approx 1 1/2 acres, older mobile home, good well elec. gas, septic, gated and fenced $70,000. Close to ENMU & National Guard Armory 575-347-8285 492
Homes for Sale/ Rent
Tractor-Work
TRACTOR WORK Lots mowed, discing, blading, post holes. 317-7738 or 347-0142.
Acreages/Farms Ranches/ Sale
EQUESTRIAN CENTER for lease, 24 indoor stalls with tack rooms and outside corrals with 3br apartment upstairs at Buena Vida in Roswell. $1500/mo, $1500/dep. 575-623-1800
500
STUCCO, LATH, Synthetic, guaranteed work. Memo 575-637-1217 405
495
SELL OR RENT YOUR HOUSE FASTER! INCLUDE A PICTURE FOR JUST $6! E-MAIL PICTURES TO CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM
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Apartments UnFurnished
540
Apartments UnFurnished
47 WILDY 3/2/1 large living & fam. rm. Remodeled kitchen includes stove, micro, refrig, dw, w/d. Rent $985+deposit. No smoking or Hud Call 575-915-6498 or 915-6490
*NOW ACCEPTING* assisted living/Hud, preferred seniors, all may apply. Large 1, 2, and 3bd available. Call John 623-2735 BETTER LIVING is within reach! 2br/1ba $592, 3br/2ba, $674, 5br/2ba $812, central H/C, fridge, stove, DW, GD, W/D hookups, 2 refreshing pools, Section 8 Vouchers accepted, 623-7711, Villas of Briar Ridge.
Will lease all or half of the 3000 square feet newly finished, professional use, office space. Building is monitored by local security service with surveillance cameras, well maintained parking lot, and quite peaceful surroundings. Options available: utilities, in house receptionist, and use of modern Multi Media/Conference room. For details please call Cheri at 575-622-1127 Ext. 11.
2BR/1BA, stove & refrigerator. Call 840-4333 or 910-8170. 3/1 over stables, 17 El Camino at Buena Vida in Roswell. Water & 1 horse stall incl. $750/mo, $750dep. 575-623-1800
RETAIL OR professional office space available on W. Second St. Lovely court yard entrance, approx. 1800 Sq Ft. with ample parking. Call Sherlea Taylor 1-575-420-1978 or 624-2219 for further details.
Houses Furnished
BOTTOM FLOOR of historic home, 2br, updated tile/bath, pet ok w/dep, utilities pd, washer/dryer, No HUD, ref. req'd, $895/mo, $500/dep. 575-420-1474
OFFICE OR Retail space for Rent. Prime downtown area. Please call 622-8711.
1BD, FURNISHED-unfurnished, no smoking/Hudpets. all bills pd. 623-6281
OFFICE-RETAIL 2108 S. Main, $550mo 627-9942
1&2BD, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331
OFFICE-RETAIL 222B W. 2nd $400mo 627-9942
Houses for RentUnfurnished
COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS for lease, 301 W. McGaffey, 204 W. 2nd 637-5315.
2&3BD, 1&2Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 2803 PURDUE 3bd/2ba $1000mo $1000dep. 627-9942
OFFICE SPACE in down town Roswell. Available Now Approx. 900 sq. ft; 2 bath rm; 4 rooms: $775.00 per month, utilities paid Kraft & Hunter Law Firm 575-625-2000
TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Berkshire Hathaway Home Services. 575-624-2262
FOR LEASE, space in Sunwest Centre Office Complex at 500 N. Main St. Various size spaces. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. High floor space available for larger tenants. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 575-623-1652 or mobile 575-420-2546
3/2/2 car garage, fenced in backyard, good neighborhood, $1300/mo. 919-255-0136 3BR/2BA mobile home, great location, seniors only, $750/mo, 910-9648. 2BR/1BA, No HUD, $535/mo, $535/dep. 915-255-8335
VALLE ENCANTADA YOUR BEST $ RENTAL VALUE! LARGE 1,2,3 BEDROOMS. FREE UTILITIES. unfurnished, laundry room, playground, pool, ample parking. 2001 South Sunset. 623-3722 TOWN PLAZA APARTMENTS NO HUD ACCEPTED ALL UTILITIES PAID Seniors receive 10% discount Friendly managers. New Renovated EXTRA LARGE 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Each 2 & 3 bedroom is multi level, upstairs & downstairs w/ large closets, stove & refrigerator, private patios, and private parking. Complex has a pool, laundry room, and a quiet garden setting environment. Friendly managers on-site. 575-623-2735. EFF, 1 & 2br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348. PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOME SERVICES, 501 NORTH MAIN. 202 S. Penn. Apt A, $600/mo, $300/dep, all bills pd, central ht. Call from 5pm-7pm, by appt. only, 575-626-5290
580
Office or Business Places
620
FOR LEASE: (2) 3 office suites, each with a large reception area, smaller suite 970 sqft, larger one 1320 sqft, 110 W. Country Club, Claudette @ 575-420-2895 or Herb at 622-0010. 585
EXECUTIVE OFFICE Space For Lease Roswell, NM
1&2BD, 3 locations, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331
550
Office or Business Places
580
423-A E. 4th, 3/1, HUD OK, NO PETS, $625/mo. Call American Realty & Mgmt, 575-623-9711.
545
Roswell Daily Record
Houses for RentUnfurnished
550
Warehouse and Storage
595
Antiques
BARRY'S Movie & TV Collectibles. Magic, Pokemon, Yu-Gi-Oh, Dragonball Z cards. Blair's Monterey Flea Market, 1400 W. 2nd, in back, upstairs, booth 54. 575-420-2240
Miscellaneous for Rent
1BR, NO pets, no drugs, private bath, single, $350/mo + deposit. If interested call 578-1296 605
TOP DOLLAR Paid for furniture, collectibles, appliances, antiques, tools, saddles, plus anything else of value. We pay cash with same day removal of all items. Compete/partial households & personal estates welcome. 623-0136 or 910-6031 625
SMALL WAREHOUSES, 800 sqft & 1000 sqft, 14 ft overhead doors. 575-626-0259
Wanted to BuyMisc.
715
Miscellaneous for Sale
Hay and Feed Sale
2 STRING alfalfa bale $10 each, 4X8 alfalfa bales $200, 626-0159
HYDRAULIC SCAFFLE hunter lift, 16 ft, $3250, 1401 Old Dexter Hwy, 420-1352
745
RUNNING BOARDS from GMC Acadia $200 OBO. 623-7678 DROP BY Josie's Collectibles at 1600 E. 2nd, Weds-Sat, 10-5 weekly. AIR CONDITIONER, 110 volt, single day bed w mattress, springs; original Nordicski. 491-4235 I AM interested in buying furniture, appliances, tools, lawn mowers and most anything of value. 575-317-6285. LINDA VISTA pool membership for sale, $1500 firm. 622-4461
BOSTON TERRIER puppies, $300ea., will have first shots,will be ready May 8, call or text 575-910-3488 780
RV’’s & Campers Hauling
MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. New & Used Travel Trailers & 5th Wheels. Parts & Service. 2900 W. 2nd St. 575-622-1751 Mon-Fri, 8-5:30, Sat 9-2 maintrailersalesinc.com 790
TABLES: • 45X60 Pedistal $175 • Vintage Drop Leaf $45
FIESTA PITCHERS $25 hummells $50, figurines bookends. 575-703-7545
Coins/Gold/ Silver/Buy
U.S. & FOREIGN coins and currency, buy, sell or trade, gold and silver coins. 622-7239, 2513 W. 2nd
2005 ESCALADE $9000 575-317-0029 99 CAMRY 129K mi. runs great, A/C, $3200. 575-625-0932 after 3:30pm. 1989 MERCURY Grand Marquis 1984 Dodge pick up long wheel base, excellent motor. 625-1429 795
2000 NISSAN Frontier, crew cab, $3000; '99 Beetle, $3000. Both standard. 623-0672 after 5pm
Pickups/ Trucks/Vans
2005 FORD F250, 5.6 V8, 4x4, ext. cab, headache rack, push bar, excellent cond., only 137k miles, $9850, 1401 Old Dexter Hwy, 420-1352. 2000 DODGE Ram 2500 Van, dual ladder ax, equip. shelving inside, only 78k miles, $3850, 1401 Old Dexter Hwy, 420-1352. 87 FORD Conversion van 83K original miles, runs good, new tires, $2000 OBO. 86 pace horse trailer or toy hauler $3500 OBO 627-3409 or 910-1926 FORD F150 Only 65K miles, LEATHER, PWR WND & seat, Multi CD, Grill Guard, Bed CVR & LNR, RUN. BRDS $7,500 575-915-6498 or 915-6490
Autos for Sale
TIRED OF the Hassle In Trading Or Selling Your Car or Truck? Economy Motors Will Either Purchase Your Vehicle Or Consign It For Sale At No Cost To You!! Call Or Come By For Details. Economy Motors 2506 N. Main Roswell, NM 88201 625-2440� *18 Years In Business� *Family Owned & Operated � *Licensed, Bonded & Insured
Chairs: • 6 Parsons style upholstered, wine red, excellent condition, $275 575-622-0590
615
ADD A PICTURE OF YOUR PET FOR SALE FOR JUST $6! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM
Autos for Sale
SHOW US WHAT YOU'RE SELLING! INCLUDE A PICTURE IN YOUR AD FOR JUST $6! E-MAIL PICTURES TO CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM
Pets for Sale
POWER WHEELCHAIR, hospital bed, CPAP breathing unit, 622-7638 WHEELCHAIR, WALKER, bath tfr bench, commode chair, grab bars 622-7638.
790
2006 CHEVY Uplander $3000. Call 910-3555 '04 CHEVY Silverado 4x4 Z71, loaded, wheels, alpine, clean, $8500. James at 575-408-9103 2004 FORD F150 Exc. cond, super crew cab, 4door, tonneau cover, $13,500 575-317-4869 796
SUVS
1997 CHEVY Suburban, 4 wheel drive, leather, 3rd row seat, priced to sell. Call 575-626-5984
ROSWELL FORD
CERTIFIED SALE!
CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED vehicles come with the 172-point inspection
(200-point for Lincoln), 24-hour roadside assistance, vehicle history report. Ford vehicles come with a 12-month/12,000-mile comprehensive limited warranty PLUS a 7-year/100,000-mile powertrain limited warranty. Lincoln vehicles come with a 7-year 100,000-mile comprehensive limited warranty*.
2014 Ford Escape Titanium #19524
2012 Ford F250 Crew Cab XLT 4x4 #19594
$20,900
$28,900
$35,900
2013 Ford F150 Platinum 4x4 #19422
2015 Lincoln MKC AWD
2015 Ford Explorer Limited 4WD #19447
$39,900
$39,900
2014 Ford Fusion SE #19270
2013 Ford Taurus SEL
2014 Ford Fusion SE #19523 #19528
2014 Ford Fusion SE
#19529
2013 Ford Taurus Limited #19565 2014 Ford Mustang V6 #19553 2014 Ford Fusion Se Hybrid
#19527
2014 Ford Mustang Convertible
#19588
2014 Ford E 350 Econoline #19586 2015 Ford Taurus Limited
20,900 $ 21,900 $ 21,900 $ 21,900 $ 22,900 $ 23,900 $ 23,900 $ 23,900 $ 26,900 $ 28,900 $
#19427
2013 Ford Fusion SE
#19252
#19591
821 N. Main Open: Mon.- Fri. 8am-7pm Sat. 8am-5pm
$47,900
28,900 32,900 $ 33,900 $ 39,900 $ 43,900 $ 47,900 $ 48,900 $ 54,900
2013 Ford Edge SEL #19585
$
2012 Ford F150 Crew Cabl XLT #19425
$
2014 Ford Taurus SHO
#19286
2014 Ford Expedition XLT 4x4
# 19589
2014Ford Explorer Sport #19361 2015 Ford F250 Crew Cab Lariat 4x4
#19580
2012 Ford F350 Crew Cab Lariat Diesel #19546 2013 Ford F350 Crew Cab Lariat 4x4 Diesel #19451
Prices do not include tax, registration and dealer service transfer fee. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Pictures are for illustrative purposes only and may not represent the actual vehicles. Not responsible for typographical errors.
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