03-26-2011

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Roswell Daily Record

INSIDE NEWS

NYC MARKS TRIANGLE TRAGEDY

NEW YORK (AP) — The centennial commemoration of the Triangle shirtwaist factory fire became a rally for organized labor Friday, as hundreds marched and vowed to resist efforts to weaken unions in state capitals across the country. Democratic Sen. Chuck Schumer drew loud cheers when he pledged .... - PAGE A3

THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

NM job market remains stagnant

Vol. 120, No. 74 50¢ Daily / $1 Sunday

ALBUQUERQUE (AP) — Federal labor statistics show most states have seen positive job growth over the past year, but New Mexico and several others remain on the negative side of the curve when it comes to the job market. There haven’t been any sizable layoffs in the past year by big employers in New Mexico, but business leaders say small businesses — from plumbing contractors and car dealer-

March 26, 2011

SATURDAY

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ships to real estate companies and architectural firms — have been forced to lay off handfuls of workers, and those numbers are adding up. “It’s like a duck nipping at our ankles. It’s a little bit here and a little bit there and before you know it, it becomes a big number,” said Terri Cole, president and CEO of the Greater Albuquerque Chamber of Commerce. One of those workers on

Downtown vulture

New Mexico’s unemployment rolls is Kathleen Cescolini, of Albuquerque, who has been without work for a year. Before being laid off along with 140 coworkers, she used to be an operator for a company that relayed telephone calls to hearing and speech impaired customers. Cescolini went to two interviews Thursday and had three more scheduled See MARKET, Page A2

US EXPERIENCES UNEVEN JOB GROWTH WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. companies have added jobs for 12 straight months, giving some of the hardest hit states a lift. But the gains have been uneven and several states are still losing jobs.

California and Michigan, which each suffered some of the worst losses during the recession, are adding jobs again. Califor-

TOP 5 WEB For The Past 24 Hours

• Another family to get its own home • RPD arrest 2 in separate incidents • RPD, RFD game, 3/29 • Wilson campaigns in Roswell • Colts hold on for 8-7 win over Gateway

INSIDE SPORTS A turkey vulture soars in for a treetop landing Wednesday evening in Roswell’s Historic District.

Mark Wilson Photo

nia last month had its single best month for job creation in more than two decades.

Still, six states lost jobs from February 2010 through last month. Among the worst for job creation in that time were New Mexico and New Jersey, states that only a year

Obama Libyan address Monday

See GROWTH, Page A2

WASHINGTON (AP) — To a nation and a Congress seeking answers, President Barack Obama on Monday will offer his most expansive explanation of the U.S. role in the Libyan war, delivering a speech that is expected to cover the path ahead and his rationale about the appropriate use of force. Obama’s 7:30 p.m. EDT speech, to be given from the National Defense University in Washington, comes as leading Republican lawmakers and some from his own party have pressed him for clarity

Soldier stops in Roswell during Hike Across America JONATHAN ENTZMINGER RECORD STAFF WRITER

LORDSBURG TROUNCES GATEWAY

At its core, baseball is about pitching, hitting and fielding. Boil it down even more and baseball is about pitching, because without it, there is no hitting or fielding. Given that, pitching is arguably the most important aspect of baseball for better or worse. For the Gateway Christian baseball team on Friday, it was for worse. Warrior pitchers hit seven batters, walked six and allowed nine hits in their 177 loss to Lordsburg ... - PAGE B1

When Lewis and Clark explored the West for President Thomas Jef ferson from 1804 to 1806, they trailblazed lands that future Americans would soon inhabit. Thomas Trujillo, Navy petty officer, 2nd class, is trekking those lands today for his Hike Across America. Although his route is different from the Lewis and Clark expedition, his purpose remains the same: provide an avenue for life, liberty and

the pursuit of happiness for his brethren. “My heart goes out to anybody who’s doing something for a vet,” Harry McGraw, local veteran said. “We’re all brothers. We don’t worry about what war, or who’s what, we stick together.” Thus far, Trujillo’s hike has taken him from Santa Monica, Calif., through Arizona, and now, Roswell. At each rest stop during his excursion, he stays with a member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, one of the trek’s

HIGH ...82˚ LOW ....44˚

CLASSIFIEDS..........B6 COMICS.................B3 FINANCIAL .............A6 GENERAL ..............A2 HOROSCOPES ........A8 LOTTERIES ............A2 NATION .................A3 OPINION ................A4 SPORTS ................B1 STATE ...................A7 WEATHER ..............A8

INDEX

See HIKE, Page A2

EMILY RUSSO MILLER RECORD STAFF WRITER

OBITUARIES

TODAY’S FORECAST

Jonathan Entzminger Photo

First a fire guts the house, then a burglar pays a visit

TODAY’S • Eleanor Hill • William ‘Bill’ Lindsey - PAGE A3

sponsors. Friday, he was welcomed by Roswell Elks Lodge No. 969. “I think it’s great that he’s showing an interest in the veterans, and make people aware of the veterans and what they’ve sacrificed,” Marvin Smith, retired Air Force airman 2nd class, said. “For him to be able to walk across the U.S. — I think that’s just awesome to show his patriotism and to show his want to care for the veterans.” The Hike Across America

See OBAMA, Page A2

Mark Wilson Photo

Alice Fullerton looks at the remnants of her home at 278 Abnaki near Dexter, which was partially destroyed during a fire nearly a year ago.

A threadbare mobile home in Dexter that was scorched in a fire last May was burglarized on Thursday night, residents of the home say. The owner of the home, Alice Darlene Fullerton, says the robbers jumped the chain link fence surrounding the perimeter of the acre lot, located at 278 Abnaki Road, and stole jewelry she inherited from

From left, Harry McGraw, Ernest Burgos and Thomas Trujillo.

her grandmother, stereo speakers and other household items. She has yet to inform the Dexter police. “It’s bad enough, and then somebody has to rob our home — well, what’s left of my home,” Fullerton, 48, said. Fullerton and her three grandchildren, ages 12, 8 and 8, have been living at her mother’s home off of Lincoln Road in Dexter since the fire gutted their home. Due to a family dispute, Fullerton had moved

out of her mother’s house on Thursday and spent the night in a hotel with the grandchildren she raised from birth. She suspects the robbers watched her family move their belongings back into the dilapidated trailer during the day, Thursday. “They probably watched me make lots of trips yesterday with my stuff,” she said. “And they watched us carry it in, so they can-

Lowell Hughes among the soldiers who liberated Dachau JESSICA PALMER RECORD STAFF WRITER

Lowell Hughes at Camp Barkeley, Texas, 1941.

Lowell B. Hughes was born in Oklahoma in 1920. He came to Roswell when he was 18 years old. His sisters had settled here and he was looking for work. He said people were still feeling the ef fect of the Depression. “Things were still hard in 1938.” The farmers in Oklahoma were reeling from the dust storms of the late 1930s. “We’d been raising cotton and we hadn’t enough to

make a good pair of overalls. I figured I had to find something better. “I arrived on the Greyhound, which was at the old Firestone building on South Main, with $6 in my pocket. I just barely have the $6, but the khakis have long since wor n out,” Hughes said.

He has seen a lot of growth and changes in his 72 years in Roswell. “The city limits were at Albuquerque Street then where Forest Tire is now.” His first job was rewinding generator armatures, which were the forerunner to alternators in modern cars.

See FIRE, Page A2

His experiences in World War II were significant. Hughes was the third person in Roswell to leave for the war. “I was 21 years old on Oct. 12, 1940. The next week I had to sign up for the draft. Instead of waiting for the draft, I volunteered,” he said. He was a member of the Thunderbirds, the 45th Infantry Division. He received the Bronze See SPOTLIGHT, Page A2


A2 Saturday, March 26, 2011 Market

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Friday. She puts in about five applications a day. “I’ve got skills. I’ve got computer skills, I’ve got communication skills. I just don’t know what they’re looking for,” she said during a visit to the state unemployment office Thursday. The architectural firm Dekker/Perich/Sabatini was forced last year to trim its employees by about 90. Founder Dale Dekker said the company had never experienced an economic layoff in more than two decades of doing business but last year came down to matching expenses with revenues. The recession is more

Hike

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is a benefit for soldiers serving overseas. All proceeds raised from Trujillo’s hike will go to the families of men and women serving in the U.S military, many of whom are in need of emergency goods and services that they cannot provide for themselves. Locals like Ernest Burgos are inspired by Trujillo’s wilderness walk for fellow veterans and families. Burgos, a disabled veteran, was recently on the receiving end of an act of kindness by local Roswell veterans, Home Depot and a host of sponsors. They built a house for him. Burgos is impressed by T rujillo’s excursion, and was on hand, Friday.

Fire

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vassed the place.” Fullerton says she cannot afford to purchase a new trailer, but wants to rebuild the burned home so it is livable again. She says she will either stay with her daughter-in-law or friends in Roswell as she works to repair the smoke-damaged trailer. She says she has strug-

Spotlight Continued from Page A1

Star after an incident in which his division was following the Germans who were retreating from southern Italy to Rome. Hughes was driving a command car over a bridge when Ger man bombs destroyed the road. He drove around the pit to a safe area, but the foot troops had to withdraw into a cave to avoid enemy fire. The vehicle he was driving could hold about 15 men. Hughes went back to retrieve the trapped troops, returning into the line of fire three times. Hughes received the medal for the lives he saved that day. His division was among the troops who liberated the concentration camp in Dachau. Hughes has turned many of the photographs from his wartime experiences into a video which he gave to Goddard High School to be used in class. “Many people say the Holocaust didn’t exist. I don’t want people to forget. I want them to understand what went on over there,” he said. He described the horrors. “When we arrived at

GENERAL insidious and subtle than people realize, Cole said. It has forced businesses to become leaner and stronger and that has af fected everyone, she said. According to the most recent labor statistics from New Mexico officials, several industries added jobs over the past 12 months, including the service and retail industries, leisure and hospitality, mining, manufacturing and transportation. But financial and business services, wholesale trading and construction continued to report job losses in January. The construction industry was down 1,600 jobs over the year. However, that did mark an

improvement over the 8,000 jobs lost during the preceding 12 months ending in January 2010. Gover nment employment totaled 2,400 fewer jobs than it did a year ago. State gover nment reported a 2,000-job decline, while local government, the largest of three public-sector components, posted a loss of 1,300. As workers retire and vacancies come up, many of those government positions simply aren’t filled. New Mexico’s unemployment rate was 8.7 percent in January, up from 8.1 percent a year ago. The rate of over-theyear job growth was negative 0.4 percent, representing a loss of about 3,500 jobs.

“It’s awesome,” he said. “It’s unbelievable what he’s doing. That’s a task — very inspiring. When he walked in, actually my body tried to stand up ... it’s that inspiring, that I literally tried to stand up, that I forgot about my condition.” T rujillo has been on medical leave from the military. He suf fered nerve damage in his inner thigh during active duty and weathers several nerve attacks on a daily basis. In addition, he endures what he calls a “rigorous journey” similar to what he has experienced in war zones. However, he remains focused. “I take one day at a time,” he said. “I’ve got nothing but positive support since I’ve begun this walk. I’m glad I get to have this journey, this experi-

ence. It’s life changing. It changes you all the way down to your soul. It really does. My fellow soldiers and their families are that important to me. They’re more important to me ... they’re more important than the pain that I’m going through. This is to help them. When I succeed, we’ll be able to help a lot of families and a lot of homeless veterans.” In August, T rujillo expects to end his 3,000mile walk-through in Washington. Trujillo has served two tours in Iraq and his 14-year military career includes duty in Air Force. For more infor mation about Trujillo’s hike across America, and to donate to military families and veterans all across the U.S., visit onesoldiersdream.org.

gled to find the time to rebuild her home. She works two jobs and her grandchildren require special attention since all have special needs. Charred pink insulation still lays exposed in the interior of the home, and a bur ned ceiling sags above a living room that is cluttered with an old dusty piano, a hamper of burned children’s clothing and boxes of broken lamps and other appli-

ances. The windows are broken, large portions of the aluminum siding of the exterior are missing and debris is strewn across the dirt lawn. “It’s been a slow but steady process,” she said. Some churches donated clothes and food to the family immediately after the fire, but Fullerton says should could use more help from the community. She says would appreciate volunteers to

Dachau, we found 20 coal cars with people jammed into them. They were laying on their sides, sitting up, standing upright and draped over the sides. Everyone was dead. They had been starved and worked to death.” Many of the images have been etched indelibly in his brain. “I try not to think about it. I prefer to remember the funny things,” Hughes said. He recalled having a flat tire later the day they liberated Dachau. Some of the prisoners of the camp had managed to escape and they saw him. “One man ran up and hugged me,” said Hughes. Most of the camp guards were shot. Three survived and were taken prisoners. “The Jews’ shoes were in bad shape, their toes were sticking out.” Hughes insisted that the Germans give their shoes to the prisoners. “They were so happy that they walked back-

wards so they could see their footprints.” Hughes believes it is hard for people to fathom the number of people who died. The Ger mans cut the soles out of the shoes of the prisoners killed in the ovens. “The piles were 40 feet high,” he said. Despite the horrors of Dachau, the most difficult time for Hughes was his first action, the invasion of Sicily in 1943. On this topic, he remains mostly silent. “The Germans threw everything they had at us. We stayed on the beachhead for four months, living underground in dug outs. I don’t know how we survived.” After the war, he became an entrepreneur again. In 1941, while stationed at Camp Barkeley, Texas (now, Dyess AFB), he and some friends bought a car and started a taxi service

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j.entzminger@roswell-record.com

Roswell Daily Record

Growth

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ago were in the middle of the pack. Overall, 44 states boosted employment in that stretch, one of the best year over -year showings since the recession ended in June 2009. And the unemployment rate has fallen in 41 states. The February report from the Labor Department on state and regional employment is the latest sign that job growth is picking up. Nationwide, employers added 1.3 million net jobs in that period. Califor nia has added nearly 200,000 jobs in that time. That’s second only to Texas, which added 254,200 net jobs. Nearly half of that increase in Califor nia occurred in February, when

Obama

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about the goals and exit strategy of the United States. Obama and top U.S. security of ficials spent about an hour talking to lawmakers on Friday, with the president answering direct questions from critics. For a president who was on a Latin American outreach trip when the U.N.-sanctioned military assault on the Libyan regime began, the speech of fers him his best chance to explain the purpose and scope of the mission to a nation already weary of war. Obama has spoken about the matter since authoriz-

help clean and rebuild the home, money for building materials for the roof and interior, such as sheet rock, or donations of building materials, home decor items, such as dressers, mattresses for the kids’ beds, kitchen cupboards and an electric stove. To contact Fullerton, call 627-0820. emiller@roswell-record.com

for men who did not want to take the bus to Dallas. The business was shortlived, though. Hughes and his friends took the car to Louisiana, and it broke down, leaving them stranded. In 1964, he established Hughes Electric Motors, and he says he still gets calls even though he has been out of the business since 1988. Hughes salvaged equipment for the Roswell Daily Record after a fire in the late 1960s when the newspaper was located across from the courthouse. He believes that hydrogen may be the energy source of the future. “Once they’ve perfected it. It is still dangerous now.” In conclusion, Hughes said, “Roswell has been good to me.” J.PALMER@ROSWELL-RECORD.COM

THE SENIOR CORNER Everything you always wanted to know about

RETIREMENT LIVING

Email Fredda at: askfredda@yahoo.com your source of retirement living answers.

Henry asked: Is there a community in the Roswell area that is strictly a Retirement Community, and if so, where? Yes, Peachtree Retirement Village is located in Roswell at 1301 W. Country Club Road. This is a lovely community that has great food, exciting events, fun activities and nice apartments. Peachtree is designed for the active retiree who wants to enjoy time spent with others of their own age and interests. Activities are designed to spark the interest of the retiree, and the activity schedule is always full of fun things to do and share with those around you. During times that quiet time alone is what you desire the privacy of your own apartment brings a welcome place to enjoy the serenity of home. Your apartment is a peaceful restful place that you can enjoy without the worry of the outside environment intruding on your rest. Retirement Communities are designed to bring people of like ages and interests together and limit the amount of chaotic cluster encountered in traditional neighborhoods. They provide security and restore the privacy that many retirees feel they are missing. They also provide a social atmosphere where the retiree can enjoy doing things with others in a safe friendly environment

Fredda

the state gained 96,500 jobs. That’s the most on records dating back to 1990. The nation’s largest state by population still has a long way to go to recover the 1.3 million jobs lost during the recession, which began in December 2007. But analysts were encouraged by the recent gains. Rising imports have boosted jobs among shipping companies that take the goods from ports and distribute them around the country. Internet services firms have also been a major source of growth. Michigan added 71,000 jobs in the same period. That’s the first sustained job gain the state has seen in the past decade, said Sophia Koropeckyj, a managing director at Moody’s Analytics. The state is benefiting ing the use of force, but not in a setting as prominent as an evening speech, as he seeks to take command of the story. Obama is expected to explain how the U.S.-led campaign is shifting to NATO control, and how the multinational approach with Arab support puts the United States in the strongest position to achieve the goals of protecting Libyan civilians, a White House official said. The president will also put the Libyan campaign into a broader context of his decisions about the use of force, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the president’s thinking. U.S.-led forces began launching missile

from a turnaround in the auto industry. Overall, Michigan has added 28,000 manufacturing jobs in the past 12 months. But six states still experienced job losses over the past year — Arizona, Kansas, Missouri, Nevada, New Mexico and New Jersey. Most of the losses were small. As a percent of their work forces, Kansas reported the biggest loss. Layoffs by telecommunications companies, particularly Sprint, and cuts by insurance companies, restaurants and bars have cost Kansas a net total of 10,500 jobs in the past year. New Jersey, which lost 6,500 jobs in the past 12 months, has suffered from cuts in the pharmaceutical industry. Growing competition has also hurt its casinos. strikes last Saturday against embattled Libyan strongman Moammar Gadhafi’s defenses to establish a no-fly zone and prevent him from attacking his own people. With the Obama administration eager to take a back seat, it remained unclear when NATO would assume command of the no-fly patrols. Also unclear was when — and even if — the U.S. military’s Africa Command would hand off to NATO the lead role in attacking Libyan ground targets. The White House announcement of Monday’s speech came after Obama’s teleconference Friday with a bipartisan group of key members of Congress.

RPD seeks shooting suspect

The Roswell Police Department is seeking information on the whereabouts of Gregory Hobbs, 21, who is wanted for the March 19 shooting of 17year-old victim. Around 2:30 a.m., Saturday, officers were called to the intersection of Caminisito and Pequeno Camino in reference to a shooting. Officers discovered the youth lying face down with a gunshot wound in his lower back. The victim was transported to Eastern New Mexico Medical Center for treatment. Investigation revealed the youth was shot after an altercation at a party. Detectives obtained enough infor mation to

secure an arrest warrant for Hobbs on charges of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon. Anyone with information on Hobbs’ whereabouts is urged to contact the police at 575-624-6770, or Crime Stoppers at 888-594-TIPS (8477).

The Roswell Symphony Orchestra, the city’s lone professional group of tenured musicians, will hold a spring Baroque concert, at First United Methodist Church, 200 N. Pennsylvania today, at 7:30 p.m. John Farrer, in his 38th season with RSO, maestro for the orchestra, will be conducting. Concert chart includes Bach’s Brandenburg concerto No. 1; Elgar’s Serenade for Strings in E minor, Op. 20; Boyce’s Symphony No. 1; Vaughan Williams’

Five Variants of "Dives and Lazarus;" and Mozart’s Eine Kleine Nachtmusik. As RSO moves into its 51st concert season, the group has retained onethird of its staff over the past 25 years. This evening’s concert will culminate with a cash giveaway drawing and raffle. Proceeds will benefit the orchestra. For more information on future concert dates and tickets, visit roswellsymphony.org.

Gregory Hobbs

RSO CONCERT TONIGHT

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NATION/OBITUARIES

Roswell Daily Record

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NYC marks 100th anniversary of Triangle fire NEW YORK (AP) — The cen- there was no union to enforce tennial commemoration of the them. With neither of those, the Triangle shirtwaist factory fire workers didn’t have a chance,” became a rally for organized Doob said. labor Friday, as hundreds Speakers repeatedly criticized marched and vowed to resist Wisconsin Republican Gov. efforts to weaken unions in state Scott Walker, who pushed capitals across the country. through legislation earlier this Democratic Sen. Chuck month to eliminate public Schumer drew loud cheers when workers’ right to collective barhe pledged to fight “right wing gaining. The new law has been ideologues” trying to curb work- temporarily blocked by a couner protections. ty judge. The rally in New York’s GreenSeveral other Republican govwich Village neighborhood took ernors, citing their states’ dire place outside the former Trian- money problems, have made gle factory building, which similar efforts to weaken public burned March 25, 1911. Earlier, employee unions, saying the many people hoisting signs pension and benefits unions designed to look like shirtwaist have negotiated in the past are blouses and bearing the names of the dead marched from Union Square several blocks south to the 10-story building, which is now part of New York University. The T riangle fire killed 146 people and helped to galvanize the U.S. labor movement. The victims were mostly young immigrant women, many of whom jumped to their death to escape the flames. The tragedy prompted many improvements in fire safety across the country, such as sprinkler installation and laws mandating fire drills. Days after the fire, 100,000 mour ners marched in a funeral procession through the streets of New York, while another 250,000 lined the route. Their grief built support for the right of gar ment workers to unionize. Many of the victims’ family members and descendants attended the ceremony Friday. Pete Doob, a laboratory worker from Columbia, Md., came to honor his great aunt, 21-year-old Violet Schechter, who died in the fire just a AP Photo week before she was to wreath near the building that housed the Triangle ShirtA be married. waist factory commemorates the centennial of the fire that “There were no regukilled 146 people. lations back then and

Saturday, March 26, 2011

AP Photo

Marchers rally to remember the 146 victims of the Shirtwaist factory fire of 1911, commonly called the Triangle Fire, during its 100th anniversary commemoration in New York City, Friday. unsustainable over time. U.S. Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, who spoke at the ceremony, offered her support for unions pushing back. “Today we honor workers in communities all across this great country protesting loudly the actions to strip them of collective bargaining — of their right to have a voice in the workplace. We applaud you,” Solis said. Schumer went further, saying Walker and others “want to drag our nation back to 1911.”

“Today some on the far right want to rob workers of their hard-earned collecting bargaining rights. They want to fray the social safety net under the false pretense of fiscal austerity,” he said. New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg was booed during his remarks. His plan to curb pensions and lay off thousands of teachers has rankled unions. President Barack Obama, in a proclamation recognizing the 100th anniversary of the fire, urged people across the country to participate in ceremonies honoring the workers who died in unsafe conditions. “Working Americans are the backbone of our communities and power the engine of our economy,” he wrote. At the rally, Cybele Locke, a

historian from New London, Conn., said she believed many workers still face unsafe conditions. “We still have a long way to go to give workers the right to organize. I am here in support of all those people who are standing for collective bargaining,” she said. Chuck Helms, a representative of the Hudson County Labor Council of New Jersey, said he had come to the ceremony because he believed workers’ rights were fading. “I cannot let my children or my grandchildren go back to that time,” Helms said. “You know we are moving back. Not just unions, middle class in general is moving back in that direction. America has got to get out and protest.”

FAA orders new procedures for air traffic controllers

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Aviation Administration gave air traffic controllers new procedures Friday as officials try to contain the fallout from an incident earlier this week in which two airliners landed at Reagan National Airport without assistance because the lone controller on duty was asleep. Regional radar facilities are now required to alert controllers working alone at night in an airport tower that a plane is approaching, FAA Administrator Randy Babbitt said in a statement. The radar controllers are “to confirm that there is a controller prepared to handle the incoming flight,” he said. Regional controllers have also been reminded that if no controller can be raised at an airport tower, proper procedures require they offer pilots the option of diverting to another airport, Babbitt said. Controllers at a regional FAA radar facility in Warrenton, Va., about 40 miles from Reagan, didn’t offer that option to the pilots who were to unable reach the airport’s tower between

12:04 and 12:28 a.m., on Wednesday. Repeated phone calls from the regional facility to the tower also went unanswered. The planes — an American Airlines flight from Dallas and a United Airlines flight from Chicago with a combined 165 people on board — landed safely. Pilots can always decide on their own authority to divert to another airport, said Rory Kay, a former Air Line Pilots Association safety chairman and an international airline captain. The controller on duty in the tower — a veteran air traf fic supervisor — acknowledged to investigators who interviewed him Thursday that he had dozed of f, the National T ransportation Safety Board said. The controller, who has not been identified, was working his fourth 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. shift in a row, according the board, which is investigating the episode. The incident has renewed concern about the potential safety consequences of controllers suf fering from fatigue, a longstanding concern of the board.

Eleanor Hill

have been finalized.

OBITUARIES

Services are pending at Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory for Eleanor Hill, 82, who passed away Thursday, March 24, 2011, at Easter n New Mexico Medical Center. A further announcement will be made once arrangements

William ‘Bill’ Lindsey

Arrangements are pending for William “Bill” Lindsey, 87, of Dexter, at Anderson Bethany Funeral Home and Crematory. He passed away March 25, 2011.

G e t C l a s s i fi e d

It has also sparked criticism of FAA’s practice of scheduling a single controller on overnight shifts at some airports, but especially at Reagan, which is in Arlington, Va., and just across the Potomac River from downtown Washington. “This is not a mom-andpop airport for small planes, and is in the vicinity of some very sensitive airspace,” Kay said. At least one congressional committee has launched its own investigation, and the issue is expected to be raised next week when the House takes up a bill to provide long-term authority for FAA programs. On Wednesday night, less than 24 hours after the incident, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood ordered a second controller be added to the overnight shift at Reagan.

About 30 other airports around the country also have a single controller on duty on the overnight shift. In some instances, the controllers work alone for only a part of the shift. FAA is examining whether staffing on those overnight shifts should be increased. On Friday, the safety board recommended to the FAA that it no longer allow air traf fic controllers to provide supervisory oversight while per for ming operational air traf fic duties. The recommendation wasn’t directly related to this week’s incident. But if FAA were to follow the board’s recommendation, the agency would effectively have to assign at least two people — a supervisor and a controller — to every shift. In a previous letter to FAA, NTSB Chairman Deb-

AP Photo

A passenger jet flies past the FAA control tower at Washington's Ronald Reagan National Airport, Thursday.

orah Hersman pointed to several previous airport accidents in which the air traffic supervisor on duty was also working as a con-

troller directing air traffic instead of being free to devote attention entirely to the supervising of controllers.


Census data will be available, eventually A4 Saturday, March 26, 2011

OPINION

A few days ago, the sweet young blonde woman newsreader gushed on the noon newscast that the Census has announced that New Mexico’s April 2010 population was just over two million. Actually this number, 2,059,179, was released three months ago. So much for television’s immediacy. The “news” that sunny March 15, which I think the blonde lady missed, was that the Census had done its first public release of a huge amount of New Mexico data. For those of you interested in this material and who also are, uh, “challenged” by getting there, here are some initial steps, offered because this ain’t easy, even perhaps for the unchallenged. On the Inter net, start with www.Census.gov. Then, from the left side menu, click on American FactFinder. There are two fact finders. The one on the left is for

EDITORIAL

HAROLD MORGAN

NEW MEXICO PROGRESS

the new stuf f. Click on http://factfinder2.census.gov/”fa ctfinder2.census.gov. This is easy to see. It’s in big blue letters. First, though, just below where it says, “factfinder2.census.gov,” a line in smaller type invites you to “Learn more about the new American FactFinder.” The first item in your learning experience is an “informational brochure.” Next you are invited to take a virtual tour, that is, to view a video stepping you through some of the FactFinder options. Clicking on this latest invitation brings the usual screen for the video

Roswell Daily Record

and, surprise, a transcript of the video. The transcript was welcome because my retention of the video’s detail would be about 20 seconds. FactFinder offers nine more videos, also with transcripts, that are called tutorials. One approach to using the videos and the transcripts, an oh-so-very90s tactic, would be to print the transcripts, punch holes in the pages and put them in a notebook. Then you would have what used to be called an operator’s manual. Or you could open two browser screens, one for the transcript and one for your data search and switch back and forth. My Macintosh has a twoscreen approach that I don’t quite understand. Following the introductory transcript, my usual pokingaround approach yielded county population for 2000. It downloaded nicely into an Excel file,

except that I didn’t care about data from 2000. To get back to the drawing board, I hit a “go back” arrow on FactFinder’s results page. It didn’t go back, so, after a minute, I forced the browser to quit and started over. This problem may have developed from getting into the old FactFinder. On the left side of FactFinder, you can select data options such as total population, race or ethnic origin for people and for a geographic area such as a state. A large number of “geographic filter options” are available, for example, “within American Indian area.” Then click on the table you want to see. A new screen appears offering options on how to view the table. I asked for “download.” A format options box asked about comma delimited (whatever that is), Excel or PDF. The table downloaded. I thought I

asked for county data, but I got place. That means I now know that of the 1,441 people living in the Berino CDP (Census Designated Place), a suburb of either Vado or Anthony, 1,418 are Hispanic. Berino is one of New Mexico’s 442 CDPs, towns, villages and cities with population counted. With seven people each, the Newkirk and White’s City CDPs seem tied for the smallest population. Statewide, New Mexico has 953,403 people calling themselves Hispanic, good for 46 percent of our 2.06 million folks. That makes us the national leader. This is good to know. It also is good to know that you can get somewhere with FactFinder. Eventually. © New Mexico News Services 2011

World Opinion On Japan’s crisis

What’s happening now in neighboring Japan is both unfamiliar and familiar to us: We are definitely not familiar with the 10meter wave that a tsunami could incur and we are not familiar with the formidable power that a nuclear plant could release in an instant. Yet we do instantly recognize the helpless eyes, the strong desire to live and the longing for a little warmth. Indeed, we have experienced similar disasters ourselves, in the Sichuan earthquake and in the Zhouqu landslide. We have suffered terrible losses, but our compassion for the lives of fellow human beings has been awakened like never before. To a certain extent, the tsunami in Japan is yet another, albeit different, test put before us. Bearing our recent history in mind, we often view each other with ambivalent attitudes, to say the least. But the candles lit, the vigils held and the tears shed for the ordinary lives have told a totally different story, which is particularly comforting. The Chinese government has also acted promptly in the most appropriate manner, sending out millions of dollars in emergency aid and a rescue team to help with Japan’s quake relief efforts. More is on the way. ... For us, there are no permanent enemies. If anything, there is perhaps only one: natural disasters. In times like these, no matter who you are and no matter what you are, there is only helplessness. In times like these, because of that, nothing is more significant and more precious than a human life. Guest Editorial China Daily, Beijing

The Libyan no-fly zone:

When Britain and France persuaded the U.N. to back a no-fly zone, it was in pursuit of a negative outcome: to prevent Moammar Gadhafi from massacring civilians in the rebel-held territories he was set to retake. That did not happen and it is a real gain — but because it is a negative one, it is difficult for the coalition to claim as a victory. The other gain is more intangible: the signal that intervention has sent out to other despots. The momentum of the revolutions in the Middle East continues, with fresh demonstrations now in Syria. The outcome of all this is far from certain, but had we not acted, the moral of Gadhafi’s victory would have been grim indeed. These are real achievements. Yet the opponents of intervention have a valid point when they identify the flaws and incoherence of the campaign. In the absence of a political solution, the long-term strategy remains unclear. It is also uncertain who, exactly, is in charge: the U.S. is militarily involved in the mission but has no desire to lead it. As Prime Minister David Cameron says, the best candidate to coordinate this loose alliance of the willing is NATO. ... We should, nonetheless, be prepared for the possibility that the no-fly zone will not be conclusive. But that is still preferable to Gadhafi having things his own way. Guest Editorial London Evening Standard DEAR DR. GOTT: This is a follow-up to your Q&A on cataracts that I read with interest. During the past two weeks, I had cataracts removed from both eyes and intraocular lenses implanted at the same time -- with no waiting. I had two other lens choices, neither covered by Medicare. Those were lenses enabling me to see without glasses at all, at several thousand dollars. For about $600, I could have chosen lenses that would require glasses for reading only; however, the main issue was the fact that there is no waiting for lens implant after removal of cataracts. DEAR DR. GOTT: I read your column advising surgery for cataracts. I was told several

It’s a grim prognosis for ObamaCare ED FEULNER THE HERITAGE FOUNDATION

Ever heard a doctor talk about the value of “early detection” with certain medical conditions? The idea, of course, is to catch a disorder before it progresses too far, and serious symptoms start to show. That’s when it’s harder to cure. Well, consider this an earlydetection warning for a piece of legislation that became law one year ago — the Patient Protection and Af fordable Care Act, or “ObamaCare.” Many of its most troubling

Doonesbury

ASK DR. GOTT UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE

years ago that I would soon need cataract surgery. I’m a wimp and don’t want to even think about surgery! I Googled cataract eyedrops and found a supplier. I’ve been using the drops for several years, and my doctor no longer even mentions surgery to me. He just says “keep on eating those carrots.” Used in Russia and China, eyedrops are effective

provisions haven’t taken ef fect. Indeed, it’s in legal limbo, having been declared unconstitutional by a federal district judge in a lawsuit brought by no fewer than 26 states. But some portions of the law are now active. And as Heritage health care expert Brian Blase points out in a new research paper, they’re beginning to inflict harm. Start with perhaps the most famous of the president’s claims about his health care “reform” — that if you were happy with your insurance, you didn’t have to worry; you could keep it. It would be “grandfathered in” and thus

80 percent of the time. The name of the product is Longevity Science’s Visual Ocuity. My husband had also been told that he needed the surgery, and he has also had great success with these drops. They dissolve the fatty deposits on the lens, and these become “floaters,” which come out in the corner of the eye. I hope this can help people avoid surgery. It sure has helped us. DEAR READERS: In response to the first reader, it’s extremely rewarding for me to put matters of eye health in the hands of a reputable, trusted ophthalmologist. After all, eyes are precious. We get only one pair. They’re not like bones that can break and heal

not subject to the law’s myriad new regulations and requirements. But that’s not how it’s working out. Health plans can be grandfathered in, all right, but only if they meet a variety of requirements. That’s not what Americans were promised. Plus, plans can lose their grandfathered status for making changes that aren’t deemed “reasonable” by the expanding federal bureaucracy. The Obama administration itself has estimated that 49 percent to 80 percent of smallemployer plans, 34 percent to 67 percent of large-employer

following a slip-and-fall accident. The cataract-removal procedure takes less than a half-hour and after a brief recuperation period while the local anesthetic wears off. It’s as if a magic button were pushed and a person is able to see again. In response to the second reader, I must admit I was not familiar with Visual Ocuity lubricant eyedrops. From what I’ve since read, they contain 1 percent N-Acetylcarnosine, a time-released form of naturally occurring dipeptide L-carnosine. The product is reported to be an antioxidant and antiglycating nutrient that helps improve or dissolve See GOTT, Page A5

plans, and 40 percent to 67 percent of individual insurance coverage won’t be grandfathered in by the end of 2013. If you like your health plan, well … sorry, but the odds are not in favor of you getting to keep it. Take another provision that may sound good at first: Under ObamaCare, health plans must spend a certain percentage of the premiums they receive paying claims and making quality improvements — at least 85 percent for large-group plans, and 80 per-

See FEULNER, Page A5

25 YEARS AGO

March 26, 1986

• The Mountain View Middle School choruses have elected new officers for the second semester of the 1985-86 school year. The new officers of the Mustang Singers are Thomas Sandles, president; Melissa Barrera, vice president; Teresa Jones, secretary; and Richard Johnson, librarian. Newly elected officers for Mixed Chorus are Janet Torres, president; Pat Steward, vice president; Rosie Buenrostro, secretary; and Paul Tolentino, librarian. The Girls Chorus elected Lupe Garcia, president,; Debbie Lopez, vice president; Ami Armstrong, secretary; and Renee Bogschutz, librarian.


LOCAL

Heel pain has many causes Roswell Daily Record

JEFFREY ASH, DPM EASTERN NEW MEXICO MEDICAL CENTER

We’ve all heard the expression about walking a mile in someone else’s shoes — and considering the amount of time spent on our feet, those miles can add up. According to the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons, every mile we walk places 60 tons of stress on each foot. It’s not surprising that many of us develop foot problems. The most common ailment affecting the foot and ankle area is heel pain. Heel pain has many causes: overuse, such as a heavy amount of running or other highimpact exercise, or standing for long periods of time; an injury to the bottom of the foot; being overweight; or anatomical problems, such as flat feet or a very high arch. Other possible causes include arthritis, osteoporosis, tendonitis, a stress fracture, nerve irritation or a cyst. Heel pain occurs in two areas — pain beneath the heel and pain behind the heel. Pain beneath the heel happens after a strain or injury to the tissues underneath the foot. Some common causes are a stone bruise, a heel spur and plantar fasciitis. A stone bruise is the result of stepping on a hard or sharp object, bruising the fat pad underneath your heel. As we age and lose the cushiony tissue in certain areas, they cannot absorb as much shock from walking or sports activity. Plantar fasciitis refers to inflammation of the band of tissue on the bottom of the foot that stretches from the heel to the toes. This type of injury also occurs more often as we age, or become less active and tissue becomes less flexible. However, the most common cause of plantar fasciitis is the structure of the foot itself; people with very high arches or flat feet are particularly prone to plantar fasciitis. Symptoms include pain on the bottom of the heel, pain that worsens when you stand and pain that increases over time instead of improving. If plantar fasciitis persists over a long period of time, a calcium deposit, also known as a heel spur, can form where the tissue connects to your heel bone. Pain behind the heel is frequently due to inflammation of the area where the

Feulner

Continued from Page A4

cent for plans in individual and smallgroup markets. Otherwise, they have to rebate the difference to their members. A year later, what do we find? Numerous insurance companies leaving the market altogether, giving all of us fewer choices to pick from. One such company, Principal Financial Group, provided insurance to more 800,000 people. As Joshua Raskin, an analyst at Barclays Capital, has noted, it “is harder and harder for smaller plans to compete in a more regulated environment.” Then there are mandates ObamaCare places on insurance plans. For example, Blase writes, “No insurance plan can now limit lifetime benefits, and group plans cannot have annual benefit limits.” The all-too-predictable result? Significantly higher premiums. According to Regence BlueCross BlueShield of Oregon, 3.4 percentage points of its recent 17.1 percent rate increase is due to

Gott

Continued from Page A4

cataracts, as well as assisting with dry eyes and other conditions. A 2008 study that appeared in the Royal Journal of Opthalmology could not find safety or efficacy in the product, however. Visual Ocuity is available in eyedrop or capsule form. Another information site indicated the product contains 1 percent glycerin and hydroxypropyl methylcellusose, sterile water, the NAC listed above, boric acid, citric acid, potassium bicarbonate and purified benzyl alcohol as a preservative. And there you have it. I urge readers to speak with their eye specialists to be assured that any decision they make -- whether it is surgical, the use of herbs, prescription or overthe-counter drugs or anything in between -- be discussed before it is implemented. Therefore, I am passing the information on from both readers as we all want to be able to make the right choice. What may be correct for one person may not be correct for another. Pardon the pun, but we all see things differently. Thank you both for writing. DEAR DR. GOTT: In my mid-40s, I started getting little red dots on my arms, legs and trunk. My doctor called them cherry angiomas. They are becoming quite numerous and are growing larger. Is this simply a cosmetic inconvenience or something significant? DEAR READER: A cherry angioma is a benign growth composed of small

Achilles tendon attaches to the heel bone. Overuse — running too much — or wearing shoes that don’t fit well and rub the back of the heel often causes pain. Typically, pain increases gradually, along with thickened, red and swollen skin at the site of inflammation and a bone spur may develop. You may notice pain at night or while you are resting, or pain that flares when you first start an activity after being still. Sometimes the pain is so intense that you are unable to wear shoes. You can alleviate the pain by wearing open back shoes, using a heel lift, taking over-thecounter pain medication and doing certain foot stretches. Some foot pain can be treated at home with some simple remedies, including: • Over -the-counter pain medication, such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen • Applying ice to the heel area for 20 minutes, several times a day, to reduce inflammation • Performing certain stretching exercises that promote flexibility in calf muscles and the Achilles heel area • Wearing supportive shoes with a good arch support, or wearing a heel insert in your shoe (also called orthotics) to cushion the area and correct any anatomical issues such as arch problems • Avoid going barefoot A doctor who specializes in the care and treatment of foot disorders can diagnose the source of heel pain and design a treatment plan. This might be a podiatrist, an orthopedic doctor, a rheumatologist, or a foot and ankle surgeon. If lifestyle modifications, stretching exercises and pain medication do not bring relief, your doctor may recommend wearing splints or taping your foot at night for stability, corticosteroid injections or, in a few cases, surgery. To learn more, visit www.enmmc.com. ObamaCare. Celtic Insurance Company in Wisconsin and North Carolina blames the law for half of its 18 percent rate increase.

And this is only the beginning. Many more regulations are to come. Yet even administration officials, at this early date, can’t keep up with it all. They’ve issued more than 1,000 waivers to exempt companies trying their best to cooperate with this legislative octopus.

As I’ve pointed out before, fixing the law isn’t an option. Market-based health care reform simply can’t be reconciled with ObamaCare, which is a massive system of central planning. We need health care reform, to be sure, but it needs to be based on personal choice and free markets.

That can’t be done until members of Congress swallow what some may find to be a bitter pill: Repeal ObamaCare. If not, next year’s diagnosis is sure to be worse. Ed Feulner is president of The Heritage Foundation (heritage.org).

dilated blood vessels that appears as a smooth red skin lesion -- thus the name. On rare occasions, a dark brown/black color may be present, giving the potential appearance of a malignant melanoma. While there doesn’t appear to be any connection to race or the sex of an individual, light-skinned older people are more inclined to have them. Lesions can appear anywhere on the body but are commonly found on the trunk. Treatment is recommended only when the lesions are undesirable from a cosmetic point of view. Options can include cryotherapy, curettage and electrodesiccation or shave excision. If you haven’t already, see a dermatologist for a complete examination of the lesions to be certain there are no malignancies and to discuss if the possibility of removal is best for you. Most cherry angiomas do not require treatment. Readers who would like related information can order my Health Report “Medical Specialists” by sending a selfaddressed stamped No. 10 envelope and a $2 check or money order made payable to Newsletter and mailed to Newsletter, P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH 44092-0167. Be sure to mention the title. Dr. Peter H. Gott is a retired physician and the author of several books, including “Live Longer, Live Better,” “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Diet” and “Dr. Gott’s No Flour, No Sugar Cookbook,” which are available at most bookstores or online. His website is www.AskDrGottMD.com.

ROSWELL DAILY RECORD

CALL 622-7710

Saturday, March 26, 2011

A5


A6 Saturday, March 26, 2011

NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE

Div Last Chg DirxSCBull ... 82.37 +2.02 Discover .24f u24.00 +.14 A-B-C Disney .40f 42.97 +.11 ACE Ltd 1.32e 62.37 +.23 DowChm .60 37.15 +.39 AES Corp ... 12.71 +.14 DuPont 1.64 54.10 +.42 AFLAC 1.20 52.65 -.42 DukeEngy .98 17.82 -.05 AK Steel .20 15.63 +.20 Dynegy rs ... 5.78 -.26 AMR ... 6.50 -.01 ECDang n ... 20.11 +.83 ... 27.33 +.28 AT&T Inc 1.72 28.85 +.31 EMC Cp AbtLab 1.92f 48.03 -.08 EOG Res .64fu117.54+1.99 ... 3.40 +.27 AberFitc .70 56.77 +.53 EKodak Accenture .90f u54.29 +2.33 Eaton s 1.36f 54.01 +.59 EdisonInt 1.28 36.62 -.13 AccretvH n ... 26.05 +1.80 AMD ... 8.88 +.05 EdwLfSci s ... 88.50 +3.10 ElPasoCp .04 17.96 +.22 Aeropostl ... 24.23 +.04 ... 6.80 +.31 Aetna .60f 36.79 +.35 Elan Agilent ... 44.04 +.13 EldorGld g .10f 16.27 +.14 Agrium g .11 89.46 +.13 Embraer .64e 32.80 -2.26 AlcatelLuc ... 5.34 +.01 EmersonEl 1.38 57.82 +.19 Alcoa .12 17.09 -.02 EnCana g .80 34.64 +.32 Alcon 3.95e 166.39 +.23 EndvrInt rs ... 11.52 +.12 Allstate .84f 31.46 -.09 EndvSilv g ... 9.29 -.04 AlphaNRs ... 60.05 +.40 ENSCO 1.40 u57.99 -.19 Altria 1.52 25.82 -.11 ExcoRes .16 20.28 +.01 AMovilL .52e 56.20 -.14 Exelon 2.10 40.59 -.42 AmAxle ... 13.16 +.38 ExxonMbl 1.76 83.62 +.89 AEagleOut .44a 15.50 -.07 FairchldS ... 18.26 +.28 AEP 1.84 34.71 -.10 FedExCp .48 90.28 -.51 AmExp .72 45.59 ... FibriaCelu ... 15.71 +.11 AmIntlGrp ... 36.53 +.21 FstAFin n .24 16.63 +.11 AmTower ... 49.64 +.57 FstHorizon .04 11.29 +.15 Ameriprise .72 60.86 +.60 FT Fincl .19e 15.16 +.06 AmeriBrgn .40 u39.29 +.23 FirstEngy 2.20 36.54 -.04 .50 73.99 +.40 Anadarko .36 u82.88 +.90 Fluor Annaly 2.62e 18.12 +.02 FootLockr .66f 19.86 +.63 ... 15.01 -.03 Apache .60 125.94 +1.05 FordM ... 37.54 +1.56 ArcelorMit .75 35.75 -.44 ForestOil ArchCoal .40 35.29 -.45 FMCG s 1.00a 54.55 +.21 ArchDan .64f 35.30 -.77 FrontierCm .75 8.09 -.05 Avon .92f 27.43 ... FrontierOil.24a 28.62 +1.61 BB&T Cp .64f 27.07 +.40 G-H-I BHP BillLt1.82e 90.67 -.59 ... 5.85 +.32 BHPBil plc1.82e 75.30 -.96 GMX Rs BP PLC .42e 46.87 +.06 GameStop ... 21.72 -.01 BRFBrasil s.18eu18.79 +.16 GamGld g ... 9.89 -.19 BakrHu .60 71.08 -.24 Gannett .16 15.14 +.21 .45f 22.56 +.02 BcoBrades .82r 19.33 -.14 Gap BcoSantSA.79e 11.94 -.22 GenElec .56 19.75 -.03 BcoSBrasil .70e 11.86 -.21 GenGrPr n ... 15.14 -.02 BkofAm .04 13.34 -.14 GenMarit .04m 2.12 +.09 BkNYMel .52f 29.45 +.19 GenMills s 1.12 36.50 -.05 Barclay .35e 18.67 -.33 GenMot n ... 31.47 +.08 Bar iPVix rs ... 30.37 -.04 GenOn En ... 3.80 -.02 BarrickG .48 51.51 -.10 Genworth ... 13.07 +.11 Baxter 1.24 52.92 -.17 Gerdau .25e 12.28 -.14 Belo ... 8.49 +.93 GlaxoSKln2.04e 37.72 +.09 BerkH B ... 85.24 +.08 GolLinhas .40e 13.57 +.03 BestBuy .60 d29.22 -.91 GoldFLtd .19e 16.82 -.21 Blackstone .40 u18.74 +.18 Goldcrp g .41f 48.90 +.03 BlockHR .60 16.56 +.09 GoldmanS 1.40 157.97 -1.94 Boeing 1.68 73.34 +.58 Goodyear ... 15.45 +.36 BorgWarn ... 77.28 +1.57 GrafTech ... 20.22 -.01 BostonSci ... 7.21 +.11 Gramrcy ... 4.39 +.47 .80a 39.23 +1.21 BoydGm ... 9.46 +.13 Guess Brandyw .60 11.72 +.05 HCA Hld n ... 32.95 +.26 BrMySq 1.32 27.29 +.86 HCP Inc 1.92f 36.73 -.06 BrkfldPrp .56 17.31 +.13 HSBC 1.80e 52.04 -.03 Brunswick .05 u25.41 +1.53 Hallibrtn .36 46.04 +.07 CB REllis ... u27.19 -.64 HarmonyG .07e 14.10 -.29 CBS B .20 u24.67 -.42 HartfdFn .40f 26.72 +.10 CF Inds .40 132.10 +6.28 HltCrREIT 2.76 51.31 +.56 ... u10.62 +.21 CMS Eng .84 19.13 +.03 HltMgmt ... 36.60 -1.37 CSX 1.04 u79.16 +.20 HlthSprg ... 8.98 -.14 CVR Engy ... u22.16 +.98 HeclaM Heinz 1.80 48.64 +.12 CVS Care .50 33.89 -.11 ... u16.68 -.24 CablvsnNY .50 34.85 -.01 HelixEn ... 16.29 +.07 Cameco g .40f 31.17 +.19 Hertz .40 84.36 +2.21 Cameron ... 59.08 +.31 Hess CdnNRs gs .36f 48.72 -.25 HewlettP .32 42.53 -.57 CapOne .20 52.23 +.37 HomeDp 1.00f 37.42 +.06 ... 36.81 -1.19 CapitlSrce .04 7.07 +.06 Honda CapsteadM1.52eu13.33 +.01 HonwllIntl 1.33f 57.39 -.34 CardnlHlth .78 41.32 +.60 HostHotls .08f 17.71 ... CareFusion ... 27.88 +.61 HovnanE ... 3.62 -.13 CarMax ... 33.01 +.54 Huntsmn .40 17.75 +1.01 Carnival 1.00f 38.78 -.25 IAMGld g .08f 22.50 -.47 Caterpillar 1.76u109.09 +.72 ICICI Bk .53e 47.74 -.38 Cemex .43t 8.81 +.12 iShGold s ... 13.95 +.01 Cemig pf 1.19e 18.34 +.18 iSAstla .82e 25.77 +.11 CenterPnt .79f u17.13 -.04 iShBraz 2.53e 75.26 +.06 .50e 33.13 -.18 CntryLink 2.90 40.97 +.28 iSCan ChesEng .30 34.24 +.36 iShGer .29e 25.33 -.17 Chevron 2.88u106.78+1.40 iSh HK .45e 18.51 -.01 .20f 14.09 -.01 iShJapn .14e 10.33 -.26 Chicos Chimera .66e 4.19 ... iSh Kor .44e 62.13 +.76 Citigrp ... 4.46 +.03 iShMex .54e 61.13 -.33 CliffsNRs .56 94.41 -.47 iShSing .43e 13.45 +.05 Coach .60 52.02 +.42 iSTaiwn .29e 14.73 +.00 ... 36.39 +.27 CocaCola 1.88f 65.22 +.53 iShSilver CocaCE .48 26.50 -.11 iShChina25.63e 43.67 +.04 Coeur ... 34.54 -.13 iSSP500 2.46e 131.73 +.39 ColgPal 2.32f 80.15 -.15 iShEMkts .64e 47.34 -.05 Comerica .40 36.79 -.04 iShB20 T 3.86e 92.17 -.23 CmclMtls .48 16.53 +.39 iS Eafe 1.42e 59.38 -.66 CompPrdS ... 31.01 +.97 iSR1KG .76e 59.82 +.20 ConAgra .92 23.83 +.43 iShR2K .89e 82.22 +.71 ConocPhil 2.64f 80.24 +.54 iShREst 1.98e 58.02 +.30 1.36 54.97 -.03 ConsolEngy .40 55.48 -.01 ITW ConstellA ... 19.42 +.35 Imax Corp ... 31.71 +1.72 IngerRd .28 48.18 +.18 ConstellEn .96 31.03 -.07 2.60 162.18 +2.14 .20 21.46 +.11 IBM Corning ... 11.05 +.18 CovantaH .30 16.95 -.19 Intl Coal Covidien .80 51.95 +.08 IntlGame .24 16.50 +.02 .75f 27.79 +.49 CrwnCstle ... 40.28 +.24 IntPap Cummins 1.05 104.54 +.77 Interpublic .24 12.10 +.11 .44 25.62 -.31 CurEuro .01e 140.17 -.96 Invesco .75 30.99 -.16 CypSharp 2.40 12.87 +.05 IronMtn ItauUnibH .67e 22.49 -.16 D-E-F J-K-L DCT Indl .28 5.28 +.01 DR Horton .15 12.04 +.25 JPMorgCh1.00f 45.86 +.13 .28 21.28 -.14 Danaher s .08 51.91 +.34 Jabil Darden 1.28 45.63 -2.38 JanusCap .04 12.18 +.04 DeanFds ... 10.50 +.23 JohnJn 2.16 58.98 -.05 Deere 1.40 94.24 +1.01 JohnsnCtl .64 41.40 +.14 DeltaAir ... 9.80 -.21 JnprNtwk ... 40.90 +.08 DenburyR ... 24.17 +.15 KB Home .25 13.36 +.12 .52e 17.84 +.20 DevonE .68f 93.01 +.25 KKR n DiaOffs .50a 78.56 +.23 KV PhmA ... 8.97 -.50 KeyEngy ... 15.55 +.46 DrxTcBll s1.35e 47.22 +.29 DrSCBr rs ... d37.71 -1.03 Keycorp .04 8.72 +.06 DirFnBr rs ... 41.09 -.31 KimbClk 2.80f 65.10 -.14 .72 17.75 +.07 DirLCBr rs ... 36.80 -.38 Kimco DrxEMBll s .84e 38.14 -.09 KindMor n ... d29.52 -.53 Kinross g .10 16.07 -.40 DrxEBear rs ... d14.03 -.43 1.00 53.50 +.57 DrxFBull s ... 29.68 +.23 Kohls Name

Sell Chg Name Amer Beacon Insti: LgCapInst 20.39 +.04 Amer Beacon Inv: LgCap Inv 19.36 +.03 Amer Century Inv: EqInc 7.37 +.02 GrowthI 26.99 +.08 Ultra 23.69 +.08 American Funds A: AmcpA p 19.67 +.05 AMutlA p 26.15 +.07 BalA p 18.53 +.04 BondA p 12.18 -.02 CapIBA p 50.62 +.02 CapWGA p36.58 -.05 CapWA p 20.56 -.06 EupacA p 42.18 -.14 FdInvA p 38.60 +.11 GovtA p 13.84 -.03 GwthA p 31.72 +.10 HI TrA p 11.49 -.01 IncoA p 17.06 +.01 IntBdA p 13.39 -.02 IntlGrIncA p32.06 -.09 ICAA p 29.04 +.05 NEcoA p 26.20 +.05 N PerA p 29.40 -.04 NwWrldA 54.23 -.03 SmCpA p 39.23 +.08 TxExA p 11.77 ... WshA p 28.45 +.12 Artio Global Funds: IntlEqI r 30.35 -.01 IntlEqA 29.61 -.01 IntEqII I r 12.54 ... Artisan Funds: Intl 22.23 -.10 IntlVal r 27.57 -.13 MidCap 35.26 +.17

MidCapVal21.85 +.07 SCapVal 18.09 +.16 Baron Funds: Growth 54.89 +.38 SmallCap 25.64 +.23 Bernstein Fds: IntDur 13.73 -.02 DivMu 14.27 ... TxMgdIntl 15.76 -.16 BlackRock A: EqtyDiv 18.44 +.06 GlAlA r 19.93 -.01 BlackRock B&C: GlAlC t 18.58 -.02 BlackRock Instl: EquityDv 18.48 +.06 GlbAlloc r 20.02 -.02 Calamos Funds: GrwthA p 55.96 +.26 Columbia Class A: Acorn t 30.18 +.19 DivEqInc 10.52 +.03 DivrBd 5.02 -.01 SelComm A46.17 -.01 Columbia Class Z: Acorn Z 31.18 +.19 AcornIntZ 40.93 -.23 ValRestr 52.75 +.27 Credit Suisse Comm: ComRet t 9.77 +.02 DFA Funds: IntlCorEq n11.57 -.09 USCorEq1 n11.61+.05 USCorEq2 n11.64+.07 DWS Invest S: MgdMuni S 8.62 ... Davis Funds A: NYVen A 35.54 +.07 Davis Funds C & Y: NYVenY 35.93 +.07

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

CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Apr 11 118.02 118.65 115.70 118.60 Jun 11 117.40 117.77 114.77 117.75 Aug 11 118.50 119.30 116.25 119.25 Oct 11 121.77 122.77 120.07 122.60 Dec 11 123.10 123.40 120.50 123.40 Feb 12 122.55 123.25 120.45 123.25 Apr 12 122.72 123.30 120.75 122.30 Jun 12 119.65 119.70 117.75 118.30 Aug 12 116.50 118.50 116.50 118.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 77163. Thu’s Sales: 41,170 Thu’s open int: 363616, up +2609 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Mar 11 131.90 132.40 130.05 131.90 Apr 11 134.72 135.62 132.42 134.85 May 11 136.12 137.07 133.82 137.05 Aug 11 138.85 139.00 135.85 138.52 Sep 11 138.10 138.10 135.47 137.90 Oct 11 137.32 137.95 135.00 137.45 Nov 11 137.50 137.50 134.95 137.10 Jan 12 132.02 133.50 132.02 133.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 6176. Thu’s Sales: 3,675 Thu’s open int: 41473, up +188 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Apr 11 92.60 93.15 90.32 92.47 May 11 101.25 101.85 99.60 101.72 Jun 11 103.57 103.72 101.25 103.70 Jul 11 102.45 102.70 101.10 102.67 Aug 11 101.87 102.00 100.70 102.00 Oct 11 91.00 91.50 90.20 91.45 Dec 11 86.85 87.40 86.00 87.32 Feb 12 87.30 87.32 86.35 87.00 Apr 12 86.95 88.02 86.95 87.90 May 12 91.00 91.50 91.00 91.25 Jun 12 93.10 94.00 93.00 93.60 Jul 12 91.25 92.00 91.25 91.85 Last spot N/A Est. sales 45075. Thu’s Sales: 17,310

chg.

+2.78 +2.98 +2.78 +2.63 +2.83 +2.60 +1.80 +1.60 +3.00

+1.10 +2.23 +2.98 +2.40 +2.50 +2.25 +2.10 +1.50

+2.15 +2.12 +2.53 +1.72 +1.40 +1.18 +1.20 +.70 +.60 +1.05 +1.00 +.35

M-N-0

MBIA ... 10.38 -.07 MEMC ... 12.91 -.03 MFA Fncl .94f 8.22 +.01 MGIC ... 8.75 -.15 MGM Rsts ... 13.22 +.12 Macys .20 23.43 +.37 Manitowoc .08 21.14 -.23 MarathonO1.00 51.70 +.97 MktVGold .40e 59.52 -.47 MktVRus .18e 41.64 +.04 MktVJrGld2.93e 38.62 -.46 MarIntA .35 37.66 +.46 MarshM .84 29.80 +.31 MarshIls .04 7.76 -.10 Masco .30 14.17 +.02 MasseyEn .24 u68.23 +.51 McDnlds 2.44 75.25 +.32 McKesson .72 79.59 -.14 McMoRn ... 18.45 +.79 MedcoHlth ... 53.72 +1.48 Medtrnic .90 38.36 +.14 Merck 1.52 32.57 -.15 MetLife .74 45.05 +.37 MetroPCS ... 15.54 -.24 MindrayM .30e 25.80 -.39 MitsuUFJ ... 4.85 -.01 MobileTel s ... 21.46 -.02 Molycorp n ... 54.47 -.81 Monsanto 1.12 70.76 +.24 MonstrWw ... 15.58 -.13 Moodys .46f 33.03 +.40 MorgStan .20 27.13 -.48 Mosaic .20 78.82 +1.27 MotrlaSol n ... 43.95 -.51 NRG Egy ... 21.33 +.19 NYSE Eur 1.20 34.48 -.60 Nabors ... u29.57 +.69 NOilVarco .44 80.65 +.45 NatSemi .40 14.35 -.07 NY CmtyB 1.00 17.25 -.05 Newcastle ... 6.07 +.12 NewellRub .20 19.52 +.31 NewmtM .60 53.96 -.56 Nexen g .20 24.81 +.31 NikeB 1.24 76.66 -.07 NobleCorp .98e 45.14 +.34 NokiaCp .55e 8.35 -.10 Nomura ... 5.38 -.11 Nordstrm .92f 43.60 -.02 NorflkSo 1.60f u68.68 +.93 Novartis 2.53e 55.43 +.08 Nucor 1.45 46.56 +.19 OcciPet 1.84f 100.85 +1.06 OfficeDpt ... 4.84 -.01 OilSvHT 2.42e 159.36 -.62 Omnicom 1.00f 47.79 +.34

P-Q-R

PG&E Cp 1.82 43.90 +.23 PMI Grp ... 2.85 +.20 PNC .40 61.77 +.36 PPL Corp 1.40 24.57 +.11 PatriotCoal ... 25.40 +.18 PeabdyE .34 u72.63 +.14 Penney .80 37.03 +.40 PepsiCo 1.92 63.98 -.22 Petrohawk ... 23.25 +.57 PetrbrsA 1.41e 35.24 +.31 Petrobras 1.41e 40.62 +.48 .80f u20.35 +.05 Pfizer PhilipMor 2.56 u65.12 +.60 PitnyBw 1.48f 25.18 +.55 PlainsEx ... 36.32 +.34 Potash s .28f 57.23 +1.32 PwshDB ... 30.32 +.08 PS Agri ... 34.15 +.22 PS USDBull ... 21.88 +.14 PrideIntl ... u42.97 +.03 ProShtS&P ... 41.59 -.13 PrUShS&P ... 21.33 -.14 ProUltQQQ ... 88.17 +.22 PrUShQQQ rs... 52.04 -.28 ProUltSP .39e 52.27 +.33 PrUShtFn rs ... 58.38 -.30 ProUShL20 ... 37.42 +.22 ProUltR2K .01e 47.00 +.80 ProUSSP500 ... 16.43 -.15 ProUSSlv rs ... 23.93 -.29 ProctGam 1.93 60.88 -.26 ProgsvCp 1.40e 20.87 ... ProLogis .45 15.49 +.10 ProUSR2K rs ... d43.82 -.82 Prudentl 1.15f 61.02 +.08 PSEG 1.37 31.09 -.08 PulteGrp ... 7.57 +.15 QntmDSS ... 2.47 -.01 Questar s .61f 17.47 +.25 QksilvRes ... 13.86 -.04 QwestCm .32 6.79 +.03 .28f u23.99 +.86 RPC s Rackspace ... 38.54 +.74 RadianGrp .01 6.74 +.10 RadioShk .25 14.30 +.24 RangeRs .16 u56.72 +1.72 RedHat ... 46.34 -.92 RegalEnt .84a 13.65 -.08 RegionsFn .04 7.18 +.05 ReneSola ... 9.00 -.04 RepubSvc .80 29.87 +.31 ResrceCap1.00 6.91 -.23 RetailHT 2.04e 105.23 -.50 ReynAm s 2.12f u35.20 +.24 RioTinto s1.08e 68.27 -.32 RiteAid ... 1.05 +.01 RobtHalf .56f 29.73 +.31 Rowan ... 41.35 -.37 RylCarb ... 41.59 -.35 RoyDShllB 3.36 73.02 +.67 RoyDShllA 3.36 72.70 +.46

NYVen C 34.31 +.06 Delaware Invest A: Diver Inc p 9.21 -.01 Dimensional Fds: EmMCrEq n21.73 +.03 EmMktV 35.59 +.01 IntSmVa n 17.93 -.10 LargeCo 10.36 +.04 USLgVa n 21.73 +.12 US Micro n14.50 +.11 US Small n22.70 +.18 US SmVa 27.26 +.24 IntlSmCo n17.62 -.12 Fixd n 10.33 ... IntVa n 19.01 -.17 Glb5FxInc n10.92 -.01 2YGlFxd n 10.17 ... Dodge&Cox: Balanced 73.29 +.09 Income 13.39 -.01 IntlStk 36.17 -.16 Stock 113.39 +.20 DoubleLine Funds: TRBd I 11.05 ... Dreyfus: Aprec 39.97 +.11 Eaton Vance A: LgCpVal 18.61 +.05 Eaton Vance I: FltgRt 9.07 ... GblMacAbR10.18 +.01 LgCapVal 18.66 +.05 FMI Funds: LgCap p 16.21 +.02 FPA Funds: NwInc 10.94 ... FPACres n27.83 -.01 Fairholme 34.70 -.06 Federated Instl: KaufmnR 5.48 ...

CATTLE/HOGS Open high

Kraft 1.16 31.26 -.02 Kroger .42 23.70 -.17 LDK Solar ... 11.25 -.19 LSI Corp ... u6.94 +.02 LVSands ... 42.56 +.62 LennarA .16 20.03 +.16 1.96 34.48 -.12 LillyEli Limited .80f 32.28 +.21 .20 30.32 +.24 LincNat LloydBkg ... 3.81 -.07 LockhdM 3.00 80.37 -.43 Lorillard 5.20f 94.74 +1.01 Lowes .44 27.19 -.09 Lubrizol 1.44 133.75 +.05

FINANCIAL S-T-U

SAIC ... 16.68 -.36 SAP AG .82e 60.24 +.33 SLM Cp ... 14.98 +.22 SpdrDJIA 2.98e 121.96 +.50 SpdrGold ... 139.26 +.04 SP Mid 1.55e 176.02 +1.29 S&P500ETF2.34e131.30+.40 SpdrHome .31e 18.25 +.12 SpdrKbwBk.15e 25.71 +.11 SpdrLehHY4.51e 40.40 -.02 SpdrLe1-3bll ... 45.85 ... SpdrKbw RB.36e 25.85 +.11 SpdrRetl .50e 49.93 +.47 SpdrOGEx .49e u63.13 +1.22 SpdrMetM .41e 73.03 +.05 Safeway .48 22.69 -.14 StJude .84 50.80 -.62 Saks ... 11.46 +.16 Salesforce ... 127.45 -1.80 SandRdge ... u12.13 +.43 Sanofi 1.63e 34.60 +.14 SaraLee .46 17.84 +.04 Schlmbrg 1.00f 86.89 -1.21 Schwab .24 18.09 +.02 SemiHTr .55e 34.57 +.03 SenHous 1.48 22.41 +.09 ShawGrp ... 35.67 +.52 SiderNac s .58e 16.27 +.01 SilvWhtn g .12 43.80 +.32 SilvrcpM g .08 14.08 -.21 SmithfF ... u24.44 +.47 Solutia ... 24.24 +.97 SouthnCo 1.82 37.58 +.04 SthnCopper1.83e41.27 -.73 SwstAirl .02 12.68 +.14 SwstnEngy ... 43.49 +.43 SpectraEn 1.04f 27.09 +.36 SprintNex ... 4.68 +.12 SP Matls 1.23e 39.23 +.21 SP HlthC .61e 32.67 +.09 SP CnSt .81e 29.69 ... SP Consum.56e 38.82 +.07 SP Engy 1.05e 78.69 +.70 SPDR Fncl .16e 16.34 +.05 SP Inds .64e 37.10 +.13 SP Tech .33e 25.88 +.06 SP Util 1.31e 31.39 -.01 StdPac ... 3.81 +.05 StarwdHtl .30f 58.74 +.93 StateStr .72f 44.04 -.04 Statoil ASA1.10e 27.57 -.39 Steelcse .24f 10.78 +.20 Suncor gs .40 44.98 +.13 Sunoco .60 u46.23 +1.30 Suntech ... 8.92 +.05 SunTrst .04 29.21 +.10 Supvalu .35 8.84 +.18 Synovus .04 2.47 -.03 Sysco 1.04 27.86 -.04 TCF Fncl .20 15.24 -.03 TaiwSemi .47e 12.24 -.04 Talbots ... 5.94 +.05 TalismE g .25 24.31 +.54 Target 1.00 49.95 -.66 TataMotors.32e 26.98 +.36 TeckRes g .60f 53.70 -1.02 TelNorL 1.65e 17.48 +.72 TenetHlth ... 7.22 +.12 Teradata ... u51.14 +.74 Teradyn ... 18.06 -.02 Tesoro ... u26.57 +.55 TexInst .52 34.64 -.22 Textron .08 27.01 -.30 ThermoFis ... 54.39 +.20 ThomCrk g ... 12.57 +.01 3M Co 2.20f 92.27 -.31 Tiffany 1.00 60.00 +.40 TW Cable 1.92f 70.67 +.39 TimeWarn .94f 35.30 -.33 TitanMet ... 18.10 +.39 Total SA 3.16e 59.93 -.48 Transocn ... 78.16 -2.09 Travelers 1.44 58.98 +.15 TycoIntl 1.00f 44.79 +.01 Tyson .16 19.82 +.21 UBS AG ... 18.21 -.34 US Airwy ... 9.02 +.16 US Gold ... 8.48 -.06 UnilevNV 1.12e 30.93 +.10 UnionPac 1.52 97.59 +2.22 UtdContl ... 23.51 +.02 UPS B 2.08f 72.04 -.06 US Bancrp .50f 26.92 +.24 US NGs rs ... 11.80 +.47 US OilFd ... 42.18 +.13 USSteel .20 55.02 +.37 UtdTech 1.70 83.52 +.76 UtdhlthGp .50 43.75 -.05

V-W-X-Y-Z

Vale SA .76e 32.34 -.02 Vale SA pf .76e 28.59 -.10 ValeroE .20 29.93 +1.14 VangTSM1.29e 67.86 +.25 VangEmg .82e 47.79 ... VerizonCm 1.95 37.29 +.11 ViacomB .60 44.90 -.21 VimpelC n .65e 13.92 -.13 Visa .60 72.09 -.57 VishayInt ... 17.79 +.14 VivoPart .84e u39.40 +.59 VMware ... 81.04 -.39 WalMart 1.46f 52.35 -.24 Walgrn .70 39.64 -.31 WalterEn .50 125.94 +3.67 WsteMInc 1.36f 37.08 -.09 WeathfIntl ... 20.87 +.04 WellPoint 1.00 u69.34 +.57 WellsFargo.20a 31.94 +.40 WendyArby .08 4.99 -.06 WDigital ... 37.39 +1.30 WstnRefin ... 17.03 +.58 WstnUnion .28 21.76 +.04 Weyerh .60f 24.22 -.11 WmsCos .50 u31.13 +.48 WT India .15e 23.91 +.10 Wyndham .60f 31.82 +.59 XL Grp .44f 23.12 +.18 Xerox .17 10.67 +.41 Yamana g .12a 12.32 -.29 YingliGrn ... 12.15 -.01 Youku n ... u49.99 +4.19 YumBrnds 1.00 51.84 -.06

COTTON

NEW YORK(AP) - Cotton No. 2 futures on the N.Y. Cotton Exchange Friday: Open high low settle chg. COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. May 11 206.00 211.16 202.63 204.49 -4.33 Jul 11 198.16 203.25 195.23 197.11 -3.38 Oct 11 152.50 154.51 152.50 154.51 +.76 Dec 11 127.25 128.10 125.25 127.92 +.11 Mar 12 121.00 121.25 118.40 120.69 -.09 May 12 114.50 114.84 113.00 114.84 +.56 Jul 12 109.83 109.89 109.10 109.82 +1.20 Oct 12 99.90 +.85 Dec 12 98.95 99.11 98.95 99.11 +.16 Mar 13 102.02 +.07 Last spot N/A Est. sales 8852. Thu’s Sales: 27,798 Thu’s open int: 177933, up +1721

GRAINS

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

low settle

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 11 732ø 753 726ø 733ü Jul 11 767ø 787ü 762 768fl Sep 11 804 822fl 799ø 806ø

chg.

-6ü -6 -6

MARKET SUMMARY

NYSE

AMEX

NASDAQ NATIONAL MARKET

NASDAQ

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE) MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Name Vol (00) Last Chg Citigrp 2962345 4.46 +.03 S&P500ETF1274227131.30+.40 BkofAm 1112873 13.34 -.14 iShR2K 675657 82.22 +.71 iShJapn 620042 10.33 -.26

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

%Chg +13.9 +12.8 +12.3 +12.0 +9.1

Name Vol (00) Hyperdyn 177466 KodiakO g 44192 DenisnM g 36107 GtPanSilv g 33081 NthnO&G 29271

Last 5.19 6.90 2.73 4.30 27.30

Name Vol (00) Last PwShs QQQ68506756.84 Oracle 622214 32.64 Microsoft 564571 25.62 Cisco 519957 17.28 Intel 518224 20.37

Chg -.82 +.16 +.03 +.02 +1.03

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Chg +.32 +.65 +.93 +.47 +4.19

Name SchMau Synnex BarcShtD Embraer BrkfldH

Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg Name -4.64 -8.9 Hyperdyn 5.19 -.82 -13.6 MitelNet gn -2.68 -7.8 ChinaShen 4.36 -.46 -9.5 LoJack -1.30 -7.1 ChiGengM 2.89 -.30 -9.4 NexxusLtg -2.26 -6.4 GSE Sy 2.25 -.11 -4.8 RschMotn -.75 -6.0 Banro g 2.64 -.13 -4.7 Amriana

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE) Last 47.51 31.47 17.00 32.80 11.78

Last 2.68 2.04 2.15 2.05 2.44

Div

BkofAm

.04

Chevron

2.88

CocaCola

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

DIARY

1,956 1,066 119 3,141 201 8 3,544,423,562

52-Week High Low 12,391.29 9,614.32 5,306.65 3,872.64 422.43 346.95 8,520.27 6,355.83 2,438.62 1,689.19 2,840.51 2,061.14 1,344.07 1,010.91 14,276.94 15.80 838.00 587.66

Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg +.28 +11.7 AsteaIntl 5.83 +1.83 +45.8 +.19 +10.3 VlyNBc wt 2.60 +.59 +29.4 +.18 +9.1 MecoxL n 6.73 +1.37 +25.6 +.16 +8.4 BodyCen n 23.20 +4.70 +25.4 +.18 +7.7 Insmed rs 6.19 +.90 +17.0

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

DIARY

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

Name

Name AmLorain Chrmcft SinoHub SearchMed SuprmInd

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

250 217 37 504 6 ... 135,463,46065

INDEXES

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

Last 12,220.59 5,207.57 408.07 8,321.78 2,325.18 2,743.06 1,313.80 13,949.38 823.85

20

Chg

13.34 -.14

11 106.78 +1.40

1.88f

13

65.22 +.53

Disney

.40f

19

42.97 +.11

EOG Res

.64f

YTD %Chg Name

Net Chg +50.03 +41.69 +.23 +10.17 +4.43 +6.64 +4.14 +54.63 +6.75

Div

... ONEOK Pt

Last 4.09 4.26 3.16 56.89 4.35

Chg -.67 -.68 -.44 -7.20 -.44

DIARY

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows Volume

%Chg -14.1 -13.8 -12.2 -11.2 -9.2

1,519 1,089 131 2,739 140 21 1,822,096,665

% Chg +.41 +.81 +.06 +.12 +.19 +.24 +.32 +.39 +.83

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

PE Last

Chg +.14 +.50 -.19 -.08 -.01

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Solutia wt 2.62 ConcdMed 5.71 Belo 8.49 Gramrcy 4.39 Youku n 49.99

PE Last

YTD % Chg +5.55 +1.97 +.76 +4.49 +5.29 +3.40 +4.47 +4.41 +5.13

52-wk % Chg +12.63 +19.99 +8.43 +12.40 +23.93 +14.53 +12.62 +14.42 +21.34

Chg

YTD %Chg

4.56f

23

82.12 +.22

+3.3

+17.0 PNM Res

.50

28

14.85 +.25

+14.1

-.8 PepsiCo

1.92

16

63.98 -.22

-2.1

+14.6 Pfizer

.80f

20

20.35 +.05

+16.2

... 117.54 +1.99

+28.6 SwstAirl

.02

21

12.68 +.14

-2.3

...

8

15.01 -.03

-10.6 TexInst

.52

13

34.64 -.22

+6.6

HewlettP

.32

11

42.53 -.57

HollyCp

.60

31

59.81 +3.56

Intel

.72

10

20.37 -.01

IBM

2.60

14 162.18 +2.14

Merck

1.52

16

FordM

Microsoft

.64

32.57 -.15

.94f

15

35.30 -.33

+9.7

+46.7 TriContl

+1.0 TimeWarn

.28e

...

14.45 +.05

+5.0

-3.1 WalMart

1.46f

13

52.35 -.24

-2.9

+10.5 WashFed

.24f

14

17.02 +.05

+.6

.20a

14

31.94 +.40

+3.1

23.50 +.03

-.2

-9.6 WellsFargo

HOW TO READ THE MARKET IN REVIEW 6

25.62 -.19

-8.2 XcelEngy

1.01

14

Here are the 525 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange, the 400 most active on the Nasdaq National Markets and 100 most active on American Stock Exchange. Mutual funds are 450 largest. Stocks in bold changed 5 percent or more in price. Name: Stocks are listed alphabetically by the company’s full name (not its abbreviation). Company names made up of initials appear at the beginning of each letters’ list. .48 12.88 # AAR Div: Current annual dividend rate paid on stock, based on latest quar- ACMIn 1.10 9.75 +.13 ACM Op .80 7.25 # terly or semiannual declaration, unless otherwise footnoted. ACM Sc 1.10 8.50 -.13 Last: Price stock was trading at when exchange closed for the day. ACMSp .96 7.50 # Chg: Loss or gain for the day. No change indicated by ... mark. Fund Name: Name of mutual fund and family. Sell: Net asset value, or price at which fund could be sold. Chg: Daily net change in the NAV.

AAL Mutual: Bond p 9.49 -.01

Source: The Associated Press. Sales figures are unofficial.

MUTUAL FUNDS

GMO Trust IV: IntlIntrVl 22.59 -.17 GMO Trust VI: EmgMkts r 14.87 +.03 IntlCorEq 29.74 -.25 Quality 20.68 +.02 Goldman Sachs A: MdCVA p 37.57 +.28 Goldman Sachs Inst: GrOppt 25.42 +.05 HiYield 7.40 ... MidCapV 37.87 +.28 Harbor Funds: Bond 12.22 -.01 CapApInst 37.81 +.08 IntlInv t 61.42 -.42 Intl r 62.03 -.43 Hartford Fds A: CpAppA p 35.27 +.01 Hartford Fds Y: CapAppI n 35.30 +.02 Hartford HLS IA : CapApp 44.06 +.05 Div&Gr 20.48 +.07 Advisers 20.07 +.02 TotRetBd 10.99 -.01 Hussman Funds: StrGrowth 11.93 -.03 IVA Funds: Wldwide I r17.15 ... Invesco Funds A: CapGro 14.15 +.06 Chart p 16.99 ... CmstkA 16.48 +.04 EqIncA 8.89 +.01 GrIncA p 20.09 +.03 HYMuA 8.81 ... Ivy Funds: AssetSC t 24.34 +.08 AssetStA p25.09 +.08

Dec 11 831ø 850ø 826ø 833ø Mar 12 864 865ü 845ø 852 May 12 869ü 869ü 856 859ü Jul 12 841ø 853fl 838 841ø Last spot N/A Est. sales 161308. Thu’s Sales: 81,944 Thu’s open int: 475375, up +1584 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 11 689 717ü 688ü 689ø Jul 11 701ø 722 693fl 695ø Sep 11 649ü 664ø 643ü 644fl Dec 11 614 624 608ü 609ø Mar 12 620 631 616ø 617fl May 12 626 637 624fl 625 Jul 12 630ü 640 626ü 628fl Last spot N/A Est. sales 734433. Thu’s Sales: 389,067 Thu’s open int: 1567241, off -3814 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 11 349 353 346ü 349 Jul 11 357 361fl 355 357ø Sep 11 364 366ø 363fl 365fl Dec 11 376ü 379ø 375 376ü Mar 12 388ø 389ü 388ø 389ü May 12 395ø 396ü 395ø 396ü Jul 12 402ø 403ü 402ø 403ü Last spot N/A Est. sales 1785. Thu’s Sales: 3,034 Thu’s open int: 13558, up +92 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 11 1361ü 1367fl 1353ü 1358ü Jul 11 1368 1377fl 1363 1368ø Aug 11 1369 1376ü 1362ø 1367 Sep 11 1359fl 1366ü 1354ü 1358ü Nov 11 1353ø 1359 1342 1350ü Jan 12 1356fl 1363 1351ø 1355 Mar 12 1352ø 1359 1344fl 1351fl May 12 1338 1347 1334ø 1340ø Jul 12 1337ü 1342ø 1328 1336ø Aug 12 1311ø 1320ø 1311ø 1320ø Last spot N/A Est. sales 250273. Thu’s Sales: 169,208 Thu’s open int: 618580, up +1047

-6ø -3fl -2ü -5ü

AssetStrI r 25.31 +.08 JPMorgan A Class: CoreBd A 11.47 -.01 JPMorgan Sel Cls: CoreBd n 11.46 -.01 HighYld n 8.35 +.01 IntmTFBd n10.81 ... ShtDurBd n10.96 -.01 USLCCrPls n21.34 +.06 Janus T Shrs: BalancdT 25.99 +.02 OvrseasT r50.71 -.20 PrkMCVal T23.70 +.11 Twenty T 65.87 -.01 John Hancock Cl 1: LSAggr 12.77 +.02 LSBalanc 13.32 +.01 LSGrwth 13.30 +.02 Keeley Funds: SmCpValA p26.67 +.23 Lazard Instl: EmgMktI 21.03 +.06 Lazard Open: EmgMkO p21.40 +.06 Legg Mason A: WAMgMu p14.93 ... Longleaf Partners: Partners 30.59 +.08 SmCap 28.55 +.08 Loomis Sayles: LSBondI 14.51 -.01 StrInc C 15.13 -.01 LSBondR 14.45 -.02 StrIncA 15.05 -.01 Loomis Sayles Inv: InvGrBdY 12.26 -.03 Lord Abbett A: AffilA p 12.13 +.04

FUTURES

-13 -12ø -13fl -9ü -9ü -8 -7fl

+ø +ü +fl +fl +fl +fl +fl

+3fl +4 +4ø +5ø +6fl +7 +7 +8 +8ø +9

BdDebA p 8.00 ... ShDurIncA p4.60 ... Lord Abbett C: ShDurIncC t4.62 -.01 MFS Funds A: TotRA 14.47 +.02 ValueA 23.86 +.09 MFS Funds I: ValueI 23.96 +.09 MainStay Funds A: HiYldBA 6.00 +.01 Manning&Napier Fds: WldOppA 8.90 -.04 Matthews Asian: AsianGIInv17.74 +.02 PacTgrInv 22.72 +.12 MergerFd 16.12 +.01 Metro West Fds: TotRetBd 10.41 -.02 TotRtBdI 10.41 -.02 MorganStanley Inst: IntlEqI 13.98 -.11 MCapGrI 39.69 +.19 Mutual Series: GblDiscA 30.08 +.03 GlbDiscZ 30.46 +.03 QuestZ 18.26 +.03 SharesZ 21.66 +.03 Neuberger&Berm Inv: GenesInst 49.14 +.34 Neuberger&Berm Tr: Genesis 50.89 +.34 Northern Funds: HiYFxInc 7.45 ... MMIntEq r 10.01 -.06 Oakmark Funds I: EqtyInc r 28.70 +.04 Intl I r 19.70 -.07 Oakmark r 43.20 +.06

OIL/GASOLINE/NG

NEW YORK(AP) - Trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange Friday: Open high

Div Last Chg Compuwre ... 11.47 +.10 Conexant ... 2.38 -.01 A-B-C CorinthC ... 4.61 -.11 .82 71.46 -.65 ASML Hld .54e 43.05 -.02 Costco Cree Inc ... 44.85 +.37 ATP O&G ... 19.01 +.11 ... 17.45 +.52 AVI Bio ... 1.81 -.01 Crocs AXT Inc ... 7.04 +.15 Cryptologic ... 1.58 +.37 Ctrip.com ... 39.47 +.46 AcaciaTc ... 32.22 -1.31 ... 24.62 -.04 AcmePkt ... 68.12 +.12 CubistPh Curis ... 3.28 +.05 ActivePwr ... 2.56 +.28 ... 19.95 -.14 ActivsBliz .17f 10.98 +.02 CypSemi ... 7.57 -.38 AdobeSy ... 32.64 +.05 Cytori Adtran .36 41.53 -.98 D-E-F AEterna g ... 1.79 ... Affymax ... 6.09 +.18 DeerConsu .20 7.89 -.39 ... 15.06 -.08 Affymetrix ... 4.95 +.44 Dell Inc ... 32.95 -.06 AkamaiT ... 38.45 +.69 Dndreon DigRiver ... 35.90 -.34 AlaskCom .86 10.84 +.11 AllosThera ... 2.98 ... DirecTV A ... u47.08 +.67 AllscriptH ... 21.26 -.22 DiscCm A ... 39.34 -.22 AlteraCp lf .24 43.39 +.97 DiscCm C ... 34.58 -.06 Amazon ... 170.98 -.12 DishNetwk ... u24.40 +.23 ACapAgy 5.60e 29.02 +.29 DonlleyRR 1.04 18.21 +.07 ... 3.89 +.08 AmCapLtd ... 9.36 +.14 drugstre ... 4.90 +.12 AmSupr ... 24.04 +.45 DryShips Amgen ... 53.15 -.12 ETrade rs ... 15.80 -.30 ... 31.70 -.06 AmkorT lf ... 6.91 -.12 eBay Amylin ... 10.54 -.04 EagleBulk ... 3.93 +.08 Anadigc ... 4.53 -.32 ErthLink .20m 7.82 -.03 A123 Sys ... 7.76 -.07 EstWstBcp .04 22.39 +.52 ... 19.70 -.14 ApolloGrp ... 43.51 +.15 ElectArts ApolloInv 1.12 11.83 +.10 Emcore lf ... 2.27 -.06 Ener1 ... 2.97 +.06 Apple Inc ... 351.54 +6.57 ApldMatl .32f 15.43 -.01 EngyConv ... 2.21 -.03 Entegris ... 8.41 -.14 AMCC ... 10.15 +.15 ArenaPhm ... 1.45 +.04 EntropCom ... 8.09 +.05 ... 86.74 +.68 AresCap 1.40 16.57 +.11 Equinix AriadP ... 6.94 +.03 EricsnTel .35e 12.56 -.01 ... 11.53 -.14 Ariba Inc ... u33.61 +.29 Exelixis ArmHld .09e 26.51 +.62 Expedia .28 21.83 -.03 Arris ... 12.16 -.13 ExpdIntl .40 48.25 +.30 ArubaNet ... u33.59 +.30 F5 Netwks ... 95.67 +.79 AsscdBanc .04 14.74 +.18 FLIR Sys .24 u33.94 +.23 ... 4.32 +.02 Atheros ... 44.62 +.02 FSI Intl Atmel ... 13.30 +.07 Fastenal 1.00f u63.21 +.29 Autobytel ... u1.40 +.10 FifthThird .24f 13.85 +.07 ... 23.54 +.31 Autodesk ... 43.27 -.54 Finisar AutoData 1.44 50.37 +.01 FinLine .20f u19.13 +.73 .04 11.64 +.16 Auxilium ... 22.00 +.15 FMidBc AvagoTch .32f 30.85 -.22 FstNiagara .64f 13.90 -.01 ... 150.44 +.26 AvanirPhm ... 3.77 +.02 FstSolar AvisBudg ... u18.00 +.24 FT Copper .35e 42.80 -.44 ... 7.34 -.02 Axcelis ... 2.56 -.02 Flextrn BGC Ptrs .56e 9.16 -.11 FocusMda ... 29.95 +.32 FormFac ... 10.47 -.30 BMC Sft ... 49.36 -.11 BallardPw ... 2.29 +.11 Fossil Inc ... u88.53 +3.01 FosterWhl ... 36.23 +.25 BannerCp .04 2.42 +.02 ... 2.05 -.03 BedBath ... 47.28 -.59 FuelCell BiogenIdc ... 71.20 -.07 FultonFncl .16f 10.94 +.13 BioMarin ... 24.04 +.29 FuntalkChi ... 6.65 +.50 BioSante ... 1.85 +.01 Fuqi Intl lf ... 3.36 -.32 BiostarPh ... 2.58 +.36 G-H-I BodyCen n ... u23.20 +4.70 BostPrv .04 6.81 -.08 GSI Cmmrc ... 19.38 +.18 GT Solar ... 10.73 -.12 BrigExp ... 35.28 +1.15 Brightpnt ... 9.99 -.03 Garmin 1.50f 34.12 +.22 .48f 29.85 +1.01 Broadcom .36f 40.95 -.15 Gentex BroadSft n ... 43.23 -.53 Genzyme ... 75.94 -.03 ... 4.83 +.08 Broadwind ... 1.37 -.05 GeronCp BrcdeCm ... 6.25 +.09 GigaMed ... 1.42 +.12 BrklneB .34 10.24 +.18 GileadSci ... 42.08 +.04 ... u9.55 +.06 CA Inc .16 23.75 -.10 GloblInd CH Robins 1.16 72.52 +.32 GluMobile ... 4.04 +.03 Cadence ... 9.85 +.06 GolarLNG .75r u24.79 +.55 ... 579.74 -7.15 CapFdF rs .30a 11.28 -.07 Google ... d5.54 -.48 CpstnTrb h ... 1.95 +.05 GulfRes Carrizo ... 36.06 +1.77 GulfportE ... 33.28 +.70 ... u32.36 +1.57 CathayGen .04 16.67 +.29 HainCel CeleraGrp ... 8.27 -.10 Halozyme ... 6.68 -.13 HansenNat ... 59.08 +1.30 Celgene ... 55.24 +.35 CentEuro ... d11.22 -.22 Harmonic ... 8.98 +.02 HawHold ... 6.05 -.02 CentAl ... u18.13 +.19 Cephln ... 57.90 +.61 HercOffsh ... 5.86 -.07 ... 21.83 -.06 ChrmSh ... 3.98 +.51 Hologic ChartInds ... u52.49 +1.35 HotTopic .28a 5.86 +.35 ChkPoint ... 49.36 +.26 HudsCity .60 9.87 ... ... 27.06 +.35 Cheesecake ... 28.87 +.08 HumGen ChinaBiot ... 8.04 -.06 HuntBnk .04 6.59 +.09 ... 30.41 +.41 ChinaCEd ... 6.40 -.13 IAC Inter ... 65.45 -.46 ChinaInfo ... 2.88 +.27 Illumina ChiNuokng ... 4.28 +.31 ImpaxLabs ... 25.00 +.32 ... 8.36 -.04 ChinaSun ... 4.08 ... Infinera ... u51.47 +1.07 ChiValve ... 5.06 +.34 Informat CienaCorp ... 24.00 -.25 InfosysT .90e 69.24 +.99 IntgDv ... 7.47 +.10 Cintas .49f 29.55 +.01 .72 20.37 -.01 Cirrus ... 21.16 +.33 Intel InterMune ... 45.25 -.18 Cisco .24 17.28 -.08 .48 12.07 -.11 CitrixSys ... 70.14 -.20 Intersil ... 51.37 +.21 CleanEngy ... 14.05 -.02 Intuit Clearwire ... 5.42 +.08 IridiumCm ... 8.76 -.07 ... 8.74 -.01 ClinicData ... 30.35 +.07 Isis ... 14.90 +.05 CognizTech ... u80.03 +.24 Ixia Coinstar ... 46.11 +.82 J-K-L Comcast .45f 25.02 +.29 ... 6.52 -.05 Comc spcl .45f 23.54 +.31 JA Solar Name

low settle

LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. May 11 105.38 105.95 104.50 105.40 Jun 11 105.90 106.44 105.05 105.94 Jul 11 106.31 106.87 105.55 106.38 Aug 11 106.69 107.09 105.87 106.64 Sep 11 106.79 107.13 105.96 106.82 Oct 11 106.81 107.23 106.27 106.94 Nov 11 106.84 107.20 106.78 107.02 Dec 11 106.94 107.49 106.29 107.06 Jan 12 106.85 107.21 106.47 106.90 Feb 12 106.59 107.07 106.59 106.67 Mar 12 106.36 106.80 106.02 106.41 Apr 12 106.13 106.13 105.91 106.09 May 12 105.76 Jun 12 105.30 105.88 104.97 105.46 Jul 12 105.11 Aug 12 104.78 Sep 12 104.65 104.65 104.50 104.50 Oct 12 104.26 Nov 12 104.07 Dec 12 103.78 104.50 103.43 103.94 Jan 13 103.67 Feb 13 103.44 Mar 13 103.22 Apr 13 103.01 May 13 102.80 Last spot N/A Est. sales 411513. Thu’s Sales: 537,199 Thu’s open int: 1518398, up +11030 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Apr 11 3.0394 3.0617 3.0350 3.0445 May 11 3.0451 3.0685 3.0395 3.0495 Jun 11 3.0331 3.0544 3.0284 3.0388 Jul 11 3.0176 3.0349 3.0118 3.0231 Aug 11 2.9920 3.0097 2.9906 3.0006 Sep 11 2.9637 2.9798 2.9585 2.9711 Oct 11 2.8300 2.8500 2.8300 2.8351 Nov 11 2.7988 2.8031 2.7988 2.8031 Dec 11 2.7845 2.8077 2.7836 2.7913 Jan 12 2.7902 2.7929 2.7882 2.7929 Feb 12 2.8054

chg.

-.20 -.17 -.14 -.09 -.04 -.01 +.01 +.01 +.01 +.02 +.04 +.06 +.09 +.11 +.10 +.09 +.08 +.07 +.06 +.05 +.06 +.08 +.10 +.12 +.14

-.0003 -.0013 -.0011

+.0003 -.0012 -.0011 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006

Old Westbury Fds: GlobOpp 8.01 +.02 GlbSMdCap16.02+.04 Oppenheimer A: CapApA p 44.89 +.12 DvMktA p 35.30 +.06 GlobA p 62.99 -.22 GblStrIncA x4.32 -.01 Gold p 48.20 -.32 IntBdA p 6.55 -.03 MnStFdA 33.05 +.05 Oppenheimer Roch: RoMu A p 14.74 -.01 RcNtMuA 6.47 +.01 Oppenheimer Y: DevMktY 34.94 +.06 IntlBdY 6.55 -.03 PIMCO Admin PIMS: TotRtAd 10.87 -.01 PIMCO Instl PIMS: AlAsetAut r10.73 -.01 AllAsset 12.31 -.01 ComodRR 9.61 -.01 DevLcMk r 10.81 -.03 DivInc 11.50 ... HiYld 9.45 ... InvGrCp 10.56 -.01 LowDu 10.42 -.01 RealRtnI 11.48 -.03 ShortT 9.89 ... TotRt 10.87 -.01 TR II 10.38 -.01 PIMCO Funds A: LwDurA 10.42 -.01 RealRtA p 11.48 -.03 TotRtA 10.87 -.01 PIMCO Funds C: TotRtC t 10.87 -.01 PIMCO Funds D: TRtn p 10.87 -.01

JDS Uniph ... JamesRiv ... JetBlue ... JoyGlbl .70 KLA Tnc 1.00 Kulicke ... LECG ... LKQ Corp ... LamResrch ... Lattice ... LawsnSft ... LeapWirlss ... Level3 ... LexiPhrm ... LibGlobA ... LibtyMIntA ... LifeTech ... LimelghtN ... LinearTch .96f LinnEngy 2.64 Logitech ... LogMeIn ... lululemn g ...

19.79 -.57 23.90 -.07 6.34 +.31 96.01 +.43 46.86 -.33 9.54 +.37 .20 -.01 23.49 +.34 54.62 +.07 6.12 +.15 11.99 -.08 15.02 ... 1.42 ... 1.73 +.01 42.22 +.58 15.65 -.04 50.57 ... 6.57 +.12 33.11 -.29 39.26 +.10 18.22 -.25 41.49 +1.91 78.64 -.17

M-N-0

MIPS Tech ... 10.80 -.06 MagicSft ... 6.28 +.25 Magma ... 6.72 +.18 MannKd ... 3.79 +.15 MarvellT ... 16.07 -.24 Mattel .92f 25.20 -.06 MaximIntg .84 25.58 +.06 MecoxL n ... 6.73 +1.37 MedAssets ... 15.11 +.04 MediciNova ... d2.66 ... MelcoCrwn ... 7.86 +.21 Mellanox ... 24.75 -.86 MentorGr ... 15.12 +.02 Microchp 1.38 37.72 -.03 Micromet ... 5.48 +.36 MicronT ... 11.55 +.05 MicroSemi ... 20.08 -.33 Microsoft .64 25.62 -.19 Micrvisn ... 1.31 -.04 Mindspeed ... 8.38 -.32 Molex .70 24.94 +.17 Motricity n ... 15.41 +.03 Move Inc ... 2.22 +.06 Mylan ... 22.31 -.03 NII Hldg ... 40.63 +1.28 NPS Phm ... 8.01 +.17 NasdOMX ... 25.30 -.28 NatPenn .04 7.53 -.06 NektarTh ... 8.76 +.06 NetLogicM ... 40.70 -.33 NetApp ... 48.61 -.34 Netease ... 47.51 +.91 Netflix ... 230.01 +.88 NetwkEng ... 2.02 +.09 NewsCpA .15 17.02 +.08 NewsCpB .15 18.08 +.06 NorTrst 1.12 50.68 -.34 Novavax ... 2.51 -.05 Novell ... 5.96 +.03 Novlus ... 36.54 -.15 NuanceCm ... 18.18 +.24 Nvidia ... 18.63 -.60 Oclaro rs ... 11.50 +.49 OmniVisn ... 33.24 -.50 OnSmcnd ... 10.09 +.14 1800Flowrs ... 3.15 +.14 OnyxPh ... 35.13 -.62 OpenTable ...u101.69+3.04 OpnwvSy ... 2.18 +.10 Opnext ... 2.36 -.13 OptimerPh ... 12.54 -.06 Oracle .24f u32.64 +.50 Orexigen ... 2.94 +.14

P-Q-R

PDL Bio .60 5.53 PMC Sra ... 7.46 Paccar .48a 49.86 PacSunwr ... 3.34 PanASlv .10 37.20 ParamTc h ... 22.02 PattUTI .20 u28.34 Paychex 1.24 31.02 PnnNGm ... 35.13 PeopUtdF .62 12.64 PhotrIn ... 8.47 Polycom ... 49.07 ... 2.97 Popular Power-One ... 8.42 PwShs QQQ.39e 56.84 Powrwav ... 4.42 PriceTR 1.24f 65.07 priceline ...u487.00 +10.99 PrinctnR ... .41 PrUPShQQQ ... 26.26 ProspctCap1.21 12.21 QIAGEN ... 19.69 QiaoXing ... 2.04 QlikTech n ... 24.53

-.10 -.05 +.23 -.02 -.16 +.15 +.90 +.06 +.06 +.27 +.39 -.43 +.05 -.02 +.14 -.24 +.57

... -.16 +.06 +.04 -.12 +.21

Qlogic Qualcom QuestSft RF MicD RAM Engy Rambus RealNwk RschMotn RexEnergy RossStrs Rovi Corp

... .86f ... ... ... ... ... ... ... .88f ...

17.98 +.25 52.75 -.97 24.72 +.32 6.29 ... 1.95 -.02 19.69 -.01 3.91 +.03 56.89 -7.20 11.25 +.10 70.23 +.50 55.85 -.22

S-T-U

SBA Com ... 38.40 +.37 SEI Inv .20 23.20 +.33 STEC ... 19.83 -.07 SabaSoftw ... u8.72 +.55 SalixPhm ... 33.57 +.10 SanDisk ... 45.01 +.32 Sanmina ... 10.88 +.27 Sapient ... 11.28 +.37 SavientPh ... 10.13 +.23 Savvis ... 35.49 +.01 SciGames ... 8.41 +.06 SeagateT ... 14.42 +.23 SeattGen ... 14.67 -.12 Sequenom ... 6.07 +.17 SvcSourc n ... 12.18 ... ShandaGm ... 6.47 -.11 Shutterfly ... u48.67 +1.66 SilicGrIn ... u19.49 +1.83 SilicnImg ... 9.73 +.02 Slcnware .41e 6.19 +.01 SilvStd g ... 29.53 -.09 Sina ...u103.52+2.42 SiriusXM ... 1.72 +.02 SkywksSol ... 32.31 +.43 SmartM ... 7.53 +.39 SonicCorp ... 9.06 -.04 Sonus ... 3.74 -.01 SpectPh ... u8.58 +.25 Spreadtrm ... 19.89 -.36 Staples .40f 20.02 +.13 StarScient ... 3.92 ... Starbucks .52 36.90 -.68 StlDynam .40f 19.04 +.20 SterlBcsh .06 8.58 ... SunPowerA ... 16.40 ... SusqBnc .04 8.94 +.06 Symantec ... 18.11 +.02 Synopsys ... 27.63 +.13 SynthEngy ... 2.22 +.26 TD Ameritr .20 20.81 -.07 THQ ... 4.78 +.14 TTM Tch ... 17.41 +.34 TakeTwo ... 15.61 +.06 ... 7.66 -.21 Tekelec Tellabs .08 5.13 -.04 Terremk ... 18.85 ... TevaPhrm .78e 50.41 +.06 TexRdhse .32 16.40 +.06 Thoratec ... 25.03 -.50 TibcoSft ... u26.34 +.22 TiVo Inc ... 8.74 -.07 TomoThera ... 4.59 ... TranS1 ... 3.99 -.14 Travelzoo ... u60.94 +4.17 TridentM h ... 1.06 -.09 TriQuint ... 12.99 +.11 USA Tech h ... 2.37 +.21 UTiWrldwd .06 19.50 +.60 UTStrcm ... 2.31 -.04 Umpqua .20 11.00 +.28 UtdOnln .40 6.29 +.11 UtdTherap ... 65.81 -.24 UnivDisp ... 50.31 +1.56 UrbanOut ... 30.06 -.13

V-W-X-Y-Z

VarianSemi ... 48.13 +.23 VeecoInst ... 50.41 +.40 Verigy ... 14.18 +.03 Verisign 3.00e 36.20 +.36 VertxPh ... 46.58 -.33 VirgnMda h .16 27.19 +.35 Vivus ... 6.39 -.15 Vodafone 1.33e 28.43 -.19 WarnerCh s8.50e23.46 +.35 WarrenRs ... 5.10 +.49 WebMD ... 53.65 +.08 WernerEnt .20a 25.82 +.19 WetSeal ... 4.01 +.46 WholeFd .40 u63.96 +.78 Windstrm 1.00 12.89 -.07 Wynn 1.00a 127.03 +2.79 XOMA rs ... 3.29 ... Xilinx .76f 32.97 -.01 YRC Ww rs ... 1.96 -.09 Yahoo ... 16.96 +.13 Yongye ... 6.03 -.06 Zagg ... 7.41 +1.04 Zalicus ... 2.29 +.18 ZionBcp .04 23.23 +.16

AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE

Name

Stock Footnotes: cc – PE greater than 99. dd – Loss in last 12 mos. d – New 52- CaGrp 14.47 -.03 wk low during trading day. g – Dividend in Canadian $. Stock price in U.S.$. n – MuBd 10.43 -.01 New issue in past 52 wks. q – Closed-end mutual fund; no PE calculated. s – Split SmCoSt 9.73 -.05 or stock dividend of 25 pct or more in last 52 wks. Div begins with date of split or stock dividend. u – New 52-wk high during trading day. v – Trading halted on primary market. Unless noted, dividend rates are annual disbursements based on last declaration. pf – Preferred. pp – Holder owes installment(s) of purchase price. rt – Rights. un – Units. wd – When distributed. wi – When issued. wt – Warrants. ww – With warrants. xw – Without warrants. Dividend Footnotes: a – Also extra or extras. b – Annual rate plus stock dividend. c – Liquidating dividend. e – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos. f – Annual rate, increased on last declaration. i – Declared or paid after stock dividend or split. j – Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last meeting. k – Declared or paid this year, accumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m – Annual rate, reduced on last declaration. p – Init div, annual rate unknown. r – Declared or paid in preceding 12 mos plus stock dividend. t – Paid in stock in last 12 mos, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or distribution date. x – Ex-dividend or ex-rights. y – Ex-dividend and sales in full. z – Sales in full. vj – In bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. • Most active stocks above must be worth $1 and gainers/losers $2. Mutual Fund Footnotes: e – Ex-capital gains distribution. f – Wednesday’s quote. n - No-load fund. p – Fund assets used to pay distribution costs. r – Redemption fee or contingent deferred sales load may apply. s – Stock dividend or split. t – Both p and r. x – Ex-cash dividend.

Fidelity Advisor A: GrowthCoK88.25 +.24 IntlInxInv n36.02 -.27 NwInsgh p 20.63 +.09 HighInc r n 9.15 +.01 TotMktInv n38.28 +.15 StrInA 12.51 -.01 Indepn n 25.51 +.12 Fidelity Spart Adv: Fidelity Advisor I: IntBd n 10.56 -.02 500IdxAdv n46.67+.15 NwInsgtI n 20.83 +.09 IntmMu n 10.02 ... TotMktAd r n38.28+.15 IntlDisc n 33.25 -.24 First Eagle: Fidelity Freedom: FF2010 n 13.96 ... InvGrBd n 11.39 -.02 GlblA 47.34 -.14 FF2015 n 11.66 ... InvGB n 7.42 ... OverseasA22.81 -.11 FF2020 n 14.22 ... LgCapVal 12.10 +.04 Forum Funds: FF2020K 13.61 ... LatAm 57.36 -.16 AbsStrI r 10.82 -.01 FF2025 n 11.92 +.01 LevCoStk n30.38 +.26 FF2025K 13.87 +.01 LowP r n 40.18 +.06 Frank/Temp Frnk A: FF2030 n 14.26 +.01 LowPriK r 40.17 +.06 CalTFA p 6.64 ... FF2030K 14.09 +.01 Magelln n 74.59 +.32 FedTFA p 11.36 +.01 FF2035 n 11.91 +.01 MagellanK 74.54 +.31 FoundAl p 10.94 +.03 FF2040 n 8.33 +.01 MidCap n 30.38 +.19 GrwthA p 46.32 +.09 MuniInc n 12.25 ... HYTFA p 9.55 ... Fidelity Invest: AllSectEq 12.95 +.04 NwMkt r n 15.58 +.01 IncomA p 2.24 ... AMgr50 n 15.80 +.01 OTC n 58.91 +.08 NYTFA p 11.15 ... AMgr20 r n12.95 ... 100Index 9.12 +.03 USGovA p 6.71 -.01 Balanc n 18.85 +.03 Ovrsea n 33.24 -.28 Frank/Tmp Frnk Adv: BalancedK18.85 +.03 Puritn n 18.62 +.05 GlbBdAdv p n13.56 BlueChGr n47.22 +.14 RealE n 26.66 +.21 +.03 Canada n 61.29 -.20 SCmdtyStrt n13.12 IncmeAd 2.23 +.01 CapAp n 26.33 +.10 +.05 Frank/Temp Frnk C: CpInc r n 9.77 +.02 SrsIntGrw 11.32 -.06 IncomC t 2.26 ... Contra n 70.22 +.32 SrsIntVal 10.44 -.08 Frank/Temp Mtl A&B: ContraK 70.20 +.31 SrInvGrdF 11.40 -.01 SharesA 21.48 +.03 DisEq n 23.70 +.09 StIntMu n 10.60 ... Frank/Temp Temp A: DivIntl n 30.78 -.14 STBF n 8.46 -.01 ForgnA p 7.40 ... DivrsIntK r 30.77 -.13 SmllCpS r n20.58 +.07 DivGth n 29.85 +.10 StratInc n 11.20 -.01 GlBd A p 13.60 +.03 EmrMk n 26.17 +.02 StrReRt r 9.87 +.02 GrwthA p 18.73 +.04 Eq Inc n 46.68 +.19 TotalBd n 10.75 -.01 WorldA p 15.57 +.06 EQII n 19.24 +.07 USBI n 11.30 -.01 Frank/Temp Tmp Fidel n 34.02 +.16 Value n 72.85 +.37 B&C: GlBdC p 13.62 +.03 FltRateHi r n9.86 ... Fidelity Selects: GNMA n 11.44 -.01 Gold r n 51.43 -.23 GE Elfun S&S: S&S PM 42.08 +.06 GovtInc 10.38 -.02 Fidelity Spartan: GroCo n 88.28 +.25 ExtMkIn n 40.35 +.30 GMO Trust III: GroInc n 19.00 +.03 500IdxInv n46.67 +.15 Quality 20.67 +.02

Thu’s open int: 218950, up +1454 PORK BELLIES 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Mar 11 123.00 123.00 123.00 123.00 +3.00 May 11 115.00 Jul 11 111.50 Aug 11 105.50 Feb 12 120.00 Mar 12 120.50 Last spot N/A Thu’s Sales: Thu’s open int: , uncha

Roswell Daily Record

Div Last Chg ChinaShen ... ClaudeR g ... 6.90 +.02 Crossh g rs ... 1.80 +.02 Crystallx g ... 8.90 -.13 CubicEngy ... 34.18 -.46 DejourE g ... 1.17 ... DenisnM g ... .14 +.02 EV LtdDur 1.39 7.43 -.06 eMagin ... 7.10 -.18 EntGaming ... 7.45 -.01 ExeterR gs ... .97 -.03 FrkStPrp .76 2.64 -.13 Fronteer g ... 51.17 +.30 GabGldNR 1.68 27.90 +.09 GascoEngy ... 1.56 +.01 Gastar grs ... 78.15 -.43 GenMoly ... 1.50 +.04 GeoGloblR ... .51 -.04 GoldStr g ... 6.08 -.10 GranTrra g ... .55 +.02 GrtBasG g ... 23.09 +.21 GtPanSilv g ... 9.13 +.05 Hyperdyn ... 17.90 +.73 ImpOil gs .44 2.89 -.30 InfuSystem ... 2.65 -.01 InovioPhm ...

AbdAsPac .42 AdeonaPh ... AlexcoR g ... AlldNevG ... Anooraq g ... ArcadiaRs ... ArmourRsd1.44 Aurizon g ... AvalRare n ... BMB Munai ... Banro g ... BarcUBS36 ... BarcGSOil ... Brigus grs ... BritATob 3.24e CAMAC En ... CanoPet ... CapGold ... CelSci ... CFCda g .01 CheniereEn ... CheniereE 1.70 ChiGengM ... ChinaPhH ...

PIMCO Funds P: TotRtnP 10.87 -.01 Parnassus Funds: EqtyInco n 27.44 +.05 Perm Port Funds: Permannt 47.24 -.07 Pioneer Funds A: PionFdA p 42.40 +.08 Price Funds: Balance n 19.96 ... BlChip n 39.90 +.12 CapApp n 21.15 +.05 EmMktS n 34.82 +.15 EqInc n 24.84 +.06 EqIndex n 35.51 +.11 Growth n 33.43 +.12 HiYield n 6.91 ... IntlBond n 10.09 -.06 Intl G&I 13.82 -.12 IntlStk n 14.38 -.05 MidCap n 62.67 +.24 MCapVal n24.77 +.07 N Asia n 18.61 +.12 New Era n 56.67 +.25 N Horiz n 35.97 +.33 N Inc n 9.46 -.01 R2010 n 15.80 +.01 R2015 n 12.29 +.01 R2020 n 17.03 +.02 R2025 n 12.51 +.02 R2030 n 17.99 +.03 R2035 n 12.75 +.02 R2040 n 18.16 +.04 ShtBd n 4.84 -.01 SmCpStk n36.58 +.34 SmCapVal n38.14+.29 SpecGr n 18.49 +.03 SpecIn n 12.49 -.02 Value n 24.80 +.08 Principal Inv: LT2020In 12.07 +.02

Mar 12 2.8181 Apr 12 2.9311 May 12 2.9326 Jun 12 2.9261 Jul 12 2.9131 Aug 12 2.8906 Sep 12 2.8631 Oct 12 2.7406 Nov 12 2.7136 Dec 12 2.6971 Jan 13 2.7021 Feb 13 2.7096 Mar 13 2.7171 Apr 13 2.8171 May 13 2.8271 Last spot N/A Est. sales 88853. Thu’s Sales: 109,302 Thu’s open int: 287033, up +6945 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Apr 11 4.302 4.432 4.219 4.403 May 11 4.385 4.515 4.300 4.490 Jun 11 4.458 4.582 4.387 4.563 Jul 11 4.528 4.650 4.461 4.636 Aug 11 4.558 4.679 4.492 4.665 Sep 11 4.568 4.683 4.502 4.673 Oct 11 4.612 4.735 4.552 4.722 Nov 11 4.771 4.878 4.720 4.872 Dec 11 5.015 5.109 4.944 5.105 Jan 12 5.129 5.224 5.060 5.219 Feb 12 5.129 5.203 5.070 5.200 Mar 12 5.063 5.135 5.010 5.132 Apr 12 4.898 4.961 4.855 4.959 May 12 4.966 4.978 4.888 4.978 Jun 12 4.901 5.011 4.901 5.011 Jul 12 5.007 5.055 4.970 5.052 Aug 12 5.000 5.079 5.000 5.079 Sep 12 5.078 5.085 4.990 5.085 Oct 12 5.095 5.136 5.041 5.136 Nov 12 5.180 5.267 5.180 5.267 Dec 12 5.405 5.477 5.405 5.477 Jan 13 5.575 5.597 5.515 5.597 Feb 13 5.502 5.557 5.502 5.557 Mar 13 5.400 5.477 5.400 5.477 Apr 13 5.180 5.217 5.180 5.217 May 13 5.235 Last spot N/A Est. sales 297031. Thu’s Sales: 408,591 Thu’s open int: 887596, off -5856

4.36 2.41 1.16 .16 .72 .40 2.73 16.14 6.96 .36 5.44 14.00 14.85 18.79 .48 4.66 5.26 .68 2.97 7.91 2.60 4.30 5.19 51.00 2.70 1.12

-.46 -.05 -.07 +.00 -.03 +.00 +.03 +.09 +.41 -.01 -.05 +.14 -.07 +.05 -.01 +.15 -.14 ... -.05 -.09 -.05 +.02 -.82 +.75 -.06 +.01

KodiakO g LucasEngy MadCatz g Metalico Metalline MdwGold g Minefnd g MinesMgt Neoprobe Nevsun g NDragon NwGold g NA Pall g NDynMn g NthnO&G NthgtM g NovaGld g Oilsands g OpkoHlth ParaG&S PhrmAth PionDrill PlatGpMet PudaCoal Quepasa RadientPh

... 6.90 +.16 ... 3.54 -.04 ... 1.83 +.01 ... 6.02 +.13 ... 1.14 -.01 ... 1.76 -.06 ... u12.75 -.14 ... 2.92 +.08 ... 3.76 +.01 ... 5.87 -.07 ... .04 +.00 ... 11.25 +.13 ... 6.34 -.08 ... 14.75 +.15 ... 27.30 +1.03 ... 2.68 -.03 ... 12.72 -.11 ... .50 +.00 ... 3.82 -.07 ... 3.80 -.08 ... 3.43 -.02 ... 12.93 -.03 ... 2.05 -.05 ... 11.38 +.20 ... 6.25 -.15 ... .39 -.01

RareEle g ... Rentech ... RexahnPh ... Rubicon g ... SamsO&G ... SinoHub ... SulphCo ... Taseko ... Tengsco ... TrnsatlPet ... TravelCtrs ... TriValley ... TriangPet ... Uluru ... Ur-Energy ... Uranerz ... UraniumEn ... VantageDrl ... VirnetX .50e VistaGold ... VoyagerOG ... WizzardSft ... YM Bio g ... ZBB Engy ...

Putnam Funds A: GNMA Ad n10.72 -.02 InflaPro n 13.21 -.06 GrInA p 14.19 +.03 GrwAdm n 32.73 +.11 IntlGr n 19.66 -.10 MultiCpGr 52.98 +.15 HlthCr n 53.68 +.07 IntlVal n 32.47 -.22 VoyA p 24.40 +.04 HiYldCp n 5.80 +.01 ITIGrade n 9.83 -.01 InfProAd n 25.96 -.10 LifeCon n 16.71 ... Royce Funds: LwPrSkSv r19.18 +.04 ITBdAdml n11.11 -.03 LifeGro n 22.83 +.02 PennMuI r 12.44 +.10 ITsryAdml n11.25 -.02 LifeMod n 20.12 +.01 PremierI r 21.90 +.10 IntGrAdm n62.58 -.31 LTIGrade n 9.24 -.02 TotRetI r 13.71 +.08 ITAdml n 13.28 -.01 Morg n 18.89 +.07 ITGrAdm n 9.83 -.01 MuInt n 13.28 -.01 Schwab Funds: 1000Inv r 39.05 +.14 LtdTrAd n 11.00 ... PrecMtls r n26.09 -.05 S&P Sel 20.53 +.07 LTGrAdml n9.24 -.02 PrmcpCor n14.30 +.03 LT Adml n 10.63 ... Prmcp r n 68.41 +.14 Scout Funds: Intl 33.03 -.16 MCpAdml n98.29 +.58 SelValu r n19.86 +.11 MorgAdm n58.58 +.21 STAR n 19.62 -.01 Selected Funds: AmShD 42.88 +.07 MuHYAdm n10.02-.01 STIGrade n10.73 -.01 AmShS p 42.88 +.07 PrmCap r n70.99 +.14 StratEq n 19.84 +.15 Sequoia n 140.16 -.06 ReitAdm r n80.83 +.64 TgtRetInc n11.47 -.01 STsyAdml n10.66 -.01 TgRe2010 n22.82 ... St FarmAssoc: STBdAdml n10.52-.01 TgtRe2015 n12.74 ... Gwth 55.22 +.09 ShtTrAd n 15.87 ... TgRe2020 n22.73+.01 Templeton Instit: STFdAd n 10.74 -.01 TgtRe2025 n13.01 ForEqS 20.94 +.01 STIGrAd n 10.73 -.01 +.01 Third Avenue Fds: SmCAdm n37.01 +.30 TgRe2030 n22.41+.02 ValueInst 52.55 +.37 TtlBAdml n10.55 -.02 TgtRe2035 n13.57 Thornburg Fds: TStkAdm n33.04 +.13 +.02 IntValA px 28.84 -.07 ValAdml n 21.91 +.09 TgtRe2040 n22.29 IntValue I x29.47 -.09 WellslAdm n53.84 ... +.03 Tweedy Browne: WelltnAdm n55.61+.07 TgtRe2045 n14.00 GblValue 23.96 +.06 Windsor n 48.16 +.12 +.02 VALIC : WdsrIIAd n48.22 +.12 Wellsly n 22.22 ... StkIdx 26.01 +.09 Vanguard Fds: Welltn n 32.19 +.04 Vanguard Admiral: AssetA n 25.50 +.07 Wndsr n 14.27 +.03 BalAdml n 22.07 +.04 CapOpp n 34.50 -.06 WndsII n 27.17 +.07 CAITAdm n10.74 ... DivdGro n 14.97 +.04 Vanguard Idx Fds: CpOpAdl n79.70 -.14 Energy n 73.49 +.36 TotIntAdm r n26.77EMAdmr r n39.62 +.10 Explr n 78.20 +.54 .14 Energy n 138.00 +.68 GNMA n 10.72 -.02 TotIntlInst r n107.10ExplAdml n72.79 +.50 GlobEq n 18.48 -.01 .56 ExtdAdm n43.86 +.33 HYCorp n 5.80 +.01 500 n 120.98 +.39 500Adml n120.98 +.38 HlthCre n 127.22 +.18 DevMkt n 10.27 -.08

-.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006 -.0006

+.159 +.163 +.166 +.169 +.171 +.171 +.171 +.154 +.144 +.136 +.132 +.125 +.110 +.110 +.109 +.107 +.107 +.106 +.108 +.105 +.100 +.098 +.098 +.098 +.098 +.100

12.37 1.25 1.41 4.79 3.83 2.15 .15 5.81 1.19 2.99 7.66 .55 8.00 .07 1.79 3.57 4.10 1.91 16.04 3.87 4.23 .26 2.64 1.14

-.56 +.03 +.03 -.02 +.08 +.18 +.00 -.05 +.02 -.01 +.34 -.05 -.28 +.00 -.03 -.13 +.01 -.09 +.64 -.03 +.06 -.01 +.09 -.06

Extend n 43.83 +.33 Growth n 32.73 +.10 MidCap n 21.65 +.13 SmCap n 36.97 +.30 SmlCpGth n23.64 +.18 SmlCpVl n 16.78 +.13 STBnd n 10.52 -.01 TotBnd n 10.55 -.02 TotlIntl n 16.01 -.08 TotStk n 33.03 +.13 Vanguard Instl Fds: BalInst n 22.07 +.04 DevMkInst n10.19-.08 ExtIn n 43.86 +.34 FTAllWldI r n95.50.47 GrwthIst n 32.73 +.11 InfProInst n10.57 -.05 InstIdx n 120.67 +.38 InsPl n 120.68 +.38 InsTStPlus n30.00+.12 MidCpIst n 21.71 +.12 SCInst n 37.00 +.29 TBIst n 10.55 -.02 TSInst n 33.05 +.14 ValueIst n 21.91 +.08 Vanguard Signal: 500Sgl n 99.93 +.31 MidCpIdx n31.02 +.18 STBdIdx n 10.52 -.01 TotBdSgl n10.55 -.02 TotStkSgl n31.89 +.13 Western Asset: CorePlus I 10.83 ... Yacktman Funds: Fund p 17.41 +.01

METALS NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Fri. Aluminum -$1.1772 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$4.3974 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper $4.4085 N.Y. Merc spot Fri. Lead - $2729.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.0858 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1436.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1426.10 troy oz., NY Merc spot Fri. Silver - $37.545 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $37.058 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Fri. Platinum -$1756.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1745.60 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Fri. n.q.-not quoted, n.a.-not available r-revised


STATE

A7

History on the move at the old Aztec firehouse Roswell Daily Record

AZTEC (AP) — It’s out with the old, and in with the new — usually. Yet recently at Aztec’s old firehouse, it’s out with the old and in with more of it. The firehouse, previously used as a storage area for the Aztec Museum, was cleared of historical treasure and clutter so numerous archived records from the San Juan County Historical Society can eventually take their place. “The society is just trying to get back to the county seat, and since the firehouse is right next to the museum, with all the historical records, it just seemed perfect,” said Aztec Purchasing Agent Austin Randall. Maintenance crews paraded everything from mannequins ador ned in pioneer clothing to 1940s posters celebrating “Yanks” out of the old firehouse in what was a quirky scene of spring cleaning. “There were decades of

newspapers,” said Aztec Museum board member Vicki Ramakka, who described some of the livelier news articles. “Mary Pickford was playing at the Star Theater in Aztec, Teddy Roosevelt’s invasion of Cuba and every other January there was always a story on the worst snow storm ever recorded,” she said. For the past 10 years, the building acted as the museum’s overflow storage space, though it was built in the 1950s as the town’s fire station. However, the newspapers found in its dusty rooms dated back to the 1890s, as did other items, such as old tourism maps and family photo albums. Anyone interested will be able to access records preserved by the society. The documents previously were stored at an old school. As for the dusty pieces of history temporarily being relocated, the mannequins,

newspapers and photos will remain in storage units surrounding the Aztec Museum. During the summer, several of the museum’s wings will be closed because items also will be stored there. “There’s a lot of history in here,” said maintenance worker Dale Jameson, who transported antiques and mannequins. “Looks like we’re cleaning out a department store.” The deal to renovate the space already is set in stone, and city commissioners recently approved a contract to finalize negotiations between Aztec and the county. The two entities will split the approximate $101,000 cost. The city’s half, a maximum contribution of $55,000, will go toward covering the bid, while the county’s maximum contribution of $55,000 will go to architectural renovation, Randall said.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

AP Photo

The city’s share of the funds will come from the fiscal year 2011 $500,000 contingency budget from the Capital Projects Fund, which is reserved for proj-

“Hometown Proud”

grant. City commissioners awarded the bid for renovation and construction to Winters Construction earlier this month.

ects not initially on the annual budget. The county’s share comes from a New Mexico Economic Development Certified Communities Initiative

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Don’t Forget Our Convenient Drive-Thru Window In Our Pharmacy Pharmacy Hours: 9am-6pm Mon-Fri • 9am-1pm Sat Closed Sunday


A8 Saturday, March 26, 2011

WEATHER

Roswell Seven-day forecast Today

Tonight

Partly cloudy

Sunny

Sunday

Monday

Sunny and windy

Tuesday

Bright sunshine and windy

Mostly sunny and cooler

Wednesday

Mostly sunny and windy

Thursday

Mostly sunny and breezy

Roswell Daily Record

National Cities Friday

Plenty of sunshine

High 82°

Low 44°

83°/40°

90°/43°

76°/42°

79°/43°

71°/39°

79°/51°

ENE at 6-12 mph POP: 0%

NE at 3-6 mph POP: 5%

E at 3-6 mph POP: 0%

SE at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

E at 4-8 mph POP: 0%

N at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

SSE at 8-16 mph POP: 5%

SW at 7-14 mph POP: 5%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

New Mexico Weather

Roswell through 5 p.m. Friday

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

Temperatures High/low ........................... 83°/37° Normal high/low ............... 72°/38° Record high ............... 86° in 2008 Record low ................. 25° in 1955 Humidity at noon ..................... 8%

Farmington 54/31

Clayton 60/30

Raton 58/26

Precipitation 24 hours ending 5 p.m. Fri. .. Month to date ....................... Normal month to date .......... Year to date ......................... Normal year to date .............

0.00” 0.00” 0.29” 0.09” 1.09”

Santa Fe 60/29

Gallup 54/25

Tucumcari 69/36

Albuquerque 62/38

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Clovis 71/37

Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading 54 0-50

51-100

Good

Moderate

Source: EPA

101-150

Ruidoso 63/43

151+

Unhealthy Unhealthy sensitive

T or C 71/43

Sun and Moon The Sun Today Sun. The Moon Today Sun.

Rise Set 6:54 a.m. 7:14 p.m. 6:53 a.m. 7:14 p.m. Rise Set 2:04 a.m. 12:19 p.m. 2:50 a.m. 1:18 p.m.

Alamogordo 75/41

Silver City 67/39

ROSWELL 82/44 Carlsbad 86/52

Hobbs 83/39

Las Cruces 73/43

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

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

75/41/pc 62/38/pc 50/23/pc 83/51/s 86/52/s 47/24/pc 60/30/pc 54/31/pc 71/37/s 72/37/s 61/37/pc 54/31/pc 54/25/c 83/39/s 73/43/s 60/28/pc 53/29/pc 68/36/pc 80/44/s 72/37/s 56/26/pc 58/26/pc 46/27/pc 82/44/s 63/43/s 60/29/pc 67/39/s 71/43/s 69/36/pc 60/33/pc

74/42/s 66/40/s 51/25/s 84/50/s 87/50/s 53/27/sh 64/36/pc 55/22/s 72/39/s 75/37/s 65/39/s 61/35/sh 59/28/sh 81/39/s 74/42/s 61/32/s 57/28/sh 71/41/s 77/45/s 71/39/s 60/29/s 64/25/pc 49/22/sf 83/40/s 63/42/s 63/31/s 69/39/s 73/42/s 69/35/s 63/30/sh

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

Today

Sun.

Today

Sun.

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

38/26/s 66/56/t 46/32/pc 38/23/s 56/44/r 36/22/pc 34/19/pc 84/50/pc 56/25/pc 34/16/pc 76/50/s 82/69/pc 82/64/pc 46/23/c 40/28/sn 67/50/pc 62/50/sh 77/39/s

37/23/pc 73/46/t 37/25/sn 41/25/pc 52/41/r 39/22/pc 32/20/pc 67/52/c 58/29/c 37/18/pc 77/48/s 82/70/pc 80/65/pc 41/23/pc 45/28/pc 71/54/s 64/50/pc 73/40/pc

86/69/s 81/44/s 32/17/c 80/69/pc 39/26/s 36/24/sn 86/60/s 42/27/s 75/53/pc 36/23/pc 53/41/r 50/43/r 44/28/sn 56/35/pc 61/55/pc 50/38/sh 76/46/s 48/31/pc

88/72/s 83/45/s 34/22/pc 81/66/t 42/29/c 41/27/c 87/63/s 40/27/c 80/56/s 36/19/sn 51/40/r 47/41/r 40/27/pc 54/39/c 61/54/pc 50/39/r 78/47/s 39/29/sn

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

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

State Extremes

High: 94°.................. Laredo, Texas Low: -9° ..................Grayling, Mich.

High: 83°............................Roswell Low: 12°.............................. Grants

National Cities Seattle 50/38

Minneapolis 32/17

Billings 42/25

Chicago 36/22 Denver 56/25

San Francisco 59/47

New York 39/26 Detroit 34/16

Washington 48/31

Kansas City 40/28

Los Angeles 62/50

Atlanta 66/56

El Paso 76/50

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

Houston 82/64 Miami 86/69

Fronts

Precipitation

Edie Falco: back for a new shift on ‘Nurse Jackie’ Last

Mar 26

New

Apr 3

First

Apr 11

Full

Apr 17

NEW YORK (AP) — Edie Falco has performed the near impossible: She has made a clean break with the show that made her a star yet could have pegged her for a lifetime as mobster wife Carmela Soprano. In the title role of “Nurse Jackie,” Falco has ably recast herself as a guardian angel with a cranky attitude, a bad back and a penchant for cheating on her husband with the guy who supplies her with pain pills. Now, that was Carmela who? At the end of last season, Jackie Peyton’s unsteady world seemed to be blowing up. Her loyal but runningout-of-patience husband (Dominic Fumusa) had discovered her latest deception. “I keep telling you I’m no prize, and you won’t listen,” she confessed. “Is that everything?” he asked her as she hugged him. “I love you,” she said. “Yes, that’s everything.” But it’s not everything. Back for a third season (Monday at 10 p.m. EDT on Showtime), Jackie, with her emergency-room scrubs, pixie haircut and caustic manner, resumes her hectic life of juggling lies. “Anyone who knows you knows they don’t know you,” as the hospital pharmacist (Paul Schulze) who is Jackie’s source for drugs

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In this publicity image released by Showtime, Edie Falco portrays Jackie Peyton, left, and Merritt Wever portrays Zoey in the Showtime original series, "Nurse Jackie." and on-the-job quickies once told her. Even Falco doesn’t claim to know Jackie. “I don’t know that I ever really feel like I’m getting my arms around the character,” Falco says. “But I think that’s why I want to do it. What ends up getting on film is my attempts to get my ar ms around an idea of who this woman is.” When it premiered two years ago, “Nurse Jackie” became an instant hit for Showtime. Viewers were hooked on this dark come-

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult JACQUELINE

BIGAR ARIES (March 21-April 19) Make calls and let friends know your plans. They might enjoy joining you. Your creativity flourishes. You can YOUR HOROSCOPE aggravate an older friend or relative far more than you realize. A partner might be rather uptight. Tonight: Could be a late one. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Reach out for someone at a distance. Try to understand what is going on with a friend by imagining what it must be like to live his or her life. Invite this same person to hop in the car and go for a drive. Both of you can relax finally. Tonight: How about a movie? GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Relate on an individual level. People seem to be far more responsive. Have you not been giving certain loved ones and/or friends enough attention? A child or new friend could be more difficult than you anticipated. Now is the moment for diplomacy. Tonight: Add a little more spice to your life. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Defer to another person and see what is happening behind the scenes. Be imaginative with a partner who might be more challenging than you are comfortable with. Fatigue could pull you down, giving you a case of the blues. Tonight: Go with another’s ideas. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You are upbeat and spirited. An easy, laid-back approach allows greater give-andtake. Your ability to home in on a situation and pitch in needs to happen. Someone appreciates you being able to free him or her up. Tonight: Hanging out — no more, no less. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Keep reaching out for a child or new friend. Though you might feel as if this person is standing on ceremony, he or she isn’t. Understanding evolves to a new level. Your sense of humor emerges. Tonight: It’s Saturday night! LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) If you want to hang at home, it is a perfect day to do just that. You might want to invite a friend or two over. Make it easy. Whatever the proj-

dy about a woman who is fiercely dedicated to healing her patients while no less resolute, it seems, on damaging herself and others in her path. (Last season the role brought Falco an Emmy for best actress in a comedy series, adding to her stash of three Emmys for “The Sopranos.”) Much of Jackie’s struggle stems from her addiction. It’s a plight that’s familiar to Falco, who, even though she has been sober for two decades, has made good use of her experience

with alcohol abuse in playing Jackie. “For sure, it’s helped me understand her in a way non-addicts never could,” Falco says. “But I’m 20 years away from that, so it doesn’t feel dangerous to me, or titillating, to play someone (who isn’t sober). Every day, I have a deeper gratitude for the fact that I’m not there anymore.” The show never glamorizes drugs as recreational. Jackie is masking pain from an on-the-job back injury and her barely man-

ect — taxes or visiting with friends — play it low-key. Tonight: You don’t need to move out of the neighborhood in order to have fun. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) How you visualize a situation could change radically if you loosen up and relax. Sometimes you cannot see everything, and others must talk if they are bothered. Don’t take someone’s comments personally. Tonight: At a favorite spot. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Imagine what it would be like if you felt totally free and as if you could do anything. Your sincerity makes a big difference to those in your immediate circle. Someone you care about could be pulling back. Trying to get this person back in could be impossible. Tonight: Your treat. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Others would prefer not to have to say “no.” Evaluate what you are asking for. There could be a gigantic backfire later. Note the power

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ageable life. “Nurse Jackie,” for all its quirkiness and extreme humor, is a cautionary tale, even though a few of its viewers may not be getting the message. “Some guy on the subway called out to me, ‘Oh! Nurse Jackie! YOU do the same drugs WE do!’ and had this fist-pumping thing going on,” Falco reports. “I thought, ‘That’s not what I’m going for.’ “Hopefully, there are people who can see past that, to something deeper.” And Falco wants them to keep seeing it. “I’m thrilled to be doing this job, and I’d love to do it for a long, long time. This is far beyond my wildest dreams — the life that I have now,” she says, explaining further with a laugh, “I’ve also been in therapy for more than 20 years.” Besides “The Sopranos,” the 47-year-old Falco’s previous TV work includes the HBO prison drama, “Oz.” Her films include “Judy Berlin,” “Sunshine State” and “Freedomland.” She will add to her extensive theater credits when previews begin April 4 for the Broadway revival of John Guare’s comedy “The House of Blue Leaves,” in which Falco co-stars with Ben Stiller, Jennifer Jason Leigh and Mary Beth Hurt. Production on “Nurse Jackie” has wrapped for Season 3, so Falco knows

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what lies ahead. But while she was filming, she insisted on never being told more than was necessary, episode by episode. “I really need to take it as it comes,” she says. “I prefer to find out at the last minute, and go with whatever comes right away. I love not knowing.” And though Jackie seems to regularly court disaster at her job, in her marriage and her personal condition, the series makes plain she’s still got room to fall. In a future episode, Jackie asks a self-professed expert in drug abuse, “Hypothetically, how far am I from hitting bottom?” To that, the man smirks knowingly and answers, “Not even close.” During her interview, Falco marvels at how long some addicts can abuse and delude themselves, “how low-down some individuals can get before they either die or clean themselves up.” For storytellers, that’s a good thing. “It means we have no rules, no boundaries on what Jackie might do,” Falco says. “Absolutely anything could happen.” But in the end, there’ll be no waffling on Jackie’s fate. “It’s important to me,” says Falco, “that whatever the culmination of the show may be, and whenever it occurs, she’ll either fall apart or she’ll fix this.”

of kindness when dealing with a neighbor, sibling or friend. Let this person know you empathize. Tonight: All smiles. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) Sometimes, as extroverted as you are, or friend-oriented, you need to pull back and have some personal space. Whether you share some time with one other person makes no difference. Just opt for quiet and calm. Tonight: Not to be found, leaving others wondering. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) What you want to do is exactly what you need to do. You can be sure that one other person is involved as you look at plans and choices. What might start as a movie and a dinner with friends could become a veritable party. Tonight: Don’t stop. BORN TODAY Poet Robert Frost (1874), singer Diana Ross (1944), actress Amy Smart (1976)


Saturday, March 26, 2011 Phone: 575-622-7710, ext. 28

LOCAL SCHEDULE SATURDAY MARCH 26 COLLEGE BASEBALL Noon • NMMI at Frank Phillips College (DH) WOMEN’S TENNIS National Dual Match Inv. At Baytown, Texas 8 a.m. • NMMI vs. Seminole State College H.S. BASEBALL 1 p.m. • Goddard vs. Artesia, at Rio Rancho Tournament Roswell Sertoma Club NMMI Colt Classic 10:30 a.m. • Gateway Chr. vs. Tularosa 1 p.m. • Lordsburg vs. Santa Rosa 3:30 p.m. • Dexter vs. Capitan 6:30 p.m. • NMMI vs. Estancia H.S. TRACK & FIELD 9 a.m. • Dexter, Lake Arthur, Gateway Chr. and Valley Chr. at Alfalfa Relays, at Hagerman H.S. SOFTBALL Artesia Invitational 9 a.m. • Goddard vs. Silver City • Lovington vs. Roswell TBA • Artesia vs. TBD. • Belen vs. TBD • Aztec vs. TBD • Hobbs vs. TBD Lindsey Callaway Tournament 10 a.m. • Capitan vs. Ruidoso 1 p.m. • Carlsbad C vs. Hope Chr. 4 p.m. • Dexter vs. Jal 7 p.m. • Artesia JV vs. Loving

G E R IN A WATCH TRACKING GERINA PILLER

SPORTS

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Third and fourth cost Lady Demons Section

Roswell Daily Record

E-mail: sports@roswell-record.com

KEVIN J. KELLER RECORD SPORTS EDITOR

In softball, it doesn’t take long for one bad play to turn into one bad inning and for one bad inning turn to into one bad outcome. For the Dexter Demons, the third inning was that one bad inning that led to a bad outcome on Friday. The Artesia junior varsity team posted six runs off of four hits in the third inning and parlayed that into an 11-5 win over the Demons in the championship semifinals of the eighth annual Lindsey Callaway Softball Tournament. “We’re going to just have to find one positive per inning and build, build and build,” said Demon coach Chanda Crandall about how her team can eliminate those bad innings. “We get down and we can’t ever find that one positive and go, go, go and build off of it. “The third inning has been bad for us. It was that way in Carlsbad and it was that way (Thursday), but this is the first time where we haven’t been able to dig ourselves

Kevin J. Keller Photo

Dexter’s Jenna Garcia, left, delivers a pitch against Artesia’s JV team on Friday at the Lindsey Callaway Tournament.

out of that.” Dexter was positive through the first two innings until the third cost them. The Demons jumped ahead 1-0 in the first when pitcher Jenna Garcia led off with a single to right field.

She then stole second and third and scored when Veronica Duran grounded out to second. Garcia gave up a pair of singles to start the second, but then mowed down three straight Bulldogs with strike-

outs. Dexter threatened in the second, but couldn’t plate a run after putting runners on second and third with nobody out. Then came the costly third.

Garcia gave up a leadoff walk to Joanna Ponce and Kendra Tinker followed by blasting a two-run bomb to straight-away center to give

arguably the most important aspect of baseball for better or worse. For the Gateway Christian baseball team on Friday, it was for worse. Warrior pitchers hit seven batters, walked six and allowed nine hits in their 17-7 loss to Lordsburg on Friday in the second round of the Roswell Sertoma Club NMMI Colt Classic.

The Mavericks took a 2-0 lead after the first inning and in the bottom of the second they tacked on four more runs to take a 6-0 lead. After the first two innings, Gateway had mustered only one hit and it appeared as though Lordsburg would pull away. But in the top of the third, Gateway erupted for

seven runs to take a 7-6 lead. Raj Bhakta, Caleb Kimberly and Cody Raines walked to start the Warrior third and Christopher Taylor got Gateway on the board with an RBI single. After the Taylor single, Daniel Ramirez drove in a run when he got hit by a pitch. Garrett Gill followed that

up with a bases clearing double that cut the Lordsburg lead to 6-5. After a strikeout, Rhett Braggs drove in Gill with a single to shallow right field, tying the game at six. The Warriors took the lead when Braggs scored on a wild pitch, but the lead

Lordsburg tops Gateway Christian, 17-7 LAWRENCE FOSTER RECORD SPORTS REPORTER

At its core, baseball is about pitching, hitting and fielding. Boil it down even more and baseball is about pitching, because without it, there is no hitting or fielding. Given that, pitching is

See DEXTER, Page B2

See WARRIORS, Page B2

Gerina Piller was 2 over through 11 holes in the second round of the LPGA Tour’s Kia Classic before the tournament was suspended due to darkness, Friday. She made a birdie, seven pars and a triple bogey on the front nine to go out in 40 on the par-38 front nine at Industry Hills Golf Club at Pacific Palms in Industry, Calif. She then made pars on 10 and 11 before the tournament was suspended. Piller is currently tied for 86th. Jiyai Shin is the clubhouse leader at 12 under after a second-round 64. Sandra Gal is four shots back of Shin at 8 under through the first nine of her second round.

LOCAL BRIEFS REFS SOUGHT FOR YOUTH SOCCER

The Roswell Youth Soccer Association will hold a referee orientation for individuals interested in becoming a referee for the association. Orientation will be held on March 28 and 31 from 4-7 p.m. at the Cielo Grande Recreation Complex. For more information, call 622-0690.

• More briefs on B2

SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS 1946 — Hank Iba’s Oklahoma A&M Aggies beat North Carolina 43-40 for their second straight NCAA men’s basketball title. Bob Kurland scores 23 points, including the first two dunks in NCAA tournament history.

ON THIS DAY IN...

1973 — Bill Walton scores 44 points to help UCLA win its record seventh NCAA basketball championship with an 87-66 triumph over Memphis State. 1992 — Former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson is sentenced to six years in prison for rape.

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Steve Notz Photo

Dexter falls to Estancia, NMMI downs Capitan

Gateway Christian’s Daniel Ramirez, left, slides safely into home during the third inning of the Warriors’ game against Lordsburg on Friday at the Roswell Sertoma Club NMMI Colt Classic. Gateway lost 17-7.

RECORD STAFF REPORTS

At the beginning of the season, Capitan beat NMMI twice by the 10 run rule. The cardiac kids made sure that wouldn’t happen again. The Colts, winners of four consecutive one-run games, pulled out another tight win on Friday, 5-4 over Capitan in the Roswell Sertoma Club NMMI Colt Classic. Heading into the final inning, NMMI held a 4-3 lead, but the Tigers were able to knot it up. NMMI’s Steele Blue led off the bottom of the seventh with a double down the rightfield line and intentional walks to Caleb Taylor and John Bonhoff loaded the bases for Chance Cavin. Cavin delivered, ripping a single

down the right field that plated Blue and gave NMMI a birth in its own tournament’s championship. Colt coach Charlie Ward was excited about his teams play and even coined a nickname for his squad. “The cardiac kids baby,” he laughed. “Four in a row by one run. We are goign to be a team to be reckoned with in 2A. We are getting better each day and are just competing. “I am excited that we are competing. We are giving ourselves a chance to win and that is all you can ask for.” NMMI was led by Blue’s and Taylor’s two runs. Goddard 11, Santa Fe 0 RIO RANCHO — A day after get-

ting only one hit, Goddard bounced back with a five-inning win over Santa Fe in the second round of the Rio Rancho Tournament on Friday. The Rockets (9-2) were led by Ryan Greene on the mound and at the plate. Greene allowed only one hit in four innings and helped his own cause with a three-run homer, his second home run in as many days. He finished the game with two hits and five RBIs. Goddard coach Steve Nunez said that his team got back to where it needed to be with the win. “I told them, ‘You are going to have a bad game and you just have to forget it and start tomorrow on a different track,’” he said. “That’s what we did. Ryan pitched a pretty good ball game. We are back to

where we need to be.” The Rockets close out the tournament with a 1 p.m. tilt against Artesia today.

Estancia 8, Dexter 3 Dexter fell behind early and couldn’t recover in a loss to Estancia on Friday. The Demons fell behind 4-0 after the third inning and trailed 7-0 heading into the bottom of the fifth. Dexter scored a run in the fifth, sixth and seventh innings, but left three men on base during those innings. The Demon’s had ten errors and had seven hits, something coach Archie Duran said is hard to overcome. See WRAP, Page B2

SAT. APRIL 2 10 AM - 3PM TEST N TUNE SPECTATORS $10 CAR & DRIVER $25

OPEN DAY BRACKET RACE SAT. APR. 16 GATES OPEN 11 AM TRIALS 1PM

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ENGINE STAGE S T A R T E N G I N E


B2 Saturday, March 26, 2011

SPORTS

Wrap

Continued from Page B1

“We had 10 errors to our eight hits and when you have more errors than hits, it is tough to win,” he said. “We tried to make a run at the end, but when you make that many errors it is tough to win at any level.” Adam Brown and Steven Marquez had two hits each for Dexter.

Prep Softball

Roswell 6, Silver City 5 ARTESIA — Entering the bottom of the seventh trailing 5-1, it appeared as if the Lady Coyotes would be picking up their eighth loss of the season. Appearances can be deceiving. Roswell scored five runs in its last at-bat to beat Silver City on the first day of the Artesia Invitational. Kaylynn Ortiz started off the home half of the seventh by reaching base via an error and Amber Armstrong followed that up with a walk and after an Arielle Green single, the Coyotes had the bases loaded with nobody out. Aleena Hernandez struck out after the Green single and then Kendra Chavez grounded into a fielders choice, leaving the bases loaded with two outs. Tyler Armstrong singled in a run to cut the lead to 5-2 and a double by Tiffanie

Warriors

Continued from Page B1

would be short lived. In the home half of the third, Lordsburg loaded the bases with one out thanks to three hit batsmen and Caesar Alvarez cleared the bases with an

Dexter

Continued from Page B1

the Bulldogs the lead for good. Kyla Martinez doubled to deep center after Tinker’s blast and Miranda Cota reached on an error. Both then scored when Savanah Boone singled up middle to make it 4-1. Artesia added two more —

Basketball

National Basketball Association At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain EASTERN CONFERENCE Atlantic Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB y-Boston . . . . . . . . . .50 21 .704 — Philadelphia . . . . . . . .37 35 .514 13 1/2

LOCAL BRIEFS FIRST TEE ACCEPTING NEW STUDENTS

The First Tee of The Pecos Valley is accepting new students for classes that will begin on April 4. Students meet for classes one day per week from 4-5:30 p.m. at the NMMI Golf Course. The cost is $100. For more information, call 6234444.

ENMU-R HOSTING 27TH ANNUAL HOOPS TOURNEY

Eastern New Mexico University Roswell will host its 27th annual 5-on-5 basketball tournament on April 8-9. The entry fee is $200 and includes a tournament T-shirt. Rosters are limited to 10 players per team and all players must be shorter than 6-foot-2. Numbered team shirts are required. The entry deadline is April 5. For more information, call 6247338 or 624-7191.

PARTY ON THE RIVER EVENTS ACCEPTING REGISTRATIONS

The Roswell Adult and Senior Center and the Roswell Parks and Recreation Department are currently accepting registrations for three different events that will be held at Party on the River. Registrations for the fiesta and powder puff tugs of war, which will be held on May 7 at Cahoon Park, will be accepted through May 6 at 5 p.m. The registration fee is $100 per team. For more information, call 624-6718. Registrations for the flag football tournament, which will be held on May 7-8 at Cahoon Park, will be accepted through April 27. The cost is $80 for a six-person team. For more information, call 624-6719. Registrations for the co-ed sand volleyball tournament, which will be held on May 7-8, will be accepted through May 2. The cost is $80 for a six-player team. For more information, call 624-6719.

Bolanos brought the Coyotes to within one. With runners on first and third with two out and a full count, senior Jessica Zamora ripped a double that plated the tying and winning runs. Roswell coach Art Sandoval said that he told his team to not give up. “We stressed that even though we had two outs, we weren’t going to give up,” he said. “We kept working and it paid off.” Zamora picked up the win on the mound for the Coyotes.

Roswell Daily Record

Lovington 8, Goddard 4 AR TESIA — Lovington had a five-run third inning that propelled them to a win over Goddard in the first round of the Artesia Invitational on Friday. The Rockets (2-6) had a 2-0 lead heading into the third inning, but two errors enabled Lovington to take the lead. “We took a 2-0 lead going into the third and then we had two errors,” Goddard coach David Lawrence said. “One of the errors cost us three runs. That was the telltale sign of the game. We had one bad inning and that is the story of our season so far. That inning did us in right there.” Danielle Hubbard was charged with the loss for Goddard.

netters advanced to the final of the back draw with two wins on Friday at the National Dual Match Invitational. NMMI’s first match of the day was against Temple College and the Broncos got singles wins from Litia Godinet (second; 6-7, 7-6 (75)), Alyssa Hawkins (fourth; 6-4, 6-3), Samantha Dunn (fifth; 6-1, 6-0) and Jazmine Burt (sixth; 6-1, 6-1). Doubles victories came from Karla Martinez and Godinet (first; 8-4) and Adalyn Hazelman and Hawkins (second; 8-3). Against the Eagles, singles winners for the Broncos were Martinez (first; 6-1, 6-2), Godinet (second; 7-5, 6-2), Hazelman (third; 6-2, 6-3), Hawkins (fourth; 6-2, 6-3) and Dunn (fifth; 6-1, 6-2). Martinez and Godinet (first; 8-5) and Hazelman and Hawkins (8-3) picked up doubles wins for NMMI. Bronco coach Zeljka Vidic said that despite the scores, the matches were tough. “The girls played really well today,” she said. “They fought hard and the matches were tough. They won some tough matches and are getting better. We just have to keep pressing forward and continue to get better each day” NMMI will square off against Seminole State College today at 8 a.m.

NMMI 6, Temple College 3 NMMI 7, Meridian CC 2 BAYTOWN , Texas — The Lady Bronco

Frank Phillips College 7, 8 NMMI 4, 5 BORGER, Texas — Not all hits are created

Women’s Tennis

inside the park grand slam that gave the Mavericks a 10-7 lead. Gateway coach Rick Rapp said that things started to snowball in the third inning. “This is our first tournament, so I think we are getting into the swing of things,” he said. “I think it one on an RBI single by Polie Baca and another off a fielding error by Dexter Clarissa Chavez. Garcia led off Dexter’s half of the third with a single and moved to third thanks to an error and a stolen base, but was stranded when Anissa Ybarra, Duran and Evelyn Dominguez each struck out. Stranding runners in scoring position was a theme for Dexter throughout the night. New York . . . . . . . . . .35 New Jersey . . . . . . . .23 Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . .20 Southeast Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W x-Miami . . . . . . . . . . .50 x-Orlando . . . . . . . . . .47 Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . .40 Charlotte . . . . . . . . . .29 Washington . . . . . . . .17 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W y-Chicago . . . . . . . . .52 Indiana . . . . . . . . . . . .32 Milwaukee . . . . . . . . .29 Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . .25 Cleveland . . . . . . . . . .14

37 .486 15 1/2 48 .324 27 51 .282 30

L 22 26 32 42 54

L 19 41 42 47 57

Pct GB .694 — .644 3 1/2 .556 10 .408 20 1/2 .239 32 1/2

Pct GB .732 — .438 21 .408 23 .347 27 1/2 .197 38

WESTERN CONFERENCE Southwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB — x-San Antonio . . . . . .57 15 .792 6 x-Dallas . . . . . . . . . . .51 21 .708 New Orleans . . . . . . .42 31 .575 15 1/2 Memphis . . . . . . . . . .40 33 .548 17 1/2 19 Houston . . . . . . . . . . .38 34 .528 Northwest Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB Oklahoma City . . . . . .47 24 .662 — Denver . . . . . . . . . . . .44 29 .603 4 Portland . . . . . . . . . . .42 30 .583 5 1/2 Utah . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36 38 .486 12 1/2 Minnesota . . . . . . . . .17 57 .230 31 1/2 Pacific Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Pct GB y-L.A. Lakers . . . . . . .51 20 .718 — Phoenix . . . . . . . . . . .36 34 .514 14 1/2 Golden State . . . . . . .30 42 .417 21 1/2 L.A. Clippers . . . . . . .28 44 .389 23 1/2 Sacramento . . . . . . . .19 52 .268 32 x-clinched playoff spot y-clinched division

Thursday’s Games Dallas 104, Minnesota 96 New Orleans 121, Utah 117, OT Friday’s Games Sacramento 110, Indiana 93 Orlando 95, New Jersey 85 Charlotte 83, Boston 81 Cleveland 97, Detroit 91 Miami 111, Philadelphia 99 Milwaukee 102, New York 96 Chicago 99, Memphis 96 Oklahoma City 111, Minnesota 103 Denver 114, Washington 94 Portland 98, San Antonio 96 Toronto at Golden State, 8:30 p.m. L.A. Clippers at L.A. Lakers, 8:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games New Jersey at Atlanta, 5 p.m. New York at Charlotte, 5 p.m. Indiana at Detroit, 5:30 p.m. Chicago at Milwaukee, 6:30 p.m. Dallas at Utah, 7 p.m. Toronto at L.A. Clippers, 8:30 p.m. Sunday’s Games Sacramento at Philadelphia, 10 a.m. San Antonio at Memphis, 4 p.m. Atlanta at Cleveland, 4 p.m. Houston at Miami, 4 p.m. Boston at Minnesota, 5 p.m. Portland at Oklahoma City, 6 p.m. Washington at Golden State, 7 p.m. New Orleans at L.A. Lakers, 7:30 p.m. Dallas at Phoenix, 8:30 p.m.

Golf

Bay Hill Scores By The Associated Press Friday At Bay Hill Club and Lodge Course Orlando, Fla. Purse: $6 million Yardage: 7,419; Par: 72 Second Round Jiyai Shin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70-64 — Chella Choi . . . . . . . . . . . . .72-68 — Anna Nordqvist . . . . . . . . . .71-70 — Sun Young Yoo . . . . . . . . . .71-70 — Mika Miyazato . . . . . . . . . . .70-73 — Michelle Wie . . . . . . . . . . . .68-75 — Moira Dunn . . . . . . . . . . . . .74-70 — Katherine Hull . . . . . . . . . . .73-71 — Ai Miyazato . . . . . . . . . . . . .72-72 — Stacy Prammanasudh . . . . .72-72 — Amy Hung . . . . . . . . . . . . . .70-74 — Juli Inkster . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75-70 — Na Yeon Choi . . . . . . . . . . .73-72 — Pornanong Phatlum . . . . . . .73-72 — Shanshan Feng . . . . . . . . . .72-73 — Sophie Gustafson . . . . . . . .72-73 — Suzann Pettersen . . . . . . . .72-73 —

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Men’s Baseball

equal. Even though NMMI outhit Frank Phillips 15 to 11 in Game 2 and equaled the Plainsmen’s seven hits in the first game, the Colts lost both games. In Game 1, NMMI had an early lead but couldn’t hold on and the Colts squandered late inning chances for a rally. In the fourth inning, the Colts had two runners on and one out. In the fifth they had the bases loaded. In the sixth inning they had two runners. NMMI just couldn’t muster that key hit in those innings, something that has plagued them all year according to coach Bret Simmermacher. “It is pretty much the same blueprint as it has been all year,” he said. “They had seven hits, we had seven hits. They scored seven runs, we scored four. It is just the same thing.” Robert Orona and Luis Maldonado had an RBI for the Colts in Game 1. In the night cap, the Colts outhit the Plainsmen, but fell 8-5. Simmermacher said that if his team could hit when it mattered most, they’d have another five wins. “We are 1-9 in the league,” he said. “In at least six of those losses, if we get any kind of timely hitting, we are 6-3 or 6-4.” Johnnie Garrett and Maldona had two hits each for NMMI.

walks are what is killing us,” he said. “We need to make them hit the ball and not put men on base. We are going to cut that out.” Rapp added that he will focus on the positive and that there is always a tomorrow in baseball. “I don’t want to focus on the negative, so we’ll try to

focus on the positive,” he said. “We did score some runs and then (tomorrow) starts zero to zero. It does not matter what happened (today), it is zero to zero starting (tomorrow) and we’ll go from there.”

kind of just snowballed. We were trying to throw strikes, but I think they were pressing a bit too much. Sometimes, we were aiming it instead of rearing back and throwing it.” Lordsburg put the game away in the fourth inning when they scored seven runs.

In that fourth inning, Gateway hit two Maverick batters, walked two, had a wild pitch and a balk. Rapp said that in the Warriors’ first two games, they have hit the ball fine, but gave up too many free bases. “The last two games we have hit the ball, but the

“We left, I think, 11 batters on base in scoring position,” Crandall said. “Anytime we get a runner on base, we need to move them all the way around. “For them to be left on is extremely disappointing.” In the top of the fourth, Artesia tacked on five more runs thanks to three hits, two walks and an error. Dexter answered with a pair of runs in the fourth.

Silvia Mediano singled with one out and moved to third on a wild pitch and a passed ball, then scored when Alyissa Sanchez singled down the third-base line. Sanchez got to third on an error and a passed ball and scored when Tabatha Salas grounded out to second. Garcia put Artesia down in order in the fifth, but Dexter blew a golden opportunity to get back in it in the bottom

of the fifth. Garcia hit a leadoff single to right and again stole second and third. Ybarra and Duran walked after that, loading the bases with nobody out with the cleanup batter coming to the plate. However, just like the third, the next three Demons struck out and Dexter was left with an 11-3 deficit after five.

The Demons would finally move runners in the seventh, but their pair of runs was too little, too late. Garcia took the loss for the Demons after giving up 11 runs on 12 hits and striking out eight. She also walked five hitters and hit 3 batters. She also went 3 for 3 at the plate. Boone got the win for Artesia.

BOSTON RED SOX—Optioned RHP Scott Atchison, RHP Michael Bowden and OF Ryan Kalish to Pawtucket (IL). Reassigned RHP Brandon Duckworth, LHP Rich Hill, LHP Andrew Miller and LHP Randy Williams to their minor league camp. KANSAS CITY ROYALS—Signed 1B Mike Sweeney to a one-day minor league contract and announced the retirement of Sweeney. Acquired 1B-3B John Whittleman from Texas for cash. Traded RHP Gaby Hernandez to the Chicago White Sox for future considerations. NEW YORK YANKEES—Agreed to terms with RHP Kevin Millwood on a minor league

contract. TAMPA BAY RAYS—Resassigned RHP Cory Wade to their minor league camp. Optioned RHP Rob Delaney to minor leagues. National League CHICAGO CUBS—Announced the retirement of RHP Braden Looper. MILWAUKEE BREWERS—Traded OF Chris Dickerson to the New York Yankees for RHP Sergio Mitre. Optioned C Martin Maldonado to Nashville (PCL) and RHP Wily Peralta to Huntsville (SL). Reassigned RHP Zack Segovia to their minor league camp. NEW YORK METS—Selected the contract of LHP Tim Byrdak from Buffalo (IL). PITTSBURGH PIRATES—Optioned RHP Daniel McCutchen to Indianapolis (IL). Reassigned RHP Sean Gallagher, RHP Tyler Yates, C Wyatt Toregas and INF Josh Fields to their minor league camp.

WASHINGTON NATIONALS—Agreed to terms with LHP Oliver Perez on a minor league contract. Optioned RHP Yunesky Maya to Syracuse (IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association SAN ANTONIO SPURS—Signed F De’Sean Butler and placed him on the inactive list. COLLEGE HOWARD PAYNE—Named Guy Ament defensive line coach. the NEBRASKA-OMAHA—Announced University of Nebraska Board of Regents approved the school’s move to the Summit League this fall and the school will eliminate the football and wrestling program. SOUTH CAROLINA—Announced junior basketball F Murphy Holloway will transfer. SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA—Announced F Nikola Vucevic will enter the NBA draft. TEXAS A&M-CORPUS CHRISTI—Named Willis Wilson men’s basketball coach.

Australia BOXING 7:45 p.m. HBO — Featherweights, Matt Remillard (23-0-0) vs. Mikey Garcia (24-0-0); champion Yuriorkis Gamboa (19-0-0) vs. Jorge Solis (40-2-2), for WBA/IBF featherweight title, at Atlantic City, N.J. GOLF 7 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Open de Andalucia, third round, at Malaga, Spain 10:30 a.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational, third round, at Orlando, Fla. 12:30 p.m. NBC — PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational, third round, at Orlando, Fla. 4:30 p.m. TGC — LPGA, Kia Classic, third round, at City of Industry, Calif. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 2 p.m.

ESPN2 — Preseason, Chicago Cubs vs. Texas, at Surprise, Ariz. MEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 11 a.m. CBS — NCAA Division II tournament, Bellarmine vs. BYUHawaii, at Springfield, Mass. 2:30 p.m. CBS — NCAA Division I tournament, regional finals, doubleheader, Florida vs. Butler, at New Orleans and Connecticut vs. Arizona, at Anaheim, Calif. NBA DL BASKETBALL 9 p.m. VERSUS — Reno at Sioux Falls (same-day tape) RODEO 6 p.m. VERSUS — PBR, Ty Murray Invitational, at Albuquerque, N.M. SOCCER 8:55 a.m. ESPN2 — Men’s national teams, European qualifier, Wales vs.

SCOREBOARD

Beatriz Recari . . . . . . . . . . .72-73 Lee-Anne Pace . . . . . . . . . .77-69 Katie Futcher . . . . . . . . . . . .76-70 Christel Boeljon . . . . . . . . . .75-71 Maria Hjorth . . . . . . . . . . . . .74-72 Leta Lindley . . . . . . . . . . . . .74-72

— — — — — —

145 146 146 146 146 146

Transactions

Friday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League

TV SPORTSWATCH

TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press (All times Mountain) Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Saturday, March 26 AUTO RACING 11 a.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, pole qualifying for Royal Purple 300, at Fontana, Calif. 12:30 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Auto Club 400, at Fontana, Calif. 2 p.m. SPEED — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, “Happy Hour Series,” final practice for Auto Club 400, at Fontana, Calif. 3:30 p.m. ESPN — NASCAR, Nationwide Series, Royal Purple 300, at Fontana, Calif. 11:30 p.m. SPEED — Formula One, Australian Grand Prix, at Melbourne,

l.foster@roswell-record.com

kjkeller@roswell-record.com

England, at Cardiff, Wales 5 p.m. ESPN2 — Men’s national teams, exhibition, U.S. vs. Argentina, at East Rutherford, N.J. WOMEN’S COLLEGE BASKETBALL 10 a.m. ESPN — NCAA Division I tournament, regional semifinal, Ohio State vs. Tennessee, at Dayton, Ohio Noon ESPN — NCAA Division I tournament, regional semifinal, Oklahoma vs. Notre Dame, at Dayton, Ohio 7 p.m. ESPN — NCAA Division I tournament, regional semifinal, Gonzaga vs. Louisville, at Spokane, Wash. 9:30 p.m. ESPN2 — NCAA Division I tournament, regional semifinal, North Carolina vs. Stanford, at Spokane, Wash.


Roswell Daily Record

COMICS

Garfield

Jumble

Family Circus

Beetle Bailey

DEAR ABBY: I am a widow. My husband and I enjoyed traveling all the years we were married. Since his death I’ve taken one trip to Florida alone. It was OK, but not the same, of course, without a loved one to share the experience. I really miss going places and seeing things. My son and his family take lots of mini-weekend trips. I would love to be asked to go along occasionally. I am not sure if they don’t ask me because they can’t afford the extra expense of an additional person, or because they want privacy. I can afford to pay my own way. I don’t know how to let them know I’d love to be included once in a while. I know there are trips for seniors, but I’m not good at mingling with new people. I have always been family-oriented. The discomfort of traveling with a group of new people would outweigh the fun for me. What do you suggest? LITTLE BIT LONELY

DEAR LITTLE BIT LONELY: Mention ONCE to your son and his wife that you’d love to be invited to go with them on an occasional mini-weekend getaway — and that you’d be glad to pay your way. They may take you up on it. However, if they don’t, do not bring it up again. I strongly urge you not to

Dear Heloise: Thank you for getting out the information about LILIES (they are poisonous to cats — Heloise) in your recent article. My cat ate lily petals, and I was fortunate to catch her in the act. I took her to the emergency clinic, and they gave her medicine to vomit up the lily. She recovered fully; however, the emergency care was more than $1,000. — Kathy, via e-mail Thanks for sharing your experience, and I’m glad your cat survived. With Easter coming up, it’s a good reminder for my readers who are owned by cats. Heloise

DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE

restrict yourself in making new acquaintances. Find new interests now that you are alone. Fight the instinct to isolate yourself. If you don’t want to travel with a group of strangers, ask some of your women friends if they would be interested in traveling with you. There are exciting times ahead for you, but you must be willing to assert some independence and reach out.

DEAR ABBY: I am a female high school junior with many friends I love and a boyfriend I care for very much. A number of my friends are gay. One girl, “Belinda,” is a year older than I am. She told me a couple of years ago that she is a lesbian. I have done everything I can to help her and support her. Last year, Belinda shared that she loves me more than as a friend. She would like to take me to the prom this year, and I

HINTS

FROM HELOISE

KING FEATURES SYNDICATE

Dear Readers:

A reader in Texas sent a photo of her 8-year-old dachshund mix, Miles, VERY comfortable on the couch. He is black with a white chest, and has one ear pointing north! To

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

would like to go with her. Because I am already involved in a relationship with a boy, should I not be Belinda’s escort? If I go, how do I tell my parents? LOYAL FRIEND IN OHIO DEAR LOYAL FRIEND: It’s time you have another talk with Belinda and explain to her that you like her very much as a friend, but not in the same way that she feels about you. Because you are already involved in a relationship, you and your boyfriend could (possibly) attend the prom with Belinda as a threesome — but you should not be her “date.” If this turns out to be the solution to your problem, I’m sure your parents would have no objection to it.

Hagar the Horrible

Blondie

DEAR ABBY: How do you respond if you’re dating a much older man and someone asks if he is your father? THE YOUNGER WOMAN IN VERO BEACH, FLA. DEAR YOUNGER WOMAN: You just reply, no, he’s someone you’re dating. Say it with good humor and without being defensive. If there is a large age discrepancy, it’s a logical question.

Zits

see Miles, visit www.Heloise.com and click on “Pets.” Heloise

Dear Heloise: Our animal charity takes in abused dogs and cats that have no home. It is terrible that people lose their homes. Could you print what the animal shelters need? This way, people who can afford to help will know what to give. A Reader in Ohio Readers: The things most shelters always need are dog and cat food, dog and cat toys, kitty/puppy milk replacement and cat litter. Call your shelters to see what their specific needs are. Heloise

Snuffy Smith

Dear Heloise: I read the comments from a reader about hints for walking a dog. I would like to take it one step further. I’m a walker (and a previous dog owner), and countless times I encounter “leavings” from dogs on the sidewalk. Here’s my proven solution: Since dogs love to go on walks and are intelligent animals, they can be taught to “do it” in their own yard before leaving home. Simply ask your pet if it wants to go for a walk, then take it out in the yard to “do its thing” by giving it the same command every day. Don’t leave for your walk until your pet “does it.” Then, on your walk, if your pet stops to “do it,” simply tell it “no.” It may take some time, but it will learn that if it wants to go for a walk, it has to “do it” first. A Walker in Oregon

Dear Heloise: I have an idea to pass on regarding how to get pets used to a new baby. Our daughter and son-in-law did this when their newborn daughter was still in the hospital. Our son-inlaw took a receiving blanket and put it on the floor, and one by one the cats went over and inspected it. When the baby came home, they all came over and sniffed, three walked away, and the fourth sat next to her for a while. None of the cats has ever bothered her. To get used to the smell before she came home, they also allowed the cats to walk in the baby’s bedroom and inspect everything. Tricia in Iowa

Dilbert

The Wizard of Id

For Better or For Worse

Saturday, March 26, 2011

B3


B4 Saturday, March 26, 2011

CHURCH PAGE

Roswell Daily Record


CHURCH PAGE

Roswell Daily Record

Saturday, March 26, 2011

B5

Shop the classifieds

.J E X B Z 'B NJ M Z $ I V S D I

CHURCHDEVOTIONAL&DIRECTORY

" 'B NJ M Z $ I V S D I 3F B D I J O H 0 V U 5P : P V 8J U I ( P E T -P W F

1B T U P S %B O O Z & 4P O T

This Devotional & Directory is made possible by those businesses who encourage all of us to attend worship services. JEWISH

CONGREGATIONAL B’NAI ISRAEL 712 N. Washington, 622-7295, W.S. 2nd & 4th Fri. 7 p.m.

LUTHERAN

IMMANUEL LUTHERAN 1405 N. Sycamore at College, 622-2853Daniel Praeuner, Min., S.S. 10:20 a.m.; W.S. 9 a.m.

REDEEMER LUTHERAN 2525 N. Spruce Ave., 6277157; W.S. 10 a.m.

ST. MARK EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN 2911 N. Main St., 623-0519, Bill Bruggeman, Min.; S.S. 9:15 a.m.; W.S. 10:15 a.m.

METHODIST

ALDERSGATE UNITED METHODIST 915 W 19th St, 625-2855, Jim Bignell, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 9 a.m.

DEXTER UNITED METHODIST 112 W. 3rd St., Dexter, 734-6529, Jim Bignell, Min. S.S. 9:30a.m.; W.S. 11:00 a.m. FIRST UNITED METHODIST 200 N. Pennsylvania, 6221881 Gorton Smith, Sr., Min.; S.S.9:15 a.m.; W.S. 10:30 a.m.

IGLESIA METHODISTA UNIDA 213 E. Albuquerque; Raul Dominguez, Min.; W.S. 8:30 a.m.; Tues. 6:30 p.m.

TRINITY UNITED METHODIST 1413 S. Union, 622-0119, Ruth Fowler, Min.; S.S. 10 a.m.; WS. 9 a.m. & 11 a.m.

MORMON

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS 2201 West Country Club Rd. First Ward: Hank Malcom, Bishop 623-2777; W.S. 9 a.m.; S.S. 10:10 a.m.

Second Ward: Ignacio Luevano, Bishop, 623-4492 W.S. 11 a.m.; S.S. 12:10 p.m. 3ra Rama (en EspaĂąol): Presidente McClellan; W.S. 2:15 p.m.; S.S. 12:15 p.m.

NAZARENE

CENTRAL CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 901 E. Country Club, 420-2907 Randy Elftman, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:30 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

FIRST CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 501 N. Sycamore, 624-2614; Mike Couch, Int. Min.; S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:45 a.m.; Sun. 6 p.m.; Wed. 6:30 p.m.

THE NEIGHBORHOOD CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 1019 S Lea; 623-0201; Hector Torres, Min.; S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m.; Spanish Service 12:30 p.m.; Wed. 6:30 p.m.

PENTECOSTAL

APOSTOLIC ASSEMBLY OF THE FAITH IN JESUS CHRIST 1721 N. Maryland, 624-2728, Ismael Chavarria, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 5 p.m. Thurs. 7 p.m. APOSTOLIC BIBLE 2529 West Alameda, 625-8779, Rod Foster, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 6:30 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

APOSTOLIC FAMILY WORSHIP CENTER 1103 N Union; Joel Martinez, Min., 627-2258; W.S. 10 a.m.; Wed. 7 p.m. FIRST UNITED PENTECOSTAL 602 S. Mississippi, 347-2514, J.E. Shirley, Min. W.S. 11 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m. GOD’S MESSENGER 3303 W Alameda; 625-0190; R. Dixon, Sr., Min.; S.S. 8:45 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m.; Wed. Noon HOUSE OF PRAYER 412 E. Matthews, 746-6699, Mike Valverde, Min. W.S. 5 p.m. Wed. & Fri. 7 p.m.

IGLESIA DE DIOS 317 East Wildy, 627-6596, Catarino Cedillo, Min. Escuela Dominical 9:45 a.m., Servicio de Domingo por la tarde 5 p.m. Martes: Oracion y Estudio Biblico 7 p.m., Jueves: Servicio Ninos, Jovenes, Damas, Varones 7 p.m. LIFE MINISTRIES FOURSQUARE CHURCH 409 W. 16th, 622-3383; Wayne & Janice Snow, Mins.; W.S. 10:30 am,Wed. 7:00 p.m. NEW APOSTOLIC 813 N. Richardson, Ste. A, W.S. 10 a.m.

NEW LIFE APOSTOLIC 1800 W. Bland, 622-2989, Emnauel Norfor, Min.; S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 5 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN DEXTER 201 West Fifth St., 734-5797, Stephen C. Deutsch, Min. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN HAGERMAN 310 N. Cambridge, 743-5797 Stephen C. Deutsch, Min. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 9:30a.m.; Mon. 4:30 p.m.

IGLESIA PRESBITERIANA HISPANA 300 North Missouri, 622-0756, Adam Soliz, Min. W.S. 11 a.m.

WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN 2801 W. 4th St., 622-2801; Dr. Harry A. Cole, Int. Min..; S.S. 10:45 a.m.; W.S. 9:30 a.m.

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST

BEULAH SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST 106 S. Michigan Ave., 243-6203; Alex Horton, Min. Sat. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. Wed. 6 p.m.

IGLESIA ADVENTISLA DEL 7 DIA 500 S. Cedar, 9106527, Noel Dominguez, Min. Sat. S.S. 11 a.m.; W.S. 9:30 a.m. Wed. 7 p.m. ROSWELL ENGLISH SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST Jaffa & S. Union, 623-4636, Ken Davis,Min. Sat. S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 am. Wed. 7 p.m.

OTHER

ALBUQUERQUE/ ROSWELL FAMILY 501 Cagua S.E., 266-4468, Fritz Schneider, Min.

BEOD MOED HEBRAIC BIBLE CENTER 928 W. McGaffey, 840-6120, Sat. Hebraic Dance 1 p.m.; Torah Study 2 p.m.; Wed. Pray & Dance Practice 6 p.m. CALVARY CHAPEL OF ROSWELL 2901 W. 4th, 623-8072, W.S. 8:30 a.m. & 10:30 a.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m.

CHRIST’S CHURCH 2200 N. Sycamore, 623-4110 S.S. 8:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:00 am.

TRINITY APOSTOLIC FAITH 611 W. 17th, 6241910, Frank & Pearl Moser, Min. W.S. 11 a.m.

CHRISTIAN COWBOY FELLOWSHIP 3103 W. Alameda John Sturza, 6250255, 2nd and last Friday

PRESBYTERIAN

THE UNITED CHURCH OF ROSWELL 123 W. 3rd. St. Service 10 am Bob Maples, Pastor

TRINITY HOUSE OF PRAISE PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF GOD 510 S. Montana, 623-2710, Bobby Barnett, Min. W.S. 9:45 a.m. & 6:30 p.m. Wed. 6:30 p.m. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN 400 W. 3rd St., 622-4910, Hugh Burroughs, Min. S.S. 8:30 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m. 24-Hr Daily Inspiration Hotline 623-5439

CHURCH OF GOD 7TH DAY 1722 N. Kansas, 6237295, Sat. W.S. 9:45 a.m.

CHURCH ON THE MOVE 901 W. Brasher Rd., 6227011, Troy Smothermon, Min. W.S. 9 & 11 a.m. Wed. 7 p.m.

FIRST CHRISTIAN 1500 S. Main, 622-2392, S.S. 9 a.m.; W.S. 10:15 a.m. Wed. 6 p.m. GATEWAY 1900 Sycamore Ave., 623-8670, Rick Rapp, Min. W.S. 10:30 a.m.; Wed. 7 p.m. GRACE COMMUNITY 935 W. Mescalero, 623-5438 Rick Hale,Min.; W.S. 9 a.m. & 10:45 a.m.

H.I.S. HOUSE 300 W. 3rd, Dexter, 734-6873 Ron & Jeri Fuller, Mins. W.S. 10 a.m. Wed.6 p.m.

NARROW WAY 2200 N. Sycamore, 623-2511, Lyman Graham, Min. W.S. 2 p.m. ORTHODOX BAHA’I FAITH obfusa@rt66.com 622-5729 ROSWELL CHRISTIAN OUTREACH MINISTRIES 101 S. Sunset; Joe Diaz, Min. W.S. 11 a.m. Wed. & Fri. 7 p.m.

ROSWELL PRAYER CENTER 622-4111/317-3867; Sat. 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Weekdays 6:30 a.m. to 8:30 a.m., 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., 6 p..m. to 9 p.m. SALVATION ARMY 612 W. College, 622-8700 Beau & Mandy Perez, Mins. S.S. 9:30 a.m.; W.S. 10:45 a.m.; B.S. Thurs. 6:30 p.m.

THE CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY 2322 N. Sherman; Lawrence S. Sanchez, Min. S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m. & 6 p.m. Wed. 7 p.m. THE DOOR 129 E. 3rd St. 781-0360; Gabriel Rubi, Min.; W.S. 10:30 am & 6 pm. Wed. 7 pm

WASHINGTON CHAPEL CHRISTIAN 110 S. Michigan St., 623-3511 Rev. Abukusumo, Min.; S.S. 9:45 a.m.; W.S. 11 a.m.; Wed. 7 p.m.

WAYMAKER 202 S. Sunset, 627-9190 Mike & Twyla Knowlton, Mins.; W.S. 10 a.m.; J12 (8-12 yr. olds) 4 p.m.; Revolution Youth Service 6 p.m.; Wed. Core Home Groups 7 p.m.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST 101 S. Lea, S.S. 10 a.m.; W.S. 10 a.m., Wed. 7:30 p.m


B6 Saturday, March 26, 2011

Legals

---------------------------------------Publish March 26, April 2, 9, 2011

FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO CASE#: DM-2011-170 Case Assigned To: Steven L. Bell CESAR CRUZ, vs.

RAMON

DE

LA

Petitioner,

GRISELDA LOERA CASTANEDA, Respondent. DISSOLUTION RE: MARRIAGE

OF

NOTICE OF PENDENCY OF ACTION STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO: GREETINGS: Notice is hereby given you that an action has been brought in the District Court of Chaves County, NO. DM-11170 in which Cesar Ramon De La Cruz is the Petitioner, and you are the Respondent, requesting a Dissolution of Marriage. Unless you enter an appearance in said cause on or before May 23, 2011, judgment will be rendered in said cause against you by default.

Petitioner’s Address is: 605 South Plaza Drive Roswell, New Mexico 88203 KENNON CROWHURST Clerk of the District Court

By: s/Maureen J. Nelson

---------------------------------Publish March 26, April 2, 2011 OF NEW STATE MEXICO IN THE COURT PROBATE CHAVES COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF Helen Sanchez DECEASED. Probate No. 8867

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been personal appointed representative of this estate. All persons having claims against this estate are required to present their claims within two (2) months after the date of the first publication of this notice, or the claims will be forever barred. Claims must be presented either to the undersigned personal representative at the address listed below, or filed with the Probate Court of Chaves County, New Mexico, located at the following address: #1 St Mary’s Pl, NM 88203 Dated: March 22, 2011.

s/Vincent Sanchez Personal Representative 1101 E. 17th Roswell NM 88201 575-637-0352

GARAGE SALES

DON ’T’ MISS A SALE BY MISSING THE 2:00 PM DEADLINE FOR PLACING YOUR ADS

001. North

4710 ACACIA Rd Sat. 8-12 Spring Cleaning Sale!!! 1608 N Union Ave Sat. & Sun. 8-5 Moving Sale.

002. Northeast

621 E. Apple Fri. Sat. & Sun. Moving must sell gone. Clothes furniture, beautiful furnishings. antiques, boots, ostrich, alligator, 84 Camero & etc. 1508 PECAN Dr. Saturday at 7:00am-Noon.

410 E. 23rd #32 Sat. 8am Back Porch Sale Tools, tools, ladders & appliances. 4 HOLLY Loop Fri. 6pm7:30 Sat. 7am-10am Toys, clothes, Tv, outdoor play equip. & more.

3303 N Flint Ave Sat. 7-2 Furniture, electronics, small appliances, linens & more.

CLASSIFIEDS

002. Northeast

3308 BANDOLINA Sat. 8am Clothes, books, and lots of misc. 610 E Vista Parkway Sat. 7am-11am 1985 Chevy van, furniture, clothes, tools, baby stuff, lots more. 3012 FUTURA Dr. Sat. 7:30am Clothes, shoes, lefty kid golf clubs, other items.

717 THREE Cross Sat. 812 Backyard Sale. Little bit of everything. Baby stuff, playpen, walker, play center. Some furniture. 801 DEBORAH Sat. only 82 Moving sale. Baby stuff, clothing, furniture, TV, DVD player, everything must go

003. East

639 E. 6th Sat. 8am Furniture, toys, girls size 6-10 clothes, videos, puppies, lots of misc. 1206 E 17th St. Fri. & Sat. 7am China cabinets, golf club set, formal dresses & much more.

310 E. Hervey, 6:00am-? kids clothes, shoes, jewelry, house decor, jr. & women’s clothes

004. Southeast

144 W. Darby Sat. 7am-12pm Home interior, girls men/ladiis clothes, toys, jackets, everything cheap lots of misc. 214 E. Frazier Sat. & Sun. 7am Antique rototiller, 2wheel garden tractor, 4-17 in tires w/rims, clothes, knick knacks, kitchen items & lots misc.

005. South

21707 BARNETT Dr. Sat. 7am No Early Birds! Tools baby stuff, 5th whl hitch hiker camper, 4 whlr, toys 417 S. Sequoia Sat. & Sun. 7am Clothes, shoes, air conditioners, pool table, carseat, bikes, bed frame tools, exercise equip. books ONE STOP Thrift Shop-711 S. Main- Sat. & Sun 10 to 4 Huge parking lot sale- Nice sectional, queen bedroom set, beds, armoire, Dinette set, refrigerators, big screen TV, TV’s chest of drawers, lots and lots of nice clothing at $1 each, jewelry, movies, exercise equipment, lots of misc., don’t miss it!

006. Southwest

Huge Estate Sale Mostly for Men 4708 W. Jefferson 3/25-26 only 8am-3pm 602-4786820 501 WEST Hervey Dr. Sat. 8am-2pm Garage sale lots of clothing, misc. items, sporting goods. 2305 BARNETT Dr. Sat. only 8-? No Early Birds! Garage sale. File cabinets chase lounge chair table with chairs lamps ladders tools vacuum cleaner hot tub, clothes hats shoes collectibles horse feeders dog crates and more.

600 WILLOW Dr. (Sycamore/Bland) Sat. 8-4 Spring cleaning garage sale. Twin size water bed & headboard, frame, heater, household items; men’s & women’s clothes & shoes. 1020 S. Plains Park Fri. & Sat. 7-11 Lots & lots of items. 3103 TULANE Dr. Fri. & Sat. 7am-? 3 family yard sale.

2302 Carver Dr. Fri. & Sat. 6-2 Tv’s furniture, clothing, shoes & misc. items. 314 S Evergreen Ave Fri. 9am-? Sat. & Sun. 8am-? Dryer, stove, antiques, misc. lots of stuff!!

2502 SOUTH Baylor Ave. Sat. 7am-11am. Lots of baby items & lots of misc. 1612 S Washington Sat. 8am-? Shoes, clothes, furniture, (3 family sale)

006. Southwest

407 S Delaware Sat. 7-12 4 family Sale, living room furniture, kitchen tables, clothes from starting at 4T.

007. West

HUGE RUMMAGE/BAKE Sale. Support youth group summer camps. Corner of S. Sycamore and W. Alameda. Fri. and Sat. 8am-1pm. Clothes and shoes for all, baby items, books, electronics, collectibles, remodel material, furniture, piano, cookies, brownies, pies, sweetbreads, more! Thank You! 504 S. Sycamore Sat. 7am Couch, chairs, book shelves, queen mattress & box spring. Much more. 2703 RIVERSIDE Dr., Sat. 8-1 sofa bed, reclining love seat, recliner, computer desk, clothes & much more

008. Northwest

2705 Chrysler Dr. Sat. 7am10am Gently used housewares, clothing, baby items, toys, shoes, electronics, jewelry, small furniture ENCHANTED HILLS Moving Sale Fri. 1-6pm Sat. 7-2pm 3305 Riverside Dr. West on th; South Moore; West Riverside. 4802 PAUL Street (West off Sycamore) Sat.7-2 Furniture, dishes, TV, brick, doors, clothes, bicycles, pictures, construction supplies & misc. 2700 GAYE Dr Sat. Clothes, purses, shoes, books, appliances including dishwashers microwaves, exercise equip. toys, household items lamps, dishes, linens, etc.

1211 W. 7th St. Fri. & Sat. 6:30am to ? Lots of stuff 3111 N Richardson Sat. 7am-12 Misc. clothing, furniture.

ANNOUNCEMENTS 015. Personals Special Notice

FOOD ADDICTS Anonymous 12 step fellowship offering freedom from eating disorders. Meeting on Thursdays at 7pm, 313 W. Country Club Rd. #5. For more information call 575-910-8178 PAY CASH all day long for household items. Top prices paid for furniture, antiques, appliances, collectibles, tools, saddles, plus everything else from A to Z, including personal estates. 627-2033 or 623-6608

025. Lost and Found

LOST FEMALE Miniature Pinscher, reddish brown, red collar, (Boobie), clipped ears & tail, lost on South Baylor, needs medical attention. (Reward) 623-1928 or 2209 S. Baylor FOUND SMALL male dog at North Walgreens. Call 622-8842 FOUND BLUE Heeler cross and Min Pin. Call 317-1866

LOST DOG 1/2 Chocolate Lab 1/2 German short hair. Brown w/pink collar lost around Broke Arrow Call 317-7469

INSTRUCTION

EMPLOYMENT

045. Employment Opportunities

FRESENIUS MEDICAL Care/Southeastern New Mexico Kidney Center is seeking a PCT. Full benefits, 401k, medical, vision, dental. PTO after 6 months. Other company benefits. Open Mon-Sat. Off Sundays.12 hour shifts. Competitive pay. Apply in person at 2801 N. Main St. Suite H.

045. Employment Opportunities BUSY OPTOMETRIST office seeking Full Time Employee. Individual must be dependable, well organized and hard working. Experience and bi-lingual a plus. Please send resume to P.O. Box 1897, Unit 257, Roswell, NM 88202. FRESENIUS MEDICAL Care/Southeastern New Mexico Kidney Center is seeking 1 Staff RN. Full benefits, 401, medical, vision, dental. PTO after 6 months. Other company benefits. Open Mon-Sat. Off Sundays.12 hour shifts. Competitive pay. Apply in person at 2801 N. Main St. Suite H. COMFORT KEEPERS NOW HIRING in Roswell & ARTESIA. Seeking SKILLED caregivers for IMMEDIATE work days, evenings and week-ends. Being a caregiver will be the best job you ever had! Call Carol @ 624-9999 and apply at 1410 S. Main St. Roswell or 502 W. Texas, Ste. C Artesia. www.beacomfortkeeper.com

DRIVERS Come join our team! Coastal Transport is seeking Drivers with Class (A) CDL. Must be 23 yrs old (X) Endorsement with 1 yr experience, excellent pay, home everyday! Paid Vacation, saftey bonus, company paid life inc. We provide state of the art training program. $2000 sign on bonus. For more information call 1-877-297-7300 or 575-748-8808 between 8am & 4pm, Monday-Friday. COUNSELING ASSOCIATES, INC. Seeking qualified individual to fill the position of a Behavioral Management Specialist. This job will be working with Severely Emotionally Disturbed Children/Adolescents. Full time position of 40 hours per week. Excellent fringe benefits. High School Diploma required. Salary DOE. An EOE. Please send your resume to: Counseling Associates, Inc Samantha Reed PO Box 1978 Roswell, NM 88202 ACCOUNTING PERSONNEL needed. Dealership experience a plus. Qualifying candidate must be detail oriented. Excellent benefits package offered, including health, dental, vision, & 401K. Fax resumes Attn: Office Manager (575) 622-5899. ROSWELL HEATING and Air Inc. is hiring for an HVAC Tech/Installer Journeyman card and some experience are preferred. Please apply at 301 S. Main. Please call ahead 575-626-1315.

STORE MANAGER, Valero, 3300 N. Main Location. Competitive salary, vacation pay, bonus potential, resume only to roadrunnerexpressjobs@ yahoo.com AVON, Buy or Sell. Pay down your bills. Start your own business for $10. Call Sandy 317-5079 ISR.

CUSTODIAN CENTRAL Valley Electric Cooperative has an opening for a full-time custodian. This position includes considerable maintenance of the facilities and grounds and other duties as assigned. For a complete position description and application form, go to our website at www.cvecoop.org and click on the employment tab. Application forms may be obtained at our offices located at 1505 N. 13th Street in Artesia, NM.

Roswell Daily Record

045. Employment Opportunities OPENING FOR a part time therapist for a local behavioral health agency that specializes in working with children who have psychological and behavioral issues. A current NM license as a LMST, LPCC, or LISW is required. Individuals with an LMHC may be considered with a supervision agreement. Please send your resume and we will contact you. PO Box 1897, Unit 259, Roswell, NM 88202. MEDICAL OFFICE POSITION: KYMERA

Independent Physicians Primary Care Clinic

Certified Medical Assistant (CMA): FT – 1-2 yrs exp. working in a medical office environment preferred. Applicants must possess the ability to work with multiple patients in a high volume office setting. Please fax resume with cover letter to: (575) 627-9520

045. Employment Opportunities FULL TIME Medical practice front office position. CMA only please. Must be familiar with front office procedures such as scheduling, billing, coding, and aging. Must have good knowledge of medical ethics & HIPPA requirements. Must be professional and friendly. 575622-0821 EASTERN NEW MEXICO UNIVERISTY – NOW HIRING: *Coordinator of Alumni Affairs* Head Women’s Basketball Coach* Kid’s College Lead Teacher* Police Officer: Jobs in Portales, NM 5755622115;agency.governmentjo bs.com/enmu . AA/EO/Title IX Employer HVAC SERVICE Tech Wanted. Must be experienced with residential and light commercial. Must pass background check and drug test. Please include current MVD report with resume. 401k and insurance available after trial period. Precision Air of Roswell 575-622-8600 or fax: 575-622-5810.

VISIT US ONLINE: RDRNEWS.COM Legals

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish March 26, 2011 ENMU-ROSWELL COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD TO MEET

The Branch Community College Board of Eastern New Mexico University-Roswell will meet Tuesday, April 5 at 5 p.m. in the Multipurpose Room of the Campus Union Building, 48 University Blvd. The board will act upon business so presented and may meet in executive session. Agendas for the meetings are available in the President’s Office located on the ENMU-Roswell campus in the Lawrence C. Harris Occupational Technology Center, 20 West Mathis. The public is invited to attend. Eastern New Mexico University-Roswell is an EEO/AA institution. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish March 19, 26, April 2, 9, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

BANK OF OKLAHOMA, N.A., vs.

Plaintiff,

JUSTIN R. LEE, a single man, Defendant.

CV-2010-1013

NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE

PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the above-entitled Court, having appointed me or my designee as Special Master in this matter with the power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property (the “Property”) situated in Chaves County, New Mexico, commonly known as 2005 Urton Road, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, and more particularly described as follows: THE SOUTH 104.5 FEET OF THE SW1/4 NW1/4 SE1/4 NE1/4 OF SECTION 27 IN TOWNSHIP 10 SOUTH OF RANGE 24 EAST OF THE NEW MEXICO PRINCIPAL MERIDIAN, IN THE COUNTY OF CHAVES AND STATE OF NEW MEXICO. A.P.N.#:11-01399

The sale is to begin at of 1:45 p.m. on April 21, 2011, at the Main Entrance of the Chaves County Courthouse, 400 N. Virginia, Roswell, New Mexico, at which time I will send to the highest and best bidder for cash in lawful currency of the United States of America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and to satisfy the Judgment in favor of Bank of Oklahoma, N.A.

Bank of Oklahoma, N.A., was awarded a Judgment on March 8, 2011, in the principal sum of $67,029.34, plus outstanding interest due on the Note through February 1, 2011, in the amount of $2,654.40 and accruing thereafter at the rate of $10.91 per diem, plus late charges of $101.32, plus escrow advances of $1,595.23, plus a FHA premium due of $55.00, and less escrow/impound funds of ($637.00), plus reasonable attorney’s fees incurred by Plaintiff in the sum of $950.00 and costs through January 15, 2011, in the sum of $468.25, with interest on the late charges, escrow advances, FHA premium due, attorney’s fees and costs of this suit at the rate of 5.940% per annum from date of the entry of the Judgment until paid.

The sale is subject to rights and easements of record, to unpaid property taxes and assessments, and to the one (1) month right of redemption in favor of Defendant(s) as specified in the Judgment filed herein.

PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT SALE ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. __________________________ FAISAL SUKHYANI Special Master 2222 Parkwest Drive NW Albuquerque, New Mexico 87120-3660 (505) 228-8484

045. Employment Opportunities

ADMIRAL BEVERAGE is hiring CDL driver position must be filled immediately, and only serious prospects need apply. Must have clean driving record. Great benefits, excellent pay, group health insurance. 1018 S. Atkinson INGALLS HOLDINGS, LLC(radio stations KMOU, KSFX, KBCQ-FM and KBCQ-AM) seeks a dedicated marketing rep to present our stations to leading Roswell Businesses. The successful candidate wll have previous sales experience, preferably in media, will have a car with insurance and a flwless work and business ethic. To schedule an appointment to present your resume and qualifications call 575-622-6450. Ingalls Holdings is an equal opportunity employer.

045. Employment Opportunities JOURNEYMAN LEVEL painter with all tools and vehicle with minimum 15 yrs experience. Call for an appointment at 575627-6886. SALES REPRESENTATIVE - The Las Vegas Optic is seeking applications for a full and part time position in sales. Successful candidates must have good people skills as well as the ability to sell advertising and help business grow, Experience isn't a requirement but a plus in consideration. Resumes should be mailed to the attention of Vincent Chavez, Optic advertising manager, PO BOX 2670, Las Vegas, NM 87701, or e-mail to vchavez@ lasvegasoptic.com

Legals

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish March 25, 26, 2011 CYFD ACCEPTING VENDORS

LETTERS

OF

INTEREST

FROM

The New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department (CYFD) is accepting Request for Letters of Interest from Vendors to provide Private Investigative Services for licensed/certified child care programs and licensed and registered homes, including, but not limited to, reports of abuse or neglect, lack of supervision, safety violations or any other infraction or deficiency as determined by CYFD.

Letters of Interest must be received on or before Friday, April 15, 2011. Request for Letters of Interest from Vendors can be downloaded from the CYFD website at www.cyfd.org. For further information regarding the Letters of Interest, you may contact Jeff Miles at (505) 827-3814 or by email at JeffreyH.Miles@state.nm.us. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Publish March 12, 19, 26, April 2, 2011 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF Chaves Fifth JUDICIAL DISTRICT

No. D-504-CV-201000417

Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., v.

Plaintiff,

JUAN CARLOS AYALA; OCCUPANTS, WHOSE TRUE NAMES ARE UNKNOWN, IF ANY, Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Special Master will on April 6, 2011 at 11:00 AM, the West steps entrance of the Chaves County Courthouse, 400 N. Virginia, sell and convey to the highest bidder for cash all the right, title, and interest of the above-named defendants in and to the following described real estate located in said County and State: The West 150 feet of Lot 23 of Johnson and Allison Subdivision of the SE1/4 of Section 20 in Township 11 South of Range 24 East, N.M.P.M., in the County of CHAVES and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat recorded December 1, 1942 in Plat Book B, Page 35, Real Property Records of CHAVES County, New Mexico. EXCEPT the North 74 feet thereof.

The address of the real property is 5003 S. Lea Avenue, Roswell, NM 88203. Said sale will be made pursuant to the Decree of Foreclosure entered on January 12, 2011 in the above entitled and numbered cause, which was a suit to foreclose a mortgage held by the above Plaintiff and wherein Plaintiff was adjudged to have a lien against the abovedescribed real estate in the sum of $99,903.18 plus interest from January 12, 2011 to the date of sale at the rate of 6.500% per annum, the costs of sale, including the Special Master's fee, publication costs, and Plaintiff's costs expended for taxes, insurance, and keeping the property in good repair. Plaintiff has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. At the date and time stated above, the Special Master may postpone the sale to such later date and time as the Special Master may specify. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that this sale may be subject to a bankruptcy filing, a pay off, a reinstatement or any other condition that would cause the cancellation of this sale. Further, if any of these conditions exist, at the time of sale, this sale will be null and void, the successful bidder's funds shall be returned, and the Special Master and the mortgagee giving this notice shall not be liable to the successful bidder for any damages. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above-described real property subject to rights of redemption.

10-0903 FC01

_____________________________ Jeffrey Lake Special Master c/o Castle Stawiarski, LLC 20 First Plaza NW, Suite 602 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Attorney for Plaintiff (800) 286-0013; (505) 848-9500


Roswell Daily Record 045. Employment Opportunities

045. Employment Opportunities

DETENTION ADMINISTRATOR

Chaves County, Roswell, New Mexico is currently seeking an experienced Detention Administrator to supervise its Adult Detention 223 bed - 58 employee facility, Juvenile Detention 19 bed - 18 employee facility and Court Services 9 employee department. This is an appointed position and serves at the pleasure of the County Manager. Position requires five years corrections/detention experience. Applicant must reside in Chaves County or be willing to relocate, as a condition of employment. Salary range: $75,000 D.O.Q. plus a comprehensive benefit package. 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 post offer, preemployment drug test. 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 web site 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 by closing date to Human Resources, PO Box 1817, Roswell, NM 88202-1817. Applications will be accepted until 5:00 p.m., Friday April 1, 2011, EOE.

045. Employment Opportunities

LAB ACCESSIONER/DATA Entry: Full-time 9-6 M-F. Excellent attention to detail and multi-tasking skills. Strong grammar, punctuation, spelling, and communication skills mandatory. Competitive salary and full benefits including health insurance, 401K, and profit sharing. Pre-employment testing will be performed. Please send cover letter with resume and three references to roswellscript@gmail.com.

LOCAL BUSINESS requires carpenter with structural knowledge for construction of shipping containers. Send resume to PO Box 1751, Roswell, NM 88202 CNA NEEDED to take care of elderly person from 7a10p at least 1 yr experience with references. Please call 575-526-9084 PART TIME office cleaning 2-4 hrs Monday-Friday $8-9 DOE Background check & urinalysis fill out application at A-1 Vacuum 1400 W. 2nd Street Ste K.

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

Finance and Administration Director: Responsibilities include planning, coordinating, and managing the finance and administrative services of the center and coordinating with other departments to ensure overall compliance with center objectives. Candidate must possess a Bachelor’s Degree in Business Administration or related field, three years related experience and/or training, one of which should be in a management capacity. Excellent benefit package included. Salary is based on education and experience.

Peppers Grill & Bar is accepting applications for all positions. Applications available between 2:00 and 4:00 pm, 500 N. Main MAID NEEDED part time 1 year experience required 1716 W. Second St. Roswell.

APPLICATIONS WILL BE ACCEPTED ONLINE ONLY

CHAMPION MOTOR Sports hiring for Motor clothes, Parts and Service Rider. No experience needed training provided. Accepting applications from 9am-5pm on Saturday March 26, 2011

View Job Description and Apply online at: www.chugachjobs.com Deadline to apply: 4/1/2011 An Equal Opportunity Employer, M/F, D/V

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

• Ads posted online at no extra cost

(includes tax)

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

CLASSIFICATION

PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE

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

EXPIRES ________

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

WORD AD DEADLINE To Place or Cancel an Ad

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

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

CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS

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

LEGALS

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

www.roswell-record.com Add 12 word count to word ad for approved addressing directions.

CLASSIFIEDS

045. Employment Opportunities

ROSWELL HOME Health & Health F/T Certified Nurse Aide Call (575) 623-8000 ask for Bobby Dockins or bring resume to: 400 E. College Blvd. Ste. A PRODUCTION WORKERS #102877 Production workers needed. Must be able to pass drug test. Apply at AmeriPride Linen between 8:00am and 11:00am 03/25 thru 03/31 at 515 N. Virginia, Roswell NM 88201. Competitive Salary and benefits! No phone calls will be accepted! AA/EEO Employer M/F/D/V NOW HIRING- Sales Representative. Seeking a courteous professional with an outgoing personality. We offer an excellent benefit package including HEALTH, DENTAL, VISION, 401k and PAID VACATION. No experience required. All applicants must pass a drug test. Apply in person at Roswell Honda 2177 W. 2nd. Ask for Rick Granado. DENTAL ASSISTANTExperience and Radiology Certification required. Send resume to Dr. Glenn Mattlage 100 S. Michigan Avenue. NOW ACCEPTING applications for Servers with license to serve alcohol. Experience is a must. Call for personal interview 575-802-3104 CASE MANAGER To be considered for this position interested individuals shall have a Bachelors degree in Social Work or other related field. The perfect candidate will have experience and be comfortable working with diverse cultures and populations; be self motivated, and have experience in direct client contact. This would be the perfect opportunity for anyone who wants to have fun, make a difference, and is interested in serving their community. Bilingual is a plus! 20-32 hours per week, Monday – Friday. Send resume or apply in person at 311 W. 2nd Street, Roswell, NM 88201, or send resume via email to Sashua@alianzanm.org. D eadline to apply is April 1, 2011 or until position is filled. Alianza is an EEOE. ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT: Excellent opportunity for an organized, professional individual seeking to be part of an expanding, fastpaced company with excellent benefits. Idea candidate must posses extensive MS Office, Word, Excel and Power Point. Must be detail oriented with ability to multi-task in a challenging environment. Bilingual a plus. Fax resumes to 575-347-2589 . NEW SALON seeks experienced Nail Tech. Call Renee for details 317-0689. BUSY MENTAL health office seeking part time receptionist. Must be reliable flexible, friendly and able to multi-task. Must be able to work weekends & evenings. If interested please bring resume and 3 references to 1010 N. Virginia ask for Jacque no phone calls.

045. Employment Opportunities

CONSTRUCTION WORKERS wanted experience a plus. Apply in person at 914 W. McGaffey applications accepted from 8am10am Monday-Friday Drug test will be required. HELP WANTED experienced only for all phases of general construction. Call Daniel 317-7015

SOCCER SOCCER SOCCER

Hiring referee for the 2011 RYSA spring season. Ref orientation Mon. 3/28 and Thur 3/31 4-7pm at Ciello Grande Park. 622-0690 for additional information.

SERVICES

075. Air Conditioning

SWAMP COOLER service & repair professional & affordable. Free estimates. Frank 624-5370, 637-2211

105. Childcare

NEED CHILD care? Find the widest range of available childcare for your children and their needs. 1-800691-9067 or www.newmexic okids.org. You may also call us; Family Resource & Referral 6229000 and we can help you navigate the system.

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

GENERAL CLEANING service over 10 years experience, references. Call 622-1209 - 420-1317 or leave message. SUNSHINE WINDOW Service. We do Windows Brite. Free estimates. Commercial and residential. 575-626-5458 or 575-626-5153.

HOUSE/OFFICE Cleaning low prices. Excellent work call anytime. 575-973-2649 575-973-3592

185. Electrical

Saturday, March 26, 2011

225. General Construction

MILLIGAN CONTRACTING Quality service for all your home improvement needs. Free Est. I show up & on time. Call Geary at 575-578-9353 Carpentry, Drywall, Painting, doors, windows, tile work. Lic., Insured, Bonded. 914-7002 Dean CALL B&B Enterprises for all your remodeling and construction needs. Local contractor with over 20 years experience. Licensed & Bonded 317-3366 TEE TIME Construction Commercial/Residential Construction - Spray foam insulation, framing, cement, roofing, drywalln painting, New Construction of Homes, Additions, Remodeling, and Metal Buildings. Licensed & Bonded. Call 575-626-9686

230. General Repair

T-LEVEL CONSTRUCTION Inc. Handyman for a day. Call John for all your misc. repairs. 317-1477 HANDY MAN plumbing roofing, carpentry and most other forms of construction. Free est. Jay 575-317-6215 Discount maintenance 25+ yrs exp. Ktchn, Bthrm, Flring specialist & all phases of Gen. repair insulation/Sheetrock, Texture Painting, Windows Doors, etc.) Ref. avail. 3177015

235. Hauling

PROPERTY CLEANUPS Tear down old bldgs, barns, haul trash, old farm equip. 3470142/317-7738

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

CALL (K) for all Spring clean ups- lawn, plant care, rototilling, trimming and fertilizing. 575-6276513 or 575-993-3293

ALLIANCE ELECTRIC Any size electrical job. Lic#367386. 575-840-7937

LAWN SERVICE & much more work at low price. 914-0803 or 914-1375

BIG HORN Electric Professional work, affordable price. 575-3178345 NM Lic#367662.

WELLS LANDSCAPING Spring is approaching fast. Is your yard, garden or flower garden ready? If not then call us. We have experience in all forms of landscaping. Join the many who have acquired our services and get the best for your money. Call and ask for David 8404349.

195. Elderly Care

ADVANCED HOME Care. All caregivers are licensed bonded & have passed federal criminal back-ground checks. Loving care since 1994. 6276256

200. Fencing

M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991 Fence Restoration, new installs, fast quote, lic#367947. BBB Member. 575-840-8395

220. Furniture Repair

REPAIR & Refinish furniture & build furniture. Southwest Woods. 1727 SE Main. 623-0729 or 626-8466 Hrs 7-3pm. Call before you come in case he’s out running errands. www.southwestwoods furniture.com.

Dennis the Menace

B7

WE WORK Cut Lawns Lots - Trees - Haul & rototilling. Will 317-7402 ORTEGA’S LAWN & Garden Services. Licensed, reliable, quality work, free estimates. Call James 575-444-8555, Connie 575-444-8519. CHAVEZ SPRINKLER CO. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING AND SPRINKLER SYSTEM & REPAIRS, ROCK WORK, TREES, SHRUBS, TRACTOR & DUMP TRUCK WORK. FREE ESTIMATES. CALL HECTOR 420-3167 Roswell Lawn Service landscaping, rototill, mow, prune & cleanup 420-3278 Enchantment Landscaping

Professional lawn care, tree/hedge trimming sprinkler repair & much more 914-0260

MOLINAS YARD SVCS Let your yard reflect your personality with help from experienced hands. Call for free estimates for lawn mowing, tree pruning. 4200260 or 420-5517 WEEKEND WARRIOR Lawn Service mowing, property cleanup, residential rain gutter cleaning, and much more 575-626-6121 Greenscapes Sprinkler Systems Lawn mowing, field mowing, gravel, sodhydro seed, pruning, tilling, For dependable & reliable service call 622-2633 or 910-0150. KEEP IT Clean Lawn care, tree service and etc... 623-1578, 910-2033

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

SPRINKLER SYSTEM installation and maintenance. Licensed free est. 575-4201615. Yard work, odd jobs/flexilble prices 575-347-5648 or 626-0518

285. Miscellaneous Services

THE NEW MEXICO SEED LOAN PROGRAM is available to small businesses owned by individuals with diabilities and provides low interest loans for the purchase of equipment and related supplies needed to expand or start a business. Contact the New Mexico Seed Loan Program at 1-800-8662253 or www.nmseedloans.org for more information. A low interest loan program of DVR State of New Mexico.

305. Computers

PROFESSIONAL COMPUTER services at affordable prices. Call (575)3179930. Desert Plains PC RepairTop of the line service with affordable prices. Years of experience with hardware and software. Computer lessons & house calls avail. 575-420-5517

310. Painting/ Decorating

Quality Painting! Interior, Exterior at prices you can afford. Mike 910-7012 TIME TO PAINT? Quality interior and exterior painting at affordable prices. Call 637-9108. A & J Painting new homes, newly remodeled homes. Custom painting. Int./Ext. Free Est. affordable prices Licensed & Bonded. Adrian 317-4324 Painting home maintenance interior, exterior local references. Ron 637-0434

312. Patio Covers

M.G. HORIZONS Patio covers, concrete, decks & awnings Lic. 623-1991.

345. Remodeling

BERRONES CONSTRUCTION. Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing. Licensed, Bonded. Ray: 625-9924 / 626-4153. NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552.

350. Roofing Need A Roof?

Call R & R Construction 18 years in Roswell. 622-0072 RWC SHINGLE Roofings. Insurance. Hector (575)910-8397 www.rancheroswelding.com

Guaranteed Shingle Roof jobs. Locally owned. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 6222552.

395. Stucco Plastering

ANAYA GRC & Tax Services. For all your tax needs. 508 W. 2nd. 623-1513 Our prices are the best in town. TAXES $30 & up for Federal and State returns, amended and previous years at the Roswell Adult Center 575-624-6718 to schedule an appointment.

405. TractorWork

RWC Bobcat and Dump Works. Insurance. Hector (575)9108397. www.rancheroswelding.com

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

410. Tree Service

STUMP GRINDING. Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 623-4185 ALLEN’S TREE Service. The oldest tree service in Roswell. Million $ ins. 6261835 SUPERIOR SERVICES parking lot, landscaping, tree, service 20 yrs experience. 575-420-1873

435. Welding RWC On site repairs or fabrication. Insurance.

www.rancheroswelding.com

Hector (575) 910-8397

PORTABLE WELDING Cliff (575) 626-9803

440. Window Repair

AQUARIUS GLASS For Less. Screens, Patio & Shower Drs., Table Tops & Mirrors. 623-3738.

FINANCIAL

485. Business Opportunities

FOR SALE FENCED COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 210x115 w/3200 SQFT SHOP & OFFICE IN & OUTSIDE PARKING. 100 N. PINE. CALL 575-910-2070. DO YOU earn $800 in a day? Your Own Local Candy Route! 25 Machines and Candy All for $9995. 877-915-8222 All Major Credit Cards Accepted!

START YOUR own Nursery. Green houses and supplies for sale. 575-4201873

REAL ESTATE

490. Homes For Sale 3BR, 1BA, at the Base, $39,500, owner financing with $5000 down. 420-1352

NE 4 br, office or 5th br, 2 living areas. Over 2400 sq. ft, new roof, ref air, walk to Del Norte Elem. & Goddard High 2715 N Orchard. 575420-3606 for appt. HOUSE NEAR Darby Rd. East side. 2800 sq. ft. 3br, 2bt. In ground pool 3 acres $187k appraisal Asking $175k 575-420-5473 for showing.

RWC Lath and Stucco. Insurance. Hector (575)9108397

Leprino Foods Job Fair Leprino Foods Company, the nation’s premier manufacturer of mozzarella cheese, is currently seeking qualified applicants for our Manufacturing positions. Successful candidates must be able to work in a 24/7 team environment, have a strong work history, and possess the ability to work safely in a fast-paced, continuously operating environment. Candidates should alsopossess a high school diploma or GED.

400. Tax Service

www.rancheroswelding.com

Roswell Convention and Civic Center March 29, 2011 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Leprino foods is an Equal Opportunity Employer offering a competitive benefit package to include medical, dental, vision, life, disability, tuition reimbursement, Only the first 100 applications will be accepted. profit sharing, 401(k), paid time off, incentive bonus and strong growth potential

Leprino Foods is an equal opportunity employer supporting a drug and tobacco free workplace M/F/D/V

Cattle Baron Restaurants, Inc. Now hiring servers Best compensation in town Apply in person Monday-Friday 2-5pm Applications accepted at any time during business hours. Must be alcohol server certified 1113 N. Main St. No phone calls please. Cattle Baron Restaurants, Inc. is an EOE.


B8 Saturday, March 26, 2011 490. Homes For Sale OPEN HOUSE Sunday 2-4pm, Price Reduced. Enchanted Hills 3/2.5/2 @ 3303 Shinkle Dr. Built in 2006. FSBO 840-9572 NORTHSPRINGS TOWNHOME FSBO, 317 Sherrill Lane No. 16, $152,500, Fliers on Sherrill Lane. 575-317-4671 www.wix.com/sandynm1/ sherrill-lane

SINGLE WIDE mobile home for sale by owner. Must be financed through bank. 3br, 2ba, all appliances included. On 2 lots, storage + fenced back yard, $75,000. 575-4446314

NWR-CUSTOM Country 4/2/2 on 1 acre. 2333 sq. ft. +27x16 Morgan storage. $255k owner/agent call 575-317-6498 RENT TO own 601 Woody Dr., 2br/1ba, new carpet & paint, new wtr heater. Owner finance $5k dn, $600 mo. 623-0459

FSBO 3/2/2 1600sqft fenced yard newer A/C new tile nice NE area. Seller will pay $3k towards buyers closing + $2k carpet allowance $132,900 Ben 317-6408 INGROUND POOL 3br, 2ba FP, living rm, Fam rm, sprinklers f/b, mature trees, garage, new energy star windows, water softener, R/O. 306 E. Vista Pkwy. Call for showing 627-5545 or 910-3733. $139,500

495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale

INVESTMENT GROUP wants low priced prairie land. Seller can leaseback. Principals only. Doug (714) 742-8374 RUIDOSO, NM AREA – 1 acre w/city water and city maintained roads near small fishing pond and golf course. Only $10,900. Financing avail. Call NMRS 1-866-906-2857. 6 PLUS acres in Buena Vida subdivision w/electricity, in phase 1 w/beautiful view. Possible owner financing. 626-9686 5.7 ACRES $38k with well & electricity. $9999 dn; $3500 now. Then $800 ± for 8 months; then $400; monthly payments #42 Wagon Trail, 575-622-5587

5 ACRES, $25K as is, septic system, 3809 Zinnia, appt M-Th 8a-4p 624-1331

500. Businesses for Sale

WELL ESTABLISHED Laundromat for sale $39k for business $79k for business plus bldg. 420-5473 MOBILE SHAVED Ice Business 100% ready to operate, everything needed already included. Enclosed trailer, freezer, shaver, register, solar panel, generator, flavors, cups and much more. Call Cesar at 575-626-7951 BUSY RESTAURANT or sale owner financing. Call 627-5422

505. Investment/ Commercial/ Business Property

Restaurant bldg, $275K cash/trade for Ruidoso prprty, MTh 624-1331 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY 40 ft x 100 ft, (4,000 sq/ft), 16 ft sidewall, red metal building, 2 each 20’ wide bay doors, 1 walk door on 150 ft x 150 ft, 8’ chain link fenced lot, 25’ sliding gate. Available immediately. 1706 S. Grand Ave. $105,000 cash. Call 622-1155.

515. Mobile Homes - Sale

SETUP IN nice adult Park North Roswell. Like new 2004 Fleetwood 16x60 two bedroom two bath with all appliances plus some furniture. Neat, clean, ready to live in. Call 575-6220035. D01090. 28X50 SOLITAIRE 3 br, 2 full ba utility room dbl carport 12x24 workshop covered patio new waterheater & softener located in Roswells finest 55+ mobilehome park. 575622-5569 or cell 575-9104292 WE BUY used mobile homes. Single & double wides. 575-622-0035 D01090.

520. Lots for Sale

OWNER FINANCING for a limited time. Ready to build 5 acre lots w/ great views & good covenants. Located 9 miles West of Roswell @ the Club House Banquet Facility. Free land maps and at entrance. 575-623-1800. www.BuenaVidaLand.com

520. Lots for Sale

READY TO build, 50’x120’ lot, all utilities on property at 1004 S. Mulberry. $7500 637-8499 or 637-4369 Mobile Home Lot size 60x134 $18,000. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. We Take Visa and Mastercard! 420-1352. COURT ORDERED Sale! 2704 S. Lea, asking 7k, 5 acres - 30 Townsend Tr. Lot 9, Cielo Vista Subdivision, has well, electric, great view of city, $60K. Call Jim 910-7969. PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, Owner will finance with 10% down, New Construction only (no mobile homes), , Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd. between Country Club & Berrendo Rd. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 6266791, 626-4337 FOR SALE in Roswell 20 acres Good area $50k 910-1152 or 910-8839

2 adjacent 5 acres lots on Chisum Rd in East Grand Plains $29,950 ea. 575623-8696 leave mesg.

RENTALS

535. Apartments Furnished

1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 6241331

540. Apartments Unfurnished

VALLE ENCANTADA YOUR BEST $ RENTAL VALUE! LARGE 1,2,3 BEDROOMS. FREE UTILITIES. unfurnished, laundry room, playground, pool, ample parking. 2001 South Sunset. 623-3722. Town Plaza Apartments Utilities paid - Gas and Electric. New Owners, friendly new managers. New Remodeled EXTRA LARGE 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Each 2 & 3 bedroom is multi level, upstairs/downstairs w/ large closets, stove & refrigerator, private patios, and private parking. Complex has a pool, laundry room, and a quiet garden setting environment. Friendly managers on-site. Seniors 55yrs plus, law enforcement & military will receive discount. No HUD. Good credit? Pay less rent! 575-623-2735. 2nd year, 1 free month rent All Bills Paid 1 br $500 2 br $600, 3 br $700 mo., ref air, new carpet, new paint/tile. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944

1 BD, all bills pd, no pets, no smoking, no HUD - 6236281

PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHAN TED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN. EFFICIENCY 2 BR, downtown, clean, water paid. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD Call 623-8377 EFFICIENCY 1 br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348. 2BR, 1BA duplex, $450 monthly, $300 deposit, no pets. Also rent to own 2br, 1ba mobile home & 3br, 2ba mobile home. 6242436

1 BEDROOM apartment. Call 910-8170

1br/1ba, very clean, 1 adult or couple, no HUD/pets, $450/$450 dep. 626-8302 or 420-4801 2 BD 1 ba 207 W. Mathews Apt. C $575 mo. $300 DD 317-6479 2BR 1610 W First St. No pets. $525 + Utilities. 6379992 1&2Bd, wtr pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331

545. Houses for Rent-Furnished FLETC Homes for rent. Long & short term rentals. 5 minutes from FLETC. Brand new & beautiful! Visit our website: www.lgrentalhomes.com or Call 420-0519 or 910-7670 NOW AVAILABLE 2/2/1 CAR GARAGE. Fullyfurnished, all electric, newer duplex with all amenities. Xeriscape landscaping, fenced backyard, quiet, near shopping + schools. For showing call Eliot. (719) 237-4680.

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished LARGE HOUSE NE location 3 br, 3 ba. 2 car garage, many extras, 1yr lease, $1250 mo. $800 dep. 420-4535

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

LOOKING FOR a place to rent? Let us help you!! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors, 501 N. Main. (575) 624-2262 Stop by to pick up a list of our available rentals or check them out online at www.roswellforrent.com! JUST REDUCED 3br, 1.5ba, NE neighborhood, $875 mo., $600 dep., no pets or HUD. Now Avail. 420-5930

400 1/2 E 5th 1 bedroom stove, refrig., water paid, $325 mo. $200 dep. No HUD & No Pets. 910-9648 2BR, 1 3/4ba townhouse for sale/rent. Located in Briar Ridge, $79k/$650. Evenings after 5:30pm. 403 N. Elm, remodeled, 3br, 2ba, 2 living areas, stove, refrig., w/d hookups, heat pump, no pets, $950 mo, $600 dep. 637-8234 TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262 1602 N. Kansas, 2br, 1ba, ref. air, fenced yard, $625 mo., $250 dep. 910-6162

3/2/2 North side, $1000 mo. plus dep. 87 Bent Tree. Call Ben at 317-6408 1/1 Duplex $400 mo. water pd. Quiet street great area. 2203 Juniper call 317-6408 2 BR 1 ba. stove, refrig., w/d, fp, 2 car gar. water pd. lawn maintained. $650 mo. drive by 811 N. Lea if interested call 575-6534654 or 575-973-1332 2 BR 1 ba. living rm w/dining area, 1 car gar. stove, refrig. fenced yard w/sprinklers. Close to park, swimming pool, tennis courts walking trail and golf course. $750 mo. Drive by 1211 W. Highland if interested call 575-6534654 or 575-973-1332 3 BD 2.5 ba duplex a/c 1 car garage 205 E. 23rd Unit B $750 mo. $500 DD 317-6479

3202 S. Sunset, 4br/2ba, appliances, fenced backyard, no smokers/HUD, pets w/fee, $1000 mo., $500 dep. avail. April 1st 575-405-0163, email colerml@q.com Remodeled 3/4 br, 1-2 ba $600, $300dep. Al 703-020 Santiago 202-4702 will sell 2501, 03, 05 S. Lea, 3br 2ba, new construction, no smokers/pets, $1100 plus $500 dep. 575-317-4050

1907 W. Alameda, 3 BR 2 BA, $800 month, 1507 S. Pennsylvania, 3 BR 2 BA, $900 month, 857 Broken Arrow, 3 BR 2 BA, $1100 month, 2211 S. Union, 4 BR 2 BA, $1100 month, 908 W. Mathews, 2 BR 1 BA, $550 month, 1614 N Pontiac, 2 BR 1 BA, $575 month, 2403 N. Grand #A, 2 BR 1 BA, $725 month, Century 21 Home Planning, 3117 N. Main St, 575-622-4604 305 S. Evergreen, 2br/1ba, covered carport, appliances, shed, fenced backyard, pets w/fee, no HUD/smoking, $750/month, $500 deposit, avail. April 1. 575-405-0163, coLermL@q.com

ENCHANTED HILLS nice 3 br 1 3/4 bath new ceramic tile floors/carpet $1000 mo. $1000 dep. 575-937-1183 or 622-4722 GODDARD AREA, nice 2br, appliances w/d hookup. No pets/Hud. 910-9357 AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY 3201 Estrellita: 3 br, 2 bath appliances, utility room, fireplace, 2 car garage w/opener, water softener. $1150 plus utilities; $850 dep. 575-703-0298 or 575624-2774 2&3 Bd, 1&2 Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, appt M-Th 624-1331

555. Mobile Homes for Rent MOBILE HOME 2 miles NE of mall. Some maintenance and repair required. Ideal for Adults, no pets, nor smokers 622-3168 or 622-9261

569. Mobile Home Spaces/Lots

EASY LIVING community - 1337 McCall Loop, Roswell. Long term RV’s welcome. 624-2436

570. Mobile Home Courts

SOUTH FORK. A 55 & above community w/large quiet and attractive lots for people that care. 624-1742 500 W Brasher Rd.

580. Office or Business Places

OFFICE SPACE for Rent. Prime downtown area, 2,061 sq.ft. Please call 622-8711.

CLASSIFIEDS

580. Office or Business Places

EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITE for lease: Newly decorated, private rest room, covered parking at 1210 North Main. Contact David McGee, Owner / Broker 6222401 Office Space For Lease. Excellent Down Town Location. Various size spaces available. Ownerpaid utilities. Building Located 200 West 1st. Suite 300 Petrolium Building. Please call 6225385 or come by. INDIVIDUAL OFFICES for rent. Includes furniture, utilities and janitorial. $125 mo. Call EXIT Realty 6236200 or Dan Coleman 8408630 3000 sqft office space available,14 private offices 2 restrooms, 1 conference room, break room former doctors office. 2110 S. Main, $2500 mo. 626-7488 or 420-1352 BARBER SHOP for sale. 910-7552 or 623-5255. Business & Building. FOR LEASE - Space in Sunwest Centre aka the Bank of America Building. Various size spaces available. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 623-1652 or mobile 4202546. LEVEL ENTRY rent all or part of large offices. Excellent North area with level entry. call 420-2100 for viewing and location.

WAREHOUSE SPACE FOR RENT 766 SQ FT. VERY SECURE LOCATED REAR OF 1725 SE MAIN ST, $400 PER MONTH. FOR APPOINTMENT CALL REX SMITH 622-6460 OR 6224552.

MERCHANDISE

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

Power wheelchair, walker, commode chair, hospital bed, Lift chair622-7638 J.JILL, ANN Taylor, Coldwater Creek, Chico’s ~ all your favorite designers at huge savings. Credit Cards accepted, no fee layaways, 100’s of new items each week. Once Again Consignment, 207 N Main, Open Mon-Sat 10-6, 627-7776, OnceAgainConsignment.co m OR Facebook.com/OnceAgain Roswell NEED FURNITURE? Shop Blair’s Trading Post for the best prices in town for your household items. We buy & sell furniture, appliances, home decor, collectibles, electronics, saddles, jewelry, tools, fishing & camping items, movies plus everything else from A-Z. Including many hard to find items. Serving Roswell for 40 years. Open daily 9-5. Accept Visa & MC. 5611 Hummingbird Ln. 627-2033 REACH OVER 500,000 READERS in more than 30 newspapers across the state for one low price. Contact your local newspaper’s classified department or visit nmpress.org for details. PROM DRESSES for Sale one short, turquoise, size large, $30, short red/white, size large $30 ball gown, in good cond. Contact Jill White at 575-420-6101 HTC EVO 4G for sale. Like new 2 mo. old. Too smart for it’s previous owner. $275 Includes phone case screen cover & car charger 622-5525 TWO NICE sectionals, armoire, refrigerator, twin bed, queen bed and queen bedroom set, small desk. 317-7908 after 5 PM NEW ITEMS (2) motorcycle helmets, 12 gauge shotgun & ammo, size 8 1/2 Harley Davidson boots, size 8 wolverine boots, size 8 Converse/Nike basketball shoes, oval wall mirror, computer speakers. 623-2222 riding mower $650, 42” cut 22 HP, top condition, call MTh 8am-4pm 624-1331 1 YR old washer & elect. dryer like new $150 ea. 2 yr old elect. glass top range $200. 627-6459 TWIN ADJUSTABLE Craftomatic bed, raises up and down, messages, electric with remote $500 obo. 622-0456 Elderly walker w/wheels, raised toilet seat, shower seat $35 ea. 622-9722 THE TREASURE Chest 1204 Hobbs dressers, sofas, boxes clothes, cotton yardage, loads new & antiques, collectibles, Depression glass 914-1855

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

6X12 ENCLOSED trailer with side door fold down ramp in back paid $4k sell for $2500 new condition. 575-317-9432 HIGH END like new Amana 21 cu. ft refrigerator with bottom freezer $350, Kenmore glass top stainless elec. range $250, super capacity washer/dryer set $300. 914-9933

610. Garage Sales, Individuals

PROM FORMALS Affordable! Tiffany, Alyce, Scala, XCite, Flirt, Mori Lee, Jump, Sherri Hill and more! 100’s of dresses for sizes 0 to 28 slinky and poofy! Check us out first. Once Again Consignment, 207 N Main, Open Mon-Sat 10-6, 627-7776, OnceAgainConsignment.com OR Facebook.com/OnceAgainRosw ell FAST CASH Friday April 1st. Cash paid for quality & designer ladies clothing & accessories in like new condition. Paying cash on Friday 4/1, 10am-6pm, for clean and wrinkle free, trendy, ladies and juniors items on hangers. Once Again Consignment, 207 N Main, Open Mon-Sat 10-6, 627-7776, OnceAgainConsignment.co m OR Facebook.com/OnceAgain Roswell

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

U.S. & FOREIGN coins and currency, buy, sell or trade, gold and silver coins. 622-7239, 2513 W. 2nd TOP DOLLAR for gold and silver jewelry. New, old and broken. Also, silver coins. Call Ted 5780805.

620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous

PAY CASH all day long for household items. Top prices paid for furniture, antiques, appliances, collectibles, tools, saddles, plus everything else from A to Z, including personal estates. 627-2033 or 623-6608 PROM DRESSES wanted, cash now or make more by waiting until it sells. Once Again Consignment, 207 N Main, Open Mon-Sat 10-6. Call for your appointment, 627-7776. OnceAgainConsignment.co m OR Facebook.com/OnceAgain Roswell WILL BUY your unwanted washers & dryers. 6267470 I AM interested in buying bedroom & living room furniture. 637-9641

650. Washers & Dryers KENMORE 600 washer, cosmetic damage, works good, $250 obo. 330-592-3582

715. Hay and Feed Sale

Alfalfa Hay- sm. bales, oat hay & sudan all grades $4.50-$9.00 per bale. Big bales $90-$140 ea. Firewood. 8:00-5:30 MonSat.1:00-5:00 Sun. Graves Farm & Garden 622-1889 Credit Cards Accepted

745. Pets for Sale

PUPPY LOVE Grooming Large Dogs Welcome, Cats also - 575-420-6655 FREE CATS! Older cats, some spayed, neutered, shy now but will be friendly, all need good homes. 6264708. MICRO SIZE, tiny Yorkies & Yorki-Poos, $800 & up. Call or text 575-308-3017.

T-CUP & Toy puppies for sale, $200-$500, Shih Tzu’s, Chihuahua’s, Chorkies, Maltese, MaltyPoos, Hybrid Min Pins, ChiWeenies. Full blooded & designer breeds. All registered, shots & papers. Call or text 575-308-3017. AKC BULLMASTIFF pups $400. 575-365-2982 or 575-513-3187 PUREBRED IRISH Setter pups born 12/11/10 $250 Leave message 575-7603811 or enmngterry@gmail.com “LUSKY” AKC lab & full blooded Husky had 5 females & 3 male pups. 8 wks old ready for new home. Call 575-910-6546

2 males $550 ea. 3 female $600 ea. Golden Retrievers parents on site for more info please contact Cynthia 575-420-1150 or Gerald 575-317-6411 FULL BLOODED Boxer puppies $200. Tails docked and dew claws removed. 840-9756 3 BLACK Mini Dachshund pups ready now $350 ea. Contact 317-4881

Roswell Daily Record 745. Pets for Sale

4 CUTE Chinese Pugs for sale 4 weeks! 622-6632 MALE YORKIES $500 ea. Mixed Shar-Pei & Australian Shepherd pups $20 parents on premises for all. 575-578-0785

780. RV’s & Campers Hauling

MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. Your dealer of choice. Sales, parts, service, consignments, purchases, propane, dump station. 2900 West Second. 6221751, 1-800-929 0046 2008 CARRI-LITE 36ft 5th wheel luxurious model w/4 slide outs priced to sell $63k Call Jereme 575-6260569

AKC REGISTERED Boxer 1 yr old male flashy fawn, very sweet & friendly, has champion bloodlines $300 OBO. Call 575-309-3396

2000 TERRY Gooseneck trailer, 25ft w/center glide out, fully self-contained, sleeps 6 easy, great camper, need to see to appreciate, $7950. Call 623-5295.

YORKIES AKC 2 males shots, eating well 10 wks old, ready to go. 575-6228888 leave mesg.

LAB PUPPIES Purebred no papers 6 weeks old yellow & black Hunting stock females $200 Males $175 575-420-0527, 575420-1555

TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale

RECREATIONAL

NICE DOVETAIL car trailer w/electric wench $1800. 626-7488

765. Guns & Ammunition

1977 FORD LTD.,red great condition $3000 OBO. Call 622-5880

New Mexico concealed handgun course now being scheduled in Roswell. Call 622-4989

775. Motorcycles & Scooters

2003 YAMAHA V-Star Classic 650, 3200 miles, $2900. Call 910-0492 or 420-2768. 2007 YAMAHA V Star 1300 Touristor Cruiser 5400 miles garage kept never dropped $7950 OBO. 6230667

790. Autos for Sale

MOVING 1991 Pontiac FireBird trade Pu small car 347-0260 1999 MERCEDES-BENZ M-Class, 320 MI., Sport Utility, 4 Door, Automatic, leather interior, sun roof, silver exterior, gray interior, excellent condition with many extras, must see to appreciate, 152,000 miles, $6700, to see call 575-6259500 or after hours/weekends call 575317-3092

2004 DODGE Stratus, 61k mi beautiful car in excellent cond., $5650, 420-1352 95 ESCORT auto trans., up to 40 MPG $2750 OBO. 317-1313 92 PLYMOUTH Grand Voyager van $500. Call 575-578-0785 ‘97 Buick LeSabre $2500 good condition 123k mi. A/C works well 624-0233 1978 MONTE Carlo good condition, clean body, interior, runs! $1800 575637-8825

795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans

1996 FORD Ecoline Van for sale. $4500, very good condition. 910-7552 or 623-5255 99 DODGE RAM 1500 p/u 89k miles 5.9 magnum, power windows & locks viper alarm $6500 OBO. Call 575-578-9542 2006 DODGE 2500 Bighorn 4 door cummins 575-420-1873 2010 CHEV 2500 HD nice truck. Call 575-420-1873 2007 FORD F150XL V6, auto, AC, PS 6 cd player & mp3, RB, 7500 miles, towing pkg. 625-9775

796. SUVS

06 TOYOTA 4 runner SR5, silver, low miles well below KBB $19,900. 317-4626

CLASSIFIEDS INDEX

005 010 015 020 025

Announcements Special Notice Card of Thanks Personals/Special Transportation Lost & Found

Instruction

030 Education 035 Music – Dance/Drama 040 Instructions Wanted 045 050 055 060

Employment

Employment Opportunities Salesperson/Agents Employment Agencies Jobs Wanted – M & F

Services

070 Agricultural Analysis 075 Air Conditioning 080 Alterations 085 Appliance Repair 090 Auto Repair 100 Babysitting 105 Childcare 110 Blade Work 115 Bookkeeping 120 Carpentry 125 Carpet Cleaning 130 Carpeting 135 Ceramic Tile 140 Cleaning 145 Clock & Watch Repair 150 Concrete 155 Counseling 160 Crafts/Arts 165 Ditching 170 Drafting 175 Drapery 180 Drilling 185 Electrical 190 Engraving 195 Elderly Care 200 Fencing 205 Fertilizer 210 Firewood – Coal 215 Floor Covering 220 Furniture Repair 224 Garage Door Repair 225 General Construction 226 Waterwell 230 General Repair 232 Chimney Sweep 235 Hauling 240 Horseshoeing 245 House Wrecking 250 Insulation 255 Insurance 260 Ironing & Washing 265 Janitorial 269 Excavating 270 Landscape/Lawnwork 280 Masonry/Concrete 285 Miscellaneous Service 290 Mobile Home Service 293 Monuments 295 Musical 300 Oil Field Services 305 Computers 306 Rubber Stamps 310 Painting/Decorating 315 Pest Control 316 Pets 320 Photography 325 Piano Tuning 330 Plumbing 335 Printing 340 Radio/TV’s/Stereo’s 345 Remodeling 350 Roofing 355 Sand Blasting 356 Satellite 360 Screens/Shutters 365 Security 370 Sewer Service & Repair 375 Sewing Machine Service 380 Sharpening 385 Slenderizing 390 Steam Cleaning 395 Stucco Plastering 400 Tax Service 401 Telephone Service 405 Tractor Work 410 Tree Service 415 Typing Service 420 Upholstery 425 Vacuum Cleaners 426 Video/Recording 430 Wallpapering 435 Welding

440 441 445 450

Window Repair Window Cleaning Wrought Iron Services Wanted

455 456 460 465

Money: Loan/Borrow Credit Cards Insurance Co. Oil, Mineral, Water, Land Lease/Sale Investment: Stocks/Sale Mortgages for Sale Mortgages Wanted Business Opportunities

470 475 480 485

Financial

Real Estate

490 Homes for Sale 495 Acreage/Farm/Ranch 500 Business for Sale 505 Commercial Business Property 510 Resort Out of Town Property 515 Mobile Homes/Sale 520 Lots for Sale 525 Building Transfer 530 Real Estate Wanted

Rentals

535 Apartments, Furnished 540 Apartments, Unfurnished 545 Houses, Furnished 550 Houses, Unfurnished 555 Mobile Homes – Rental 560 Sleeping Rooms 565 Rest Homes 569 Mobile Home Lots/Space 570 Mobile Home Courts 571 RV Parks 575 Resort Homes 580 Office/Business Rentals 585 Warehouse & Storage 590 Farms/Acreage – Rent 595 Miscellaneous for Rent 600 Want to Rent

Merchandise

605 Miscellaneous for Sale 610 Garage Sales, Individuals 611 Garage Sales, Businesses 615 Coins/Gold/Silver 620 Want to Buy – Miscellaneous 625 Antiques 630 Auction Sales 635 Good Things to Eat 640 Household Goods 645 Sewing Machines 650 Washers & Dryers 652 Computers 655 TV’s & Radios 660 Stereos 665 Musical Merchandise 670 Industrial Equipment 675 Camera/Photography 680 Heating Equipment 685 Air Conditioning Equipment 690 Business/Office Equipment 695 Machinery 700 Building Materials 705 Lawn/Garden/Fertilizer 710 Plants/Flowers 715 Hay & Feed Sale 720 Livestock & Supplies 721 Boarding Stables 725 Livestock Wanted 730 Poultry & Supplies 735 Poultry Wanted 740 Show Fowl 745 Pets for Sale

Recreational

750 Sports Equipment 755 Bicycles for Sale 760 Hunting & Camping Equipment 765 Guns & Ammunition 770 Boats & Accessories 775 Motorcycles 780 RV’s/Campers 785 Trailers Wanted

Transportation

790 Automobiles for Sale 795 Trucks & Vans 796 SUV’s 800 Classic Automobiles 805 Imported Automobiles 810 Auto Parts & Accessories 815 Wanted – Autos


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