RPD investigates homicide of woman, RFD rescues furry friends, woman from fire

Page 1

Roswell Daily Record THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

Vol. 125, No. 73 75¢ Daily / $1.25 Sunday

March 27, 2018

Tuesday

www.rdrnews.com

RPD investigates homicide of woman

By Trevier Gonzalez Roswell Daily Record

Authorities are investigating the homicide of an adult female in west Roswell. According to the Roswell Police Department’s public information officer, Todd Wildermuth, authorities received the initial call at about 8:25 p.m. Monday. Wildermuth said the incident occurred in the 300 block of South Birch Avenue. North of the intersection of West Alameda Street

and Birch Avenue, much of the surrounding area was blocked off with police tape. According to radio traffic, after about 9 p.m., RPD detective Robert Scribner had arrived at the scene, among other detectives. A member of the RPD scoured past the small area of Birch Avenue near the area of the homicide. As a result, an RPD officer’s pair of medical gloves with some blood was recovered. The RPD’s Mobile Command Center also arrived Monday night.

In December 2017, a man living in the same apartment building had made claims of arson after someone had entered his residence while he was asleep and set several of his belongings on fire. However, the initial conclusion by investigating officers was that the man’s story did not really add up to the situation found at the scene. Multimedia-Crime reporter Trevier Gonzalez can be reached at 575-622-7710, ext. 301, or at breakingnews@rdrnews.com.

Trevier Gonzalez Photo

A building near the corner of West Alameda Street and South Birch Avenue is outlined with police tape and colored with emergency lights Monday night as members of the Roswell Police Department investigate the homicide of a woman.

RFD rescues furry friends, woman from fire By Trevier Gonzalez Roswell Daily Record

A woman, along with her cat and dog were saved by firefighters after flames emerged from a mobile home Monday afternoon in east Roswell. According to radio traffic, the structure fire broke out before 3:30 p.m. Monday at Country Club Mobile Home Manor at 1200 E. Country Club Rd. After the fire was under

control, a firefighter handed off a cat recovered from the mobile home. According to the RFD’s fire chief, Devin Graham, the resident of the mobile home and an off-duty firefighter who stopped to help were taken to a local hospital for evaluation. “Our priority was getting the lady that lives there to the hospital,” Graham said. “We’ll probably — we’re getting ready

See RFD, Page A2

Trevier Gonzalez Photos

Above: An RFD firefighter looks out toward his fellow firefighters as they extinguish the flames at Country Club Mobile Home Manor Monday afternoon. Right: An RFD firefighter hands off a tabby cat named “Mr. Whiskers” off to a man after Monday afternoon’s fire at Country Club Mobile Home Manor is extinguished. According to the RFD’s public information officer, Todd Wildermuth, a dog was also rescued from the mobile home.

Local, federal authorities make large seizure

Continuing investigation finds firearms, marijuana, cash

Roswell Daily Record A collection of marijuana, firearms and more than $56,000 in cash were seized following a tip given to a Roswell police officer Sunday. According to a news release by the Roswell Police Department’s public information officer, Todd Wildermuth, the tip-off sparked an investigation by the RPD’s patrol division at an apartment in southwest Roswell Sunday afternoon. Wildermuth said the investigation was met with the assistance of RPD narcotics agents, as well as agents with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. “The investigation resulted in the seizure

of about six pounds of marijuana (the weight includes containers holding the marijuana) and about 11 pounds of marijuana-related products (marijuana in other forms) and containers,” Wildermuth said. “Also seized were 14 firearms and slightly more than $56,000 in cash.” Police said most of the seized items were found in a suspect’s apartment. “Some items were located in the same suspect’s vehicle, which at the time police served the search warrants was parked at the suspect’s place of employment elsewhere in the city,” Wildermuth said. “No arrests have been made in this case as of Monday morning, but the investigation is ongoing.”

Today’s Forecast

HIGH 71 LOW 40

Alison Penn Photo

Hangar 84 Robotics Club shows their Roswell Spirit on Friday afternoon. In the front row on the floor, Brayden Rook, Cyrus Guiterrez, and Rose Hobbs sit with the robot. Carmen Lucero, Cole Borner, Ariana Pompa, Eric Martinez, and Destiny Torrez stand in the second row with Anthony Martinez in the back row. Mark Gorbitz is not pictured as well as six other members.

Robotics Club programs real-world skills

By Alison Penn Roswell Daily Record

The Hangar 84 Robotics Club of Early College High School and University High School shared their experience in form-

ing the club and their first robotics competition. From March 7-10, Hangar 84 competed in For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology (FIRST) Robotics Competition. As a group,

the students said they learned more than robotics, but the competition drove them to learn communication, teamwork, business and much more. “Some of the teams had tremendous robots

• Manuel A. Leyva • Benjamin R. Sanchez

See CLUB, Page A3

Index

Today’s Obituaries Page A6

• Edna Carper • Keilah Nicole Renteria

with high-level technology,” Early College High School teacher Glen Kirk said. “So for our kids in New Mexico to be diving into that world of tech-

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A2 Tuesday, March 27, 2018

General

Roswell Daily Record

Input on Community Development Block Grant projects wanted

Roswell Daily Record

Public hearings will be held this week regarding Community Development Block Grant. On the city website, it said the purpose of these public hearings is to report on past CDBG program activities and to receive public input on community development needs and suggestions for future CDBG projects. The City of Roswell will hold its 2018 Community Development Block Grant public hearings as follows:

Tuesday, March 27, 5 p.m., Boys & Girls Club, 201 S. Garden Ave. Wednesday, March 28, 10 a.m., Roswell Public Library, 301 N. Pennsylvania Ave. Wednesday, March 28, 2 p.m., Roswell Public Library, 301 N. Pennsylvania Ave. The Community Development Block Grant program was established in 1974 to assist communities in providing essential community facilities and decent housing for residents, promoting economic development and main-

taining a suitable living environment. The State of New Mexico estimates a 2018 appropriation of $10.5 million to be distributed statewide on a competitive basis. State and national objectives of the CDBG Program require that assistance is made available for activities that address at least one of the following: 1) An activity identified as principally benefiting people of low and moderate income. 2) Aid in the prevention and elimination of slums and blight. 3) Meet other community

development needs of recent origin having a particular urgency because existing conditions pose a serious and immediate threat to the health and welfare of the community where other financial resources are not available to meet such needs. Applications are limited to a maximum of $500,000 without certified cost estimates and $750,000 with certified cost estimates, except for planning applications which have a limit of $50,000. Eligible activities and catego-

ries will be described at the hearings. All interested parties are invited to attend, to submit project ideas, to provide supporting data and testimony and other pertinent information. With sufficient notice, a translator will be provided for non-English speaking residents. Those unable to attend the public hearings may email written comments to Planning Manager William Morris at b.morris@roswell-nm. gov or mail to Morris at City of Roswell at 415 N. Richardson Ave with zip code 88201.

Head Start Program now accepting children’s applications Submitted The Southeast N.M. Community Action Corp. Head Start Program is now accepting children’s applications for the 201819 program year. Child MUST have turned 3 or 4 years old before Sept. 1. Children who turn 5 before Sept. 1 are not eligible. The following documents are needed for enrollment application: State issued birth certificate. Current/Updated immunization record. Income verification for the previous 12 month period (W2 or income tax forms). Medicaid or health insurance card.

Enrollment applications are being scheduled at the following locations: Artesia Head Start, 504 Gage St. 575-748-1141 Carlsbad Head Start, 1915 San Jose Blvd., 575-887-3939 Hagerman Head Start, 112 N. Cambridge, 575-752-4244 Dexter Head Start, 401 C W. Fourth St., 575-734-6104 Roswell Head Start, 209 E. Hendricks, 575-624-1285 Roswell Head Start 503/504 W. McGaffey Ave., 575-623-1782 Loving Head Start 601 S. Seventh, 575-703-6435 Services for children with disabilities are available. Parents and/or guardians are encouraged to call and schedule and appointment to complete an

enrollment application for their child. For more information on enrollment applications or to tour the centers, contact your local Head Start Center.

elegibles. Se necesitan los siguientes documentos para la aplicación de inscripción: Acta de nacimiento emitido por el estado Registro de vacunas actualizado o corriente Verificación de ingresos para el paríodo de 12 meses anterior (W2 o declaración de impuestos) Medicaid o seguro de salud no es requisite. Sin embargo, por favor traiga su tarjeta sis u niño o niña está cubierto. Solicitaciónes de inscripción se están programando el los siguientes lugares: Artesia Head Start, 504 Gage St. 575-748-1141 Carlsbad Head Start, 1915 San Jose Blvd., 575-887-3939

El Programa Head Start Corp. aceptando aplicaciónes

Presentado El Programa Head Start Corp. de Comunidades del Sudeste de N.M., ahora estan aceptando aplicaciónes para niños para el año 2018-19. Los niños DEBEN haber cumplido 3 o 4 años de edad antes del 1 de septimbre. Los niños que cumplen 5 años antes del 1 de septiembre no son

Hagerman Head Start, 112 N. Cambridge, 575-752-4244 Dexter Head Start, 401 C W. Fourth St., 575-734-6104 Roswell Head Start, 209 E. Hendricks, 575-624-1285 Roswell Head Start 503/504 W. McGaffey Ave., 575-623-1782 Loving Head Start 601 S. Seventh, 575-703-6435 Los padres y/o guardianes se les anima a llamar para programar una cita o venir a la oficina local de Head Start para completer una aplicación de inscripción. Tambien puede ponerse en contacto con la oficina de Head Start para obtener más información para hacer una visita del centro.

RFD

Worship and Luncheon

Continued from Page A1

Timothy P. Howsare Photo

Rev. John Guthrie, pastor of First Presbyterian Church, speaks during Monday’s Worship and Luncheon in the parish hall of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. The free luncheons will be held from 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. throughout the week at churches across town. Today’s luncheon will be held at First Presbyterian Church, 400 W. Third St., Wednesday’s will be First United Methodist Church, 200 N. Pennsylvania Ave., Thursday’s will be at St. Mark’s Lutheran Church and Friday’s will be at First Church of the Nazarene. The ecumenical events are a Holy Week tradition in Roswell and the public is invited.

to send our investigators in. My guess is, if there is another cat back in there that probably didn’t make it, we’ll know for sure here in a little bit.” A neighbor told the Daily Record another neighbor, David Cooper, had helped the female victim from passing out. Although Cooper had been coughing, he declined to be checked out by medical professionals. “We could hear somebody ask for help,” Cooper said. “I put her head down to make sure she was OK, ‘cause she was about to pass out — she was. “They wanted to take me, but I’m OK. I’m not a hero — I’m just a neighbor.” In an update from

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Todd Wildermuth, the Roswell Fire Department’s public information officer confirmed a dog had also been rescued from inside the residence. “One female resident of the home was rescued by arriving fire crews and transported to the hospital for smoke inhalation,” Wildermuth said. “The second person transported was an off-duty firefighter who saw the smoke, stopped and attempted to rescue the resident before other firefighters arrived. He was also transported for smoke inhalation.” Wildermuth said the cause of the fire is under investigation. Multimedia-Crime reporter Trevier Gonzalez can be reached at 575622-7710, ext. 301, or at breakingnews@rdrnews. com.

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CIrculation Director jdishman@rdrnews.com Published daily except Monday at 2301 N. Main St., Roswell, N.M. 88201. Copyright Notice The entire contents of the Roswell Daily Record, including its flag on Page 1, are fully protected by copyright and registry and cannot be reproduced in any form for any purpose without written permission from the Daily Record. SUBSCRIPTION RATES by carrier delivery in Roswell: $11 per month, payable in advance. Prices may vary in some areas. *Notice: Increase in mail rates effective 02/14/17. MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ALL NEW MEXICO 882 ZIP CODES, $18 ONE MONTH, $54 THREE MONTHS, $108 SIX MONTHS, $216 ONE YEAR. All other New Mexico zip codes, $18 one month, $54 three months, $108 six months, $216 one year. All other states in USA, $20 one month, $60 three months, $120 six months, $240 one year. Periodical-postage paid at Roswell, N.M. Postmaster: Please mail change of address to Roswell Daily Record, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell, N.M. 88202-1897. All postal subscriptions will stop at expiration unless payment is made prior to expiration. Payments can now be done online at rdrnews.com

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Roswell Daily Record

General

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

A3

Aliens and the arts in spotlight at competition

By Lisa Dunlap Roswell Daily Record

The city of Roswell is putting its art community and its UFO attractions in the spotlight as it competes in a state event to win media coverage. The city has been selected as one of six finalists for “Travel Tank 2.0,” sponsored by the New Mexico Tourism Department. “We are very excited about it,” said Director of Public Affairs Juanita Jennings, “and we hope we bring home the win.” Styled after the TV show “Shark Tank,” the Trav-

Club Continued from Page A1

nology and starting to compete with other states is big. We need to — New Mexico has to step up.” At the competition at the Lubbock fairgrounds, Hangar 84 won two rookie awards called Highest Rookie Seed and Rookie Inspiration Award sponsored by National Instruments. “I think a lot of what people are learning in this club is applicable to the real world,” Mark Gorbitz, a homeschooled student and club member said. “We have to learn how to do business, we have to learn about construction and the technical side of things, and then we have to learn how to work with other people. I think everything that the robotics club does prepares people for the real world.”

Guiding the process

Science teachers Andrea Bautista from University High School and Glen Kirk from Early College High School oversaw Hangar 84’s creation. Bautista said she loved to see the program foster qualities in the students, while she and Kirk served as guides. Bautista said attending an aerospace exposition in October ignited the interest in the students for robotics, which led the students to ask if they could do something like what they had seen. “A lot of kids are interested in engineering and robotics,” Principal Por-

el Tank competition gives tourism representatives five minutes to convince local and national journalists and media figures that their region deserves coverage. As the name implies, the competition is in its second year, said Brianna Gallegos, public and industry relations coordinator with the department. The first year, the six regional tourism marketing boards in New Mexico competed and New Mexico writers and reporters were the judges. The event is meant to showcase tourism expe-

riences that are “uniquely” New Mexican, Gallegos said. There is no cost to entrants and gives tourism representatives experience selling their ideas. “Sometimes people don’t know how to reach out to journalists,” she said. “This is an opportunity to present ideas right to them.” The competition will occur May 8 at the Inn of the Mountain Gods in Ruidoso during the Governor’s Conference on Hospitality and Tourism. The public can attend the event, which is scheduled to begin at 12:30 p.m. Other finalists this year

include a bicycle rental and touring company in Albuquerque; a business group based in Pecos, New Mexico; Los Alamos County; the city of Alamogordo; and Visit ABQ, a nonprofit group that promotes Albuquerque as a destination. Jennings and her group advanced to the finalist stage for their entry on “Aliens and Art.” In addition to promoting the International UFO Museum and Research Center and other attractions related to Roswell’s well-known connection to UFO phenomena, Jennings is emphasizing the city’s

two art museums and its arts community. She said that part of the pitch will be about a new Peter Hurd exhibit planned by the Roswell Museum and Art Center, the Roswell-Artist-in-Residence program of the Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art and Main Street Arts, a cooperative exhibiting various artists’ works and businesses. Jennings said an earlier tour of journalists through New Mexico indicated that their experiences creating art at the Main Street gallery rated among their favorite activities.

She said that a Travel Tank win could translate into tens of thousands of dollars worth of free media coverage. “One of the panelists is a Texas Monthly writer. If we were to pay for an ad in Texas Monthly, it could cost us $8,000 to $10,000,” Jennings said. The winner also gets a free booth at the Family Travel Showcase in Gallup in November. All finalists also can participate in a Texas media tour in June. Senior Writer Lisa Dunlap can be reached at 575-6227710, ext. 310, or at reporter02@rdrnews.com.

ter Cutrell said. “A few of the students came to us. The science teachers took this and ran with it. These guys are not the sage on the stage anymore as they say. They’re the guide on the side. Really, these guys did a great job with this. They just guided the students and they did a lot of different things.” The event kicked off on Jan. 6 and each team had six weeks to build a robot. Bautista said she became a sponsor three days before the application due date and the process was organic and new to the teachers and students. With 16 members total, Bautista said a majority of the students in the club are from the Early College High School with one University High School student qualified to go to the competition and one homeschooled student. Bautista said the students have come from ground zero where they knew nothing about building a robot, wiring, pneumatics, electrical systems or business plans. Now, Bautista said the program fostered skills that allow the students to be confident in the process and their final product. “They are gladly stepping forward to say that so truly they have taken it on in their own hands,” Bautista said of her students. “They’ve taught themselves so much more than we ever could have taught them. And now, they know how to go and get whatever information they need on their own and go out to other teams and collect that. So real-

ly, they are building their own self-sustaining group, which is pretty sweet.” Bautista said no funding was from the school but came from fundraising from the students. Bautista said Cutrell pushed for this program and offered support in any way he could. “As we look at the change in education, right now we are really looking at trying to blend and mold what we do in public education to what students need down the road,” Cutrell said. “As you see, the world of work is changing — so for us to continue to do the same stuff and produce the same people to go out in the workforce that doesn’t really exist anymore would be a poor choice.” Saying he was appreciative of the community’s support, Cutrell said the students sought resources from community members like retired science teachers, veterans and other knowledgeable sources and even a scientist in California over Skype. Cutrell said he is excited to see what will happen with the Robotics Club next year.

is to lift milk crates and put them on switches or scales. Rook said the motor spins at 22,000 revolutions per minute, which operates the scissor lift. As a group, the students said in agreement they never believed that they could build a robot, let alone a robot that could lift a cube around 8 feet in the air. Another student, Cole Borner, said it was pneumatically powered and trying to remove the milk crate from the robot’s grip was impossible. “So obviously it starts with the battery because that is the power,” Borner said. “The battery has wires that go into the PDP, which is the power distribution panel — but then that distributes all the power to all the different little wiggly bits that we all need to work.” The classroom broke out into laughter and the students were eager to share more about their robot. “There’s a brain inside called the roboRIO,” Rook said. “My computer talks to the radio, which is connected to the roboRIO, and we are using a software called LabVIEW to program the robot. I did all of that. LabVIEW is a drag and drop kind of thing — so you have a block that says motor and you connect it through wires that say start or stop — so that’s the how the LabVIEW program

works.” Gorbitz said he did all the driving for the team, web design and banner design. “I was more influenced in the process of building the robot,” Eric Ramirez said. “I was part of the computer programming and building team, so I kind of did half and half. I learned a lot (from the) experience to the program the robot and what languages there were for programming. I just want to say that with this experience it’s actually going to help me a lot with my field of work that I am going into, which would be engineering and programming, so it helped me a little bit in introducing it to me.”

nut butter and jelly sandwiches to keep team members fed at the competition. Destiny Torrez was in charge of the business team and her team members said she did a huge amount of work. Rose Hobbs said she helped build the base of the robot among other projects. “I mainly helped with the website,” Hobbs said. “I was mainly part of the media group and I learned quite a bit. I know it is not really what I want to go into, but it definitely helps it when you are trying to add to advertise something.” The student unanimously said their teachers and sponsors were amazing. Carmen Lucero said the teachers and leaders made it possible for the team to get to the competition with bus and hotel rentals, food, fees, applications and materials for the robot. “Overall the competition brought us together,” Lucero said. “I didn’t talk to three of these people before. Like — I didn’t know that Ariana was a person and now we are best friends. We really have come together as a team and like a family in a way.” City reporter Alison Penn can be reached at 575-6227710, ext. 205, or at reporter04@rdrnews.com.

Robotic specifications

The students said their robot is named Little Timmy, who weighs 108 pounds. A student programmer, Brayden Rook said the robot’s purpose

Beyond robotics

Cyrus Guiterrez and Bautista said the robotics team welcomes any high school aged students who want to join Hangar 84. Saying he happily spent most of the competition networking with other teams and fetching pens, Gutierrez said members can participate in robotics, media, outreach and much more. Calling the club a fun experience, Ariana Pompa said she learned teamwork and communication skills and her friend Carmen Lucero said it opened her eyes to more opportunities. Pompa and Lucero said they even made pea-

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A4 Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Opinion

Republicans go to the back of the (omni)bus I

t will take some time for anyone who wants to know what’s in the 2,232-page 2018 omnibus budget passed last Friday. Shades of Obama Care? The so-called omnibus budget is one of the biggest hack jobs for passing pork spending bills by all our politicians in the “swamp.” By definition, the term omnibus, as applied, means in Latin “for all” or penitence two or more independent matters. It is frequently used in reference to a legislative bill comprised of two or more general subjects that is designed to compel the executive to approve provisions that he or she would otherwise reject but that he or she signs into law to prevent the defeat of the entire bill. It makes me almost think using a Latin or Greek word is an attempt by lawyer politicians to hide a nefarious activity or action from we the people. Of course, that would never happen. There are a few parts of OB2018 up front that will give us a glimpse of “omni-ism.” Chuck Schumer, Democrat Minority Leader of the Senate, was beside himself with joy concerning passage of the 2018 budget, while

John Taylor

Veterans & Other Affairs President Trump was not a happy camper. Trump agreed to sign the bill due to the fact the military was getting $716 billion this fiscal year and $700 billion next year. Make absolutely no mistake about it, that money was desperately needed to prevent any one of the four nations with nuclear missiles pointed at (your house) to pull the trigger! At least there’s one person in Washington who cares about his country more than his pocketbook. That’s probably the reason the Democrat Party and half the Republican Party spends all their time trying to get rid of him, instead of taking care of We the People. Case in point, a report from Washington DC shows why Sen. Chucky is so happy. “There is

new hope Thursday for the Gateway Tunnel Project to build a much-needed (additional) rail tunnel underneath the Hudson River (my note — connecting New York City with New Jersey).” To continue, “People in New York and New Jersey are very happy with the results we achieved,” Schumer said Thursday. A smiling Schumer announced that he got key Republicans to agree to put the money in the budget to jump start the project. While the $500 million commitment is less than 5 percent of the $11 billion tunnel price tag, Schumer praised the agreement, the report concluded. Oh, and did I tell you Schumer and the NYC boys are in first chair for $2.9 billion, that’s billion, in federal grants for the project under the current spending bill? New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, also smiling, commented, “One big step, with a lot more that needs to come,” Murphy said. “We need the federal government to be a full partner in this project.” Does “full partner” mean full funder? Bottom line, the dreamers were thrown under the bus by their Democrat protectorate in order

Roswell Daily Record

for Sen. Schumer and the Jersey/NYC good old boys to secure their legacy (and their pocketbooks) for the people of New Jersey. That should make our “visiting immigrants” feel secure that their benefactors care for them, not their votes. Before closing, here’s my thoughts — strictly my thoughts — on “the wall” and the morsel granted in the budget. $747 billion is allocated, not earmarked, to the military just for the first year, another $700 billion for the next. The wall is estimated at less than $12 billion, which is peanuts from the military budget. President Trump has 20 Engineer Battalions in the military system at his disposal to build the wall, anti-personnel minefield or whatever. The Army Corps of Engineers built, then re-built the walls around New Orleans, Houston Bay, the Intercoastal Waterway and all of our major reservoirs. A wall across the southwest would be nothing to them. The project would be based out of the South Pacific Division, which is ironically located in the sanctuary city of San Francisco. Oh, the irony of it

all. The president is brilliant, so I wouldn’t be surprised if he had something in mind like this. Just saying. Next week, I’ll have some important changes in veteran retirees’ and totally disabled veterans’ benefits currently coming through the pipeline you definitely need to be aware of. Some topics include: a dollar-for-dollar offset of a spouse’s SBP annuity by the spouse’s VA Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC); VA announces rollout and application process for new Veterans ID Card; Federal Long Term Care Insurance Program eligibility; VA facilities now offer same-day care for urgent primary and mental health-care needs. Stay tuned! God bless. ——— John Taylor, a 25-year resident of Roswell, is a retired Vietnam vet paratrooper, DAV, vice commander of the Military Order of Purple Heart and a former health-care executive. He may be reached at skytroopjhtay@gmail. com. The views expressed in this column are those of the author.

Guest Editorial

Game Over for Toys R Us The Jacksonville Daily News

Toys R Us finally has acknowledged the obvious: The game is over, deader than an outgrown Little Tikes playhouse. The New Jersey-based retailer said this month it would liquidate the inventory of 735 stores across the country, a maneuver that threatens the jobs of 30,000 workers and will weaken the financial results of toymakers such as Hasbro Inc. Toys R Us sought protection in bankruptcy court last fall, but the retailer hoped a strong holiday shopping season would carry it back in the direction of profitability. Instead, shoppers went online to buy their electronic gizmos, action figures, board games and Power Wheels. And that signaled the end for a retail chain that once was seen as the most important player in toy land. It’s no secret that bricks-and-mortar retailers have been hurt by competition from virtual retailers. Companies from Sears to the Gap have been forced to close hundreds of underperforming stores as they groped for new strategies to survive. But while it’s easy to say Amazon and other virtual retailers destroyed Toys R Us’ business model, the fact is that other retailers, especially Walmart and Target, have found ways to succeed in the face of fierce online competition. Even Toys R Us, as crippled as it was, still sold more toys than Amazon. The core problem for Toys R Us is that the company has been drowning in debt since private investment firms KKR, Bain, and Vornado took control in 2005. That forced the chain to divert resources from operating priorities in order to repay lenders. Toys R Us managers concede they couldn’t afford to spruce up their aging stores, nor hire enough workers to excite the customers who wandered through their cavernous spaces. The chain still hopes to package and sell its operations in Asia, Europe and Canada, but it’s not clear that buyers will emerge. Potential investors, like shoppers, seem to have lost interest in Toys R Us. Creditors pushed for liquidation because they saw it as the most likely way to be repaid. Fortunately for Hasbro and other large toymakers, the disappearance of Toys R Us will not be fatal, though it will be painful. The chain accounted for 9 percent of Hasbro’s global net sales last year, far less than the Rhode Island company sells through Walmart. Hasbro said it expects Toys R Us’ financial problems to “negatively impact” Hasbro’s sales this year, and the company’s stock has suffered as investors calculated the damage. Shoppers won’t be seriously hurt by the chain’s closure; in fact, they will benefit in the short term as Toys R Us discounts its merchandise in order to get rid of it. But employees are likely to suffer, as will smaller toymakers who lack the diversified revenue streams of companies like Hasbro.

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The teenage demagogues raise their voice All you needed to know about student activist David Hogg’s speech at the “March for Our Lives” in Washington, D.C. over the weekend was that he affixed a price tag on the microphone to symbolize how much National Rifle Association money Sen. Marco Rubio took for the lives of students in Florida. The stunt wasn’t out of place. Indeed, it perfectly encapsulated the braying spirit of the student gun-control advocacy in the wake of the Parkland, Florida school shooting. These young activists are making our public debate even more poisonous and less civil, and are doing it as teenagers. They are precocious that way. The Stoneman Douglas students experienced a horrific trauma. No one can deny their grief or blame them for being impassioned. And allowance has to be made for the fact that they are teenagers, who universally believe that they know better than their hapless elders (Hogg says the problem is that their parents don’t know how to use a democracy). Yet none of that excuses their scurrilous smears of the other side in the gun

Rich Lowry Guest Columnist debate. The student activists presume that there is a ready solution to mass shootings that everyone knows, and the only reason why someone might not act on this universally accepted policy is malice or corruption. This makes the other side the equivalent of murderers. So at the CNN forum, Stoneman Douglas student Cameron Kasky told Sen. Marco Rubio that looking at him is like looking down the barrel of the AR-15 held by the school shooter. In a video interview with an outfit called The Outline, David Hogg said that the NRA and its supporters “want to keep killing our children.” Not that they inadvertently enable people who carry out school shootings via misconceived policy, but they themselves kill children and want to keep doing it. Lest he be misunderstood, Hogg added, “they could have blood from children spattered

all over their faces and they wouldn’t take action because they will still see those dollar signs.” This is the thought, if you can call it that, behind the price tag at the “March for Our Lives,” which Stoneman Douglas students also wore around their necks. It said “$1.05,” purportedly the amount of support Rubio has gotten from the NRA over his career, $3.3 million divided by the 3.1 million public and private students in Florida. In accusing their opponents of being bought off, the students deny the sincerity and legitimacy of supporters of gun rights. They treat the Second Amendment as an inkblot on the Constitution, and dismiss all counterarguments as transparent rationalizations. Not only is this a (appropriately) juvenile view of the gun debate that ignores Supreme Court jurisprudence, the genuine support of the NRA by millions of people and the serious, practical objections to gun-control proposals, it removes all possibility of a middle ground. Tellingly, it is Marco Rubio who is the foremost object of the ire of the students, when he has been notably open and accommodating.

He showed up at the CNN town hall to get abused, and has shown remarkable forbearance in handling political attacks on him that are shameless blood libels. He sponsored incremental school safety legislation that is becoming law, and for his trouble he is deemed a moral monster who doesn’t care how many people have to die as long as he gets a few more campaign contributions. Maybe all of this can be written off as the work of overenthusiastic, underinformed 17-year-olds. But the student activists aren’t acting alone. They are promoted and praised by adults who should know better. Since the kids serve a useful purpose in promoting gun control, though, it is practically forbidden in much of the media to dissent from anything they say. It was hard to believe that our public debate could get even more sophomoric. The student activists are here to say, “Yes, it can.” ——— Rich Lowry can be reached via email: comments.lowry@ nationalreview.com. The views expressed in this column are those of the author.


Artesia News Well

Roswell Daily Record

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

A5

Artesia churches offer plenty of Easter activities By Mike Smith Roswell Daily Record

ARTESIA - Imagine a warehouse somewhere in Artesia housing enough plastic Easter eggs for everyone living in Artesia and Roswell. On the far eastern edge of Faith Baptist Church’s property at 401 South 20th Street there are 75,000 eggs in such a warehouse that houses transportation vehicles for the church. According to the 2016 United States Census Population Estimate, Roswell’s population was 48,184 and Artesia’s was 12,232. Add those numbers up and 60,416 people could get an Easter egg and there would be still plenty left over. Saturday at Morris Field on 13th Street, FBC will be hosting their annual Easter Eggstravaganza. Andy Singelton, associate children’s pastor was asked how the plastic eggs were prepared. “Very carefully,” he said. Church personnel like Singelton weren’t charged with filling all 75,000 eggs. Instead, they were prefilled at a place in Geogia. “We really don’t want to go through and fill those eggs with candy and prizes,” he said. Singelton said people like himself were thankful that someone else filled the eggs up and shipped them out on an 18-wheeler. The big rig backed into the large building and dropped them off. “We’ve got them in boxes and we’ll set them out at different times,” Singelton said. “It’s not really a hunt, instead there’s a bunch of eggs.”

Mike Smith Photo

The transportation warehouse at Faith Baptist Church in Artesia is currently housing thousands of plastic Easter eggs for Saturday’s Easter Eggstravaganza Saturday at Morris Field. He said that participants will be allowed to gather as many eggs as they can. He added that different age groups will be going at different times. Singelton said this is Faith’s way of giving back to the Artesia community. Along with the eggs, Singelton said there will also be 25 bouncing houses, a rock wall and free food. Singelton said the community is invited to attend Easter Sunday activities, which will start at 10 a.m. with Bible study and the services will start at 11

a.m. Easter week started this past Sunday at First Evangelical Presbyterian Chuch, according to Pastor Daniel Phelps. The church is located at 402 West Grand Avenue and Sunday was the Passion/Palm Sunday Service. For a good portion of this week, Phelps said the church sanctuary will be open during the lunch hour as a time to reflect. “Holy Week is a good time to do that,” he said. Phelps said people can stop by and read the Passion Story, sit and pray.

Artesia Police hosting Prescription Drug Take Backs

Submitted

The Artesia Police Department’s Drug Take Back Locker will be at the Child Safety Fair on Apr. 7 at Guadalupe Park, according to Commander Lindell Smith. Items accepted are: prescriptions, prescription patches, pet medications, ointments, over the counter medications, vitamins and samples. Items that may be disposed of in proper provided containers are: used and unused sharps. “The services are free

and anonymous with no questions asked,” he said. Commander Smith added the Drug Enforcement Administration along with the APD has scheduled another National Prescription Drug Take Back Day which will take place Apr. 28 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Artesia Public Library. “Last year many thousands of pounds of prescription drugs were collected at about 6,100 sites. These items were removed from circulation and possible accidental ingestion by children

Thursday at 6 p.m. Phelps said there will be a Maundy Thursday Communion Service. “Because we don’t do Good Friday, we kind of combine those two days into one. We’ll have communion together,” he said. Phelps added there will also be a hand washing ceremony. “I’m not brave enough yet to do a foot washing,” he said. Such a program would take a lot of time, according to Phelps. “You’re washing the hands of someone else as an act of forgiveness or an

act of love,” he said. Phelps said those attending will also participate in a Tenebrae service, which means people will be reading the events of Holy Week. “We have eight readings and after each reading we have a candle that’s extinguished and by the end of the service the sanctuary is as dark as it can be,” Phelps said. Phelps added this service tells the story of the death of Jesus Christ. He said people should come back on Sunday. Easter Sunday will start with a 9 a.m. breakfast

Artesia Public Library offers plenty for adults By Mike Smith Roswell Daily Record

City of Artesia Photo

Commander Lindell Smith and pets as well as abuse by those that might be caught in that trap,” he said.

Central Valley Electric meeting

Raelynn Bean Photo

Members of Central Valley Electric register for the annual meeting that took place March 17 at the Estelle Yates Auditorium in Artesia. CVE spokesperson Leah Boone says 156 people registered for the meeting. Before it took place lunch was served to members and their families at Artesia Jr. High School. Boone says members got updates on CVE happenings in Chaves and Eddy Counties and they also heard from guest speakers State Rep. Candy Spence-Ezell, Republican from Roswell and District 2 Public Regulation Commissioner Patrick Lyons.

followed by an Easter egg hunt in the courtyard at 10 a.m. and then services start at 10:45 a.m. West Main Baptist Church will have a Passover Seder meal Friday at 6 p.m. and Sunday services will start at 10 a.m. Friday at First Baptist Church, people can walk through The Stations of the Cross from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. and then from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Sunday services start at 10:15 a.m. General assignment reporter Mike Smith can be reached at 575-622-7710, ext. 307, or at sports2@ rdrnews.com.

ARTESIA - Artesia adults who are into writing, movies and crafts may want to stop by the Artesia Public Library in April, according to Adult Services Librarian Jo Nickerson-Harper. For the scribes in the community, Nickerson-Harper said Camp Nanowrimo will be taking place every Wednesday from 4-6 p.m. in the library meeting room. The camps will help participants get ready for National Novel Writing Month in November. “It’s a virtual writing retreat hosted online,” Nickerson-Harper said. Set up is like a summer camp, participants are separated into cabins. Nickerson-Harper said the library has its own cabin called the New Mexico Scribblers and there will be webinars along with other activities. Along with Camp Nanowrimo, the library is hosting a Creative Writing Working Shop on Apr. 11 at 6 p.m., as Zane Biebelle from New Mexico State University in Carlsbad will be teaching the course for up-and-coming writers. For movie buffs, Nickerson-Harper said two films will be shown at the library in April. Movie and a Chat and a Craft is set for 11 a.m. on Apr. 11 and the film is 1989’s “Dead Poets Society.” “The irrepressible Robin Williams starred

in this drama about an English teacher to arrives at a boys’ prep school. His teaching methods fly in the face of the school’s traditions but are effective at reaching the boys,” Nickerson-Harper said. Those attending will be making journals and materials are provided. Nickerson-Harper said the Saturday Afternoon Matinee is set for Apr. 21 at 1 p.m. Shown that afternoon will be the 1956 classic “The King and I.” “Yul Brynner and Deborah Kerr star in this Rodgers and Hammerstein musical classic about an English governess hired to instruct the royal children of the King of Siam,” Nickerson-Harper said. Nickerson-Harper added the monthly arts and crafts projects will be back next month. DIY from the Heart is set for Apr. 17 at 4 p.m. “There are a number of gifts and decorative items that can be made using mason jars. We’ll have the opportunity to make a variety of them during this crafting event.” What Can You Macrame? takes place Apr. 23 10-11:30 a.m. at the Artesia Senior Center. ”Learn the basics of macrame knotting. We’ll do simple projects so that you can practice for making more complicated projects at home,” Nickerson-Harper said. For more information call the library at 746-4252. General assignment reporter Mike Smith can be reached at 575-622-7710, ext. 307, or at sports2@rdrnews.com.


A6 Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Benjamin R. Sanchez

Benjamin R. Sanchez, age 83 passed away Friday, March 23, 2018 at his home. A visitation will be held Tuesday, March 27, 2018 from 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM at LaGrone Funeral Chapel. Graveside services will be Wednesday, March 28, 2018 at 10:00 AM at Memory Lawn Memorial Park. Military Honors are being rendered by the Roswell Veterans Honor Guard. Benjamin was born December 23, 1934 in Carlsbad, NM. He was proud to serve his country as a Marine. Benjamin worked for Roswell Daily Record as

Keilah Nicole Renteria

Services are pending at Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory for Keilah Nicole Renteria 17,

Manuel A. Leyva

MANUEL A. LEYVA, 81, passed away peacefully in his sleep to be with our Lord Jesus Christ on Friday, March 23, 2018, at his family home in Dexter, NM; with his sons at his bedside. Manuel was a resident of Dexter, NM, for over forty-five years. A Funeral Service will be held at Anderson Bethany Funeral Home Chapel on Thursday, March 29, 2018, 1:00 PM. Interment will follow at South Park Cemetery. Celebrate Manuel’s life by visiting www.andersonbethany.com to offer a memory or expression of sympathy for his family. Manuel Leyva was born in Avalos, Chihuahua, Mexico, on May 8, 1936, to Jose Leyva and Tomasa Avila-Leyva of Coyame, Chihuahua, Mexico; whom preceded him in death. He married Rosa Morales of McNary, TX, on June 20, 1958, in Banderas, Mexico. They lived in El Porvenir, Chihuahua, Mexico, for years until they decided to make Dexter, NM, their home. His wife, Rosa, preceded him in death. Manuel was also preceded in death by his brothers: Juan A. Leyva of Chihuahua, Mexico, and Guadalupe Gutierrez of Midland, TX. Those surviving to cherish Manuel’s memory are his two sons:

Obituaries a pressman and Production Director at retirement. Benjamin married Frances Robinson on May 5, 1961. After retirement Ben and Frances retired to their beloved mountains of Ruidoso. Loving and enjoying the 17 years they lived there. Moving back to Roswell in 2016 to be closer to their daughter and son-n-law He is survived by his wife, Frances Sanchez of the family home; his daughter, Janet Libby and husband George of Roswell, NM; brothers, Samuel Cobos of San Juan Bautista, CA and Saulo Cobos of Los Banos, CA; brother-inlaw, Victor Robinson of Roswell, NM; sister-inlaw, Isabel Passmore of Roswell, NM. Pallbearers will be George Libby, Victor Robinson, Jimmy Serna, Anacleto Loya, Karl Haeny and George Escalante. Arrangements are under the personal care of LaGrone Funeral Chapel. Online condolences may be made at www.lagronefuneralchapels.com

who passed away Sunday March 25, 2018 in Roswell. A further announcement will be made once arrangements have been finalized.

Jesus M. Leyva of Dexter, NM, Jaime M. Leyva and wife, Sylvia of Mesquite, NM; grandchildren: Brianna J. Leyva, Kristen N. Leyva of Las Cruces, NM, Brittany R. Leyva, Elizabeth M. Leyva of Mesquite, NM, and Jesus Leyva Jr. of Albuquerque, NM. Manuel enjoyed working with his hands and everything outdoors. He enjoyed hunting, fishing and gardening. Manuel could always be found fishing at his favorite spot at Lake Van in Dexter. His ultimate passion though was horses and the ranch life. In his younger years, Manuel was a skilled horseman and was often sought to break wild horses and conduct cattle roundups. He worked at Bogle Farms for years and retired at the age of sixty-six. Manuel didn’t stop working though; he was always building something, taking it apart or fixing it. He maintained an active lifestyle until he succumbed to his illness. Manuel Leyva will be greatly missed by his family and many of his lifelong friends whom have numerous stories of their mischievous antics during their youth. Pallbearers will be: Jaime Leyva, Jesus Leyva Jr, Juan Antonio Leyva, Mario Chavez, Manuel Flores and Francisco Tarin. This tribute was lovingly written in honor of Manuel by his family.

Edna Carper

Services are scheduled for 10:00 a.m. Friday, March 30 at First Presbyterian Church for Edna Carper of Artesia, NM. Mrs. Carper, 103, died on March 21, 2018 at her home. Fr. Maurice Geldert and Fr. Herb Robbins will officiate at the services with burial at Woodbine Cemetery. Pallbearers will be grandchildren John Emery Jessee, Stanley Glen Jessee, Lindsey Nelle Stawarczik, Amy Leann Reid, Stephanie Lynn Rosa and Aaron Van Carper. Honorary pallbearers will be all great-grandchildren. Visitation will be held on Thursday, March 29 at Terpening & Son Mortuary from 10:00 a.m. 8:00 p.m. Edna was born on August 6, 1914 in Chugwater, Wyoming: the daughter of Bertha Cowles Bassette and John Marion VanWyngarden. On December 29, 1940 she married Stanley Carper and moved to Artesia. He preceded her in death on September 5, 1969. She received her BA Degree from University of Wyoming in Laramie and taught music in Atwood, Colorado and Tularosa, New Mexico. She was organist for

St. Paul’s Episcopal Church for fifty-four years. She also organized the Compassionate Ministry there. She participated as a leader for Girl Scouts and Boy Scouts for ten years. A member of Artesia Arts Council Chorale and was organizer of the Medieval Feast. She belonged to the Lasses Ladies A Cappello Singing Society, the Six Guitars and was part of the Sentimental Journey with Jess Briggs and Tony King. She was a member of Chapter J, P.E.O. Sisterhood. She is survived by daughters Claire Jessee and husband Pete of Bogata, Texas, Janice Bonds and husband Joe Raley of Duran, N.M., and son Stanley Roger Carper and wife Becky of Artesia; grandchildren John Emery Jessee, Stanley Glen Jessee and wife Donna, Lindsey Nelle Stawarczik and husband Wesley, Amy Leann Reid and husband Jason, Stephanie Lynn Rosa and husband Michael, and Aaron Carper; great-grandchildren Jessica Rae Kirkland and husband Kyle, Stanley Reese Jessee, Trevor Lee Jessee and wife Tristen, Madison McKenna Stawarczik, Morgan Michael Stawarczik, Braiden Duane Reid, Tate Dale Reid, Andon James Reid, Deigen Kendrick Rosa, Taylan Rosa and Havrly Rosa; great-great-grandchild Caroline Grace Kirkland. She was preceded in death by her parents and a great-grandson John Layton Reid. Arrangements have been entrusted to Terpening & Son Mortuary. Please remember Mrs. Carper online at www. artesiafunerals.com.

Roswell Daily Record

First winner of Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race dies at 75

By Mark Thiessen Associated Press

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Dick Wilmarth, who won the initial Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race nearly a half century ago, has died. He was 75. Wilmarth died Wednesday after a battle with cancer, according to his daughter Rebecca Wilmarth. “He was our first champion, and he will be dearly missed,” Iditarod spokesman Chas St. George said. After winning the first Iditarod in 1973, he never took part in the race again. He was once asked why he never raced again. “His response was very quick, and with a big smile, he said, ‘Cause I won,’” St. George said. “He moved on to doing new things and different things,” his daughter added. “He liked to stay busy, and I think he figured one time was enough for him.” Wilmarth was a 17-year-old Idaho logger who came to Alaska with his older brother, Larry, to fish out of Kodiak Island, Rebecca Wilmarth said. “Somebody recommended he head out west, there’s a lot of undiscovered territory out there,” she said. He settled in Red Devil, Alaska, located about 250 miles (402 kilometers) west of Anchorage, where worked for a mine and

learned how to fly planes. He also did some trapping as a younger man, and became interested in mushing dogs. Wilmarth was 29 when he and his friend, Bob Vanderpool, first heard about plans for a 1,000mile (1,609-kilometer) sled dog race from Anchorage to Nome. “We thought that would be a pretty neat thing,” Wilmarth told The Associated Press in 2001 while he sat in a tent in the ghost town of Iditarod, Alaska, welcoming mushers in that year’s race. He put a dog team together a few months before the race, swapping goods for dogs in Alaska Native villages along the Kuskokwim River. He traded a .22-caliber rifle for a snowmobile, and then swapped that for five of his 12 dogs on the team. Conditions for the first Iditarod in 1973 were nothing like they are today. He said shortly after the race began, there was no trail at all so he and sprint dog musher George Attla at one point put on snowshoes and cleared a path for the dogs. The 1973 race began with 34 teams, and more than a third of them never finished the race. He pocketed $12,000 for being the first musher win the rugged race across Alaska. It took him 20 days and 49 minutes.

Girl at center of segregation ruling dies TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Linda Brown, who as a Kansas girl was at the center of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court ruling that struck down racial segregation in schools, has died at age 76. Her father, Oliver Brown, tried to enroll the family in an all-white school in Topeka, and the case was sparked when he and several black families were turned away. The NAACP’s legal arm brought the lawsuit to challenge segregation in public schools, and Oliver Brown became lead plaintiff in the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision by the Supreme Court that ended school segregation. Sherrilyn Ifill, president and director-counsel at NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Inc., said in a statement that Linda Brown is one of a band of heroic young people who, along with her family, courageously fought to end the ultimate symbol of white supremacy — racial segregation in public schools. “She stands as an example of how ordinary schoolchildren took center stage in transforming this country. It was not easy for her or her family, but her sacrifice broke barriers and changed the meaning of equality in this country,” Ifill said. Peaceful Rest Funeral Chapel of Topeka confirmed that Linda Brown died Sunday afternoon. No cause of death was released. Funeral arrangements are pending. Her sister, Cheryl Brown Henderson, founding president of The Brown Foundation, confirmed the death to The Topeka Capital-Journal . She declined comment from the family. The landmark case was brought before the Supreme Court by the NAACP’s legal arm to challenge segregation in public

AP Photo

This undated file photo, location unknown, shows Linda Brown. Brown, the Kansas girl at the center of the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that struck down racial segregation in schools, has died at age 76. Peaceful Rest Funeral Chapel of Topeka confirmed that Linda Brown died Sunday. schools. It began after several black families in Topeka were turned down when they tried to enroll their children in white schools near their homes. The lawsuit was joined with cases from Delaware, South Carolina, Virginia and the District of Columbia. On May 17, 1954, the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that separating black and white children was unconstitutional because it denied black children the 14th Amendment’s guarantee of equal protection under the law. “In the field of public education, the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place,” Chief Justice Earl Warren wrote. “Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal.” The Brown decision overturned the court’s Plessy v. Ferguson decision, which on May 18, 1896, established a “separate but equal” doctrine for black’s in public facilities.

“Sixty-four years ago, a young girl from Topeka, Kansas sparked a case that ended segregation in public schools in America,” Kansas Gov. Jeff Colyer said in a statement. “Linda Brown’s life reminds us that by standing up for our principles and serving our communities we can truly change the world. Linda’s legacy is a crucial part of the American story and continues to inspire the millions who have realized the American dream because of her.” Brown v. Board was a historic marker in the Civil Rights movement, likely the most high-profile case brought by Thurgood Marshall and the lawyers of the NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund in their decade-plus campaign to chip away at the doctrine of “separate but equal.” “Her legacy is not only here but nationwide,” Kansas Deputy Education

Commissioner Dale Dennis said. Oliver Brown, for whom the case was named, became a minister at a church in Springfield, Missouri. He died of a heart attack in 1961. Linda Brown and her sister founded in 1988 the Brown Foundation for Educational Equity, Excellence and Research. The foundation says on its webpage that it was established as a living tribute to the attorneys, community organizers and plaintiffs in the landmark Supreme Court decision. Its mission is to build upon their work and keep the ideals of the decision relevant for future generations. “We are to be grateful for the family that stood up for what is right,” said Democratic state Rep. Annie Kuether of Topeka. “That made a difference to the rest of the world.”


Business Review

Roswell Daily Record

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

A7

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Savino, born and raised in Roswell, established Dent & Ding Doctor in 2005 so it’s safe to say that he and his techs have plenty of experience with even the most difficult of dents and dings. The majority of PDR techniques utilize light panels and some simple, yet specialized tools to push out the dents from the underside of the body as explained step-by-step below. Assess the Damage The first step in any repair process is to assess the damage. Where is the dent? How big is the dent? How do you access the dent? After the damage has been sized up, and determining it can be effectively removed through PDR, Dent & Ding Doctor preps the area around the dent for the repair.

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aintless dent repair, or PDR, is an environmentally friendly method of removing minor dents from the body of a motor vehicle so long as the paint surface is intact. It can repair hail damage, door dings, minor creases, large dents and bodylines damage in a fraction of the time at a fraction of the cost overpa traditional dent repair. Minimal damage The Dent & Ding Doctors keeps the turnaround time to a miniL to R: Alex Linares, Savino Sanchez, Amanda Sanchez, John Dye & mum, even as much as same day service Raquel Cobos repair. In some cases, hail damage can be so severe that it will deem the vehicle a total loss based on the insurance adjusters evaluation. If your vehicle’s condition is somewhere in between, that’s where Savino Sanchez comes in.

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Apply Slow Pressure to Work out the Dent Metal rods and body picks are then utilized to carefully massage the exterior surface back to its original position, however, this requires skill and patience. Pushing too hard can create high spots that cause the clear coat to split or crack. The most experienced and qualified technician can avoid this with the use of heat, blend high spots to match the texture of the paint called “orange peel” and even repair a large, shallow dent or crease – all accomplished without the use of sanding or body filler.

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A8 Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Roswell Seven-day forecast Today

Mostly sunny

High 71°

WNW at 7-14 mph POP: 25%

Tonight

Patchy clouds

Low 40°

N at 8-16 mph POP: 25%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

Roswell through 8 p.m. Monday

Wednesday

Times of clouds and sun

71°/44°

W at 6-12 mph POP: 10%

Weather Thursday

Friday

Sunny; breezy in the p.m.

Saturday

Mostly sunny and pleasant

78°/40°

79°/47°

WNW at 8-16 mph POP: 0%

SSE at 7-14 mph POP: 0%

Clouds and sun; warmer

87°/47°

SSW at 8-16 mph POP: 0%

New Mexico Weather

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

Temperatures

High/low ........................... 69°/61° Normal high/low ............... 71°/39° Record high ............... 91° in 2012 Record low ................. 20° in 1931 Humidity at noon .................. 24%

Farmington 51/25

Clayton 44/26

Raton 42/19

Precipitation 24 hours ending 8 p.m. Mon. Month to date ....................... Normal month to date .......... Year to date .......................... Normal year to date .............

0.00" trace 0.43" 0.61" 1.23"

Santa Fe 50/25

Gallup 47/23

Tucumcari 52/33

Albuquerque 53/35

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Clovis 57/35

Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading

T or C 63/40

Source:Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

Sun and Moon

The Sun Today Wed. The Moon Today Wed. Full

Rise 6:53 a.m. 6:51 a.m. Rise 3:27 p.m. 4:33 p.m.

Last

Mar 31

Apr 8

New

Apr 15

Set 7:15 p.m. 7:15 p.m. Set 4:28 a.m. 5:13 a.m. First

Apr 22

Ruidoso 53/30

Alamogordo 67/34

Silver City 57/30

ROSWELL 71/40 Carlsbad 74/40

Hobbs 72/43

Las Cruces 65/36

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2018

Sunday

Monday

Mostly sunny and nice

79°/44°

SW at 8-16 mph POP: 0%

Roswell Daily Record

Mostly sunny

73°/42°

ESE at 7-14 mph POP: 0%

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

Hi/Lo/W

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67/34/s 53/35/c 36/19/sn 71/42/s 74/40/pc 40/22/sn 44/26/c 44/24/pc 57/35/sh 63/35/pc 50/29/pc 51/25/pc 47/23/pc 72/43/pc 65/36/s 40/23/sh 44/27/sf 56/34/sh 71/44/pc 63/39/sh 45/24/sn 42/19/sn 37/19/sn 71/40/s 53/30/s 50/25/sh 57/30/pc 63/40/pc 52/33/sh 48/28/sh

67/41/pc 61/38/s 46/21/pc 69/43/pc 70/47/pc 47/21/pc 60/30/pc 47/29/pc 64/37/pc 69/38/pc 57/32/c 60/31/s 58/25/s 67/43/c 69/41/pc 56/26/c 51/31/pc 64/36/s 66/44/pc 64/40/pc 55/28/s 56/23/s 45/19/pc 71/44/pc 53/37/pc 57/28/pc 64/34/s 68/47/pc 67/36/pc 54/31/pc

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

National Cities Today

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

Wed.

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39/26/c 76/58/c 60/50/c 46/38/c 72/60/c 57/40/pc 52/41/c 64/52/t 53/29/c 55/42/c 69/47/s 82/69/s 80/65/t 61/47/c 60/38/pc 76/58/s 77/54/s 65/38/c

U.S. Extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states)

High: 95° .................. Zapata, Texas Low: -7°..........Clayton Lake, Maine

Today

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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

77/66/pc 76/47/t 47/32/pc 82/70/pc 49/39/s 52/33/c 77/57/pc 49/39/s 74/53/s 49/47/r 54/46/c 50/40/s 60/44/r 52/40/s 70/54/s 53/42/r 68/44/pc 52/44/pc

Wed.

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79/68/pc 70/46/c 52/27/pc 83/67/sh 50/44/c 62/34/s 82/59/s 52/46/c 80/57/s 59/49/r 57/41/c 70/57/c 56/45/c 58/40/c 71/56/s 53/42/c 75/48/s 66/55/c

State Extremes

High: 73° ..........................Carlsbad Low: 23° ...............................Gallup

National Cities

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

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Court tosses Olivia de Havilland lawsuit against FX’s ‘Feud’

By Andrew Dalton AP Entertainment Writer

LOS ANGELES — A California appeals court on Monday threw out a lawsuit by 101-year-old actress Olivia de Havilland against the creators of the FX Networks show “Feud: Bette and Joan,” bringing an abrupt end to a closely-watched case that pitted an individual’s rights to their life and likeness against the rights of artists to depict them. The 2nd District Court of Appeal said in a unanimous decision that the First Amendment rights of the show’s creators clearly trump de Havilland’s claims that permission to use her likeness was needed and she should have been compensated. “Whether a person portrayed in one of these expressive works is a world-renowned film star — ‘a living legend’ — or a person no one knows, she or he does not own history,” the three-judge panel wrote in its decision. “Nor does she or he have the legal right to control, dictate, approve, disapprove, or veto the creator’s portrayal of actual people.” The judges agreed with FX along with entities like the Motion Picture Association of America and Netflix, which supported the network, that the logic behind de Havilland’s suit would make legal action possible against “all books, films, plays and television programs that accurately portray real people.” “The First Amendment does not permit this result,” the judges said. “Feud” creator Ryan Murphy called the reversal “a victory for the creative community and the First Amendment” that “gives all creators the breathing room necessary to continue to tell important historical stories inspired by true events. Most of all, it’s a great day for artistic expression.” De Havilland, played by Catherine Zeta-Jones on the show that chronic led th e d eca d es -lo n g squabbles of Bette Davis

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AP Photo

In this combination photo, actress Olivia de Havilland appears in Rome in 1968, left, and actress Catherine Zeta-Jones portrays de Havilland in a scene from the FX series, “Feud: Betty and Joan.” A California appeals court has thrown out a lawsuit by 101-year-old actress Olivia de Havilland against the creators of the FX Networks show Feud: Betty and Joan. De Havilland claims that she should have been compensated and asked permission for the use of her likeness on the show. and Joan Crawford, also alleged that the show portrayed her in a “false light” by making the character a vulgar gossipmonger. De Havilland’s lawyer Suzelle Smith called the ruling an “entirely pro-industry decision” that she and de Havilland plan to appeal. Smith said in a statement that the judges have taken on themselves “the role of both judge and jury, denying Miss de Havilland her constitutional rights to have a jury decide her claims to protect the property rights in her name or to defend her reputation against knowing falsehoods.” De Havilland objected in particular to being shown calling her estranged sis-

ter Joan Fontaine a “bitch” and a joke she makes about the heavy-drinking habits of Frank Sinatra. The show’s writers said in court papers that de Havilland had often called her sister a “dragon lady,” and “bitch” was a distillation of that for modern ears. The judges wholeheartedly agreed, finding that no reasonable person would find her characterization offensive, and in fact most would find it positive. “As played by ZetaJones, the de Havilland character is portrayed as beautiful, glamorous, self-assured, and considerably ahead of her time in her views on the importance of equality and

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respect for women in Hollywood.” The judges said that her character’s “lighthearted” crack about Sinatra only showed that she was a “wise, witty, sometimes playful woman.” The panel also found that because de Havilland, whose character is shown in interviews and occasionally acts as narrator, appears in only 17 minutes of the 6 ½ hour limited series, she could not claim that her likeness was essential to it. The “Gone With the Wind” actress, the only major character portrayed on the show who is still alive, filed the lawsuit in June, and it was expedited because of her age. The trial court reject-

ed a defense motion to throw out the case, and FX appealed that motion, leading to Monday’s ruling.

It comes amid a heyday for high-quality TV series and movies based on real stories that might have been taken up with a more trashy approach in the past. The decision name drops several such works that would have been threatened by the logic of de Havilland’s lawsuit, including the film “Fruitvale Station” and Murphy and FX’s own “The People V. O.J. Simpson,” the show that arguably sparked the current surge in high-end docudramas. MPAA Chairman and CEO Charles Rivkin said in a statement that the opinion reaffirms the “right to tell stories about and inspired by real people and events.” ‘‘ It’s this right,” Rivkin said, “that has allowed filmmakers to make movies from Citizen Kane to The Devil Wears Prada to Primary Colors to The Social Network to Hidden Figures.

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Sports

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Section

B

Mayor fit, Cop fit, CrossFit

By J.T Keith Roswell Daily Record Crash City CrossFit gym is almost like Cheers. Here, everybody knows your name. When you walk through the door, immediately there’s a greeting. All that’s missing is the beer, until later. Members include a fish and game warden, an instructor at New Mexico Military Institute, a lawyer, Taryn Russell, an Artesia firefighter and a Roswell SWAT police officer that is ranked 20th in the nation for policemen in the Southwest CrossFit region. Then there’s the mayor of Roswell, Dennis Kintigh. Crash City CrossFit, was holding their CrossFit Open games, which is called Friday Night Lights: which runs from Feb.22 to Mar.26. During those five weeks, there are five workouts. CrossFit will have live announcement of the top athletes, female, males and age groups. The announcement will tell the groups what the workout is on Thursday night. The athletes have until Monday to do the workout in front of a certified judge and submit their score online. There is a leader board worldwide. For men competing in the 18-yearold to 35-year-old, there were 216,000 competing. Women in that same age group were 165,000. Scott Hendrix bought CrossFit from Tabitha Denny in 2015. Mayor Here, Kintigh is not the

Roswell Daily Record

mayor. He’s just Dennis. Once Open 2018 begins, he was exhausted like all of the participants. Kintigh was an FBI special agent for 24 years before retiring and swears the CrossFit workout is by far the hardest thing he has done. Kintigh feels that being able to work out in the morning made a difference when he ran for mayor and won on Mar. 6, 2018. He was able to do the workouts and walk to different neighborhoods every day to shake voter’s hands. Kintigh estimates he talked to over 1,000 people and knocked on over 2,800 doors. “This is in all honesty for me,” Kintigh said, “my stress relief. This is the one place in this town that I’m not the mayor. I’m Dennis. They’re yelling at me, cheering me on; this is a family thing. Here you get pushed, you don’t want to lag because you feel like you’re letting someone down. This is where I come to get recharged.” Kintigh became involved in CrossFit through his son-in-law Brandon Stroud. Stroud took him to a box in 2009 in Waco, Texas. Not impressed at first, Kintigh started trying some of the workouts at home. When Tabitha Denny opened a CrossFit gym in 2012, his wife Carol wanted to do CrossFit, and both have been doing it ever since. “I’ve got decent body mass,” Kintigh said. “I’ve been blessed with the ability to do this. It’s challenging. It’s the weights, the metabolic conditioning too,

Broncs and Wranglers split NMMI Sports Press The Bronco baseball team finished off their four-game Western Junior College Athletic Conference series versus Odessa with a doubleheader split on Sunday, taking Game 1 by a score of 6-4 before dropping the nightcap, 22-13. In Game 1, the Broncos got on the board early thanks to a monster homerun over the scoreboard in right field by Angel Colon, giving NMMI a 1-0 lead heading into the top of the second. Colon continued his offensive outburst by doubling to right center in the third inning. With Colon on second and Bobby Galindo reaching on a walk, Luis Rivera Melendez came to the plate and singled on a hard line drive to center field, scoring Colon and advancing Galindo to third. Cedric Reynaud then singled on a hard hit ball to shortstop, scoring Galindo. With three complete, NMMI was up 3-0. After a somewhat uneventful top of the fourth, where the Institute survived a fielding error but still managed to hold Odessa scoreless, Jason Herrera kept the Bronco offense going with a lead-off single up the middle. Next at the plate was Palo Rodriguez and he singled as well, this time to left field. Galindo then doubled to right center scoring both and giving the Broncos a 5-0 lead going into the top of the

fifth. Neither team was able to score in the fifth inning and despite a late offensive surge of four runs in the top of the sixth, from the Wranglers, NMMI added insurance run in their half of the inning to make it 6-4. Zach Gonzales came in for relief out of the bullpen, recorded the last four outs and picked up his fourth save on the season. Gerry Lerma was NMMI’s starting pitcher. He picked up the win to bring his overall record to 4-2 on the season. He lasted five and twothirds innings, allowed six hits and four runs while striking out five and walking one. Sunday’s Game 2 was a slugfest, with 35 runs scored between the two WJCAC opponents over the course of just eight innings. Odessa started the offensive onslaught with a pair of runs in the top of the first. NMMI cut that lead in half with a single score in their part of the stanza, but gave up a five-spot to the Wranglers in the top of the second. The Broncs came back with four in the bottom half, but continued to trail after allowing 16 Odessa runs over the next six innings, while plating eight over the same span. Miguel Soto was a perfect 3-for-3 at the plate for NMMI, with a homerun, 4 RBIs and 2 runs and Luis Rivera went 3-for-5 with a run and two RBIs. Six pitchers spent

See BRONCS Page B2

J.T. Keith Photo

Mayor Dennis Kintigh strains while doing a pull-up during his seven-minute workout at The CrossFit Open 2018 on Friday. and it’s intense, it pushes me every day.” Most of the people working out were competing in CrossFit Open 2018. All of them were trying to do one more rep than their last Open, each athlete seeking to get one position higher in regionals. Before an athlete can be on TV, they have to earn it, everything is computerized and done the instant they’re finished working out. George Some athletes just do it for the fitness challenge

of it. Some to get in better shape and lose weight. Member Francine George has only done CrossFit with her boyfriend, Phillip Kloppenburg for three months and in that time, she has lost 30 pounds going from a size 14 to a size seven in pants. Both work out five times a week. “Since I’ve started working out, I’m stronger,” George said. “My cardio is better. When I first started I couldn’t even run 200 meters, now I just finished a marathon in February. I

recently finished in thirdplace running a 5K. That’s what CrossFit has done for me. I would never go back to another gym.” Police officer Roswell police officer Brandon Stroud started doing CrossFit in 2009, in Waco, Texas. Stroud is currently ranked 20th in the nation against all the other police officers in the Southwest Region. Stroud played college football at Texas Tech and was a teammate of current Red Raider coach Kliff Kings-

bury. After Tech, Stroud missed the competition void and played arena football locally for the Lubbock Lone Stars. For a couple of years, he didn’t work out or anything, until one of his buddies got him involved in CrossFit. Friday’s work out was seven minutes. He had to do three thrusters, and three chests -to-bar pullups with 100 pounds, and then the number moves up to six and nine and n and

See CROSSFIT Page B2

Charlie’s Angels continue title run with No. 12

David Rocha Photo

Coach Kim Castro said the girls are tired but the work is worth it. Charlie’s Angels win their seventh dance title in a row and 12th overall, along with two national titles. RHS will hang their banners today.

Lady Demons win Lindsey Callaway Tourney

Jeannie Harris Photo

The Lady Demons won the 15th annual Lindsey Callaway Tournament Saturday.


B2 Tuesday, March 27, 2018 Sports on TV All times local Schedule subject to change and/ or blackouts Tuesday, March 27 COLLEGE BASKETBALL 5 p.m. ESPN — NIT, first semifinal, W. Kentucky vs. Utah, at New York 7:30 p.m. ESPN — NIT, second semifinal, Penn St. vs. Mississippi St., at New York MLB BASEBALL 11 a.m. ESPN — Spring training, Chicago Cubs vs. Boston, at Fort Myers, Fla. 5 p.m. MLB — Spring training, St. Louis vs. Toronto, at Montreal NBA BASKETBALL 6 p.m. TNT — Cleveland at Miami 8:30 p.m. TNT — Milwaukee at L.A. Clippers SOCCER 1 p.m. FS1 — International friendly, England vs. Italy, at London 5:30 p.m. FS1 — International friend, United States vs. Paraguay, at Cary, N.C. 8 p.m. FS1 — International friendly, Mexico vs. Croatia, at Arlington, Texas

This Day in Sports

March 27 1939 — Oregon beats Ohio State 46-33 in the NCAA’s first national basketball tournament. 1942 — Joe Louis knocks out Abe Simon in the sixth round at Madison Square Garden to retain his world heavyweight title. 1945 — Oklahoma A&M beats New York University 49-45 for the NCAA basketball championship. 1951 — Bill Spivey scores 22 points to lead Kentucky to a 68-58 win over Kansas State for the NCAA title. 1971 — UCLA defeats Villanova 68-62 for its fifth NCAA crown. 1978 — Jack Givens scores 41 points to lead Kentucky to a 94-88 victory over Duke for the NCAA championship. 1983 — Larry Holmes wins a unanimous 12-round decision over Lucien Rodriguez to keep his world heavyweight title in his hometown of Scranton, Pa. 1994 — Donna Andrews sinks a 6-foot birdie putt on the final hole to win the Dinah Shore by one stroke, her second straight victory and first LPGA major. 1998 — Michael Jordan scores 34 points to lead the Chicago Bulls to an 89-74 victory over the Atlanta Hawks before 62,046 at the Georgia Dome — the largest crowd in NBA history. 2005 — Annika Sorenstam shoots a final-round 68 to finish at 15-under to win the Nabisco Championship by eight shots over Rosie Jones. It’s Sorenstam’s fifth win in a row over two seasons, tying a record set by Nancy Lopez in 1978. 2011 — Jamie Skeen scores 26 points and Virginia Commonwealth delivers the biggest upset of the NCAA Tournament, a 7161 win over No. 1 seed Kansas in the Southwest Regional final. The Rams are the third 11th seed to make the Final Four. 2013 — The Heat’s 27-game winning streak ends with a 101-97 loss to the Chicago Bulls. A furious Miami comeback led by LeBron James falls short. 2016 — Malachi Richardson scores 21 of his 23 points in the second half to lead the greatest comeback in Syracuse basketball history, sending the Orange to the Final Four with a 68-62 victory over top-seeded Virginia. Syracuse trailed 54-39 before it ripped off 25 of the next 29 points, including 15 in a row. The Orange become the first 10 seed and fourth double-digit seed to make it to the Final Four. 2017 — The UConn’s women advance to its 10th consecutive Final Four with a 90-52 victory against Oregon. The victory moves coach Geno Auriemma past Pat Summitt for the most NCAA Tournament victories at 113.

Transactions BASEBALL American League BOSTON RED SOX — Optioned RHP Brandon Workman to Pawtucket (IL). Reassigned RHP Justin Haley to minor league camp. Placed LHPs Drew Pomeranz and Eduardo Rodriguez and RHP Ste-

Broncs Continued from Page B1

time on the mound for NMMI, with starter Matthew Marquez getting tagged for the loss after 1.1 innings of work. “We had a chance to win the series,” said NMMI head coach Chris Cook. “We scored 13 runs [in Sunday’s Game 2] and still got run-ruled. That’s a tough pill to swallow. But the reality is that through seven innings we allowed 13 walks or hit-by-pitches. Against a good hitting

Sports ven Wright on the 10-day DL. DETROIT TIGERS — Assigned LHP Blaine Hardy outright to Toledo (IL). KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Optioned RHP Kevin McCarthy to Omaha (PCL). TAMPA BAY RAYS — Optioned RHP Austin Pruitt to Durham (IL). Released LHP Dan Jennings. TEXAS RANGERS — Re-signed RHP Bartolo Colon and INF Trevor Plouffe to minor league contracts and assigned them to Round Rock (PCL). National League ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS — Designated C Chris Herrmann for assignment. Selected the contract of LHP Jorge De La Rosa from Reno (PCL). ATLANTA BRAVES — Agreed to terms with OF Peter Bourjos and 2B Ryan Flaherty on one-year contracts. MIAMI MARLINS — Optioned RHP Brian Ellington to New Orleans (PCL). MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Released RHP Yovani Gallardo. NEW YORK METS — Claimed OF Bryce Brentz off waivers from Pittsburgh. Placed RHP Rafael Montero on the 60-day DL. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Designated RHP Ricardo Pinto and C Cameron Rupp for assignment. Optioned 2B Jesmuel Valentin, CF Roman Quinn, RHP Zach Eflin and LHP Zac Curtis to Lehigh Valley (IL). Selected the contracts of RHP Drew Hutchison and 2B Scott Kingery from Lehigh Valley. Released C Cameron Rupp. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Optioned RHP Kyle Crick and 1B Jose Osuna to Indianapolis (IL). Reassigned LHP Kevin Siegrist, C Ryan Lavarnway, OF Daniel Nava and RHP Bo Schultz to minor league camp. Agreed to terms with SS JiHwan Bae on a minor league contract. SAN DIEGO PADRES — Sent RHP Carter Capps outright to El Paso (PCL). SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Named Dusty Baker special adviser to the CEO. Released LF Jarrett Parker. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Optioned 3B Matt Reynolds and SS Adrian Sanchez to Syracuse (IL). American Association KANSAS CITY T-BONES — Signed RHP Frank Duncan. ST. PAUL SAINTS — Signed RHPs Mike Devine, Eddie Medina and John Straka. SIOUX FALLS CANARIES — Signed C Maxx Garrett and RHP James Jones. WICHITA WINGNUTS — Signed RHP Mark Haynes and INF Logan Watkins. Can-Am League ROCKLAND BOULDERS — Signed RHP Justin Topa and INF Matt Gonzalez. SUSSEX COUNTY MINERS — Traded C Brian Mayer to Lake Erie (Frontier) for a player to be named. TROIS-RIVIERES AIGLES — Signed RHP Shaun Ellis. Frontier League EVANSVILLE OTTERS — Signed OF Zach Welz to a contract extension. Signed RHP Taylore Cherry and C Luis Vilorio. JOLIET SLAMMERS — Signed RHP Taylor Goshen. LAKE ERIE CRUSHERS — Signed RHP Mason Klotz to a contract extension. Signed RHP Dalton Geekie and 2B Dane Hutcheon. RIVER CITY RASCALS — Released OF Ryan Fucci. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association CHICAGO BULLS — Waived F CJ Fair. Signed G Sean Kilpatrick. FOOTBALL National Football League CAROLINA PANTHERS — Resigned CB LaDarius Gunter and G Amini Silatolu to one-year contracts. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Resigned LB Tank Carder. DETROIT LIONS — Signed LB Jonathan Freeny. LOS ANGELES RAMS — Agreed to terms with DE Ndamukong Suh on a one-year contract. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Resigned OL LaAdrian Waddle. NEW YORK GIANTS — Signed S Michael Thomas. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Signed LB Pernell McPhee. HOCKEY National Hockey League ANAHEIM DUCKS — Agreed to terms with RW Troy Terry on a three-year, entry-level contract. BUFFALO SABRES — Agreed to terms with C Casey Mittelstadt on a

team, you put that many extra base runners on, it’s going to be tough to score enough runs.” With the Sunday split, NMMI moves to 18-14 overall and remains even in conference with a 6-6 record. They’ll next face WJCAC opponent Luna Community College in a four-game, two-day series held at Albuquerque’s Regional Sports Complex on March 30th and 31st. Start times for both days’ doubleheaders are scheduled for 12 p.m.

Roswell Daily Record 622-7710

Scoreboard three-year, entry-level contract. CALGARY FLAMES — Assigned G David Rittich to Stockton (AHL). Recalled G Jon Gillies from Stockton. CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS — Agreed to terms with D Joni Tuulola on a two-year contract. COLORADO AVALANCHE — Assigned G Joe Cannata and F Julien Nantel from San Antonio (AHL) to Colorado (ECHL). COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Signed F Eric Robinson to a twoyear, entry-level contract. MINNESOTA WILD — Signed LW Jordan Greenway to a three-year, entry-level contract. OTTAWA SENATORS — Assigned G Chris Driedger and D Cody Donaghey from Belleville (AHL) to Brampton (ECHL). Recalled G Marcus Hogberg and D Macoy Erkamps from Brampton to Belleville. SAN JOSE SHARKS — Signed F Dylan Gambrell to an entry-level contract. WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Reassigned F Pheonix Copley to Hershey (AHL). American Hockey League IOWA WILD — Returned D Tommy Panico to Worcester (ECHL). MANITOBA MOOSE — Recalled D Jake Kulevich and F Elgin Pearce from Jacksonville (ECHL). MILWAUKEE ADMIRALS — Returned F Ryan Penny to Reading (ECHL). SAN ANTONIO RAMPAGE — Signed G Adam Werner to an amateur tryout agreement. SPRINGFIELD THUNDERBIRDS — Assigned G Evan Cowley to Manchester (ECHL). Returned F Cory Ward to Manchester. ECHL ECHL — Suspended Idaho D Charlie Dodero four games and Worcester D Mike Cornell and Quad City F Kyle Novak one game. INDY FUEL — Signed F Mathew Thompson. KALAMAZOO WINGS — Released G Ed Minney. KANSAS CITY MAVERICKS — Signed F Logan DeNoble. MANCHESTER MONARCHS — Loaned F Jake Horton to Springfield (AHL). Released G Joe Spagnoli as emergency backup. Signed F Jarrid Privitera. Signed F Nic Pierog to an amateur tryout agreement. QUAD CITY MALLARDS — Released F Casey Shea from an amateur tryout agreement. SOUTH CAROLINA STINGRAYS — Signed D J.C. Brassard. TOLEDO WALLEYE — Released F Luke Nogard from an amateur tryout agreement. COLLEGE BIG TEN CONFERENCE — Granted Iowa men’s basketball G Connor McCaffrey a hardship waiver. DETROIT — Fired men’s basketball coach Bacari Alexander. FIU — Named Ken Dorsey assistant athletic director. LOUISVILLE — Promoted interim athletic director Vince Tyra to permanent athletic director and signed him to a five-year contract. MINNESOTA — Announced junior men’s basketball F Davonte Fitzgerald will transfer. MISSOURI — Freshman F Michael Porter Jr. has declared for the NBA draft. OHIO STATE — Junior F Keita Bates-Diop has declared for the NBA draft. PURDUE — Sophomore G Carsen Edwards has declared for the NBA draft. SAINT PETER’S — Named Marc Mitchell women’s basketball coach. SYRACUSE — Men’s sophomore basketball F Matthew Moyer announced he is transferring. TENNESSEE STATE — Named Brian Collins men’s basketball coach. TEXAS ARLINGTON — Fired men’s basketball coach Scott Cross. UTAH — Announced the retirement of athletic director Chris Hill at the end of the academic year. WASHINGTON STATE — Junior F Robert Franks announced he will enter the NBA draft.

NCAA Women’s All Times EDT ALBANY REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 16 At Columbia, S.C. Virginia 68, California 62

CrossFit Continued from Page B1

nine and increases by three until the seven minutes are up. The score is how many repetitions Stroud completed during his seven-minute workout. After that, he would plug his score in, and it would rank him worldwide. “It’s a drive,” Stroud said. “To be able to compete against yourself and others.” Stroud has been on the SWAT team for six months, and the Roswell police force for two years. Stroud is a certified CrossFit trainer. Every Wednesday, he will take the officers through a CrossFit workout. “What I like about CrossFit,” Stroud said, “it’s not like the powerlifters who can deadlift 1,000 pounds and bench press 800

South Carolina 63, N.C. A&T 52 Saturday, March 17 At Storrs, Conn. UConn 140, Saint Francis (Pa.) 52 Quinnipiac 86, Miami 72 At Athens, Ga. Duke 72, Belmont 58 Georgia 68, Mercer 63 At Tallahassee, Fla. Florida State 91, Little Rock 49 Buffalo 102, South Florida 79 Second Round Sunday, March 18 At Columbia, S.C. South Carolina 66, Virginia 56 Monday, March 19 At Storrs, Conn. UConn 71, Quinnipiac 46 At Athens, Ga. Duke 66, Georgia 40 At Tallahassee, Fla. Buffalo 86, Florida State 65 Regional Semifinals Saturday, March 24 At Albany, N.Y. South Carolina 79, Buffalo 63 UConn 72, Duke 59 Regional Championship Monday, March 26 UConn 94, South Carolina 65 SPOKANE REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 16 At Notre Dame, Ind. Notre Dame 99, Cal State Northridge 81 Villanova 81, South Dakota State 74, OT At College Station, Texas DePaul 90, Oklahoma 79 Texas A&M 89, Drake 76 At Eugene, Ore. Minnesota 89, Green Bay 77 Oregon 88, Seattle 45 Saturday, March 17 At Columbus, Ohio Central Michigan 78, LSU 69 Ohio State 87, George Washington 45 Second Round Sunday, March 18 At Notre Dame, Ind. Notre Dame 98, Villanova 72 At College Station, Texas Texas A&M 80, DePaul 79 At Eugene, Ore. Oregon 101, Minnesota 73 Monday, March 19 At Columbus, Ohio Central Michigan 95, Ohio State 78 Regional Semifinals Saturday, March 24 At Spokane, Wash. Notre Dame 90, Texas A&M 84 Oregon 83, Central Michigan 69 Regional Championship Monday, March 26 Notre Dame (32-3) vs. Oregon (334), 9 p.m. KANSAS CITY REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 16 At Raleigh, N.C. Maryland 77, Princeton 57 N.C. State 62, Elon 34 Saturday, March 17 At Starkville, Miss. Oklahoma State 84, Syracuse 57 Mississippi State 95, Nicholls 50 At Los Angeles UCLA 71, American 60 Creighton 76, Iowa 70 At Austin, Texas Arizona State 73, Nebraska 62 Texas 83, Maine 54 Second Round Sunday, March 18 At Raleigh, N.C. N.C. State 74, Maryland 60 Monday, March 19 At Starkville, Miss. Mississippi State 71, Oklahoma State 56 At Los Angeles UCLA 86, Creighton 64 At Austin, Texas Texas 85, Arizona State 65 Regional Semifinals Friday, March 23 At Kansas City, Mo. Mississippi State 71, N.C. State 57 UCLA 84, Texas 75 Regional Championship Sunday, March 25 Mississippi State 89, UCLA 73 LEXINGTON REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 16 At Louisville, Ky. Louisville 74, Boise State 42 Marquette 84, Dayton 65 At Knoxville, Tenn. Oregon State 82, Western Kentucky 58 Tennessee 100, Liberty 60 At Waco, Texas Michigan 75, Northern Colorado 61 Baylor 96, Grambling State 46 Saturday, March 17 At Stanford, Calif. Florida Gulf Coast 80, Missouri 70

pounds, but then if I ask them to run to the end of the block, they can’t do it. I can deadlift 500 pounds. I can squat 425 pounds, but I can run a 5K in 20 minutes. It’s general fitness and that’s why the military and law enforcement are big into CrossFit. It prepares you for everything.” Owner Scott Hendrix was a former Roswell police officer. He found CrossFit in 2010 when he was deployed to Afghanistan. As a member of the Marines, a fellow sergeant asked him to try the workout. After the workout Hendrix told his buddy he was crazy. The guy told him to do the workout for a week, and he would fall in love with it. He did it for a week and fell in love with CrossFit. “By doing the workouts in Afghanistan,” Hendrix said, “I can honestly say it kept me alive. It kept my

Roswell Daily Record Stanford 82, Gonzaga 68 Second Round Sunday, March 18 At Louisville, Ky. Louisville 90, Marquette 72 At Knoxville, Tenn. Oregon State 66, Tennessee 59 At Waco, Texas Baylor 80, Michigan 58 Monday, March 19 At Stanford, Calif. Stanford 90, Florida Gulf Coast 70 Regional Semifinals Friday, March 23 At Lexington, Ky. Oregon State 72, Baylor 67 Louisville 86, Stanford 59 Regional Championship Sunday, March 25 Louisville 76, Oregon State 43 FINAL FOUR At Columbus, Ohio National Semifinals Friday, March 30 UConn (36-0) vs. Spokane chamion, 7 or 9:30 p.m. Mississippi State (36-1) vs. Louisville (36-2), 7 or 9:30 p.m. National Championship Sunday, April 1 Semifinal winners, 7 p.m.

Baseball At A Glance All Times EDT AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Boston 21 9 Houston 20 9 Cleveland 19 12 Baltimore 17 12 New York 18 13 Chicago 16 12 Kansas City 16 13 Seattle 15 14 Tampa Bay 14 15 Minnesota 13 14 Oakland 13 15 Detroit 12 15 Toronto 13 18 Los Angeles 13 19 Texas 7 22 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Milwaukee 19 11 Chicago 19 13 15 10 San Diego St. Louis 17 12 Miami 15 13 Los Angeles 16 14 San Francisco 14 15 Arizona 14 15 Washington 13 16 Philadelphia 13 17 Colorado 12 16 Atlanta 13 18 Pittsburgh 11 19 New York 10 18 Cincinnati 10 19

Pct. 0.700 0.690 0.613 0.586 0.581 0.571 0.552 0.517 0.483 0.481 0.464 0.444 0.419 0.406 0.241 Pct. 0.633 0.594 0.600 0.586 0.536 0.533 0.483 0.483 0.448 0.433 0.429 0.419 0.367 0.357 0.345

Monday’s Games N.Y. Mets 3, Las Vegas 1 Philadelphia 6, Pittsburgh 3 Tampa Bay 2, Detroit 2 Baltimore 7, Norfolk 6 Boston 4, Chicago Cubs 2 Chicago White Sox 9, Charlotte 5 Kansas City at Omaha, cancelled St. Louis 5, Toronto 3 N.Y. Yankees 5, Atlanta 1 Cincinnati vs. Texas at Arlington, TX, 8:05 p.m. San Diego vs. El Paso at El Paso, TX, 8:05 p.m. Houston 5, Milwaukee 2 Cleveland vs. Arizona at Phoenix, 9:40 p.m. L.A. Angels vs. L.A. Dodgers at Los Angeles, CA, 10:10 p.m. Oakland vs. San Francisco at San Francisco, CA, 10:15 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Detroit vs. Tampa Bay at St. Petersburg, Fla., 12:35 p.m. Milwaukee vs. Houston at Houston, TX, 1:05 p.m. Pittsburgh vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater, Fla., 1:05 p.m. Chicago Cubs vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla., 1:05 p.m. Cincinnati vs. Texas at Arlington, TX, 2:05 p.m. Miami-Fla vs. Miami at Miami, Fla., 3:10 p.m. Cleveland vs. Arizona at Phoenix, 3:40 p.m. Minnesota vs. Washington at West Palm Beach, Fla., 4:05 p.m. Seattle vs. Colorado at Scottsdale, Ariz., 4:10 p.m. St. Louis vs. Toronto at Montreal, QC, Canada, 7:07 p.m. Braves Futures vs. Atlanta at Atlanta, GA, 7:35 p.m. Oakland vs. San Francisco at San Francisco, CA, 9:05 p.m. L.A. Angels vs. L.A. Dodgers at Los Angeles, CA, 10:10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled

NHL All Times EDT EASTERN CONFERENCE

head in the game. It got me more physically fit than I ever was in my life. When I got off the bus my wife didn’t recognize me.” When Hendrix took a fitness test in Afghanistan, he could do eight pull-ups, he maxed out on the crunches and ran 26:30 in the three mile run. By doing CrossFit over there, when he got back stateside he maxed out the marine corps physical fitness test. On that test, Hendrix did 20 dead hang pull-ups, maxed the crunches and did the three-mile run in 21 minutes. Hendrix said he never ran once while overseas for seven months. Hendrix believed in CrossFit so much that he resigned from the police force aftrer eight years and cashed out his retirement to buy CrossFit from Tabitha Denny. “I believed in CrossFit that much,” Hendrix said.

Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Tampa B 75 51 20 4 106 272 213 x-Boston 74 47 17 10 104 245 189 Toronto 76 45 24 7 97 257 216 Florida 74 39 28 7 85 226 224 Montreal 76 27 37 12 66 192 243 Detroit 75 27 37 11 65 192 233 Ottawa 75 26 38 11 63 204 266 Buffalo 76 24 40 12 60 177 250 Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Washingt 76 45 24 7 97 240 223 Pittsburgh 76 43 27 6 92 251 233 Columbus 76 42 29 5 89 215 208 Philadelph 76 38 25 13 89 230 228 New Jersey 75 39 28 8 86 225 225 Carolina 76 34 31 11 79 212 240 N.Y. Range 76 33 35 8 74 221 245 N.Y. Island 76 31 35 10 72 242 276 WESTERN CONFERENCE Central Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA x-Nashville 75 48 16 11 107 243 192 x-Winnipeg 75 46 19 10 102 250 196 Minnesota 75 42 24 9 93 232 213 Colorado 75 41 26 8 90 239 218 St. Louis 75 42 28 5 89 209 196 Dallas 76 38 30 8 84 215 208 Chicago 76 31 36 9 71 214 234 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vegas 75 47 21 7 101 250 204 San Jose 75 43 23 9 95 232 203 Anaheim 76 39 24 13 91 217 204 Los Angel 76 41 28 7 89 221 190 Calgary 76 35 31 10 80 205 231 Edmonton 76 34 36 6 74 221 243 Vancouver 76 27 40 9 63 197 247 Arizona 75 25 39 11 61 186 241 NOTE: Two points for a win, one point for overtime loss. Top three teams in each division and two wild cards per conference advance to playoffs. x-clinched playoff spot Sunday’s Games Pittsburgh 5, Philadelphia 4, OT Winnipeg 5, Nashville 4, SO Vancouver 4, Dallas 1 Boston 2, Minnesota 1, OT Anaheim 5, Edmonton 4, OT Monday’s Games Florida 3, N.Y. Islanders 0 Carolina 4, Ottawa 1 Buffalo 3, Toronto 2 Washington 4, N.Y. Rangers 2 Detroit at Montreal, 7:30 p.m. Arizona at Tampa Bay, 7:30 p.m. San Jose at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Colorado at Vegas, 10 p.m. Calgary at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. Tuesday’s Games Carolina at New Jersey, 7 p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m. Pittsburgh at Detroit, 7:30 p.m. Boston at Winnipeg, 8 p.m. San Jose at St. Louis, 8 p.m. Minnesota at Nashville, 8 p.m. Philadelphia at Dallas, 8:30 p.m. Columbus at Edmonton, 9 p.m. Anaheim at Vancouver, 10 p.m. Wednesday’s Games Florida at Toronto, 7:30 p.m. N.Y. Rangers at Washington, 8 p.m. Philadelphia at Colorado, 10 p.m. Arizona at Vegas, 10 p.m. Thursday’s Games Detroit at Buffalo, 7 p.m. Tampa Bay at Boston, 7 p.m. Pittsburgh at New Jersey, 7 p.m. Florida at Ottawa, 7:30 p.m. San Jose at Nashville, 8 p.m. Dallas at Minnesota, 8 p.m. Winnipeg at Chicago, 8:30 p.m. Columbus at Calgary, 9 p.m. Edmonton at Vancouver, 10 p.m. Arizona at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m.

Soccer MLS All Times EDT EASTERN CONFERENCE

W L T Pts GF GA Columbus 3 0 1 10 8 3 New York 3 0 1 10 8 3 New York 2 1 0 6 7 1 Atlanta Unit 2 1 0 6 7 6 Philadelphia 1 0 1 4 2 0 New Englan 1 1 1 4 4 5 Montreal 1 2 0 3 4 5 D.C. United 0 2 2 2 5 9 Orlando City 0 2 1 1 2 5 Chicago 0 2 0 0 4 6 Toronto FC 0 2 0 0 0 3 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA Sporting Ka 2 1 1 7 9 9 Vancouver 2 1 1 7 5 6 Los Angeles 2 0 0 6 6 1 Minnesota Un 2 2 0 6 6 8 FC Dallas 1 0 2 5 5 2 Houston 1 1 1 4 7 4 LA Galaxy 1 1 1 4 3 3 Real Salt Lake 1 1 1 4 3 6 San Jose 1 1 0 3 5 5 Colorado 0 1 1 1 3 4 Portland 0 2 1 1 2 7 Seattle 0 2 0 0 0 4 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. Saturday, March 24 New York City FC 2, New England 2, tie Portland 1, FC Dallas 1, tie Columbus 3, D.C. United 1

“I sold eight years of retirement; that’s how much I believe in CrossFit to keep this place open. I bought the affiliate in 2015.” Cheers After Friday night’s work out was over, Crash City CrossFit members took pictures together. Family members, kids, and spouses who didn’t workout gathered together and hung out. The adults shared a beer and had a dinner of nachos. “We try to harbor that family atmosphere,” Hendrix said. Every Friday night we do this (dinner) and the rest of the year on the first Monday of the month we have WOD (Workout of the Day) and Wine. We do a workout, have a potluck, and we drink beer and have some wine. That’s one of the things the members like.”


Sports

Roswell Daily Record 16 LIU Brooklyn 61

E 16 Radford 71

March 15-16

1 Virginia 54 16 UMBC 74 8 Creighton 59 9 Kansas State 69 5 Kentucky 78 12 Davidson 73 4 Arizona 68 13 Buffalo 89 6 Miami 62 11 Loyola-Chi. 64 3 Tennessee 73 14 Wright State 47

MEN’S Second Round

2 Cincinnati 68 15 Georgia State 53

16 Texas So. 64

March 17-18

March 22-23

9 Kansas St. 61

Elite 8

9 Kan. St. 50

1 Villanova 81

1 Villanova 90

Elite 8

March 24-25

9 Alabama 58

March 24-25 1 Villanova 71

9 Kansas St. 62

5 West Vir. 94

5 Kentucky 95

FINAL FOUR

5 UK 58

5 W.Vir. 78

San Antonio

13 Buffalo 75

13 Marshall 71

Sat., Mar. 31

SOUTH

1 Villanova

11 Loyola-Chi.

11 Loyola-Chi. 63

6:09 p.m.

11 Loyola-Chi. 69

EAST

8:49 p.m.

6 Florida 66

3 Texas Tech 78 3 Tex. Tech 69

3 Tenn. 62 11 Loyola 78

3 Texas Tech 59

7 Nevada 75

10 Butler 73

NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP

7 Nevada 68

2 Purdue 65

Mon., April 2, 9:20 p.m.

2 Cincinnati 73

First Round

Second Round

Sweet 16

March 22-23

16 UMBC 43

MW

11 Syracuse 60

NCAA TOURNAMENT

7 Nevada 87 10 Texas 83

W

Sweet 16

March 17-18

2 Purdue 76

March 15-16

1 Villanova 87 16 Radford 61 8 Virginia Tech 83 9 Alabama 86 5 West Virginia 85 12 Murray State 68 4 Wichita State 75 13 Marshall 81 6 Florida 77 11 St. Bonaventure 62 3 Texas Tech 70 14 SFA 60 7 Arkansas 62 10 Butler 79 2 Purdue 74 15 Cal St. Fullerton 48

1 Xavier 102 16 Texas Southern 83 8 Missouri 54 9 Florida State 67 5 Ohio State 81 12 South Dakota St. 73 4 Gonzaga 68 13 UNC-Green 64 6 Houston 67 11 San Diego State 65 3 Michigan 61 14 Montana 47 7 Texas A&M 73 10 Providence 69 2 UNC 84 15 Lipscomb 66

B3

11 Arizona St. 56

16 N.C. Central 46

March 13-14 Dayton, Ohio

E 11 UCLA 58

2018

First Round

First Four

11 St. Bonaventure 65

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

1 Kansas 76 1 Kansas 83

1 Xavier 70 9 Florida St. 75

1 Kansas 80

9 Florida St. 75

16 Penn 60 8 Seton Hall 94

8 Seton Hall 79

5 Clemson 84

5 Ohio State 84 4 Gonz. 60

5 Clem. 76

4 Gonzaga 90

4 Auburn 54

WEST.

9 NC State 83

1 Kansas 85

9 Florida St. 54

3 Michigan

1 Kansas

MIDWEST 11 Syracuse 55

6 Houston 63 11 Syracuse 65

3 Michigan 99 All times EDT

3 Michigan 64

3 Mich. St. 53

3 Mich. 58

5 Clemson 79 12 New Mexico St. 68 4 Auburn 62 13 Charleston 58 6 TCU 52 11 Syracuse 57 3 Michigan State 82 14 Bucknell 78

2 Duke 81

7 Texas A&M 86

7 Rhode Island 62

7 Texas A&M 72

2 Duke 69

2 UNC 65

2 Duke 87

7 Rhode Island 83 10 Oklahoma 78 2 Duke 89 15 Iona 67 AP

NCAA TOURNAMENT

2018

First Round March 16-17

1 UConn 140

WOMEN’S Second Round

Sweet 16

March 18-19

8 Miami 72 9 Quinnipiac 86 5 Duke 72 12 Belmont 58 4 Georgia 68 13 Mercer 63 6 South Florida 79 11 Buffalo 102

7 California 62 10 Virginia 68 2 South Carolina 63 15 N.C. A&T 52 1 Notre Dame 99 16 CSUN 81

5 DePaul 90 12 Oklahoma 79 4 Texas A&M 89 13 Drake 76 6 LSU 69 11 Central Mich. 78 3 Ohio State 87 14 Geo. Wash. 45 7 Green Bay 77 10 Minnesota 89 2 Oregon 88 15 Seattle U 45

Elite 8

March 25-26

1 Miss. St. 71

9 Okla. St. 56 1 Miss. St. 89 5 Maryland 60

5 Duke 66

Final Four

5 Duke 59

A l b a n y, N . Y.

11 Buffalo 86

4 NC St. 57

Columbus, Ohio

4 Georgia 40

Fri., Mar. 30 1 UConn

1 Miss. St.

9 p.m.

7 p.m.

4 N.C. St. 74

K a n s a s C i t y, Mo.

11 Creighton 64

3 UCLA 84

11 Buffalo 63

3 UCLA 86 3 UCLA 73

10 Virginia 56

National Championship

2 S. Carolina 79

Sun., April 1 7 p.m.

2 S. Carolina 66

7 Arizona St. 65 2 Texas 75 2 Texas 85

1 Notre Dame 98

1 Louisville 90

1 Notre Dame 90

1 Louisville 86

8 Marquette 72

9 Villanova 72 1 Notre Dame 84

1 Louisville 76 12 FGCU 70

5 DePaul 79 4 Texas A&M 84 4 Texas A&M 80

Spokane, Wa s h .

4 Stan. 59

1 Notre Dame

1 Louisville

Lexington, Ky

11 Central Mich. 95 11 Central Mich. 69 3 Ohio St. 78 2 Oregon 74

All times EDT

4 Stanford 90

6 Oregon St. 66

6 Oregon St. 72 3 Tenn. 59 6 Oregon St. 43

10 Minnesota 73 2 Oregon 83 2 Oregon 101

March 16-17

1 Mississippi St. 95

8 Syracuse 57 9 Oklahoma St. 84 5 Maryland 77 12 Princeton 57 4 N.C. State 62 13 Elon 35 6 Iowa 70 11 Creighton 76 3 UCLA 71

3 Florida St. 65 2 S. Car. 65

First Round

16 Nicholls St. 50

1 Miss. St. 71

March 25-26

1 UConn 94

8 So. Dakota St. 74 9 Villanova 81

March 23-24

Elite 8

1 UConn 72

March 18-19

9 Quinnipiac 46

3 Florida State 91 14 Little Rock 49

Sweet 16

March 23-24

1 UConn 71 16 Saint Francis (Pa.) 52

Second Round

7 Michigan 58 2 Baylor 67 2 Baylor 80

14 American 60 7 Arizona State 73 10 Nebraska 62 2 Texas 83 15 Maine 54 1 Louisville 74 16 Boise State 42 8 Marquette 84 9 Dayton 65 5 Missouri 70 12 FGCU 80 4 Stanford 82 13 Gonzaga 68 6 Oregon State 82 11 Western Ky. 58 3 Tennessee 100 14 Liberty 60 7 Michigan 75 10 Northern Colo. 61 2 Baylor 96 15 Grambling 46 AP


B4 Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Financial

Roswell Daily Record

Cisco Systems gives $50M to combat California homelessness

Juliet Williams Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Internet gear maker Cisco Systems Inc. announced Monday that it will donate $50 million over five years to address the growing problem of homelessness in California’s Santa Clara County and is encouraging other Silicon Valley companies to make similar efforts. In a blog post, Chief Executive Chuck Robbins said people in the San Francisco Bay Area know homelessness has reached a crisis level, costing the county where many tech companies are based $520 million per year. “Though homelessness seems intractable, I believe that it is a solvable issue,” Robbins wrote. “I also feel very strongly that we have an opportunity — and a responsibility — to do something about it.” Northern California’s booming economy has been fueled by the tech sector. But the influx of workers coupled with decades of under-building has led to a historic short-

AP Photo

In this March 2014 file photo tents are set up along a pathway in the Jungle, a homeless encampment in San Jose, Calif. San Jose, California-based Cisco Systems Inc. is donating $50 million to address the growing problem of homelessness in Santa Clara County and is encouraging other Silicon Valley companies to also step up. age of affordable housing throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. Homelessness is now pervasive throughout Silicon Valley. The median rent in the San Jose metro area is

$3,500 a month, but the median wage is $12 an hour in food service and $19 an hour in health care support, an amount that won’t even cover housing costs. The minimum

annual salary needed to live comfortably in San Jose is $87,000, according to a study by personal finance website GoBankingRates. Cisco’s donation will

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settle

CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Apr 18 116.22 117.20 114.80 115.17 Jun 18 106.20 107.30 104.70 105.30 Aug 18 104.90 105.70 103.30 103.67 Oct 18 108.92 109.52 107.42 107.57 Dec 18 112.75 113.30 111.40 111.62 Feb 19 114.50 115.00 113.37 113.57 Apr 19 114.85 115.35 114.25 114.32 Jun 19 109.50 109.92 108.37 108.40 Aug 19 107.75 107.75 107.40 107.42 Est. sales 60938. Fri’s Sales: 74,492 Fri’s open int: 355730, off -486 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Mar 18 135.50 136.50 134.77 134.92 Apr 18 136.07 137.25 134.30 134.50 May 18 137.00 138.30 135.40 135.55 Aug 18 142.12 143.47 140.87 141.15 Sep 18 143.30 144.52 142.10 142.35 Oct 18 143.72 144.75 142.42 142.57 Nov 18 144.07 144.95 142.62 142.80 Jan 19 141.52 141.52 139.75 140.05 Est. sales 13558. Fri’s Sales: 18,182 Fri’s open int: 53985, up +861 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Apr 18 58.82 59.10 57.95 58.02 May 18 65.75 66.95 65.22 65.25 Jun 18 74.35 75.72 74.02 74.10 Jul 18 75.60 76.60 75.07 75.20 Aug 18 75.50 76.67 75.15 75.25 Oct 18 65.35 66.07 64.80 64.92 Dec 18 60.42 60.97 60.00 60.02 Feb 19 64.52 65.02 64.32 64.45 Apr 19 68.65 68.65 68.02 68.12 May 19 73.87 Jun 19 77.00 77.00 77.00 77.00 Jul 19 77.62 Est. sales 34815. Fri’s Sales: 61,551 Fri’s open int: 236511, up +3047

chg.

-.88 -.90 -1.28 -1.35 -1.10 -.73 -.53 -.80 -.45

-.78 -1.60 -1.75 -1.15 -1.30 -1.30 -1.35 -.45

-.40 +.03 -.05 -.15 -.20 -.33 -.40 -.27 -.13 -.13 -.65 -.15

Cotton Open high COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. May 18 82.08 82.57 Jul 18 82.22 82.83 Sep 18 Oct 18 Nov 18 Dec 18 77.51 77.92 Jan 19 Mar 19 78.00 78.09 May 19 78.11 78.14 Jul 19 78.14 78.17 Sep 19 Oct 19 Nov 19 Dec 19 73.60 73.60 Jan 20 Mar 20 May 20 Jul 20

low settle

81.50 81.90

77.32 77.60 77.92 77.90

73.39

chg.

81.78 82.22 77.70 78.88 77.70 77.70 77.88 77.88 77.92 77.90 73.39 75.28 73.39 73.39 73.48 73.48 74.03 74.11

-.05 +.04 -.08 +.04 +.04 +.03 +.03 +.03 +.03 -.11 -.11 -.11 -.11 -.11 -.11 -.11 -.11

settle

chg.

grains Open high

low

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 18 462.50 463.75 451.25 454.25 Jul 18 478.25 479.50 467.75 471.50 Sep 18 494 495.50 484 487.75 Dec 18 515.25 516.75 505.25 509 Mar 19 532.25 533 521.75 525.75 May 19 541 542.25 531 534.75 Jul 19 542.75 544 538.75 541.25 Est. sales 109288. Fri’s Sales: 130,401 Fri’s open int: 484320, up +5018

-6 -5 -4.75 -4.75 -5 -4.75 -4.25

CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 18 378.50 380.75 373.50 374 Jul 18 386.50 388.75 382 382.50 Sep 18 393 394.75 388.50 389 Dec 18 400 402.25 396.25 396.75 Mar 19 407.25 409.25 403.75 404 May 19 412 413.75 408.50 409.25 Jul 19 416 418 413.25 413.50 Sep 19 406.25 406.25 403 403 Est. sales 314016. Fri’s Sales: 542,308 Fri’s open int: 1833794, off -13308 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 18 227.50 232.25 226.50 226.50 Jul 18 238 240 235.25 235.25 Sep 18 242.75 Dec 18 252 253 252 252 Mar 19 258 May 19 261.75 Jul 19 266.75 Sep 19 268 Est. sales 591. Fri’s Sales: 962 Fri’s open int: 6002, up +244 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel May 18 1026.251040.25 1025 1025.50 Jul 18 1037.251051 1036 1036.50 Aug 18 1040 1052.50 1038.50 1039 Sep 18 1029.751042.25 1029.75 1030.25 Nov 18 1025 1036.25 1025 1025.50 Jan 19 1028.751038.75 1028.25 1028.75 Mar 19 1028.75 1037.75 1026.50 1026.75 May 19 1028 1035.50 1027 1027.25 Jul 19 1034.751036 1029.75 1030 Aug 19 1024.50 Est. sales 166324. Fri’s Sales: 333,101 Fri’s open int: 867237, up +5634

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go to Destination: Home, a public-private partnership that focuses on getting housing for the homeless as the first step in addressing other problems related to health, addic-

tion, family estrangement and joblessness. In addition to financing housing, the funding will also help improve data collection about homelessness services so money is spent more efficiently. Ray Bramson, chief impact officer for Destination: Home, said the leadership shown by Cisco and its CEO is what the community needs to see from the major technology companies that call Silicon Valley home. “We’ve always known that tech could be a good partner,” Bramson said. “We’re hoping that by Cisco really stepping up and giving us this support we’re going to see other great organizations in our valley step up. ... No one agency, no one organization can really do it alone.” Cisco’s donation is believed to be among the largest of its kind in the region. The tech company last year pledged $10 million to Housing Trust Silicon Valley’s TECH fund, on the condition that it would be matched by others. LinkedIn matched $10 million.

low

settle

LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. May 18 65.90 66.55 65.08 65.55 Jun 18 65.81 66.37 64.94 65.41 Jul 18 65.30 65.96 64.57 65.03 Aug 18 64.76 65.39 64.04 64.49 Sep 18 64.31 64.80 63.47 63.92 Oct 18 63.62 64.19 62.99 63.33 Nov 18 63.19 63.55 62.43 62.79 Dec 18 62.66 63.09 61.90 62.28 Jan 19 62.12 62.60 61.45 61.77 Feb 19 61.57 61.96 61.00 61.24 Mar 19 61.08 61.45 60.55 60.76 Apr 19 61.00 61.00 60.02 60.30 May 19 59.97 59.97 59.89 59.89 Est. sales 893899. Fri’s Sales: 1,271,363 Fri’s open int: 2469551, up +32861 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Apr 18 2.0255 2.0463 2.0020 2.0104 May 18 2.0415 2.0545 2.0132 2.0203 Jun 18 2.0501 2.0550 2.0181 2.0253 Jul 18 2.0404 2.0486 2.0134 2.0210 Aug 18 2.0223 2.0306 1.9993 2.0071 Sep 18 1.9995 1.9995 1.9773 1.9846 Oct 18 1.8603 1.8640 1.8410 1.8511

-3.25 -3.25 -3 -2.50 -2.50 -2.25 -2.50 -1.75

+.25 +.50 +.50 +.50 +.50 +.50

-2.75 -2.75 -2.25 -1.25 -1 -1.25 -1.50 -1.50 -1.25 -1.50

Nov 18 1.8216 1.8216 1.8078 1.8141 Dec 18 1.7973 1.8000 1.7787 1.7866 Jan 19 1.7755 1.7755 1.7681 1.7745 Feb 19 1.7816 1.7816 1.7673 1.7735 Mar 19 1.7926 1.7926 1.7770 1.7835 Apr 19 1.9587 Est. sales 164972. Fri’s Sales: 192,679 Fri’s open int: 438974, off -853 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Apr 18 2.588 2.642 2.565 2.618 May 18 2.627 2.680 2.610 2.657 Jun 18 2.680 2.737 2.676 2.716 Jul 18 2.742 2.797 2.735 2.777 Aug 18 2.765 2.815 2.761 2.797 Sep 18 2.749 2.800 2.748 2.784 Oct 18 2.768 2.812 2.758 2.796 Nov 18 2.805 2.857 2.805 2.841 Dec 18 2.941 2.979 2.939 2.964 Jan 19 3.023 3.064 3.023 3.049 Feb 19 2.990 3.029 2.990 3.015 Mar 19 2.895 2.935 2.895 2.919 Apr 19 2.630 2.667 2.630 2.644 Est. sales 296119. Fri’s Sales: 272,025 Fri’s open int: 1400563, up +4200

Metals

Last

Gold (troy oz) Silver (troy oz) Copper (pound) Aluminum (pound) Platinum (troy oz) Lead (metric ton) Zinc, HG (pound)

$1354.40 $16.632 $2.9605 $0.9293 $950.40 $2359.50 $1.4582

-.0077 -.0080 -.0088 -.0098 -.0109 -.0121

Close: 24,202.60 Change: 669.40 (2.8%)

-.33 -.30 -.26 -.25 -.24 -.23 -.22 -.23 -.22 -.22 -.20 -.20 -.20

-.0232 -.0212 -.0190 -.0173 -.0151 -.0130 -.0079

Name

Div

Last

AT&T Inc 2.00f Aetna 2.00 BkofAm .48 Boeing 6.84f Chevron 4.48f Citigroup 1.28 CocaCola 1.56f Disney 1.68f EOG Rescs .67 ExxonMbl 3.08 FordM .60a HP Inc .53 HollyFront 1.32 HomeDp 4.12f HonwllIntl 2.98 Intel 1.20 IntlBcsh .66 IBM 6.00

34.69 170.75 30.44 328.97 115.35 69.78 42.69 100.65 107.57 74.00 10.83 22.20 49.36 176.38 146.94 52.48 39.55 153.37

+.027 +.024 +.024 +.024 +.024 +.024 +.023 +.021 +.020 +.021 +.019 +.016 +.005

Advertise Your Business Here

CALL TODAY 575.622.7710

10 DAYS

$1349.30 $16.530 $2.9845 $0.9339 $948.40 $2378.00 $1.4618

25,000 24,000 23,000 22,000

S

O

N

52-Week High Low Name 26,616.71 20,379.55 Dow Industrials 11,423.92 8,744.36 Dow Transportation 778.80 647.81 Dow Utilities 13,637.02 11,324.50 NYSE Composite 7,637.27 5,769.39 Nasdaq Composite 2,872.87 2,322.51 S&P 500 982.18 812.63 S&P SmallCap 29,760.60 24,131.40 Wilshire 5000 1,615.52 1,335.03 Russell 2000

YTD Chg %Chg -10.8 -5.3 +3.1 +11.5 -7.9 -6.2 -7.0 -6.4 -.3 -11.5 -13.3 +5.7 -3.6 -6.9 -4.2 +13.7 -.4 ...

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

Div

Last

3.36 1.92 1.68 1.06 3.22 1.28 2.80 .50f 2.48 1.61 1.07e 2.36 2.08f .68f 1.56 1.44

127.39 54.04 93.78 37.35 106.81 35.04 96.00 57.59 106.60 93.99 26.29 47.07 87.50 34.75 52.29 44.14

D

J

indexes

F

M

Net U.S.%and YTD 52-wk News that the China Last Chg Chg % Chg % Chg are open to negotiations to 24,202.60 +669.40 +2.84 -2.09 +17.77 avert a trade war put investors 10,373.21 +209.89 +2.07 -2.25 +16.09 in a680.17 buying+6.49 mood+.96 Monday, -5.97 giv-3.17 12,433.10 +255.40 its +2.10 -2.93 in +8.93 ing the market best day 7,220.54 +227.88 +3.26 +4.59 +23.63 more than+70.29 two years 2,658.55 +2.72 and -.56eras+13.54 +.80 +14.23 ing943.75 about +20.63 half of+2.23 last week’s 27,605.57 +692.93 +2.57 -.68 +13.36 huge losses. Technology com1,543.72 +33.64 +2.23 +.53 +13.73 panies surged.

story stoCks

YTD Chg %Chg +2.29 +.63 +6.60 +.90 +.66 +.55 +2.61 +.87 +5.24 +1.42 +.42 +.78 +2.08 +1.10 +1.31 +.40

-8.8 -4.0 +9.6 -7.7 -10.9 -3.3 -5.1 -12.0 +2.1 +2.8 -2.4 -11.1 -11.4 +1.5 -13.8 -8.3

Dividend footnotes a- extra dividends were paid, but are not included b - annual rate plus stock e - amount declared or paid in last 12 months f- current annual rate, which was increased by most recent dividend announcement

Get Noticed!

23,480

26,000

Prev. Day

-.01 +2.64 +1.27 +7.97 +2.37 +1.88 +.36 +2.11 +1.71 +1.11 +.27 +.35 +1.55 +4.58 +3.66 +3.12 +1.15 +4.48

24,440

27,000

stoCks oF loCal interest chg.

25,400

Dow Jones industrials

Finish Line

FINL

Close: $13.83 3.28 or 31.1% The sporting goods retailer agreed to be bought by JD Sports Fashion for $558 million. $20 15 10 5

D

$6.90

J F 52-week range

M $16.38

Vol.: 17.0m (12.1x avg.) PE: 25.8 Mkt. Cap: $557.7 m Yield: 3.3%

USG

USG

Close: $40.03 6.52 or 19.5% The building products company rejected an offer worth $42 per share from Knauf. $45 40 35 30

D

$25.60

J F 52-week range

Vol.: 13.5m (10.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $5.7 b

Lowe’s

Close: $89.30

M $41.18 PE: 62.6 Yield: ...

5.53 or 6.6%

LOW


Roswell Daily Record

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

PIANO STUDENTS OF MIKE LIVELY EARNED SUPERIOR RATINGS IN COMPETITIONS HELD IN HOBBS AND WEST TEXAS RECENTLY

Makylah Apostol

Caden Bair

Elijah Baltazar

Haven Barker

Claire Coble

Lilli DeGroot

Abigail Dodson

Joshua Dodson

Jackson Elwell

Amelia Herrera

Ella Hobbs

Emma Hobbs

Hannah Lilley

Sarah Lilley

Nicole Lopez

Reid McKelvy

Raylene Moore

Micaela Rodriguez

Olivia Tang

Lucas Tang

JANE FALK (HOBBS, NM ) PIANO COMPETITION First Methodist Church 40 musical pieces. 40+ students participating FIRST PLACES: Makylah Apostol Caden Bair Elijah Baltazar Claire Coble Ethan Cowart Lilli DeGroot Joshua Dodson Jackson Elwell Nicholas Elwell Ella Hobbs Emma Hobbs Hannah Lilley Sarah Lilley Nicole Lopez Erynn McKelvy Reid McKelvy Raylene Moore Lucas Tang Steven Xu Sylvia Xu SECOND PLACES: Audrey Perry Elise Taylor

Erynn McKelvy

9th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Lope Apostol 7th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Ryan Bair 11th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs Don Baltazar 4th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Ed Coble 3rd grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Tyler Cowart 10th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Charles DeGroot 4th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Steve Dodson 6th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Darrel Elwell 10th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Darrel Elwell 3rd grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Madux Hobbs 7th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Madux Hobbs 8th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Tom Lilley 8th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Tom Lilley 9th grade, daughter of Dr. & Mrs. Sebastian Lopez 7th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Ian McKelvy 5th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Ian McKelvy 12th grade, daughter of Ms. Jenny Moore 5th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Aonan Tang 5th grade, son of Daoqing & Minlin Chen Xu 4th grade, daughter of Daoqing & Minlin Chen Xu 3rd grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Ryan Perry 3rd grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Brian Taylor

JACK HENDRIX (ODESSA, TX) PIANO COMPETITION Odessa College 44 musical pieces. 101 students participating FIRST PLACES: Haven Barker 3rd grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Jesse Barker Claire Coble 4th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Ed Coble Abigail Dodson 2nd grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Steve Dodson Joshua Dodson 4th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Steven Dodson Hannah Lilley 8th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Tom Lilley Sarah Lilley 8th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Tom Lilley Erynn McKelvy 7th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Ian McKelvy Reid McKelvy 5th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Ian McKelvy Lucas Tang 5th grade of son of Mr. & Mrs. Aonan Tang Steven Xu 5th grade, son of Daoqing & Minlin Chen Xu Sylvia Xu 5th grade, daughter of Daoqing & Minlin Chen Xu SECOND PLACES: Elijah Baltazar 11th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Don Baltazar Raylene Moore 12th grade, daughter of Ms. Jenny Moore THIRD PLACE: Jackson Elwell 6th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Darrel Elwell PARTICIPANT: Alice Hansen 2nd grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Garrett Hansen

Steven Xu

Sylvia Xu

LUBBOCK PIANO SONATA/SONATINA COMPETITION Texas Tech University 36 musical pieces, 80+ students participating FIRST PLACES: Claire Coble Joshua Dodson Amelia Herrera Hannah Lilley Erynn McKelvy Reid McKelvy Raylene Moore Micaela Rodriguez Lucas Tang Steven Xu SECOND PLACES: Matthew Baltazar Ella Hobbs Emma Hobbs Taylor Le Sarah Lilley THIRD PLACES: Makylah Apostol Elijah Baltazar PARTICIPANTS: Jackson Elwell Sylvia Xu

4th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Ed Coble 4th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Steve Dodson 6th grade, daughter of Mr. Daniel Herrera 8th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Tom Lilley 7th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Ian McKelvy 5th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Ian McKelvy 12th grade, daughter of Ms. Jenny Moore 3rd grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. David Rodriguez 5th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Aonan Tang 6th grade, son of Daoqing & Minlin Chen Xu 4th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Don Baltazar 3rd grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Madux Hobbs 7th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Madux Hobbs 12th grade, daughter of Taun Le & Mai Haynh 8th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Tom Lilley 9th grade, daughter of Mr.& Mrs. Lope Apostol 11th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Don Baltazar 6th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Darrel Elwell 4th grade, daughter of Daoqing & Minlin Chen Xu

KNOX (MIDLAND, TX) PIANO COMPETITION Midland College 52 musical pieces. 138 students participating FIRST PLACES: Caden Bair Elijah Baltazar Claire Coble Ella Hobbs Emma Hobbs Hannah Lilley Sarah Lilley Nicole Lopez Reid McKelvy Olivia Tang SECOND PLACES: Matthew Baltazar Erynn McKelvy Lucas Tang Lilli DeGroot Will Coble Raylene Moore

7th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Ryan Bair 11th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Don Baltazar 4th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Ed Coble 3rd grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Madux Hobbs 7th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Madux Hobbs 8th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Tom Lilley 8th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Tom Lilley 9th grade, daughter of Dr. & Mrs. Sebastian Lopez 5th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Ian McKelvy Kindergarten, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Aonan Tang 4th grade, son of Mr & Mrs. Don Baltazar 7th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Ian McKelvy 5th grade, son of Mr. & Mrs. Aonan Tang 10th grade, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. Charles DeGroot Kindergarten, son of Mr. & Mrs. Ed Coble 12th grade, daughter of Ms. Jenny Moore

B5


B6 Tuesday, March 27, 2018 Dear Abby Universal Press Syndicate Dear Abby: I am an only child who has lived at home all her life — 44 years. My father recently passed away, s o n o w i t is ju s t M o m and me. She has become extremely clingy. She is jealous of my friends and feels I must be with her for almost everything. What can I do? I think I should move out, but she will take it badly. Also, I’m concerned about her health. She’s 71, diabetic and has a heart condition. Is this a lost cause or is there hope? HOPING IN FLORIDA DEAR HOPING: I agree that you should move. It would have been better had you cut the umbilical cord while your father was still alive, but better late than never. Are there relatives or friends who can look in

Comics on your mother regularly? If there are, enlist their help. She should not be allowed to become isolated and solely dependent on one person. Look into grief support groups and other programs for seniors in your community. If your mother needs a companion and your family finances allow it, hire someone to stay with her. It’s time you had a life of your own. Consider it the price of your freedom. HHHHH DEAR ABBY: A few months ago, one of my best friends was dumped by his long-term boyfriend. I was shocked because everyone thought they were an ideal couple, and theirs was a relationship to model all of ours after. A few days ago, my friend finally felt comfortable enough to confide that his ex had cheated on him with another friend of ours, which was another shock. Since then, I have been conflicted about how to act around the ex, whom I considered to be a good friend until this happened. I am tempted to

lash out at him for hurting someone we care about, but I don’t want to add more drama. We all are in undergrad together, so we see each other every day. It’s getting harder not to stick up for my friend at this point. How do I suppress my anger in order to be a friend to both of them, even if the ex may not deserve it? ANGRY IN THE SOUTH DEAR ANGRY: A way to do that would be to remind yourself that there are usually two sides to a story. Bide your time and wait to see what happens. Whether you want to remain friends with the “cad” will become apparent with time. Remaining quiet may be the better choice, particularly if the “ideal couple” decides to reunite. HHHHH Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www. DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Roswell Daily Record Hints from

Heloise King Features Syndicate Dear Readers: A sudsy scrub with soap and water is the best way to clean your hands, but what if that’s not possible? hand sanitizer is the next best thing. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (www.cdc.gov), a hand sanitizer containing an alcohol concentration of 60 percent to 90 percent is best. Nonalcohol sanitizers might not kill bacteria. Here are some application hints: Pump a small amount, according to what the label recommends, into the palm of your hand. Rub all over your hands. And this is critical: Wait for the sanitizer to dry. If your hands have actual visible dirt, chemicals or grease on them, find a way to wash with soap and water. Hand sanitizers will be ineffective against these. Naturally, keep hand

Jacqueline Bigar

sanitizer away from youngsters. It’s not to be ingested. Heloise HHHHH Dear Heloise: Toilet paper needs to be bought by the pound, not by “units.” The heavier of two rolls of the same price (both of which fit the holder) has more paper in it. Embossed is puffed to make it seem like more. Some have two layers; some, one thin layer for septic tanks. Manufacturers should put the weight on the package. Glenda D. in Houston Dear Heloise: Happy foggy morning from Vancouver, Washington! I’ve moved more times than I can count, and one of the things we learned to do was pack a couple of suitcases like we were going on a short camping trip. We include a set of sheets, a blanket if it’s that kind of weather, a change of clothes — including jammies — and bathroom supplies, like toilet paper, shampoo and hand soap. Add fluffy towels and

Beetle Bailey

Your Horoscope ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH You could be on top of a problem, and are likely to initiate a brainstorming session. You might not like all the solutions and ideas that are tossed out, but there will be one that works. Let others know how much you appreciate their feedback. Tonight: Be as upbeat as possible. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH Your instincts tell you to study a situation more completely. Wait a few days to make a decision. You could feel hindered by what is happening around you. Slow down. Stay more upbeat than you have in the past. Tonight: Let go of stress by taking a walk or relaxing at home. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH Those closest to you will notice your easygoing attitude. In fact, you even might inspire some of them to be more carefree. Your words seem to energize others, especially at work and within the community. You will enjoy your friendships. Tonight: Socialize and network. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHHH Your creativity when dealing with others comes out in simple ways, such as trying to understand what’s going on with a friend or loved one. Honor a fast change, and know that it’s for the best. Don’t minimize what is going on here. Tonight: Time for fun and games! LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH You enjoy a surprise or two from time to time, but what comes your way today could give you a serious jolt. Whether it is for better or worse will be decided by you after some reflection. Tap into your imagination to find solutions and answers. Tonight: Be resourceful and responsive. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHHH Figure out why you are surrounded by confusion. A misunderstanding between you and an associate probably is at the base of the problem. You might need to rethink this matter more fully. Make a point of clearing the air and resolving the issue. Tonight: With a favorite person. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHH Friendship plays a significant role in your day. You could be trying to make a difference where you really can’t. A close loved one seems determined to follow his or her own path. Know that no matter what course you take, you will experience success. Tonight: Where others hang. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHHH You could be dealing with a strong, creative personality outside your personal life. This person has a way of charming others in order to get some of his or her ideas agreed upon. You see through this game, and you’ll take a stand. Tonight: Plan on a late night out and about. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You could be in the midst of doing something very unique and very worthwhile. Excitement builds as you think about the possibilities. Take a step back in order to see how realistic you are being. As a result, you might find out otherwise. Tonight: Love the moment. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH You could have a problem arise from out of the blue. A misunderstanding seems likely. Have a long-overdue discussion and clear up any potential conflicts. Listen to the feedback you are getting. A meeting proves instrumental. Tonight: Catch up on someone else’s news. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHH Defer to a partner or loved one. Letting this person run the show will be great for him or her, as he or she might need to be on center stage. Be aware of a boss or higher-up, as you will be receiving his or her positive feedback in the near future. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHHH Your creativity points to a new chapter. You will see what happens when you don’t follow your instincts. Listen to news more carefully. Understand what is happening with others in order to gain greater clarity. Be sure to explain your choice clearly. Tonight: Run errands.

Blondie

Dilbert

Garfield

Hagar the Horrible

Snuffy Smith

Zits

washcloths, and the first night in the new house will be so restful. When we got up on the last day in the old house, we would throw in the medications, toothpaste, toothbrushes and pillows, and haul the suitcases to the car. There, they are out of the way, and they arrive with us! Jane M., via email Hi, Heloise: I have a friend who saves the fragranced magazine inserts until she sends a greeting card for a wedding or anniversary. She then opens the insert and rubs the inside of the card with them. I have received scented cards from her, and the scent lasts nearly a week. It’s just a little added touch for a special occasion. LOVE your column, by the way! Mary, via email Dear Heloise: Those cotton fillers from prescription bottles are great for wiping the lint and smears from eyeglasses. Jack W., Olney, Md.


Classifieds

Roswell Daily Record

LEGALS _______________________

LEGALS

LEGALS

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

________________________________________________

Notice of Sale...

Amended Notice of Sale...

Notice of Sale...

Publish March 13, 20, 27, April 3, 2018

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT I N T H E M A T T E R OF THE PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF Eipalita Varela, Case#D-504-CV-2018274 NOTICE OF CHANGE OF NAME TAKE NOTICE that in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 40-8-1 through Sec. 40-8-3 NMSA 1978, the Petitioner Eipalita Varela will app ly to the Honorable Dustin K. Hunter, District Judge of the Fifth Judicial District at the Chaves County Courthouse, 400 N. Virginia, in Roswell, New Mexico at 9:00 a.m. on the 24th day of April, 2018 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME from Eipalita Varela to Hipolitalisia Varela. KATIE ESPINOZA CLERK OF THE DISTRICT COURT /s/ Kellie Adams Deputy Clerk Submitted By: /s/ Hipolitalisia Varela 611 Spruce Dexter, NM 88230 575-734-5108 _______________________

Notice to Creditors... Publish March 27, April 3, 10, 2018 STATE OF NEW MEXICO IN THE PROBATE COURT CHAVES COUNTY I N T H E M A T T E R OF THE ESTATE OF Karen McDaniel, DECEASED. Probate No. 9771 NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned has been appointed personal 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 Place, Roswell, NM 88203. Dated: 3-23, 2018 /s/ Billy McDaniel 124 Trinity Ave. Elephant Butte, NM 87935 575-652-7281

045

LEGALS

Change of Name... Publish March 20, 27, 2018

Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Publish March 13, 20, 27, April 3, 2018

Publish March 27, April 3, 10, 17, 2018

B7

Employment Opportunities

DEXTER CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS Notice of Vacancy 2017-2018 School Year SCHOOL BUS ROUTE DRIVERS

NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE STATE OF NEW FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL Starting Route Driver Pay COUNTY OF CHAVES DISTRICT WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. $18.00 per hour STATE OF NEW MEXICO Case No. D-504-CV-2017-00458 WILLIAM J. 15-20 hour workweek FIRST MORTGAGE COMPANY, LLC, TAYLOR; OENITA TATUM; RENITA TAYLOR BANK OF SOUTHWEST, WILSON, Defendants. PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that Applicants Must Meet New Mexico Department of Plaintiff, the above-entitled Court, having appointed me or my Transportation Plaintiff, designee as Special Master in this matter with the vs No. D-504-CV-2015-00533 power to sell, has ordered me to sell the real property Requirements Position will be open until filled. Visit vs. No. D-504-CV-2017-00760 (the "Property") situated in Chaves County, New MexDANNY RICE A/K/A DANNY JAY RICE AND MORT- ico, commonly known as 302 W Forest Street, www.dexterdemons.org for job description. MONICA CANDELARIA AND ALLEN L. COATS GAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEM, Roswell, NM 88203, and more particularly described For questions – Danny DBA COATS PLUMBING AND LAWN INC. AS NOMINEE FOR AMERICAN SOUTHWEST as follows: A PART OF LOT 3 IN BLOCK 17 OF Rochelle, Director of OperSPRINKLERS, MORTGAGE CORP., SOUTH HIGHLANDS ADDITION, IN THE CITY OF ations – 575-734-5420 or ROSWELL, COUNTY OF CHAVES AND STATE OF rochelled@dexterdemons.o Defendants. Defendants. NEW MEXICO, AS SHOWN ON THE OFFICIAL PLAT rg FILED IN THE CHAVES COUNTY CLERK'S OFFICE NOTICE OF SALE AMENDED NOTICE OF SALE ON FORECLOSURE ON MAY 13, 1901 AND RECORDED IN BOOK A OF EEOE NOTICE is hereby given that on April 11, 2018 at PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the above-entitled PLAT RECORDS, AT PAGES 50-51, BEING MORE 10:00 a.m., the undersigned Special Master will sell to Court, having appointed me or my designee as Spe- PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEDEXTER the highest bidder on the East Steps to the Chaves cial Master in this matter with the power to sell, has GINNING AT A POINT THAT IS 345 FEET SOUTH CONSOLIDATED County Courthouse at 400 N. Virginia Ave, Roswell, ordered me to sell the real property (the "Property") AND 168 FEET EAST OF THE NORTHWEST SCHOOLS NM 88201, all Defendants’ interest in the real property situated in Chaves County, New Mexico, commonly CORNER OF LOT 2 IN SAID BLOCK 17 OF SOUTH Notice of Vacancy located at 406 and 408 W. Third, Dexter, State of New known as 3100 Encanto Drive, Roswell, New Mexico HIGHLANDS ADDITION, THENCE SOUTH 132.5 2018-2019 School Year Mexico, and more particularly described as: 88201, and more particularly described as follows: FEET, THENCE EAST 51 FEET, THENCE NORTH 132.5 FEET, THENCE WEST 51 FEET TO THE ELEMENTARY TEACHER LOT FIVE (5) LOT SEVEN (7) AND WEST 25 LOT TEN (10) IN BLOCK TWELVE (12) OF LINDA POINT OF BEGINNING. If there is a conflict between (bilingual preferred but not FEET OF LOT THREE (3) IN BLOCK SEVEN (7) required) VISTA ESTATES NUMBER TWO, IN THE CITY the legal description and the street address, the legal OF BURR ADDITION TO DEXTER, COUNTY OF description shall control. The sale is to begin at 3:00 OF ROSWELL, COUNTY OF CHAVES AND CHAVES AND STATE OF NEW MEXICO, AS STATE OF NEW MEXICO, AS SHOWN ON THE pm on May 3, 2018, east steps of the Chaves County Applicants Must Meet New Mexico Licensure SHOWN, AS SHOWN ON APRIL 19, 1907 AND Courthouse, City of Roswell, County of Chaves, State OFFICIAL PLAT FILED IN THE CHAVES Requirements RECORDED IN BOOK A OF PLAT RECORDS, COUNTY CLERK'S OFFICE ON JUNE 25, 1958 of New Mexico, at which time I will sell to the highest Position will be open until CHAVES COUNTY, NEW MEXICO, AT PAGE 90. and best bidder for cash, in lawful currency of the AND RECORDED IN BOOK C OF PLAT filled. Visit RECORDS, CHAVES COUNTY, NEW MEXICO, United States of America, the Property to pay ex- www.dexterdemons.org for The sale proceeds will pay the expenses of sale, penses of sale, and to satisfy the foreclosure JudgAT PAGE 80. job description. then be applied against the Default and Summary ment granted on February 23, 2018 in the total amount For questions – Bernadette Judgment, Degree of Foreclosure, Order of Sale and The sale is to begin at 11:45 a.m. on April 6, of $49,437.96 with interest at the rate of 6.00% per an- Aragon, Elementary School Appointment of Special Master against the defend- 2018, outside the front entrance of the Fifth Judicial num from September 8, 2017 through the date of the Principal – 575-734-5420 ants, listed above, entered on February 22, 2018 in District, 400 N. Virginia, Roswell, New Mexico 88201 sale. The sale is subject to the entry of an Order by ext. 410 or the amount of $85,108.57, with interest accruing at the at which time I will sell to the highest and best bidder this Court approving the sale. NOTICE IS FURTHER aragonb@dexterdemons.or rate of 10.95% per year ($25.53 per diem) from Janu- for cash in lawful currency of the United States of GIVEN that the real property and improvements cong ary 31, 2018 until paid in full; and EEOE America, the Property to pay expenses of sale, and to cerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all The Default and Summary Judgment, Decree of satisfy the Judgment granted First Mortgage Com- patent reservations, easements, and all taxes and utilForeclosure, Order of Sale and Appointment of Spe- pany, LLC (“FMC”). ity liens, special assessments and taxes that may be 2 UTILITY Construction cial Master may be obtained from either the court clerk FMC was awarded in rem Judgment on January due. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., its attorneys, and the unLaborers needed, pay or the undersigned Special Master prior to the sale 29, 2018, in the principal sum of $103,926.24, plus in- dersigned Special Master, disclaim all responsibility based starts at $12 and up date. BANK OF THE SOUTHWEST has the right to terest due on the Note through August 31, 2017, in the for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property depending on applicants bid at the sale and to apply its judgment to the pur- amount of $12,509.34, and accruing thereafter at the "as is," in its present condition, subject to the valuability & knowledge. chase price as a credit in lieu of cash. For all other bid- rate of 4.25% per annum ($12.10 per diem) until paid, ation of the property by the County Assessor as real or Applicant must be 21 years ders, the sale terms are cash or its equivalent by the plus late fees in the amount of $838.40, plus escrow personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufacof age, hold a valid clean close of business on the day of sale. The sale may be advances in the amount of $6,422.42, plus property tured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mo- driver's license, pass a drug test, & pass background postponed and rescheduled at the Special Master’s preservation in the amount of $1,451.00, plus bile or manufactured home on the property, if any, encheck, ability to speak & discretion. This property is being sold subject to a one attorney's costs, in the amount of $467.65, with in- vironmental contamination on the property, if any, and month right of redemption, any property taxes due terest on the aforesaid amounts at the rate of 4.25% zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NO- understand English, citizen of the United States, from the year 2014 forward, any and all easements, per annum from date of the entry of this Judgment un- TICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such nonsmoker, physically fit to utility liens, or special assessments. PROSPECTIVE til paid. sale shall take title to the above described real prop- perform job scope of work, PURCHASERS ARE ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR The sale is subject to rights and easements of re- erty subject to a one (1) month right of redemption. High School diploma or OWN EXAMINATION OF TITLE AND THE CONDI- cord, to unpaid property taxes and assessments and PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT SALE ARE ADGED, out of town travel TION OF THE PROPERTY AND CONSULT THEIR to the one (1) month right of redemption in favor of the VISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF required. Company pays all OWN ATTORNEY BEFORE BIDDING. Defendants as specified in the Judgment filed herein. THE TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPexpenses involved with ____________________ ERTY AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY travel. Company offers David Washburn PROSPECTIVE PURCHASERS AT THE SALE ARE BEFORE BIDDING. By: Robert A. Doyle c/o Legal vacation, insurance P.O. Box 91988 reimbursement. Contact ADVISED TO MAKE THEIR OWN EXAMINATION OF Process Network P.O. Box 51526 Albuquerque, NM Albuquerque, NM 87199 TITLE AND THE CONDITION OF THE PROPERTY 87181 1 NM-17-770501-JUD IDSPub #0138573 575-317-4031 between 9-5 to schedule an interview or (575) 443-4576 AND TO CONSULT THEIR OWN ATTORNEY BE- 3/27/2018 4/3/2018 4/10/2018 4/17/2018 send contact information to david@ancillaryls.com FORE BIDDING. ________________________________________________ 045 045 johnsonsboring@mail.com Employment Employment STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

Notice of Commission Meeting...

Publish March 27, 2018 NOTICE OF A NEW MEXICO DRY ONION COMMISSION MEETING

/s/ Faisal Sukhyani__ Faisal Sukhyani C/O Leverick & Musselman, LLC 5120 San Francisco NE Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109 ________________________________________________

IFB #18-11...

Notice is hereby given that a meeting of the New Mexico Dry Onion Commission will be held in the confer- Publish March 27, 2018 ence room of the New Mexico Department of Agriculture, 3190 S. Espina Street, Las Cruces, New Mexico, INVITATION FOR BIDS on Tuesday, April 3, 2018 at 1 p.m. Notice is hereby given by the Board of Education of Purpose: Review year-end and current financial the Roswell Independent School District of Roswell, statements New Mexico that sealed Bids for the furnishing of the FSMA Update following services will be received by Yajaira Alvarez Conduct General Business in the Support and Transportation Services Office, 300 N. Kentucky, Suite 201, Roswell, New Mexico 88201, 045 Employment until GARAGE SALES Opportunities April 30, 2018 @ 2:30 pm BID #18-11 Food 14 temp positions: Ag. Bid #18-12 Non-Food Equip. Opr., 4/22 to 015 Personals Bid #18-13 Produce 12/01/18. Duties: operate Special Notice Bid #18-14 Milk farm equip to plant, cultiv, HUNGER HURTS Please give to your local charity food program

EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES

045

Employment Opportunities

PUT GRAPHICS IN YOUR AD! ADD A PICTURE OF YOUR PET, YOUR HOUSE, YOUR CAR, YOUR COMPANY'S LOGO! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

harv & store crops; attach implements (plow, disc, drill); oper self-propelled custom class harvester; use hand tools to adj speed/weight of cutter, blower, conveyor & head; drive heavy trucks; tow harv. equip; lube/repair farm machinery. Min. 3 mos exper. MBA to lift 60 lbs. & obtain DL w/in 30-90 days of hire. We offer $10.69 – 11.87/hr at 48 hrs/wk. ¾ guar., transp. & subsist. expenses to worksite pd after 50% compl of contract, or earlier. Housing, tools, equip. prov at no cost. Wage rate may incr w/exper. w/company. Bonuses at employer discretion. No min ed. req. Greer Enterprises, Vega, TX. Apply at TWC, 512-475-2571, job #6621886.

Specifications and instructions for RFP's may be obtained from the Roswell Independent School District's website and the above office. The Board of Education reserves the right to reject all RFP's and to waive technicalities and irregularities. /s/ Mona Kirk Mona Kirk, President Board of Education 045

Employment Opportunities

045

Employment Opportunities

PART-TIME home child care helper, high school diploma/GED, must be able to work with all ages. Call 575-910-0980 or 575-622-0098

PANHANDLE TRUCKING needing drivers with Class A CDL, two years experience refer, tanker endorsement a plus. Call Ron at 575-910-9759

HEALTH CARE Services Group now hiring in housekeeping, laundry and floor care. Apply at Casa Maria Health Care Center, Mission Arch Nursing Home, and Sunset Villa Nursing Rehab.

BUTCH'S Rat Hole & Anchor Service now hiring for Drilling assistant at the Artesia, New Mexico facility. Class A CDL drivers. Health care and 401K avail Call Garry at 575-513-1482 or Jason James 432-250-7001. Or apply online at brhas.com

Opportunities

Opportunities

DEXTER CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS Notice of Vacancy 2018-2019 School Year

DEXTER CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS Notice of Vacancy 2018-2019 School Year

HVAC INSTALLERS helper needed, exp a plus, self motivated, drug testing. Apply in person at 309 N. Virginia. No phone calls.

HIGH SCHOOL MATH TEACHER

PART-TIME READING INTERVENTIONIST

Applicants Must Meet New Mexico Licensure Requirements Position will be open until filled. Visit www.dexterdemons.org for job description. For questions – Craig DeYoung, High School Principal – 575-734-5420 ext. 710 or deyoungc@dex terdemons.org

Applicants Must Meet New Mexico Licensure Requirements Position will be open until filled. Visit www.dexterdemons.org for job description. For questions – Bernadette Aragon, Elementary School Principal – 575-734-5420 ext. 410 or aragonb@dex terdemons.org

HAMPTON INN & Suites is now hiring for PT front desk & PT housekeeping and laundry attendant. Must be flexible. Apply in person at 3607 N. Main.

EEOE

EEOE

DEXTER CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS Notice of Vacancy 2018-2019 School Year MIDDLE SCHOOL SCIENCE TEACHER Applicants Must Meet New Mexico Licensure Requirements Position will be open until filled. Visit www.dexterdemons.org for job description. For questions – Chanda Crandall, Middle School Principal – 575-734-5420 ext. 510 or crandallc@dex terdemons.org EEOE ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT NEEDED at Family Owned Service Business Full Time Position, Experience in Accounts Receivable & Microsoft Office. Apply in person at 1206 W. Hobbs

CHECK OUT our employment opportunities, we are looking for a sales and warehouse position. Also a light auto and tire tech position open. Applicants must have valid drivers license, good customer skills, positive attitude. Both full and part time applicants will be considered. Apply in person only, no phone calls please, at 101 S. Main in Roswell today. MJG CORPORATION is accepting applications for a secretary position. Please pick up application at MJG Corporation, 204 W. 4th St., Roswell, NM 88201 or fax work history to 575-623-3075 Attn: Gary. Email history to gchaveswmjg@qwestoffice. net. JOURNEYMAN HVAC technician needed, 4 years exp, drug testing, wage depends on exp. Apply in person at 309 N Virginia. No calls.

MECA THERAPIES is continuing to expand & hiring qualified Full Time Speech Language Pathologists and Occupational Therapists for Hobbs & Roswell Children’s Outpatient Clinic (opening soon) with experience or who want to gain experience with pediatrics. MECA Therapies has big plans for the future & we want you to be a part of it! We are proud to offer staff: Competitive Salaries Comprehensive Benefits Package to include Health, Dental, Vision, Life & Short Term and Disability Plans Please send your resume to the following email addresses: erin@mecatherapies.com NOW HIRING Drivers in the Roswell Area!! 2 Yr experience, Valid CDL, Home time. 2500-3000 adv. miles per week. Zero DWIs, Preventable accidents 3yrs, 575-317-3540


B8 Tuesday, March 27, 2018

045

Employment Opportunities

225

KYMERA INDEPENDENT Physicians is now seeking Qualified Applicants for: Roswell Location Marketing Manager: Marketing Degree 3-4 yrs on/job exp preferred. Managerial, organizational, & effective communication skills and demonstrate ability to campaign to the community and outlying areas. Roswell Location Billing/Coding Specialist: FT - Customer Svc Skills and computer skills, with emphasis on EMR knowledge required. 1-2 yrs working in medical office setting preferred. Roswell & Carlsbad Location EMT or CMA: FT: 1-2 yrs exp working in a medical office. Applicants must possess the ability to work with multiple patients in a high volume office setting, chart preparation familiarity, and have multitasking skills; EMR & basic computer knowledge.

Classifieds

General Construction

BERRONES CONSTRUCTION Remodeling, painting, roofing, sheds, additions, fencing. Licensed, Bonded. Ray, 626-4153

INTERIOR & EXTERIOR Maintenance Commercial & Residential One time or recurring Trash Removal too! 575-973-1019 ALPHA CONSTRUCTION. Residential & commercial new construction, remodels, additions, concrete, roofing & painting. Lic. & Bonded. Adam 622-3781 or 626-2050.

PAINTING, FLOORING, fencing, patios, porches. Free estimates, call 575-914-4140

CERRITOS MEXICAN Kitchen is seeking to fill an Assistant Manager, Line Cook, and Server positions. Cerritos is a fast paced, locally owned restaurant with a reputation in the community of being service and family oriented. If you would like to join the Cerritos team, please apply in person at 2103 N. Main St. Cerritos offers competitive compensation and growth opportunities. Qualification requirements include 2 years of restaurant management, bar tending, and kitchen experience. Compensation based on experience. 135

Ceramic Tile

20 YEARS experience ceramic tile setter. Call Ben 575-910-3467 140

WANT CLEAN windows? Sunshine Window Service 575-626-5458 / 626-5153 OCC CLEANING Angels Pricilla & Ernie 575-910-9140, 420-5388 Free Estimates *Commercial and Residential cleaning. 12 years experience. Insured and Bonded! 150

200

Fencing

M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991 METAL OR wood chain link fencing, mobile welding, & fence repairs. Call 575-910-5044.

HUGHESNET SATELLITE Internet ? 25mbps for just $49.99/mo! Get More Data FREE Off-Peak Data. No phone line required! FAST download speeds. WiFi built in! FREE Standard Installation! Call 1-844-781-1139 DIRECTV SELECT PACKAGE! Over 150 Channels! ONLY $35/month (for 12 mos.) Order Now! Get a $200 AT&T Visa Rewards Gift Card (some restrictions apply) CALL 1- 888-758-5998 SAVE ON Medicare Supplement Insurance! Get a FAST and FREE Rate Quote from Medicare.com. No Cost! No Obligation! Compare Quotes from Major Insurance Cos. Operators Standing By. CALL 1-877-358-0472 GET AN iPhone 8 or Samsung Galaxy8 for $34/month. Call AT&T Wireless today to learn how to get a new phone. Call while supplies last. 1-888-989-2198 EARTHLINK HIGH Speed Internet. As Low As $14.95/month (for the first 3 months.) Reliable High Speed Fiber Optic Technology. Stream Videos, Music and More! Call Earthlink Today 1-888-805-8653

YARD WORK, clean-ups, lawns. Handyman svc. David 637-9580.

RUNNING BEAR Construction. Roofing, concrete, block & stucco. Lic: 373219. Call 317-6058

IN-GROUND Pool & Spa construction, outdoor kitchens, outdoor living areas, landscaping & irrigation. Free estimates. Licensed, insured & bonded. LIC# 393400. 310-987-2082. 285

SHINGLE ROOF Jobs. Call 5-Candelaria Const. Insured. 626-4079 or 622-2552. 395

Stucco Plastering

M.G. Horizons All types of Stucco and Wire lath. Free Estimates 623-1991 410

Tree Service

BK STUMP Grinding Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 840-0443, 914-5421

Miscellaneous Services

DISH TV $59.99 For 190 Channels $14.95 High Speed Internet. Free Installation, Smart HD DVR Included, Free Voice Remote. Some restrictions apply. Call 1-855-404-4306

310

Painting/ Decorating

TIME TO PAINT? Quality int/ext. painting. Call 637-9108 345

Remodeling

NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552. 350

Roofing

BERRONES CONSTRUCTION shingles, metal roofing & torch-down roofing. Licensed & Bonded. Free Estimates. Call Ray at 575-626-4153. FLAT & METAL ROOFS renewing at 1/2 cost of replacement, 20-year warranty. 575-937-6647.

We are now hiring!

Explore the career possibilities at PepsiCo, the world’s second largest food and beverage company. Our main businesses – Quaker, Tropicana, Gatorade, Frito-Lay and Pepsi-Cola – make hundreds of enjoyable foods and beverages that are loved throughout the world. We’re offering competitive compensation, excellent benefits, and a team oriented environment. Our location in ROSWELL has immediate FULL-TIME openings and is actively recruiting for the following positions: •Relief Driver (CDL Required)

Apply online at: www.pepsijobs.com All qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, national origin, protected veteran status, or disability status. PepsiCo is an equal opportunity employer. Minorities/Females/ Disability/Protected Veteran/Sexual Orientation/Gender Identity

490

455

Money to Loan/ Borrow

504 E. Tilden. Fixer-upper. $12000 firm. 575-420-2821. CONDO FOR sale. 2/2. 2716 N. Penn. # 47. 1800 sq. ft. Quiet, w/pool. $183,000. 505-918-2002. FOR SALE by owner, 3br/1ba, fenced backyard, w/d hookups. 3 blks from Monterrey Elementary. 575-625-9004. 492

490

Homes For Sale

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

HOMES FOR you or rental income, fnced yrds, call MTH 8a-noon 624-1331 SPACIOUS 3/2/2 brick home in Enchanted Hills. Open concept with 2 large living areas, bonus room for guest or gym. Recent updates. 1200 Hall Dr. NO Owner financing Asking 219k. Pics on Facebook @ Roswell Homes Text 575 444 6231 to show.

Homes for Sale/ Rent

SELL OR RENT YOUR HOUSE FASTER! INCLUDE A PICTURE FOR JUST $6! E-MAIL PICTURES TO CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM 520

REAL ESTATE OPPORTUNITY

Homes For Sale

POSSIBLE OWNER Finacing: All brick, 2700sqft., 3BD/2BA, living room, game room, totally remodeled. 502 Barnett Dr. $220K. Call for app @ 575420-1274 or 575-420-4993

TREE PRUNING & removals. Free estimates in Roswell. 575-910-4581

REAL ESTATE loans Credit not a problem. We buy any type of property Tel 575 644 9408

GARZIASCAPES. RESIDENTIAL, commercial & country lawns. 910-5044.

Concrete

M.G. Horizons. Metal, flat, TPO, torch downs, comp. shingles. Free estimates, licensed & bonded. 623-1991.

VIAGRA AND CIALIS USERS! Cut your drug costs! SAVE $$! 50 Pills for $99.00. FREE Shipping! 100% Guaranteed and Discreet. CALL 1-800-956-1792

FREE ESTIMATES for mowing. 20 years family owned business. 291-5484, 626-0518, 347-5648

FREE ESTIMATE Walker's Yard Service, 20 yrs experience, Like the opportunity to care all year for your lawn needs, call-317-0141

Roofing

QUICKCUT TREE Service, Call Me First, Lowest Prices, Fast Service 575-420-1453

FREE ESTIMATES. Affordable, for all your lawn care needs. No job too big or small! Call 575-626-0200

LAWN MOWED, trimming, and trees cut down. 575-910-2033.

350

LIFE ALERT. 24/7. One press of a button sends help FAST! Medical, Fire, Burglar. Even if you can't reach a phone! FREE Brochure. CALL 800-644-2630

SPRING CLEAN-UP rake leaves, tree trimming, weed eating, haul trash, property clean-up & much more. Call Joseph, 317-2242.

NEED YOUR lawn mowed also mow empty lots, call Bob. Free esti. 420-2670

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

GOT AN OLDER CAR, VAN OR SUV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane Society. Call 1-800-316-0265

Landscape/ Lawnwork

TONY THE PRO Lawn Care and Tree Service Free Estimates 575-626-0379

Cleaning

UNABLE TO work due to injury or illness? Call Bill Gordon & Assoc., Social Security Disability Attorneys! FREE Evaluation. Local Attorneys Nationwide 1-800-591-5109 [Mail: 2420 N St NW, Washington DC. Office: Broward Co. FL (TX/NM Bar.)

ROOFING, INSULATION, bath remodels, painting, stucco, concrete, fencing, storage sheds, additions, patios, porches. Call Ernie at 575-910-9140 or 575-910-9139 270

Miscellaneous Services

DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. CALL 1-800-948-7239

SANCHEZ REMODELING. Drywall, Tile, Painting,Concrete, Quality work. Free estimates: 575-317-6393

Please send Resume with Cover Letter to: e-mail: hr@kymeramedical.com or fax: 575-627-9520 GROWING COMPANY looking for experienced roofers, construction framer & concrete. Call 910-9140

285

Lots for Sale

PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, good covenants (no mobile homes), Pecan Lands West on Brown Road between Country Club & Berrendo Road. Owner will finance with 10% down. 622-3479, 624-9607, 910-1913, 626-6791, 626-3848. 535

Apartments Furnished

1&2BD, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 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 3BR/2BA APARTMENT. 950 SF. $681 + electric, central AC & heat, gorgeous tile in living room & kitchen. New carpet in bedrooms. Ceiling fans in every room. Pool, 2 playgrounds, 2 laundry rooms & acres of green grass. Plenty of shady trees & beautiful roses everywhere. Peaceful & family friendly. 502 S. Wyoming. 505-804-3256.

Roswell Daily Record Dennis the Menace

540

Apartments UnFurnished

EFF, 1 & 2br, wtr pd, No pets, No Hud. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348. PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOME SERVICES, 501 NORTH MAIN. MOVING SPECIAL! 2BR apartment, 575-317-5040 2BD APARTMENT 575-910-8170 or 840-4333

550

Houses for RentUnfurnished

22 W. Bryne 3bd/1ba $500dep $750mo. Hud Accepted, no bills pd. 575703-7307 or 575-365-7964 308 BROKEN Arrow, 3/2/1, $1100mo. Call American Realty & Mgmt, 575-623-9711 EXECUTIVE HOME. 814 Twin Diamond. 3BR/2BA, approx 2800 sq.ft., 1 yr lease min., $1750/mo, $1750/dep. 575-627-9942

ENJOY LIVING in a clean, spacious, comfortable 2BD/1BA apt. Close to shopping, extra storage, water + gas paid. $595, 1114 S. Kentucky. 910-0851 or 910-7076.

AVAILABLE SOON. 2706 S. Lea, 3br/1ba, extra clean, fenced yard, washer/dryer hookups, stove, fridge. No pets, No HUD, $850/mo, $850/dep. 1 year lease. 575-420-0744

205-B E 23rd, 3/3/1, $750mo. 1005 Plaza Del Sol, 2/2, $650mo., Call American Realty & Mgmt, 575-623-9711

4 BDR/2Ba, Refrigerated Air, New Carpet, New Appliances, New Fence, New Stucco and Paint. $1200 month. Hud Ok. 1811 N. Cambridge. (575)317-8894.

SUPER SENIOR 4 plex Apt 2406 1/2 N Grand 2BD2BA Appliances laundry area carport Near shopping & hospitals No pets No hud $700 wtr pd 317-8854 545

Houses Furnished

1BD/2BD, furnished-unfurnished, no smoking/Hudpets. all bills pd. 623-6281 550

Houses for RentUnfurnished

ENCHANTED HILLS. 3 BR, 2200 Sq. Ft, 1 year lease, No Pets, No Smoking, No HUD. $1400. Text/Call 575-626-7896. TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Berkshire Hathaway Home Services. 575-624-2262 DUPLEX IN Briar Ridge area. 2BD/2BA w/ attached patios, 1 car garage. $1100mo. 575-910-7284 1719 W. Walnut, 3BD/2BA, ref. air, heat pump. stove, refrigerator, washer/dryer hookups, large covered patio, no pets/smoking, $1000mo., $800dep 9145402 3BD/2BA granite counter tops, sky lights, walk-in closet, w/d hookups, $1000mo $1000dep. 114 Oliver St. LeRoy: 702-232-7578. No smoking, pets or Hud. LUXURY DUPLEX, 2 lg bd/2 full bth, Brick FP, new carpet, new paint, 1100 sq ft, fenced yd, patio, garage, $1000/mo, available now 624-1975, 625-2000 400 E 5th.. 1BR/1BA. Stove, fridge. Water paid. $450/mo. $300/dep. No pets. 910-9648.

QUALITY FAMILY LIVING, All Bills Paid. 1BR $630, 2BR $748, 3br/2ba $858/mo., central heating & cooling, newly remodeled. cable included. 502 S. Wyoming. 575-622-4944

1205 W. 13th 3bd/2ba $650mo. $300dep. No pets, 910-9648

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

3BR/1BA. $850/mo. HUD ok. No pets. References 575-317-3222.

2BD/1BA, 1007 1/2 S. Lea. Fresh paint, new carpet, carport, storage, no smoking, no pets, Wtr pd, $575mo., $500dep., 575-317-1371 LARGE 2BD, $700/mo. Small 1BD, $500/mo. No pets. 575-626-9347. 1BD DUPLEX. Newly remodeled, appliances. Senior citizens. 420-2395. EXTRA NICE, 1bd, off street parking, w/ appls, water pd, no pets. 910-9357 1715 W. Alameda. 3BR/2BA, ref. air, stove, fridge, W/D hookups. No Pets/smoking. $1000/mo. $800/dep. 575-914-5402. 2BR. $675/mo. $500/dep. 1502 N. Delaware. No HUD. 317-4307. 11 E. WELLS (near ENMUR and Airport) large 3br, 1ba, fenced yard, stove, fridge, w/d hookups, laundry room, completely remodeled very clean & cute, $675 mo, plus deposit, No HUD. References & rental history required. Call or Text: 575-578-3034 FOR RENT or sale, 3br/1ba, fenced backyard, w/d hookups. 3 blks from Monterrey Elementary. 575-625-9004. 580

Office or Business Places

OFFICE SUITES Available: FREE...First Month's Rent FREE...Utilities FREE...Parking FREE...SMILES From Small Office to Large Suites Newly Remodeled Petroleum Building 200 West First Street in Roswell Call us today @ 622-5385 & Come Take a LOOK! EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITE FOR LEASE: 1600 sqft, newly decorated, private rest room, covered parking, main street signage at 1210 N. Main. Contact David McGee, 575-622-2401. FOR LEASE, space in Sunwest Centre Office Complex at 500 N. Main St. Various size spaces. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. High floor space available for larger tenants. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 575-623-1652 or mobile 575-420-2546 222 A. W 2nd, Retail. $500/mo., $500/dep., water pd, 1 yr lease. 317-8331 222 W 2nd, Retail. $725/mo., $725/dep., 1 year lease min. 317-8331 605

Miscellaneous for Sale

WHEELCHAIR CARRIER, nebulizer, c-pap breathing unit, power wheelchair, hospital bed, adult wheel chair, walker with seat and brakes, oxygen concentrator 622-7638 SAFE STEP Walk-In Tub #1 Selling Walk-in Tub in North America. BBB Accredited. Arthritis Foundation Commendation. Therapeutic Jets. MicroSoothe Air Therapy System Less than 4 Inch Step-In. Wide Door. Anti-Slip Floors. American Made. Call 800-296-0427 for up to $1500 Off. EXEDE SATELLITE Internet. Affordable, high speed broadband satellite internet anywhere in the U.S. Order now and save $100. Plans start at $39.99/month. Call 1-800-476-0029

615

Coins/Gold/ Silver/Buy

U.S. & FOREIGN coins and currency, buy, sell or trade, gold and silver coins. 622-7239, 2513 W. 2nd 620

Wanted to BuyMisc.

TOP DOLLAR Paid for furniture, collectibles, appliances, antiques, tools, saddles, plus anything else of value. We pay cash with same day removal of all items. Complete/partial households & personal estates welcome. 623-0136 or 910-6031 FREON R12 WANTED: CERTIFIED BUYER will PICK UP and PAY CA$H for R12 cylinders or cases of cans. (312) 291-9169; www.refrigerantfinders.com WE BUY gold school class rings, wedding bands and all gold jewelry. No white gold. We buy all U.S silver dollars, dated up to 1935. No texts, call 317-2976 670

Farm Equipment

JOHN DEER Brush Hog, used, $800. 575-910-7348 715

Hay and Feed Sale

PREMIUM 2 string alfalfa bales, $12. 575-626-0159 775

Motorcycles & Scooters

HARLEY SPORTSTER, 2007 883, low miles, 575-840-4898. 780

RV’’s & Campers Hauling

MAIN TRAILER Sales Inc. New & Used Travel Trailers & 5th Wheels. Parts & Service. 2900 W. 2nd St. 575-622-1751 Mon-Fri, 8-5:30, Sat 9-2 maintrailersalesinc.com 790

Autos for Sale

SHOW US WHAT YOU'RE SELLING! INCLUDE A PICTURE IN YOUR AD FOR JUST $6! E-MAIL PICTURES TO CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM TIRED OF the Hassle In Trading Or Selling Your Car or Truck? Economy Motors Will Either Purchase Your Vehicle Or Consign It For Sale At No Cost To You!! Call Or Come By For Details. Economy Motors 2506 N. Main Roswell, NM 88201 625-2440� *21 Years In Business� *Family Owned & Operated � *Licensed, Bonded & Insured 2004 BUICK Lesabre Limited, loaded, runs good, not new, $1750. 575-317-0191 795

Pickups/ Trucks/Vans

1995 CHEVROLET, 3 quarter ton, extended cab, loaded, excellent condition, needs transmission. $1500 575-317-0191 2006 SILVERADO crew cab 4X4. 113k miles. Excellent running condition. $13500 OBO. 626-7802.


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