07 16 14 Roswell Daily Record

Page 1

Roswell Daily Record THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

Vol. 123, No. 170 75¢ Daily / $1.25 Sunday

July 16, 2014

First flight of immigrants left from Roswell BY JEFF TUCKER RECORD STAFF WRITER

Whether it was a grudging goodbye, or simply a see-you-again-soon farewell, Roswell can now go into the history books as being the first American city from which the summer surge of Central American illegal immigrants have been deported. A flight carrying about 40 immigrant adults with children, who had been detained at the Federal Law

WEDNESDAY

www.rdrnews.com

Enforcement Training Center in Artesia, departed the Roswell International Air Center Monday morning for Honduras.

The illegal immigrants are being turned over to gover nment of ficials in their home countries for processing, federal officials said. Airport manager Jennifer Brady Griego said the McDonnell Douglas MD-80 charter flight departed Roswell at about 9 a.m. Monday, under tight secu-

rity at the airport. The MD-80 series can seat from 130 to 172 passengers, depending on the seating configuration. The immigrants had been temporarily detained at FLETC in Artesia since illegally crossing the U.S.Mexico border this year, along with tens of thousands of other Central Americans, including thousands of unaccompanied children. The administration of President Barack Obama

last month converted the FLETC facility in Artesia into one of several temporary sites to deal with the surge of women and children illegally entering the United States from Central America this summer.

Federal of ficials said Monday’s deportation flight was only “the initial wave” of deportations of adults and children back to Central America. The trip south was no doubt in far better comfort than the immigrants’ harrowing trip to

the United States, which sometimes involved children riding atop freight trains through Mexico.

“As President Obama, the vice president, and (U.S. Department of Homeland Security) Secretary (Jeh) Johnson have said, our border is not open to illegal migration and we will send recent illegal migrants back,” DHS spokesperson Marsha Catron said Tuesday.

to Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador in the coming days and weeks, based on the results of removal proceedings or expedited removal. These returns are a result of the president’s direction to surge resources, such as immigration judges and asylum officers to process these cases more quickly.”

U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce, who in June was appointed by U.S. House Speaker

Firefighters take icy plunge to raise funds “We expect additional migrants will be returned

See FLIGHT, Page A3

Money raised to help girl, 7, with leukemia

BY RANDAL SEYLER RECORD STAFF WRITER

Roswell Firefighters, along with Sierra Volunteer Fire Department firefighters, gathered in Cahoon Park on Tuesday to take an icy plunge for a good cause. The firefighters held an Ice Water Challenge to raise funds for Kinzie Aldrich, the daughter of Warren and Sarah Aldrich. Warren is a firefighter with the Roswell Fire Department. Kinzie, 7, was diagnosed with leukemia, and although the prognosis for her recovery is good, the family has been struggling with the medical bills. “The Ice Water Challenge is a nationwide thing, and we are doing this one for our Kinzie,” said Deputy Chief Devin Graham. “We have been passing the bucket around the stations, and we are taking a collection here today.” About 40 firefighters

Randal Seyler Photos

Above: Members of the Roswell Fire Department, along with members of the Sierra Volunteer Fire Department, held an Ice Water Challenge on Tuesday in Cahoon Park. The firefighters took a plunge in an icy tub of water to raise funds to help pay the medical bills for the daughter of one of the firefighters.

Right: Seven-year-old Kinzie Aldrich, center, stands with her father, Warren Aldrich, left, little sister, McKenna, and Deputy Chief Devin Graham during Tuesday’s Ice Water Challenge. Kinzie was diagnosed with leukemia, and the Ice Water Challenge was a fundraiser to help her family with the medical bills.

turned out to take an icy plunge in a flexible tub they set up in the park and filled with water from a tanker truck and several dozen bags of ice. “Men and women in the fire service across the country are known for bravery and dedication,” Graham said. “Most of all, firefighters are known for their brotherhood, for their dedication to one another.” Graham said firefighters routinely answer the call for help from complete strangers, but sometimes it is one of their own who need help. “It’s times like this where our true strength shows.” Graham said that while the medical bills for Kinzie’s treatment has put a financial strain on her family, the Aldriches will not bear this burden alone. “We issue this Ice Water Challenge to anyone out in

Salvation Army to host Parks Committee OKs Altrusa request benefit golf tourney STAFF REPORT

The Salvation Army is sponsoring a golf tournament at the New Mexico Military Institute Golf Course at 8 a.m. on Saturday, July 26. The tournament will be played as a three-person best ball. Green fees, cart, breakfast and lunch are included in the $60 per person entry fee. The proceeds of the tourney will allow the Salvation Army to continue serving

the people of the Pecos Valley community. Maj. Beau Perez, of the Salvation Army’s Roswell Corps, reported that in June, 217 families and 2,469 seniors received emergency food aid. In addition, The Salvation Army assists with clothing, rental and utility allowances, substance abuse rehabilitation and emergency disaster relief.

BY RANDAL SEYLER RECORD STAFF WRITER

The Parks and Recreation Committee voted on Monday to approve the Roswell Altrusa Club’s request to change the name of the Missouri Avenue Park. The request will next go to the City Council for approval. Deborah Goluska, Altrusa member and former club president, asked the commissioners to consider renaming the new park after the club, which donated $6,000 to purchase furnishings and equipment for the city park, which opened to the public earlier this year.

Goluska presented the same request before the Parks and Recreation Commission on June 30, and the commissioners forwarded the request on to the committee.

“The Roswell Altrusa Club has been active in the community since 1947,” Goluska said. The Altrusa Club was responsible for starting Friends of the Roswell Library and the Literacy Council. Altrusa also provides college scholarships for local students and pays the fees for local residents to take their GED tests. “We have a long history of community involvement, and we see this park as another way for us to contribute to the community,” Goluska said.

California approves fines for water-wasters

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California water regulators voted Tuesday to approve fines up to $500 a day for residents who waste water on lawns, landscaping and car washing, as a report showed that consumption throughout the state has actually risen amid the worst drought in nearly four decades. The action by the State Water Resources Control Board came after its own survey showed that conservation measures to date have failed to achieve the 20 percent reduction in

See GOLF, Page A2

water use sought by Gov. Jerry Brown. Survey results released before the 4-0 vote showed water consumption throughout California had actually jumped by 1 percent this past May compared with the same month in previous years. The fines will apply only to wasteful outdoor watering, including watering landscaping to the point that runoff flows onto sidewalks, washing a vehicle without a nozzle on the hose, or hosing down sidewalks and driveways.

HIGH 93 LOW 67

TODAY’S FORECAST

“Our goal here is to light a fire under those who aren’t yet taking the drought seriously,” water board Chairwoman Felicia Marcus said in an interview after the vote. She called the vote historic, not only because the steps are unprecedented in California but because the board is trying to spread the burden of the drought beyond farmers and agencies that are trying to protect wildlife. She said city and suburban residents are not fully aware of the seriousness of

the three-year drought — the worst in Califor nia since the mid-1970s. “We’re all in this together,” Marcus said. “This is our attempt to say ... this is the least that urban Californians can do.” The board estimates the restrictions, which take ef fect in early August, could save enough water statewide to supply more than 3.5 million people for a year. Cities and water districts were given wide latitude on how the fines will be implemented.

TODAY’S OBITUARIES PAGE A7 • HAZEL RUTH HUBBLE • WILLIAM (BILL) E. CARTER NINNEMANN • GARY RICHARD WRIGHT • BILLY CHARLES FRENCH • MARIO CESAR BENCOMO • BILLIE JEAN CAREY

See PLUNGE, Page A3

Besides the donation already made to the park, the Altrusa Club intends to provide more benches and tables as well as trees and flowers for the park. “If we put our name on something, we’re going to make sure it is nice,” she said. Commissioner Bob Edwards also updated the committee members on the presentation Tim Rogers, an expert in active transportation planning from Santa Fe, made on June 30 regarding the city’s bicycle and walking trails. “We are asking that we connect Cielo Grande Park with Spring River See COMMITTEE, Page A2

AP Photo

A sprinkler system sprays water onto a parked car along the curb in Glendale, Calif., Wednesday, July 9. CLASSIFIEDS ..........B8 COMICS .................B7 ENTERTAINMENT .....A8 FINANCIAL ..............B5

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

HOROSCOPES .........A8 LOTTERIES .............A2

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

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

WEATHER ............A10


Gov. Martinez announces appointments A2 Wednesday, July 16, 2014

SUBMITTED

SANTA FE — Gov. Susana Martinez announced Tuesday appointments to the Public Defender Commission, the New Mexico Family Caregiver Task Force, the New Mexico Council for Purchasing from Persons with Disabilities, the Board of Directors of the New Mexico Insurance Health Exchange, the Board of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine, the Radiation

GENERAL

Technical Advisory Council, the Counseling and Therapy Practices Board, the Behavioral Health Planning Council, the Technology Research Collaborative, the State Commission for Community Volunteerism, the Northern Regional Housing Authority, the Board of Chiropractic Examiners, the Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Professional Surveyors, the New Mexico Museum of Space History Commission, and the Pecos River Com-

pact Commission.

Ray Willis, of Roswell, has been appointed to the Pecos River Compact Commission. Willis is a petroleum engineer and geologist. He is president of Hanson Operating Company Inc. in Roswell and president of White Mountain Development Company in Ruidoso. Willis has drilled and completed over 1,400 oil and gas wells across the United States. He is a lifetime senior member of the Society of Petroleum Engineers.

Editor discusses career with Kiwanis

Jeanne Quintero, of Las Cruces, has been appointed to the Public Defender Commission. Quintero is superintendent of Juvenile Justice Services, which operates through the Children, Youth and Families Department (CYFD). Quintero previously served as the deputy district attorney in the 3rd Judicial District Attor ney’s Of fice in Las Cruces from 2004 to 2012. Quintero received her Juris Doctorate from the University of New Mexico School

Randal Seyler Photo

Roswell Daily Record Editor Tim Howsare, left, visited the Roswell Kiwanis Club on Tuesday as Kiwanian Robert Sherman, right, looks on. Howsare discussed his journalism career and his experiences as a musician and booking agent. The Kiwanis Club meets each Tuesday at noon at K-Bob’s Steakhouse in Roswell.

Committee Continued from Page A1

Trail using the alley along the golf course,” Edwards said. Connecting the park with the trail would give bicyclists and walkers about 10 miles of contiguous trail. At the June 30 meeting, Rogers reviewed existing trails in Roswell and several main streets for quality of bicycle traffic, and recommended several inexpensive improvements to the commissioners. Connecting Spring River Trail with Cielo Grande and eventually with the Hondo River Trail were two goals discussed at the meeting. Edwards said the connection from Cielo Grande to Spring River Trail through the alley would be an inexpensive way to connect the western end of town. “We’re trying to use what we already have,” said City Councilor and Committee Member Tabitha Denny. “Eventually, we would like to have trails connecting Cielo Grande to the Spring River Zoo. This is something we want to do not just for the residents of Roswell, but for visitors as well.” The committee agreed to forward Edwards’ recommendation to the City Council for consideration. Parks and Recreation Director Tim Williams informed the committee members that he had priced some splash pads and the cost could run from $125,000 for a two-spray pad to $225,000 for a five-spray pad. “This is something the mayor is

LOTTERY NUMBERS Mega Millions 2-4-17-36-40

Mega Ball: 5

Roadrunner Cash 3-15-27-30-31 Pick 3 4-6-3

NOBLE FINANCE

“We want to make you a loan”

$200 - $2,000 (575)622-0900

interested in, and we would like to see about adding one pad a year,” Williams said. “The pads are much less expensive than a swimming pool and they are very popular in communities with hot climates.” Williams also told the committee members that the Yucca Center has limited its classes and activities to the lower floors, closing off the upper floors due to concerns over accessibility. Besides needing nearly $60,000 in work to make the Yucca Center compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act, the center also needs extensive roof repairs and HVAC work. There is $500,000 from the state Legislature that has been earmarked for roof repairs, but Williams said he thought the city should think twice about making that much of an investment in the old facility. Williams estimated that replacing the Yucca Center with a new facility could cost at least $6 million for a basic building of about 40,000 square feet. “We will have to decide what we are going to do as a community,” Williams said. “But we are talking about a building that was built in 1911, and we have to decide what we realistically want to spend on a structure that old or do we want to consider building a new building.” Councilor Savino Sanchez questioned whether or not the Yucca Center should remain open or even be

NOTICE TO OUT-OF-TOWN SUBSCRIBERS

Buena Vida, Picacho, Tinnie, Hondo, Glencoe

Dan Parson 575.937.6539

Capitan, Lincoln, Carrizozo, Fort Stanton

Dan Parson 575.937.6539

Ruidoso, Alto, Ruidoso Downs

102 S. Virginia Roswell 575-317-0521

(One block off Main St., across from Mayes Lumber)

“Youth basketball, volleyball, and dance and karate, those programs would be affected,” Williams said. “Some of these programs have been there a long time.”

One way to pay for a new center would be to seek a millage rate increase to fund the facility, which would involve a citywide campaign and the support of the community. “I understand what you are saying,” Councilor Jeanine Corn Best said to Sanchez. “You’re basically talking about tough love. If you want to invest in the city, then get off your duff and support it.”

“We have people who expect everything from the government, I think they need to decide, ‘how important are your children to you?’” Sanchez said. “If the people want to keep a Yucca Center, then they need to get involved with fundraising.”

Williams also told committee members that the Cahoon Pool needs $8,000 in repair to replace a pump and motor that is going out. “We will have to close the pool for a day to make the repairs,” Williams said.

Guy Surdi, of Santa Fe, has been appointed to the New Mexico Family Caregiver Task Force. Surdi serves on the Governor’s Commission on Disability as a disability specialist. He has volunteered as a chef with Kitchen Angels, a Santa Fe-based organization that provides and

delivers free meals to the elderly and critically ill. Surdi received his Master of Social Work from Highlands University in Las Vegas, N.M. Beverly Dow, of Albuquerque, has been appointed to the New Mexico Family Caregiver Task Force. Dow has been a full-time caregiver for her father since 2011, and also provided care to her late mother. From 2007 to 2011, and See APPOINTEES, Page A3

UNION AVENUE ROADWORK CONTINUES

STAFF REPORT

The city of Roswell and Constructors Inc. will continue today the rehabilitation of North Union Avenue. North Union will be closed from College Avenue to 13th Street. Pay close attention to traffic-control signage. If you have any questions or concerns, contact project manager Jana Lessard at 575-626-5486.

Golf

Continued from Page A1

Due to the recent high demand for service, the cupboards are bare.

Gen. Jerry Childress and Bart Hoffman have formed the Golf Outing Committee. Four levels of sponsorship are offered. Corporate sponsors receive paid green fees for their team for the cost of $500.

Ar my sponsors pay $250 and get green fees for one member of the team. A hole sponsorship is $100 is a hole sponsor and a sign will be placed at the hole of their choice.

A prize sponsor pays $60 and helps The Salvation Army get prizes for the event. To be a sponsor or for more infor mation, contact Carol Smith at 575-6228700.

CORRECTIONS

An article on Page A1 of the July 15 edition regarding the Yucca Recreation Center should have stated that because the center’s elevator does not accommodate those with disabilities, able-bodied patrons cannot utilize the second floor or basement of the center.

An article on Page A1 of the July 12 edition regarding Central American immigrants in Artesia should not have said U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce said President Barack Obama’s executive order on the DREAM Act contributed to the illegal immigration surge. The Daily Record apologizes for the errors and any inconveniences they may have caused.

CONSTRUCTORS, INC.

General Asphalt, Concrete, Aggregate, Dirt and Utility Construction

Call Constructors for any size construction job at

575.622.1080 Constructors Inc. Serving Southeast New Mexico for more than 50 years

Artesia (Inside City Limits)

Dexter, Rural Dexter

Hagerman, Rural Hagerman

Rural Artesia, Lake Arthur

Rural Roswell

Dan Parson 575.937.6539

Carmen Scafella 575.840.6503 Patricia Hariston 575.840.6928

Victoria Garcia 575.420.0727

Carmen Scafella 575.840.6503

Circulation Department 575.622.9480 Any questions or comments? Call 1-888-842-4121

Vendor Booths For Rent

Antiques One of Kind’s Vintage Jewelry Hand Crafted & Much More

“I don’t want us to put $500,000 into it,” Sanchez said. “What would be the community impact if we just close it?”

of Law in Albuquerque, and her Doctor of Philosophy in Clinical, Research, and Developmental Psychology from the University of Illinois in Chicago.

Listed below are our distributors in your local delivery area:

Sun Country Mini Mall

* * * *

replaced.

Roswell Daily Record

* * * * *

Collectables Memorabilia Original Art Up-Cycled E-Cigs & Liquids

Roswell Daily Record

USPS No 471-200

News & Business Telephone 622-7710 Circulation Telephone 622-7730

Charles Fischer Publisher

cfischer@rdrnews.com

Timothy Howsare Editor editor@rdrnews.com

R. Cory Beck Publisher (1987-2006)

Vonnie Fischer .............................................. Advertising Director addirector@rdrnews.com

Jim Dishman .................................................. 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.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ALL NEW MEXICO 882 ZIP CODES, $12 ONE MONTH, $36 THREE MONTHS, $72 SIX MONTHS, $144 ONE YEAR. All other New Mexico zip codes, $13 one month, $39 three months, $78 six months, $156 one year. All other states in USA, $18 one month, $54 three months, $108 six months, $216 one year. Periodical-postage paid at Roswell, N.M. Postmaster: Please mail change of address to Roswell Daily Record, P.O. Box 1897, Roswell, N.M. 88202-1897. All postal subscriptions will stop at expiration unless payment is made prior to expiration.


GENERAL

Roswell Daily Record

Appointees Continued from Page A2

again in 2014, Dow served as a legislative analyst for the New Mexico House of Representatives. Dow received her Bachelor of Science in Business from Administration Phillips University in Enid, Okla. Veronica De Leon-Dowd, of Santa Fe, has been appointed to the New Mexico Council for Purchasing from Persons with Disabilities. De Leon-Dowd is the deputy director of Program Development and Supports at the New Mexico Division of Vocational Rehabilitation (NMDVR). She also is the program manager for Social Security Reimbursement, Ticket to Work, and Medicaid Adjudication at NMDVR. De Leon-Dowd received her Master of Arts in Counseling and Educational Psychology from New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. Kurt Shipley, of Albuquerque, has been appointed to the Board of Directors of the New Mexico Health Insurance Exchange. Shipley is president of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Mexico. He joined Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Mexico in 1996, and his past leadership roles include vice president of New Mexico Programs and Network Management, chief financial officer and vice president of Finance, director of Financial Reporting, and manager of Financial Shipley Accounting. earned his Bachelor of Science in Accounting from Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah.

Flight

Continued from Page A1

John Boehner to a working group of seven House Republicans to examine the border crisis, said Tuesday the repatriation of the immigrants was a meaningful development. “This is a significant step in curbing the surge of unaccompanied minors and families crossing the border,” Pearce said in a statement. “The president and Secretary Johnson have stated they are committed to enforcing our nation’s immigration laws, and this flight follows through on that commitment. DHS must maintain this strong response, and I look forward to (U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement) continuing these flights throughout the days, weeks and months ahead.” The removal of about 40

ico Division of the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy. Dawson has a Collaborative Law Certification from the State Bar of New Mexico and he is a United States Navy veteran of the Vietnam War. Dawson earned an Master of Arts in Counseling Psychology from Goddard College in Plainfield, Vt. Kendra Morrison, of Los Lunas, has been appointed to the Behavioral Health Planning Council (BHPC). Morrison is senior advocate at Families ASAP in Albuquerque, where she works with families who have children with disabilities, including behavioral health diagnoses. Morrison serves on the Governance Committee for the Systems of Care programs, the New Mexico Restraint and Seclusion Task Force, and the Children and Adolescent Subcommittee for the BHPC. Morrison holds vocational certificates from Fred Pryors Seminars in Albuquerque. John Liebman, of Santa Fe, has been appointed to the Technology Research Collaborative. Liebman is an independent consultant and expert witness. Liebman retired from his senior counsel position at McKenna, Long, and Aldridge, LLP in 2012. During his career, Liebman advised aerospace and defense contractors, as well as academic and research institutions in export regulations. Prior to beginning his private law practice, Liebman served as counsel to and program director for the U.S. Agency for International Development in Washington, D.C. Liebman has also previously served as commissioner of the Cali-

Constance Gehring, of Albuquerque, has been appointed to the Board of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine. Gehring opened an acupuncture clinic in Albuquerque in 2006. She received her Master of Arts in Oriental Medicine from the International Institute of Chinese Medicine in Santa Fe. Selah Chamberlain, of Taos, has been appointed to the Board of Acupuncture and Oriental Medicine. Chamberlain practices Oriental Medicine at various clinics across New Mexico and teaches continuing education classes for acupuncturists. Chamberlain received his Master of Arts in Eastern Classics at St. John’s College in Santa Fe. Ralph Phelps, of Sandia Park, has been appointed to the Radiation Technical Advisory Council. Phelps is a nuclear engineering management consultant and brings more than 40 years of experience in nuclear power. He has consulted for a variety of clients including the Los Alamos Department of Public Utilities, Duke Power, the U.S. Department of Energy, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Phelps earned his Master of Science in Nuclear Engineering from the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia. Chuck Dawson, of Corrales, has been appointed to the Counseling and Therapy Practice Board. Prior to opening his private practice five years ago, Dawson helped clients with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and those living in difficult family situations. He was elected to the Board of Directors for the New Mex-

immigrant adults with children Monday was only a fraction of those hundreds of immigrants being housed in Artesia. Catron said, as of Tuesday, there were 570 immigrants still housed in Artesia. Everyone of them is receiving extensive medical treatment and other benefits, all at the expense of American taxpayers. The FLETC facility in Artesia has a maximum bed capacity for 672 immigrants. The DHS said more than 81,995 immigrants from Central American countries have been returned to their home countries since Oct. 1, 2013. However, none of the unaccompanied Central American children smuggled into the United States this year have been sent

Plunge

Continued from Page A1

out in the community who can show their support for the fire department and this family,” Graham said, “and encourage everyone to pass this challenge on.”

Graham said the Roswell firefighters chal-

lenge other fire departments in the area, as well as members of the Denver Broncos and Dallas Cowboys, to take the Ice Water Challenge.

A video of the challenge will be posted online with

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

fornia State World Trade Commission from 1983 through 1990. Liebman received his Juris Doctorate from the University of Califor nia, Los Angeles School of Law in Los Angeles, Calif. Larry Stolarczyk, of Raton, has been appointed to the Technology Research Collaborative. Stolarczyk is the executive research director and cofounder at Stolar Research Corporation, a multimillion-dollar research and development company. Over the course of his 30 years with Stolar Research Corporation, Stolarczyk has made numerous contributions to the field of electromagnetic remote sensing. He holds over 100 U.S. and foreign patents and has published more than 60 technical papers. He received his Doctor of Science in Electrical Engineering from New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. Larry Alei, of Albuquerque, has been appointed to the Technology Research Collaborative. Alei has held a variety of positions through his 27year career with Intel Corp., including business integration manger, chief of staff to worldwide manufacturing general managers, and finance manager. He is an Intel Encore Fellow with WESST, a statewide small business development and training organization. He received his Master of Business Administration from the University of California, Los Angeles. John Dowdle, of Santa Fe, has been appointed to the Technology Research Collaborative. Dowdle is a partner in NODO Services, Inc, a management con-

sulting practice focused on logistics and strategic planning. He joined NODO after 30 years with Booz Allen Hamilton Inc., an international strategy and technology consulting firm. During his time at Booz Allen Hamilton, Dowdle became the first president of the Transportation Consulting Division, where he helped grow the Division to over 120 employees. He earned his Master of Science in Economics from Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pa. Wesley Jackson, of Las Cruces, has been appointed to the State Commission for Community Volunteerism. Jackson is the president of the Associated Students of New Mexico State University and an intern in U.S. Rep. Steve Pearce’s (NM-2) Las Cruces office. Jackson is a member of Kappa Sigma Fraternity and serves as philanthropy director of the NMSU chapter, where he raised funds for the Military Heroes Foundation and for building homes on the grounds of military and VA centers. Jackson is a Bachelor of Business Administration candidate at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces. Rayetta T rujillo, of Raton, has been appointed to the Northern Regional Housing Authority. Trujillo is chief deputy clerk for Colfax County. Trujillo formerly served as Colfax County clerk, first elected to office in 2004. She has been an elected official for eight years. She earned a Clerical Certificate from Luna Community College in Las Vegas, N.M., and participated in Government NM EDGE County College.

A3

Aaron Piñon, of Rio Rancho, has been appointed to the Board of Chiropractic Examiners. Piñon is an attorney and partner at Sanchez & Piñon LLC, where he has worked in civil litigation since 2010. His cases cover a variety of issues including medical malpractice, personal injury, and insurance coverage matters. Piñon is a member of the New Mexico Trial Lawyers Association. He earned his Juris Doctorate from the University of Dayton School of Law in Dayton, Ohio.

David Cooper, of Albuquerque, has been appointed to the Board of Licensure for Professional Engineers and Professional Surveyors. Cooper is a licensed professional land surveyor and the principal of Sierra Land Surveying Inc. Cooper brings 30 years of surveying experience to the Board along with a 25 year career with the New Mexico Department of Transportation.

Griselda Martinez, of Las Cruces, has been appointed to the New Mexico Museum of Space History Commission. Martinez is a graduate assistant at the Arrowhead Center at New Mexico State University, where she works on economic development initiatives, small business assistance programs, and as a team mentor under the Center’s Enterprise Research and Technology Commercialization. Martinez is a Doctor of Philosophy in Economic Development candidate at New Mexico State University in Las Cruces.

Get Classified

back to their parents in Central America, federal officials concede.

Federal officials said the deportations are consistent with DHS’s enforcement priorities of focusing on national security, public safety and border security.

Free Weatherization Program CALL NOW!

Pearce said he was assured by Deputy Secretary of Homeland Security Alejandro Mayorkas that DHS would be expediting the removal process as much as possible, without jeopardizing the safety and well-being of the children and families in detention.

1(800)687-2495

Rocky Lara of Carlsbad, the Democrat nominee to challenge Pearce in November, could not be reached for comment.

a link, if people would like to donate. Donations may also be made at any Pioneer Bank in the city, or visit facebook.com /blesskinzie for more information.

Choo Choosing osing Happiness... Happi Happin pinness... Reconnect wit with th and lear learnn to us usee your intuition intuittion on Recognize wh what at you ar are re passionate pa passionatte about and engage Cr reatte tthe he ener rgetticc “look” of of a happy happy woman Create energetic

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

Have Ha ave a clear vision vision ooff what what happiness happinesss is for for you Leave choose Lea ave with witth rreal eal tools to help elp you choos se inn ffavor avor of of your own hhappiness, appiness, guilt free! frree!

Wednesday, Wednesday, July Juuly 23rd, 8:30-4:30 8:330-4:30 Thursday, Th day, July Thursda Jully l 24th, h 9:00-4:30 9:0 9 00-4:30

REGISTER REGIST REGIS STTER E NOW! ER N W! SSanctuaryOnTheRiver.com SanctuaryOn anctuaryOn ctuaryOn ctuaryOn uaryOn aryOn yOnnTheRiv T eRiv R ver.com ver.com er.com

Weatherization consists of:

Requirements:

· · · · ·

· Central Refrigerated Air Conditioning · Need to be an Xcel customer · Home must have accessible attic · No flat roofs or mobile homes · Home cannot be treated twice

Pressure test to home and duct work Installation of gaskets on switches/plus Seal leaks in air conditioning duct work Install weather striping around doors Caulk windows

A portion of the proceeds benefits beenefits Domestic Dom mesttic Violence Awareness A 207 207 Eagle Dr., Dr., Ruidoso, Ruidosso, NM

Ph Phone: hone:: 575-630-1 575-630-1111 111

Choosing C Happiness Retreat

Albuquerque Stair LLC, an XCELEnergy Program Sponsor


Illegal immigration is a far-reaching web A4 Wednesday, July 16, 2014

While I have read that the flood of illegal immigrants is overwhelming our southern border and is a crisis stage, I had not realized the vast scope of the problem until the federal government decided (without first consulting with our state government officials) to convert a large portion of the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC) in Artesia that trains Border Patrol agents to secure our borders to house 800 of the same illegal immigrants those agents are trained to apprehend. I decided to do some research about the illegal immigration problem, and I was absolutely shocked at what I found. Not only does it impact the southern border states, but every single state in the union with regard to health issues, social issues, financial burdens and increased criminal activity. Consider the following:

OPINION

JOAN BOUE

CHAVES COUNTY REPUBLICAN WOMEN

The Obama administration will not disclose how many illegal immigrants come across our border, but some government agencies have made preparation for 60,000 illegal immigrant children in 2014. This figure does not include any adults, but the federal government is looking to provide for 50,000 illegal immigrant families this year. Most of these children and families come from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, because Mr. Obama announced he would stop deport-

Roswell Daily Record

ing young illegal immigrants who met the criteria under the proposed DREAM Act that is a bill that has yet to pass in Congress after several attempts to do so. Federal law, the Trafficking Victims Protection Re-authorization Act, requires the border patrol to transfer children from countries other than from Canada and Mexico to the Health & Human Services Department (HHS) which is “to act in the best interests of the child” within 72 hours after apprehension. A union representative for Immigration, Customs and Enforcement states that 60 to 120 agents per day who could be out protecting our borders are assigned to escort unaccompanied illegal children who have crossed the border on airplanes to see relatives or family friends. Since the U.S. government does not have near enough facilities to accommodate the flood of illegals,

more than 90 percent of these children and families are released to the custody of a parent, relative, or family friend, and given a “Permisios” (deportation notice) which requires the child or adult to appear in court at a future date. Families, women and children are also given a document that allows them to board a bus to anywhere in the U.S. and travel freely during this time. Very few of these illegals ever bother to appear for their court date and melt into the population. The activities described above are costing us $1.3 million a week. Think that this does not affect you? It should be a concer n, because no one knows what type of health problems or communicable diseases these people may have. How do we even know that the children who appear with “families” are theirs? The federal gov-

ernment has mandated that any school system that accepts federal funding must integrate and educate illegal immigrant children in the public school system that is funded to a great extent by local property taxes. Many of the teenagers from Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador are sent here to take advantage of the Obama administration’s misguided and deceptive immigration policies to join or be recruited by violent drug dealing organizations such as MS-13 and Calle 18, causing a nationwide spike in crime and overwhelming law enforcement at all levels — not to mention our health care, educational and social welfare facilities. Do you believe the time to get an appointment time at your medical facility is lengthy? It will get longer as will your time in the

See BOUE, Page A5

EDITORIAL

Colleges have some learning to do in protecting sexual assault victims

If they’re interested in keeping women on their campuses safe from sexual assault, the nation’s colleges and universities should be grateful for the work of Sen. Claire McCaskill. Some of the institutions no doubt are. Others wish she would just go away. But the women on campus, their parents and anyone who cares about the safety of women know that problems usually don’t get solved in the shadows. The Missouri Democrat has turned a spotlight on sexual violence at colleges and universities, a problem that has existed for too long. She is working to develop legislation to help clarify overlapping sex-crime laws as they now exist and strengthen campus disciplinary proceedings. She wants to ensure that the victims of sexual assaults feel safe reporting the crime and that the accused are treated the same as those outside the academic environment. “If we’re going to turn the tide against sexual violence, survivors must be protected, empowered, and given the confidence that if they make the difficult choice to report a crime, they will be treated with respect and taken seriously,” Ms. McCaskill said in a report released Wednesday. In gathering information for the legislation she is crafting with a bipartisan team that includes senators Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., and Marco Rubio, R-Fla., Ms. McCaskill sent surveys a few months ago to 440 schools asking how they handle rapes and sexual assaults. The results from more than 300 schools that responded are disturbing. Among the findings: • Lack of knowledge about the scope of the problem. • Failure to encourage the reporting of sexual violence. • Lack of adequate sexual assault training for faculty, staff and students. • Failure to investigate reports of sexual violence. • Lack of adequate services for sexual violence survivors. • Untrained and uncoordinated law enforcement efforts. Ms. McCaskill is a former sex crimes prosecutor in Jackson County and a Senate leader in the fight to reduce sexual assaults in the military. When she launched her efforts in the academic arena, she noted that military and university settings are similarly closed environments where people fear repercussions if they come forward with allegations of sexual violence. Ms. McCaskill labeled the survey results a “wake-up call” for schools, saying they need to recognize sexual violence as the crime it is, work to prevent it and effectively address it when it does occur. Unfortunately, there is ample evidence that not everyone understands what rape is and that some people do not recognize it as a crime. Not everyone has gotten the White House report saying that one in five female college students has been assaulted, and that just 12 percent have reported the attacks. Among the more alarming findings from the Senate survey is that more than 20 percent of institutions that responded give their athletic departments oversight of sexual violence cases involving student-athletes, a finding Ms. McCaskill said was “bordering on the outrageous.” Given the investment that universities have in their athletes, how is a victim to feel protected and safe in reporting sexual assaults or that their assailants will not be coddled by the institution? The survey was criticized by the American Council on Education, which represents more than 1,700 college and university presidents. Ada Meloy, general counsel for ACE, told the Post-Dispatch’s Chuck Raasch that the report was unfair and “ignores how hard colleges and universities are working to address a serious and complex societal issue.” REPRINTED FROM THE ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH

The most reliable poll of all

I dimly recall being rousted out of my bunk bed as a young child before sunrise on Oct. 27, 1948, so I could stand at an intersection in my hometown of Weymouth, Massachusetts, to catch a brief glimpse of President Harry Truman as he drove by on his way to a campaign event in the more populous Brockton some 10 miles away. I later learned there were no prominent Massachusetts Democrats traveling with Truman that day — the candidates for governor and U.S. senator were otherwise committed — because in just six days, as all the smart money knew, T ruman was going to lose big-time to Republican Tom Dewey. Politics “Politics,” as a wise man noted, “ain’t beanbag.” If, as a candidate, you have the aura and aroma of impending defeat about you, then your fate is to hear the most coun-

MARK SHIELDS

SYNDICATED COLUMNIST

terfeit of excuses about why people you believed were friends and allies suddenly have conflicts that prevent them from appearing next to you at a public event. How about “Sorry, but my goddaughter is graduating from yoga class” or “That’s the day we’re scattering the ashes of our family gerbil”? T raveling the country in the fall of 1972 with the totally admirable Sargent Shriver, the Democratic nominee for vice president, serving as his political director, I experienced this firsthand. That was the year Richard Nixon

and Spiro Agnew, crushing George McGovern and Shriver, carried 49 states. You never forget, and you forever cherish, those brave souls who, knowing you’re going to lose, still do show up to share the stage, and offer a public endorsement and a friendly face. I’ll always remember a rally on the statehouse steps in Columbia, South Carolina, a state the Democratic ticket would lose by 43 percent, when Sen. “Fritz” Hollings, a former governor, to his own political disadvantage, dared to stand tall for Shriver. Everything in politics is in fact a poll. This is clear in the 2014 Senate races, where endangered Democrats struggle uphill to retain seats the party now holds in Alaska, Arkansas, Louisiana, Montana, South Dakota and West Virginia — all states that President Barack Obama lost to Mitt Romney by at least 13 percent. This helps explain

why Mark Begich, who won his Alaska Senate seat in 2008 by just a 1 percent lead, while Republican John McCain was beating Obama by 21 points, when asked if he would accept an offer from Obama to campaign for him, answered, “If he wants to come and see what I want to show him, what he needs to change his position on, I’m happy to do it.” In many red states, the president has become the political equivalent of Typhoid Mary. Romney carried Arkansas by 24 percent, so Democratic Sen. Mark Pryor is very much running emphasizing his own record and his independence from the White House, as is Democratic Sen. Mary Landrieu in Louisiana, which Obama lost by 17 percent. When Obama visited Raleigh, North Carolina, Sen. Kay Hagan did not make the

be because extramarital sex is more likely to happen with a younger partner in an unfamiliar setting, and anxiety about having extramarital sex may add to the surge of adrenaline that makes the heart work harder. If you’ve had angioplasty or bypass surgery, your doctor will tell you how long to wait before resuming sexual activity. In general, if you have had angioplasty, wait until the puncture site has healed. After open coronary artery bypass surgery, wait about six to eight weeks, until your breastbone has healed. Dr. Lee notes that if you’ve had minimally invasive or robotic bypass surgery, most doctors will advise you to resume sexual activity once you feel ready. That’s because mini-

mally invasive surgery does not involve cutting the breastbone. As always, let your symptoms (or lack thereof) be your guide. For example, if you don’t have symptoms of heart disease — breathlessness or palpitations, for example — you are likely at low risk of having a heart attack during sex. The same is true if you can pass a stress test without experiencing chest pain. Relative to any vigorous exercise — jogging, biking, swimming — the amount of exertion during sex (and, hence, the need for your heart to work harder) is pretty small. On the other hand, do not have sex if you experience symptoms of heart disease at

Heart attacks during sex are highly unlikely

DEAR DOCTOR K: I’m a man in my 60s. I had a heart attack a few months ago, and now I’m afraid to have sex. Is it too strenuous for my heart? DEAR READER: Your question is a common one. Many of my patients who’ve had a heart attack wonder if and when it will be safe to resume sexual activity. I can understand why. Physical exertion causes the heart to work harder, and if you’ve had a heart attack, your heart has been injured. My patients often worry about having another heart attack, or about dying during intercourse. These concerns are understandable. But according to my Harvard Medical School colleague, cardiologist Thomas Lee, they are unfounded.

ASK DR. K UNITED MEDIA SYNDICATE

Less than 1 percent of all heart attacks occur during sexual activity. The risk is as low for men who have suffered a heart attack as it is for those without heart disease. The risk of dying during intercourse is even lower. But interestingly, according to the American Heart Association, extramarital sexual activity increases this risk. That may

See SHIELDS, Page A5

See DR. K, Page A5


OPINION II

A5

Paul Schnucker remembered: A vets’ veteran Roswell Daily Record

Lt. Col. Paul Schnucker passed away last week, leaving a noticeable hole in our ranks of exemplary military veterans. His military service record quietly reflects the positive “measure of a man,” but also the portrait of a military hero, serving in World War II and Vietnam (two tours). Paul joined the U.S. Air Force as an enlisted man, then took it to the next level, becoming a Second Lieutenant within two years of his enlistment. He was certified as a navigator/bombardier, flying missions in B-36s and B-52s. After five years following his commission, he completed flight school (fixed wing) and then helicopter pilot training. As an added dimension to his “pilot’s license,” he received his Army Pilot Wings and Vietnamese Pilot Wings. With maximum credentials, it’s no wonder he not only flew combat missions, he was a Flight Instructor, Combat Flight Officer, Advanced Combat Survival Train-

Boue

Continued from Page A4

waiting room, and the quality of your health care will continue to decrease. How much money in the short and long term does this Obama immigration fiasco take away from the needs of our veterans, our elderly, and rob from other programs such as defense? The Obama administration is now requesting an additional $3.7 billion to help solve the immigration problem that Obama caused to become a crisis situation, but the money will do nothing to solve the issue. People will still cross our borders, become apprehended, stay illegally in the U.S. for years, if not forever, because of the overwhelmed immigration sys-

LETTERS

JOHN TAYLOR

VETERANS ADVOCATE

ing Officer, Air Operations Officer and served in several other command positions within the Strategic Air Command (SAC). Lt. Col. Schnucker’s list of commendations, awards and medals seems almost endless. An abbreviated list includes the Bronze Star, the Purple Heart, the Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air Medal with 7 Oak Leaf Clusters, the Air Force Commendation Medal with 3 Oak Leaf Clusters, the Republic of Vietnam Honors Medal, the Republic of Vietnam Commendation Medal, the Republic of Vietnam Gallantry Cross, the Vietnam Service Medal

tem and courts; it has lost track of them. The federal gover nment has not allowed state and local law enforcement to arrest illegals unless they have committed some other crime, and Border Patrol morale is at an all-time low. Cases of family units and children caught along the border or at port of entry claiming a “creditable fear” of persecution in order to seek a hearing before an immigration judge increased 586 percent from 2007 to 2013, and USCIS data show that 92% of those requests for asylum were approved. If you believe that this immigration situation will not affect you, then you are in denial. This situation will

Dear editor, We want the people of Roswell to be aware of the great hospital we have here, Eastern New Mexico Medical Center. I was a heart patient and had a new procedure done on July 8. My doctor was Dr. Michael Sarkees and while the procedure was not new, it was new to ENMMC. I had an impella insertion to have a stent put in my heart. The care from the hospital staff, my doctor and the ICU, lab, etc. were all so kind and caring. There was professional care from each nurse, doctor and staff.

Shields

with 4 Devices, and the National Defense Service Medal with 1 Device. Paul retired from active duty after 24 years of service. I was fortunate enough to have met Paul while we were both waiting in a New Mexico Veterans Service Officer’s office. He noticed I was wearing a Purple Heart baseball and invited me to join the Military Order of the Purple Heart. After a couple of weeks in the MOPH, he asked me to join the local MOPH sponsored Roswell Veterans Honor Guard (RVHG). Following a couple of months in the RVHG, he nominated me to take over his position as guard commander, and the rest is history (10 years later). It was then I realized Paul should have been a senior recruiter, added to his list of qualifications! Paul played a significant role in the 30-year -old local veterans funeral honors team. As commander, he kept alive the tradition of the RVHG before reluc-

change your way of life, your health care, your taxes, your safety, the way you do business, and allow the federal government to engineer our social direction. Do not let anyone defend the current immigration system by quoting the law. Our immigration laws are being bypassed and ignored. It has come to the point where you cannot continue to ignore this crisis. What can you do? Rather than ignore the situation, and hope that it will not affect you (which it already has) you can make a decision to become active and channel your efforts in letting your opinion be heard and counted even though it may invite criti-

I will never understand why anyone would go miles and miles to go to another hospital or even out of state when we have the care of this hospital and doctors in Roswell. I want to thank ENMMC, Dr. Sarkees, the ICU staff and nurses. I also want to add we need more doctors here in Roswell. We need to support what we have here with the hospitals and staff them properly. Ella Fletcher Roswell

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

tantly “retiring” his position in 2004. As his health continued to deteriorate, he still continued to attend Guard funeral services as a member of our uniform team. I remember the last service he attended was with his walker/chair (unable to stand for any length of time), but still was able to render the “Final Salute” for our fellow veteran.

In Lt. Col. Schnucker’s honor, the following is the Air Force prayer: Lord guard and guide the men who fly, Through the great spaces of the sky, Be with them as they take to air, In morning light and sunshine fair. Eternal Father, strong to save, Give them courage, make them brave, Protect them whereso’er they go, From shell and flak and fire

cism from those who oppose you. Mainly, you are going to have to become visible and a force to be reckoned with. This may involve rallies at gatherings of people who are running for office, funding ads in the local newspaper, spreading your thoughts at meetings, boycotting those businesses who employ illegals, backing and supporting leaders who speak out against this detrimental immigration, and speaking against those who support illegal immigration even though it may mean becoming confrontational, repeated mass letters and emails to your governmental representatives, recruiting other people and organizations to

Dr. K

Continued from Page A4

and foe. Most loved Member of their crew, Ride with them up in the blue, Direct their bombs upon the foe, but shelter those whom Thou dost know. Keep them together upon their way, Grant their work success today, Deliver them from hate and sin, and bring them safely down again. O God bless the men who fly, Through lonely way across the sky. (Appreciation to Lynne Ybarra for this rendition, in honor of Dennis.) Paul is now serving as a “force for good” in the Lord’s Army in Heaven. He certainly did on here on Earth. The Lord bless you and keep you, my brother. God bless.

Veterans advocate John Taylor can be reached at skytroopjhtay@gmail.com.

speak out against this situation, raising money to let your message be heard. Whatever methods you choose you will have to maintain a sustained effort in order to be effective, but you need to act now!

This is a federal issue so you need to contact the following: U.S. Senate Sen. Tom Udall 110 Hart Senate Office Bldg. Washington, DC, 20510 202-224-6621 tomudall.senate. gov/contact

Sen. Martin Heinrich 702 Hart Senate Office Bldg.

any time. Your heart attack was caused by disease of the arteries of your heart. Having symptoms of heart disease after you’ve had a heart attack can mean, unfortunately, that the disease in your arteries is still threatening your heart. You need to bring this to the attention of your doctor! Delay sexual activity until your condition is stable. More important, everyone recovering normally from a heart attack actually needs regular exercise. It is a part of every cardiac rehabilitation program.

Washington, DC, 20510 202-224-5521 phone 202-228-2841 fax Or 200 E. Fourth St. Ste. 300 Roswell, NM, 88201 575-622-7113 phone 575-622-3538 fax heinrich.senate.gov /contact

Congress Steve Pearce 2432 Rayburn House Office Bldg. Washington, DC, 20515 202-225-2365

Or 1717 West Second St., Ste. 110 Roswell, NM, 88201 855-473-2723 pearce.house.gov/ contact-me

Regular exercise under medical supervision strengthens the heart. Don’t be afraid of exercising after a heart attack: It’s good for you. And when your doctor has cleared you to do it, sex is good for you, too.

Dr. Komaroff is a physician and professor at Harvard Medical School. To send questions, go to AskDoctorK.com, or write: Ask Doctor K, 10 Shattuck St., Second Floor, Boston, MA 02115.

Continued from Page A4

trip. Remember: When Democratic senators last won these states in 2008, Republican George W. Bush was president.

The latest, most reliable poll came from Colorado, where Democratic Sen. Mark Udall did not show at a Denver fundraiser for his candidacy, which featured Obama. The reason given: He had to be in Washington to vote on the nomination of Julian Castro as Housing and Urban Development secretary. It was a real clif fhanger; Castro was confirmed by a Senate vote of 71-27. In 2014, for Democrats, all politics really are local. To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

Shop Roswell

YOUR CREDIT

“We want to make you a loan”

(575)624-2929

$200 - $2,000

Auto Immune Disorders? Arthritis? No Need to Travel for Treatment.

Receive World Class Care Right Here in South Eastern New Mexico at

402 W. Country Club www.kymeramedical.com

Zain Abideen, MD.

Board Certified Rheumatologist

Call 575-627-9110 to schedule an appointment or have your current Rheumatologist fax records to 575-623-2191 Attention: Monica Dr. Abideen is seeing patients in both Roswell and Carlsbad Most Major Insurances Accepted.

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


Get your child immunized today A6 Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Is your child fully immunized? The New Mexico Department of Health and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Mexico (BCBSNM) are of fering childhood immunizations today at the McDonald’s UFO Restaurant on Main Street in Roswell. Parents are encouraged to bring their children’s shot records to the BCBSNM Care Van clinic. Nurses will be on hand from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. There is no co-pay or fee, but if you have insurance, please bring your card. For questions, call 505-850-7066.

Hagerman/Dexter Caregiver Support Group to meet

The JOY Hagerman/Dexter Caregiver Support Group will meet at 10:45 a.m. on Wednesday at the Hagerman/Dexter JOY Center located at 503 E. Argyle in Hager man. Account Executive Mike Garcia, area manager, and Helene Reiff, division manager of encompass Home Health will be the guest speakers. Contact Connie Conde at 623-4866 for additional information.

Democrats meet at Elks Lodge

The Democratic Party of Chaves County will hold its monthly meeting at 6 p.m. on Thursday, July 17, at Elks Lodge, 1720 N. Montana Ave.

Annual meeting for Assurance Home Board

The Assurance Home Board of Directors will be holding their annual meeting at 5:30 p.m., on Thursday, July 17 at the Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art located at 409 E. College Avenue. The meeting is open to the public.

J.O.Y. Roswell Caregiver Support Group to meet

The J.O.Y. Roswell Caregiver Support Group will meet at 10:30 a.m., Thursday, July 17, at the Roswell JOY Center located at 1822 N. Montana. Account Executive Mike Garcia and Helene Reiff,

LOCAL

division manager of encompass Home Health will be the guest speakers. Contact Connie Conde at 623-4866 for additional information.

Chaparral Rockhounds to meet

The Chaparral Rockhounds will meet at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, July 17, at the Roswell Adult Center, 807 N. Missouri Ave. Don James will be presenting “Micro Exploration — More Than Meets the Eye.” Members are encouraged to bring a red gem, fossil or mineral. Visitors are welcome. For further information call 622-5679.

Concert in the Parks

The Roswell Parks & Recreation Department will be sponsoring a Concert in the Parks Friday evening, July 18 in Cahoon Park. The event is free and open to the public and will begin at 6:30 p.m. The band that will be playing is the Plateros. This is a part of a summer long series. Spectators are encouraged to bring their own lawn chairs or blankets. For more information call, 575-624-6720.

Assurance Home to host event

Assurance Home will be hosting a special event at 4 p.m., Friday, July 18, to bless and dedicate the Jeff Wilson Memorial Courtyard. Wilson, who passed away in 2010, was the founder and owner of Cattle Baron Restaurants, Inc. He held a special place in his heart for the children of Assurance Home. The Assurance Home Foundation Board, the Assurance Home Board of Directors, the staff and the children would like to invite any friends or business associates of Wilson to

Pet of the week

This brown and white female sheperd-cross is 5 months old. She is sweet and playful. Reference Cage 52 at the city shelter. Roswell Animal Control Services are providºed 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Shelter business hours are Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to noon and 1 to 5 p.m. For more information, call 624-6722.

attend the dedication. Assurance Home is located at 1000 E. 18th St.

Kathleen Peterson to speak at Healthsense

Kathleen Petersen, director of Health Information Management at Easter n New Mexico Medical Center, will be the speaker at Healthsense Friday, July 18, at Senior Circle. She will discuss a great new benefit at ENMU, so this is a good opportunity to learn all about it. Healthsense is held at 11:30 a.m. and light snacks are served. The talks are open to the public. Senior Circle is in the Wilshire Center, 2801 N. Main St., Suite D, next to Family Dollar. It is a resource of ENMU. For more information, call 6232311.

Youth football registration

Registration for Roswell Youth Football will be held every Saturday from July 19 to Aug. 16. Registration will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the main court of the Roswell Mall. Fees are $85 per player, which includes game jersey, use of helmet and shoulder pads for the season. Ages 7-12 as of Sept. 1 will play tackle while ages 5 and 6 will play flag. A birth certificate and proof of residence is required at time or registration. For more information, call Kathie Herring at 910-9647 or Juan Oropesa at 626-7802.

Sunrise Optimist pancake breakfast

The Sunrise Optimist Club of Roswell will be holding a pancake breakfast to help raise funds for their many youth projects during the year. The pancake breakfast will be held

from 7 to 10 a.m., Saturday, July 19, at Grace Community Church. For $5 you are served pancakes, sausage and either coffee, juice or milk. For tickets, contact any Sunrise Optimist member or call 4209420, 623-8931, 420-1738. If you are interested in serving the community through a service club directed at the youth, you are invited to attend the club’s breakfast meetings at 7 a.m. on Wednesday mornings at Los Cerritos.

‘Prayer and Healing’ lecture

Explore the connections between prayer and healing with a free lecture by Mark Swinney at 2 p.m., Sunday, July 20, at the Fairfield Inn and Suites in Roswell. The lecture is open to the public and is sponsored by the alamogordo Christian Science Society and the Roswell Christian Science Group. For more information, call 910-9716.

Old-time Gospel hour

Spend an hour singing old-time Gospel songs at 4 p.m., Sunday, July 20, at the First Assembly of God Church at 1224 W. Country Club Road.

Cowboy Crusade to perform

There will be a Cowboy Crusade in Roswell from July 21 to July 26, with services starting at 6 p.m. each evening with a cowboy supper. Music will begin at 7 p.m. provided by Pecos Valley Blue Grass Association and the message will begin at 7:30 p.m. Speakers will include Rob Moon, Danny Sons, Mark Green, David Buckingham, Jackie Thomas and Caleb Edwards. The event is sponsored by Second Chance Ministry and Circle J Church.

2014 Earth Camp

Keep Roswell Beautiful is now accepting application for 2014 Earth Camp — a summer educational program dedicated to teaching youth ages 10-12 about resource management and conservation. The camp will take place July 21-25 from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at Spring River Park and Zoo and will include daily activities, fun presentations and

Roswell Daily Record

field trips that culminate in a community beautification project. The fee is $30 for the week and some scholarships are available. For more information, contact the Spring River Zoo at 624-6760

Retired education employees meet

The Chaves County Retired Educational Employees will meet for their monthly luncheon at 11:30 a.m., on Monday, July 21 at Los Cerritos Restaurant. All retired educational employees are welcome. Call 623-0752 for more information.

M.A.D. camp starting July 21

M.A.D. Camp, a music, art and drama camp for all students in the community preschool through eighth grade, will be held July 2127 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Camp activities will take place at First United Methodist Church, 200 N. pennsylvania Ave. Elementary and middle school campers, led by Michelle Olson, will prepare the songs to the musical “Are We There Yet?” by Tom Long and Allen Pote; art activities will involve make he sets and props for the musical. Students working on speaking parts will receive special coaching along with helpful hints on how to use the speaking voice ef fectively. Those interested in hand chimes or Or f f instruments will have the opportunity to lear n basic ringing and playing skills. John Fuss will lead preschool children in songs, drama and crafts related to familiar Bible stories. A mid-mor ning snack and lunch will be provided. Highlighting the week will be a presentation of the musical “Are We There Yet?” by elementary and middle school camoers as well as a presentation of songs and drama by preschool children on Sunday morning, July 27, at 10:30 a.m. Cost of registration is $8 per camper, which includes a camp T -shirt. Registration forms are available at First United Methodist Church, or you may call 622-1881 or 317-4880 or email music@dfn.com for

infor mation. further Campers can also register at fumc-roswell.org/events.

Vacation Bible School

Highland Baptist Church, 2001 S. Lea St., will hold Vacation Bible School from 6 to 8:30 p.m., July 21-24. Ages are from 3 years old (potty trained) to 12 years old. For more information, call 317-3548.

Benise: ‘Nights of Fire!’

The Roswell Symphony Orchestra presents Benise: Prince of Spanish Guitar in his Emmy award-winning production, “Nights of Fire!” at 7:30 p.m., July 26. Roni Benise (benise.com) takes the audience on a romantic and exotic voyage through the wild and beautiful sounds of his Spanish guitar. Along with world class musicians and elaborately choreographed dancers, “Nights of Fire!” is an unprecedented and spectacular jour ney of music and dance. Benise and his band showcase classic songs from Bach, The Rolling Stones and the Eagles, to name a few, and marries them with Spanish guitar and dance. Benise’s love of both Spanish guitar and rock brings a fierce intensity to the new interpretations of his favorite classic anthems. This theatrical special event and fundraiser will be held in Pearson Auditorium at the New Mexico Military Institute. Tickets are available for $30, $40, $50 and $15 for children 16 years and younger. For ticket information, call the RSO office 623-5882 or roswellsymphony.org.

Free Community Health Fair scheduled

The annual free Community Health Fair will be held on Saturday, July 26 at the Roswell Boys and Girls Club, 200 S. Garden St. from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Exhibitors with healthrelated services and information are invited to participate. If your agency wishes to participate, please contact Jane Batson at ENMU-Roswell, 575624-7233 or email jane.batson@roswell.enmu. edu.


Roswell Daily Record

Hazel Ruth Hubble Ninnemann 1943-2014

Hazel passed peacefully from this life on 7/11/14 after a seven-year battle with dementia. She is now in Heaven with God, her struggle finally over. Hazel was bor n in El Centro CA, December 24, 1943, a Christmas baby. Her family eventually settled in Roswell where Hazel grew up and went to school. Later she lived in Virginia and North Carolina for several years. After moving back to Roswell in 1982, she married Terry in July 1984. She was a lifelong writer and an original member of the Joy Writer's group in Roswell. All of her working life was spent in printing and she loved the work. She was also an accomplished seamstress and gardener among many other interests. Her mom was her best friend. She was preceded in death by her mother Mary Ruth Beall and stepfather S K Beall. Also preceding her were brothers Charles “Chuck” and Johnny Franklin Hubble. Survivors include brothers Richard Lee Hubble and wife Jan of Greenville SC, Chris Hubble, Lubbock TX, sister Jennifer Hubble and husband, Bobby Seward, of Dexter. She is also survived by son Bill Wright and wife, Vicki, of Tijeras, N.M., and daughter Sandra Phipps of Roswell. Grandchildren include Kaleigh and Ciara, daughters of Bill Wright. Also Leland Wright, Jonathan and Cara Harris, of Roswell, and Jeremy Johnstone, of Venice, CA, children of Sandra Phipps, and a great-granddaughter Corrine Rosie Wright, daughter of Leland Wright. Hazel has many nieces, nephews and cousins. Hazel's husband, Terry, also survives at the home. Many thanks to Alma Reyes and her staff at Joy Center Adult Day Care. Also our lasting gratitude to the entire staff at Heartfelt Manor, who not only made a wonderful, caring home for Hazel in her last days but also for her husband Terry. Thanks to special friends Jack and Marg

Johns, Sal Jaramillo and Shelia McKnight for helping many times and also friends at Grace Community Church. Last, eternal thanks to Gentiva Hospice nurse Rose Page for all she did for us. A service conducted by Pastor Rick Hale will be held Friday, July 18, 11 a.m. at Grace Community Church, Roswell. Please come help celebrate Hazel's old life and her new one in Heaven. There will be no cemetery service at this time.

Billy Charles French

Billy Charles French, 79 beloved husband, father, and Poppa passed away on Saturday, June 7, 2014. A memorial service to celebrate his life will be held at St. Andrews Episcopal Church, 505 North Pennsylvania Ave., on July 19, 2014 at 2 p.m. Bill was born in Levelland, Texas on September 26, 1934, to W.O. and Mamie (Chick) French who preceded him in death. His brother Don French also preceded him in death. He is survived by his wife Elaine; son Alan French and wife Sarahjane of Ruidoso, daughter Delaina Franzoni of Roswell, daughter Davona Hickey and husband Robert of Roswell. Poppa is survived by seven grandchildren: Darin Franzoni and wife Laura of Aurora, Colorado; Alyssa Hopkins and husband Daniel of Bosque Farms; Kara Hickey of Rio Rancho; Caitlin Kipp of Ruidoso; Abagail Kipp of Ruidoso; Breanna Hickey of Roswell; Erica French of Ruidoso; great-grandson Ian Connor Hopkins; nephew Donnie French; and a niece Kim Young. Bill was a gifted athlete and was a member of Roswell High School’s 1952 State Basketball Championship team. He went on to play basketball for the NMMI Broncos and ENMU Greyhounds. Pops often recounted stories about the exploits of his teams as they traveled around the country playing the game he loved so much. Upon graduation he was able to continue his love of the

OBITUARIES

game as a coach. He was an assistant coach for the Roswell High state champions in 1962. He moved over to Goddard and was the head basketball coach until 1974. He moved to Dexter to become the Principal of the high school until his retirement in 1985. During his career he touched many lives and provided a living example of gentle strength and leadership. Bill was a past Exalted Ruler of the BPOE 969. He enjoyed the many friends and activities he was involved in while a member of the Elks. Bill has served the community in many capacities and enjoyed meeting and working with everyone. Bill discovered his passion for art after his retirement. He was a very talented painter with acrylic being his favorite medium. He was a member of and sold his work at The Gallery. He was also a member and past vice president of the Roswell Fine Arts League. Bill was confirmed into St Andrews Episcopal Church in 1986. Through the years he has enjoyed attending services with his children, grandchildren and many friends. He served on the vestry for many years and took great pleasure in being an usher for services. Bill had always felt he found a home when walking into the church for the first time. It was his wish to have his ashes interned in the columbarium there. In lieu of flowers donations may be made to the American Diabetes Association. Arrangements have been entrusted to Ballard Funeral Home and Crematory. An online registry can be accessed at ballardfuneralhome.com.

Mario Cesar Bencomo

A rosary for Mario Cesar Bencomo, 41, of Roswell, NM will be at 7 p.m., Thursday, July 17, 2014, at St. John’s Catholic Church. A Mass will be Friday, July 18, 2014, at 10 a.m. at St. John’s Catholic Church with Fr. Charlie Martinez officiating. Burial

JAMES MACGREGOR BURNS, HISTORIAN, DIES AT 95

BOSTON (AP) — James MacGregor Burns, a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and political scientist who analyzed the nature of presidential leadership and wrote candid biographies of Franklin D. Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy, died Tuesday at 95. Bur ns died at his home in Williamstown, Massachusetts, his companion and fellow historian Susan Dunn said. The longtime Williams College professor helped coin two adjec-

RECYCLE THIS PAPER

tives now common in politics: “transfor mational” leaders, or those with a vision to change the world, and “transactional” leaders, those with the cunning to get things done. The words were used constantly during the 2008 presidential race, with the “transactional” Hillary Rodham Clinton battling the “transformational” Barack Obama for the Democratic nomination. Burns was a liberal Democrat who both wrote about and partici-

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

following at South Park Cemetery. Mario Cesar passed away Sunday, July 13, 2014. Mario Cesar was bor n September 10, 1972, to Manuel R Bencomo Sr. and Alicia Ramirez in Roswell, NM. He loved the Dallas Cowboys and was a great artist. He was an avid believer in God and was not afraid to show it. Many would see him walking around his neighborhood with a smile on his face. He enjoyed spending time with his nieces and nephews especially on cousins night. One of his favorite outings was spending time with his brothers and friends he grew up with at the shop. What he enjoyed the most was the family gatherings. He loved his family very much. Mario Cesar will be greatly missed by all who knew him. Mario Cesar is survived by his parents; Manuel R Bencomo Sr. and Alicia Ramirez; brothers, Manuel R Bencomo Jr. and wife Yvonne; Marco Antonio Bencomo and wife Lisa; Melvin Bencomo; a sister, Maribel Bencomo and companion Raymond Mesquita; 7 nieces and 3 nephews all of Roswell, NM and survived by numerous aunts, uncles and cousins. Mario Cesar was preceded in death by his paternal grandparents, Jesus “Papi” Bencomo and Maria “Mami” Bencomo. His mater nal grandparents, Aurelio Ramirez Caro and Josephina Soltero Ramirez and uncle Bonifacio Ramirez Soltero. Pallbearers are Manuel R. Bencomo Jr., Marco Antonio Bencomo, Melvin Bencomo, Konrad Gino Sanchez, Juan Manuel “Guero” Sanchez, Chris Romero, Danny Zamarripa, Raymond Mesquita, Albert “T rudy” Marquez and Frankie Marquez. Honorary Pallbearers are all his cousins, nephews and nieces. Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com Services are under the direction of AndersonBethany Funeral Home and Crematory. Y el Senor Dios dijo Te prestare por un tiempo a un hijo mio para que lo ames mientras viva Podran ser 6, 7 o 15 anos, hasta que lo llame. Podras cuidarlo? Quiero que aprenda a vivir, he buscado a un maestro y te he elegido ati...le ensenaras! No te ofresco que se quedara contigo solo te lo presto porque lo que va a la tierra a mi

pated in the political process. He was a convention delegate, congressional aide and congressional candidate who in the late 1950s became friendly enough with Sen. John F. Kennedy to be granted access for a 1960 biography that angered the family by portraying him as a man of excessive calculation and questionable heart.

His two-volume biography of Roosevelt was praised by historians as a model of accessible, objective scholarship. The second vol-

regresa Te dara la ternura, la alegria y todo la comprencion de su juventud. Y el dia que yo lo llame tu no me odiaras, ni lloraras por regresarlo a me Su ausencia corporal quedara compensado con los muchos agradables recuerdos. Y con ellos tu luto sera mas llevadero y habras de decir con agradesida humildad Senor hagase tu voluntad………

A7

and his parents. Private family graveside services are scheduled for Thursday, July 17, 2014, at South Park Cemetery. Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories with the family in the online register book at andersonbethany.com Services are under the direction of AndersonBethany Funeral Home and Crematory.

Gary Richard Wright

William (Bill) E. Carter

William (Bill) E. Carter was bor n November 6, 1933, Crystal Springs, Mississippi to Albert E. and Sue M. Carter. He passed away July 15, 2014. He met and married the love of his life, Sarah Lynn Hinson on February 8, 1953. He entered into the United States Air Force shortly after they married and served honorably in The Korean War. He completed his service at the then Walker Air Force Base here in Roswell in1956. After the service, Bill started working as a bookkeeper and worked his way to becoming a Certified Public Accountant. He worked for several accounting firms located in Roswell and Artesia. Bill enjoyed his time hunting, fishing and playing poker with his close buds. Bill and Sarah spent many of their summers relaxing in South Padre Island, Texas. Bill is survived by two children, Elizabeth Ann (Stirling) Hall of Sequim WA and Randy Carter of Mesa, AZ. He also adopted into his life two additional children, Rocky and Vicki Mascarenas of Dexter. He has three grandsons, Eli (Crystal) Mascarenas of Dexter, Nathan (Darla) Mascarenas of Roswell and Ethan Austin Wells of Port Angeles, WA, as well as two adopted grandsons, Drew Gordon and Jeremy Thomasson both of Roswell. Bill has four great-grandchildren, Elijah, Daimon, Laine and Jaeden Mascarenas. Bill was preceded in death by his wife, Sarah

Age 68, a longtime resident of Roswell and Albuquerque and United States Air force veteran, passed away July 13, 2014 in Albuquerque, NM. He is survived by his spouse Linda; children: Julie Cole and husband, Michael, Sean and wife, Kelly, James and wife, April, Michael and wife, Parisa, Genevieve; stepsons: Jason McDonald and wife, Valerie, Jeremy McDonald and wife, Jessica; 17 grandchildren; sister Linda Downard and husband, Lee; along with their two children: Michelle and Rob. Mr. Wright was preceded in death by his parents, Franklin and Kitty Wright. Services will be held on Thursday, July, 17 2014, at 3 p.m. at FrenchWyoming 7121 Wyoming Blvd. NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109. Should anyone desire, memorial contributions may be made in lieu of flowers to Linda Wright c/o Julie Cole 1501 Garcia st. NE Albuquerque, NM 87112. Please visit our online guest book for Gary Wright at FrenchFunerals.com.

Billie Jean Carey

A gathering is scheduled for Monday, July 21, 2014 at 3 p.m. at Peach Tree and a graveside memorial services will be scheduled for a later date in Mineral Wells, TX, for Billie Jean Carey, age 77, of Roswell, who passed away on July 14, 2014. A complete announcement will be made at a later date. Condolences may be made online at lagronefuneralchapels.com. Arrangements are under the personal care of LaGrone Funeral Chapel.

ume, “Roosevelt: Soldier of Freedom,” was published in 1970 and won the Pulitzer and the National Book Award. Bur ns’ other books included “Leadership,” a 1978 release that outlined his theories of “transformational” and “transactional” and became standard reading among students of business and politics; a biography of George Washington written with Dunn; and a trilogy on U.S. history, “The American Experiment.”

MARIO BENCOMO St. John’s Catholic Church Rosary Thursday, July 17 7:00 PM

St. John’s Catholic Church & South Park Cemetery Funeral Service Friday, July 18 10:00 AM


A8 Wednesday, July 16, 2014

ENTERTAINMENT/HOROSCOPES

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3- JACQUELINE Average; 2-So-so; 1-DiffiBIGAR cult ARIES (March 21-April 19) You’ll have reason to celebrate today, even if you YOUR HOROSCOPE feel you need to lie low. You will be starting a new luck cycle that affects love, creativity, children and everything else associated with your heart. This good-luck factor will last for a year. Tonight: Out and about. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You might enter a cycle where you enjoy your home life much more. You are likely to make an addition to your home or move to a new location. You also might witness a far more content social life in the next months. Tonight: Buy a favorite dessert, and celebrate. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Your ability to communicate and handle an active social life will emerge in the next few months. A new “toy” is likely to appear that will help improve your communication skills. Deal with a loved one directly. Have an important talk. Tonight: Out till the wee hours. CANCER (June 21-July 22) Reach out to someone who is a valuable source of information. You could be looking at a more positive money situation in the next

Roswell Daily Record

have a special opportunity to open a new door or experience life in a new way. How this potential opening occurs could be very different from what you visualize. Do not hesitate to leap past a barrier. Tonight: Hang close to home. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) You’ll need to reach out to someone at a distance. Listen well to the other party, as important information could be dropped on you in a very offbeat manner. Make communication your specialty for the day. Tonight: Clear out emails before you decide what to do. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) You might be concerned about a money matter. You also could be noticing a difference in how others are relating to you. You’ll enter a new cycle, which emphasizes relationships and expectations. If you are single, you could meet someone special. Tonight: Keep to your budget. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) You respond well to whatever comes down the path toward you. In the next few months, you might take on a new responsibility or add to the quality of your daily life. Curb a tendency to overeat. Others can’t help but respond to you positively. Tonight: As you like it.

month. A relative could be difficult, as he or she seems to want something from you that you refuse to give. Tonight: Join a friend at a new haunt. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Jupiter, the planet of expansion and good luck, moves into your sign today. This transit signifies a new luck and love cycle for the next 12 years. You might feel the difference. Be careful, as the world will not be your oyster every moment of every day. Tonight: Out and about. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Keep reaching out to several people. You will start noticing the difference in how you feel. You will become more intuitive in regard to people’s motives. You are like a cat with nine lives; however, you’d be wise not to push your luck. Tonight: Go along with a suggestion. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Your focus will be on work and/or establishing a new project. If you are retired, you could be looking at taking up a new hobby or pastime. You might not believe what could come out of this venture. Trust your judgment right now. Tonight: Honor a friend’s request. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) Pressure builds. You will have a chance to incorporate your creativity into your community. As a result, you’ll achieve a much-longed-for goal or status within your inner circle. You might need to clear out some negativity or anger. Tonight: A must appearance. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) You could

BORN TODAY Actress Ginger Rogers (1911), author Mary Baker Eddy (1821), politician Trygve Lie (1896)

Documents describe Bullock’s encounter with stalker LOS ANGELES (AP) — Sandra Bullock’s recent encounter with a stalker in her home reads like a scene from a scary movie in newly released documents, painting a portrait of an obsessed fan who described himself as her “husband.” Joshua James Corbett, 39, was later found to have a stash of illegal weapons including two fully automatic rifles and a machine gun at his home. But he was unarmed when he broke into Bullock’s home, af fidavits in the case said. Investigators said the sleeping actress was awakened at 6:30 a.m. on June 8 by banging noises, opened her bedroom door and saw a dark-clad stranger moving toward the stairs. Bullock, who has portrayed brave, strong women on screen, took quick action, locking the door and summoning police. “Sandy, I’m sorry!” the

man shouted as he was being taken away. “Don’t press charges.” Police determined Corbett had scaled the gates of the home and forced open a locked sunroom glass door. He remains in jail awaiting trial and could face more than seven years in prison. The incident shocked Hollywood and resurrected memories of other stars plagued by stalkers. Actress Rebecca Schaeffer was slain by a stalker in the 1980s and her death led to tightened laws to make stalking a crime and keep stalkers away from their prey. Madonna, Steven Spielberg, Ryan Seacrest, Paris Hilton and others became stalking victims but were not harmed. The writings of Corbett, detailed in a search warrant affidavit filed by the Bullock case investigators, revealed the depth of his obsession. Many stalkers have been ordered to undergo psychological

counseling as part of their sentences. The newly released affidavits gave the first detailed account of what happened inside Bullock’s home. Corbett had a letter he had written to the actress the day before the breakin professing his love for her and insisting he was her husband and the father of her son. “I love you. You are very special to me and without you in my life there is only misery,” said the letter....You are my girl!...You are my wife by law, the law of God and you belong to me and me to you.” Corbett revealed he had been watching Bullock’s movements, saw her retur n home from an American Film Institute gala on June 5 and wished he could follow her inside the gates to her house. “I will be waiting by those gates when you decide to open them to me...,” he wrote. At another point, he told

AP Photo

In this March 2 file photo, Sandra Bullock arrives at the Oscars at the Dolby Theatre, in Los Angeles.

the actress, “You are so hot and intelligent, lissome and taught (sic).” The letter was signed, “Your husband, Joshua James Corbett.” The police affidavit said Bullock arrived home about 1 a.m., showered and went to bed. She was awakened early the next morning by banging noises

she thought were coming from her third-floor workout room. The sound then shifted to the living room and she became concerned for her safety, the affidavit said. Police said Corbett was walking down the stairs when they arrived. He acknowledged breaking in, they said, and told them

your yo ur ttown. own. your your s store. tore. beallsonline.com beallsonline.com

Free F Fre ree ee 7 7-pc. - pc. gift *

with w ith any any C Clinique linique purchase purchase of of $27 $27 o orr m more! ore! a $ $70 70 vvalue. alue. Your gift Your gift iincludes: ncludes: Turnaround Turnaround O Overnight vernight Radiance Radiance Moisturizer, Moisturizer, Dramatically Dramatically D Different ifferent Moisturizing M oisturizing Lotion+, Lotion+, C Colour olour Compact, Compact, Different Diffferent Lipstick, Lip pstick, L Lash ash Doubling Doubling M Mascara, ascara, Take T ake T The he Day Day Off Off Makeup Makeup Remover Remover ffor or Lids, Lids, L Lashes ashes & Lips, Lips, plus plus colourful colourful Cosmetics Cosmetics B Bag. ag. **Quantities Quantities are are llimited. imited. O One ne B Bonus onus tto o a client, client, per per e event. vent. W While hile s supplies upplies last. last.

Now N ow tthrough hrough August August 2 in in store, store, o online nline or or order order toll-free toll-free 1 1-800-743-8730. -800-743-8730.

ROSWELL MALL MON-SAT 10-9 SUN 12-6 Clinique & Lauder now available at Bealls

he was trying to alert Bullock that her security was not impervious to intruders. He said he didn’t want to upset Bullock and thought she would not be home. The question of why Corbett was stockpiling arms at his home and at an airport hangar remained unanswered.


BUSINESS REVIEW

Roswell Daily Record

Pro Active Hearing, LLC

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

A9

Check out the featured business at www.rdrnews.com - Click on Business Review

Rudy’s Towing

214 W. First Roswell, NM 88203 Serving SENM Roswell, Ruidoso, Artesia, Carlsbad, Lovington, Hobbs

Mon-Fri 8am-5pm Sat. by Appointment (575)622-0375

1-800-657-7657(In State Only) Fax(575)622-0575 proactivehearing@outlook.com proactivehearing.com

CHUCK DWYER

Certified Locksmiths • Bonded • Registered • Insured

622-8916

1-800-530-4547 610 N. MAIN, ROSWELL

LOCKS • KEYS • SAFES 24 HOUR EMERGENCY SERVICE

Home Decor & Woodwick Candles

Fast Service Not Fast Talk

When you need drycleaning in a hurry, you want action not conversation. We promise that your beautifully drycleaned clothes will be ready, and right, when you need them.

Call us first for all your towing needs! We care! 420-7670/623-5021 24/7 $ For Junk Vehicles Free Car Removal From Your Property

Shear Elegance & Boutique

308 N Richardson 623-1887 T-F 1-5:30 pm Sat 10 am-2 pm 10% off on 1 regular item w/this ad!

WAKEFIELD OIL CO.

"We don't want you to give us your business, we want the chance to earn your business" 311 S. Virginia QUALITY, PRICE AND SERVICE!

Been in an accident and need your vehicle repaired? Call the Professionals for a FREE estimate at DESERT SUN COLLISION CENTER Randy Fisher, Estimator Mike Lamb, Manager 2912 W. Second 622-4102

Custom Built Mattresses and Renovation “Dreme-Bilt-Mattress”

Contact us for all of your insurance needs.

(575) 624-0404

WHITE MATTRESS CO.

Darel Davenport, Prop.

622-1000 604 East Second

FREE DELIVERY! LOWEST PRICES!!!

Western Finance

Laser Printer, Fax & Copier Toners Repair of printers, copiers, fax machines & typewriters

Loans up to $1100 Signature or Clear Car Title.

627-8069 • 200 W. 1st St. #124-A • Roswell

Hours: Broadmoor Shopping Center Mon - Fri 1010 S. Main 9:00 am to 6:00 pm Roswell, NM 88201 Sat: 9:00 am to 1:00 pm (505) 623-3900 Emergency # 624-5574 623-3394

BROADMOOR SHOPPING CENTER

104 E. Berrendo Rd. 623-1900 514 W. 2nd 623-3810

John’s

623-5000

Out of this World Service in Roswell, NM

Therapeutic Massage

Low Level Laser Therapy

COMPUTERS & ACCESSORIES • SALES & SERVICE

Now Featuring Carbonite Back-up Service 1703 N. Garden Fax: 624-0147

575-625-9141

Care That’s At Home, Wherever You Live.

CHEW’S COINS & CURRENCY BUY, SELL OR TRADE. GIFTS FROM THE ORIENT

ALL NEW QUARTERS, SILVER DOLLARS, GOLD EAGLES & THE PURE

BUFFALO GOLD COINS. TRY US. 2513 W. 2nd St. 622-7239•10:00 am to 5:00 pm daily

412 West 2nd Roswell NM 622-2031 HOURS: Tuesday through Saturday 10 am - 5:30 pm

Call for our daily specials

FELECIA HARVEY

oasis@oasis-computers.net www.oasis-computers.net

Comfort Keepers® provides in-home care services that help seniors and others live safe, happy and independent lives in the comfort of their own homes. Call today for more information Roswell 624-9999 Artesia 748-2200 Carlsbad 887-4999 ©2014 CK Franchising, Inc. • Most offices independently owned and operated.

ComfortKeepers.com ALTERNATOR • STARTERS • BATTERIES • ELECTRICAL BRAKE SERVICE • TUNE UPS • AUTO AIR CONDITIONING DALE • DENNIS • JOE

CARR AUTOMOTIVE, INC. Complete Auto Repair Open 8:00 - 5:00 Mon./Sat.

Phone 622-0909 Emergency. Phone: 623-9751 or 625-9007 316 EAST MCGAFFEY • ROSWELL NEW MEXICO 88201

You can depend on us - we value our reputation

Not a member? Don’t worry. Becoming a member is easy! If you work or reside in Chaves, Eddy, Lincoln, Roosevelt or De Baca you are eligible. Open a checking account today and get great rates likes these.

2514 N Main St. www.roswellcu.org (575) 623-7788

Auto Loans, Boat Loans, RV Loans we’ve got you covered. Low rates on titled vehicles or let us refinance your current titled loan.

2% REFI SALE

Will lower your current rate on your vehicle loan financed elsewhere, by 2%*. WE’RE HERE TO SAVE YOU MONEY!!* *Base Rate 3% OAC

Help Homeless Pets by signing up to be a member of

Roswell Humane Society

General Dues $25 • Senior Dues $15 Junior Dues $5 • Lifetime $250 • Family $50 Business $200 Name:___________________________________ Address:_________________________________ Phone:____________________ Roswell Humane Society 703 E. McGaffey 622-8950

LMT#4689

626-4941

INDOOR ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL & HOME COMFORT

Carrier systems technology can guarantee you a more comfortable home at a lower energy cost. For a great indoor weather forecast as us about

Carrier’s Heat Pump System® with ComfortHeat™ Technology.

622-4977


A10 Wednesday, July 16, 2014

WEATHER

Roswell Seven-day forecast Today

A thunderstorm around

Tonight

Mostly cloudy, a t-storm

Thursday

A t-storm in the area

Friday

Saturday

A p.m. t-storm possible

Sunday

Partly sunny and warmer

Sunny and hot

Monday

Partly sunny and hot

Roswell Daily Record

National Cities Tuesday

Partly sunny and hot

High 93°

Low 67°

89°/63°

89°/67°

97°/69°

100°/70°

99°/70°

99°/75°

NW at 3-6 mph POP: 40%

VAR at 2-4 mph POP: 55%

SW at 3-6 mph POP: 40%

SSW at 6-12 mph POP: 30%

S at 4-8 mph POP: 5%

S at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

S at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

NE at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

New Mexico Weather

Roswell through 8 p.m. Tuesday

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

Temperatures High/low ........................... 90°/67° Normal high/low ............... 94°/67° Record high ............. 103° in 2009 Record low ................. 55° in 1962 Humidity at noon .................. 40%

Farmington 89/60

Clayton 84/56

Raton 82/55

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

0.03" 0.16" 1.09" 6.45" 5.99"

Santa Fe 82/56

Gallup 86/58 Albuquerque 88/64

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Tucumcari 92/64 Clovis 87/61

Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading

Ruidoso 77/58

T or C 88/69

Source:Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

Sun and Moon The Sun Today Thu. The Moon Today Thu. Last

Jul 18

Rise Set 6:00 a.m. 8:08 p.m. 6:01 a.m. 8:07 p.m. Rise Set 11:13 p.m. 10:51 a.m. 11:51 p.m. 11:55 a.m. New

Jul 26

First

Aug 3

Full

Aug 10

Alamogordo 92/71

Silver City 86/66

Hobbs 93/67

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

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

92/71/t 88/64/t 72/44/t 93/69/t 97/73/pc 75/48/t 84/56/t 72/53/t 87/61/t 93/69/t 87/63/t 89/60/t 86/58/t 93/67/pc 92/69/t 79/52/t 80/57/t 92/65/t 93/68/t 91/64/t 82/57/t 82/55/t 70/46/t 93/67/t 77/58/t 82/56/t 86/66/t 88/69/t 92/64/t 83/59/t

93/69/t 91/66/t 68/46/t 89/64/c 94/67/c 78/47/t 74/56/pc 73/49/t 76/56/c 96/69/pc 90/64/t 92/60/pc 88/57/t 88/63/c 95/69/t 70/53/t 80/57/t 93/64/t 89/64/c 81/61/c 84/56/t 75/53/t 73/46/t 89/63/c 73/57/t 83/57/t 89/64/pc 92/68/pc 80/59/pc 83/58/pc

Thu. Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

68/56/pc 66/55/pc 83/62/pc 84/65/pc 83/63/pc 83/63/pc 78/65/t 82/64/s 85/63/pc 86/66/pc 72/55/pc 77/60/pc 70/56/pc 73/55/pc 89/72/t 81/69/t 74/53/t 79/57/pc 72/56/pc 76/57/pc 94/74/pc 98/76/t 88/75/pc 88/74/pc 93/76/pc 90/76/t 72/53/pc 75/55/s 75/56/pc 74/59/pc 104/83/t 105/82/pc 78/64/pc 76/64/pc 91/66/t 79/61/c

89/77/t Miami Midland 96/73/pc Minneapolis 75/58/s 87/72/t New Orleans New York 81/66/t Omaha 75/55/s 88/74/t Orlando Philadelphia 83/65/pc Phoenix 107/84/pc 72/53/pc Pittsburgh Portland, OR 89/59/s Raleigh 86/63/t St. Louis 77/60/s Salt Lake City 89/63/pc San Diego 74/68/pc Seattle 86/60/s 100/74/pc Tucson Washington, DC 83/67/pc

90/76/t 94/66/c 77/63/s 88/76/pc 81/66/pc 78/59/pc 90/74/t 83/65/pc 107/83/s 76/55/pc 83/56/s 87/65/pc 79/62/s 92/70/pc 73/68/pc 81/57/s 102/74/s 85/66/pc

U.S. Extremes

Today

Thu.

(For the 48 contiguous states)

State Extremes

High: 118° .........Death Valley, Calif. Low: 36° .................. Hettinger, N.D.

High: 92° .....................Alamogordo Low: 46° ........................Eagle Nest

National Cities

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

Fronts

Precipitation

FREE Concert in the Park CAHOON PARK Fri. July 18 - 6:30PM

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2014

Choices”, calling it an “eyewitness view” to her four years as chief U.S. diplomat. But he kept returning to everyone’s main question: the 2016 presidential race, joking, “I think I speak for everybody when I say, no one cares (about the book), they just want to know if you’re running for president.”

He then took a different tack to try to get a hint from her about her political plans, asking whether she prefers an office with corners, or without them — like the Oval Office.

She didn’t go for that bait either.

The 66-year -old former first lady is well aware of the spotlight on her as a potential presidential hopeful, with pundits parsing her every word and books and articles attacking her past actions. “I’ve been amazed at what a cottage industry it is, and so, I kind of expect it would continue, so I’m not really paying a lot of attention,” she deadpanned.

6230 N. Main St. Roswell NM 88201

1/2 mile north of the bridge on Vaughn Highway 575-622-6493 www.erniesqualityconcrete.com

METAL ART

PATIO FURNITURE

Carlsbad 97/73

Las Cruces 92/69

No hints from Hillary on ‘The Daily Show’

NEW YORK (AP) — Hillary Rodham Clinton gave Jon Stewart no hints about whether she will run for president, but acknowledged during Tuesday’s taping of “The Daily Show” that the speculation surrounding her possible candidacy has become “a cottage industry.” Stewart introduced Clinton by saying, “She’s here solely for one reason: to publicly and definitively declare her candidacy for president of the United States ... I think.” That proved not to be true. The two moved on to a series of national and international issues Clinton faced as secretary of state, including the violence and tension between Israel and the Palestinians. “We’re really in a terrible dilemma,” she said, noting there has been an offer of a cease-fire brokered by Egypt that Israel accepted but that was rejected by Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip. “Part of what I see Hamas doing is, their identity comes from being the violent resistance,” she said. Stewart also plugged Clinton’s new book, “Hard

ROSWELL 93/67

Regional Cities Today Thu.

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

Today Hi/Lo/W

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

Cold

-10s

Warm

-0s

0s

Stationary

10s

20s

Showers T-storms

30s

40s

50s

Rain

60s

"The Plateros"

Flurries

70s

80s

Snow

Ice

90s 100s 110s


SPORTS

B

Wade re-signs two-year deal with Heat Wednesday, July 16, 2014 Phone: 575-622-7710, ext. 304

Section

Roswell Daily Record

AP Photo

Dwayne Wade, who has played for the Miami Heat his whole career, signed a two-year deal, Tuesday.

E-mail: sports@rdrnews.com

Dwyane Wade is staying with the Miami Heat, and his latest deal is designed to give both the player and the only franchise he’s ever known some flexibility in the coming years. Wade signed a new contract with the Heat on Tuesday. It’s a two-year deal, the second of those seasons a player option, said a person familiar with the situation. The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because neither side announced terms. “I am proud to have spent every single day of my career as a member of the Miami Heat and to have brought three championship titles to this great city,” Wade said in a statement. “I’ve been here through the good times and the hard times. I have confidence in the Miami Heat organization and the team they are building.” Earlier Tuesday, Wade tweeted “Home Is Where The Heart Is... My Home,My City,My House” and attached a photo of himself standing below the three NBA champi-

onship banners that hang at Miami’s home arena. Financial terms were not announced, though it’s expected Wade’s salary for next season will not reach the $20.2 million he would have made under his previous contract. Heat President Pat Riley confirmed that Wade again bought into the Heat mantra of sacrifice. The contract he signed four years ago left millions on the bargaining-room table, in part to make the deals with LeBron James, Chris Bosh and Udonis Haslem happen. “Dwyane has been the franchise cornerstone for this team since the day he arrived 11 years ago,” Riley said. “He has shown his commitment to the Heat many times over the course of his career and has always been willing to sacrifice in order to help build this team into a champion. This time is no different.” See RE-SIGNS, Page B3

Lions Hondo Little League 9-10 Year Old District 2 Champions

Photo by Bob Bailey

Dominico SanFelippo catches a fly in left center field, Tuesday.

One pitcher helps Invaders win for second straight game Photo courtesy of Mel Licon

Pictured holding banner left to right: Andrew Sedillo and Raul Guzman; Back row left to right: Jack Forrester, Fabian Segovia and Erik Palma; Front row left to right: Frankie Lara, Eric Brock, Emiliano Bonilla, Sabino Lazos, Ezekiel Gonzales, Nico Carrilo, Javin Sanchez, Dominic Morgan and Jonathan Anchondo.

Jeter, Trout help AL beat NL 5-3 in All-Star Game

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Derek Jeter soaked in the adulation from fans and players during one more night on baseball’s national stage, set the tone for the American League with a pregame speech and then delivered two final All-Star hits. Mike Trout, perhaps the top candidate to succeed the 40-year-old Yankees captain as the face of the game, seemed ready to assume the role with a tiebreaking triple and later a go-ahead double that earned the 22-year-old MVP honors. On a summer evening filled with reminders of generational change, the AL kept up nearly two decades of dominance by beating the National League 5-3 Tuesday for its 13th win in 17 years. “I think let Mike be Mike. I don’t think people have to necessarily appoint someone to a particular position,” Jeter said. “He’s got a bright future ahead of him. I don’t know how much better he can get, but if he consistently does what he’s doing, then he will be here for a long time.” Miguel Cabrera hit a two-run homer to help give the AL champion home-field advantage for the World Series. No matter what else happened, from the start it seemed destined to be another special event for Jeter. He made a diving stop on Andrew McCutchen’s grounder to shortstop leading off the game and nearly threw him out at first, then received a 63-second standing ovation when he walked to the plate before his opposite-field double to right leading off the bottom half. He was given another rousing cheer before his single to right starting the third and 2 1-2 minutes more applause after AL manager John Farrell sent Alexei Ramirez to shortstop to replace him at the start of the fourth. As Frank Sinatra’s recording of “New York, New York” boomed over the Target Field speakers and his parents watched from the stands, Jeter repeatedly waved to the crowd, exchanged handshakes and hugs with just about every person in the AL dugout and then came back onto the field for a curtain call. “It was a special moment and it was unscripted,” Jeter said. “I was unaware of it.” NL manager Mike Matheny of the Cardinals didn’t want it to stop. See JETER, Page B3

LOCAL SCHEDULE —WEDNESDAY, JULY 16 — • Bisbee at Roswell, 7 p.m. PECOS LEAGUE

AP Photo

Derek Jeter waves as he is taken out of the game at the top of the fourth inning, Tuesday. It was Jeter’s last All-Star Game as the American League won 5-3.

SPOTLIGHT 1920 — Babe Ruth breaks his own season record of 29 homers with his 30th as the New York Yankees beat the St. Louis Browns, 5-2. Ruth ends the season with 54. 1920 — The United States sweeps Australia in five straight matches to win the Davis Cup for the first time since 1913. The U.S. team is made up of Bill Tilden and Bill Johnston. 1938 — Paul Runyan wins the PGA golf champi-

On Monday, Ernie Zaragoza pitched a full game to help the Invaders win. On Tuesday, that’s exactly what Josh Mooney did as Roswell edged the Bisbee Blue 3-2 at Joe Bauman Stadium. Mooney (9-2) struck out 13 while giving up six hits and two runs. Invaders center fielder Dominic SanFelippo went 2-for4, hitting a double and triple. Dylan Ryan (2-4) pitched seven innings while giving up six hits and three runs, taking the loss.

ON

SPORTS

ON THIS DAY IN ...

onship by routing Sam Snead 8 and 7 in the final round. 1947 — Rocky Graziano scores a technical knockout with a barrage of 30 punches against Tony Zale in the sixth round to win the world middleweight boxing title. Held in Chicago Stadium, it’s the largest grossing fight in history. 1950 — Uruguay beats Brazil 2-1 to win soccer’s World Cup in Rio de Janeiro. 1989 — Betsy King birdies three of the first four

holes of the final round to win her first U.S. Women’s Open championship by four strokes over Nancy Lopez. 1993 — Nick Faldo ties the best single round in 122 years of the British Open with a course-record 63 to give him a one-stroke lead after the second round. 1995 — Annika Sorenstam of Sweden wins the U.S. Women’s Open by one stroke over Meg Mallon, her first victory on the LPGA Tour.


Pistorious gets into nightclub argument B2 Wednesday, July 16, 2014

SPORTS

Roswell Daily Record

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Oscar Pistorius was in an altercation at an upmarket nightclub over the weekend, his family said Tuesday. Pistorius went with a cousin to a trendy Johannesburg nightclub on Saturday, where he was accosted by a man who aggressively questioned him about his murder trial, a family spokeswoman said. The man gave a different version, saying the double-amputee runner was drunk, insulted his friends and the family of President Jacob Zuma and poked him in the chest, according to Johannesburg’s Star newspaper. Regardless of who started the argument, the weekend episode focuses fresh attention on the disputed character of Pistorius, a globally recognized athlete who is on trial for murder after he fatally shot girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp through a closed toilet door on Feb. 14, 2013. Defense lawyers describe Pistorius, currently free on bail, as a vulnerable figure with a disability who pulled the trigger in a tragic case of mistaken identity, but prosecutors portray him as a gun-obsessed hothead who shot Steenkamp after the couple quarreled. The trial is on a break ahead of closing arguments on Aug. 7-8, sparing Pistorius the near-daily trip to the Pretoria courthouse, where he has sometimes wept and wailed in apparent distress

during testimony. The nightclub argument has put him back on the front pages of South Africa’s press, which has also highlighted a number of quotations about suffering and religious faith that appeared on his Twitter account in the hours that followed. The altercation in the nightspot cannot be a factor in Pistorius’ trial, said a legal analyst who has closely followed proceedings. “It would not be appropriate to mention it in closing arguments as it would constitute hearsay as no previous witness has entered evidence of it on the trial record,” Kelly Phelps, a senior lecturer in the public law department at the University of Cape Town, wrote in an email to The Associated Press. “If it had occurred earlier in proceedings the gentleman concerned could have been called as a witness or Mr. Pistorius could have been questioned on the reports. Even then it would have very little value. The most important thing the court needs to determine is what Pistorius was thinking and how he was acting on the night in question,” wrote Phelps, referring to the night on which Pistorius killed Steenkamp. Pistorius had been barred from consuming alcohol under early bail conditions, but the ban was rescinded after the defense appealed. He was seated in a quiet booth

in the VIP section of the nightclub before he was approached, said Anneliese Burgess, a spokeswoman for the Pistorius family. “The individual, according to my client, started to aggressively interrogate him on matters relating to the trial. An argument ensued during which my client asked to be left alone,” she said in a statement. “Oscar soon thereafter left the club with his cousin. My client regrets the decision to go to a public space and thereby inviting unwelcome attention.” Leo Pistorius, an uncle of the runner, said in a statement later that it was unwise for his nephew to go to the club even if he was not the aggressor in the argument, noting Pistorius’ “escalating sense of loneliness and alienation” had contributed to “some of his self-harming behavior.” The man who argued with Pistorius is Jared Mortimer, according to Johannesburg’s Star newspaper and The Juice, a South African celebrity news website, which quoted Mortimer as saying the Paralympic athlete started the confrontation. Pistorius said Mortimer’s friends had betrayed him in the murder trial, The Star quoted Mortimer as saying in an apparent reference to evidence presented in court. The athlete also said he had information that could get those friends into trouble, but he would not use it, according to

Mortimer. “He was drunk, but not bad. We were drinking tequila and I still remember putting down my drink and thinking I couldn’t drink it while my friends were being spoken of like that,” The Star quoted Mortimer as saying. Pistorius also insulted the family of the South African president, Jacob Zuma, upsetting Mortimer, who is a friend of a member of Zuma’s family, according to the newspaper. “He was poking me and saying that I would never get the better of him,” the newspaper quoted Mortimer as saying. “He was close to my face and at that point I pushed him to get him away from me. A chair was behind his legs and he fell to the ground.” Pistorius’ uncle, Leo, said the allegation that the runner had insulted Zuma was false and that Mortimer was “a man peddling untruths designed for maximum attention and maximum damage.” The altercation happened Saturday night in Sandton, an upscale area in Johannesburg, according to South African media. A woman who answered the telephone at The VIP Room, the club where the incident occurred, said club owner Chris Coutroulis was “overseas” and was awaiting reports from club staff who witnessed the altercation. The club website says it caters

to the “nouveau riche” and invites guests to “slip on your diamante dancing shoes or designer suit and dance the night away at the most ostentatious venue in Joburg.” On Monday, several quotations appeared on Pistorius’ Twitter account. They included the biblical verse “The Lord is close to the brokenhearted,” as well as a prayer, “Lord, today I ask that you bathe those who live in pain in the river of your healing. Amen.” Another tweet shows photos of Pistorius with disabled and other children and a caption about “the ability to make a difference in someone’s life.” Burgess, the Pistorius family spokeswoman, said she was not immediately able to confirm the authenticity of the tweets. He last tweeted on Feb. 14, the first anniversary of Steenkamp’s death. Pistorius, who says he killed Steenkamp after thinking an intruder was about to attack him, faces 25 years to life in prison if found guilty of premeditated murder. He could also be sentenced to a shorter prison term if convicted of murder without premeditation or negligent killing. Additionally, he faces separate gunrelated charges.

RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — Brazil just pulled off the World Cup. Next up is Rio de Janeiro’s 2016 Olympics, which poses an even bigger challenge. Cement trucks are busy, creating billowing dust clouds, and girders are rising along Avenida Embaixador Abelardo Bueno, the road running in front of the main Olympic Park in the suburb of Barra da Tijuca. “It’s going, it’s going,” said a worker at the construction site, wearing an orange helmet, blue overalls and introducing himself as Mauricio Lima. Rust-orange beams sprouted behind him as he talked, a superstructure that in two years will become the Olympic media and broadcast centers. “There is a lot to do, but things are moving,” he added. The World Cup overcame fears about protests, half-finished stadiums and chaotic transport to deliver an exciting tournament that culminated with Germany’s 1-0 victory over Argentina in extra time in the final. Brazil’s humiliating 7-1 loss against Germany in the semifinals was a blow to the home country, and the collapse a week ago of an overpass — part of a World Cup project in the southeast city of Belo Horizonte —

killed two people. Eight workers died in World Cup stadium construction accidents. Rio’s Olympics have had their own problems. A few months ago, International Olympic Committee Vice President John Coates called the city’s preparations the “worst” in memory. Other IOC members openly lambasted Rio. In response, the IOC sent in executive director Gilbert Felli to work as a troubleshooter. His presence has helped, and Felli expects most projects back on schedule by September. “I’d like to be clear,” Felli said in an interview with The Associated Press. “Until the games are delivered I’m always concerned. But it’s not the case to say we’re not going to make it. It’s not possible that we won’t make it.” Felli believes the World Cup gave the Olympics a boost. “The perception of the Brazilians is much more positive,” Felli said. “It’s good for the games. They have better trust in themselves to deliver the games. My view is to say ... the Brazilians will deliver excellent games. But we have to work every day for it. Nothing is a done deal.” Deadlines are still tight, and Felli described some as “tense, very tense.” The problem areas

include: —a shortage of hotel rooms —severe water pollution at the sailing venue in Guanabara Bay —a late start at the second large cluster of venues called Deodoro in northern Rio —completion of a subway line extension from central Rio to Barra da T ijuca, site of the Olympic Park —construction of a public golf course several kilometers (miles) from the Olympic Park. The Rio Games, with events scattered around four venue clusters, could present transportation nightmares in a city cut up by mountains, tunnels and poor roads. About 60 percent of the events will be at Olympic Park, about 25 kilometers (15 miles) west of central Rio. The Olympic Park and nearby golf course are being built in a wetlands/swamp area. Small alligators have been spotted wandering around the golf course, and visitors constantly complain about swarming mosquitoes in the Olympic Park area and the neighboring athletes village. Other events will be staged at three other clusters: Deodoro; the famous Maracana Stadium area in central Rio; the Copacabana Beach and Guanabara Bay areas. Track and field will be run at

the Joao Havelange Olympic Stadium, which was built in 2007 for the Pan American Games. The stadium, located in the Maracana cluster area, has been closed for a year for renovation and is to open next year. In the wake of the World Cup, former IOC marketing director Michael Payne warned against complacency. “The danger would be anybody having a false sense of security,” Payne said. “The Olympics are a far more complicated undertaking to deliver than the World Cup.” For example: —The World Cup involved 736 athletes; the Olympics 10,500. —The World Cup is one championship; the Olympics are dozens. —The World Cup drags on for a month; the Olympics are densely packed into just over two weeks. —Host-generated broadcasting for the World Cup amounted to a few hundred hours; the Rio Olympics will generate about 5,000 hours. Payne suggested Rio’s Olympic preparations might have “bottomed out” a few months ago, which means the only way is up. “No disrespect to FIFA and the complexity and what they’ve done,” Payne said. “But the sheer number of events becomes intimi-

dating in the Olympics. It’s a danger if Brazilians think it’s just a bit more complex.” Brazil is estimated to have spent $11 billion to 14 billion on the World Cup, mostly public money. About $4 billion went to building or refurbishing 12 stadiums. Olympic spending is about $17 billion — a mix of public and private money. Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes said he expects overall spending to increase by as much as 20 percent. That would put spending at over $20 billion. In their winning bid in 2009, Rio of ficials pitched that the Olympics would be a catalyst for building infrastructure in Rio, a city neglected for 50 years. But as costs have risen, and in an election year for President Dilma Rousseff, national, state and local of ficials have flipflopped. Now they say infrastructure spending should be viewed separately from direct Olympic spending. They argue that a subway extension, high-speed bus lanes and a rejuvenated port would have been built anyway and are not Olympic-related expenses. However, Paes has acknowledged the projects lingered for years and would not have happened without the Olympics.

One down, one to go: Rio Olympics next for Brazil

Pecos League

Pecos League At A Glance All times Mountain Northern Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Santa Fe . . . . . . . .39 Trinidad . . . . . . . .32 Raton . . . . . . . . . .22 Taos . . . . . . . . . . .19 Las Vegas . . . . . . .15 Southern Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Alpine . . . . . . . . . .45 Roswell . . . . . . . .36 Bisbee . . . . . . . . .30 Douglas . . . . . . . .26 White Sands . . . . .26

L 20 22 34 37 40

L 19 24 29 33 32

Pct GB .661 — .593 4.5 .393 15.5 .339 18.5 .273 22.5

Pct GB .703 — .600 7 .508 12.5 .441 16.5 .448 16

July 12 Raton 10, Las Vegas 4 Trinidad 4, Douglas 3 Santa Fe 5, Taos 4 Alpine 4, Bisbee 2, 1st game Roswell 15, White Sands 1 Alpine at Bisbee, 2nd game July 13 Douglas 9, Raton 3 Trinidad at Las Vegas, 7 p.m. White Sands 15, Alpine 11 Roswell 13, Bisbee 2 Santa Fe 11, Taos 7 July 14 Raton 7, Douglas 5 Trinidad 10, Las Vegas 9 Alpine 10, White Sands 4 Santa Fe 27, Taos 4 Roswell 6, Bisbee 1 July 15 Santa Fe 12, Raton 3 Las Vegas at Trinidad, 7 p.m. Alpine 12, White Sands 0, 1st game Alpine 17, White Sands 6, 2nd game Douglas at Taos, 8 p.m. Roswell 3, Bisbee 2 July 16 Las Vegas at Trinidad, 7 p.m. Raton at Santa Fe, 7 p.m. Bisbee at Roswell, 7 p.m. Douglas at Taos, 8 p.m. July 17 Santa Fe at Trinidad, 7 p.m. Raton at Las Vegas, 7 p.m. White Sands at Taos, 8 p.m. Bisbee at Douglas, 8 p.m. Roswell at Alpine, 7 p.m. July 18 Santa Fe at Trinidad, 7 p.m. Raton at Las Vegas, 7 p.m. White Sands at Taos, 8 p.m. Bisbee at Douglas, 8 p.m. Roswell at Alpine, 7 p.m.

July 19 Las Vegas at Raton, 7 p.m. Trinidad at Santa Fe, 7 p.m. Douglas at Bisbee, 8 p.m. Roswell at Alpine, 7 p.m. White Sands at Taos, 8 p.m. July 20 Las Vegas at Raton, 7 p.m. Trinidad at Santa Fe, 7 p.m. Bisbee at Douglas, 8 p.m. Roswell at Alpine, 7 p.m. White Sands at Taos, 8 p.m.

Golf

World Golf Ranking By The Associated Press Through July 13 1. Adam Scott . . . . . . . . . . .AUS 8.86 2. Henrik Stenson . . . . . . . .SWE 7.88 3. Justin Rose . . . . . . . . . . .ENG 7.34 4. Bubba Watson . . . . . . . . .USA 6.90 5. Matt Kuchar . . . . . . . . . . .USA 6.73 6. Jason Day . . . . . . . . . . . .AUS 6.46 7. Tiger Woods . . . . . . . . . .USA 6.36 8. Rory McIlroy . . . . . . . . . . .NIR 6.30 9. Sergio Garcia . . . . . . . . .ESP 6.13 10. Jordan Spieth . . . . . . . . .USA 5.90 11. Jim Furyk . . . . . . . . . . . .USA 5.45 12. Martin Kaymer . . . . . . . .GER 5.45 13. Phil Mickelson . . . . . . . .USA 5.23 14. Zach Johnson . . . . . . . . .USA 5.11 15. Hideki Matsuyama . . . . .JPN 4.89 16. Dustin Johnson . . . . . . . .USA 4.87 17. Graeme McDowell . . . . .NIR 4.62 18. Jimmy Walker . . . . . . . . .USA 4.18 19. Steve Stricker . . . . . . . . .USA 4.14 20. Luke Donald . . . . . . . . . .ENG 3.98 21. Jason Dufner . . . . . . . . .USA 3.89 22. Keegan Bradley . . . . . . .USA 3.87 23. Victor Dubuisson . . . . . .FRA 3.81 24. Thomas Bjorn . . . . . . . . .DEN 3.78 25. Rickie Fowler . . . . . . . . .USA 3.75 26. Charl Schwartzel . . . . . .SAF 3.74 27. Ian Poulter . . . . . . . . . . .ENG 3.67 28. Miguel Angel Jimenez . .ESP 3.66 29. Webb Simpson . . . . . . . .USA 3.65 30. Patrick Reed . . . . . . . . . .USA 3.56 31. Jamie Donaldson . . . . . .WAL 3.45 32. Lee Westwood . . . . . . . .ENG 3.30 33. Stephen Gallacher . . . . .SCO 3.27 34. Thongchai Jaidee . . . . . .THA 3.27 35. Brandt Snedeker . . . . . .USA 3.21 36. Graham DeLaet . . . . . . .CAN 3.20 37. Bill Haas . . . . . . . . . . . . .USA 3.16 38. Kevin Na . . . . . . . . . . . . .USA 3.07 39. Kevin Streelman . . . . . . .USA 3.01 40. Ryan Moore . . . . . . . . . .USA 2.93 41. Brendon Todd . . . . . . . . .USA 2.87 42. Jonas Blixt . . . . . . . . . . .SWE 2.79 43. Francesco Molinari . . . . .ITA 2.73 44. Chris Kirk . . . . . . . . . . . .USA 2.69 45. Joost Luiten . . . . . . . . . .NED 2.68 46. Hunter Mahan . . . . . . . . .USA 2.68

SCOREBOARD

47. Mikko Ilonen . . . . . . . . . .FIN 2.64 48. Harris English . . . . . . . . .USA 2.62 49. Matt Every . . . . . . . . . . .USA 2.59 50. Gary Woodland . . . . . . .USA 2.56 51. Matt Jones . . . . . . . . . . .AUS 2.51 52. Louis Oosthuizen . . . . . .SAF 2.50 53. Billy Horschel . . . . . . . . .USA 2.46 54. Kevin Stadler . . . . . . . . .USA 2.45 55. Angel Cabrera . . . . . . . .ARG 2.41 56. John Senden . . . . . . . . .AUS 2.39 57. Russell Henley . . . . . . . .USA 2.32 58. Ernie Els . . . . . . . . . . . . .SAF 2.27 59. Pablo Larrazabal . . . . . .ESP 2.25 60. Ryan Palmer . . . . . . . . . .USA 2.22 61. Koumei Oda . . . . . . . . . .JPN 2.16 62. Marc Leishman . . . . . . . .AUS 2.14 63. J.B. Holmes . . . . . . . . . .USA 2.13 64. Charley Hoffman . . . . . .USA 2.11 65. Richard Sterne . . . . . . . .SAF 2.09 66. Gonzalo Fdz-Castano . .ESP 2.07 67. Bernd Wiesberger . . . . . .AUT 2.07 68. Shane Lowry . . . . . . . . . .IRL 2.06 69. Matteo Manassero . . . . . .ITA 2.05 70. Brian Harman . . . . . . . . .USA 2.03 71. K.J. Choi . . . . . . . . . . . . .KOR 1.99 72. George Coetzee . . . . . . .SAF 1.95 73. Rafael Cabrera-Bello . . .ESP 1.93 74. Erik Compton . . . . . . . . .USA 1.87 75. Charles Howell III . . . . . .USA 1.85

MLB

American League At A Glance All Times Mountain By The Associated Press East Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Baltimore . . . . . . . . . .52 42 Toronto . . . . . . . . . . . .49 47 New York . . . . . . . . . .47 47 Tampa Bay . . . . . . . . .44 53 Boston . . . . . . . . . . . .43 52 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Detroit . . . . . . . . . . . .53 38 Kansas City . . . . . . . .48 46 Cleveland . . . . . . . . . .47 47 Chicago . . . . . . . . . . .45 51 Minnesota . . . . . . . . .44 50 West Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Oakland . . . . . . . . . . .59 36 Los Angeles . . . . . . . .57 37 Seattle . . . . . . . . . . . .51 44 Houston . . . . . . . . . . .40 56

Pct GB .553 — .510 4 .500 5 .454 9 1/2 .453 9 1/2

Pct GB .582 — .511 6 1/2 .500 7 1/2 .469 10 1/2 .468 10 1/2

Pct GB .621 — .606 1 1/2 .537 8 .417 19 1/2

Texas . . . . . . . . . . . . .38 57 .400

21

Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games All-Star Game at Minneapolis, MN, 6 p.m. Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled

National League At A Glance All Times Mountain By The Associated Press East Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Washington . . . . . . . .51 42 Atlanta . . . . . . . . . . . .52 43 New York . . . . . . . . . .45 50 Miami . . . . . . . . . . . . .44 50 Philadelphia . . . . . . . .42 53 Central Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Milwaukee . . . . . . . . .53 43 St. Louis . . . . . . . . . . .52 44 Cincinnati . . . . . . . . . .51 44 Pittsburgh . . . . . . . . .49 46 Chicago . . . . . . . . . . .40 54 West Division . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L Los Angeles . . . . . . . .54 43 San Francisco . . . . . .52 43 San Diego . . . . . . . . .41 54 Colorado . . . . . . . . . .40 55 Arizona . . . . . . . . . . .40 56

Pct GB .548 — .547 — .474 7 .468 7 1/2 .442 10

Pct GB .552 — .542 1 .537 1 1/2 .516 3 1/2 .426 12

Pct GB .557 — .547 1 .432 12 .421 13 .417 13 1/2

Monday’s Games No games scheduled Tuesday’s Games All-Star Game at Minneapolis, MN, 6 p.m. Wednesday’s Games No games scheduled

Transactions

Tuesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL Major League Baseball MLB — Named Billy Bean as a consultant who will serve as Ambassador for Inclusion. American League CLEVELAND INDIANS — Optioned RHP Zach McAllister to Columbus (IL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS — Acquired G/F Thabo

Sefolosha and the rights to F Giorgos Printezis and cash considerations from Oklahoma City Thunder for the rights to F Sofoklis Schortsanitis. BOSTON CELTICS — Signed G Avery Bradley to a four-year contract. CHICAGO BULLS — Released F Carlos Boozer. Waived F Lou Amundson, G Ronnie Brewer and G Mike James. DALLAS MAVERICKS — Signed F Dirk Nowitzki and F Chandler Parsons. DETROIT PISTONS — Signed G D.J. Augustin and F Caron Butler. HOUSTON ROCKETS — Acquired F Trevor Ariza, F Alonzo Gee, G Scotty Hopson and a 2015 first-round draft pick from the New Orleans Pelicans, the Pelicans received C Omer Asik, F Omri Casspi and cash considerations and the Washington Wizards receive C Melvin Ely and a trade exception. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES — Signed G Beno Udrih to a multiyear contract. MIAMI HEAT — Re-signed G Dwyane Wade. OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER — Signed G Sebastian Telfair. PHOENIX SUNS — Waived G Ish Smith. SAN ANTONIO SPURS — Named Etorre Messina assistant coach. FOOTBALL National Football League INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed G Chad Anderson. Waived DE Gannon Conway. NEW ORLEANS SAINTS — Agreed to terms with TE Jimmy Graham on a multiyear contract. Canadian Football League WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS — Acquired QB Josh Portis from Toronto for a 2015 conditional draft pick. HOCKEY National Hockey League ARIZONA COYOTES — Signed F Brandon McMillan to a one-year contract and F Jordan Szwarz to a two-year contract. DETROIT RED WINGS — Named Tony Granato assistant coach. EDMONTON OILERS — Signed C Andrew Miller to a one-year contract. Agreed to terms with F Tyler Pitlick and F Curtis Hamilton on one-year contracts. FLORIDA PANTHERS — Agreed to terms with D Dylan Olsen on a two-year contract and F Garrett Wilson and C Ryan Martindale on one-year contracts. MINNESOTA WILD — Re-signed LW Jason Zucker to a two-year contract. NASHVILLE PREDATORS — Signed Fs Mike Ribeiro and Derek Roy to one-year contracts. Signed LW Viktor Arvidsson and LW Kevin Fiala to a three-year entry-level contract. NEW YORK ISLANDERS — Agreed to terms C Casey Cizikas has on a two-year contract and D Calvin de Haan on a threeyear contract.

WASHINGTON CAPITALS — Signed G Vitek Vanecek and F Jakub Vrana to threeyear, entry-level contracts. American Hockey League CHARLOTTE CHECKERS — Agreed to terms with G John Muse on an AHL contract. TORONTO MARLIES — Named Gord Dineen coach. SOCCER MLS COLUMBUS CREW — Announced it has mutually agreed to part ways with MF Alvaro Rey. COLLEGE BIG EAST CONFERENCE — Named Stu Jackson senior associate commissioner for men’s basketball. ALABAMA — Announced the retirement of gymnastics coach Sarah Patterson. DELAWARE — Named Christine Motta associate athletic director for student-athlete development and senior woman administrator. EASTERN MICHIGAN — Named Mark Van Ameyde baseball coach. IOWA — Suspended G Peter Jok indefinitely. SAINT ROSE — Named William Aloia, Jr. assistant athletic director for compliance. UMASS — Announced women’s sophomore basketball F Alyssa Lawrence has a transferred from San Diego State. TENNESSEE — Announced the Southeastern Conference has denied a graduate transfer to F Eric McKnight. WEST ALABAMA — Named Rusty Cram women’s basketball coach.

TV SPORTSWATCH

TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press All Times Mountain Wednesday, July 16 CYCLING 6 a.m. NBCSN — Tour de France, Stage 11, Besancon to Oyonnax, France GOLF 2 a.m. ESPN — British Open Championship, first round, at Hoylake, England SOCCER 4:55 p.m. ESPN2 — MLS, New York at Philadelphia


Roswell Daily Record

Re-signs Continued from Page B1

Wade’s retur n was expected, yet still represents a huge win for Miami during free agency — especially since it comes less than a week after James left the Heat after four seasons and returned to the Cleveland Cavaliers. So now, what was the “Big 3” is a “Big 2.” Bosh is in the process of finishing a $118 million, five-year contract with Miami. Also Tuesday, the Heat signed Luol Deng to a twoyear, $20 million deal, which was agreed to over the weekend. “Luol Deng is one of the most important free agent signings that we have ever had in the history of the franchise,” Riley said. “He is a proven All-Star and quintessential team player, both as a scorer, as well as an All-NBA defender. He brings the attitude of a warrior and competes every single night against the very, very best.”

Miami also announced the signing of small forward James Ennis, who has been one of the team’s summer-league standouts this year. Ennis was the 50th pick in the 2013 draft and spent last season playing in Australia. Wade is entering his 12th Heat season and is the franchise’s all-time leader in games, points, assists and steals. He and Haslem, who is also expected to complete a new two-year contract with Miami in the coming days, are the only players to appear on all three of the Heat teams that won NBA championships in 2006, 2012 and 2013. He was limited to 54 games last season, in large part because of a maintenance program designed to limit wear and tear on his knees. But when he was on the floor, he was effective — shooting a career best 54.5 percent and averaging 19.0 points. With James gone, Wade likely won’t have the luxury of resting as much this season.

SPORTS

He’s averaged 24.3 points for his career, 16th-best in NBA history and fifth-best among active players with at least seven seasons. And only seven other players in league history have as many points (17,481), rebounds (3,605), assists (4,301), steals (1,262) and blocked shots (696) as Wade has posted so far in his career. Wade could have lobbied for more money or insisted on more years. But the Heat are positioning themselves to have as much flexibility as possible in 2016, a similar approach to what brought the “Big 3” together in 2010, and Wade’s deal helps them greatly in that regard. Wade still has a hectic summer ahead. There’s an upcoming marriage to actress Gabrielle Union, the ongoing building projects at the home he’s been remodeling for some time, and the annual fantasy camp that he hosts. His biggest order of business, however, is now complete.

Augustin, Butler part of another Pistons makeover AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (AP) — This of fseason makeover for the Detroit Pistons is a bit different than last year’s. Instead of making a big free agent signing and adding another key player via trade, the Pistons have made quieter moves this summer, adding better outside shooters to a team that’s missed the playoffs for the last five seasons. Detroit introduced D.J. Augustin and Caron Butler at a news conference Tuesday after signing the two free agents. The 6foot-7 Butler played 56 games last season for Milwaukee and Oklahoma City, averaging 10.5 points and shooting 39 percent from 3-point range. Augustin was waived by Toronto early last season, but the 26year -old point guard caught on with Chicago and averaged 13.1 points for the season. He shot 40 percent from beyond the arc. “Obviously both these guys played in big games, in big roles for their teams this past year,” said Stan Van Gundy, who took over this offseason as Detroit’s coach

and team president. “Both of these guys go to exactly what we’ve been talking about since the day I came in here — high-character, hardplaying guys who can shoot the ball and be a major part of what we do.” The Pistons also signed Jodie Meeks. He was introduced Monday. Last offseason, Detroit handed out a big contract to free agent Josh Smith, hoping he could be a driving force in a new-look lineup. The Pistons also traded for point guard Brandon Jennings. The team ended up being a major disappointment, going 29-53. Coach Maurice Cheeks was fired in the middle of the season, and team president Joe Dumars stepped down at the end. Smith and Jennings are still in the fold, as is talented young big man Andre Drummond. Greg Monroe is a restricted free agent. “I see the potential,” Butler said. “With coach Van Gundy at the helm of things now and what he’s going to insert on the defensive end and on the offensive end, and a little

more consistency, we can shock a lot of people.” Butler is familiar with Van Gundy, having played for him in Miami a decade ago. Augustin’s minutes went up — and so did his production — when he joined the Bulls last season. “For any guy in the NBA, when you get a chance to play a good amount of minutes every night, you get comfortable, you get confident and you get a rhythm,” he said. “I don’t care how talented you are, if you’re not playing a certain amount of minutes in every game, you’re not going to play as well.” Augustin hasn’t been a regular starter since he was with Charlotte in 2012, but he performed well as a backup for the Bulls. He’s confident he and Jennings can work well together. “He’s a great player, I’m his teammate, so we’re going to try to push each other, make each other better and do whatever it takes to help the team to win,” Augustin said. “As point guards, that’s what you have to do.”

CHICAGO (AP) — The Chicago Bulls said goodbye to forward Carlos Boozer on Tuesday, using the amnesty clause to cut the veteran forward after four seasons with the team. Boozer came to Chicago in a sign-and-trade deal with Utah in July 2010. The two-time All-Star averaged 15.5 points and nine rebounds in 280 games with the Bulls. He had one season left on a five-year deal worth roughly $75 million. The amnesty clause allows a team to waive one player during the current labor deal and have 100 percent of his salary taken

off the cap and the tax. The 6-foot-9 power forward is still owed the money. “Carlos epitomized professionalism in everything he did for the Bulls both on the court, and in the community, during his time here in Chicago,” general manager Gar Forman said in a release. “Over the last four seasons, Carlos’ productivity helped elevate our team to another level. I have nothing but respect for Carlos, and certainly wish him the best as he moves forward.” The 32-year-old Boozer took to Twitter to thank the team for his four sea-

sons with Chicago. The Bulls also waived forward Lou Amundson and guards Ronnie Brewer and Mike James as they continue to clear salary-cap space for the signing of free-agent center Pau Gasol and the first NBA contract for 2011 draft pick Nikola Mirotic. Chicago made two trades on Monday. It sent forward Anthony Randolph, two second-round draft picks and cash considerations to Orlando for the rights to Milovan Rakovic. It also traded forward Greg Smith to Dallas for the rights to Tadija Dragicevic.

Bulls use amnesty clause; cut Boozer

Mavs add PF Rashard Lewis DALLAS (AP) — The Dallas Mavericks have added veteran power forward Rashard Lewis. Mavericks owner Mark Cuban revealed the move Tuesday night in a post on a Cyber Dust account controlled by Cuban and the team.

The 34-year-old Lewis is a two-time All-Star who has played 16 seasons with four teams since going straight to the NBA out of a Houston high school in the 1998 draft. He played for Seattle (1998-2007), Orlando (2007-10) and Washington (2010-12) before the

last two seasons in Miami. His one-year deal in Dallas came on the same day the Mavericks of ficially signed forwards Dirk Nowitzki and Chandler Parsons. Lewis has averaged 14.9 points and 5.2 rebounds in his 1,049 career games.

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Jeter

Continued from Page B1

“The guys on our side have the utmost respect for him and would like to have been standing out there for a little while longer,” he said. “I think Derek was the one that was uncomfortable with it.” While not as flashy as Mariano Rivera’s All-Star farewell at Citi Field last year, when all the other players left the great reliever alone on the field for an eighth-inning solo bow, Jeter tried not to make a fuss and to deflect the attention. Even during his clubhouse speech. “He just wanted to thank us,” Trout said. “You know, we should be thanking him.” A 14-time All-Star who was MVP of the 2000 game in Atlanta, Jeter announced in February this will be his final season. His hits left him with a .481 All-Star average (13 for 27), just behind Charlie Gehringer’s .500 record (10 for 20) for players with 20 or more at-bats. While the Yankees are .500 at the break and in danger of missing the postseason in consecutive years for the first time in two decades, Jeter and the Angels’ Trout gave a boost to whichever AL team reaches the World Series. The AL improved to 9-3 since the AllStar game started deciding which league gets Series home-field advantage; 23 of the last 28 titles were won by teams scheduled to host four of a possible seven games. Detroit’s Max Scherzer, in line to be the most-prized free agent pitcher after the season, pitched a scoreless fifth for the win, and Glen Perkins got the save in his home ballpark. Target Field, a $545 million, limestone-encased jewel that opened in 2010, produced an All-Star cycle just eight batters in, with hitters showing off

B3

flashy neon-bright spikes and fielders wearing All-Star caps with special designs for the first time. With the late sunset — the sky didn’t darken until the fifth inning, well after 9 o’clock — there was bright sunshine when Jeter was cheered before his first at-bat. He was introduced by a recording of late Yankees public address announcer Bob Sheppard’s deep monotone. St. Louis pitcher Adam Wainwright left his glove on the mound and backed up toward second, clapping along with the crowd of 41,048. “I tried to tell him to pick it up — let’s go,” Jeter said. “But he took a moment and let the fans give me an ovation which I will always remember.” When Jeter finally stepped into the batter’s box, he took a ball and lined a 90 mph cutter down the right-field line for a double. “I was going to give him a couple pipe shots just to — he deserved it,” Wainwright said. “I thought he was going to hit something hard to the right side for a single or an out. I probably should have pitched him a little bit better.” After those in-game remarks created a stir on the Internet, Wainwright amended himself: “It was mis-said. I hope people realize I’m not intentionally giving up hits out there.” Trout, who finished second to Cabrera in AL MVP voting in each of the last two seasons, became the youngest All-Star MVP, about 3 1/2 months older than Ken Griffey Jr. was in 1992. Playing in his third All-Star game, T rout followed Jeter in the first by tripling off the right-field wall. Cabrera’s homer — just the fourth in the last six All-Star games — made it 3-0, but the NL tied it on consecutive RBI doubles by Chase Utley and Jonathan Lucroy off Jon Lester in the second and Lucroy’s run-scoring double against Chris Sale in the fourth.

AP Source: Miller, Cavs agree to two-year deal CLEVELAND (AP) — Mike Miller had choices. None of them was better than playing with LeBron James again. Miller has agreed to a $5.5 million, two-year contract with the Cavaliers, reuniting the sharpshooting forward with James, his former teammate in Miami. Miller’s contract includes a player option in the second year, a person familiar with the negotiations told The Associated Press. The person spoke Tuesday on condition of anonymity because the deal is not yet signed. Miller will make $2.7 million next season, and the option is worth $2.8 million, the person said. The 34-year-old Miller also was coveted by Dallas and Denver. But the chance to play alongside James was enough to send him to Cleveland. Miller and James played together with the Heat for three seasons, winning two NBA titles. Miller reportedly had a threeyear offer from the Mavericks. Last season, Miller played in 82 games — the most since his rookie season — for Memphis. He shot 46 percent (107 of 233) on 3-pointers and averaged 7.1 points and 2.5 rebounds.

After agreeing to the deal, Miller posted a message on his Instagram account, thanking Grizzlies fans and acknowledging James. “Thanks to Memphis for a great year!!” Miller wrote. “But I’m so excited to be a part of the Cleveland family and their fans. The only thing you can expect from me is everything I have! So excited to reunite with u my brother! I know I don’t even need to tell you this but I will “Let It Fly”.” Miller gives the Cavs another outside offensive option and someone to help spread the floor for James, who signed a two-year, $42 million contract with Cleveland on Saturday. Although Miller was slowed by injuries during his tenure with Miami, the Heat could always count on him to knock down big shots and James never lost confidence in him. Miller has made 41 percent of his 3point attempts during an NBA career that began with Orlando in 2000. The Magic drafted Miller, who played at Florida, with the No. 5 overall pick in 2000. He also has played for Minnesota and Washington.

GOLFERS! ENTER NOW

to play the ROTARY DESERT SUN GOLF CLASSIC

Y JULY 19-20 Z at Nancy Lopez Golf Course at Spring River

• $13,000 in cash and prizes • $50 Nike gift card and lunch both days • Friday Night Banquet and Saturday Night Gala l • Amateur-friendly Saturday-Sunday tournament • Two-man teams playing scramble and best ball, shotgun start

Presented annually by ROSWELL ROTARY CLUB, PECOS VALLEY ROTARY CLUB, SUNRISE ROTARY CLUB

17 Y L JU 22-9506 : E IN T 575-6 ic.com L D A LEWET golfclass E D Y RLTON B .desertsun R T EN TACT CA ation www

Your entry benefits ROSWELL HABITAT FOR HUMANITY

desert sun CON ete inform l Sponsored by DESERT SUN MOTORS of ROSWELL Comp a u t o

g r o u p


B4 Wednesday, July 16, 2014

SPORTS

Nibali now favorite to win Tour de France

BESANCON, France (AP) — With defending champion Chris Froome and two-time winner Alberto Contador out of the race, the path is wide open for Vincenzo Nibali to become the first Italian to win the Tour de France since the late Marco Pantani in 1998. The French have waited even longer for a champion — the last was Bernard Hinault way back in 1985 — but with three riders in the top six places, hopes are growing of at least a first podium place since climber Richard Virenque finished second in 1997. After Tuesday’s rest day, the race resumes with Stage 11 on Wednesday, followed by arduous mountain stages on Friday and Saturday which will reveal the genuine contenders. These are where Nibali’s climbing skills could set him apart, and give him a chance to fully

stamp his authority on the race. There are five days of hard climbing ahead, starting with Friday’s 197.5-kilometer (122.4mile) trek from Saint-Etienne to Chamrousse, which ends with a huge ascent of 18 kilometers (11.2 miles). As for Nibali’s rivals, Contador broke his shin in a violent fall in Monday’s 10th stage and Froome pulled out on stage 5 with a broken wrist. “I’m not happy about what happened to Alberto and Chris,” the 29-year -old Nibali said. “The climbs would have been better and more spectacular for everyone.” Nibali, who won the Spanish Vuelta in 2010 and the Giro d’Italia in 2013, is 2 minutes, 23 seconds ahead of Australian Richie Porte and 2:47 clear of Spaniard Alejandro Valverde, who won the Vuelta five years ago. Three Frenchmen are within

four minutes of Nibali — Romain Bardet, Tony Gallopin and Thibaut Pinot. None has come close to a podium place on a Grand Tour, although the 23year-old Bardet and the 24-yearold Pinot have strong climbing skills. “We’ve got to stay calm and study the situation,” Nibali said. “The danger can come from anywhere.” Porte rode as a key support rider for Froome last year on the Sky team, but now has free reign to attack. “Porte goes well in the climbs, he goes well in time trials, you have to keep a good distance on him,” Nibali said. “You have to watch Valverde, he can attack at any time.” The 34-year-old Valverde was handed a two-year suspension in 2010 for his involvement in the Operation Puerto doping plot, which involved dozens of riders

Players may consider smokeless tobacco ban discussion in 2016 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Major League Baseball players say they may consider whether to discuss a possible ban on chewing tobacco when they negotiate their next labor contract in two years. For now, they hope individuals decide on their own to stop dipping. Players’ union head Tony Clark said Monday that several of his members have quit cold turkey following the death of Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn on June 16 from oral cancer. While the use of smokeless tobacco was banned for players with minor league contacts in 1993, it is permitted for players with major league deals. The labor agreement covering 2012-16 says players may not carry tobacco packages and tins in their back pockets when fans are permitted in ballparks, and they may not use tobacco during pregame and postgame interviews and at team functions. “I think what we have been doing thus far has been a positive, and although I’m not going to offer you a bargaining proposal today on chewing tobacco, we could have that conversation,” Clark said Tuesday before the All-Star game. “Then we will see where the guys are and continue the education and their appreciation for or against, or what the many considerations that need to be made in the area even look like, and we’ll have that conversation with Major League Baseball,” he said.

over secretly stored blood bags. Like Nibali, Pantani was a courageous cyclist who loved to attack in the tough climbs. Pantani was found dead in a hotel room on Valentine’s Day in 2004 and a coroner ruled he died from cocaine poisoning. Nibali has one of Pantini’s yellow jerseys at home, a gift from Pantini’s mother to mark the 10th anniversary of his death. “It would be a great honour to follow on from him,” said Nibali. Friday’s stage will also be special for Nibali because it marks the 100th anniversary of the birth of two-time Tour champion Gino Bartali, who died in 2000 at the age of 85. “As an Italian, it’s a huge privilege to be asked about Bartali. I grew up watching documentaries on the big riders, the big wins of (Felice) Gimondi, Bartali and (Fausto) Coppi,” Nibali said. “They’re all in the encyclopedia of

cycling. There are others like Hinault, too. They’ve written the history of cycling.” The last French heyday came in the 1980s when Hinault, a five-time champion, competed against Laurent Fignon, who won in ‘83 and ‘84. Wednesday’s stage is a 187.5kilometer (116.3-mile) route in eastern France from Besancon to Oyonnax and features four small climbs. Veteran Fabian Cancellara won’t be among the starters. The 33-year-old Swiss cyclist has pulled out to focus on the Road World Championships in Ponferrada, Spain, from Sept. 2128. Cancellara withdrew prior to the start of the 11th Tour stage in 2012.

AP source: Cowboys to release backup QB Orton after missing offseason workouts The Dallas Cowboys are releasing Kyle Orton after their backup quarterback missed all the offseason workouts amid reports he was considering r etir ement. A person with knowledge of the decision told The Associated Press on Tuesday that the Cowboys wer e cutting ties with Orton slightly more than a week before the start of training camp. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the team had not announced the decision. The 31-year -old Orton started the finale last year after Tony Romo injured his back a week earlier. The Cowboys lost to Philadelphia, their third straight season-ending defeat against an NFC East rival with a playoff berth on the line. The new backup is likely

to be Brandon Weeden, Cleveland’s first-r ound draft pick in 2012. The Cowboys signed Weeden in Mar ch, and he worked with the first team during the offseason while Romo continued his r ecovery from back surgery. Orton was fined about $70,000 for failing to report during the offseason and missing the mandatory minicamp in June. The move saves Dallas about $3.25 million this season, but will cost the team about that amount on the salary cap over the next two seasons. After getting into just one game in his first season with the Cowboys in 2012, Orton played briefly in two games last year 7-3-14 before starting againstrev.the Eagles. He was 30 of 46 for 358 yar ds with two touchdowns and two interceptions against Philadel-

phia, including one late that clinched the Eagles’ 24-22 win. Orton has started 70 of 75 games in a nine-year career. He spent his first three seasons in Chicago befor e going to Denver, where he lost the starting job to T im T ebow and signed with Kansas City after the Broncos cut him during the season. Weeden started right away after the Br owns took him with the 22nd pick, but was benched for good late in his second season with a car eer record of 5-15, including losses in all five starts in 2013. Weeden tur ns 31 in October but is going into rev. 7-3-14 thir d season just his because he spent five years playing professional baseball out of high school.

Baseball Commissioner Bud Selig, who plans to retire in January, promised “it will be a subject that they’ll discuss at the next collective bargaining” but acknowledged “I understand that individuals have the right to make their own decisions.” Gwynn, 54 at his death, attributed his cancer to years of chewing tobacco. “We believe that the numbers suggest that the usage has declined significantly, declined in the minor leagues, declined in the majors,” Clark said during a question-and-answer session with the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. “Our hope is that we continue to educate guys on that the damage that dipping can do, that they will continue to decide not to dip and chew.” Clark, a former All-Star first baseman who never dipped, said Gwynn’s death “really smacks you between the eyes, and it’s unfortunate sometimes, that an event like that brings that decision instead of that decision being made beforehand.” No change is planned during the current labor contract. “We give the players the opportunity to make the decision that they’re AGE going DIVISIONSto W = WomenAGE DIVISIONS 50 = 50-54 W = Women 60 = 60-64 50 = 50-54 70 = 70-74 60 = 60-6480 = 80-84 70 = 70-7490 = 90-94 80 = 80-84 100 = 100+ 90 = 90-94 100 = 100+ make against the backdrop of it being M = Men 55 = 55-59 65 = 65-69 75 = 75-79 85 = 85-89 95 = 95-99 M = Men 55 = 55-59 65 = 65-69 75 = 75-79 85 = 85-89 95 = 95-99 rev. 7-3-14 legal,” Clark said. “We don’t condone it. They know we don’t condone it. ... So at EVENTS WEDNESDAY, JULY THURSDAY, 17 SATURDAY, FRIDAY, JUJ EVENTS JULY THURSDAY, the end of the day, yes, we will continue EVENTS WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, JULY FRIDAY, JULY 181916 EVENTSJULY 1716 WEDNESDAY, JULY THURSDAY, FRIDAY, JULY SATURDAY, JULY EVENTS WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, JULYJULY 181716 SATURDAY, JULYJULY EVENTSJULY 16 WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, JULY 18191716 SATURDAY, 19181716 WEDNESDAY, to educate guys, and yes, the players will pmWALK 0Practi 0MPM&ceWWomen 11 2:am8:000-10pm pm Practi 8-BALL POOL 18-BALL pm-4 pm POOL Practice Men 1 pm-4 8:RACE 30 am-12: 0Practice 0 PM Men 118:RACE am -10 pmWALK 2:300am-12: am M &cWe Women 1500M 8:7:0000am am MM&&WW continue to have a decision that AIR GUNthey Pistol Pistol Supported Pistol Supported AIR Supported GUN Pistol Supported Roswell Adult & Senior Center Sign-up sheet at RASC M 70, 75, 80, 85, 90+ Sign-up sheet atAges RASC@ Roswell Adult & Senior Center Sign-up sheet at RASC M 70, 75, 80, 85, 90+ Sign-up sheet at RASC Vernon Dyer, (575) 420-0355 Vernon Dyer,Meeting @ AllMeeting Ag (575) 420-0355 AllAllAges make in that area.” Convention & Civic Center Convention 8:00 am M &50,Civic 55, 60Center 8:Richard 00 am McKinley, M 50,65,55,75,6080 8:First 00 amComeMcKinley, 70,75,85,Served MM-65,First 8090-94 8:First 01:00 0 amCome Richard First 1:00Come pm M- First 50, 55, 65 on First Come - First pm M-M70, 50,85,Served 55,90-94 60, 65 First Served Roswel l60, Conventi Wool Bowl Roswel RoswelServed l Convention Wool Bow All Ages Robert Distlehorst, 1:00 pmDistlehorst, W 50, 55, 60 1:(575) 00 pm650-2591 W 65, 1:0(575) 0 pm650-2591 Robert 50, 55,75,6080 WW65,70,75,85,8090+ 1:00 pm W 70, 85, 90+ 2:00 pm Women All Ages 2:00 pm Women & Civic Center & Civic & Civic Center (575) 373-9124 Pistol Standing Pistol Standing Pistol Standing (575) 373-9124 Pistol Standing FIELD M RACQUETBALL &W M &8:W00 am M & W FIELD M &RACQUETBALL W 8:00 am M & W 10:00 am M 50, 55, 60 10:Wool 00 amBowlM 50,65, 75, 80 10: M 70, 85, 90+ 55, 60 0 0 am M 65, 75, 80 00 amVaultM 70, 85, 90+ Pole Vault Sports Complex Wool Bowl Sports Complex 10:Pole Discus NMMI Godfrey Center NMMI Godfrey Center Discus All Ages rev. 7-3-14 All Age 3:00 pm W 50, 55, 60 W 65, 3:1800 00 pmpmN. Grand 50, 55,75,6080 3:1800 00 pmN. Grand WW65,70,75,85,8090+ 3:07:00 0Randy pmam WMontoya, 7:00 am 50,50,5555 7:00 am 50,Singles, 55 Doubles, accuser, a 24-year-old cocktail waitress 50,70,5585, 90+ Randy Montoya, Singles, Fuller, 9:00 am 60,60,6565 9:00 am 60, 65 in downtown Charlotte. “I was so scared Fuller, am 60, 65 Rifle Supported RifleTimSupported RifleTimSupported Rifle9:00 Supported (575) 624-8275 (575) 624-8275 MixedJU EVENTS WEDNESDAY, 16 THURSDAY, JULY 17 FRIDAY, JULY (575)626-4495 11:00 am 70, 75, 80, 85, 90+ 11:00 am 70,Mixed 75, 80, 18 85,1990+ SATURDAY, EVENTS WEDNESDAY, JULY 16 THURSDAY, JULY 17 FRIDAY, JULY 18 SATURDAY, JULY I wanted to die. When he loosened his (575)626-4495 11:00 am 70, 75, 80, 85, 90+ 70, 75, 80, 85, 90+ 8:00 am W 50, 55, 60 8:00 am W 50,70,55,85,6090+ 8:00 am WW70,65,85,75,90+ 80 8:00 am W 65, 75, 80 Standing High Jump grip slightly, I said just, ‘Do it. Kill me.”’ Standing Long Jump High JumpLong Jump 1:00 pm M 50, 55, 60 1:TENNIS 00 pm M 70, 1:TENNIS 07:000pmam MMM70,65, 80 (Rd1) 1:07:7:00 50, 55,85,6090+ 90+ 00pm 65,& W75,75,Singles 0 amam MM70,RACE 7:9:00 00 amam M70,50,& W75,55Singles & W85,75,Singles (Rd90+3) 7:00 80,RUN 85,(Rd90+3) 9:00 am 50, 55 80,80RUN 85,(Rd1) The accuser admitted she had used ROAD ROAD RACE Rifle Standing RifleNMMIStanding RifleNMMI s (Rd 1) 11:00 8:9:00 30 amam Dbl50,Conti s 55(Rdn3)ued Conti65nued 3Standing 0 amam Dbl50,s &55(Rd 11:00 am 60, Tennis Courts 8:3Standing 0 amTennisDblCourts s & Mxd Dbls (Rd 1)Rifle8:9:00 3) DblCenter cocaine on the night of the incident and Convention &Mxd Civic Ag Convention60,&65Civic Center M & W All Ages MM&&WW AllAllAges am 60,70,65Dbl75,s (Rd McDonald, 0am 0 amam WMMxd &65,W65Dbl75,Singles (Rd 2) 11:00 Mxd 2)85, 90+ 1:00 pm 70, 75, 80, 85, 90+ 0 am s (Rd 2) 60, 1:00 pm 80, 10:00 am W 50, 55, 60 10:Kelly 00 amMcDonald, W 50,70,55,85,6090+ 10:11:Kelly 80 (Rd 2) 10:11:11:00 had been drinking. 000am WWM70,&65,W85,75,Singles 90+ 00Rita 80 6: 0 0 am 10K Run 6: 0 0 am 5K Run Kane-Doerhoefer, 6:00 am 10K RitaPut Kane-Doerhoefer, Put MDoubles Long 0pm 0 am (Rd80 2) Dbls Shot 11: 00 amJumpM & W Singles, Dbls Long Jump M65,& W75,Singles, Hardy and his business manager 3:00 pm M 50, 55, 60 3:(575) 00 pm317-7789 M 70, 80 2) 3:11:Shot 50, 55,85,6090+ 3:11:0(575) 000pmam317-7789 MMDoubles 70,65,85,75,(Rd 90+ 00(575) 626-6563 (575) 626-6563 7:00 am 60, 65 7:00 am 70, 75, 80, 85, 90+ 7:00 am Mxd 60, 65Dbls 75, 80, 85, 90+ Mxd70,Dbls Sammy Curtis both testified that Hardy 9:00 am 70,50,75,5580, 85, 90+ 11:00 am 50, 55 9:00 am 70, 75, 80, 85, 90+ 11:00 never hit nor threw the accuser, and 9:00am ARCHERY ARCHERY 11:00 65Singles SHUFFLEBOARD 9:&8:00W00pm amam 60,WM Singles Single 1:00 pmam 50,60,M5565Singles M11:00 &SHUFFLEBOARD Wam 50, 55 M8:&0W0 am WDoubl didn’t communicate threats. Hardy said TRACK MTRACK &W M1:00 ENMUR Gym 3: 0 0 pm Doubles contin Javelin Double NMMI Stapphe Field pm Sports W Estimated 8:Javelin NMMI Stapp Field 00ENMUR am MGym &W Wool Bowl Complex 58:pm09:00-am 08ampmM &800M 7:3:0000ampm 1500M the accuser became angry when Wool Bowl Sports Complex 5 pm 9:0-08am 800M Estimated 7:00 am 1500M 7:00 60, 65 GladieAllPeltomaki, GladieamAllPeltomaki, 7:00 60, 65 Aimee Arelthe lanes, (505) 476-4791 Aimee Arellanes, (505) 476-4791 1800 N. Grand Practice Ages Practice Ages 1800 N. Grand Run/Walk 8:00 am 800M wouldn’t have sex with her and left Run/Walk 8:00am am 800M 9:00 am 70, (505) 350-7380 9:00 am 70, 75, 80, 85, 90+ (505) 350-7380 room to sleep in the living room. He said Micah Trujillo, 10:Micah 00 amTrujillo, 400M Estimated 10:00 am 400M Estimated 8:30 am 100M75, 80, 85, 90+ 8:30 am 100M 1:00 pm 50, 55 1:00 pm 50, 55 the accuser then became angry and (575) 910-0812 Run/Walk 9:30 am 400M (575) 910-0812 Run/Walk 9:30 am 400M BADMINTON BADMINTON SOCCER ACCURACY SOCCER ACCURACY 10:00 am Intergenerational 10:00 am Intergen M&W began slamming doors. NMMI Godfrey Center 8:NMMI 00 amGodfrey M & Center W Doubles 8:00 am M & W Doubles M&W M & WField 8: 0 0 am 80, 85, NMMI Stapp Hardy said the accuser then asked Relay Relay NMMI Stapp Field Andrea Weiss, 11:Andrea 00 amWeiss, M & W Singles 11:FRISBEE 00 am MACCURACY & W Singles FRISBEE ACCURACY 8:Dorie 00 amSandoval, 65 1:00 pm 70 10:30 am 200M him, “Do you want to see crazy? I’ll 10:39:0 0amam 200M 00 amSandoval, 65 1:00 pm 70 8:Dorie 75 (505) 250-2936 1:(505) 00 pm250-2936 Mixed Doubles 1:0NMMI 0 pm Stapp Mixed 00 am285-3922 60 2:00 pm 75 11:00 am 50M show you crazy.” 11:010:0 0am FieldDoubles NMMI Stapp Field 9:0(505) 0 am 285-3922 60 2:00 pm 75 9:(505) 0 am50M70 10:00 am 80, 85, 90+ Hardy said she threw herself into the 11:30 am 4 x 100M Co-Ed Relay 11:11:3000amam 4 x65100M C LoriAnn Keith, (505) 927-4671 LoriAnn Keith, (505) 927-4671 10:00 am 80, 85, 90+ 11:00 am 50, 55 bathtub, causing the bruises she BASKETBALL had on 11:00 am 50, 55 BASKETBALL 1:00 pmSUBJECT 60 T SCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGESCHEDULE her body. Hardy said she also threat2: 0 0 pm 50, 55 FREE THROW FREE THROW M&W ened to kill herself if she left his buildFRISBEE DISTANCE FRISBEE DISTANCE M&W NMMI Godfrey Center 8:08:00am NMMI Godfrey Center NMMI Stapp Field 0 amMEN 65 1:00 pm 70 ing. NMMI Stapp Field 0 amMEN 65 1:00 pm 70 8:08:00am M&W 0am 0 amWOMEN 60 DISTANCE 2:00 pm 75 However, Thorn-T in seemedJoannmore Lopez, (575) 347-8728 Joann Lopez, (575) 347-8728 Joann Lopez, (575) 347-8728 Joann Lopez, (575) 347-8728 10:09:0SOFTBALL 0am 0 am WOMEN 60 DISTANCE 2:00 pm 75 10:09:0SOFTBALL NMMI Stapp Field 8: 0 0 am 80, 85, NMMI Stapp Field 10: 0 0 am 80, 85, 90+ inclined to believe the testimony of the 10:00 am 80, 85, 90+ Pete Salazar, 9: 0 0 am 75 11: 0 0 am 50, 55 accuser and the defense’s top witness, Pete Salazar, 11:00 am 50, 55 BASKETBALL BASKETBALL Christina Lawrence, another woman (505) 269-1272 10:00 am 70 (505) 269-1272 POINT SHOT 3 POINT SHOT who was in Hardy’s apartment 3at the FUN EVENTS M & W 11: 00 amJULY65 16 FUN EVENTS EVENTS M &JULY W 14 15 TUESDAY, EVENTS JULY 14 MONDAY, JULYJULY 15 16WEDNESDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY,JULY WEDNESDAY, time of the incident. NMMI Godfrey Center 9: 0 0 am MEN NMMI Godfrey Center 9: 0 0 am MEN Civic Center 10:00 am Session I 1: 0 0 pm 60 Civic Center 10:00 am Session I Lawrence said she was sleepingJoann inLopez, the(575) 347-8728 Joann Lopez, (575) 347-8728 912 N. MainAthlete Check-In 912 N. MainAthlete8:00 pmpmpm Session II 8:00 am2:-05:00 Check-In amam-11:5:00 amam-1:00 5:00 00 ampmWOMEN 8:008:00 0-1:00 05:00 ampm WOMEN am -11:5:00 - 5:00 pmpm Session II8:008:00 0 pm pm50, 55 other room with a friend of Hardy’s Alex Barrera, Alex Barrera, Convention & Civic CenterConvention & Civic Center when she heard scuffling and fighting (575) 623-4866 (575) 623-4866 All Welcome SWIMMING M & W AllAllWelcome Ages Ag BOWLING M & W Mixed Doubles M &Doubles W Singles Doubles Teams SWIMMING MM&&WW AllAllAges BOWLING M & W Mixed MM&&WWSingles M & W Doubles Teams and what sounded like a woman being Sport Tables 8:00 am 5:00 pm 8:00 am 5:00 pm 8:00 am 5:00 pm NMMI Pool Godfrey Center 1: 0 0 pm 5: 0 0 pm 7: 0 0 am Warm Up 7: 0 0 am Warm Sport Tables 8:00 am 5:00 pm 8:00 am 5:00 pm 8:00 am 5:00 pm NMMI Pool Godfrey Center 1: 0 0 pm 5: 0 0 pm 7: 0 0 am Warm U Center Ci t y Lanes 8: 3 0 am 50, 55, 60 8: 0 0 am 65, 75 8: 0 0 am 55, 65 8: 0 0 am 50, 55 Center Ci t y Lanes 3 50, 55, 60 65, 75 55, 65 8: 0 0 am 50, 55 slammed into the wall and dragged GOLF GOLF Shelly Ebarb, Practice 8:00 am Competition 8:0000am am Compet Comp Shelly Ebarb, Practice 8: Convention & Civic Center Convention & Civic Center across the floor. She said she also3905heard SE Main 12:390530 pm 00 pmGolf70,70,Course 85, 90+ 12:00 pm 65,70,70,75,75,80,80+ SE Main65, 70, 75, 80, 12:030 pm 70,65,80,70,85,75,90+ 80, 12:NMMI 80,75,85,80,90+ 85, 90+ 12:07:00 0 pmam65,M70,& 75, 80+ NMMI Golf Course 7:00 M&W (575)am616-9034 200Y Free, 100Y Fly 100YFreIM (575) 616-9034W 200Y the accuser say, “What are you going Brenda Esquibto el, (575) 623-8557 Brenda Esqui85,bel,90+ 00 pmCrump, 50,Opening 60 4: 0 0 pm 50, 60 4: 0 0 pm 60 (575) 623-8557 4:Brady 85,55,90+ 50, 55, 60 50, 60 4: 0 0 pm 60 Brady Crump, (575) 622-6033 All Ages Opening Ceremony 6:30 pm Lineup (575) 622-6033 All Ages Ceremony 6:30 pm Lineup 50Y Breast, 200Y IM 100Y 50Y BreaF do, break my arm?” 100Y Back 100Y 100Y NMMI Alumni Park NMMI Alumni Park 7:00 pm - Program 7:00 pm - Program BaB Hardy and his accuser began dating HORSESHOES 7:00 am M & W 7:00 am M 65 CYCLING M & W All Ages M & W All Ages CYCLING All Ages M & W All Ages 50Y Free Ba HORSESHOES 7:00 am M & W 7:00 am M 65 50Y50YFree last September, but had broken up at Athlete After Opening Ceremony Athlete 200Y Breast 200YBreCo 75, 80, 85,Social 90+ 10:30 am W75,60,80,7085, 90+ 10:30 am W 60, 70 After Opening Ceremony Bottomless Lakes 7:00 am Check-in 7:Cahoon 00 am Park Check-in Bottomless Lakes Check-in Social 7:Cahoon 00 am Park Check-in 200Y the Pro Bowl in February. Hardy said 1101 am M & W 50, 55 500Y F MTime 70 Trial Bronco Plaza10:00 am MM&70W 50, 55 they had had sexual relations “fivePerryorToles,six Bronco 8:00 amToles,10K Time Trial 8:1101 00 amW. 4th 5KNMMI Perry 10KTime TimeTrial Trial Plaza8:10:00 00 amW. 4th 5KNMMI Joe Martinez, 12:30 pm W 65 Joe Martinez, 12:30 pm W 65 times” since. (575) 622-5863 9:30 am622-5863 20K Road Race 9:030 am 40K (575) 20K Road Race 9:(575) 00 am420-5006 40K 2:00 pm MTENNIS 60 (575) 420-5006 2:00 pm M 60 TABLE Practice M & W All Ages TABLE1718TENNISFRIDAY, Practice M & W AllContin EVENTS JULY THURSDAY, JULY 18 19 SATURDAY, JULY 19Ages EVENTS THURSDAY, 17 FRIDAY,JULY SATURDAY, JULY NMMI Cahoon Armory 1:00 pm - 4:00Armory pm 8:0000pm am- 4:5:00 pm NMMI Cahoon 1: 8: 0 0 am - 5:00 pm DANCE 2 pm -5 pm Dance/Line Dance 2 pm -5 pm Dance/Line Dance DANCE HUACHAS HUACHAS Marvin Sommers, Marvin Sommers, Athlete Check-In 8:00 am 5:00 pm 8:00 am 12:00 noon 8:00 am 12:00 noon Athlete Check-In 8:00 am - 12:00 noon NMMI Pearson Auditorium NMMI Pearson Auditorium Practice 8:00 am - 5:00(505)pm239-1443 Practice 8:00 am - 12:00 noon (Washers) PracticeM & W M&W (505)Practice 239-1443 (Washers) Convention CenterDance / Line Dance Convention & Civic CenterDance / Line Dance& Civic Philomena Luiz, 7:0NMMI 0 pm Philomena Luiz, 7:00 pm Cahoon Armory 1:00 pm 9:00 am 70-90+ NMMI Cahoon Armory 1:00 pm - 5:00 pm 9:00pmam- 5:00 70-90+ (575) 6273291 Competi tion (575) 6273291 t8:00 io8:00 n amam- -5:00 SHOW PRACTICE - RSVP 8:00 am11:00 PRACTICE - RSVP am noon 50-69 TALENT PRACTICE - RSVP Sport Tables pmnoonSHOW8:008:00amam- 12:00 - 12:00 Sport Tables Anthony Futch, 8:00 am - 5:00TALENT pm Competi 12:00 - 12:00 noon Anthony Futch, 11:00 amnoon 50-69 NMMI Pearson Auditorium 1: 0 0 pm 5: 0 0 pm 8: 0 0 am 2: (505) 463-7931 NMMI Pearson Auditorium 1: 0 0 pm 5: 0 0 0pmpm (505) 463-7931 Convention & Civic CenterConvention & Civic Center DISC GOLF DISC GOLF Laurie Jerge, Sign up required Signupuprequired required Laurie Jerge, Sign POSTING POSTING 8:00 Mix Doubles POSTING 8:00 am W Singles (575) 624-6720 Enchanted Park 8:0PICKLEBALL 0 am MResult & W Posting 8:0PICKLEBALL 0 am MMResult 65, POSTING 70, 8:08:00 POSTING POSTING Enchanted Park &&WW 60,Posting 0 am MMix & WDoubles 60, 65, 70, (575)am624-6720 8:00 W Singles NMMI Godfrey Center 1:00 M Singles 8:00 am M Doubles CONTINU Bill & Sue Leslie, 50, 55 75, 80, 85, 90+ Bill & Sue Leslie, 50, 55 75, 80, 85, 90+ Convention & Civic Center NMMI Godfrey Center & Civic Center 1:00 M Singles 8:00 am M Doubles CONTINUED Convention 1:00 pm W Doubles Bob Klass, (303) 719-3004 Bob Klass, (303) 719-3004 1:00 pm W Doubles (575) 587-2087 (575) 587-2087

Hardy guilty on two accounts of assault CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — Panthers Pro Bowl defensive end Greg Hardy was found guilty Tuesday night of assaulting a female and communicating threats. Mecklenburg County Judge Rebecca Thor n-T in sentenced Hardy to 18 months’ probation. A 60-day jail sentence was suspended. Hardy’s attorney Chris Fialko said he’ll appeal and Hardy has asked for a jury trial in superior court. In North Carolina that means the ter ms of Hardy’s probation are on hold until the trial — so he’s free to travel with the team to training camp and compete in games. A date for the jury trial hasn’t been set. The Panthers released a statement Tuesday night saying, “We have just learned of the verdict and are respectful of the process. We do not have a comment at this time.” The judge didn’t buy Hardy’s testimony that he was the one abused by the accuser and that he had asked her to leave his apartment during a domestic dispute on May 13 at his downtown Charlotte condominium. After nearly 11 hours of hearing testimony, Thorn-Tin told a somber Hardy on Tuesday night that “the court is entirely convinced Hardy is guilty of assault on a female and communicating threats.” Earlier in the morning the accuser testified that she was assaulted by Hardy at his apartment after a night of drinking. She also said Hardy threatened to kill her and put his hands around her neck. “He looked me in my eyes and he told me he was going to kill me,” said the

Roswell Daily Record

SENIOR OLYMPIC SENIOR OLYMPIC 2014 SUMMER 2014 GAMES SUMMERSCHEDULE GAMES SCHEDULE

SENIOR OLYMPIC SENIOR OL SUMMER GAMES SCHE 2014 SUMMER GAM SENIOR 2014GAMES SUMMER GAMES SCHEDULE SENIOR OLYMPIC 2014OLYMPIC SUMMER2014 Senior Olympics Schedule ofSCHEDULE Events

SENIOR2014OLYMPIC SUMMER GAMES SCHEDULE SENIOR OLYMPIC SUMMER2014GAMES SCHEDULE

r r

r r

r r

r r

GAMEGAME INFO INFO

Sports Health Fair Expo Sports Health Fair Expo 9:00 am - 3:00 pm 9:00 am - 3:00 pm SCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGESCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGE Convention & Civic CenterConvention & Civic Center Sports Banquet

Sports Banquet

SCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGESCHEDULE SUBJECT T

6:00 pm

6:00 pm


Star power lacking at SEC Media Days FINANCIAL / SPORTS

Roswell Daily Record

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

B5

HOOVER, Ala. (AP) — Florida quarterback Jeff Driskel insists there are still plenty of superstars in the Southeastern Conference. The only problem is nobody’s heard of them yet. One year after high-profile players such as Alabama’s A.J. McCarron, South Carolina’s Jadeveon Clowney and Texas A&M’s Johnny Manziel brought a rockstar feel to SEC Media Days, the buzz is largely missing this week at the league’s preseason showcase. Part of the reason is a lack of experienced quarterbacks. McCarron, Manziel, LSU’s Zach Mettenberger, South Carolina’s Connor Shaw and Georgia’s Aaron Murray are gone after impressive careers. There are still some accomplished players in the league — especially at running back.

Alabama’s T.J. Yeldon and Georgia’s Todd Gurley are among the nation’s best. Driskel said it won’t be long before others become nationally known as well. “Some of the guys haven’t put up the numbers or the championships that guys in the past have,” Driskell said. “But there’s always going to be talent in the SEC. It’s just a matter of who makes the plays this year. You get guys who end up being household names who weren’t at the beginning of the year.” But the shadow of Manziel, McCarron and Co. still looms, even months after they played their last college game. When Texas A&M coach Kevin Sumlin took the podium on Tuesday afternoon, two of the first three questions he received were about Johnny Football.

After the second one, an amused Sumlin said “Is this the SEC Media Days?” The Aggies are one of several teams moving on without their stars. They had three players selected in the first round of the NFL draft — which left gaping holes at quarterback, offensive tackle and receiver — but Sumlin said that’s just part of the challenge of the college game. “In college football, every two, three years you’re going to have turnover and you have to have a plan for that,” Sumlin said. “Whether it’s quarterback, whether it’s a great defender, whatever it is. To me that’s what’s exciting about college football.” That might be true eventually, but right now it means there are a lot of unknowns. Arguably the league’s most rec-

ognizable quarterback — Auburn’s Nick Marshall — didn’t come to media days after being cited for possession of a small amount of marijuana. Mississippi’s Bo Wallace is the only returning quarterback in the league who threw for at least 2,000 yards last season. Mississippi State’s Dak Prescott and Driskel are among the most intriguing breakout candidates at quarterback. Prescott threw for 1,940 yards last season and rushed for 829 more as a sophomore despite missing two games because of injuries. Driskel had a promising season in 2012 before missing much of last year with a leg injury. Prescott said the SEC’s loss of so many star players won’t hurt the quality of the league. “Those guys were unknown at

some point, too, so that’s just part of the game,” Prescott said. “It leaves the door open for guys to step up and get their name out there.” The strength of the league might be at running back, where veterans like Yeldon, Gurley and South Carolina’s Mike Davis return for another season. All three averaged around 100 yards per game during their sophomore seasons and scored at least 10 touchdowns. But there’s a good chance some of the league’s best players — along with the league’s best teams — are relative unknowns right now. “Nobody picked Missouri and Auburn to win the divisions last year,” South Carolina Steve Spurrier said. “That’s why we play the game. We don’t know who’s going to win ‘em.”

HOOVER, Ala. (AP) — Kevin Sumlin headed of f questions about Texas A&M’s quarterback of the future, whoever that might be. The Aggies coach couldn’t avoid interest in life without his former superstar quarterback on Tuesday at Southeastern Conference media days. First podium question: What’s it like to not be coaching Johnny Manziel? A few minutes later, Sumlin smiled and didn’t take the bait when asked about Manziel’s night life these days. “Is this the SEC media days,” he asked. “That’s a great question about the Cleveland Browns.”

Closer to home, the Aggies must replace three NFL firstround picks, including the swashbuckling quarterback. Texas A&M won 20 games in its first two seasons in the SEC with Manziel, the 2012 Heisman Trophy winner. Now, the Aggies get a chance to prove they can win big in the powerhouse league even without Manziel. Sumlin said having players like the nation’s top-rated quarterback recruit, Kyle Allen, makes the task more exciting. “I understand there’s not going to be another Johnny Manziel, the way he played the game,” Sumlin said. “Now does that

mean that we change offensively? Maybe. Does that mean we changed offensively for him? That might be the case, too.” Sumlin said he doesn’t adorn the walls at the football complex with motivational signs. Two that did make the cut, he said. “No excuses” and “It’s about us.” “We have our own expectations,” Sumlin said. “We have to because Year One, nobody expected anything out of us. Last year, we were expected to beat the Green Bay Packers. I have to have a reasonable expectation for what we try to do.” He said there’s no leeway to have “a bunch of rebuilding

years” but they might not be necessary anyway after a couple of highly rated recruiting classes. Sumlin tried to eliminate questions about whether sophomore Kenny Hill or Allen, an early enrollee, is going to be the Aggies’ quarterback in his opening statement. That will be settled on the practice fields — or perhaps during games — not at a podium before hundreds of reporters. Left tackle Cedric Ogbuehi said he has “a lot of confidence” in both young quarterbacks. “Both of them are doing a great job,” said Ogbuehi, the latest Aggies’ linemen being touted as a future first-round draft pick.

“They’re young but they’re still being vocal. It’s impressive to see young guys step up and lead some old players.” That’s not the only question facing the Aggies despite the loss of offensive stars. The Aggies defense yielded league-worst 32.2 points and 475.8 yards per game last season. Cor nerback Deshazor Everett said there were issues with communication and understanding of the defense and believes they’ll be better this season. “We couldn’t get much worse,” Everett said.

VIENNA (AP) — The national Olympic committees of Austria, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland have joined forces to call for a thorough revision of the Olympic bidding process. In a joint paper released Tuesday, the four European NOCs asked the International Olympic Committee for “more support in bidding, more certainty in process, more partnership in risk, more flexibility in scale.” All four nations backtracked recently from bidding plans to host the 2022 Winter Olympics (Munich, Stockholm and St. Moritz)

or the 2028 Olympic Games (Vienna) because of a lack of national or, at least, regional public or political support. The four NOCs said they don’t intend to criticize the IOC but hope their findings will become part of the Olympic Agenda 2020, the strategic roadmap of the Olympic movement which has been initiated by IOC President Thomas Bach and is set to be finalized by the end of the year. In their 15-page document titled “The Bid Experience,” the four nations give an insight into the failed bids.

According to the paper, “established European nations” encounter similar problems when considering a bid, most notably the fact that “public and politics seemingly fear the high costs of bidding for and hosting the Games, especially in the aftermath of the increase of costs that was witnessed in Sochi as well as concerns relating to human rights and sustainability.” Furthermore, the situation “is aggravated by the media picturing mistrust in the IOC.” The four nations propose a string of recommendations to improve the

bidding process, attempting to make it less complex and more transparent. They highlight eight key topics which are all related to the process of the bidding, or the costs and the scale of the Games. Their recommendations to the IOC include shortening the bid phases; clearly dividing the cost of the Games in public and private costs; better explaining and promoting the IOC’s financial contributions; and limiting the total number of the Olympic Family and reducing the IOC accommodation requirements. The paper focused mainly on

Winter Olympics because of the committees’ experience that these challenges “are even more pressing than in bidding for Olympic ‘Summer’ Games.” Austria dropped plans to bid for the 2028 Olympics after 72 percent of the inhabitants of capital Vienna opposed the initiative. In Germany and Switzerland, 53 percent didn’t support the Olympic proposal. More recently, Krakow and Lviv also withdrew their applications for the 2022 Games, leaving Oslo, Almaty and Beijing the only remaining candidate cities.

Aggies’ Sumlin can’t escape Manziel questions

NOCs call for revision of Olympic bidding process

CATTLE/HOGS

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

low

settle

chg.

CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Aug 14 148.25 148.87 147.65 148.57 +.77 Oct 14 151.25 152.15 150.60 151.85 +1.00 Dec 14 152.22 153.10 151.85 152.50 +.25 Feb 15 152.55 152.85 152.12 152.70 +.95 Apr 15 151.90 152.90 151.90 152.60 +.65 Jun 15 144.40 144.40 144.30 144.35 +.58 Aug 15 142.75 142.95 142.75 142.95 +.55 Oct 15 145.25 Dec 15 145.50 145.75 145.50 145.75 +.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 3969. Mon’s Sales: 76,274 Mon’s open int: 340401, off -597 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Aug 14 211.15 212.97 210.72 211.52 +.85 Sep 14 211.92 213.22 211.02 211.82 +.70 Oct 14 212.00 212.57 210.95 211.77 +.85 Nov 14 210.72 212.10 210.00 210.97 +.42 Jan 15 206.25 206.75 205.50 205.52 -.28 Mar 15 205.00 205.25 204.40 204.55 -.02 204.70 205.20 204.70 205.20 +1.10 Apr 15 May 15 204.40 205.00 203.97 203.97 Last spot N/A Est. sales 10. Mon’s Sales: 12,525 Mon’s open int: 49965, off -275 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Aug 14 130.55 131.00 129.70 130.72 +.37 116.05 116.60 80.00 115.95 +.23 Oct 14 Dec 14 105.40 105.47 104.00 104.70 -.45 Feb 15 98.80 98.95 98.00 98.87 -.03 96.90 97.70 96.75 97.65 +.73 Apr 15 May 15 94.50 94.50 94.50 94.50 +.10 Jun 15 96.80 97.05 96.45 97.05 +.35 Jul 15 93.60 94.20 93.60 94.20 +.70 Aug 15 92.25 92.40 92.25 92.40 +.20 Oct 15 81.35 81.35 81.35 81.35 +.10 Dec 15 78.10 79.00 78.10 79.00 +1.00 Last spot N/A Est. sales 9834. Mon’s Sales: 50,254 Mon’s open int: 256833, up +45521 321

COTTON

NEW YORK(AP) - Cotton No. 2 futures on the N.Y. Cotton Exchange Friday: Open high

low settle

COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 14 68.60 68.72 67.84 68.25 Dec 14 68.25 68.67 67.50 67.75 Mar 15 69.02 69.28 68.36 68.54 May 15 70.12 70.70 69.64 69.82 Jul 15 70.77 71.84 70.77 70.97 Oct 15 71.26 Dec 15 73.50 73.50 72.62 72.95 Mar 16 73.10 May 16 74.11 Jul 16 75.11 Oct 16 74.71 Dec 16 72.93 Mar 17 73.38 May 17 74.39 Last spot N/A Est. sales 13742. Mon’s Sales: 13,711 Mon’s open int: 150495, up +597

chg.

-.35 -.55 -.54 -.50 -.46 -.54 -.57 -.58 -.58 -.58 -.58 -.58 -.58 -.58

GRAINS

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

low

settle

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Sep 14 538 539ø 530ø 537fl Dec 14 560 563 553ø 561 Mar 15 582ü 583ø 575 582 May 15 597ø 598ø 590ø 597 Jul 15 608ø 610fl 602ü 608ø Sep 15 622ø 623fl 613ø 621ø Dec 15 635 637ø 629ø 636ø

chg.

+ø +ü -ø +1 +2

642 644fl Mar 16 645 645 May 16 641fl 645 641fl 645 Jul 16 637fl 637fl 636ø 636ø Sep 16 637fl 637fl 636ø 636ø Dec 16 637fl 638ø 637fl 638ø Mar 17 637fl 638ø 637fl 638ø May 17 637fl 638ø 637fl 638ø Jul 17 637fl 638ø 637fl 638ø Last spot N/A Est. sales 79066. Mon’s Sales: 74,561 Mon’s open int: 400707, up +1165 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Sep 14 381 381ü 371 374 378ü 381fl Dec 14 388 388 Mar 15 399 399 390 393ü May 15 405fl 406 398ü 401fl 414 414fl 406 409ø Jul 15 Sep 15 417ü 420ü 412ü 415 Dec 15 425 425 416ø 420 Mar 16 430 434ø 426fl 429ü May 16 436 440fl 433ø 435fl 440 444 438ø 439ø Jul 16 Sep 16 435 440 435 437 Dec 16 434 437ø 430fl 435 451ü 455fl 451 454 Jul 17 Dec 17 445 448ü 445 447 Last spot N/A Est. sales 270556. Mon’s Sales: 206,346 Mon’s open int: 1321603, off -790 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Sep 14 335 335fl 332ü 334ü Dec 14 332 333fl 327fl 331 Mar 15 328ø 328ø 322fl 325ø May 15 318fl 318fl 317fl 317fl 322 322 321 321 Jul 15 Sep 15 322 322 321 321 Dec 15 305 305 305 305 305 305 Mar 16 305 305 May 16 305 305 305 305 Jul 16 306 306 306 306 Sep 16 306 306 306 306 Last spot N/A Est. sales 551. Mon’s Sales: 378 Mon’s open int: 7382, off -157 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Aug 14 1194ü 1195 1153ü 1180ø Sep 14 1107 1108ø 1084fl 1104ü Nov 14 1083fl 1088ø 1070 1086ü Jan 15 1092fl 1096fl 1079 1095 Mar 15 1102ø 1105ü 1087fl 1103ø May 15 1110ø 1114ü 1096fl 1111fl Jul 15 1119 1122ü 1104fl 1119ø Aug 15 1107 1115fl 1107 1114ü Sep 15 1095ü 1101ø 1095ü 1100fl Nov 15 1095ü 1097fl 1082 1095fl Jan 16 1094ü 1103ü 1094ü 1101fl Mar 16 1107ü 1107ü 1105fl 1105fl May 16 1111 1111 1110 1110 Jul 16 1115ø 1115ø 1115 1115 Aug 16 1114 1114 1113ø 1113ø Sep 16 1101ø 1101ø 1100 1100 Nov 16 1089 1092fl 1078ü 1089 Jul 17 1105ø 1105ø 1101fl 1101fl Nov 17 1080 1090ü 1080 1090ü Last spot N/A Est. sales 203754. Mon’s Sales: 160,717 Mon’s open int: 624792, up +3702

FUTURES

+2ü +3ü -1ü -1ü +fl +fl +fl +fl

-7ø -6ø -5fl -5ü -5ü -5ü -5ü -5ü -5 -4ø -3 -2ø -1fl -1ü

+ü -1ø -1 -1 -1 -1

-16ø -3fl

-fl -1 -fl -1ø -fl -2 -1ø -1ø -1 -ø -ø -1ø -3fl -3fl +1ü

OIL/GASOLINE/NG

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

low

settle

chg.

LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. Aug 14 100.93 101.06 99.01 Sep 14 100.54 100.63 98.68 Oct 14 100.04 100.04 98.23 99.37 99.45 97.79 Nov 14 Dec 14 98.05 98.20 97.40 Jan 15 98.34 98.40 97.00 97.87 97.87 96.51 Feb 15 Mar 15 Apr 15 96.83 96.85 95.67 95.90 95.90 95.36 May 15 Jun 15 95.50 95.60 93.35 Jul 15 94.93 95.01 94.80 94.39 94.63 94.39 Aug 15 Sep 15 94.00 94.10 94.00 Oct 15 Nov 15 Dec 15 93.82 93.82 91.49 Jan 16 Feb 16 Mar 16 Apr 16 May 16 Jun 16 92.00 92.00 91.52 Jul 16 Aug 16 Sep 16 91.50 91.50 90.86 Oct 16 Nov 16 Dec 16 91.15 91.82 90.36 Jan 17 Feb 17 Mar 17 Apr 17 May 17 Jun 17 89.80 89.80 89.38 Jul 17 Aug 17 Sep 17 Oct 17 Nov 17 Dec 17 90.24 90.24 88.80

99.96 99.53 98.98 98.43 97.93 97.46 96.99 96.54 96.08 95.68 95.33 94.86 94.45 94.10 93.80 93.56 93.33 92.94 92.58 92.25 91.94 91.70 91.52 91.21 91.01 90.86 90.74 90.64 90.57 90.29 90.04 89.83 89.65 89.50 89.38 89.20 89.08 89.01 88.97 88.96 88.96

-.95 -.95 -.95 -.96 -.97 -.97 -.97 -.96 -.94 -.91 -.88 -.86 -.85 -.85 -.85 -.84 -.83 -.80 -.77 -.75 -.72 -.69 -.67 -.66 -.66 -.66 -.65 -.65 -.64 -.64 -.64 -.63 -.62 -.62 -.62 -.62 -.62 -.61 -.61 -.60 -.60

Jan 18 88.84 Feb 18 88.73 88.63 Mar 18 Apr 18 88.54 May 18 88.45 88.37 Jun 18 Jul 18 88.27 Aug 18 88.19 88.13 Sep 18 Oct 18 88.08 Nov 18 88.04 88.88 88.88 87.86 88.02 Dec 18 Jan 19 87.96 Feb 19 87.91 87.86 Mar 19 Apr 19 87.82 May 19 87.78 87.75 Jun 19 Jul 19 87.71 Aug 19 87.68 87.66 Sep 19 Oct 19 87.65 87.65 Nov 19 Dec 19 88.80 88.80 87.65 87.65 Jun 20 87.55 87.30 87.45 87.30 87.45 Dec 20 Jun 21 87.40 Dec 21 87.35 87.35 Jun 22 Dec 22 87.87 87.87 87.35 87.35 Last spot N/A Est. sales 671594. Mon’s Sales: 634,304 Mon’s open int: 1724135, up +2542 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Aug 14 2.9275 2.9286 2.8659 2.8986 2.8983 2.8983 2.8388 2.8681 Sep 14 Oct 14 2.7370 2.7376 2.6862 2.7092 Nov 14 2.6998 2.7000 2.6540 2.6719 2.6600 2.6600 2.6350 2.6468 Dec 14 Jan 15 2.6604 2.6604 2.6256 2.6360 Feb 15 2.6612 2.6624 2.6289 2.6385 Mar 15 2.6532 Apr 15 2.8250 2.8255 2.8200 2.8255 May 15 2.8183 2.8210 2.8110 2.8210 Jun 15 2.8054 2.8060 2.7940 2.8023 Jul 15 2.7720 2.7793 2.7720 2.7793 Aug 15 2.7538 Sep 15 2.7200 2.7260 2.7200 2.7238 Oct 15 2.5850 2.5857 2.5850 2.5857

METALS

NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Tue. Aluminum -$0.8722 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$3.2441 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper -$3.2385 N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Lead - $2193.50 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $1.0502 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1310.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1296.90 troy oz., NY Merc spot Tue. Silver - $20.820 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $20.842 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. Platinum -$1497.00 troy oz., Handy & Harman. Platinum -$1484.30 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Tue. n.q.-not quoted n.a.-not available r-revised

-.60 -.60 -.60 -.60 -.60 -.60 -.60 -.60 -.60 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59 -.59

-.0265 -.0284 -.0299 -.0310 -.0314 -.0317 -.0316 -.0312 -.0302 -.0292 -.0280 -.0280 -.0280 -.0280 -.0280

NYSE

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

MARKET SUMMARY

Name Vol (00) Last Chg AMD 1554127 4.53 -.11 S&P500ETF1041496197.23-.37 BkofAm 941099 15.81 +.24 MktVGold 513318 25.78 -.82 iShR2K 486148114.55 -1.14

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

AMEX

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Name Vol (00) AmApparel 91677 AlldNevG 45205 GreenHntr 41814 NwGold g 39162 Globalstar 32648

Last 11.84 9.89 83.14 39.92 5.72

Chg %Chg Name +1.37 +13.1 Enservco +.91 +10.1 GreenHntr +7.44 +9.8 AmShrd +3.47 +9.5 NanoViric +.48 +9.2 NewConcEn

Last 2.96 2.85 2.88 4.23 2.45

Name DirGMnBull Lorillard Aarons BiP GCrb USEC Inc

Last 25.10 60.17 30.34 6.90 4.76

Chg %Chg Name -3.79 -13.1 HMG -7.05 -10.5 22ndCentry -3.19 -9.5 UnvSecInst -.70 -9.2 Organovo -.48 -9.2 BioTime

Last 13.50 2.68 4.06 7.40 2.75

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

DIARY

Volume

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

Name Vol (00) Last Intel 524665 31.71 Facebook 437160 67.17 Apple Inc s 434121 95.32 PwShs QQQ36441095.51 SiriusXM 349289 3.38

1,087 2,019 118 3,224 105 27

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Chg %Chg Name Last Chg -1.60 -10.6 NewLead rs 2.17 -1.03 -.24 -8.2 MinervaN n 5.85 -.95 -.34 -7.7 FemaleHlt 4.19 -.60 -.56 -7.0 AccelrDiag 20.50 -2.59 -.20 - AssembB rs 9.10 -1.10

DIARY

123 284 19 426 2 6Lows

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

DIARY

102,333,886 Volume

INDEXES

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

Chg +.22 -.74 -1.13 -.33 -.01

Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg +.38 +14.7 Codexis 2.03 +.62 +44.0 +.35 +14.0 PlugPowr h 4.85 +.67 +16.0 +.18 +6.7 Elecsys 13.78 +1.67 +13.8 +.23 +5.8 GoPro n 41.63 +4.79 +13.0 +.13 +5.6 LaJollaPh 12.09 +1.24 +11.40

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

3,250,105,817 Volume

52-Week High Low 17,088.43 14,719.43 8,338.72 6,237.14 576.98 467.93 11,334.65 9,246.89 4,485.93 3,573.53 1,985.59 1,627.47 1,452.01 1,170.62 21,108.12 17,305.21 1,213.55 1,009.00

Chg -.06 -.11 +.35 -.25 -

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name DirGMBear EKodak wt RockwdH DrxGldBear StdRegistr

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

Last 1.15 3.54 2.85 6.13 4.15

NASDAQ

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Last 17,060.68 8,345.08 555.95 10,965.63 4,416.39 1,973.28 1,412.37 20,865.85 1,153.81

Div

PE

Last

Chg

YTD %Chg Name

1.84 .90 .04 2.92 4.28f 1.22 .86f .50 3.74f 2.76f .50 .64 1.28f .90 4.40f 2.80f

11 14 21 22 13 23 22 26 ... 14 11 12 16 17 13 20

36.24 82.38 15.81 129.10 129.26 42.10 86.15 113.44 56.78 102.39 17.54 34.15 44.94 31.71 188.49 103.28

+.38 +.22 +.24 -.42 ... -.28 -.61 -2.12 +.46 -.29 -.01 ... +1.27 +.22 -1.37 -2.10

+3.1 +20.1 +1.5 -5.4 +3.5 +1.9 +12.8 +35.2 -.8 +1.2 +13.7 +22.1 -9.6 +22.2 +.5 +12.8

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

744 1,905 142 2,791 44 53ic

1,710,514,125

Net % Chg Chg +5.26 +.03 +31.97 +.38 +2.70 +.49 -25.84 -.24 -24.03 -.54 -3.82 -.19 -4.79 -.34 -61.41 -.29 -11.81 -1.01

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

%Chg -32.2 -14.0 -12.5 -11.2 -10.8

YTD % Chg +2.92 +12.76 +13.33 +5.44 +5.74 +6.76 +5.20 +5.89 -.84

52-wk % Chg +10.41 +29.94 +10.47 +15.56 +22.73 +17.72 +16.05 +17.50 +11.08.0

Div

PE

Last

Chg

YTD %Chg

1.76 1.12 2.98f .74 2.62f 1.04 2.00 .24f 1.20 1.27b .68e 2.12 1.92 .44f 1.40f 1.20

38 16 21 20 21 17 15 23 26 16 ... 11 16 14 13 16

57.91 -.27 42.45 +.31 57.92 +.54 28.24 -.40 90.34 -.74 30.41 +.17 81.12 +1.17 27.90 +.30 48.66 -.26 71.01 -.67 21.11 ... 50.71 +.18 76.84 +.29 21.59 -.11 51.35 +.04 31.54 +.20

+15.7 +13.5 +10.0 +17.1 +8.9 -.7 +5.2 +48.1 +10.8 +6.2 +5.7 +3.2 -2.4 -7.3 +13.1 +12.9

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


B6 Wednesday, July 16, 2014

MINI PAGE

release dates: July 12-18

Roswell Daily Record

28-1 (14) TM

Mini Spy

Mini Spy and Basset Brown are going to a rodeo competition. See if you can find: Q olive Q snake Q tooth Q safety pin Q bell Q word MINI Q rolling pin Q bird Q question mark Q shark Š 2014 Universal Uclick from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

Lasso Up Some Fun

Let’s Go to the Rodeo! Rodeo history

image courtesy University of Houston Libraries

photo by Tom Donoghue, courtesy PRCA

An ancestor of the horses we know today (Equus) lived on our continent millions of years ago. But at some point, those early horses crossed a land bridge into Asia and Europe. For many years, there were no horses at all in North America. About 500 years ago, Spanish explorers brought horses back to the Americas. They also brought cattle. North American cowboys used horses to round An early up the wild cattle. cowboy (“Rodeo� means roundup in Spanish.) American and Spanish cowboys, or vaqueros (vah-CAIR-ohs), learned to rope and tie the cattle as they were herding them. They had to break, or tame, wild horses to use them for work. Soon they began competing against each other in contests of cowboy skills.

Bull rider Tate Stratton comes out of the chute at the 2012 Wrangler National Finals Rodeo. Every bull has a different bucking pattern. Cowboys and rodeo clowns study the animals to get an idea of how they buck. Some may spin more than others, dart to the left or right, or jump straight up in the air. Bulls weigh around 2,000 pounds, so bull riding is a dangerous and exciting event.

from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

Is going to a rodeo on your list of summer plans this year? Rodeos are lots of fun for kids and adults. This week, The Mini Page goes to the rodeo to find out more about this entertaining sport.

Rodeo livestock steal the show Horses compete in nearly every rodeo event. The most popular type of horse for rodeo is the American quarter horse. Rodeo horses require a lot of care. Their exercise includes trotting up and down hills to build their stamina. They must be fed healthy food and have plenty of water. Some horses are bred especially for their events. For example, breeders raise and train some horses to be bucking broncos for bronc riding events.

TM

Bulls are the biggest of the rodeo animals. They are used only in bullriding events. Steers, or male cattle that have been neutered, are used for timed steer wrestling, steer roping and team roping events. Calves, or young cattle, are used for the tie-down roping event. This timed event originated with cowboys catching cattle to give them medicine.

Rookie Cookie’s Recipe

Roasted Red Pepper Dip You’ll need: s CUP CHOPPED ROASTED RED PEPPERS s OUNCES LIGHT VEGETABLE CREAM CHEESE SOFTENED s TABLESPOONS CHOPPED FRESH BASIL s SALT AND FRESHLY GROUND BLACK PEPPER What to do: 1. In a food processor or blender, combine peppers, cream cheese and basil. Puree until smooth. 2. Season to taste with salt and pepper. 3. Serve with jicama or carrot sticks, or other cut-up vegetables. You will need an adult’s help with this recipe. Adapted from “The Robin Takes 5 Cookbook for Busy Familiesâ€? with permission from Andrews McMeel Publishing (andrewsmcmeel.com). from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

Meet a Rodeo Clown

photo by Peter Iovino, Š 2013 Relativity Media, LLC. All Rights Reserved

%LLA ,INNEA 7AHLESTEDT STARS AS %MMA in the movie “Earth to Echo.� She has acted in several movies, TV shows and commercials. Ella, 15, was born in Stockholm, Sweden, and moved to the United States when she was 6. When she was 10, she became a skilled gymnast. One day, her gymnastics coach didn’t show up, so she went to an acting class instead. She was excited by the idea of acting and entered a performing arts middle school. She also enjoys singing, hiking, writing and photography. Ella speaks Swedish, Spanish and English. She supports charities that work to provide safe drinking water for people.

from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

TM

Goldie Goodsport’s Supersport

Height: 5-6 Birthdate: 3-3-93 Hometown: Bradenton, Florida

Doris Chen The University of Southern California fields one of the best teams in women’s collegiate golf, and junior Doris Chen has played a large role in the Trojans’ recent success on the golf course. But Chen, a three-time All-America selection, had something other than golf on her mind recently. ,AST YEAR $ORIS MOTHER 9UH 'UEY 95 GWAY ,IN WAS diagnosed with stage 3 lung cancer. She would undergo surgery and chemotherapy in an effort to fight the disease. Doris found it hard to concentrate on birdies and pars while her mom was fighting for her life. "UT ,IN DID FIGHT BACK ˆ AND SHE WAS DECLARED CANCER FREE The relief for Chen was evident in her play. At the NCAA Women’s Golf Championships in May, Chen helped her team to a second-place finish in the team competition and captured the individual national title with a 6-under-par score over four days. The highlight for Doris, though, was that her mom was there in person to watch her play.

Justin Rumford is a rodeo clown. He works from January through November, traveling around the country to entertain crowds and protect cowboys in the ring. He spoke with The Mini Page about his work. MP: What does a rodeo clown do? JR: The rodeo clown helps the announcer entertain the crowd and make sure they have a great time. During the bull riding, the clown has a serious role. He is called a barrelman, and he works inside a barrel that he can move around. The barrels we use are made of aircraft aluminum. They are padded inside and out and are almost impossible to get hurt in. I have only had minor injuries competing, and none clowning. At each rodeo there is only one clown. There are two bullfighters who take the role of cowboy protection. The bullfighters distract the bull (after the rider has fallen off) until the cowboy can get to safety.

Rodeo clown Justin Rumford entertains fans at a rodeo in Colorado in 2013.

photo by Brian Gauck, courtesy PRCA

MP: How did you start clowning? JR: I have been involved in rodeo my whole life. I went to college on a rodeo scholarship. I started clowning four years ago to try something new. I’ve always been a joker! MP: What should kids know about rodeo? JR: I want kids to know about the livestock. Some people say you have to hurt animals to make them buck, but that is not true at all. Horses and bulls have been bred to buck for the last 75 years. These animals are great athletes that their owners take great pride in!

Spurs, or metal attachments to cowboys’ boots, must be dull.

photo Š Lincolnrogers | Dreamstime.com

Meet Ella Linnea Wahlestedt

What about the animals? Some people protest that rodeos are cruel to animals. According to the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association, it and other rodeo organizations work together with breeders and trainers to make sure that rodeo animals are cared for humanely. A veterinarian, or animal doctor, must be at every rodeo event to examine animals before their events and to treat any injured animals. Cowboys are not allowed to be overly rough with animals during their events. They will be disqualified if they break this rule. Steers’ horns are wrapped with a protective covering during their events. Straps for bulls and bucking broncos must be soft. from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

TMMighty

A Mini Guide to the Rodeo Bareback Riding

Saddle Bronc Riding

Barrel Racing

Team Roping

This event requires a cowboy to ride a bucking horse Sterling Crawley using a saddle. The cowboy gets points for spurring, or prodding, the horse. He must not use his free hand, and his feet must remain in the stirrups.

Cowgirls are the stars of barrel racing. The cowgirl and her horse enter the arena at full Lisa Lockhart speed. She must guide the horse around three barrels in a particular pattern, then speed back out of the arena. The cowgirl can touch the barrel, but if it falls over, there is a 5-second penalty. The fastest time wins. photo by Mike Copeman, courtesy PRCA

Bull Riding For this dangerous event, the cowboy must stay on a bucking, spinning bull for 8 seconds. He holds onto a rigging but must not touch anything with his free hand. The rider tries to lean forward over his hand to avoid being whipped around too much. Judging is based on the cowboy’s good body position and on the efforts of the bull.

Ardie Maier

photo by Larry Smith, courtesy PRCA

photo by Mike Copeman, courtesy PRCA

This event depends on great teamwork between a cowboy and his horse. The cowboy must Tuf Cooper rope the calf from his horse, then jump off and tie three of its legs together. Meanwhile, the horse pulls back on the roping line to keep it tight so the calf can’t escape.

photo by Larry Smith, courtesy PRCA

A cowboy called a bulldogger must chase a steer, then reach Luke Branquinho down and grab the steer’s horns and dig in his own heels to stop the animal. Then he must lift the steer and lay it down on its side. Another cowboy, called a hazer, keeps the steer running in a straight line.

photo by Mike Copeman, courtesy PRCA

In bareback riding, the cowboy has to keep his feet in Steven Peebles a certain position while he hangs onto the rigging, a handhold made of leather and rawhide, for 8 seconds. He can’t use his free hand at all. The score is based on the performance of both the horse and the rider.

In this timed event, two cowboys work together. Clay Tryan and One, the Jade Corkill header, tries to rope a steer’s horns or head. Then the other, the heeler, tries to rope its back feet. If he snags only one back foot, he gets a 5-second penalty.

Add` ^c ndjg cZlheVeZg [dg gdYZdh Xdb^c\ je ^c ndjg VgZV# L]^X] ZkZcih ldjaY ndj a^`Z id XdbeZiZ ^c Yjg^c\ V gdYZd4 The Mini Page thanks Justin Shaw with the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association and rodeo clown Justin Rumsford for help with this issue. Next week, The Mini Page is the first of two issues about architectural styles.

The Mini Page Staff Betty Debnam - Founding Editor and Editor at Large Lisa Tarry - Managing Editor Lucy Lien - Associate Editor Wendy Daley - Artist

I]Z B^c^ EV\Zœ

<j^YZ id i]Z 8dchi^iji^dc The popular nine-part series on the Constitution, written in collaboration with the National Archives, is now packaged as a colorful 32-page softcover book. The series covers: s the preamble, the seven articles and 27 amendments s the “big ideas� of the document s the history of its making and the signers

Mini Jokes

All the following jokes have something in common. Can you guess the common theme or category?

Tie-Down Roping photo by Larry Smith, courtesy PRCA

photo by Larry Smith, courtesy PRCA

Steer Wrestling

Funny’s

Honor: What kind of horse does a ghost like to ride? Harry: Nightmares! Hubert: Why is it hard to identify horses from the back? Hilda: Because they keep switching their tails! Harry: Why did the horse scold its colt? Henry: For misbehooving! from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

TM

Rodeo

Y O B W O C L J W K V L Q N R Z D S P U R S K C A B E R A B Basset C B B U L L D O G G E R O E H Brown’s S C T R E E T S N N B R P S Q E L D D A S M W C I U A I R O V A Q U E R O A P G C B N O E N R X V J L L A F G K M G H D S P I N C F S L R I G W O C O B L N A I R A N I R E T E V R Words that remind us of a rodeo are hidden in the block above. Some words are hidden backward or diagonally, and some letters are used twice. See if you can find: BAREBACK, BARREL, BUCK, BULLDOGGER, CALF, CLOWN, COWBOY, COWGIRL, FALL, HORSE, LIVESTOCK, RIGGING, RODEO, ROPING, SADDLE, SPIN, SPURS, STEER, VAQUERO, VETERINARIAN.

Try ’n’ Find

from The Mini Page Š 2014 Universal Uclick

Ready Resources The Mini Page provides ideas for websites, books or other resources that will help you learn more about this week’s topics. On the Web: s PRORODEOKIDS COM s NLBRA COM s PBSKIDS ORG BUSTER VIDEOS TX?HOUSTON?VID HTML At the library: s h2ODEOv BY 2OBIN *OHNSON s h2ODEO #LOWN ,AUGHS AND $ANGER IN THE 2INGv BY Keith Elliot Greenberg

To order, send $9.95 plus $3.50 postage and handling for each copy. Send check or money order (U.S. funds only) payable to: Andrews McMeel Universal, P.O. Box 6814, Leawood, KS 66206 or call toll-free 1-800-591-2097. Please send ______ copies of The Mini Page Guide to the Constitution (Item #0-7407-6511-6) at $13.45 each, total cost. (Bulk discount information available upon request.) www.smartwarehousing.com Name: ________________________________________________________________________ Address: _______________________________________________________________________ City: _________________________________________ State: _________ Zip: ________________

Please include all of the appropriate registered trademark symbols and copyright lines in any publication of The Mini PageÂŽ.


Roswell Daily Record

DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE

DEAR ABBY: Help! My daughter just turned 13, and I need to discuss the facts of life with her. I don’t know where to start. My mom told me absolutely NOTHING, and I know my daughter needs to be educated in a simple but very understandable way — especially in these times. Do you still have your booklet that gives teens answers to questions on sex? I need ideas on how to approach this. NERVOUS MOM IN ILLINOIS

DEAR NERVOUS MOM: Because many parents find the subject of sex embarrassing, they postpone discussing it with their children. When “the talk” finally happens, it is often too late. Their child’s head is filled with information received from contemporaries, and often what they’ve heard is inaccurate. Today, children are maturing years earlier than they did a generation ago. It’s not unusual to hear about teens engaging in adult activities at much younger ages than teens of earlier generations. That is why it’s so important for parents (and guardians) to begin discussions about alcohol, drugs and family values well before their children start experimenting. My booklet, “What Every Teen Should Know,” was written to help parents break the ice and get the conversation going. It can be ordered by sending your name and address plus check or money order for $7 (U.S. funds) to Dear Abby Teen Booklet, P.O. Box 447,

COMICS

Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. Shipping and handling are included in the price. You should review it before starting the discussion so you can prepare beforehand to answer questions or guide the conversation. My booklet provides answers to frequently asked questions, such as: How old must a girl be before she can get pregnant? Can she get pregnant the first time she has sex? What time of the month is a girl 100 percent safe? How old must a boy be before he can father a child? Another important topic is how to avoid date rape and what to do if it happens. Included is information on contraception and sexually transmitted diseases (and how to recognize them). My booklet has been distributed in doctors’ offices and used to promote discussion by educators and religious leaders, as well as parents like you who find it dif ficult to discuss these topics with their children. #####

DEAR ABBY: I recently started a summer job in the fitting room of a clothing store. Customers often ask me what I think about their outfits, and the most common question is, “Does this make me look fat?” How do I answer if the outfit DOES make the woman look fat? These women want honesty, but how do I avoid sounding rude? CONFLICTED IN NEW JERSEY

Family Circus

DEAR CONFLICTED: Try this: “The color is great on you. Let’s get it in another size and it’ll be per fect. Sometimes garments have been mismarked.” (It’s true.) ##### 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.

Beetle Bailey

The Wizard of Id

HINTS

Blondie

FROM HELOISE

KING FEATURES SYNDICATE Dear Heloise: Can you please reprint your HELOISE PEANUT BRITTLE recipe? I haven’t made it in years, and I cannot find the recipe! Ellen S. in Indiana

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

This recipe is so easy and quick, because you make it in the microwave. Gather the following ingredients: 1 cup of granulated sugar 1/2 cup of light corn syrup 1 1/2 cups of raw (skin on) peanuts 1/8 teaspoon of salt 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract 1 teaspoon of butter 1 teaspoon of baking soda Place aluminum foil over a cookie sheet (with sides) and spray lightly with nonstick cooking spray. In a large, microwave-safe bowl, combine sugar, corn syrup, peanuts and salt. Mix together. Place in the microwave (wattages vary, so you may need to adjust the times) and heat on HIGH for 8 minutes, stirring well halfway through cooking. Stir in the vanilla and butter, and microwave another 2 minutes on HIGH. Carefully take the bowl out, because it will be very hot! Add the baking soda and stir until the mixture becomes foamy and light. Be careful not to overstir! Quickly pour the mixture onto the cookie sheet using a metal knife. You may need help with this. Evenly spread the mixture to about 1/4-inch thickness. Let it cool, then break into pieces and store the peanut brittle in an airtight container or a plastic, zip-top bag. Heloise ##### SEND A GREAT HINT TO: Heloise P.O. Box 795000 San Antonio, TX 78279-5000 Fax: 210-HELOISE Email: Heloise(at)Heloise.com

Dear Heloise: As I was growing up, my grandmother said that you could use selfrising flour in baking instead of plain flour, baking powder and salt. Is this regardless of the measurements for the baking powder and salt? — Renee P. in North Carolina No, you need to be aware of the measurements, which are the following: 1 cup all-purpose flour, 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder and 1 teaspoon table salt. These measurements are what change plain flour to self-rising flour. Heloise ##### Dear Heloise: I always use the wrappers from sticks of butter to grease casserole dishes or baking sheets. When I have wrappers but no cooking immediately planned for which they will be used, I store the wrappers in the freezer. The freezer keeps the wrappers fresh and ready to use. Kelly T. in Illinois

Dear Heloise: We cook our bacon outside in an electric skillet to keep odor and splatters out of the house. We cook at least a pound at a time, and we put what we don’t use in a plastic freezer bag. It keeps great in the freezer, and whenever you want a couple of pieces, you pop them into the microwave for 10 seconds. Yum! Craig and Patti J. in Michigan

Dear Heloise: When I stem strawberries, I use the long, skinny potato peeler. This way, I get the stem plus the pithy center and save all the shoulder fruit of the strawberry. Sue, via email

Dilbert

For Better or For Worse

Garfield

Hagar the Horrible

Snuffy Smith

Zits

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

B7


B8 Wednesday, July 16, 2014

CLASSIFIEDS

Ebola crisis in West Africa deepens: 500+ dead

DAKAR, Senegal (AP) — Deep in the forests of souther n Guinea, the first victims fell ill with high fevers. People assumed it was the perennial killer malaria and had no reason to fear touching the bodies, as is the custom in traditional funerals. Some desperate relatives brought their loved ones to the distant capital in search of better medical care, unknowingly spreading what ultimately was discovered to be Ebola, one of the world’s most deadly diseases. Ebola, a hemorrhagic fever that can cause its victims to bleed from the ears and nose, had never before been seen in this part of West Africa where medical clinics are few and far between. The disease has turned up in at least two other countries — Liberia and Sierra Leone — and 539 deaths have been attributed to the outbreak that is now the largest on record. The key to halting Ebola is isolating the sick, but fear and panic have sent some patients into hiding, complicating efforts to stop its spread. Ebola has reached the capitals of all three countries, and the World Health Organization reported 44 new cases including 21 deaths on Fri-

Roswell Daily Record

day. There has been “a gross misjudgment across the board in gauging the severity and scale of damage the current Ebola outbreak can unleash,” the aid group Plan International warned earlier this month. “There are no cases from outside Africa to date. The threat of it spreading though is very much there,” said Dr. Unni Krishnan, head of disaster preparedness and response for the aid group. Preachers are calling for divine intervention, and panicked residents in remote areas have on multiple occasions attacked the very health workers sent to help them. In one town in Sierra Leone, residents partially burned down a treatment center over fears that the drugs given to victims were actually causing the disease. Activists are trying to spread awareness in the countryside where literacy is low, even through a song penned about Ebola. “It has no cure, but it can be prevented; let us fight it together. Let’s protect ourselves, our families and our nation,” sings the chorus. “Do not touch people with the

signs of Ebola,” sings musician and activist Juli Endee. “Don’t eat bush meat. Don’t play with monkey and baboons. Plums that bats have bitten or half-eaten, don’t eat them.” Guinea first notified WHO about the emergence of Ebola in March and soon after cases were reported in neighboring Liberia. Two months later there were hopes that the outbreak was waning, but then people began falling ill in Sierra Leone. Doctors Without Borders says it fears the number of patients now being treated in Sierra Leone could be “just the tip of the iceberg.” Nearly 40 were reported in a single village in the country’s east. “We’re under massive time pressure: The longer it takes to find and follow up with people who have come in contact with sick people, the more difficult it will be to control the outbreak,” said Anja Wolz, emergency coordinator for the group, also referred to by its French name Medecins Sans Frontieres. This Ebola virus is a new strain and did not spread to West Africa from previous outbreaks in Uganda and Congo, researchers say. Many believe it is linked to

the human consumption of bats carrying the virus. Many of those who have fallen ill in the current outbreak are family members of victims and the health workers who treated them. There is no cure and no vaccine for Ebola, and those who have survived managed to do so only by receiving rehydration and other supportive treatment. Ebola’s high fatality rate means many of those brought to health clinics have been merely kept as comfortable as possible in quarantine as they await death. As a result, some families have been afraid to take sick loved ones to the clinics. “Let this warning go out: Anyone found or reported to be holding suspected Ebola cases in homes or prayer houses can be prosecuted under the law of Liberia,” President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf stated recently. Her comments came just days after Sierra Leone issued a similar war ning, saying some patients had discharged themselves from the hospital and had gone into hiding. At the airport in Guinea’s capital, departing passengers must undergo temperature screening, and those with a fever are pulled

attorney for the British legal rights group Reprieve who spoke in a phone interview from London. “This guy is basically a hero, and he should be permitted to give care to detainees that is ethically appropriate,” Crider said. It is the first time a nurse or doctor is known to have refused to tube-feed a prisoner, said

Ar my Col. Greg Julian, a spokesman for Southern Command, which oversees Guantanamo. He said in a phone interview that the nurse is a lieutenant and has been assigned other duties at Guantanamo. “It’s being handled administratively,” he said, declining further comment. The Guantanamo spokesman,

Navy Capt. Tom Gresback, did not respond to messages seeking comment. Crider said she learned about the case during a phone conversation with Abu Wa’el Dhiab, a 42-year-old Syrian prisoner she represents who has never been charged and has been a candidate for release and resettlement since 2009. She said Dhiab, who is on a

aside for further evaluation. Still, the stigma of Ebola follows Guineans well outside the region. “The police treated us like we were aliens. They said they didn’t want us in their country because of the disease affecting Guinea,” says Tafsir Sow, a businessman who was briefly detained at the airport in Casablanca, Morocco before continuing on to Paris. “I had tears in my eyes.” Still, WHO health officials are hopeful they will be able to get the situation under control in the next several weeks. A recent conference in the capital of Ghana brought together health authorities from across the af fected areas, and the countries agreed on a common approach to fight Ebola. “When you have it spread, of course it’s moving in the wrong direction,” said Dr. Keiji Fukuda, WHO’s assistant director-general for health security and environment. “You want to see the number of infections going down. So we really have to redouble our efforts. But saying that it’s out of control makes it sound like there are no solutions. This is a virus for which there are very clear solutions.”

Navy nurse refuses to force-feed Gitmo detainees SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) — A U.S. Navy nurse has refused to force-feed prisoners who are on an extended hunger strike at Guantanamo Bay, the first protest of its kind at the detention center, a rights lawyer and U.S. official said Tuesday. The unidentified nurse declined to participate after deciding the practice is a criminal act, said Cori Crider, an

Legals ___________________________________________

First Amended Notice of Sale...

Publish July 2, 9, 16, 23, 2014

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT No. D-504-CV-2012-00508 BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., Successor by merger to BAC Home Loans Servicing, LP fka Countrywide Home Loans Servicing, LP, vs.

Plaintiff,

CORWIN PETERSEN; and MARION JANETTE PETERSEN, Defendants.

FIRST AMENDED NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on July 29, 2014, at the hour of 11:45 a.m., the undersigned Special Master will, at the south door of the Roswell Police Department, 128 West Second Street, Roswell, New Mexico, sell all the right, title and interest of the above-named Defendants in and to the hereinafter described real estate to the highest bidder for cash. The property to be sold is located at 4 Beaver Place, Roswell, and is situate in Chaves County, New Mexico, and is particularly described as follows: The following described property in Chaves County, New Mexico: Lot 55, of Briar Ridge Unit A Addition, in the City of Roswell, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat filed in the Chaves County Clerk's Office on March 16, 1977 and recorded in Book F of Plat Records, at Page 35.

Being the same property conveyed from Ricky Dean Wallis and Francine J. Wallis to Corwin Petersen and Marion Janette Petersen by deed recorded October 29, 2002 in Book 445, Page 1139 in the registrar's office of Chaves County.

THE FOREGOING SALE will be made to satisfy a judgment rendered by the above Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on June 12, 2013, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the above-described property. The Plaintiff's Judgment, which includes interest and costs, is $157,766.18 and the same bears interest at 5.000% per annum from March 1, 2013, to the date of sale. The amount of such interest to the date of sale will be $11,151.69. The Plaintiff and/or its assignees has the right to bid at such sale and submit its bid verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of cash. The sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the real property and improvements concerned with herein will be sold subject to any and all patent reservations, easements, all recorded and unrecorded liens not foreclosed herein, and all recorded and unrecorded special assessments and taxes that may be due. Plaintiff and its attorneys disclaim all responsibility for, and the purchaser at the sale takes the property subject to, the valuation of the property by the County Assessor as real or personal property, affixture of any mobile or manufactured home to the land, deactivation of title to a mobile or manufactured home on the property, if any, environmental contamination on the property, if any, and zoning violations concerning the property, if any. NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN that the purchaser at such sale shall take title to the above described real property subject to a one month right of redemption. Electronically signed /s/ A.D. Jones A. D. Jones, Special Master P.O. Box 1180 Roswell, NM 88202-1180 (575) 622-8432

Legals

____________________

Change of Name...

Publish 2014

July

16,

23,

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION FOR CHANGE OF NAME OF Yesenia Renteria on behalf of the minor children Eryn Nicole Sena and Evan Andrew Sena.

025. Lost and Found

LOST WHITE female terrier with black head July 4th, 804 W. 4th St., Cahoon Park area, $100 Reward. 317-9898 FOUND MALE Boxer puppy injured by airport July 9th. Call to identify markings. 505-918-1120.

INSTRUCTION

EMPLOYMENT

045. Employment Opportunities

Case CV#2014-368

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 Yesenia Renteria will apply to the Honorable James M. Hudson, 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 15th day of September, 2014 for an ORDER FOR CHANGE OF NAME of the CHILD from the name of Eryn Nicole Sena and Evan Andrew Sena to Eryn JoeyElle Renteria and Joey Evan Renteria, Jr. KENNON CROWHURST Clerk of the District Court /s/Maureen J. Nelson Deputy Clerk Submitted by: /s/Yesenia Renteria 609 W. Frazier Roswell, NM 88203 575-910-3688

GARAGE SALES

004. Southeast

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

DRIVER NEEDED Class A or B CDL with clear driving record, local route, competitive pay, 401K, insurance and paid time off. Call 800-658-2673 or 806-293-4431 COMFORT KEEPERS is pursuing experienced caregivers to work in the Roswell, Dexter, Hagerman and Artesia areas. We offer flexible schedules both part time and full time with competitive pay. Stop by our Roswell office at: 1410 South Main to visit with us today or call Kim at 575-624-9999 for more information.

TODAY Inside sale Geman cartoon, Santa Fe train engine.603 E. Van Buren.

008. Northwest YARD SALE fundraiser; to buy school clothes for community kids, Sat. 7/19 8am. 6th & Kentucky

ANNOUNCEMENTS 025. Lost and Found

Lost 7/4 large male bassett/ hound cross/ crooked front legs, brown/ some white. Neutered, stitches still in, needs meds. 637-0828, 317-2781, 623-3578, 910-7892, 575-513-8061 500 block of S. Delaware

ADMIRAL BEVERAGE is currently hiring Class A CDL drivers. Position must be filled immediately. Local delivery, excellent pay, hourly and overtime, 4 day work week, affordable health insurance. Great opportunity for someone looking for long term employment. www.admiralbeverage.com LEARN TO drive in 5 short weeks. Artesia Training Academy has new classes forming. CDL Class A with endorsements. VA approved. 20 years of service to South East New Mexico. Call for more information 575-748-9766 or 1-888-586-0144 visit us at www.artesiatraining.com or visit us on Facebook.

045. Employment Opportunities

MJG Corporation is seeking to fill maintenance position. Must be able to work on basic equipment and general building repairs. Send resume or employment history to: Att: Senior Vice President, 204 W 4th St., Roswell, NM 88201 or call 575-622-8711 and ask for Gary only! MEDICAL ASSISTANT needed to fill a full time position. All applicants must have prior experience and knowledge of EMR system. You must also be proficient in word, have knowledge of medical terminology, and also be willing to work under pressure. All applicants are subject to a background check and drug test. Please send resume with references to Po. Box 639 Roswell, NM 88202. THE ROSWELL DAILY RECORD is currently accepting applications for the position of Pressman. This is a Part-time graveyard position, with weekend shifts. Applicants should be flexible with their schedule. For more information, and an application, please stop by the Roswell Daily Record Monday thru Friday 8am - 5pm.

No Phone Calls Accepted.

THE NEW Mexico Youth ChalleNGe Academy is seeking qualified individuals to fill multiple Cadre positions to supervise, train and mentor 16-18 year old high school dropouts in a Quasi-Military environment. Qualified applicants must have a high school diploma or GED, minimum of two years experience working with youth, and a valid New Mexico driver’s license. To apply, contact CPT Chris Lara @575.347.7601 or bring resume to 131 Earl Cummings Loop, Roswell, NM PART TIME /PRN family medical practice, patients care/clerical and cleaning duties, pick up application at 612 W. 8th No phone calls please. RECEPTIONIST: Office Support Staff with typewriter typing skills, basic computer knowledge, and basic bookkeeping skills. Good working conditions in small office. Pay will be commensurate with qualifications. Please send resumes to PO Box 1897, Unit 385, Roswell, NM 88202. MJG CORPORATION is currently accepting applications for HVAC Techs. We offer: Top Salary and Benefits. Send resume or employment history to 204 W. 4th St. Roswell, New Mexico 88201: Call 575-622-8711 or fax to 575-623-3075 email to: mjgcorp@cs.com

045. Employment Opportunities

HIRING CDL Drivers. Passenger Endorsement Preferred. Benefits Provided. Sign on bonus. Call or email. (575) 885-8848/ kevins@1800buslimo.com Avon, Buy/Sell. I can help you build your business or team. Sandy 317-5079 ISR

CDL A DRIVERS NEEDED ALBUQUERQUE MAIL SERVICE is now accepting applications for Full time freight drivers in the Roswell area. Work week would be Tuesday-Saturday from approximately 1 AM to 1 PM, Must have a current class A Commercial Driver's License, Current medical card, at Least 2 years driving exp or have completed truck driving school, and at least 23 years of age. Albuquerque Mail Service supports a drug-free work environment. If you have submitted an application in the last 90 days no need to re-apply. Applications can be printed from our web page albuquerquemailservice.com

or contact our office at 505-843-7613. Please submit a current MVR with application. DEXTER CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS Notice of Vacancy

School Social Worker LISW Preferred Position will be open until filled. For application information visit www.dexterdemons.org Any questions please call Beth Benedict 734-5420 # 319 EEOE

HIV Prevention Educator Alianza is a local non-profit community based organization that provides services to individuals and families living with and affected by HIV in Southern New Mexico. To be considered for this position interested individuals should have a minimum of high school diploma and a valid NM driver’s license. The perfect candidate will have experience and be comfortable working with diverse cultures and communities; have some basic knowledge about HIV; be self-motivated; willing to travel; and have experience in direct client contact. This would be the perfect opportunity for anyone who wants to have fun, make a difference, and is interested in serving their community. Bilingual is a plus! Starting salary DOE; benefits include health insurance; sick and vacation leave; and paid holidays. Send resume or apply in person at 1200 S Richardson, Roswell, NM 88203, or send resume via email to jobs@alianzanm.org. Deadline to apply is July 18, 2014 or until position is filled. Alianza is an EEOE.

hunger strike, told her in the July 10 call that he had gotten to know the nurse very well and that the nurse apparently was the leader of a medical group for roughly two to three months. “Even before his decision, though, you could tell he was very compassionate,” Crider quoted Dhiab as telling her, according to notes she shared of their conversation.

045. Employment Opportunities

OUT OF town Driver needed Monday thru Friday. Must have at least 3/4 ton truck and minimum of 12’ enclosed trailer. Contact (575)-390-6226. If no answer please leave a message. NOW HIRING full time housekeepers. Must be able to pass background check and drug screening. Excellent pay with benefits. Please apply in person at 200 E. 19th. No phone calls please. IN SEARCH of an experienced dog groomer for a new grooming salon. If interested please call 420-8986 OFFICE ASSISTANT needed computer skilled, Quickbook, Excell and data entry. Apply in person, no phone calls please. Custom Construction #4 Wool Bowl Circle. SUPER 8 hiring: Front desk clerks- friendly customer service required. Maintenance person with experience. Apply in person 3575 N. Main St L & F Distributors seeks a full time Sign Shop Manager. Candidate must be proficient with Corel Draw and be an experienced graphic designer. Must also have knowledge and experience in applying vehicle graphics and must be able to work & create signage on a variety of materials. Candidate must possess effective written & verbal communication skills, must be self motivated, detail oriented, and must have a strong work ethic. Will consider a combination of education and experience. Must be able to lift and carry 25 lbs. Apply in person only 2200 N. Atkinson Roswell, NM 88201 Equal Opportunity Employer RECYCLING COMPANY looking to hire a dependable, honest individual. Full time on a temp. to permanent basis. Background check and drug screen required. Wages depend on ability. Apply in person (no phone calls) on Thursday July 17th, at WISE RECYCLING, 1100 E. McGaffey between 9am and 3pm. DEXTER CONSOLIDATED SCHOOLS Notice of Vacancy 14-15 School Year

High School Language Arts

Applicants Must Meet New Mexico Licensure Requirements Position will be open until filled. Visit www.dexterdemons.org For questions - Beth Benedict 734-5420 # 319 EEOE

045. Employment Opportunities

MJG CORPORATION is accepting applications for an energetic part-time secretary. Must have at least 1 year experience and have knowledge of windows operating systems. Please pick up application at MJG Corporation, 204 W. 4th St. Roswell, NM 88201 or fax work history to 575-623-3075 Attn: Gary. Dean Baldwin Painting, LP aircraft strip and paint services, is presently looking to fill the following long term, full-time positions: PAINTERS – Exp in stripping and painting aircraft or vehicles. PAINTER HELPERS – Exp preferred but not required. On the job training available! EVS Tech (Housekeeping) Positions open at Eastern New Mexico Medical Center. Apply online at enmmc.com under job opportunities. EOE CALL US NOW 12 people needed. $1600/month per written agreement. 575-578-4817

EXPERIENCED DRIVER OR RECENT GRAD? With Swift, you can grow to be an award-winning Class A CDL driver. We help you achieve Diamond Driver status with the best support there is. As a Diamond Driver, you earn additional pay on top of all the competitive incentives we offer. The very best, choose Swift. • Great Miles = Great Pay • Late-Model Equipment Available • Regional Opportunities • Great Career Path • Paid Vacation • Excellent Benefits Please Call: (866) 314-4833 ELECTRICIAN CAREERS U.S. NAVY. Paid training, financial security, medical/dental, vacation, retirement. HS grads ages 17-34. Call Mon-Fri (800) 354-9627 $2000 BONUS! Oilfield drivers. High hourly, Overtime. Class A-CDL/Tanker. 1 year driving Experience. Home 1 Week Monthly. Paid Travel, Lodging. Relocation NOT necessary. 1-800-588-2669. www.tttransports.com HAIR STYLISTS needed for a busy, growing salon. Commissioned & booth rental positions available. Call 575-317-0251 CAR RENTAL company has opening for rental/sales associate. Applicant must have better than average computer skills and have customer service and sales experience. This position is 30-40 hrs per week and includes evenings and weekends. Must be dependable and have neat appearance. Apply in person at Avis Rental Counter inside Airport, 8am-1pm.


Roswell Daily Record 045. Employment Opportunities

REFRIGERATION RESTAURANT equipment tech needed, wages based on experience, paid holidays, overtime over 40 hrs, if interested please send resume to zionheating cooling@gmail.com or fax to 575-291-2052 THE HOLIDAY Inn Express & Suites is located at 2300 N Main Street. Our hotel is looking for a friendly and professional Housekeepers to join our busy team. Please apply in person M-F 9am to 3pm.

The Roswell Daily Record is now accepting applications for the full time position of: OUTSIDE SALES The ideal candidate must possess excellent customer service skills, superior organizational skills and be a self-starter with a strong work ethic. This is a full time position with a great benefit package. Interested applicants please send resume & references to: ROSWELL DAILY RECORD Attn: Vonnie Fischer, 2301 N. Main, Roswell, NM 88201 or e-mail to: addirector@rdrnews.com NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! NOW HIRING CDL driver for local delivery. Must have clean driving record and must pass drug test, call 575-622-1189 or come by 4100 S. Lea, Roswell ask for Denis or pick up application.

THE HOLIDAY Inn Express & Suites is located at 2300 N Main Street. Our hotel is looking for a friendly and professional Part time night Audit to join our busy team. Please apply in person M-F 9am to 3pm.

045. Employment Opportunities

INQUIRE NOW Need people to shampoo carpets. $1600/mo per written agreement. 575-578-4817

ELWOOD STAFFING, one of the fastest growing privately held staffing firms in the US, is seeking a full-time Staffing Manager. As we continue to grow and expand, we are looking for energetic and dedicated people who wants to grow with us! We offer competitive pay and benefits as well as the opportunity to work with a company that values and rewards its employees. A successful candidate will be service driven, organized, capable of multi-tasking in a fast-paced environment with changing priorities, have a high level of self-motivation and possess excellent computer & customer service skills. A Pre-employment drug screen & background check are required as a condition of employment. To apply please send resume to karamia.victoria@ elwoodstaffing.com BUTCH’S RATHOLE & ANCHOR SERVICE Now hiring Class A CDL drivers for Artesia, NM yard. Insurance & 401K. 575-513-1482, Garry. ELECTRICAL WIRING Instructor – Roswell HBI’s program at the Roswell Job Corps Center is seeking a full-time electrical wiring instructor. Must have a HS diploma or equivalent. Five years’ experience in electrical wiring also required plus the ability to teach young adults. Competitive salary plus full benefits including paid leave. Learn more and apply at www.hbi.org. EOE/AA/M/F/D/V

045. Employment Opportunities

THE SLIPPER gentlemen’s club South of Artesia is now hiring Dancer’s. Must be 18 yrs old or older, no experience necessary. Stop y 6110 7 River’s Hwy or call 505-402-6777 BANK TELLER

Join one of the oldest and largest independent community banks in the state of New Mexico. First American Bank is strong, stable and financially secure. Part time Teller position available. Responsibilities include but not limited to; quality customer service, accepting payments, deposits and withdrawals on account, wire transfers, and proof. Computer knowledge required, 10-key helpful, Confidentiality a must.

Ideal candidate must possess a high level of accuracy and attention to detail as well as being able to multi-task in a fast paced environment, and in a Professional setting. High school diploma required, prior experience in handling money a plus. Interested candidates must be able to successfully pass a pre-employment credit, background and reference check. Submit resumes to or apply at First American Bank 303 W Main Street Artesia, NM 88210 Member FDIC Equal Opportunity Employer

CLASSIFIEDS

045. Employment Opportunities

DEANS, INC. NOW HIRING!

AUTOMATION TECHNICIANS Excellent benefits package, including 401(k), Employee Ownership, Medical Dental and Vision Insurance, Life Insurance, Long Term Disability Insurance, paid holidays, vacations and bonuses. A 2-year Electrical Technician degree is preferred. At least two years experience in PLC’s and Automation are a must. Valid driver’s license with a clean driving record and pre-employment drug test required. Apply online at www.deansinc.com or submit an application by mail or in person at 409 Commerce Road, Artesia or 2016 E. Orchard in Carlsbad.

SURVEY TECHNICIAN needed. Applicant must have a valid driver’s license with a clean driving record. Needs to communicate well with clients and public. Experience in construction staking, boundary surveys, GPS and AutoCad preferred. Send cover letter, along with resume to Smith Engineering Company ATTN: Human Resources, PO Box 2565, Roswell, NM 88202-2565. No phone calls, please.

SERVICES

075. Air Conditioning

SWAMP COOLER service & repair, free estimates. 575-910-4581

140. Cleaning

JD CLEANING Service, Licensed and bonded. References. 623-4252 SUNSHINE WINDOW Services. Free estimates. 575-626-5153 or 626-5458 RESIDENTIAL INVESTMENT AND OFFICE cleaning. Call or txt Ms. Missy at 575-840-9327 email: msmissyscleaning@ gmail.com

185. Electrical

ELECTRICAL SERVICES Meter loops, service upgrades, remodels, additions, service calls. Lowest prices in town. Free estm. Lic#360025. 910-4193

200. Fencing

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

• Ads posted online at no extra cost

(includes tax)

MAIL AD WITH PAYMENT OR FAX WITH CREDIT CARD NUMBER Call (575)-622-7710 --- 625-0421 Fax 2301 N. Main TO BUY-SELL-RENT-TRADE ANY AND EVERYTHING

CLASSIFICATION

PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE

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

M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991

WORD AD DEADLINE To Place or Cancel an Ad

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

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

CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS

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

LEGALS

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

www.rdrnews.com

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

200. Fencing

Dennis the Menace

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

Rodriguez Construction FOR WOOD, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100

210. Firewood/Coal

MIXED SEASONED, some needs splitting. Reasonably priced. 910-8242

225. General Construction

Professional Yard care, trees, lawns, bushes. 575-910-4581

285. Miscellaneous Services

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

INJURED IN AN AUTO ACCIDENT? Call InjuryFone for a free case evaluation. Never a cost to you. Don`t wait, call now, 1-800-725-4104

HOME REPAIRS No Job to Small/Large Reasonable Rates. 575-317-2357 SWAMP COOLER TIME HANDYMAN SERVICES specialized in small and large home projects, one call does it all. Estimates 637-0255

ENJOY 100 percent guaranteed, delivered? to-the-door Omaha Steaks! SAVE 74 percent PLUS 4 FREE Burgers - The Family Value Combo - ONLY $39.99. ORDER Today 1-800-773-3095 Use code 49381JVZ or www.OmahaSteaks.com/ osmb12

230. General Repair

QUALITY HANDYMAN Small Home Repairs, Paint Fencing, Doors & windows. Free Estimates. Call Clint at 575-918-0056.

DISH TV Retailer. Starting at $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) & High Speed Internet starting at $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now! 1-800-315-7043

235. Hauling

RWC. BACKHOE, skid steer, dump truck, bom lift, services. Insured. Call Hector 575-910-8397. PROPERTY CLEANUPS Tear down old bldgs, barns, haul trash, old farm equip. 347-0142/317-7738

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90 percent on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-661-3783, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping.

269. Excavating

RWC EXCAVATION services for all your excavation needs Call Hector 575-910-8397

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

DIRECTTV - 2 Year Savings Event! Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Only DirecTV gives you 2 YEARS of savings and a FREE Genie upgrade! Call 1-800-264-0340

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

SHARI`S BERRIES Order Mouthwatering Gifts for any Occasion! SAVE 20 percent on qualifying orders over $29! Fresh Dipped Berries starting at $19.99! Visit www.berries.com/big or Call 1-800-406-5015

CHAVEZ SPRINKLER CO. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING AND SPRINKLER SYSTEM & REPAIRS, ROCK WORK, TREES, SHRUBS, TRACTOR & DUMP TRUCK WORK. FREE ESTIMATES. CALL HECTOR 420-3167

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

Landscaping, mowing, trimming, & trees cut down. sprinklers, etc. 420-0965 Yard work, clean-ups, lawns. Handyman svc. David 637-9580.

BUNDLE AND SAVE! DIRECTV, INTERNET& PHONE From $69.99/mo. Free 3-Months of HBO, starz, SHOWTIME & CINEMAX FREE GENIE 4-Room Upgrade LOCK IN 2 YR Savings Call 1-800-264-0340

WE WORK Yard & alley cutting, garden rototilling, hauling. Call Will at 317-7402 or 317-2573.

REDUCE YOUR CABLE BILL!* Get a whole-home Satellite system installed at NO COST and programming starting at $19.99/mo. FREE HD/DVR Upgrade to new callers, SO CALL NOW 1-800-719-8092

SERVICE TECHNICIAN Build your career here! Roswell Ford has an immediate opening for a general service technician. We offer up to $30 an hour, great benefits and a busy shop.

SALES REPRESENTATIVE

300. Oil Field Services

RWC BACKHOB & Dump truck services Call Hector 575-910-8397

310. Painting/ Decorating

TIME TO PAINT? Quality int./ext. painting. Call 637-9108. EXTERIOR/INTERIOR, INSURED. Call Hector 575-910-8397.

345. Remodeling

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

350. Roofing

RWC SHINGLE Roofings. Insuranced. Hector (575)910-8397 IB CONSTRUCTION & Roofing specializing in Ins. claims, re-roofs, roof-leak & all types of construction Lic# 368776 www.ibcnm.com 575-805-9313

395. Stucco Plastering

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

400. Tax Service

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

Great salespeople are the backbone of our business! We’re on the lookout for talented women and men to expand our sales force. We have an excellent pay plan and America’s top-selling truck line. You’ll need strong computer skills, excellent communication abilities and be able to stay organized in a fast moving environment.

SERVICE WRITER

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

410. Tree Service

STUMP GRINDING. Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 317-8037 or 623-4185 PROFESSIONAL TREE trimming and removal. Call 910-4581

435. Welding

RWC On site repairs or fabrication. Insuranced. Hector (575) 910-8397

FINANCIAL

REAL ESTATE

490. Homes For Sale PUBLISHER’S NOTICE:

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

INCOME PROPERTY for sale 4 units, $69000 will consider financing with substatial down. 623-7678

3/2/2 NE Roswell. 12 Jardin Court. 198K. Video/Pics at www.12Jardin.com or call (316) 841-4230

Requires a thorough understanding of automotive systems along with excellent “people skills.” Come grow with us! We offer great pay and benefits in an excellent working environment. We will provide training for the right people. Please apply in person 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.

Owner financing 15% down, $60K 3b/1ba, good area, serious inquiries only. 575-626-4130 or 840-5320

ROSWELL FORD 821 NORTH MAIN, ROSWELL, NM • 575-623-3673

www.roswellford.com

EASTERN NEW MEXICO UNIVERSITY-ROSWELL POSITION

405. TractorWork

2410 PALOMAR Dr, 3bd/2ba, Newer windows, ext. & int. paint, 2 car garage door, metal privacy fence, RV parking, zero landscaping, large yard, clean & ready to move in.$139k Jim 575-910-7969

ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT

*Program Specialist – ETS Instructor of OTA Instructor of EMS Technician II (2 Positions) Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) Instructor

B9

Emerald Landscaping Lawn & sprinkler installation, sprinkler repair, sod, gravel, lawn maintenance. Maintenance/Free Estimates/accept credit cards. Lic#89265. Call: Aaron, 575-910-0150 or Chris, 420-3945

CAREER OPPORTUNITIES at ROSWELL FORD

EXPIRES ________

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

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Job Announcements

DEPARTMENT

Student Outreach Division of Heath Division of Health Computer Services Career & Tech Ed

CLOSING DATE 07/18/14 07/25/14 07/25/14 07/25/14 07/25/14

SALARY

$33,933.84 $38,837.70 Step 1/ Level 1 $38,243 - $40,731 (DOE) $33,933.84 45,891.79-JL -$51,665.86-JL Plus BA +15

*NOTE:This position is funded through an external grant. Continued employment beyond the fiscal year is contingent upon continued funding. Specific information on the above positions may be obtained by calling (575) 624-7412 or (575) 624-7061 or our website www.roswell.enmu.edu

TO APPLY: All applicants must submit an application for each job for which they are applying. A complete application packet consists of a letter of interest, resume, an ENMU-R Application form, and complete transcripts for those positions requiring a degree and/or if claiming college education. Failure to submit a complete application packet and all its requirements will invalidate your application. The ENMU-R application and job announcement(s) for the above position(s) are available in the Human Resources office at ENMU-Roswell, 67 University Blvd., Roswell, NM 88202 or on our website www.roswell.enmu.edu. Completed applications MUST be in the Human Resources office by 12:00 p.m. on Friday of the closing day, to be considered for this position. HR office hours are Monday – Thursday 7:30 – 6:00 and Friday from 8:00 – 12:00. Successful applicants will be subjected to a Background Investigation prior to appointment. Appointment will be conditional upon satisfactory completion of Background Investigation. New Mexico is an open record state. Therefore, it is the policy of the University to reveal to the public the identities of the applicants for whom interviews are scheduled. ENMU-Roswell reserves the right to cancel, change, or close any advertised position at any time. The decision to do so will be based upon the needs of the University and the final determination will rest with the President. ENMU-Roswell is an EOE/AA/ADA Employer

409 LA Fonda clean 3br/2ba, 1 car gar., nice house move-in ready $119k no owner financing. Call 626-0259.

FSBO: 1809 Western 1470 sqft brick home on large corner lot, 3/2 w/covered carport, central air, new kitchen, baths, flooring, windows, & more. Too much to list. Best buy in Roswell at $103k. More info call 575-914-1272. 1717 N. Ohio, 3br/1ba, FP, family room. Central air/heating, $45,000. 1730 N. Delaware, 3bd/2ba, large rooms, $45,000. Owner Gerardo Martinez, 909-657-7611.

492. Homes for Sale/Rent

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


B10 Wednesday, July 16, 2014 500. Businesses for Sale PROFITABLE WATER softener/reverse osmosis renting and selling business for sale. Very good growth potential includes current income from rental customers. Possible training available for the right person. Asking price of $60k is negotiable. Serious inquires only, leave a message at 575-623-4603. NEW SELF STORAGE Facility 104 units, 50% full, serious inquiries only. 575-317-0029

515. Mobile Homes - Sale

602 E. 23rd, trailer w/property, very nice yard, 2 sheds, 3br/2ba, auto wtr sprinkler, all gated, asking $65k OBO, no rent to own. 575-208-8371 PRICED TO sell in beautiful North Senior park, 3br/2ba, doublewide, all appliances, fireplace, carport, covered porch w/ramp, storage bldg. 575-317-6870 #057

520. Lots for Sale

Mobile Home Lots for sale: Lot size 50x134 $19,500. Owner financing w/ $4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. 420-1352. PREMIUM 5 acre tracts, good covenants (no mobile homes), Pecan Lands West on Brown Rd between Country Club & Berrendo. Owner will finance with 10% down. 622-3479, 624-9607, 626-6790, 626-6791, 626-3848.

521. Cemetery Lots

DESIRABLE CEMETERY Plots in South Park for sale spaces 2 & 3, in lot 3, of block 6, in section 38. Near chapel, $1500 each Call Jerry 505-239-5771

RENTALS

535. Apartments Furnished

1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 2BR/2BA TOWNHOUSE, over 2500 sqft w/garage, washer & dryer, fenced yard, $995/mo + dep. 2500 Bent Tree. Call for more info at 317-6408.

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. FIRST MONTH FREE 3br/2ba, $753, 1000 sqft, all bills paid, cold central AC, newly remodeled, 502 S. Wyoming, 622-4944. ALL BILLS PAID 1BR $544, 2BR $653, 3br/2ba $753/mo., ref air, newly remodeled. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944

Town Plaza Apartments NO HUD ACCEPTED ALL UTILITIES PAID Seniors receive 10% discount Friendly managers. New Renovated EXTRA LARGE 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Each 2 & 3 bedroom is multi level, upstairs & downstairs w/ large closets, stove & refrigerator, private patios, and private parking. Complex has a pool, laundry room, and a quiet garden setting environment. Friendly managers on-site. 575-623-2735. BETTER LIVING is within reach! 2br/1ba $592, 3br/2ba, $674, 5br/2ba $812, central H/C, fridge, stove, DW, GD, W/D hookups, 2 refreshing pools, Section 8 Vouchers accepted, 623-7711, Villas of Briar Ridge. Eff. Apartment new paint & carpet, $450mon + dep. all bills pd, Ben 317-6408

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

1br/1ba, has stove, wtr pd, HUD ok. $425/mo, $200 dep. 625-9208 705 W. 10th, new carpet, fresh paint,1br/1ba, very clean, $550/mo. $550dep. No HUD, no pets, Couple or Single 575-420-4801

2BD/1BA CARPORT, laundry room. 1210 W. 9th No Hud or pets. 910-6161

540. Apartments Unfurnished

PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT PRUDENTIAL ENCHANTED LANDS, REALTORS, 501 NORTH MAIN. EFF, 1 & 2br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348. 1704-A W. 1st, 2/1, NO PETS, wtr & gas pd, $545/mo. American Realty & Mgmt, 575-623-9711. X NICE 2br, w/d hookups, wtr pd, appliances, no pets & No HUD. 575-910-9357 EFF, 1,2 BR, downtown, clean, wtr pd. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD. 623-8377

545. Houses for Rent-Furnished

1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 N. OF the Mall, small furnished house, 2br/1ba, AC, washer and dryer, bills pd, carport, maintain yard, no hud no pets, adult property, seniors preferred. $800/mo, $500/dep. 625-0684 or 626-2545.

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 2414 N. Prairie, 3br/1.5ba, $700/mo, $300/dep, no pets, 910-9648.

SPARKLING 2BED - 1bath home in park-like setting, near NMMI, $863/mo + utilities. 575-626-6286 2&3Bd, 1&2Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 GOOD LOCATION 1br, appliances, w/d hookup, no pets, $400/mo, $400/dep, HUD ok. 575-910-9391 SINGLE OR couple 1b/1ba W/D, $550mo $500dep. Water pd. 626-2510 2, 3 & 4 Bedrooms, low rent & deposit. Call 575-703-0421 or 420-3495 or 575-703-0420 3202 S. Sunset, 5br/2ba, some appliances, fenced backyard, no HUD, no utilities pd, dogs w/fee, $1200/mo., $800/dep. 575-405-0163 or email kilok9s@gmail.com

2br/2ba, 1 car garage, fireplace, W/D hook-ups, walk-in closet, 30D Bent Tree Rd. $675 $675dep No smoking/Hud/pets. 702-232-7578 4BD/2.5BA brick home in great neighborhood. Ref required. $1500/mo $1500dep. 432-248-1169 for more info. 3BR, E. Church, $700 + deposit, 575-840-5776

1009 1/2 S. Lea, 2br/1ba, wtr pd,carport, $550 + $530/dep, No smoking No HUD. 317-1371 EXECUTIVE HOME in La Sierra Subdivision, 3br/2ba, #5 Taos Ct., $1650/mo, $1000/dep. Pet will be considered. Call Bob at 575-317-2600. TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262 VERY NICE North 2br mobile home, central ht, ref air, all appliances, $625 + no pets. 910-9357 807 S. Adams, 3/2/1, $950/mo; 59 Wildy, 3/2/1, $900/mo; 1611 N. Ohio, 2/1, $700/mo. Call American Realty & Mgmt, 575-623-9711.

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished 809 W. 4th 1bd/1ba, appliances, gas & water pd $450mo. $400dep. 626-5423

3400 1/2 E 5th 1 bedroom stove, refrig., water paid, $350 mo. $300 dep. No HUD & No Pets. 910-9648

CLASSIFIEDS

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

DESIGNER LADIES handbags, sunglasses, hats, motorcycle jackets, oil paintings, and more. Closeout Sale 1723 SE. Main Power wheelchair, hospital bed, oxygen concentrator, shower chair 622-7638

2br/1ba, $510/mo; Call or text after 6pm. 915-255-8335

CAR/BOAT STORAGE building, Morgan steel shed, 14x40, 2 garage doors, lights & shelving, $5500. 622-0118 or 291-9644

3BD BRICK town home, 3 yrs old, #4 La Placita $1450mo. Call John Grieves 626-7813

STORE CLOSING SALE All women’s heels, flats, boots, men’s clothes, lots more at closeout prices! Fixture & display for sale also. Fri & Sat. 303 N. Main

580. Office or Business Places

3000 sqft office building for lease or rent, $800/mo. 2809 E. 2nd 575-623-6039 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 EXECUTIVE OFFICE Space For Lease Roswell, NM

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

720. Livestock & Supplies

ABETTA SADDLE-ADULT excellent shape. $250 910-8242

745. Pets for Sale

10x10 DOG kennel, $100; lawn mower, $100; dog house, $25. Good condition. 317-8395

2BD/2BA MOBILE home, wtr pd, $550mo $400dep. 4900 S. Penn. 910-2510

BEDROOM FOR rent, nice location. Office avail. if needed (575)808-9038

2 STRING alfalfa bale $10 each, 4x8 oat bales $140. 4X8 hay grazer $100, 4X8 alfalfa bales $220,4X8 barley bales $140 626-0159

{{{SOLD}}} Scooter chair, like new, $1000.

555. Mobile Homes for Rent 558. Roommates Wanted

715. Hay and Feed Sale

THE TREASURE Chest Cast iron sinks, new old stock, utility faucets, dressers, washer, dryer, thrifts, hobby, antiques, bedroom set. 1204 W Hobbs 914-1855 Weds-Sat 10-5 FOR SALE approx. 1200 pcs. of an Avon collection from the 70’s on. Porcelains, cologne, decanters, dolls, etc. Plus the glass shelves for display. $1000. 622-6170 MOVING SALE Furniture & misc. items. 317-2957 for more info. LARGE OFFICE desk has 2 filing drawers, top cabinet w/shelves, plug-ins for computer & pullout keyboard drawer, $400. Like new JUGGS baseball/softball pitching machine, pitches up to 60 mph w/360 degree movement, includes pitching screen & frame, $850. 626-6111

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

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

Retail/Office, 309 N. Main, $1200/mo; 2100 S. Main, $800/mo. 627-9942 (2) COMMERCIAL stores and storage space for rent. Great location, 1723 SE Main, 623-3738. SMALL OFFICE, 311 W. 2nd. Great location, Call John Grieves 575-626-7813

595. Misc. for Rent

SELF STORAGE Units $30 a month, any size available. 575-317-0029

MERCHANDISE

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

NEED FURNITURE Shop Blair’s for the best prices on used furniture, beds, dressers, table & chairs, living room sets, patio sets, bookshelves, appliances, antiques, collectibles, home decor & housewares, saddles, tools, movies, plus lots more. Open daily 9-5, closes Wed. 627-2033 Invacare patient lifter, walker, bruno wheelchair hoist/loader 622-7638.

BATH BENCH, elevated toilet seat, nebulizer, wheelchair. 575-622-7638

620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous

French Bulldog puppies CKC Reg., health guaranteed, $160. 575-626-9813 5 CHIHUAHUAS for sale, $100 each. 575-291-9680

RECREATIONAL 765. Guns & Ammunition

NEW COBRA 380 automatic pistol, 2 clips, box shells, $350. 317-8387

775. Motorcycles & Scooters

YAMAHA ROYAL Star 1300 V4, 1998 21,700 mi. great cond. See pics on Craigslist. $3900. Call Terry at 575-637-1851. SHARP ‘99 Harley Road King new battery and tires, and custom seat 35k miles, very nice. Call 623-2500 Can leave mess. $7,800 ‘04 Vulcan NoMad 1500 cc, FI. 33K mi. Chaves local, Grt cond. See pics craiglist $4250 856-266-0194

780. RV’s & Campers Hauling

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

I AM interested in buying most anything of value, furniture, appliances, tools, household items & more. 317-6285

630. Auction Sales

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 INSIDE GATED & alarm RV storage. Contact 575-317-8348

TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale

ADVERTISE YOUR AUCTION in 33 New Mexico newspapers for only $100. Your 25-word classified ad will reach more than 288,000 readers. Call this newspaper for more details. Or log onto www.nmpress.org for a list of participating newspapers.

635. Good things to Eat

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

FROZEN GREEN Chile, dried red chile & chile powder, local pinto beans, peanuts & pecan, ristras, jams & jellies, fountain drinks, fresh eggs, Alfalfa Hay, Wheat, Sudan & Oat hay, small & large bales, we accept credit cards & EBT. GRAVES FARM 622-1889

SHOW US WHAT YOU’RE SELLING! INCLUDE A PICTURE IN YOUR AD FOR JUST $5! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

Roswell Daily Record

5 $ 00 8 $

cord Roswell Daily Re S.COM

RDRNEW 575-622-7710 •

00

Roswell Daily Re

cord 575-622-7710 • RDRNEWS.COM

GARAGE & YARD SALE KITS To make your sale more successful!

Includes: • 3 Signs • Pricing Stickers + Tax • Yard Sale Tips Includes: • 6 Signs • Pricing Stickers + Tax • Yard Sale Tips

Roswell Daily Record 790. Autos for Sale

790. Autos for Sale

Tired of the Hassle In Trading Or Selling Your Car or Truck? Economy Motors Will Either Purchase Your Vehicle Or Consign It For Sale At No Cost To You!! Call Or Come By For Details. Economy Motors 2506 N. Main Roswell, NM 88201 625-2440 •18 Years In Business •Family Owned & Operated •Licensed, Bonded & Insured

EDDIE BAUER for sale or trade for full size car or mid size SUV 575-208-1348

MERCEDES BENZ 230 SLK, kompressor, hard top convertible, imperial red, excellent condition, $7200. 420-1352 MECHANIC SPECIAL ‘93 Ford Crown Vic. $800 OBO 637-1464

RAY'S GALACTIC MOTORS 4907 S. MAIN ST. ROSWELL, NM 575-910-0282 575-420-2703

2006 FORD EXPLORER, 2 TO CHOOSE FROM, EXCELLENT COND., $8,500 EACH 2010 FORD FUSION, 4 CYL, LOADED, 77,000 ACT. MILES, EXCELLENT COND., $10,500 2002 DODGE 4X4, LWB, REG. CAB, 3IN. LIFT, CUSTOM WHEELS, MUST SEE, $9,900 MANY MORE QUALITY VECHILES TO CHOOSE FROM

795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans

‘94 CHEVY 5-step pickup, low miles, excellent condition, $3850, owner financing w/$1k down & good credit. 626-7488 2006 FORD F350 XLT, Super Duty Dually Crew Cab, 6.2 power stroke, automatic, 4x4, all power, clean, 200k miles, engine replace by Ford @ $148K under warranty, $17,995. 575-420-0638

796. SUVS

2008 FORD Explorer XLT, fully loaded, excellent condition, low miles, $10,950. 420-1352 2003 DENALI, all electric, 3rd seat, good condition, $8000 OBO. 622-7423


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.