10 10 13 Roswell Daily Record

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Roswell Daily Record

Vol. 122, No. 243 75¢ Daily / $1.25 Sunday

THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

October 10, 2013

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THURSDAY

US cutting hundreds of millions in aid to Egypt WASHINGTON (AP) — The United States on Wednesday cut hundreds of millions of dollars in aid to its Mideast ally Egypt, responding to the military ouster last summer of the nation’s first democratically elected president and the crackdown on protesters that has sunk the country into violent turmoil. While the State Department did not provide a dollar amount of what was being withheld, most of it is linked to military aid. In all, the U.S. provides $1.5 billion in aid each year to Egypt. Of ficials said the aid being withheld included 10 Apache hel-

icopters at a cost of about $500 million, F-16 fighter jets, M1A1 tank kits and Harpoon anti-ship missiles. The U.S. also is withholding $260 million in cash assistance to the gover nment until “credible progress” is made toward an inclusive government set up through free and fair elections. The U.S. had already suspended the delivery of four F-16 fighter jets and canceled biennial U.S.-Egyptian military exercises. In Cairo, military spokesman Col. Ahmed Mohammed Ali declined immediate comment. Before the announcement, Gen. Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, the Egypt-

ian military leader, described his country’s relations with the United States as “strategic” and founded on mutual interests. But he told the Cairo daily, Al-Masry al-Youm, in an interview published on Wednesday that Egypt would not tolerate pressure, “whether through actions or hints.” Neighboring Israel also has indicated concern. The Israelis consider the U.S. aid to Egypt to be important support for the peace agreement between Egypt and Israel. The State Department stressed that the long-standing U.S. part-

nership with Egypt would continue and that it sees the aid decision as temporary. Still, the decision puts ties between the U.S. and Egypt at their rockiest point in more than three decades. “The United States continues to support a democratic transition and oppose violence as a means of resolving differences within Egypt,” State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said. “We will continue to review the decisions regarding our assistance periodically and will continue to work with the interim gover nment to help it move toward our shared goals in an

Jam session

atmosphere free of violence and intimidation.” The U.S. will continue to provide support for health and education and counterterrorism, spare military parts, military training and education, border security and security assistance in the Sinai Peninsula where near-daily attacks against security forces and soldiers have increasingly resembled a fullfledged insurgency. The U.S. officials providing the details did so only on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to comment by name.

PED finds mixed results on English proficiency tests TESS TOWNSNED RECORD STAFF WRITER

Mark Wilson Photo

Young trumpet player Geoffrey Gallante jams with Mariachi Nuevo Comienzo upon arriving at the Roswell International Air Center Wednesday afternoon for this weekend’s Jazz Festival.

The state Public Education Department (PED) analysis of Roswell Independent School District results in tests of proficiency in English among students designated as current lear ners of English was released last week and presented at Tuesday’s district Board of Education meeting. The analysis of the results for the 2012-2013 school year show that the district has met state standards for improvement and proficiency in English as tested by the Assessing Comprehension and Communication in English State-to-State for English Language Lear ners (ACCESS) test used nationally, but that the district

lags behind on the State Based Assessment (SBA) of academic proficiency in English. Kenneth Bewley-Cadena is the district director of bilingual programs and Title III programs, which relate to English as a Second Language (ESL) instruction. He said that while the district did not meet state standards for SBA results, it has shown improvement in the assessments of both tests over time. “It’s not as if we’re stagnant,” he said. He said that the district was considering amending the measure to just reflect growth, in part because it is counter -intuitive to measure the proficiency of students who have been See TESTS, Page A3

2 hurt when balloon CVE opens new headquarters in Artesia crashes into power line

RIO RANCHO (AP) — A balloon flying in Albuquerque’s Inter national Balloon Fiesta hit a power line as it tried to land Wednesday, sending two men to the hospital with burns and injuries from a 40-foot fall, officials said. Police in Rio Rancho, a northwest Albuquerque suburb, said the balloon got tangled in the line at about 8:30 a.m. When the passenger reached out to free the balloon, he was shocked, festival spokesman Tom Garrity said. The balloon was freed, but the gondola crashed to the ground. One man suffered serious bur ns on his face,

chest and arms and underwent surgery at the University of New Mexico Hospital, police said. The other man was in stable condition with bur ns to his head.

Rio Rancho police identified the pilot as Mark Kilgore, 59, of Albuquerque, and the passenger as Daniel Lovato, his 66-year -old crew chief. Police didn’t specify which man had which injuries.

Although photos from the scene showed flames, Garrity said it was unclear if the gondola caught fire.

“We know there was arcing of electricity,” he said. “We are still trying to figure out the specifics.”

JILL MCLAUGHLIN RECORD STAFF WRITER

Central Valley Electric Cooperative opened a new, state-of-the-art $7.5 million building in Artesia Wednesday. “We’re really excited to open this facility and to show people what we’ve done,” said General Manager Chuck Pinson. CVEC started work on the Artesia facility in November and moved in Sept. 11. “The biggest thing is the space for us to be able to house our employees,” Pinson said. An enthusiastic crowd of contractors, employees and community leaders waited outside as an offi-

Walk and Roll

cial ribbon-cutting ceremony unfolded and the doors opened. Attendees walked through the halls, across the new floors and examined the fixtures before heading to a lunch of barbecued ribs and potato salad. The office building, at 1403 N. 13th St., is about 33,500 square feet and was budgeted to cost $8.3 million. It was specifically designed to be energy efficient and built using geothermal heating and cooling systems and LED lighting.

The geothermal system will convert ground temperatures to heat the See CVE, Page A3

Washington Avenue Elementary students walk en masse to school Wednesday morning, participating in the Healthy Kids Chaves County Walk and Roll, which hopes to promote healthier lifestyle choices for children.

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• RICKY JOHN APODACA

General Manager Chuck Pinson, second from left, shakes hands after cutting the ribbon on the new Central Valley Electric Cooperative headquarters in Artesia Wednesday.

Charity to pay military death benefits

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration, scrambling to tamp down a controversy over suspended death benefits for the families of fallen troops, announced Wednesday that a charity would pick up the costs of the payments during the government shutdown.

Mark Wilson Photo

Jill McLaughlin Photo

“The Fisher House Foundation will provide the families of the fallen with the benefits they so richly deserve,” Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said in a statement, adding that the Pentagon would reimburse the foundation after the shutdown ended. Hagel said Fisher House,

TODAY’S OBITUARY PAGE A6

which works with veterans and their families, had approached the Pentagon about making the payments. The Defense Department typically pays families about $100,000 within three days of a service member’s death, but officials say the shutdown was preventing those benefits from being paid. A senior defense official said the government could not actively solicit funds from private organizations but could accept an offer. The failure to make the payments has stirred outrage on Capitol Hill and at the White House. Obama spokesman Jay Car ney

CLASSIFIEDS ..........B6

COMICS .................B4

FINANCIAL ..............B5

said Wednesday that the president was “disturbed” when he found out the death benefits had been suspended and demanded an immediate solution. “The commander in chief, when he found out that this was not addressed, he directed that a solution be found, and we expect one today,” Carney said before the Pentagon announced the agreement with Fisher House. The Republican-led House unanimously passed legislation on Wednesday to restore the death benefits. But it’s unclear whether See BENEFITS, Page A3

INDEX GENERAL ...............A2 HOROSCOPES .........A8 LOTTERIES .............A2 NATION ..................A6

OPINION .................A4 SPORTS .................B1

WEATHER ..............A8


A2 Thursday, October 10, 2013

Council to consider disaster declaration JILL MCLAUGHLIN RECORD STAFF WRITER

City Councilors will consider ratifying a resolution today to declare a disaster following the Sept. 11 floods that destroyed bridges and eroded infrastructure, crops, homes, land and other structures. The resolution supports a similar measure taken by Chaves County last month. The action would be taken mainly as a step to seek state and federal funds to repair the damage, said City Manager Larry Fry. “It could make us eligible for certain types of federal or state funding, but it’s too early in the game to know what it would be,” Fry said. “We certainly did have some damage. Those damages are still being accumulated.” The city’s resolution states that all locally available public and private resources committed to mitigate and alleviate the damage are insufficient to pay for damages, including starting repairs and meeting restoration requirements. Councilors were expected to consider committing $50,000 in Lodger Tax funds for next year’s Roswell Filmfest and Cosmicon, but that item was pulled from today’s agenda. The item was considered at the city’s Finance Committee earlier this week, but committee members found issues with the event organization’s financial reporting from last year’s event, Fry said. “There were just some issues on reporting from last year’s event,” Fry said. “There are questions still outstanding as far as reporting.” The funding is expected to be reconsidered by the committee and possibly by City Council again next month. In economic development news, City Planning Director Michael Vickers has reported on several new business ventures within the city. KBob’s Steakhouse is expected to open by the end of the year inside the Best Western Sally Port Inn & Suites on North Main Street. The restaurant will replace the bar that was closed two months ago. The city approved a full liquor license to the hotel last

GENERAL

RPD September Crime Report

month.

The restaurant is expected to be “intimate” and serve a full bar, Vickers said.

“There are no specifics on the layout yet,” Vickers said.

“We’re always hearing about new businesses opening up, prospering and doing well in Roswell,” Vickers said.

FedEx is also expected to open a 20,000-square-foot distribution facility on a 5.5-acre lot that the city sold to a developer in the Brasher Industrial Park at 419 E. Brasher Road.

“That’s a nice project,” Vickers said. “We don’t have the full plans on it yet.”

And, a new 118,000square-foot apartment complex could start development at 2420 North Union Street at any time. Country Club Apartments is planned for more than 100 units of market-rate apartments. “We definitely need them,” Vickers said. “The permit is ready. They just need to pull it.”

In other actions, the council will consider approving a beer and wine license for La Salsa Restaurant, at 4501 N. Main St., and issuing a permanent waiver to allow the sale of alcohol at the Royal Crown Restaurant and Event Center, to be located at 1714 W. Second St.

The Royal Crown Restaurant and Event Center owners Faustino and Naomi Robles intend to remodel an existing building to operate a family restaurant and special event facility, according to plans submitted to the city.

The property is located within 300 feet of the Trinidad Community Baptist Church, which makes it necessary for the owners to ask the city for a waiver of state requirements.

Wallet, license stolen Burglary

• Police were called to Rodeway Inn, 2803 W. Second, Sunday, where a Colorado man visiting Roswell had his wallet, his driver’s license and $60 in

cash stolen.

• Police responded to the 1900 block of South Main Street, Monday, after subjects smashed a passenger window to a

Charles Fischer Publisher

cfischer@rdrnews.com

Regular Meeting

Supper 6:30 pm Meeting 7:30 pm 2305 W. College W.M. James Samuels

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

Police were dispatched to the 400 block of Broken Arrow Road, Monday, following a call of vehicle burglary. The item reported as stolen was a bottle of tea valued at $1.

Found property

Police were called to the intersection of Hendricks

Anyone with information about these or any other crimes should contact Crime Stoppers at 1-888-594-TIPS (8477). Callers may remain anonymous and could be eligible for a reward.

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Street and Ash Avenue, Sunday. Police confiscated two knives and some amphetamines which were sent to a laboratory for identification. The male subject was arrested on three counts of failure to pay fines.

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T rinidad Community Baptist Church voted in a special business meeting Aug. 18 to per manently deny the waiver of the liquor license and again Aug. 25 to deny a waiver of any kind of beer and wine license, according to Pastor Michael Bush.

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vehicle and removed an iPod Touch, valued at $200. Damages to the car were assessed at $150.

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R. Cory Beck Publisher (1987-2006)

Jim Dishman .....................................................Circulation Director jdishman@rdrnews.com

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GENERAL

Gov. used state helicopter on trip to GOP fundraiser Roswell Daily Record

SANTA FE (AP) — New Mexico Republican Gov. Susana Martinez, who criticized her Democratic predecessor’s use of government aircraft and called a state jet the “ultimate symbol of waste and excess,” hopped on a state-owned helicopter to avoid missing an airline flight to attend political fundraisers in Texas. The governor’s spokesman, Enrique Knell, said Martinez used the state police helicopter on Nov. 15, 2011, because it allowed her to attend a meeting of the state Board of Finance that ran late into the afternoon. “It would have been by state car, if the meeting hadn’t lasted so long,” Knell said in a statement. It’s about a 60-mile drive from Santa Fe to the airport in Albuquerque. The Albuquerque Journal reported that Martinez left the meeting about 20 minutes before it ended to catch a commercial flight from Albuquerque to Houston, where she attended private fundraisers the next day to benefit the Republican Governors Association — the top contributor to her campaign in 2010. The political group paid for her airline flight to Texas. A state police officer security agent was the only other passenger on the helicopter, which costs about $800 an hour to operate. According to minutes of the meeting, the governor left near the end of a board discussion of a proposal to grant a 25-year lease to a horse racing track and casino at the state fairgrounds in Albuquerque. The lease was approved by the board a month later with the governor’s support. A liberal advocacy group, ProgressNow New Mexico, criticized the governor for the helicopter trip and on Wednesday asked Democratic Attorney General Gary King, who is running for governor next year

Tests

Continued from Page A1

identified as non-proficient in English. “If your students are growing every year, which is what our students are doing, we would meet that goal,” he said. PED sets targets each year to determine the overall performance of districts. These targets are the percentages of students the state agency wishes to see test high enough to show progress in learning English, show overall proficiency in English and show academic proficiency in English. The targets raise every year. The term “proficiency,” as used in both the ACCESS and SBA tests, refers to students being able to comprehend information relayed in English as well as their nativespeaker peers. Neither test is grade-based. Whether students are making progress is determined by whether test takers who have scores from at least two years of ACCESS tests have scored at least half a level higher on the six-level test since the previous year they took it. According to results, of 828 RISD students with two sets of scores, 476, or 57 percent of two-time test takers, showed improvement. This exceeded the state target of 47 percent of test takers. Students who score at a level of five or six for attaining proficiency on ACCESS are considered proficient in English. Proficiency is measured for all test takers, not just those who have taken the test in previous years. Of 1,084 students who took the ACCESS test in the district, 19 percent are considered proficient in English based on their

against Martinez, to determine whether she violated state ethics laws “Plain and simple, this is an abuse of power and taxpayers deserve their money back,” said Pat Davis, executive director of the group. Knell dismissed the group’s criticism as “just one more baseless attack from a discredited left-wing special interest group.” When she ran for governor in 2010, Martinez criticized Gov. Bill Richardson’s administration for purchasing a $5.5 million twinengine business jet and aired ads against her opponent, Lt. Gov. Diane Denish, for use of state aircraft — what her campaign called “the perks of power at the expense of taxpayers.” Davis pointed out that Martinez had said in “August of 2011 that she would ‘not use this state jet as a personal air taxi,’ but she used the helicopter six weeks later to shuttle to the airport for the flight to Texas fundraisers. The helicopter flight to Albuquerque was one of three times Martinez has used the $6.7 million state police chopper, according to the Journal. She flew on it to attend wildfire briefings in June 2011 and to travel to a welcome home ceremony for National Guard troops in Las Cruces in December 2012. Knell said Martinez’s policy is to use the helicopter or other aircraft in “emergency situations or when her schedule simply won’t easily accommodate traveling in any other way.” She has used a state twin-turboprop airplane 17 times since taking office in January 2011, with at least six of those trips related to wildfires in the state. Richardson used a state helicopter for 40 trips from late December 2003 through October 2005, with half of those flights from Santa Fe to Albuquerque.

scores. The state target for proficiency as reflected by ACCESS scores is 10 percent of students in a given district. SBA is dif ferent from ACCESS in that it is based on New Mexico’s curriculum for public schools. The test looks at whether students can comprehend academic information, whereas ACCESS looks at overall proficiency in English. PED’s assessment of SBA results for the district looks only at results of tests distributed to students in grades 3-8 and 11. Eighteen of the district’s 20 schools participated in ACCESS testing in the past academic year. Of these 18 participating schools, 14 met PED benchmarks for proficiency in both measurements of the ACCESS test. In order for a district to achieve academic proficiency on the SBA test, the district must meet PED designated percentage targets in rate of participation of the test, graduation rate and proficiency in reading and math. District results of SBA show that 44.5 percent of students scored high enough in the reading section of SBA to be considered proficient at reading in English. The state target in reading proficiency is 56.7 percent of test takers. In the math section of SBA, 34.9 percent of the district’s English-learning students scored high enough to be considered proficient at understanding math problems relayed in English. PED’s benchmark percentage for a district to achieve sufficient proficiency among its test takers in the math section is 50 percent. Only three of the district’s 20 schools achieved high enough percentages of students deemed proficient in the math and English

CVE

Continued from Page A1

building in the winter and cool it in the summer. The co-op pursued an $87,000 federal grant to pay for the system, which is expected to last more than 75 years. The LED lighting cost $55,000 but lasts 50,000 hours, or more than 20 years. CVEC also increased its security system for its employees. The company will keep its old building. The new facility will house its administration, operations and engineering staff. Construction was completed ahead of

Benefits

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the Democratic-led Senate will take up the measure or whether Obama would sign it. Obama has threatened to veto other legislation passed by the House in recent days that would reopen individual funding streams, arguing that a

Thursday, October 10, 2013 piecemeal approach to ending the shutdown was unacceptable and that the entire government must be reopened.

As of Wednesday afternoon, the Obama administration had yet to issue a formal veto threat for the death benefit bill.

Before the government shutdown last week, Congress passed and Obama

signed a bill allowing the military to be paid during the federal closure. However, the death benefit payments were not covered by that legislation.

Carney said the Pentagon told lawmakers before the shutdown that the death benefit payments were not covered by the bill and would be cut off during a shutdown.

portions of the SBA test to be considered proficient overall in digesting academic information in English. These schools were Berrendo Middle School, Mesa Middle School and Sidney Guiterrez Middle School. The district exceeded PED’s benchmark for participation in the SBA test, but fell below the state standard for the graduation rate of students who speak English as a second language. One hundred percent of English-learning students in the district took the SBA test, exceeding the target test participation rate of 95 percent. However, 59 percent of test takers in their senior year of high school in 20122013 graduated, falling below the PED’s 71.8 percent graduation rate benchmark. Bewley pointed out that elementary schools with the highest number of English-learning students performed relatively well on the tests. He said that the district’s three elementary schools that offer bilingual programs—Pecos Elementary, Sunset Elementary and Nancy Lopez Elementary — deserve to be commended. “If you consider the amount of students they have that are ELL [English Language Learners], they’re doing a really excellent job in moving their students up,” he said. All three schools met PED targets based on the ACCESS test, but none met targets based on SBA. Bewler will host meetings in Spanish at campuses throughout the district to discuss the meaning of ACCESS and SBA test results. To learn when a meeting may be held at a specific school, contact the specific school or Bewler’s office at 575-627-2586 or kbewley@risd.k12.nm.us.

schedule and under budget. “Hopefully, we’re setting the standard for our members and county with how they can save money,” Pinson said. CVEC plans to pay for the building using general funds. Member fees are not expected to be affected. The cooperative opened in 1937. Last year, the co-op reported it had 3,833 members in Eddy, Chaves and parts of Otero and Lea counties. The company also serves 14,330 meters, has 80 employees and 29 substations. Power suppliers to the co-op are Southwestern Public Service Co. and Western Farmers Electric Cooperative. In 2012, the co-op reported operating revenues of more than $54 million.

A3

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A4 Thursday, October 10, 2013

OPINION

Congress should adopt the single subject principle There’s a hidden lesson for New Mexicans in the federal government shutdown. It shouldn’t be hidden. Most of us are alarmed, frightened and furious about the shutdown and the paralysis of government decision-making process at its highest level. We understand why it’s happening: one issue is being held hostage to another issue. In the U.S. House of Representatives, a member cannot vote on a socalled “clean” bill that simply restores funding to the entire government. Because of the passionate opposition of some members to Obamacare, every bill allowed on the floor to fund the government incorporates a provision de-funding or delaying Obamacare. Any member who wants to vote for the basic purpose of the bill has to vote for the antiObamacare care provision also because the two matters are written into one bill.

EDITORIAL

MERILEE

DANNEMANN TRIPLE SPACED

Regardless of what you think about the Obamacare law, this is a nasty technique. It’s sometimes called log rolling — bundling unpopular legislation into more palatable bills, so that the popular bills carry the unpopular provisions to passage. Something like this could not be done in New Mexico, or in most other states. Our protection is a state Constitution provision known as the single-subject rule that says you can’t cover two separate subjects in the same bill. Here it is: New Mexico Constitution, Article IV, Section 16,

“Subject of bill in title; appropriation bills.” “The subject of every bill shall be clearly expressed in its title, and no bill embracing more than one subject shall be passed except general appropriation bills and bills for the codification or revision of the laws; but if any subject is embraced in any act which is not expressed in its title, only so much of the act as is not so expressed shall be void. General appropriation bills shall embrace nothing but appropriations for the expense of the executive, legislative and judiciary departments, interest, sinking fund, payments on the public debt, public schools and other expenses required by existing laws; but if any such bill contain any other matter, only so much thereof as is hereby forbidden to be placed therein shall be void. All other appropriations shall be made by separate bills.” The single subject rule was

Roswell Daily Record

invented to stop the very kinds of abuses that offend us when we see them practiced by Congress: bad or controversial provisions, attached to good or essential bills, to arm-twist legislators into voting for things they would not have supported if they had been able to vote for each issue independently. This is not a recent invention. The rule was first enacted in ancient Rome. The Lex Caecilia Didia, enacted in 98 B.C., was designed to forbid the practice of “lex satura,” the proposing of laws containing unrelated provisions. The rule came into the American legal system state by state, beginning with the New Jersey Constitution in 1844. By 1912 most other states followed, and today 42 state constitutions have a single-subject rule. It has been in the New Mexico Constitution since statehood. The New Mexico provision also

requires each bill to be fully described in the bill’s title. I looked up SB275, a workers’ compensation administrative cleanup bill with multiple related provisions; the title is 134 words long, with 12 clauses. It’s complete so everyone can see what’s in it. In federal legislation, the titles sometimes say, “and other purposes.” While we all continue to jump out of our skins at the craziness in Congress, let’s appreciate that at the state level this is one thing we don’t have to worry about — and make sure that if anybody decides to modernize the state Constitution, this provision stays right where it is. I’d suggest amending the federal Constitution to add such a rule, but I know better. Contact Merilee Dannemann at www.triplespacedagain.com. © New Mexico News Services 2013

With Obama, it’s ‘my way or the highway’

President Obama convened the leaders of both houses of Congress at the White House on Oct. 2 for a novel purpose: to tell them he wasn’t going to negotiate over reopening the federal government or increasing the federal debt ceiling. Why bother with a pointless meeting, we wonder, just to announce that any further meetings will be equally pointless? This is part of a disquieting trend that has beset the Obama administration virtually from its inception (it was only three days into his presidency, remember, that Mr. Obama dismissed Republican objections to his stimulus package with a curt “I won”). At virtually every turn, this administration haughtily dismisses the idea of negotiating with the opposition. This latest fight is no exception. Summoning members of Congress to the White House just to reiterate your contempt for their demands smacks of a monarch, not the chief executive of a government that requires cooperation between its branches to function. We are equal-opportunity opponents of the imperial presidency, but this behavior is especially disappointing coming from President Obama. This is the man, remember, whose entire candidacy was predicated on the need for a dramatically elevated civic dialogue and a new, bipartisan sense of understanding. In his inaugural address, he proclaimed “an end to the petty grievances and false promises, the recriminations and worn-out dogmas, that for far too long have strangled our politics.” Nearly five years later, Mr. Obama is one of the leading practitioners of the behavior he once decried. All too often, this president’s instincts are to steamroll his opposition. That was the case when he ignored Republican concerns about the stimulus package and Obamacare. It was the case when he made recess appointments to the National Labor Relations Board and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau when Congress was still in session. And it’s now the case when he refuses to so much as begin a conversation with congressional Republicans that could reopen the federal government or stave off a debt crisis. As a result, this president — who campaigned on the need for more national consensus — has yet to produce a single moment of meaningful bipartisan cooperation during his time in office. None of this excuses the role of congressional Republicans in this current debacle. Their initial push to defund Obamacare as a condition of keeping the government open was doomed from the start and made the possibility of a shutdown exponentially more likely. That demand is off the table now, however, and there ought to be plenty of room for negotiation between the two sides — if only the president would come to the table. The Barack Obama of Inauguration Day 2009 declared that “the time has come to set aside childish things.” We’d encourage that fellow to get in touch with the Barack Obama of 2013 and tell him to start acting like the adult in the room. Guest Editorial The Orange County Register

D E A R D O C T O R K : I have pain in the ball of my foot. My doctor thinks it is caused by a Morton’s neuroma. How did I get this, and what can I do about it? D E A R R E A D E R : Morton’s neur oma is a swelling of the nerve between the bones at the base of the toes in the ball of the foot. The pain it causes usually is in one spot. It can feel like you have a pebble in your shoe. Once the nerve starts to swell, the nearby bones and ligaments put pressure on the nerve, worsening the irritation and inflammation. (I’ve put an illustration of a Morton’s neuroma on my website, AskDoctorK.com.) A neur oma usually occurs between the bones of the third and fourth toes. It causes

Fracking: environmentally safe and economically stimulating On the very same day that the Wall Street Jour nal announces: “U.S. Rises to No. 1 Energy Producer” — thanks to the shale boom made possible through a technology known as hydraulic fracturing — an environmental group released a report calling for a complete ban of the practice, which would effectively shut down the oil-and-gas industry (and all of the jobs and revenues it creates) and increase dependence on foreign oil. You probably haven’t heard about either, as most news coverage, on Oct. 3, centered on the government shutdown. Why would Environment America choose to release the

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aching pain, a burning sensation, and numbness and tingling in the toes. Morton’s neuroma is much more common in women than in men. In most cases, highheeled, narrow-toed shoes are to blame. High heels shift the foot bones into an abnormal position and put pressure on the ball of the foot. This causes the foot

MARITA NOON ENERGY MAKES AMERICA GREAT INC.

report on a day when it would likely receive little attention? The answer is found in the Wall Street Journal: “the shale boom’s longevity could hinge on commodity prices, government regulations and public support.” (italics added) Americans support the concept of energy independence. We don’t like the fact that we’ve been funding terrorists who happily slaughter our cit-

bones to put pressure on the nerve, and that increases the risk that a neuroma will form. Once it forms, the same pressure from bones makes it hurt. Less often, physical activities that str ess the feet (such as running or racquet sports) can cause a Morton’s neuroma. You can temporarily relieve the pain by taking off your shoes, flexing your toes and rubbing your feet. Other causes of foot pain can be confused with Morton’s neuroma. A wart on the ball of the foot can cause pain, for example. So can inflammation of a sheet of tissue called fascia (FASS-cha) beneath the skin on the underside of the foot. Inflammation of tissue around the joint (capsulitis or bursitis),

izens. The Obama administration is the most anti-fossil-fuel in history, yet within the past month, three Obama Cabinet members — two former, one current — have declared fracking a safe technology for extracting oil and natural gas: • At a speech in Columbus, Ohio, for mer Secretary of Energy Steven Chu said that fracking “is something you can do in a safe way.” • At the Domenici Public Policy conference in Las Cruces, former Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar stated: “I would say to everybody that hydraulic fracking is safe.”

or inflammation of one of the foot bones, can also cause pain. A doctor makes the diagnosis of Morton’s neuroma by pushing directly on the spot between the third and fourth toes where it forms. Treatment usually starts with switching to shoes that have wide toe boxes, low heels and good arch support. A foot-care specialist may also recommend an adhesive pad to fit under the front of your foot. Custom-made shoe inserts, or orthotics, can correct any structural foot problems that might contribute to nerve compression. You can also relieve painful inflammation by icing the area or taking nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs such as ibuprofen,

• In a meeting with the NY Daily News editorial board, Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz asserted: “Fracking for natural gas is climate-friendly, environmentally safe and economically stimulating” and added: “Which is just what America and New York need.” Then, in the same month, in the greenest state of the Union, against strong opposition, Califor nia Gov. Jerry Brown signed a hotly-contested bill that reflects that he favors some level of fracking. These pro-fracking news items, along with several recent reports pointing to the

See NOON, Page A5

naproxen or aspirin. Occasionally, a foot specialist will inject the area with a steroid and anesthetic to reduce inflammation and numb the pain. This can’t be repeated very often, because the treatment can damage the tissues, but it can give you temporary relief. Inflamed or injured nerves can take time to improve. But if your pain continues despite several months of treatment, your doctor may recommend surgery. Surgery can remove the neuroma or create a wider space for the affected nerve to travel through. (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.)


LOCAL

A5

Sunrise Optimist Club announces new officers Roswell Daily Record

Courtesy Photos

From left: Tracy Morgan, Judith Tichenor, Roger K. Burnett, Pat Burnett and Richard Glenn.

The Annual Sunrise Optimist Club of Roswell Awards and Installation Banquet was held Sept. 26 A Los Cerritos. Zone 4 Lt. Gov. Judith Tichenor swore in the new officers and directors. The officers for 2013-2014 term are: President – Richard Glenn, Vice President – Roger K. Burnett, Vice President – PJ Marshal-Riese, Treasurer – Tracy Mumford, and Secre-

tary – Patricia Burnett. The directors swore in were; Scott Hicks, Elouise Ortega, Bud Hewett, Chris Cook, Evelyn Klemo, and Cheryl Martinez. Outgoing President Karen Hamilton presented several awards. Optimist Rookie of the Year went to Chris Cook, Officer of the Year was awarded to T racy Mumford and Optimist of the Year was presented to

The new directors. From left: Evelyn Klemo, Elouise Ortega, Cheryl Martinez and Scott Hicks.

Scott Hicks. Several other Optimist members received special awards for their efforts in assisting club programs to benefit the youth of Roswell. The purpose of the Sunrise Optimist Club is to develop optimism as a philosophy of life utilizing the tenets of the Optimist Creed; to promote an active interest in good government and civic affairs; to inspire

respect for the law; to promote patriotism and work for international accord and friendship among all people; to aid and encourage the development of youth, in the belief that the giving one’s self in service to others will advance the wellbeing of humankind, community life and the world. Here is a partial list of some of the projects the club is involved with: a

Waldman — MD, MBA, medical doctor, author and speaker Wednesday, Oct. 16 at noon at the Elks Lodge, 1720 N. Montana Ave. Waldman will be discussing Obamacare. This luncheon is open to everyone interested in Obamacare. A meatloaf luncheon will be served at 11:45 a.m. for $11 per person. Reservations are required for everyone attending. Please RSVP to Judie Yeager at 626-9902 by Monday, Oct. 14, at 12 p.m.

meet every Monday and Thursday from 4:30-5:30 p.m. Youth ages 10-14 will meet every Tuesday and Thursday from 5:45-6:45 p.m. Price is $40 per month. We will work with cheerleading or other sports schedules. Please call 420-0922 to sign up.

Habitat for Humanity taking apps Saturday

Habitat for Humanity

Need a house? Habitat for Humanity is taking applications Saturday at First Baptist Church, 500 N. Pennsylvania Ave. (enter through the west entrance in back parking lot) from 10 a.m.-noon. Make sure to bring birth certificates of all household members, proof of all household income,

Noon

Continued from Page A4

Social Security cards or proof of citizenship and driver’s license or proof of residency. For more information, call 624-2138.

Fall luncheon

The Chaves County Republican Women cordially invite you to our fall luncheon with honored guest and speaker J. Deane

safety of hydraulic fracturing, have the anti-fracking crowd resorting to desperation. And, then the Wall Street Journal announces America’s energy dominance on its front page. I suspect that Environment America had their little report ready to go and were just waiting for the right time to release it — probably after the shutdown, when the news cycle had some space. But, when the Wall Street Journal heralded the U.S. energy comeback, they just had to spring it — hoping to shift public opinion. The environmentalists’ advertising efforts have had an impact. A September Pew Research Center for the People and the Press found that opposition to increased use of fracking rose to 49 percent from 38 percent in the previous six months. Why, when hydraulic fracturing has brought America to the brink of energy independence, been the biggest driver of job growth, lowered utility bills, and posi-

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Hip-hop classes

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tively impacted the trade deficit, are people opposed to it? Because they don’t really know what it is, and, therefore, are gullible to the old adage: “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it.” A University of Michigan report on hydraulic fracturing found: “The public tends to view the word ‘fracking’ as the entirety of the natural gas development process, from leasing and permitting, to drilling and well completion, to transporting and storing wastewater and chemicals.” In fact, fracking is limited to the process of injecting fluids into a well — just a few days of a multi-month operation (not counting leasing and permitting). This widespread misunderstanding explains why the repeated lies have taken hold. One of the most rampant lies about fracking made by the environmentalists is about water. The press release about the “Fracking by the Numbers” report, claims: “Of particular concern are the billions of gallons of toxic waste created

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Rx Take-back

Bring your unused or expired prescription medications for safe disposal to the Roswell Neighborhood Watch offices on Saturday, Oct. 26, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The office is located at 426 N. Main St., on the corner of Fifth and Main streets. For additional infor mation, call Steve Wolfe at 622-4014.

scholarship program for the three high schools, mentors at the HOST program, essay contest, adopted two zoo animals, sponsors annual Girl Scout trip, flag display project, summer baseball, Science Olympiad, CAPS program, and the Sunrise Optimist Poe Corn Basketball Tournament. The Sunrise Optimist Club of Roswell meets each

Wednesday at 7 a.m. at Los Cerritos. We are always looking for good new members. If you are interested in joining or finding out more about the club, stop in for breakfast. The club’s main objective is to make Roswell a better place for the youth of our community. For more information contact Roger K. Burnett at 623-7613 or Richard Glenn at 623-2900.

ENMU-R FOUNDATION GIVES SCHOLARSHIPS

The Eastern New Mexico University- Roswell Foundation has so far awarded $16,600 in scholarships to students this fall semester. Lindsey Dubiel received the William H. McCutchen Memorial Scholarship for $750. Ethan Urban received the Thomas M. Coates Memorial Aviation Scholarship for $1,000. The Thomas M. Coates Memorial Scholarship for $1,000 was awarded to Katherine Hernandez. The Sally Pacheco Memorial Scholarship for $750 was awarded to Kimberly England. ENMU-Roswell Foundation Scholarships for $750 each were awarded to Melissa Hernandez and Evelyn Moreno. A group of 28 students received College Access Program Scholarships (CAPS) for $450 each. They are: Melissa Baeza, Jacob Blacke, Emily Chavez, Danielle Clements, Angelita Delgado, Jasmine Dominquez, Mawaika Duran, Carla Garcia, Ezekiel Garcia, Michael Garcia, Allejandra Gomez, Amanda Hampton, Courtney Hawkins, Teaira Hooks, Sierra Hoover, Mariel Lopez, Stephanie Lopez, Kimberly Medellin, Michelle Molina, Steve Olguin, Valeria Perez, Jessie Ramirez, Natalie Reyes, Stephanie Rosas, Sergio Tavarez, Amanda Valdez, Diana Valencia, and Evelyn Vazquez. For information on all available scholarships, contact the Financial Aid office on campus at 624-7400. For information about the ENMU-Roswell Foundation, contact Craig Collins, foundation coordinator at 624-7304.

from fracking, which threaten the environment, public health and drinking water.”

On Page 5, Fracking by the Numbers states: “Fracking operations have used at least 250 billion gallons of water since 2005.” Which sounds ominous until you get some perspective. For example, over that same period, car washes have used more than twice as much water: 600plus billion gallons. In the state of Colorado, where water supplies can be constrained and oil-and-gas development is high, water used for fracking amounts to less than one-tenth of one percent of the state’s total water demand.

The report claims: “While most industrial uses of water return it to the water cycle for further use, fracking converts clean water into toxic wastewater, much of which must then be permanently disposed of, taking billions of gallons out of the water supply annually” — which is false. The oil-and-gas industry is now using water that is not suitable for farming or drinking and then reusing the water over and over.

We could go on picking apart the 47page report, but these deceptions on water give you the idea. Energy In Depth has a more thorough review of Environment America’s “Fracking by the Numbers.” Thanks to hydraulic fracturing America is on the brink of energy independence, it has provided the biggest driver of job growth, lowered utility bills, and positively impacted the trade deficit, yet one small, well-funded, and vocal segment of the population is opposed to it — using false scare tactics to sway pubic opinion. When you think about why they would want to ban this single, effective economic stimulus, it should make you shudder and cause you to commit — with me — to spreading the truth. The author of “Energy Freedom,” Marita Noon serves as the executive director for Energy Makes America Great Inc. and the companion educational organization, the Citizens’ Alliance for Responsible Energy. Together they work to educate the public and influence policy makers regarding energy, its role in freedom, and the American way of life.


A6 Thursday, October 10, 2013

NATION/OBITUARY

Jupiter-bound craft runs into problem after flyby

AP Photo

As Federal Reserve chair, Yellen would face tough challenges

Janet Yellen, vice chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, listens in the State Dining Room of the White House, Wednesday.

WASHINGTON (AP) — If she becomes the next Federal Reserve chair, the challenges that lie ahead for Janet Yellen will require both the steely intellect and the personable style that many attribute to her. The job as the world’s most important banker comes with a daunting to-do list: deciding when to slow the Fed’s stimulus, forging consensus from a fractious policy committee and calculating the effects of any economic slowdown from Washington’s budget fight. That’s in addition to monitoring volatile financial markets and fine-tuning the Fed’s communications. First, though, Yellen will have to get there. She will need to overcome Washington’s toxic political environment and win confirmation from the Senate to succeed Ben Bernanke when his term ends Jan. 31. It’s almost enough to make you wonder why she would want the job. Yellen is widely seen as a “dove” on Fed policy. She stresses the need to use the Fed’s tools to boost growth and reduce unemployment in the sluggish aftermath of the Great Recession, rather than worry about igniting future inflation. That view came through in her brief remarks Wednesday after President Barack Obama announced her nomination. Yellen said more needed be done to strengthen the economy. She added, though, “We have made progress. The economy is stronger, and the financial system is sounder.” In part for her perceived dovishiness, Yellen has been outspokenly backed by many Democrats in Congress and opposed by some Republicans. She wasn’t Obama’s first choice to lead the Fed. That was Larry Summers, a former Treasury Secretary and chief White House economic adviser who withdrew from consideration in the face of widespread opposition.

OBITUARY

Ricky John Apodaca

Memorial services are scheduled at 2 p.m. Friday, October 11, at Terpening & Son Chapel for Ricky John Apodaca of Artesia, New Mexico. Mr. Apodaca, 58, died Tuesday, October 8, 2013, at his home.

Brian Gardner, Washington political analyst for Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, predicts that Yellen, widely respected as an academic economist and veteran policymaker, will be easily confir med despite some Republican no votes. Then the hard stuff begins. Fed policymakers have been debating when and how to scale back their $85 billion a month in bond purchases designed to spur economic growth by reducing long-term interest rates, driving up stock prices and encouraging borrowing and spending. Yellen was a key architect of this strategy. Last month, the Fed surprised financial markets by deciding not to scale back its bond purchases. It concluded that the U.S. economy wasn’t yet healthy enough for the Fed to ease its stimulus even slightly. Fed officials also worried about the budget stalemate that’s since led to a partial shutdown of the government and threatens to trigger a default on government debt. Many analysts now don’t think the Fed will reduce its stimulus before next year. And with the dovish Yellen as chairman, the Fed would likely be cautious about any pullback in early 2014. For now, there’s another problem, too. There isn’t much official economic data to go on. The shutdown that began Oct. 1 forced the Labor Department to cancel its all-important jobs report for September. It’s still unclear when the jobs report will come out. The choice of Yellen to lead the Fed also comes amid worry and uncertainty about how much damage the shutdown might cause the U.S. economy. Graver yet is fear that lawmakers won’t raise the government’s borrowing limit this month. If they don’t, the government could eventually default on its debt, possibly causing another recession and financial crisis.

Cremation has taken place under the direction of Terpening & Son Mortuary. Ricky was born February 22, 1955, in Roswell, New Mexico; the son of Albert Apodaca and Trina (Peralta) Apodaca. He was a lifelong area resident including Hager man, Dexter and Artesia. On Feb. 8, 2007, he was married to Nohemi Castro in Artesia. Ricky was an A Operator for Navajo Refinery. He was of the Catholic denomination, a member of the N.R.A. and a former member of the Artesia Moose Lodge. Ricky was an avid outdoorsman, including hunting and shooting. He enjoyed rock ’n’ roll music, dancing and riding his Harley. He was preceded in death

by his parents.

Survivors include his wife, Nohemi Castro of the family home; son, Marty Apodaca, and wife, Krystle, of Albuquerque, N.M.; stepsons: Rudy Chavez, Jonathan Chavez, Michael Chavez and Daniel Chavez, all of Artesia; brother Albert Apodaca, of Leesburg, Virginia; sisters: JoAnn Vallejos, of Dexter, N.M., and Julia Oropesa, of Roswell, N.M.; step-grandchild Aiden Chavez, of Artesia; five nephews; four nieces; 12 great-nephews; four great-nieces; three greatgreat-nephews; and two great-great-nieces. Arrangements have been entrusted to Terpening & Son Mortuary. Please express condolences at artesiafunerals.com.

Roswell Daily Record

LOS ANGELES (AP) — NASA’s Jupiter -bound spacecraft hit a snag Wednesday soon after it used Earth as a gravity slingshot to hurtle toward the outer solar system, but mission managers said it’s on course to arrive at the giant planet in 2016. Juno emerged from Earth’s shadow in safe mode, a state that spacecraft are programmed to go into when there’s some trouble. Despite the problem, “we believe we are on track as planned to Jupiter,” said project manager Rick Nybakken of the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which manages the $1.1 billion mission. Engineers continued to diagnose the issue, which

occurred after Juno whipped around Earth in a momentum-gathering flyby. Up until Wednesday, Juno had been in excellent health. While in safe mode, it can communicate with ground controllers, but its activities are limited. Previous missions to the outer solar system have used Earth as a celestial springboard since there’s no rocket powerful enough to make a direct flight. The Galileo spacecraft buzzed by Earth twice in the 1990s en route to Jupiter, the solar system’s largest planet located 484 million miles from the sun. Launched in 2011, Juno flew beyond the orbit of Mars, Earth’s closest planetary neighbor, before looping back toward our home

planet for a quick visit. Wednesday’s rendezvous boosted Juno’s speed from 78,000 mph relative to the sun to 87,000 mph — enough momentum to cruise past the asteroid belt to Jupiter, where it should arrive in 2016. During the swing past Earth, Juno snapped pictures. The solar-powered, windmill-shaped spacecraft slipped into Earth’s shadow as planned, but engineers were puzzled by the too little data it sent back afterward. At closest approach, it hurtled 350 miles above the ocean off the coast of South Africa. NASA said skywatchers with binoculars or a small telescope might have seen it streak across the sky, weather permitting.

CONCORD, N.H. (AP) — A temporary increase in food stamps expires Oct. 31, meaning for millions of Americans, the benefits that help put food on the table won’t stretch as far as they have for the past four years. Food stamps — actually the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program — go to 47 million Americans a month, almost half of them children and teenagers. “Every week is a struggle as it is,” said Heidi Leno, 43, who lives in Concord with her husband, 9-yearold daughter and 5-year old twins. “We hate living paycheck to paycheck and you have to decide what gets paid.” Starting in 2009, the fed-

eral stimulus pumped $45.2 billion into SNAP, increasing what would have been a monthly benefit of $588 a month to $668 for an average household of four. In November, that same family will start getting $632 a month, about a 5 percent cut. The benefits, which go to 1 in 7 Americans, fluctuate based on factors including food prices, inflation and income. Families and providers worry the expiration of the stimulus bump comes at a particularly bad time: — Though census figures from September show poverty remains stuck at around 22 percent, in some states, including New Hampshire, the number of

children living in poverty is climbing.

Food stamp recipients fret as stimulus boost winds down

— The House voted to cut almost $4 billion a year from the roughly $80 billion-a-year program in an effort to find savings in the budget. A Senate bill would cut around $400 million a year.

— In cold weather states, even a slight decrease in the benefit can trigger a decision between heating and eating. Heating fuel prices are expected to increase this year too, the government warned this week. And the program could face another shortfall if the government is shuttered past Nov. 1.


BUSINESS REVIEW

Roswell Daily Record

Gina Dwyer (left) and Mica Nevarez invite everyone to come in for a free quote on their homeowners, auto, life, and business insurance. The Gina Dwyer Farmers Insurance Agency is open from 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m., Mon. thru Fri. (Saturdays by appointment.) For more information call 622-3993. Se habla Español.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

A7

Nobody sells more real estate than RE/MAX. RE/MAX of Roswell is located at 110 East Country Club Road. The phone number is 575-622-7191. RE/MAX has a wonderful inventory of homes in all price ranges, style and design and different locations.

RDR Business Review Page is a great way to advertise

The Roswell Daily Record’s Business Review Page is a great way for a business to advertise. The Business Review Pages run three times a week, in the Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday papers. There are only a few spots available right now so if you’ve “been thinking about it”, NOW would be the time to get your spot before they’re all gone. Your RDR advertising representative can fill you in on the complete details. Please phone or ask them for the information. The basic setup for the Business Review Page is as follows: You sign up and we run your ad on the bottom half of the Business Review Page on its assigned day (Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday) each week. We have a maximum of twenty six ads running per page. After advertising weekly for six months you will receive a “free future article” (then another one six months after your first free one and another free one six months after that). as our “Thank You!” for advertising on the busi-

E & C S Electric are experts at helping you save energy. For information about E & C S Electric and their services, visit the web site at eandcselectric.com or telephone them at 625-5524, Jim Bloodhart - President, and Karen Bloodhart - CFO can give you a free estimate on any electrical work you would like to have done. obtain effective advertising have to offer (services We do whatever works best ness review page. and/or product); who you for you. This six month on a small budget. schedule comes from havLeasa Metcalf is the The feature article are (history); where you are ing twenty-six (maximum) typically uses two or three located; when you are open; Business Review Page advertisers per page and a photographs and the equiv- and how to get in touch with Editor. Leasa takes the phofifty-two week year. tographs and either writes alent of two double-spaced you. The typical layout the text (with your input) or With ads starting typewritten pages of inforas low as $21.43 (including mation about your business. can be altered to fit your cir- uses an article that your tax) per week the business Its an ad that looks like a cumstance. If you want provide for your feature review page is ideal for busi- written story. This info usu- more pictures we can cut story. We can also use your nesses large and small to ally consists of what you down on the article’s length. photographs, if you have

ones that you want to use. Many local business owners (like the three pictured here) have found this feature to be an ideal way for them to advertise economically. They have an ad in the Roswell Daily Record once a week, on their regular day, and then they have a half page write-up with pictures twice a year to tell the story of their business. Please call your Roswell Daily Record advertising representative at 622-7710 for complete information and prices. In this economy you’ve got to advertise to stay in business, and the Roswell Daily Record’s Business Review page is an effective way to do it. Call now while there are still spaces available. Its a great deal and you will see more customers coming in the front door of your business when you advertise in the newspaper. Advertising in the Roswell Daily Record works because it is a great way to inform people about your business and what you have to offer. Phone 622-7710.

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A8 Thursday, October 10, 2013

WEATHER

Roswell Seven-day forecast Today

Tonight

Sunny; winds subsiding

Mainly clear and breezy

Friday

Mostly sunny

Saturday

Sunday

Mostly sunny

Monday

Warmer

Mostly sunny

Tuesday

Roswell Daily Record

National Cities

Sunny and not as A little morning rain warm

High 87°

Low 49°

82°/47°

80°/53°

90°/51°

83°/46°

74°/48°

78°/44°

SSE at 6-12 mph POP: 5%

SE at 4-8 mph POP: 10%

SE at 8-16 mph POP: 0%

WSW at 10-20 mph POP: 5%

W at 3-6 mph POP: 5%

NE at 4-8 mph POP: 5%

NW at 7-14 mph POP: 10%

SW at 6-12 mph POP: 55%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

New Mexico Weather

Roswell through 8 p.m. Wednesday

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

Temperatures High/low ........................... 87°/46° Normal high/low ............... 78°/49° Record high ............... 93° in 1965 Record low ................. 30° in 1970 Humidity at noon .................. 19%

Farmington 56/33

Clayton 76/41

Raton 70/34

Precipitation 24 hours ending 8 p.m. Wed. 0.00" Month to date ....................... 0.00" Normal month to date .......... 0.38" Year to date .......................... 8.34" Normal year to date ........... 10.84"

Santa Fe 64/32

Gallup 55/27

Tucumcari 82/46

Albuquerque 70/41

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Clovis 80/45

Moderate Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading

Ruidoso 66/44

T or C 75/45

Source:Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

Sun and Moon The Sun Today Fri. The Moon Today Fri. First

Oct 11

Rise Set 6:59 a.m. 6:31 p.m. 6:59 a.m. 6:29 p.m. Rise Set 12:41 p.m. 11:21 p.m. 1:34 p.m. none Full

Oct 18

Last

Oct 26

Alamogordo 80/48

Silver City 68/41

New

Nov 3

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

ARIES (March 21-April 19) #### Your vision upon waking today could change rather quickly. Where you might have thought you were free to explore some new ideas, you could discover that you are in a position to take the lead. Your intuition will guide you in new direction. Tonight: Revise your plans. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ##### Try to see what it’s like to walk in someone else’s shoes. Detach by taking a walk around the block or by doing some yoga. This will work wonders, as you’ll be able to see a situation in a new light. Bring your new understanding into a discussion. Tonight: Let your mind lead. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ##### You know the power of

ROSWELL 87/49 Carlsbad 91/54

Hobbs 84/52

Las Cruces 78/47

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2013

one-on-one relating. If you have a question about what choices you should make, follow through and ask. One key person might be more influential and responsive than others. Reach out to this person more often. Tonight: Opt for some closeness. CANCER (June 21-July 22) #### You might not be as in control as you might like today. Others continue to seek you out, and you will feel the need to respond. Someone could inspire you to follow an offbeat course, even if it’s just in making weekend plans. Why Not? Tonight: Only with favorite people. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ### Pace yourself, and know what you must do. You have the energy to carry you through a major project. Use it well. A long-overdue conversation with a partner will feel right-on. You even might be inspired to head in a new direction. T onight: Choose a

Regional Cities Today Fri. 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

Today

Fri.

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

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Wednesday

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

relaxing activity. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) #### You won’t be able to contain yourself, even in the most serious of situations. Your mind seems to be everywhere except where it needs to be. A new friend will understand you. Clear up what is going on, so that you can be more present. Tonight: Be naughty and nice. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) # # # A personal or domestic issue dominates your thoughts. Realize that you might need to make a decision about an investment involving real estate. Check in with some wise and supportive friends for feedback. Don’t act until you are 100 percent sure of yourself. Tonight: Head home. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) # # # # You will ask the right questions, but someone might be reactive and cause some confusion. It is possible that this per-

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U.S. Extremes

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son is mixed up, and the fog that emanates from him or her is reflective of his or her mindset. Be willing to start a discussion on a basic level. Tonight: Hang out. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) # # # You have a certain naivete when it comes to money, as you believe that the cost of a venture is far less than it really is. Explore the price with several people before you make any commitments. You might need to revise your finances. Tonight: Play it conservatively. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) # # # You will get past momentary episodes of confusion. Your sense of direction will help you break past a barrier. Do not hesitate to find experts or those in the know. Someone might say something that could cause you to regroup and head in a new direction. Tonight: As you like it.

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BORN TODAY Pianist Thelonious Monk (1917), playwright Harold Pinter (1930), actor Amanda Burton (1956)

THE FUTURE COOLEST LIGHT EVER.

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AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) # # # # # One-on-one relating remains pivotal in breaking past someone’s anger issues. You still might decide to do nothing and let time work its wonders. You would be wise not to count on that premise succeeding. If you care, you must venture out. Tonight: Not to be found. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) #### Meetings and networking need to take a high priority right now. Be aware of your limitations when dealing with a friend in a business situation. “Separate business and pleasure” would be a good motto for you to live by today. Tonight: Go where the crowds are.

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SPORTS

B

NMMI falls to Odessa Thursday, October 10, 2013

Roswell Daily Record

Phone: 575-622-7710, ext. 304

To paraphrase the quote wrestling hall of famer Ric Flair made famous, “You’ve got to bring your best to beat the best.” The NMMI Bronco volleyball team did not bring its best on Wednesday against Odessa and it led to a fiveset loss to the league-leading Wranglers. Odessa won the first, third and fifth sets to beat the Broncos and seize full control of the WJCAC with less than a month left in the season. In the opening set, Odessa (16-7, 5-0 WJCAC) broke an 8-8 tie by winning 14 straight points to go up 22-8 en route to a 25-12 victory. The Broncos answered back in the second set after falling behind late. Through the first 41 points, Odessa led 22-19. NMMI won four of the next five points, though, to tie the

Section

set at 23. Odessa won the next point to hit set point, but NMMI rallied from there. The Broncos won three straight points to take the set 26-24. Like the first set, Odessa dominated the third set. The Wranglers trailed just once and pulled away late in the set. Sitting on a 16-13 advantage, Odessa won eight of the next 11 to get to set point. The Broncos won two straight, but Odessa won the next point for a 25-18 win. The fourth set was a mirror image of the second with Odessa taking an early lead before NMMI stormed back with a late charge to take the set. The Wranglers etched out a 19-17 lead through 36 points, but NMMI won two in a row to tie the set. Odessa never led again. Instead, the Broncos went

E-mail: sports@rdrnews.com

up 21-19 and held off Odessa for a 25-23 win. In the fifth set, Odessa never trailed. The Broncos got within two at 7-5, but a run of five in a row by the Wranglers put the set out of reach. NMMI shaved its deficit to three, but Odessa won two straight to close out a 15-10 win. For NMMI (15-15, 3-2), Veronika Baric led with 16 kills and 12 digs. Mariah Cox had 15 kills and 12 digs, Cristal Quinonez had 13 kills and 13 digs, Ashlei Swaim had 44 assists and 10 digs and Cara Salazar had 23 digs. Shawn Naranjo Photo

RIGHT: NMMI’s Ashlei Swaim, right, tracks down the ball during the Broncos’ match against Odessa, Wednesday.

Cardinals beat Pittsburgh 6-1 NLDS GAME 5 S T. LOUIS (A P) — A dam Wainwright went all the way and the St. Louis Cardinals g o t t w o -r un h om er s fr om David Freese and Matt Adams to beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 6 - 1 on Wed ne sda y n i gh t, advancing to the NL championship series. Wainwright scattered eight hits in his second dominant w in o f t h e d ivisi on ser ie s, coming through for the Cardi-

n a ls in a wi nn er - tak e- all Game 5. S t. Lou is get s t o st a y at h o me t o op en t h e N LC S against the well-rested Los Angeles Dodgers on Friday night. The last three seasons, the Cardinals are 8-1 when facing elimination. They also See CARDS, Page B2

AP Photo

Bears look to end skid against Giants

Jay Cutler and the Chicago Bears look to get back on track with a win over the winless Giants tonight.

LAKE FOREST, Ill. (AP) — On the surface, this would seem like an easy one for the Chicago Bears. They’re trying to get back to winning against a team that hasn’t won a game all season. The problem is the New York Giants (0-5) are no strangers to victories no matter what their record says, so the Bears (3-2) aren’t exactly breathing easy heading into Thursday night’s game at Soldier Field. They see a perennial contender, a quarterback in Eli Manning with two championship rings, and signs of danger even if there’s a big zero in the win column. “When you look at their personnel, they’ve got playmakers all over the field,” Bears coach Marc Trestman said. “They’ve got a future Hall of Fame quarterback that’s got a couple of Super Bowls. ... They have firepower.” They also have one of the league’s worst defenses, a running game that ranks at the bottom and is injured, an offense that leads the league with 20 turnovers, and a quarterback with more interceptions (12) than anyone else. They won’t have starting halfback David Wilson. The team’s first-round pick in 2012, he injured his neck

AP Photo

Detroit’s Verlander gets ball for Game 5 against Oakland again

See TNF, Page B3

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — These decisive Game 5s sure are becoming familiar for Justin Verlander. Just like last October in Oakland, the Tigers have been pushed to a winnertake-all fifth game in their AL division series against the Athletics. And Detroit will have Verlander on the mound again Thursday night after he pitched a fourhit shutout in the 2012 clincher. AP Photo

LEFT: With Detroit’s season on the line in Game 5 of the ALDS against Oakland, the Tigers will give the ball to Justin Verlander.

LOCAL SCHEDULE — THURSDAY, OCT. 1O — • Roswell at Portales, 4 p.m. BOYS SOCCER

• Hagerman at Melrose, 5:30 p.m. • Valley Chr. at Hondo Valley, 6 p.m. • Corona at Lake Arthur, 6 p.m. • Tatum at Dexter, 6 p.m. • Gateway Chr. at Vaughn, 6 p.m. • Goddard at Lovington, 6:30 p.m. • Clovis at Roswell, 7 p.m. PREP VOLLEYBALL

SPOTLIGHT 1964 — John Henry Johnson of Pittsburgh rushes for 200 yards to lead the Steelers to a 23-7 triumph over the Cleveland Browns. 1974 — Danny Gare of Buffalo scores 18 seconds into his first NHL game as the Sabres beat the Boston Bruins 9-5. 1981 — Southern Cal’s Marcus Allen rushes for 211 yards, his fifth straight 200-plus rushing game, in a 13-10 loss to Arizona.

“Well, you don’t pretend. It’s not just another game,” Verlander said after the Tigers evened the series with an 8-6 win Tuesday at Comeria Park. “The season is on the line. It was on the line for us tonight, too. This whole season, the way we battled and played as a team, comes down to one game, may the best team win. You can’t treat it just like another game. It’s a little bit different. There is more to it.” Verlander dominated in a thrilling pitcher’s duel with rookie Sonny Gray in Game 2 last Saturday, though he had nothing to show for it in a 1-0 loss. Verlander is riding a 22-

ON

inning postseason scoreless streak against the A’s, and has 33 strikeouts over the past three playoff matchups with Oakland, 11 in each outing. Not that the A’s are counting. “He’s been beaten before, it can happen again,” third baseman Josh Donaldson said. Verlander acknowledged it would have been great to pitch the playoff opener, while also noting 21-game winner Max Scherzer more than earned the nod. Now, Verlander gets the ball for his most meaningful start See TIGERS, Page B3

SPORTS

ON THIS DAY IN ... 1998 — New Hampshire’s Jerry Azumah becomes the first back in NCAA Division I-AA history to run for more than 1,000 yards in four consecutive seasons. He has 165 yards and one touchdown in a 22-13 loss to Richmond. 2004 — New England wins its 19th straight game, setting an NFL record for consecutive wins — counting the playoffs — with a 24-10

victory over Miami. 2010 — Tony Romo of Dallas completes 31 of 46 passes for 406 yards with three TDs in a 34-27 loss to Tennessee. 2011 — NBA Commissioner David Stern cancels the first two weeks of the season after owners and players are unable to reach a new labor deal and end the lockout.


B2 Thursday, October 10, 2013

SPORTS

Roswell Daily Record

PIGSKIN PROGNOSTICATIONS OUR PANEL OF EXPERTS PICKS THE WINNERS OF THIS WEEK’S AREA FOOTBALL GAMES

KEVIN J. KELLER Sports Editor Overall Record

45-10 GAME

Hondo Valley at Reserve Hagerman at Cloudcroft Clovis at Artesia Gateway Christian at Logan Goddard at Carlsbad NMMI at Hot Springs Moriarty at Roswell Lake Arthur at Dora NMMI JC at Arizona Western

Cards

Continued from Page B1

won Game 5 of the NL division series at Washington last year and at Philadelphia in 2011. Freese homered in the second inning off rookie Gerrit Cole and Adams connected in the eighth a ga i n st r el ie ve r M ar k Melancon to make it 5-1. P e t e K o zm a a dd e d a n RBI infield single, and Wainwright finished it off by striking out Pedro Alvarez with two on. A l var ez be cam e th e first player with an RBI in his first six postseason games on a fluke hit t h at ca r o med of f f i rs t base in the seventh. But the Pirates were held to one run in each of the final two games in their first playoff appearance i n 2 1 y ear s. T he y haven’t won a postsea-

MLB

Postseason Baseball Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain WILD CARD Both games televised by TBS Oct. 1, NL: Pittsburgh 6, Cincinnati 2 Oct. 2, AL: Tampa Bay 4, Cleveland 0 DIVISION SERIES (Best-of-5; x-if necessary) American League Boston 2, Tampa Bay 0 Oct. 4: Boston 12, Tampa Bay 2 Oct. 5: Boston 7, Tampa Bay 4 Oct. 7: Tampa Bay 5, Boston 4 Oct. 8: Boston 3, Tampa Bay 1

Oakland 2, Detroit 1 Oct. 4: Detroit 3, Oakland 2 Oct. 5: Oakland 1, Detroit 0 Oct. 7: Oakland 6, Detroit 3 Oct. 8: Detroit 8, Oakland 6 Oct. 10: Detroit (Verlander 13-12) at Oakland (Colon 18-6), 6:07 p.m. (TBS)

National League St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 2 Oct. 3: St. Louis 9, Pittsburgh 1 Oct. 4: Pittsburgh 7, St. Louis 1 Oct. 6: Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 3 Oct. 7: St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 1 Oct. 9: Pittsburgh (Cole 10-7) at St. Louis (Wainwright 19-9), 6:07 p.m. (TBS) Los Angeles 3, Atlanta 1 Oct. 3: Los Angeles 6, Atlanta 1 Oct. 4: Atlanta 4, Los Angeles 3 Oct. 6: Los Angeles 13, Atlanta 6 Oct. 7: Dodgers 4, Los Angeles 3 LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) American League All games televised by Fox Oct. 12: TBD Oct. 13: TBD Oct. 15: TBD Oct. 16: TBD x-Oct. 17: TBD x-Oct. 19: TBD x-Oct. 20: TBD National League All games televised by TBS Oct. 11: TBD Oct. 12: TBD Oct. 14: TBD Oct. 15: TBD x-Oct. 16: TBD x-Oct. 18: TBD x-Oct. 19: TBD WORLD SERIES (Best-of-7) All games televised by Fox Oct. 23: at AL Oct. 24: at AL Oct. 26: at NL Oct. 27: at NL x-Oct. 28: at NL x-Oct. 30: at AL x-Oct. 31: at AL

Another Rays season ends in disappointment

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP) — The goal is to play the final game of the season and win, so the Tampa Bay Rays fell short

TV SPORTSWATCH

TV SportsWatch By The Associated Press All times Mountain Schedule subject to change and/or blackouts. Thursday, Oct. 10 AUTO RACING 1:30 p.m. FS1 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, practice for Bank of America 500, at Concord, N.C. 5 p.m. ESPN2 — NASCAR, Sprint Cup, pole qualifying for Bank of America 500, at Concord, N.C. 11 p.m. NBCSN — Formula One, practice for Japanese Grand Prix, at Suzuka, Japan COLLEGE FOOTBALL 5:30 p.m. ESPN — Rutgers at Louisville 8:30 p.m. FS1 — Arizona at Southern Cal

LAWRENCE FOSTER Assistant Sports Editor Overall Record

45-10 KELLER

Hondo Valley Hagerman Clovis Gateway Chr. Goddard Hot Springs Moriarty Lake Arthur Arizona Western

s o n s e ri e s s i n ce t he 1979 World Series. The 23-year -old Cole beat the Cardinals with an impressive effort in Game 2. They got to him e a rl y t h i s t i me eve n though his fastball hit 1 0 0 m ph in th e f i r st inning against Matt Holliday. Freese made the kid pay for a full-count walk to Jon Jay with two outs in the second, lining a 12 pitch into the visitors’ bullpen in left. T h e Pi r a te s h a d t h e bullpen up in the fourth a f te r Ya d ie r M o l i n a’ s infield hit and a throwing error put runners on second and third. Cole gave up just three hits ov er fi v e i n n i n g s, bu t was lifted for a pinchhitter in the sixth. Freese struggled this s e as o n t o ov e r c o m e a b a ck in j u r y i n s p ri n g training and had nine again. Manager Joe Maddon finds it laughable, though, that anyone would suggest that finishing with 90-plus victories four consecutive years without making it to the World Series might be getting old. “Of course you want to win the final prize, there no question about that,” said Maddon, whose team was eliminated from the AL division series in four games by the Boston Red Sox. “In the latter part of the season, in short series, sometimes the matchups are tough and sometimes they just don’t roll your way,” Maddon added. “But I really hope and believe that the people in the Tampa Bay area would not frown upon 90-plus wins on an annual basis, and a bunch of guys that come out and play with the kind of zeal our guys do on a nightly basis.” Despite having one of the lowest payrolls in baseball, the budget-minded Rays won 92 games, including a Game 163 tie-breaker to earn a playoff berth for the fourth time in six seasons. The only team to win more games than Tampa Bay over the past six seasons is the New York Yankees, quite an accomplishment for a franchise that was a perennial 100-game loser for the first decade of its existence. Once again, the Rays simply couldn’t muster enough offense to advance. It was the same challenge they faced in losses to Texas in two other ALDS appearances since Tampa Bay’s surprising run to the 2008 World Series. Built to win with pitching and defense, nine pitchers — a postseason record for a nine-inning game — combined to hold Boston to three six hits in a 3-1 loss that ended Tampa Bay’s season on Tuesday night. The game ended with ace David Price — the only remaining available pitcher warming up in the bullpen for a possible 10th inning. It could have been the last time Price will be seen in a Rays uniform at Tropicana Field. The 2012 AL Cy Young Award winner and three-time All-Star is two years away from free agency, but he’s in line for a significant raise after earning just over $10 million this season. The Rays began this season with a payroll of $58 million and could decide they can’t afford to keep him. Executive vice president of baseball operations Andrew Friedman traded pitchers James Shields and Wade Davis to Kansas City last winter in a deal that brought rookie Wil Meyers and other prospects to Tampa Bay. Price, who lost Game 2 of the ALDS after going 10-8 with a 3.33 ERA this season, could be traded, too. “We don’t comment on what if’s,” Friedman said. “It’s easy to talk about what he means to this organization, what he’s done for it and the success that we’ve had that’s he a very large part of.” Still, the prospect of losing Price is unsettling. “I’ve given it a lot of thought. So has he,” right-hander Alex Cobb said. “It’s a sad thought, it really is because this group has gotten so close and David is really our go-to leader, are go-to guy that we look for direction. “I know it’s been a thought in all of our minds this year, that it could be our last year

GOLF 7 a.m. TGC — European PGA Tour, Portugal Masters, first round, at Vilamoura, Portugal 3 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Frys.com Open, first round, at San Martin, Calif. 10:30 p.m. TGC — LPGA Malaysia, second round, at Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL PLAYOFFS 6 p.m. TBS — ALDS, Game 5, Detroit at Oakland NFL FOOTBALL 6 p.m. NFL — N.Y. Giants at Chicago WNBA BASKETBALL 6:30 p.m. ESPN2 — Playoffs, finals, Game 3, Minnesota at Atlanta

SHAWN NARANJO

JOE CARPENTER

Sports Photographer Overall Record

46-9 FOSTER

Hondo Valley Hagerman Clovis Gateway Chr. Goddard Hot Springs Roswell Lake Arthur Arizona Western

GEOFF GUNN

Overall Record

NMMI Golf Course Asst. Professional Overall Record

42-13 NARANJO CARPENTER

37-18 GUNN

44-11 DOERHOEFER CONSENSUS

KEND broadcaster “Voice of the Coyotes”

Hondo Valley Hagerman Clovis Gateway Chr. Goddard NMMI Roswell Lake Arthur NMMI JC

h om er s an d 60 R B Is . But just like teammate Carlos Beltran, he’s an October star with seven homers, 29 RBIs and a . 32 5 a ver age i n 3 6 c ar eer pos tse as on games. Adams’ power hitting h el ped th e Ca r d in a ls ove r com e a m id -fo ot sprain to cleanup man Allen Craig in early Sept em ber an d h e h am mered a first-pitch fastball from Melancon well over the right-field wall for his first RBIs of the series. The Pirates scratched o ut t h eir lo ne r u n on two infield hits and the single by Alvar ez that looked to be a harmless inning-ending groundout before it hit the bag.

Hondo Valley Hagerman Clovis Gateway Chr. Goddard Hot Springs Roswell Lake Arthur Arizona Western

together. It’s been tough at times to think of that. ... You’re going to be taking a huge chunk out of this rotation. Nobody can replace a Cy Young.” All-Star Matt Moore won 17 games and Cobb is 18-4 — the second best record in baseball — since August 2012. There are questions how important Price is to a pitching staff that posted the lowest opponents’ batting average for the fourth straight year while allowing five or fewer hits a major league-leading 46 times — the most in the AL in 41 years.

NBA

Kobe progresses, but still weeks away from playing

EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (AP) — Although Kobe Bryant is making steady progress in his recovery from a torn Achilles tendon, he’s still a few weeks away from playing for the Los Angeles Lakers. Bryant is back with the Lakers after a short trip to Germany to get treatment on his right knee, another trouble area for the 35year-old guard. He sat on Los Angeles’ bench for an exhibition game Tuesday night, and he’ll travel with the team to China later this week. But the fourth-leading scorer in NBA history isn’t committing to any return date until he gets in shape and figures out how his legs will hold up when he’s back in uniform. “I haven’t said anything (about a return date),” Bryant said. “I just keep it all open right now. I don’t know why you guys are so hell-bent on deadlines. It’s like the most ridiculous thing to me. It’s entertaining. When I’m ready, I’m ready.” Bryant is running with his full body weight on a special treadmill, and he has done light jogging and calf exercises recently. His repaired Achilles tendon appears to be holding up fine, but six months of relative inactivity — and donuts and sugar cookies — have taken a toll. “It’s the explosiveness, the muscle,” Bryant said. “It takes a little time, and then I’ve got to get my fat (rear) in shape. I was eating whatever the hell I wanted to eat and not running, stuff like that. Caught up to me a little bit.” Bryant said he’ll need roughly three weeks of conditioning to get into game shape, his usual allotment for a return from any extended layoff. The Lakers’ season begins Oct. 29 against the Clippers. With time to spare in the preseason, Bryant seized the chance to travel to Germany for another round of the plateletrich plasma treatment designed to stimulate recovery in aging joints. He has had at least three surgeries on the knee over the past decade. Bryant posted a photo of his German treatment on Instagram, complete with acupuncture needles protruding from the joint. His recovery time from the procedure has been short in the past. “I’m starting to move a little bit more,” Bryant said. “I’m just trying to pick up the pace a little bit more. I’m not where I was the first time I had the (German) procedure done, being able to run as much, but I can do some things.” Bryant has been in near-constant rehabilitation on his Achilles tendon since he had season-ending surgery last April. He’s grateful the finish line is in sight, even if he might not be ready when the Lakers open the regular season. “I’ll be happy when I’m able to get out on the floor and do what I do best,” he said. “All this right now is just all a process to try to get to that point.”

NFL

PF 95 98 114 112

PF 139 115 93

PA 70 116 117 130

PA 79 95 139

Hondo Valley Hagerman Clovis Gateway Chr. Goddard NMMI Roswell Lake Arthur NMMI JC

Hondo Valley Hagerman Clovis Gateway Chr. Goddard NMMI Roswell Lake Arthur NMMI JC

Hondo Valley 6-0 Hagerman 6-0 Clovis 6-0 Gateway Chr. 6-0 Goddard 6-0 Tied 3-3 Roswell 5-1 Lake Arthur 6-0 Tied 3-3

Girardi signs 4-year extension with Yankees NEW YORK (AP) — Manager Joe Girardi signed a four-year contract Wednesday to stay with the New York Yankees through 2017. General manager Brian Cashman had said after the team missed the playoffs for the second time since 1992 that the Yankees wanted to keep Girardi, whose name was mentioned for the Cubs opening in his native Illinois. The 48-year-old Girardi said it would be up to his family if he returned. He was completing his second three-year deal with New York since taking over for Joe Torre after the 2007 season. “After talking to my family, this is where we wanted to come back,” Girardi said. Despite finishing tied for third in the AL East at 85-77, Girardi had what many believed was his best season as a manager. He kept the Yankees in the playoff chase until late September despite injuries to stars Derek Jeter, Alex Rodriguez, Mark Teixeira and Curtis Granderson.

SCOREBOARD

National Football League At A Glance By The Associated Press All Times Mountain AMERICAN CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct New England . . .4 1 0 .800 N.Y. Jets . . . . . . .3 2 0 .600 Miami . . . . . . . . .3 2 0 .600 Buffalo . . . . . . . . .2 3 0 .400 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct Indianapolis . . . . .4 1 0 .800 Tennessee . . . . .3 2 0 .600 Houston . . . . . . .2 3 0 .400

RANDY DOERHOEFER

NMMI Sports Information Director Overall Record

Jacksonville . . . .0 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Baltimore . . . . . . .3 Cleveland . . . . . .3 Cincinnati . . . . . .3 Pittsburgh . . . . . .0 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W Denver . . . . . . . .5 Kansas City . . . .5 San Diego . . . . . .2 Oakland . . . . . . .2

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PF 117 101 94 69

T Pct PF 0 1.000 230 0 1.000 128 0 .400 125 0 .400 98

NATIONAL CONFERENCE East . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Philadelphia . . . .2 3 0 .400 135 Dallas . . . . . . . . .2 3 0 .400 152 Washington . . . . .1 3 0 .250 91 N.Y. Giants . . . . .0 5 0 .000 82 South . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF New Orleans . . . .5 0 0 1.000 134 Carolina . . . . . . .1 3 0 .250 74 Atlanta . . . . . . . . .1 4 0 .200 122 Tampa Bay . . . . .0 4 0 .000 44 North . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Detroit . . . . . . . . .3 2 0 .600 131 Chicago . . . . . . . .3 2 0 .600 145 Green Bay . . . . .2 2 0 .500 118 Minnesota . . . . . .1 3 0 .250 115 West . . . . . . . . . . . . . .W L T Pct PF Seattle . . . . . . . . .4 1 0 .800 137 San Francisco . . .3 2 0 .600 113 Arizona . . . . . . . .3 2 0 .600 91 St. Louis . . . . . . .2 3 0 .400 103

PA 110 94 87 110

PA 139 58 129 108 PA 159 136 112 182

PA 73 58 134 70

PA 123 140 97 123

PA 81 98 95 141

Thursday’s Game Cleveland 37, Buffalo 24 Sunday’s Games Green Bay 22, Detroit 9 New Orleans 26, Chicago 18 Kansas City 26, Tennessee 17 St. Louis 34, Jacksonville 20 Cincinnati 13, New England 6 Indianapolis 34, Seattle 28 Baltimore 26, Miami 23 Philadelphia 36, N.Y. Giants 21 Arizona 22, Carolina 6 Denver 51, Dallas 48 San Francisco 34, Houston 3 Oakland 27, San Diego 17 Open: Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Tampa Bay, Washington Monday’s Game N.Y. Jets 30, Atlanta 28 Thursday, Oct. 10 N.Y. Giants at Chicago, 6:25 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 13 Carolina at Minnesota, 11 a.m. Oakland at Kansas City, 11 a.m. St. Louis at Houston, 11 a.m. Green Bay at Baltimore, 11 a.m. Philadelphia at Tampa Bay, 11 a.m. Pittsburgh at N.Y. Jets, 11 a.m. Cincinnati at Buffalo, 11 a.m. Detroit at Cleveland, 11 a.m. Tennessee at Seattle, 2:05 p.m. Jacksonville at Denver, 2:05 p.m. Arizona at San Francisco, 2:25 p.m. New Orleans at New England, 2:25 p.m. Washington at Dallas, 6:30 p.m. Open: Atlanta, Miami Monday, Oct. 14 Indianapolis at San Diego, 6:40 p.m.

Manning masters game of inches

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Normally the coolest customer on Denver’s offense, the replays show Peyton Manning clearly flustered. He’s gesturing and yelling at Knowshon Moreno and Moreno is giving it right back to the quarterback. In the pivotal moment of Denver’s latest win, Manning and Moreno were debating how to execute what the Broncos call “First Down, Fall Down” — another in the dozens of scenarios the meticulously prepared Manning runs through with the Broncos, starting in the spring and continuing throughout the season. In this case, it was “First Down, Fall Down” with a twist. With the game tied at 48 with 1:40 left, the Broncos had third-andinches from the Dallas 1. What Manning was imploring Moreno to do was gain a few inches, but to fall down before he reached the end zone. “I was asking him, ‘How? How am I supposed to do that?”’ Moreno said of the animated discussion at the line of scrimmage. “He was like, ‘Just do it.’ And that was it.” A delicate task, indeed, but Moreno got it

“I wouldn’t have come back if I didn’t think we could win a championship,” Girardi said. “I have faith in our organization.” Girardi has led the team to the playoffs in four of his six seasons, winning the World Series in 2009. Under Girardi, the Yankees have gone a majors-best 564-408 (.580) since 2008. He was NL Manager of the Year in 2006, when he led the Florida Marlins to a 78-84 record in his first year as a manager. A 15-year MLB catcher, Girardi won three World Series titles with the Yankees from 1996-99. Girardi remains with a high-priced ballclub that places the utmost premium on winning championships, but entered the offseason with great uncertainty. Mariano Rivera and Andy Pettitte retired, Jeter played only 17 games this year after breaking an ankle last October and A-Rod is still appealing a 211-game suspension.

done, busting through the line, then plopping down at the half-yard line. Dallas used its last timeout. The Broncos ran the clock down to 2 seconds and kicked the winning field goal, never giving Tony Romo a chance to add to the 48 points and 506 yards passing he had already amassed. “We were well aware that could be a possibility,” Broncos coach John Fox said. “The situation where it’s third-and-1, it’s harder than if it’s third-and-8 and you bust a run to fall down. Our guys executed it well.” It’s this sort of attention to detail that makes Manning so good in all things big and, in this case, small. Though he’s always looking ahead — in this case, to Sunday’s game against Jacksonville — Manning was asked during his weekly Wednesday news conference about the play that essentially sealed Denver’s 16th straight regular-season victory. “A unique situation,” Manning called it. “We work on situations in training camp. I’ve never quite had that one simulated before but I thought it was good we did that. I thought we played it just right.” After five weeks, Manning has 20 touchdown passes and the Denver offense has scored 230 points, both the best marks in NFL history for the first five games. He’s preparing for the 0-5 Jaguars, who have put up as many points all season (51) as Denver did last week. Manning, of course, doesn’t overlook the Jaguars or his own team’s flaws. “Too many penalties, turned it over twice, and those are things that will get you beat,” Manning said. They made up for it with picture-perfect execution when the stakes were high and the margin of error was slim. “We certainly had our plan,” Manning said. Broncos fans with long memories will recall 1998, when Denver got the winning score in its Super Bowl win over Green Bay after Packers coach Mike Holmgren instructed his defense to let Terrell Davis walk in from the 1 for the winning touchdown so Brett Favre would get the ball back with 1:45 to play. The Broncos ended up stopping Favre to seal the 31-24 victory. Cowboys coach Jason Garrett considered a similar strategy but decided against it, saying if the Cowboys could have held the Broncos to a field goal, they would’ve had a much better chance of winning. The website www.advancednflstats.com has done extensive analysis of these scenarios and said that while the Cowboys’ chances of winning were slim either way, they would have had a better chance had they let the Broncos score the touchdown shortly after Romo’s pick gave them the ball on the Dallas 24 with 1:57 left. As it turned out, there was no stop, no touchdown and no chance for the Cowboys’ offense. Moreno said he could have scored the touchdown on the pivotal third-and-inches play. Instead, his best run on a day in which he gained 93 yards was one he kept to about 6 inches. “We work on the ‘First Down, Fall Down’ kind of thing,” Moreno said. “Usually in the middle of the field, you can fall down easily. You don’t usually deal with it on that kind of spacing.”

Rams’ Austin not frustrated by lack of production

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Tavon Austin has little to show after the first five games of his rookie season with the St. Louis Rams. His best plays have been the ones that were called back. Austin had four returns for just 15 yards in Sunday’s win over Jacksonville. The elusive rookie from West Virginia had 72 yards of punt-return yardage wiped out by his teammates’ illegal blocks. The 5-foot-8 Austin also had a 25-yard catch against the Jaguars and finished with three receptions for 32 yards. He also had two dropped passes. Apparently frustrated, Austin left the locker room after the game just as reporters were being allowed in and did not speak. After practice Wednesday, Austin insisted he was not disheartened. “I definitely was not frustrated,” Austin said. “I just got up and I had family outside. I wasn’t frustrated at all. We got the win and that’s all that matters.” A jack-of-all-trades at West Virginia, Austin had 114 catches for 1,289 yards with 12 touchdowns last season with the Mountaineers. He added 643 yards rushing along with five TDs. Austin also handled the kickoff and punt return duties. He was especially good as a receiver in college, gaining yards after the catch when

the Mountaineers quickly got him the ball in space. Space is harder to find in the NFL. With St. Louis, Austin has 23 receptions and leads all rookies in that category, one catch ahead of DeAndre Hopkins, who will be on the opposite sideline Sunday in Houston. However, he has just 156 yards receiving, 6.8 per catch. “We’re hoping to get him an opportunity,” Rams coach Jeff Fisher said about getting more deep balls to Austin. Returning punts, Austin officially has 57 yards on 17 returns this season, for a 3.4yard average and a long of 14 yards. Fisher pointed out that, without those penalties, Austin would have 257 yards in punt returns this season with a long of 84 yards and a touchdown. He would be averaging nearly 10 yards a return. The 84 yards came on the nullified punt return for a touchdown came against Dallas. Fisher gave the rookie a special teams game ball Monday for the 91 punt return yards he would have had against the Jaguars and for the yards subtracted the rest of the year. While he would like to see no flags on his returns, Austin claimed he is not upset about it. “That’s how the game goes,” Austin said. “You’ve got to keep on pushing. I believe in my teammates. Hopefully, it will get better next time.” The Rams traded up eight spots in April’s draft to get the explosive playmaker for quarterback Sam Bradford.

Transactions

Wednesday’s Sports Transactions By The Associated Press BASEBALL American League NEW YORK YANKEES — Re-signed manager Joe Girardi to a four-year contract through the 2017 season. TEXAS RANGERS — Activated RHP Matt West from the 60-day DL. Designated INF infielder Jeff Baker for assignment. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association LOS ANGELES LAKERS — Waived C Dan Gadzuric and C Eric Boateng. FOOTBALL National Football League BUFFALO BILLS—Signed CB Johnny Adams to the practice squad. CAROLINA PANTHERS — Signed C Brian Folkerts from the practice squad. Signed WR Marvin McNutt from Miami’s practice squad. Signed LB Ben Jacobs and LB Jeff Tarpinian to the practice squad. CHICAGO BEARS — Signed DT Christian Tupou from the practice squad. Placed DT Nate Collins on injured reserve. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS — Signed LB Andy Studebaker. Signed RB Dan Herron of Cincinnati’s practice squad. Placed RB Ahmad Bradshaw on injured reserve. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Signed DE Brian Robison to a four-year contract extension. Waived DE George Johnson. Signed DE Justin Trattou. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Signed DT Andre Neblett. Re-signed LB Ja’Gared Davis and S Kanorris Davis to the practice squad. NEW YORK JETS — Placed LB Antwan Barnes on injured reserve. Re-signed LB Ricky Sapp. Signed DT T.J. Barnes to the practice squad. Released DT Junior Aumavae from the practice squad. OAKLAND RAIDERS — Signed DT Daniel Muir. Re-signed OL Jack Cornell to the practice squad. PITTSBURGH STEELERS — Signed LB Stevenson Sylvester. Released LB Kion Wilson. SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS—Claimed QB McLeod Bethel-Johnson off waivers from the Minnesota Vikings. Released QB John Skelton. Arena Football League ORLANDO PREDATORS — Announced the team was assigned OL Theo Goins. HOCKEY National Hockey League NHL — Fined New York Islanders F Frans Nielsen $5,000 for slashing Phoenix F Martin Hanzal in an Oct. 8 game. FLORIDA PANTHERS — Recalled G Scott Clemmensen from San Antonio (AHL). Loaned C Drew Shore to San Antonio. MINNESOTA WILD — Recalled F Stephane Veilleux from Iowa (AHL). Reassigned F Carson McMillan and F Jason Zucker to Iowa. PHOENIX COYOTES — Recalled F Tim Kennedy and F Brandon Yip from Portland (AHL). Assigned F Chris Brown and F Lucas Lessio to Portland. COLLEGE LEES-MCRAE — Promoted Craig McPhail to vice president of athletics and club sports.


SPORTS

Roswell Daily Record

FEATURED GAME

Thursday, October 10, 2013

FEATURED GAME

VS. CARLSBAD — Ralph Bowyer Stadium • Friday, 7 p.m.

VS. ROSWELL — Wool Bowl, Roswell • Friday, 7 p.m.

— GODDARD

RECORDS Goddard 3-2, Carlsbad 4-2 COACHES Goddard, Sam Jernigan; Carlsbad, Ron Arrington LAST YEAR Goddard won 20-17 LAST WEEK Goddard lost to Clovis 31-28; Carlsbad beat Rio Grande 50-0 WHAT TO WATCH Division I recruit Rodney Holcomb is the leader of Caveman offense that is averaging nearly 35 points per game this season. Holcomb, a 6-foot-5, 215-pound senior, completes nearly 62 percent of his passes and averages 206 passing yards per game this season. He’s thrown for 1,236 yards and 15 touchdowns while completing 131 of his 212 passing attempts. He’s also tied for the team lead in rushing scores with six and is second in rushing yards with 340. ... Behind Holcomb is junior tailback Elijah McCoy, who leads the team in rushing yards and is among the leaders in receiving yards. McCoy,

HONDO VALLEY VS. RESERVE

Mountaineers Stadium (Reserve), 3 p.m. RECORDS Hondo Valley 5-1, Reserve 0-4 COACHES Hondo Valley, Brandon Devine; Reserve, Gary Allison LAST YEAR Hondo Valley won 58-6 LAST WEEK Hondo Valley beat NMSD 104-0; Reserve lost to Dora 71-6 WHAT TO WATCH The Mountaineers have struggled on both sides of the football this year. The offense has yielded just 46 points (11.5 per game), while the defense is allowing 66 per game. ... Reserve scored a season-best 26 against Animas on Sept. 27, but hasn’t scored more than 14 in its other three games. ... Defensively, all four of Reserve’s opponents have scored at least 63 points. VS.

VS.

yard performance. ... Quarterback Dakota Yandell has thrown the ball a total of 13 times for 122 yards in the past two games. ... The Wildcats are huge up front, which is a big part of the reason they’re averaging 276.3 yards per game on the ground. ... The defense is vulnerable, though, allowing 28 or more four times and 40 or more three times this season.

GATEWAY CHRISTIAN

VS.

LOGAN

CLOUDCROFT

ARTESIA

Tigers Stadium (Truth or Consequences), 7 p.m. RECORDS NMMI 2-4, Hot Springs 1-4 COACHES NMMI, Randy Montoya; Hot Springs, Daniel Terrazas LAST YEAR Did not play (Last meeting: 2007, Hot Springs won 48-0) LAST WEEK NMMI beat Capitan 14-13; Hot Springs beat Mesilla Valley Christian 34-0 WHAT TO WATCH Quarterback Darin Welty and running back Quinton Montoya are the leaders of a Tiger offense that is averaging a little more than 10 points per game this season. ... The Tigers keep the offense fairly balanced between the run and the pass, but Montoya is the go-to weapon in both facets. ... The Tigers have allowed just 13 points in their past two games after giving up 111 in the first three games of the year. ... The 34 points scored by the Tigers in last week’s win over Mesilla Valley Christian are the most since a first-round playoff victory over Zuni in the 2011 postseason.

Bulldog Bowl (Artesia), 7 p.m. RECORDS Clovis 2-4, Artesia 2-4 COACHES Clovis, Eric Roanhaus; Artesia, Cooper Henderson LAST YEAR Artesia won 55-48 LAST WEEK Clovis beat Goddard 31-28; Artesia lost to Las Cruces 54-0 WHAT TO WATCH One name stands out in Clovis’ offense — Kamal Cass. The senior became the school’s all-time leading rusher last week while running for 331 yards and three TDs against Goddard’s stout rush defense. On the year, he’s rushed for 1,248 yards and 18 TDs on 159 attempts (7.9 yards per carry). Last week’s performance was his second straight 300-plus

TNF

Continued from Page B1

RECORDS Moriarty 3-3, Roswell 4-2 COACHES Moriarty, Bob Allcorn; Roswell, Jeff Lynn LAST YEAR Moriarty won 56-14 LAST WEEK Moriarty beat Albuquerque 55-0; Roswell beat Gadsden 30-9 WHAT TO WATCH The Pintos have been running the wing-T offense since Bob Allcorn took over more than a decade ago and 2013 is no exception. Moriarty is averaging nearly 300 yards per game on the ground with its trademark offense. ... Senior Justin Manning and junior Joe Jackson are the go-to weapons for the Pintos. Jackson leads the team in rushing yards and TDs and Manning is second in both categories. Both play wingback in the wing-T. They are similar in size, speed and athleticism. ... Junior Skylar Pearson is the quarterback for the Pintos. He’s among the

Longhorns Stadium (Logan), 7 p.m. RECORDS Gateway Christian 5-0, Logan 4-1 COACHES Gateway Christian, Shaun Wigley; Logan, Kene Terry LAST YEAR Gateway Christian won 40-24 LAST WEEK Gateway Christian beat Melrose 52-6; Logan beat Mountainair 54-0 WHAT TO WATCH Tyler Mehl and Wyatt Strand share the load in the backfield for the Lonhorns. Strand, the QB, leads the team in rushing with more than 400 yards, but Mehl, the TB, is right behind him with more than 300. ... Strand doesn’t throw it a bunch, but does average more than 15 yards per completion this season. The junior also returns kicks and punts. ... Michael Estrada is Strand’s favorite target in the passing game. ... Defensively, Mehl and Strand are the playmakers. Trey Daniels leads the team in sacks.

Bears Stadium (Cloudcroft), 6 p.m. RECORDS Hagerman 6-0, Cloudcroft 0-2 COACHES Hagerman, Casey Crandall; Cloudcroft, Jim Seal LAST YEAR Hagerman won 48-12 LAST WEEK Hagerman won by forfeit over Mescalero Apache; Cloudcroft lost to Artesia JV 66-12 on Sept. 19 WHAT TO WATCH The Bears prefer to keep the ball on the ground with senior tailback Dillion McCourt. He leads the team in every major rushing category, and also leads the team in every receiving category. ... Randy Summers should also see some work in the backfield. ... Rayce Collins calls the signals for the Bears. ... Harrison Tuner leads the Bear defense along with Summers and Matteo Vasile. The trio has combined for more than 50 percent of the team’s total tackles this year.

CLOVIS

— MORIARTY

who took over the starting duties after Kain Fierro was injured in Week 1, has 468 yards and six TDs on 74 carries this season. He’s also third on the team in receiving yards with 232 on 33 catches and leads the team in scoring with 48 total points. ... Trevin Ramirez is the top target in the passing game. The junior has 395 yards and six TDs on 36 grabs this season. Travis Kessler is also a favorite target of Holcomb’s, catching 24 passes for 277 yards and four scores. ... The trio of Codey Tanner, Chaz Sartin and Ty Able lead a defense that has allowed more than 22 points just once and is giving up 19.3 points per game. Tanner and Sartin are the leading tacklers with 28 apiece, while Able has 26 on the year. Sartin also leads the team in sacks with three from his middle linebacker position.

OTHER LOCAL GAMES

HAGERMAN

against the Philadelphia Eagles last week and will miss this game. The offensive line has struggled all season through injuries to center Kevin Baas and guard Chris Snee, and it’s added up to this: New York matching its worst start since the 1987 strike season. “I think our guys have handled it well, and I think they know that we can fix it,” Manning said. “They know that we can play better than what we are. They know we’re capable of more and that we’ll do whatever it takes to get that first ‘W.’ I think that’s been good.” The fact that everyone in the NFC East is below .500 has Manning believing the Giants are not quite out of it. Beating the Bears would be a good start, and it would add to the percolating angst in Chicago. Losses to Detroit and New Orleans have raised the anxiety level after a 3-0 start. The Bears struggled to mount a pass rush from the start, and that was before defensive tackles Henry Melton and Nate Collins suffered season-ending knee injuries. On offense, they’re still adjusting to Trestman’s system. And they probably could have done without Brandon Marshall going public with his frustration over a lack of catches against the Saints, particularly given Alshon Jeffery’s team record performance in that game. Here are five things to watch when the Giants and Bears meet: MISSING MARSHALL: It’ll be interesting to see how often Marshall is targeted in light of his comments. He had five passes thrown his way and caught four for 30 yards and a touchdown. The Saints were blanketing him, and that created opportunities for Jeffery, who set a franchise mark

B3

NMMI

VS.

HOT SPRINGS

SATURDAYʼS GAME

LAKE ARTHUR

VS.

DORA

Coyotes Stadium (Dora), 3:30 p.m. RECORDS Lake Arthur 5-0 (0-0), Dora 5-1 (1-0)

with 218 yards. So do the Giants double up on Marshall? If they do, does Cutler force some passes to him or look more to another receiver such as Jeffery? Another possibility is the Giants pay more attention to Jeffery, which could ease the pressure on Chicago’s Pro Bowl receiver. GETTING IT BACK: The Bears didn’t force any turnovers against Drew Brees and the Saints. Chicago has 14 takeaways and 55 points off turnovers. The Giants gave it away four times for 17 points against Philadelphia, with Manning getting picked off on three straight possessions in the fourth quarter. UNDER PRESSURE: Losing both Melton and Collins left the Bears short-handed up front and dealt some more blows to a group struggling to wreak havoc. The only teams with fewer sacks than Chicago (eight) are the Giants (five) and Steelers (four), but there might be some hope for the Bears going against a shaky line. Manning’s been sacked 15 times, tied for fourth in the league. RUN WITH IT: The Giants haven’t rushed for 100 yards as a team yet after averaging 116.4 per game a year ago. They released No. 1 running back Ahmad Bradshaw to clear the way for Wilson. Now, he’s out and Brandon Jacobs figures to make his first start since the end of the Giants’ 2011 season. He played little last year with San Francisco because of injuries and a run-in with coach Jim Harbaugh. NO DEFENSE: The Giants have allowed at least 31 points in each loss, tying an NFL record set by the Chicago Cardinals in 1954, and it’s not hard to see why. They have no pass rush and can’t get off the field on third down. Opponents have converted 39 of 79 chances, the second-highest percentage in the league.

Tigers

Continued from Page B1

this year — to extend the season Thursday night. With Scherzer pitching in relief Tuesday, Verlander became the automatic Game 5 choice for manager Jim Leyland. “I don’t want to sit here and tell you we planned on doing it, but it was an option,” Leyland said. “It worked out good for us. We took our best shot and we had to because we were behind the 8-ball a little bit. We took that shot and, hey, both teams are going to have a good pitcher going two days from now.” Both clubs chose to use Wednesday as a full day off without on-field workouts after two long flights in four days. The A’s were yet to announce their Game 5 starter as of early Wednesday afternoon. They were deciding between 18-game winner Bartolo Colon, the loser in the ALDS opener, or Gray. It’s quite a choice for 2012 AL Manager of the Year Bob Melvin, whose team is trying to avoid having the season end at the hands of Detroit for the third time in as many post-

tallest players on the team and has an especially good grasp on his role. Moriarty throws the ball more than most wing-T teams and Pearson is a capable passer. ... When Pearson does throw it, Kade Bond is his favorite target. The senior tight end has caught all but three of Pearson’s passes this season. ... Both Allen Michel and Chris Lucero have seen time at fullback for the Pintos this season. ... Moriarty started the season 1-3, but has since won back-to-back games while outscoring its opponents by a combined 89-17 count. ... The benchmark number for the Pinto defense is 20 — when the Pintos allow more than 20, they are 0-3; when they hold their opponent to less than 20, they are 3-0. ... The Pintos have been notorious for starting slow this year. They have fallen behind by at least 10 in the first half three times this year, going 1-2 in those games.

COACHES Lake Arthur, Jose Cruz Porras; Dora, Mason McBee LAST YEAR Dora won 63-34 LAST WEEK Lake Arthur beat Floyd 58-6 on Sept. 27; Dora beat Reserve 71-6 WHAT TO WATCH The Coyotes are led by a pair of playmakers in senior Jestin Watson and junior Eddie Arzate. Watson is the only player who saw significant time during Dora’s undefeated regular season a year ago and he’s back as a captain in 2013. Arzate saw some time in mop-up duty last season. ... The Coyotes opened the year with a lopsided loss to Hondo Valley, but have since won five straight games. During the current stretch, not including the forfeit win over Roy on Sept. 28, they are outscoring opponents by an average of 43.3 points per game.

NMMI VS. ARIZONA WESTERN

Veterans Memorial Stadium (Yuma, Ariz.), 8 p.m. RECORDS NMMI 5-2 (4-2), Arizona Western 6-1 (51) COACHES NMMI, Joe Forchtner; Arizona Western, Tom Minnick LAST YEAR Arizona Western won 59-30 LAST WEEK NMMI lost to Scottsdale 77-56; Arizona Western beat Glendale 41-21 WHAT TO WATCH The Matadors feature one of the most potent offensive attacks in the nation. They are 14th in the nation in yards per game (429.3) and 17th in both passing yards and rushing yards per game at 229.9 and 199.4, respectively. They also rank eighth in points per game with 41.0. ... Tyler Rogers steers the ship at quarterback. The freshman completes 68 percent of his passes and has 12 touchdowns to just three interceptions. He’s thrown for 1,078 yards on 104-of153 passing. ... Six different Matadors have at least 150 rushing yards, including Rogers (278) and Brandon Gainer (253). Rogers and Gainer each have four rushing scores and Brent Calloway has three. ... In the passing game, Cody Hollister and Javon Williams are Rogers’ favorite targets. Hollister has 459 yards and four scores on 39 catches, while Williams has 375 yards and four TDs on 28 grabs. ... Randy Ricks and Anthony Olobia form the bookends up front for a Matador defense that is allowing 20.3 points per game. Ricks is the team leader in sacks (4.5) and tackles for loss (11.5), and Olobia is second in both with 3.5 and 8.5, respectively. ... Linebacker Antonio Kinard is the leading tackler. ... A Bronco win combined with a Pima loss to Eastern Arizona would lock up a championshipbracket berth for NMMI in the WSFL playoffs. seasons — last year and also a four-game sweep by the Tigers in the 2006 AL championship series. The last time the A’s won a winner-take-all postseason game was in Game 7 of the 1973 World Series against the New York Mets. Oakland has lost its last five Game 5s in the AL division series since 2000. The AL West champion A’s know what’s at stake — and realize full well the challenge of facing Verlander again. Last fall’s frustrating finish is still fresh for everybody. “Going to go out there like we always do,” leadoff hitter and center fielder Coco Crisp said. “He’s a great competitor and we’re a competitive team. We’re going out there to go out and beat him.” Verlander has hardly had the kind of dominant season like he had the past two years, including 2011 when he won both AL MVP and Cy Young Award honors. Yet that hardly affected Leyland’s decision-making as he insisted Verlander’s 13-12 record was hardly indicative of how well he pitched much of the season aside from a couple of rough stretches. Oakland rookie Stephen Vogt delivered a walk-off single in Saturday’s win

once Verlander was out of the game. But he also had a wild 10-pitch at-bat with Verlander in which the lefthanded hitting catcher fouled off the first five pitches and seven in all before striking out to end the seventh. “We can expect pretty much what we saw from him the other night. Hopefully he makes a couple mistakes and we’re able to capitalize,” Vogt said. “It’s a tough loss but we’re not done. We still got one more game. We’re not done.” Neither are those 48,000-plus fans with their swirling yellow rally towels packing the Coliseum. They are sure to be even more hyped up and fiery Thursday night after watching a disputed home run at Comerica Park in Tuesday’s loss. On that play, a pair of fans reached out to grab the ball as right fielder Josh Reddick was leaping for it at the wall. The homer went to replay review and stood as a solo shot for Victor Martinez in the seventh. “We just do it like we have been doing it all season long, we end up winning a pretty good ballgame and it’s over, turn the page,” Martinez said.


B4 Thursday, October 10, 2013 DEAR ABBY UNIVERSAL PRESS SYNDICATE

DEAR ABBY: I have been with my boyfriend off and on for nine years. When I moved to San Francisco, we separated for a year, until he decided he wanted to move here. He has been miserable and depressed since he came. He misses his family and friends. His salary doesn’t go as far here, so he’s always short of money. He has also had a string of bad luck — speeding tickets, car repairs, a stolen bike and a back injury. He says he’ll move back East soon if things don’t get better, and it’s making me

anxious. He does nothing to turn around his problems. How can I help him realize it takes time for a new city to feel like home and lessen my anxiety over his problems? ANXIOUS IN THE BAY AREA

DEAR ANXIOUS: Your boyfriend does not appear to be anywhere near as adaptable as you are. You didn’t mention how long he has been in California, but if it’s longer than six months and he’s still homesick, you may have a lifechanging decision ahead of you. Would you rather live “in his world than live without him in” ... San Francisco? Even if YOUR heart’s in San Francisco, HIS does not appear to be.

#####

DEAR ABBY: My boyfriend of nearly a year and I recently said “I love you” for the first time. Before he said it (he said it first) he told me he doesn’t want to start saying it

COMICS

“all the time” — wherein lies my dilemma. How often is too often? Do I say it every night before bed or only on special occasions? Please help because I’m confused, and I’m worrying that I’m hurting him because I haven’t said it since that night four days ago. I don’t want to smother him or make him feel uncomfortable. HOW MUCH IS TOO MUCH?

DEAR HOW MUCH: Not everyone is comfortable with verbal declarations of love, and your boyfriend may be one of them. Love is spontaneous, it’s a feeling — not a mathematical formula. Only your boyfriend can tell you how often is too often for HIM. However, if you are sharing a bed, you should be able to express yourself fully whenever you climb into it — and his reaction should be positive (if not reciprocal) when you do.

#####

DEAR ABBY:

I am far from flat-chested (I’m a happy B-cup), but you would not call me “well-endowed.” My question is, why is it that friends and family members who have larger breasts constantly ask me if I would like some of theirs? I think it’s rude and, quite frankly, embarrassing. I would never turn the tables and say, “I’m feeling a little skinny. Could I have some of your fat?” What do I say when asked?

Family Circus

PERFECTLY FINE IN EVANSTON, WYO.

DEAR PERFECTLY FINE:

A few responses come to mind; none that I’d print in a family newspaper. My advice is to keep it simple and nonconfrontational. Smile and say, “No thanks, I’m happy just the way I am!”

P.S. In my opinion, a B-cup IS well-endowed.

Beetle Bailey

The Wizard of Id

HINTS

Blondie

FROM HELOISE

KING FEATURES SYNDICATE Dear Readers:

Earlier this year, I ran a column about the hazards of heavy furniture and unsecured TVS FALLING ON CHILDREN! This happens more than you really want to know! In years past, thousands of children, most under age 6, have gone to an emergency room for injuries from a tipped-over TV.

Dilbert

This potentially deadly situation warrants repeating this warning.

Today’s Crossword Puzzle

As newer flat-screen models are purchased and mounted on walls, older, heavier TVs most likely are going into bedrooms, dens or even playrooms. The problem: These older models are probably being set on a dresser, bookcase, etc., which can be an accident just begging to take place! Don’t curious children like to climb? Think about it. Look around your home.

For Better or For Worse

The Consumer Product Safety Commission suggests that ALL TVs be anchored with straps, L braces, etc. Or, set a free-standing older model as far back on the furniture as possible. Also, be certain that the furniture is stable and strong enough to hold a heavy TV.

#####

Heloise

Dear Heloise:

Garfield

A great glass and window cleaner is a wet-mop refill that has a scrubbing strip. Simply squeeze to remove excess fluid, and then wipe. Shine with a microfiber cloth. Keep one in a zippered bag in your vehicle to clean the windshield when the bugs hit it. Duncan, via email

Dear Heloise:

My wife and I have three toy poodles that are an important part of our family. We used to give them small treats, such as imitation bacon, which is not cheap and probably not the best for their health.

Hagar the Horrible

We discovered something they love to eat, and it is cheap and healthy. Our dogs go crazy over a small piece of raw carrot! Doug J., Denham Springs, La.

Dear Heloise:

At a time when we are rightly concerned for our security, I suggest that one should not have house keys on the same key ring as car keys. If somebody steals your car, that person also would have access to your house.

Snuffy Smith

Ellen in Lake Providence, La.

Ellen, good point, but one should NOT leave the car keys in the auto! The thief would have access to your home, but only if there is information in the auto with a home address on it.

#####

Heloise

Dear Heloise:

When I have to carry several things up to the second floor, I put as many as I can on the third or fourth step, and I climb behind. I repeat this again until I reach the top floor. I do the same in reverse when coming down.

Don, via email

Zits

Roswell Daily Record


FINANCIAL

B5

Investors keep faith in US in crisis after crisis Roswell Daily Record

NEW YORK (AP) — Global investors have stayed remarkably confident in the U.S. despite one budget crisis after another. But they’re starting to wonder if the latest political impasse will tarnish America’s Teflon image. So far, the nation’s reputation as the world’s best place to invest remains unshaken. The 10-year Treasury note, the bedrock of the government’s debt market, has attracted more money in recent weeks, not less, and the stock market is still close to record highs. Still, the squabbling in Washington over the debt ceiling, which follows squabbling over automatic spending cuts earlier this year, is severely testing investor patience. Many fear a default would be a tipping point, sending bond and stock prices plunging. The repeated budgetary brinkmanship is making some question their faith in the U.S. “The more times you give politicians a chance to completely muck something up, the more chance ... they will do it,” says Gary Jenkins, managing director of Swordfish Research in London. “If this were to become a regular occurrence, then, who knows?” The U.S. Treasury has warned it will run out of money if Congress does not agree to raise a $16.7 trillion cap on borrowing by Oct. 17 and allow it to issue more debt. That has raised the specter that the U.S. won’t be able to pay interest on its debt. Republicans say they won’t allow more borrowing unless Democrats agree to restructure benefits programs or

Thursday, October 10, 2013

The debt ceiling fight echoes the Congressional standoff over the same issue in the summer of 2011. Experts say the U.S. attracts money now for the same reason it did back then: Many other countries are faring worse than the U.S. China, India and Brazil are slowing dramatically. Japan is struggling to shake off a twodecade slump. The 17 countries of the eurozone have just emerged from a recession. “We’re the best of worst,” says David Sherman, head of Cohanzick Management, a manager of bond funds. He adds that the U.S. tends to “bounce back” from crises. In the 2011 crisis, for example, U.S. stock prices dropped, but recovered most of their losses by the end of the year. Many investors think the costs of a default are too high for politicians not to raise the borrowing cap before the deadline. But they’re still worried. Congress has not agreed on a spending bill for the new budget year that began Oct. 1. A lack of funding led to a partial shutdown of the government, which entered its ninth day on Wednesday. “If we’re having trouble with this government shutdown, and no negotiation, what’s going to happen in two weeks?” asks Talley Leger, a strategist Macro Vision Research, an investment consultancy. Leger thinks it may take a further drop in stocks, perhaps a big one, to force lawmakers to compromise.

AP Photo

Specialist Vincent Surace, right, calls out prices during the IPO of QTS Realty Trust, from Overland Park, Kansas, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange Wednesday.

cut the deficit; the White House has ruled out negotiations tied to the debt cap. The Treasury says a default on bond payments could freeze global credit, spike borrowing costs and trigger a collapse worse than the

Great Recession. Even with such a dire scenario, investors continue to buy Treasurys. On Tuesday, the yield on the 10-year note, which falls when investors buy, was 2.63 percent, near a two-month low.

U.S. stocks fell again on Tuesday, the 11th drop in the last 14 trading days. Still, the Standard and Poor’s 500 index reached an all-time high just three weeks ago and is only 4 percent below that peak.

Government shutdown takes toll on small business NEW YORK (AP) — The shutdown of the U.S. government is making it tough for small federal contractors like Craig Stowers to keep their businesses going. Stowers is tapping his company’s line of credit because he doesn’t know when it will be paid for work it’s done for the Defense Department. “I’m juggling funds now, just to keep afloat,” says Stowers, CEO of Vienna, Va.-based Ramarc Solutions, a provider of technology hardware and services for websites, wireless networking, Internet security and teleconferencing. The company gets about 25 percent of its revenue from the government. Some small contractors have had to lay off employees because there’s no work for them while the government is shut down. Others are dipping into credit lines because they’re not getting paid for work they’ve done, or for goods they’ve shipped. Many companies face longer waits to get contracts approved because federal employees aren’t processing previously submitted bids. Stowers will have to pay interest charges on his credit line and has no idea yet how much that will cost. He also had to cancel trips for staffers who were supposed to fly to New Mexico to install videoconferencing equipment at an Army National Guard base. He’s not sure if hotel charges and airfares will be refunded. Small businesses are likely to suffer more than larger

CATTLE/HOGS

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

low

settle

CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 13 127.90 128.15 127.80 128.00 Dec 13 132.32 132.32 124.80 131.95 Feb 14 134.05 134.07 133.40 133.57 Apr 14 134.97 134.97 127.82 134.67 Jun 14 129.70 129.75 129.02 129.40 Aug 14 127.85 127.90 127.60 127.75 Oct 14 130.70 130.70 130.50 130.70 Dec 14 131.20 131.60 131.20 131.40 Feb 15 132.40 132.40 132.20 132.20 Last spot N/A Est. sales 35324. Tue’s Sales: 31,024 Tue’s open int: 300796, up +2204 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Oct 13 164.85 164.90 163.82 164.55 Nov 13 166.37 166.47 165.50 166.37 Jan 14 166.57 166.72 165.62 166.37 Mar 14 165.82 166.00 164.87 165.70 Apr 14 166.20 166.20 165.62 166.12 May 14 166.20 166.20 165.50 166.20 Aug 14 167.15 167.22 166.50 167.10 Sep 14 165.75 Last spot N/A Est. sales 8370. Tue’s Sales: 6,455 Tue’s open int: 34972, up +464 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. 91.37 91.37 89.42 89.82 Oct 13 88.20 88.47 86.37 86.52 Dec 13 Feb 14 90.35 90.35 82.45 89.10 Apr 14 90.55 90.67 89.37 89.70 May 14 93.20 93.20 93.20 93.20 Jun 14 94.95 95.47 94.70 94.95 Jul 14 93.50 93.60 93.25 93.47 Aug 14 91.55 91.55 91.00 91.30 Oct 14 79.35 80.00 79.35 79.40 Dec 14 76.20 76.20 76.10 76.10 Feb 15 77.75 Last spot N/A Est. sales 50624. Tue’s Sales: 34,865 Tue’s open int: 310342, off -3402

chg.

-.27 -.37 -.48 -.40 -.35 -.15 +.08 -.40 -.40

-.25 +.05 -.20 -.17 -.18 -.02 +.23

-1.40 -1.68 -1.25 -.85 -.20 -.62 -.50 -.30 -.20 -.20

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 13 81.95 Dec 13 83.64 83.90 83.10 83.20 Mar 14 84.17 84.47 83.86 83.98 May 14 84.30 84.30 84.00 84.17 Jul 14 83.85 84.20 83.85 84.04 Oct 14 80.04 Dec 14 79.00 79.25 79.00 79.11 Mar 15 79.46 May 15 79.40 Jul 15 79.34 Oct 15 79.34 Dec 15 79.34 Mar 16 79.34 May 16 79.34 Jul 16 79.34 Last spot N/A Est. sales 21052. Tue’s Sales: 14,944 Tue’s open int: 207395, off -2592

chg.

-.24 -.49 -.17 +.09 +.19 +.19 +.11 +.76 +.76 +.76 +.76 +.76 +.76 +.76 +.76

GRAINS

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

low

settle

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 13 692ø 694fl 687 690ø Mar 14 702 704fl 697ü 700ø May 14 708 710 702fl 705 Jul 14 700 702ü 694fl 698ü Sep 14 704ü 706ø 700ü 703 Dec 14 714ø 715 709 712ü

chg.

-3 -3 -3ø -2 -2ü -2ø

Mar 15 717fl 718 716ø 718 May 15 715ü 717ø 715ü 717ø Jul 15 711 711 708ø 709ø Sep 15 714ø 714ø 713ü 713ü Dec 15 723ø 723ø 722ø 722ø Mar 16 725 725 724 724 May 16 725 725 724 724 Jul 16 717 717 715ü 715ü Last spot N/A Est. sales 82523. Tue’s Sales: 124,063 Tue’s open int: 366070, up +625 CORN 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 13 441ø 447 440ø 443ø Mar 14 454ü 459ø 453ü 456ü May 14 462 467ø 461fl 464fl Jul 14 469 474ø 469 472ü Sep 14 475ø 480 475 478 Dec 14 483 487ø 482 485ü Mar 15 493ø 495 492fl 494ø May 15 498ø 500 498ø 498fl Jul 15 500ü 501ø 499ü 501ø Sep 15 496 498ü 496 498ü Dec 15 498ø 498ø 495ü 497 Jul 16 509ü 509ü 509ü 509ü Dec 16 497fl 498ü 497fl 498ü Last spot N/A Est. sales 182210. Tue’s Sales: 387,954 Tue’s open int: 1215467, up +8750 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Dec 13 316 320 314ø 318 Mar 14 302fl 307ü 302ü 303fl May 14 305 305 300 301 Jul 14 294ø 294fl 294ø 294fl Sep 14 295ü 295ü 295ü 295ü Dec 14 302ü 302ü 302ü 302ü Mar 15 302ü 302ü 302ü 302ü May 15 302ü 302ü 302ü 302ü Jul 15 302ü 302ü 302ü 302ü Sep 15 302ü 302ü 302ü 302ü Jul 16 302ü 302ü 302ü 302ü Sep 16 302ü 302ü 302ü 302ü Last spot N/A Est. sales 1132. Tue’s Sales: 681 Tue’s open int: 11093, up +19 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Nov 13 1287ø 1293 1281ü 1287fl Jan 14 1285ü 1288fl 1278 1284 Mar 14 1274ü 1275ø 1266ø 1269 May 14 1252ø 1257ø 1247ø 1250ø Jul 14 1251ü 1253ø 1244 1247ø Aug 14 1240 1241ü 1234 1236ø Sep 14 1203 1204ü 1199 1199fl Nov 14 1178 1180 1173fl 1176ø Jan 15 1183 1183 1181ü 1181ü Mar 15 1182fl 1182fl 1180fl 1180fl May 15 1184fl 1184fl 1182 1182 Jul 15 1188fl 1188fl 1186 1186 Aug 15 1186ü 1186ü 1183ø 1183ø Sep 15 1173ü 1173ü 1170ø 1170ø Nov 15 1166ø 1170fl 1166ø 1170fl Jul 16 1160fl 1160fl 1158ü 1158ü Nov 16 1149fl 1149fl 1147 1147 Last spot N/A Est. sales 301358. Tue’s Sales: 548,964 Tue’s open int: 623084, up +7132

ones from the shutdown because they don’t have the financial cushions big companies have. “Their margins are a lot smaller and their cash flow is slimmer, so any type of delay is going to put them into jeopardy,” says Elizabeth Hyman, vice president for public advocacy at CompTIA, a technology industry trade association whose members include large corporations like Microsoft and much smaller tech companies. The government owes L ynn Petrazzuolo’s company $100,000, but it’s not paying up during the shutdown. Her Alexandria, Va.-based company, Avanti Corp. helps clients comply with environmental regulations and measure health and ecological risks. Its customers include the Interior Department and it gets all of its revenue from the government. She’s been forced to furlough nine workers and has reduced four full-timers to part-time hours. “That’s the hard part, explaining it to employees,” Petrazzuolo says. International Code Design, which gets more than half of its revenue from the government, can’t work on projects for NASA because its staffers need to be in contact with government workers who are now furloughed. “Everything we were doing came to a standstill,” says Michele Jackson, chief operating officer of the software company in Greenbelt, Md. She has had to tell the company’s handful of freelancers there’s no work.

FUTURES -2ø -2 -1 -1ü -1 -1 -1 -1fl

+1fl +1fl +2 +2ü +2fl +2ü +1fl +1ø +2ü +2ü

+1ü +fl +ø +ü

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

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. Nov 13 103.49 103.75 101.18 101.61 -1.88 Dec 13 103.29 103.50 101.02 101.43 -1.88 Jan 14 102.84 102.95 100.57 100.97 -1.83 Feb 14 101.98 101.98 99.93 100.32 -1.72 Mar 14 101.11 101.21 99.23 99.61 -1.60 Apr 14 100.07 100.20 98.38 98.81 -1.49 May 14 99.46 99.47 97.50 98.02 -1.38 Jun 14 98.51 98.60 96.71 97.27 -1.26 Jul 14 97.64 97.64 96.02 96.49 -1.15 Aug 14 96.67 96.78 95.25 95.78 -1.07 Sep 14 96.10 96.10 94.73 95.13 -1.02 Oct 14 95.29 95.29 94.00 94.47 -.98 Nov 14 93.87 -.95 Dec 14 94.09 94.44 92.80 93.32 -.92 Jan 15 92.65 -.89 Feb 15 92.01 -.84 Mar 15 91.42 -.80 Apr 15 90.66 90.82 90.49 90.82 -.76 May 15 90.32 -.71 Jun 15 90.35 90.35 89.43 89.87 -.67 Jul 15 89.31 -.63 Aug 15 88.80 -.61 Sep 15 88.41 -.58 Oct 15 88.03 -.56 Nov 15 87.73 -.54 Dec 15 88.16 88.34 87.06 87.47 -.52 Jan 16 87.37 87.37 86.99 86.99 -.50 Feb 16 86.56 -.47 Mar 16 86.16 -.45 Apr 16 85.81 -.43 May 16 85.50 -.41 Last spot N/A Est. sales 600077. Tue’s Sales: 938,074 Tue’s open int: 1871940, off -5021 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Nov 13 2.6365 2.6535 2.5950 2.6230 -.0076 Dec 13 2.6288 2.6406 2.5845 2.6082 -.0135 Jan 14 2.6290 2.6361 2.5823 2.6034 -.0163 Feb 14 2.6339 2.6381 2.5907 2.6104 -.0182 Mar 14 2.6479 2.6532 2.6041 2.6251 -.0183

Apr 14 2.8042 2.8042 2.7650 2.7773 May 14 2.7934 2.7934 2.7538 2.7730 Jun 14 2.7691 2.7765 2.7344 2.7522 Jul 14 2.7341 2.7341 2.7255 2.7255 Aug 14 2.6948 Sep 14 2.6613 Oct 14 2.5125 2.5288 2.5110 2.5288 Nov 14 2.4998 Dec 14 2.4727 2.4828 2.4689 2.4828 Jan 15 2.4793 Feb 15 2.4858 Mar 15 2.4973 Apr 15 2.6273 May 15 2.6298 Jun 15 2.6148 Jul 15 2.5968 Aug 15 2.5778 Sep 15 2.5548 Oct 15 2.4348 Nov 15 2.4048 Dec 15 2.3848 Jan 16 2.3848 Feb 16 2.3868 Last spot N/A Est. sales 131837. Tue’s Sales: 189,883 Tue’s open int: 230737, off -1239 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Nov 13 3.724 3.734 3.673 3.679 Dec 13 3.877 3.887 3.835 3.839 Jan 14 3.976 3.986 3.939 3.943 Feb 14 3.981 3.989 3.942 3.947 Mar 14 3.951 3.963 3.921 3.924 Apr 14 3.895 3.942 3.867 3.871 May 14 3.900 3.942 3.889 3.889 Jun 14 3.940 3.942 3.918 3.920 Jul 14 3.964 3.969 3.942 3.952 Aug 14 3.973 3.978 3.942 3.964 Sep 14 3.969 3.971 3.942 3.958 Oct 14 3.997 4.004 3.942 3.976 Nov 14 4.062 4.062 4.038 4.043 Dec 14 4.216 4.216 4.195 4.195 Jan 15 4.287 4.295 4.274 4.281 Feb 15 4.275 4.275 4.258 4.258 Mar 15 4.202 4.209 4.194 4.194 Apr 15 4.000 4.008 3.997 3.997 May 15 4.024 4.030 4.006 4.006 Last spot N/A Est. sales 298950. Tue’s Sales: 898,349 Tue’s open int: 1246549, off -21423

METALS

NEW YORK (AP) _ Spot nonferrous metal prices Wed. Aluminum -$0.8248 per lb., London Metal Exch. Copper -$3.2800 Cathode full plate, LME. Copper -$3.2215 N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Lead - $2056.00 metric ton, London Metal Exch. Zinc - $0.8391 per lb., London Metal Exch. Gold - $1304.00 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Gold - $1306.90 troy oz., NY Merc spot Wed. Silver - $21.850 Handy & Harman (only daily quote). Silver - $21.846 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed. Platinum -$1388.00 troy oz., N.Y. (contract). Platinum -$1379.50 troy oz., N.Y. Merc spot Wed. n.q.-not quoted n.a.-not available r-revised

GET NOTICED

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE CALL TODAY

575.622.7710

-.0190 -.0190 -.0189 -.0188 -.0202 -.0214 -.0224 -.0209 -.0179 -.0169 -.0169 -.0169 -.0179 -.0179 -.0179 -.0179 -.0179 -.0179 -.0179 -.0179 -.0179 -.0179 -.0179

-.037 -.030 -.026 -.026 -.023 -.022 -.021 -.020 -.019 -.019 -.020 -.019 -.017 -.016 -.016 -.015 -.015 -.012 -.012

AP Photo

Craig Stowers Jr., president of Ramarc Solutions, LLC, poses in the door of a client’s conference room in downtown Washington on Tuesday. Stowers is tapping his company’s line of credit because he doesn’t know when he’ll be paid for work he’s done for the government.

NYSE

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

MARKET SUMMARY AMEX

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

NASDAQ

MOST ACTIVE ($1 OR MORE)

Name Vol (00) Last Chg S&P500ETF1544153165.60+.12 Barc iPVix 956543 16.37 -.59 BkofAm 946334 13.84 +.15 SPDR Fncl 758051 19.64 +.07 Alcoa 649437 8.10 +.16

Name Vol (00) AlldNevG 50016 InovioPhm 44362 NovaGld g 41129 NwGold g 35499 CheniereEn 33852

Name EmOPES n EmpOP60 n MensW CSVInvBrnt HewlettP

Name Last Chg %Chg Name SwedLC22 27.00 +5.03 +22.9 AltairN rs Neuralstem 2.50 +.29 +13.1 Ku6Media EmersnR h 2.00 +.14 +7.5 Callidus 3.53 +.21 +6.3 UranmR rs TrioTch Lannett 17.96 +.96 +5.6 xG Tech n

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE) Last Chg 82.30+37.30 29.44 +6.44 45.03 +9.79 35.00 +6.50 22.60 +1.85

%Chg +82.9 +28.0 +27.8 +22.8 +8.9

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

DIARY

Volume

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

Name Vol (00) Last Facebook 1450565 46.77 AriadP 800320 5.83 11.31 MicronT 668892 18.15 PwShs QQQ63431576.98

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Last 2.85 2.10 5.90 7.90 6.98

DIARY

PE

Last

Chg

1.80 .80 .04 1.94 4.00 1.12 .75f .75 3.58 2.52 .40 .58 1.20a .90 3.80 2.64

25 12 25 21 9 20 19 47 12 9 12 ... 5 12 13 19

33.75 +.64 63.86 -.42 13.84 +.15 114.47 -.97 116.13 -.60 37.08 -.20 63.59 -.41 171.52 +.06 51.48 +.05 85.16 -.35 16.62 +.12 22.60 +1.85 39.73 -.70 22.59 +.11 181.32 +2.60 85.96 +.35

Chg +.93 +.29 +1.32 +.31 +.31

%Chg +22.6 +15.4 +15.3 +13.7 +10.6

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

170 226 36 432 6 15

INDEXES

Last 14,802.98 6,459.51 483.16 9,497.02 2,295.61 3,677.78 1,656.40 17,668.15 1,043.46

YTD %Chg Name +.1 +37.9 +19.2 +51.9 +7.4 +2.3 +27.7 +42.0 +19.9 -1.6 +28.3 +58.6 -14.7 +9.6 -5.3 +22.6

+.23 -.24

Chg %Chg Name Last Chg %Chg -.35 -10.9 AriadP 5.83-11.31 -66.0 -.15 -6.7 CorpResSv 3.15 -.89 -22.0 -.41 -6.5 CytRx 2.23 -.51 -18.6 -.50 -6.0 CancerGen 15.39 -3.36 -17.9 -.41 -5.531 Celgene rt 2.02 -.38 -15.8

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Net Chg +26.45 +12.76 +2.27 +13.85 -14.24 -17.05 +.95 -11.01 -3.80

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

Div

Last 5.05 2.14 9.92 2.57 3.24

DIARY

85,051,754 Volume

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

Chg -.37 -

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

LOSERS ($2 OR MORE)

3,514,086,800 Volume

52-Week High Low 15,709.58 12,471.49 6,754.81 4,838.10 537.86 435.57 9,906.32 7,841.76 2,472.00 2,186.97 3,819.28 2,810.80 1,729.86 1,343.35 18,409.85 14,036.94 1,087.78 763.55

Name

1,466 1,575 133 3,174 29 88

Chg -.01 +.01 -.15 -.07 +.48

GAINERS ($2 OR MORE)

Name Last Chg %Chg Name K12 17.60-10.99 -38.4 RetractTc Pretium g 4.70 -2.07 -30.6 NovaGld g PumaBio n 40.52 -7.64 -15.9 Medgenics Lentuo 2.93 -.55 -15.8 Alteva CastleAM 14.75 -1.64 -10.0 AmpioPhm

Advanced Declined Unchanged Total issues New Highs New Lows

Last 4.41 2.13 2.10 5.69 34.98

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

1,087 1,417 120 2,624 31 49oTch

2,160,226,566

% Chg +.18 +.20 +.47 +.15 -.62 -.46 +.06 -.06 -.36

YTD % Chg +12.96 +21.72 +6.64 +12.48 -2.55 +21.80 +16.14 +17.83 +22.85

52-wk % Chg +10.93 +29.03 +1.01 +15.41 -5.21 +20.51 +15.63 +18.15 +26.21

Div

PE

Last

Chg

YTD %Chg

1.72 1.12f 2.88f .66 2.27 .96 1.56f .16 1.20f 1.15 .70e 2.12f 1.88 .40f 1.20 1.12

26 13 21 17 19 15 8 29 24 18 ... 94 14 15 11 14

47.27 33.07 51.47 22.59 79.50 28.29 56.90 14.95 39.29 64.61 18.10 46.20 73.00 20.45 40.36 27.77

-.48 +.06 +.05 +.19 +.57 +.05 +.01 +.13 +.05 -.41 +.04 +.15 +.10 -.11 +.12 +.19

+15.5 +23.8 -4.7 +10.1 +16.2 +12.8 +7.2 +46.0 +27.2 +35.1 +12.8 +6.8 +7.0 +21.2 +18.1 +4.0

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


B6 Thursday, October 10, 2013

GARAGE SALES

002. Northeast

824 SWINGING Spear, Friday-Saturday, 9am-5pm.

518 E. 6th St. Sat 8am. 8 families, the last of the year, the same people of 310 E. Poe. Only beautiful and good stuff for everone.

002. Northeast

SENIOR CIRCLE garage sale 8 am. to noon, Saturday, Oct 12. More than 40 participants, everything from antiques to clothes to dishes to kitchen stuff, jewelry, clothing, shelled pecans and tons of books! Including a life-size animated Santa and genuine antique Hummel figures, snow globes, burritos and baked goods, golf items, 2801 N. Main St., next door to Family Dollar.

004. Southeast 107 E. Ballard, Fri-Sat, 8am-?, lots of misc.

004. Southeast 726 E. Pear St., Sat., 8am-?, A little bit of everything

Legals

-----------------------------------------------------------------------Publish September 19, 26, October 3, 10, 2013 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

No. D-504-CV-2013-00226

BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., Plaintiff, vs.

JASON T. FOSTER AND COLLEEN G. FOSTER, Defendants. NOTICE OF SALE

Notice is hereby given that on October 16, 2013, at the hour of 11:30 am the undersigned Special Master, or her designee, will, at the west steps entrance of the Chaves County Courthouse, at 400 N. Main, Roswell, NM 88202, sell all of the rights, title and interest of the above-named Defendants, in and to the hereinafter described real estate to the highest bidder for cash. The property to be sold is located at 505 S. Cedar Avenue, Roswell, New Mexico 88203, (if there is a conflict between the legal description and the street address, the legal description shall control) and is more particularly described as follows: Lot 18, Block 9 of Thorne Subdivision, in the City of Roswell, County of CHAVES and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat recorded February 10, 1948 in Plat Book B, Page 93, Real Property Records of CHAVES County, New Mexico,

including any improvements, fixtures, and attachments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes. Subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to a one (1) month right of redemption by the Defendants upon entry of an order approving sale. The foregoing sale will be made to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on September 11, 2013, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the above-described property. The Plaintiff's judgment is $92,900.13, and the same bears interest at the rate of 6.0000% per annum, which accrues at the rate of $15.27 per diem, commencing on September 19, 2013, with the Court reserving entry of final judgment against said Defendants Jason T. Foster and Colleen G. Foster for the amount due after foreclosure sale, for costs and attorney's fees, plus interest as may be assessed by the Court. The Plaintiff has the right to bid at such sale all of its judgment amount 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.

The Court's decree, having duly appointed its Special Master to advertise and immediately offer for sale the subject real estate and to apply the proceeds of sale, first to the costs of sale and the Special Master's fees, then to pay the above-described judgment, interest, and costs of sale, and to pay unto the registry of the Court any balance remaining to satisfy future adjudication of priority mortgage holders;

NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that in the event that said property is not sooner redeemed, the undersigned will as set forth above, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, the lands and improvements described above for the purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of priorities, the judgment described herein and decree of foreclosure together with any additional costs and attorney's fees, costs of advertisement and publication, a reasonable receiver and Special Master's fee to be fixed by the Court. The total amount of the judgment due is $92,900.13, plus interest to and including date of sale of $427.56 for a total judgment plus interest of $93,327.69. Sale is subject to the entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of this sale.

Witness my hand this 16th day of September, 2013. /s/ Bernadette F. Gutierrez - Electronically Filed BERNADETTE F. GUTIERREZ, Special Master PO Box 91988 Albuquerque, NM 87199-1988 Telephone: (505) 433-4576 Facsimile: (505) 433-4577 E-mail: bernadette@ancillaryls.com

CLASSIFIEDS

005. South

501 W. 5th, Saturday, 7am-11am. Multi Church garage sale.

006. Southwest

STATE SALE 1003 Plaza del Sol, Sat-Sun. 9am-3pm. 4702 W. Jefferson, Fri. & Sat., 7am, 3 family yard sale, everything must go, tools, chairs, camping & lots more 1403 S. Missouri, Thur-Sun, 7-2pm, clothing shoes, toys, jewerly, misc. 2101 FULKERSON, Fri-Sat, 8-4pm, refrigerator, freezer, play pens, lots of new baby clothes, shoes

008. Northwest GARAGE SALE, 808 N. Kentucky. Clothes and misc. items. Sat 19th, 7-12pm.

711 W. 8th, Sat., & Sun., 7am-4pm, Lots of books, furniture, kitchen & house hold items, portable baby bed, & kids stuff, peg board display panels, Nordic track, Rockwell table shaper, IBM Selectric typewriter and much more

008. Northwest

1511 N. Montana, Thurs. & Fri., 7am-3pm, 2 family inside sale, women & children-lg., med., sm., clothes,children’s toys & furniture, books, Nora Roberts and other good authors, bird cage w/accesories, mountain bike, rug 10x12 red, and much more

INSTRUCTION

EMPLOYMENT

045. Employment Opportunities

ANNOUNCEMENTS 025. Lost and Found

LOST cat, black w/bushy tail, between 5 & 6 mos old, no markings. Reward offered. 575-437-8779 LOST DIAMOND tennis bracelet at FairQueen contest, livestock show or parade. Sentimental value. Reward 626-3385 MALE JACK russell terrier “sparky” Found 9/26 N. Kentucky/College, cute and friendly. Needs new home. 575-626-4822, 624-3258 FOUND 10/05/2013, young male Chihuahua, near Wool Bowl. No collar or tags. Call to identify, 575-623-4894. FOUND IN Enchanted Hills area, female pit bull. Please call 575-622-8965.

Legals

-----------------------------------------------------------------------Publish September 26, October 3, 10, 17, 2013

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

No. D-504-CV-2013-00210 U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, vs.

Roswell Daily Record

Plaintiff,

BONNIE JANE MORRIS, and if married, JOHN DOE A (true name unknown), her spouse; and NEW MEXICO MORTGAGE FINANCE AUTHORITY, Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that on October 22, 2013, 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 407 South Hemlock Avenue, Roswell, and is situate in Chaves County, New Mexico, and is particularly described as follows: LOT SEVENTEEN (17) in BLOCK ONE (1) of THORNE SUBDIVISION, in the City of Roswell, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat filed in the Chaves County Clerk's Office on February 10, 1948 and recorded in Book B of Plat Records, Chaves County, New Mexico, at Page 93.

THE FOREGOING SALE will be made to satisfy a judgment rendered by the above Court in the above entitled and numbered cause on September 13, 2013, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the above described property. The Plaintiff's Judgment, which includes interest and costs, is $76,652.33 and the same bears interest at 4.500% per annum from July 29, 2013, to the date of sale. The amount of such interest to the date of sale will be $812.72. 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

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

JFA Distributing LLC •Management opportunity •Paid vacations •Training Provided

1600/month per agreement

(575) 578-4817

CALL TODAY start immediately. $1600/mo per written agreement. Full time, no experience needed. Call Rick at 575-578-4817. 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 There is an immediate part time position open for front office personnel in a small office. The applicant must have good time management skills, extremely organized, have a flexible schedule, punctual, can multitask, and work under pressure in a busy office. The skills that are required for this position are: building worksheets in Excel, have accounting or bookkeeping experience, and be familiar with Quickbooks. Please submit resume to PO Box 1897 unit 356, Roswell NM 88202 FRONTIER MEDICAL is currently accepting applications for the following positions: Part time RN, CNA & Office Staff, clerical. All resumes and applications can be delivered to 217-A N. Main Street. THOUGHT OF driving Big Rigs the oil fields are going strong and Companies are looking for CDL Drivers. In less than 2 months you can have your Class A License and making the money you deserve. Classes are forming now. Artesia Training Academy is VA approved, you can call Artesia Training Academy for more information. Or visit our web site. Phone # 575-748-9766 or 1-888-586-0144 Web site: www.artesiatraining.com Check us out on Facebook

045. Employment Opportunities

LOOKING FOR house keeping and front desk, must be flexible with schedule. Apply in person. Hampton Inn and Suites. 3607 N Main OFFICE, PART time, typical duties. Submit resume to PO Box 1797, Roswell, NM 88202. IMMEDIATE OPENING for a Full-time Bookkeeper: Looking for a hard working individual for bookkeeper position in a fast paced office. Quick Books experience needed. Job requires accuracy and multi-tasking. Benefits available. Send resume to PO Box 1757, Roswell, NM 88202

Registered Nurse Full or PT

HDFS is seeking RNs to provide healthcare coordination, health assessments and health related teaching to people with developmental disabilities and their staff living in the Roswell and surrounding community. Some instate travel required.. Excellent salary and benefit package. Email asalmon@highdesertfs.com

or visit us at www.highdesertfs.com

ALL ABOUT SPAS is accepting applications for full time Sales Clerk. Great earning potential with opportunity for advancement. Must be able to pass drug screening & background check. Inquire at All About Spas, 3700 N. Main St., Roswell. CARDIOLOGY CLINIC Office Manager

Our core values and large network of cardiologists make this practice a unique and desirable opportunity for a results-driven healthcare leader. This position is responsible for overseeing office operations, including activities encompassed in the delivery of care and services provided to all NMHI patients, and efficient daily operation of each assigned functional area. Requirements: 5 years’ experience as a leader in the medical field; Bachelors degree required. Email your qualified resume to resumes@nmhi.com

IMMEDIATE OPENING for an all around handy man. The more verified skills, the higher the pay. Apply in person ONLY at 2803 W 2nd ST. NOW HIRING for Sales Manager, Front Desk, & Serving positions. Serious inquiries only. Apply in person at Holiday Inn, 3620 N. Main.

Legals

-----------------------------------------------------------------------Publish October 3, 10, 2013 NOTICE OF SALE TO SATISFY LIEN SECURITY SELF STORAGE

906 West McGaffey, Roswell, NM 88203 575-622-0000

LINDA CHAPIN

JESSICA ROGERS

THE ABOVE NAMED PERSONS ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT THE GOODS, WARES AND MERCHANDISE LEFT BY THEM IN SELF-STORAGE WITH SECURITY SELF-STORAGE WILL BE AUCTIONED, SOLD OR DISPOSED OF BY SAID COMPANY IF NOT CLAIMED BY 5:00 PM ON OCTOBER 17, 2013. PURPOSE OF THE SALE IS TO SATISFY THE LIEN OF SAID COMPANY FOR STORAGE OF SAID GOODS, WARES AND MERCHANDISE, TOGETHER WITH INCIDENTAL AND PROPER CHARGES PERTAINING THERETO, INCLUDING THE REASONABLE EXPENSES OF THIS SALE AS ALLOWED BY LAWS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO.

045. Employment Opportunities

MURPHY EXPRESS is now hiring 2 part time cashier positions available. Apply online at murphyusa.com. MAINTENANCE POSITION FT, experience not necessary. Apply at Roswell Summit Apart. FRED LOYA Insurance is hiring bilingual customer service representative. High school diploma required. Please apply at 2601-B N Main St. DENTAL ASSISTANT wanted for a friendly and modern dental office and team. Must be able to multi-task and learn all office duties. Energetic and detail oriented person with a focus on patient service and willing to take direction and instructions. Experience preferred, but will train the right person. Send resume to PO Box 3773, Roswell, NM 88202. EXPANDING HVAC business has openings for Service Technicians and HVAC installers. Individuals with knowledge in heat pumps, furnaces, controls, boilers and chillers a plus. Must have a clean driving record, and pass a background check and drug test. Experience preferred but not required. Interested applicants may email a resume with work experience and previous employment references to

hvac_serviceinstall@yahoo.com

CONSTRUCTION PROJECT manager and project manager assistant. Health Insurance, 401k retirement plan, profit sharing, paid vacation time. Apply in person only at 512 S Main. WANTED RNS, LPNs, CNAs for local PRN and Contract positions! Be in control of your own career. Call 575-746-6117 today!! BILINGUAL CUSTOMER Service/Administrative Assistant needed. Salary, medical and 401K. Call Jeff or Danica at 575-623-6820 or apply in person at 4001 W. 2nd, Roswell, NM.

Tobosa Developmental Services is seeking a Case Manager to act as a service coordinator for a caseload of people served. The position requirements includes facilitating meetings, working a coordinating with outside agencies, coordinating and completing all required documentation pertaining to individuals served. Applicant must have experience in the developmental disabilities field and interest in a desire for working with persons with developmental disabilities. A degree in human services field or a related field is preferred. Salary is negotiable based on experience and education level. Apply at Tobosa Developmental Services, 110 E. Summit, Roswell, NM 88203 or call 575-624-1025. Applications close on October 11, 2013. EOE AMERIPRIDE LINEN Requisition#106620

Production Employees October 4, 2013 to October 14, 2013 Production Employees needed: High School diploma or GED. Must be able to pass drug test. Application must be filled out on-line. No walk-ins or phone calls will be accepted. Go to ameripride.com. Click on about us and select careers. AA/EEO EMPLOYEE M/F/D/V

ATTENTION DEDICATED & REGIONAL DRIVERS! Averitt Offers Excellent Benefits & Hometime. CDL-A req. 888-362-8608. Recent Grads w/a CDL-A, 1-6 wks. Paid Training. Apply online at AverittCareers.com Equal Opportunity Employer

045. Employment Opportunities

Avon, Buy/Sell. Become Ind. Sales Rep $10 to start Sandy 317-5079 ISR ADVERTISE YOUR DRIVER JOBS in 33 New Mexico newspapers for only $100. Your 25-word classified ad will reach more than 288,000 readers. Call this newspaper to place your ad or log onto www.nmpress.org for more information. ADVANCED PRACTICE PROVIDER (NP, PA, CNS) Our core values and large network of cardiologists make this practice a unique and desirable opportunity for a results-driven healthcare provider. This position provides care to patients in their specialized area of training and collaborates as necessary with an NMHI physician and/or other members of the healthcare team when the needs of the patient are beyond their scope of practice. Requirements: Degree from an accredited NP, CNS or PA school and licensed to practice in NM. To be considered, email your resume to resumes@nmhi.com

LOCAL BUSINESS looking for an individual with concrete and basic carpentry background to assist with some installations within the State of New Mexico. Individual hired could work into a supervisory position quickly. Salary dependent on experience. Driver’s license required. Drug test and background check will be completed before hiring. Interested individuals can stop by A K Sales & Consulting, 115 E. Country Club Rd., Roswell, 575-623-1488 or mail resume. GB98 preferred. LOCAL INSURANCE office seeks a careeroriented service professional. Position best suits individual who is passionate about serving customers, taking on challenges, attentive to detail, excellent communication and multi-tasking skills. Company will invest in training and offers opportunity for growth. Email resume to: resume9393@gmail.com CHAVES COUNTY is accepting applications for a six month pool for the Part-time position of Deputy Assesor in the County Assessor’s Office. This is an entry level position: $10.95 - $12.36/hr DOQ. Minimum qualifications: HS diploma or GED, three years clerical experience. Responsibilities inlcude but are not limited to, data entry of business and personal property reports as well as assuring accuracy of Notices of Valuation. Applicant must be able to use a ten-key calculator by touch, operate personal computer proficiently, understand basic computer programs, be detailed oriented and work with maximum accuracy. Knowledge of legal description, title work, real estate terminology and bilingual helpful. Chaves County is a drug free employer. All applicants this position will be required to pass a background check and be subject to a post offer, pre-employment drug test. Required applicaitons forms are available at the County’s Job Position Board located in the west wing of the County Administrative Center or by accessing the web site at www.co.chaves.nm.us. Applications may be returned to the County Manager’s Suite #180, Chaves County Administrative Center, #1 St. Mary’s PL, Roswell, NM 88203 or mailed by closing date to Human Resources, PO Box 1817, Roswell, NM 88202-1817. Applications will be accepted until 5:00 PM, Friday, October 18, 2013. EOE.


Roswell Daily Record 045. Employment Opportunities

TELECOMMUNICATIONS OFFICER “Dispatcher” Salary is $13.52 hourly. Applications will be accepted until 4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, October 16, 2013. Complete job description and applications at the Village of Ruidoso, 313 Cree Meadows Dr. Ruidoso, NM 88345. Phone 258-4343 or 1-877-700-4343. Fax 258-5848. Website www.ruidoso-nm.gov “Drugfree Workplace” EEOE. Tobosa Developmental Services is seeking a Registered Nurse and/or Licensed Practical Nurse. Position is responsible for maintaining the highest level of nursing documentation as guided by best practices for documentation standards by the mainstream healthcare industry and maintaining a flexible case load of low to moderate acuity patients. Experience with developmentally disabled preferred but not required. Please submit current resume with completed application, police background check, and driving record. Apply at Tobosa Developmental Services, 110 E. Summit, Roswell, NM 88203 or call 575-624-1025. Salary is negotiable based on experience and education level. Applications close October 11, 2013. EOE THE HOLIDAY Inn Express & Suites is looking for a friendly and professional Maintenance person to join our team. Ideally you will have building services experience in a customer-facing environment. Please apply between 9 and 5 Monday through Friday at 2300 N Main street.

045. Employment Opportunities

DRIVERS - LOCAL CDL/Hazmat, 2 yrs exp (tanker preferred), good MVR. Full Benefit Package. Griffin Transportation Fax 806-785-4182 Call 806-744-2067 Ask for Transportation Dept THE CHAVES County Sheriff’s Office is accepting applications for the position of Deputy Sheriff. Entry level salary range: $15.20 to 17.09/hr DOQ. Current top out rate is $22.13. Benefits include: 25 year retirement @ 90% under PERA Police Plan 5, medical and dental insurance, uniforms, weapons and take home vehicle. Applicants must be 21 yoa, a US citizen, HS Graduate or GED, in good physical and mental condition. Must be a New Mexico State Certified Peace Officer or become one within one year. Valid NM driver’s license, good driving record and no felony convictions. Applicants will be subject to criminal history and background checks, written exam and oral interview, pre-employment drug screen, physical and psychological testing, Qualified applicants will be notified of test days. Required application forms are available at the County’s Job Posting Board located in the west wing of the County Administrative Center or by accessing the web site at www. co.chaves.nm.us. Applications may be returned to the County Manager’s Suite #180, Chaves County Administrative Center, #1 St. Mary’s PL, Roswell, NM 88203 or mailed by closing date to Human Resources, PO Box 1817, Roswell, NM 88202-187. Applications will be accepted until 5:00 PM, Friday, November 1, 2013. EOE.

045. Employment Opportunities

SEEKING FULL time night nurse at NMMI. 624-8235 for more information. LOCAL BUSINESS looking for an individuals to join our team to assist with installations/assembly of various types of athletic & background equipment and furniture throughout the State of New Mexico. We will provide transportation to out of town jobs and lodging with per diem when applicable. Looking for individuals with some construction background. Salary dependent on experience. Interested individuals can stop by A K Sales & Consulting, 115 E. Country Club Rd., Roswell, 575-623-1488. Background and drug test will be required prior to hiring. ROSWELL JOB Corps, operated by Del-Jen,Inc is currently accepting resumes for Security Officers. Under direct supervision, patrols assigned area to ensure safety of students, property and equipment. Qualifications – HS Diploma or GED plus one year of security experience. Valid drivers license and good driving record. Email resumes to aranda.irma@jobcorps.org ATTENTION DEDICATED & REGIONAL DRIVERS! Averitt Offers Excellent Benefits & Hometime. CDL-A req. 888-362-8608. Recent Grads w/a CDL-A, 1-6 wks. Paid Training. Apply online at AverittCareers.com Equal Opportunity Employer NEED CASH? Be your own boss & build your business at Blairs Monterey indoor market at 1400 W. 2nd. Booths start at $75 mo Call 623-0136

CLASSIFIEDS

045. Employment Opportunities

LOOKING FOR desk clerk and manager. Experience preferred. Apply in person at 3575 N. Main St.

225. General Construction

Alpha Construction New Construction, remodels, additions, concrete & painting. Lic. & Bonded Call Adam 626-2050 TILING, drywall and painting, house repairs. For low price, 622-6719

SERVICES

080. Alterations

ALTERATIONS & MISC. SEWING - 840-8065.

135. Ceramic Tile

CERAMIC TILE Do you need to tile your floor? Here in Roswell, Ben does it for you. From $295 ONLY per room. It includes everything. I also do small plumbing jobs. 505-990-1628 or 575-825-0579 (cell)

140. Cleaning

JD CLEANING Service, Licensed and bonded. References. 623-4252 I CLEAN HOUSES, OFFICES, WINDOWS, & DO SEWING. 840-8065 SUNSHINE WINDOW Services. Free estimates. 575-626-5153 or 626-5458

195. Elderly Care

CNA 25 yrs experience, will care for your loved ones, Med certified. 637-1727

210. Firewood/Coal MOUNTAIN WOOD for sale, Delivery available. 575-420-5124

CORDOVA CHIMNEY Sweep. 575-623-5255 or 575-910-7552

220. Furniture Repair WE BUILD and repair furniture. 840-7849 or 626-8466

225. General Construction

Olaguez Construction: Free estimates, complete remodeling including plumbing, additions, tile, sheds, concrete, fence, roof, stucco, windows, painting, & doors. Guaranteed Work. 910-7035 Miguel.

Thursday, October 10, 2013

232. Chimney Sweep

CHIMNEY SWEEP Have your woodstove, fireplace, or pellet stove inspected and cleaned. Dust free Guarantee. 39 yrs Exp., Licensed, Insured. Bulldog Janitorial Services 575-308-9988

235. Hauling

RWC. BACKHOE, skid steer, dump truck, bom lift, services. Insured. Call Hector 575-910-8397. www.rancheroswelding.com

PROPERTY CLEANUPS Tear down old bldgs, barns, haul trash, old farm equip. 347-0142/317-7738

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

WW LAWN Service Property cleanup - Mowing - Shrub & hedge trimming & much more. Call Juan, 626-6121.

285. Miscellaneous Services

SAVE ON Cable TVInternet-Digital PhoneSatellite. You`ve Got A Choice! Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 888-706-8846 SAVE $$$ on AUTO INSURANCE from the major names you know and trust. No forms. No hassle. No obligation. Call READY FOR MY QUOTE now! CALL 1-888-719-6435 ANYONE NEEDING home care or housekeeping, call 575-291-9586 ATTENTION SLEEP APNEA SUFFERERS with Medicare. Get FREE CPAP Replacement Supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 1-866-938-5101.

270. Landscape/ Lawnwork

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

MEDICAL ALERT for Seniors - 24/7 monitoring. FREE Equipment. FREE Shipping. Nationwide Service. $29.95/Month CALL Medical Guardian Today 888-416-2099

WE WORK All Yard work & hauling. Call Will at 317-7402 Bòidheach Yards and Gardens. Property cleanup & hauling, year round maintenance, landscaping, tree management. You'll love our prices! 578-9404. LAWN-SERVICE Year-round maintenance, trimming, re-seeding, trash, cleaning & hauling, sprinkers. Low prices. 575-914-0803 Fall Clean-up rake leaves, tree trimming, weed eating, haul trash, property clean-up & much more. Call Joseph, 317-2242.

“Big E’s” Landscaping & Yardwork mow, trim, prune property clean-up, sprinkler sys. senior disc. 914-6025

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. SAVE ON Cable TVInternet-Digital PhoneSatellite. You`ve Got A Choice! Options from ALL major service providers. Call us to learn more! CALL Today. 888-706-8846 MEDICAL ALERT for Seniors - 24/7 monitoring. FREE Equipment. FREE Shipping. Nationwide Service. $29.95/Month CALL Medical Guardian Today 888-416-2099

LANDSCAPE, CUTTING grass, mowing, trimming, cut down trees. 910-2033

RETIRED GUYS will mow & edge yards. Reasonable! Call Charlie & Mike. 910-1358.

ATTENTION SLEEP APNEA SUFFERERS with Medicare. Get FREE CPAP Replacement Supplies at NO COST, plus FREE home delivery! Best of all, prevent red skin sores and bacterial infection! Call 1-866-938-5101.

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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

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Dennis the Menace

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.

285. Miscellaneous Services

SAVE $$$ on AUTO INSURANCE from the major names you know and trust. No forms. No hassle. No obligation. Call READY FOR MY QUOTE now! CALL 1-888-719-6435

310. Painting/ Decorating

Quality Painting! Affordable prices, Sr. Discounts. Mike 622-0072 INTERIOR, EXTERIOR painting, free estimates, 20yrs experience, 575-914-3522 EXTERIOR/INTERIOR, INSURED. Call Hector 575-910-8397.

www.rancheroswelding.com

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

330. Plumbing

GAS LINES and plumbing specials, best prices, licensed, 840-9105

345. Remodeling

BERRONES CONSTRUCTION. Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing. Licensed, Bonded. Ray: 626-4153.

EXPIRES ________

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

WORD AD DEADLINE To Place or Cancel an Ad

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

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

CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS

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

LEGALS

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

www.rdrnews.com

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

RWC Lath and Stucco. Insuranced. Hector (575)910-8397

www.rancheroswelding.com

405. TractorWork

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. 623-4185 TREE TRIMMING AND REMOVAL, free estimates, super clean up, 840-9105 QuickCut Tree Services Best prices, great clean-up. Call for free estimates, 575-208-8963. Allen’s Tree Srvc. Trim top removal, good clean up. Free estimates. 626-1835

435. Welding

RWC On site repairs or fabrication. Insuranced.

CONCRETE, STUCCO, cabinets, floors, painting, drywall, welding. Call Gerry 575-420-3825

490. Homes For Sale

350. Roofing

RWC SHINGLE Roofings. Insuranced. Hector (575)910-8397 www.rancheroswelding.com

Guaranteed Shingle Roof jobs. Locally owned. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 622-2552.

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Hector (575) 910-8397

FINANCIAL

REAL ESTATE

3BR, 1 3/4ba, north part of town, 3110 N. Bandolina, 1 car garage, all new carpet, paint & roof, 2 blks from swimming pool. Priced to sell, $108,000. Owner may finance w/large down payment. 622-5031 or 420-1022

2br/1ba, wood floors, carport, large lot, 2 storage areas, new gas furnace, $59k with allowance for new kitchen floor, $3k down, 503 S. Kansas. 575-973-2353 BEAUTIFUL COUNTRY home on 5 acres, 5037 W. Berrendo Rd., pictures & information on forsalebyowner.com listing #23966971. Call 575-626-2280.

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RDRNEWS.COM

INTERNET DIRECTORY EY E W EA R Brent’s Eyewear

Stucco, Lath, synthetic, guaranteed work. Memo 575-637-1217

www.rancheroswelding.com

69B>C>HIG6I>K: 6HH>HI6CI

AU T O Roswell Ford-Lincoln-Mercury 821 N. Main • 623-3673

395. Stucco Plastering

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

Published every Thursday in the Roswell Daily Record

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

B7

www.roswellford.com

facebook.com/brentseyewear2020 207 N. Union St • 623-9990

FINA NC IA L Pioneer Bank www.pioneerbnk.com 3000 N. Main • 306 N. Pennsylvania • 300 S. Sunset • 624-5200 3301 N. Main • 2 St. Mary’s Place • 627-4400 FUNE R A L HOME S Ballard Funeral Home & Crematory www.ballardfuneralhome.com 910 S. Main St. • 575-622-1121 R E A L E S T AT E Alex Pankey www.alexpankey.com 501 N. Main • 1-800-806-7653 • 626-5006 • 622-0875 Taylor & Taylor Realtors, Ltd www.sherleataylor.com 400 W. 2nd St. • 622-1490

NICE AND cozy 3/2/1, NE in county, close to schools & shopping, new ref. air, carpet & water heater, $85,000. Owner will carry contract $20K down. For appt. call 623-2500 can leave msg. 3BR/2BA CUSTOM home, 3yrs old in Briar Ridge, 81 Bent Tree Rd., $137,500. 831-915-0226 FSBO: 708 W. Tilden, 3/1, garage, fenced yard, ref. air, central ht, owner financing, $5k down, total payment P.I.T.I. $697 for 20 years. Jim, 910-7969.

PROPERTY AUCTION 200 E. Country Club Rd #7 Open House Oct. 13th, 1-3 pm This property will be sold at Public Auction on Oct 19th. Wild West Auctions.com for terms or 623-7355. REMODELED 3/1 1818 N. Michigan $74,500 575-639-4114

492. Homes for Sale/Rent

Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors

www.findroswellrealestate.com 501 N. Main • 622-0875

Bill Davis

www.billdavis-roswellrealestate.com 501 N. Main St., 575-622-0875, 575-420-6300

Shirley Childress www.shirleysellsroswell.com 110 E. Country Club • 575-622-7191 • 575-317-4117

PR I N TI N G Ink Plus

Facebook.com/inkplusink 200 W. First St • 627-8069

To advertise, call the Advertising Department 622-7710 or e-mail: advertising@rdrnews.com

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


B8 Thursday, October 10, 2013 495. Acreages/ Farms/ Ranches/Sale

TWO NEIGHBORING 20 acre ranches each just $12,900 or together for $24,000. Lender repossession. 1 hour 45 minutes southwest of Albuquerque. These ranches previously sold for 3x the new asking price. Remote, high dessert setting with good access and electric. Financing available. Call NMRS 1-888-676-6979. 500 ACRES, $500 per acre OBO, must sell. 505-634-6301 or 575-416-1406 (in spanish). TWO NEIGHBORING 20 acre ranches each just $12,900 or together for $24,000. Lender repossession. 1 hour 45 minutes southwest of Albuquerque. These ranches previously sold for 3x the new asking price. Remote, high dessert setting with good access and electric. Financing available. Call NMRS 1-888-676-6979.

515. Mobile Homes - Sale

16X80, 3BR/2BA, ref. air, washer/dryer, stove, fridge, deck in front, put up in child friendly park, $19k OBO. 622-2324

520. Lots for Sale

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. 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. FOR SALE by owner 5 acre lot, great location NW area, well, electric on site, wonderful community custom built homes, $55,000 OBO 760-716-0610 or 575-910-7969

521. Cemetery Lots

SIDE BY side plot in South Park Cemetery $1800 call (928)460-0115

RENTALS

535. Apartments Furnished 1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, call M-Th 8a-4p 624-1331 Corporate Rental & completely remodeled studio apt., in historic dowtown Roswell.$38/day=$1,140/ mo.,includes utilities,cable, internet, yard serv.,washer & dryer & BBQ grill. All you need is toothbrush& clothes. Call 575-551-8281 {{{{RENTED}}} First floor of historic home, walk to post office, fenced yard, off street parking, fully furnished, new bath central air/ht, utilities pd. 1/2 mature adults only. Available 10/7/13. References required. $850/mo, $500/dep.

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. 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. ALL BILLS PAID 1BR $544, 2BR $653, 3br/2ba $753/mo., ref air, newly remodeled. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944 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. FIRST MONTH FREE 3br/2ba, $753, 1000 sqft, all bills paid, cold central AC, newly remodeled, 502 S. Wyoming, 622-4944. EFF, 1BR, downtown, clean, wtr pd. Stove & frig. No Pets/HUD. 623-8377

540. Apartments Unfurnished

THREE RENTALS Available: All 2 bedrooms, no pets, water paid, $500/mo, $400/dep. Inquire at 804 S. Atkinson. 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. Town Plaza Apartments NO HUD ACCEPTED ALL UTILITIES PAID 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. Good credit? Pay less rent! 575-623-2735. Spacious 2br 1ba, extra storage, laundry facilities, freshly painted, ceramic tile floors, $600 water & gas paid, 1114 S. Kentucky, 910-0851 or 910-7076 2BR/2BA, $625/MO and $400/dep. No hud no pets, 2802 W. 4th. 910-1300 1&2Bd, 3 locations, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, M-Th 8a-4p 624-1331 2BR & 1br, 1 bath, stove & refrigerator. Call 840-4333 or 910-8170. HISTORIC DISTRICT 213 N. Washington, 1br duplex, hardwood floors, wtr pd, W/D, 575-937-8658 607-C Woody Dr., 2br, $575/mo, $250/dep. Call 317-9647, after 5pm call 910-8206. 2BR, No Pets, No HUD, 1702 E. 2nd St. 773-396-6618 (cell) 1 or 2bd, furnished-unfurnished, no smoking/Hudpets all bills pd. 623-6281

545. Houses for Rent-Furnished

1&2Bd, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-4p 624-1331 REMODELED 3B/2BA in nice N.W. Roswell area, $1700, Chris 575-317-3245 REMODELED 3B/2BA in nice S.W. Roswell area, $1600. Chris 575-317-3245

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Prudential Enchanted Lands Realtors Property Management 575-624-2262 1608 S. Cottonwood 3br/1ba, ref. air, w/d hookups, no HUD, no pets. $700/mo, $600/dep. 575-914-5402 DOWNTOWN 3BR home in local Historical District, newly remodeled kitchen w/washer & dryer, 1 1/4ba, basement, serious inquiries only, $1250/mo, $600/dep. Please text 505-603-6388. 600 S. Lea, 3br/2ba, ref. air, w/d hookups, no HUD or pets, $750/mo, $600/dep, 914-5402. 36 H St., $550/mo, $550/dep, 2br/1ba, fenced yard, wtr pd, min. 1yr lease, 627-9942. 3/1/1 FOR small family, 6 month lease, background check required, no HUD or Pets, 623-0316, lv msg

550. Houses for RentUnfurnished

3BR NEAR ENMU-R, #20 Murphy Place, HUD approved, w/garage, ldry rm, new carpet, very clean, $650/mo. 623-6999 or 317-2945 305 S. Evergreen, 2br/1ba, coverd carport, shed, appliances, fenced yard, $775/$600 dep, pets w/fee, no HUD or utilities pd. 575-405-0163 or kilok9s@gmail.com 36 H St., $550/mo, $550/dep, 2br/1ba, fenced yard, wtr pd, min. 1yr lease, 627-9942. 2&3Bd, 1&2Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-4p 624-1331

CLASSIFIEDS

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

630. Auction Sales

22FT FLAT bed trailer $2,000, slide in camper $300, 2 wood burning heating stoves, $250 each, 622-6786 THE TREASURE Chest Must see. New Estate. Sofas, chests, antiques, antique wood stove, Christmas, Halloween, Fall decor. 1204 W. Hobbs, 914-1855, Weds-Sat, 10-5. CALIF. KING waterbed. c/w 6-drawer base, 2 heater pads, some sheets, custom made headboard. $275, ready to pick up. 622-5190 Anytime

305 W. Deming, 2br/1ba, utilities pd, ref. air, appliances included, $700/mo, $500/dep. No pets/HUD. 575-623-7678

DIRECTV - Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Call Now! Triple savings! $636.00 in Savings, Free upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sunday ticket free!! Start saving today! 1-800-264-0340

3BR, 1BA, $650mo, No Hud, $250dep, No Pets,1617 W. Walnut, 575-623-9115

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

3BR/2BA, 1108 S. Missouri, $825/mo, $600/dep. Call Julie at 505-220-0617.

1BR $425/mo & 2br $550/mo, Available on S. Wyoming. Call Dee at 575-840-4749. 1602 N. Kansas, 2br/1ba, $650/$300, near both hospitals 622-2877 HUD ACCEPTED 26 A. St., 2br, wtr pd, $470/mo, $470/dep, 575-626-9530 2br/1ba, laundry room, carport, $500 + $250/dep, 1602 S. Kansas. 840-9848 2BR/1BA $460 call or text after 5pm, No HUD. 915-255-8335 13 ROUHONEN Pl (near ENMU-R) large 3br, 1ba, new stove, w/d hookups, completely remodeled very clean & cute, $600 mo, plus $600 dep., No HUD. References & rental history required. 578-3034

Pwr wheelchair, hospital bed, lift chair, Invacare patient lifter. 622-7638 SELLING 6 person soft tub hot tub. It has brand new liner & all new jets & gaskets. Perfect condition, it plugs into regular wall outlet. I have all the chemicals & a wrap around bar w/step. This unit sells for $5000, I’ll take $1800 obo. Please text me for info or pics. 505-818-8120 BOWFLEX GYM mach. brand new, never used, good bargain. Doris, 622-5682 or 626-6905

406-A E. 3rd, 2br/2ba, wtr pd, no pets, $550/mo, $300/dep. 910-9648

Top Quality reconditioned appliances on sale. Many like new less than half the price! Washers, dryers $75 & up. Refrigerators, stoves from $100. Excellent selection, Camper’s Appliances, 300 E. McGaffey 623-0397. Everything guaranteed!

REMODELED 3B/2BA in nice S.W Roswell area, $1350. Chris 575-317-3245

CRAFTSMAN HIGH power washer, like new, new binoculars, 575-317-8387

REMODELED 3B/2BA in nice N.W. Roswell area, $1450. Chris 575-317-3245

555. Mobile Homes for Rent Mobile homes for rent, sale or rent to own, mobile home lots available, RVs welcome. Country Club Mobile Home Manor, 1200 E. Country Club, 623-6660

2BR/1BA ADD on, fenced yard, dogs ok, if potty trained, $400 dep $600 month, gas and water paid. 575-625-0605 or 626-1019

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 DIRECTV - Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Call Now! Triple savings! $636.00 in Savings, Free upgrade to Genie & 2013 NFL Sunday ticket free!! Start saving today! 1-800-264-0340

615. Coins, 580. Office or Gold, Silver, Business Places Buy, Sell, Trade FOR LEASE - Space in Sunwest Centre aka the Bank of America Building. Various size spaces available. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 623-1652 or mobile 420-2546.

MERCHANDISE

605. Miscellaneous for Sale

2 WHITE 1950s metal kitchen cabinets, $200 for both; sofa $125; loveseat $85, excellent condition. 627-9942

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

620. Wanted to Buy Miscellaneous

TOP PRICES paid for household items, furniture, appliances, antiques, collectibles, tools, saddles, plus anything else of value. We buy compete household & estates. 623-0136 or 910-6031 CLARDY’S (LEGIBLE) note bottles, 1956 year book RHS, 831-625-6126, 939-21-3136.

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

GRAVES FARM Bell peppers, squash - 5 different kinds, sweet corn, onions, green beans & black-eyed peas (call for your bushel order), pinto beans, Armenian cucumbers, watermelons, cucumbers, peanuts, dried red chile pods & cantelopes. 622-1889, 8:30am-5:30pm, Mon-Sat, Sunday 1pm-5pm. GRAVES FARM Bell peppers, squash - 5 different kinds, sweet corn, onions, green beans & black-eyed peas (call for your bushel order), pinto beans, Armenian cucumbers, watermelons, cucumbers, peanuts, dried red chile pods & cantelopes. 622-1889, 8:30am-5:30pm, Mon-Sat, Sunday 1pm-5pm.

665. Musical Merchandise

1 HAMMOND electric organ w/ honer controls, 2 key boards & foot retals. Rythm section, in working condition, music incl. Make an offer, 622-5190 anytime.

715. Hay and Feed Sale

4x8 SORGUM bales $75 each and 4X8 alfalfa bales $225 each. Call Janet at 575-626-0159.

745. Pets for Sale

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

PUPPY LOVE Grooming & Boarding - Large Dogs Welcome, Cats also 575-420-6655

RECREATIONAL 750. Sports Equipment

{{{SOLD}}} large Rhino 4 wheeler, nice, sale or trade, $800.

765. Guns & Ammunition

HUNT ON 7k acre private ranch, units 37. Hunt dates are November 3rd-7th. 3br mobile home provided. $1500 a gun, 4 gun maximum. 575-626-7488

780. RV’s & Campers Hauling

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

Roswell Daily Record

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RDRNEW 575-622-7710 •

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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 780. RV’s & Campers Hauling

2012 42FT fiberglass 5th wheel, 4 slide outs, 2br, 2 airs, washer/dryer, dishwasher, 4 seasons, many extras, like new, $38,900. 505-385-3944. Will deliver 1989 PROWLER Lynx gooseneck camper, sleeps 4 to 6, $4900, 623-8514

TRANSPORTATION 790. Autos for Sale

790. Autos for Sale

‘93 ACURA legend,pro white, deluxe package $2300 or OBO, call for more details, 575-623-2009 or 575-694-8036. 79’ DATSUN station wagon with spare car for parts, $500, 623-8514. CORVETTES ‘71 Convertible, new paint & top, rebuilt tranny & starter $9,500, ‘97 excellent condition 81K miles $16,000. 575-626-5172

795. Pickups/ Trucks/Vans 2008 DODGE Ram, fire engine red, new wheels & tires (black XD wheels), 6.7 liter cummins diesel, HS performance chip, 118k miles, asking $25,900. Call 420-0173 for more info. 2005 FORD F150, 4 wd, pickup, $7000 OBO. 575-420-0277 or 623-8003 1999 DODGE Ram V8 shortbed, extras, alarm sys., new rims & tires, CD player w/remote, $4800. 575-317-0958

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

15TH ANNUAL Swap Meet and Car Corral, October 11, 12, 1802 W. Main St., Artesia, $15 reserved, $20 at gate, Spectators free, 575-746-9477 or 622-4350 LEER FIBER glass shell, long bed Ford, in great condition $300. 626-3854

CLASSIFIEDS INDEX

Announcements

005 Special Notice 010 Card of Thanks 015 Personals/Special 020 Transportation 025 Lost & Found

Instruction

030 Education 035 Music – Dance/Drama 040 Instructions Wanted

Employment

045 Employment Opportunities 050 Salesperson/Agents 055 Employment Agencies 060 Jobs Wanted – M & F

Services

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

440 Window Repair 441 Window Cleaning 445 Wrought Iron 450 Services Wanted

Financial

455 Money: Loan/Borrow 456 Credit Cards 460 Insurance Co. 465 Oil, Mineral, Water, Land Lease/Sale 470 Investment: Stocks/Sale 475 Mortgages for Sale 480 Mortgages Wanted 485 Business Opportunities

Real Estate

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

Rentals

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

Merchandise

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

Recreational

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

Transportation

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


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