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Roswell Daily Record THE VOICE OF THE PECOS VALLEY

Vol. 124, No. 122 75¢ Daily / $1.25 Sunday

May 22, 2015

Friday

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Police: No evidence of forced entry after vandalism By Jared Tucker Multimedia Journalist It has been four days since vandals trashed the Roswell High School in what some are calling a senior prank gone way too far. Toilet paper thrown everywhere, furniture moved, cow manure thrown in the hallways, maple syrup spilled and graffiti on hallway floors are just some of the damage inflicted Monday morning. Police said there is no evidence of forced entry to the building, leaving some to believe students got access to the building’s keys. Many residents are outraged that none of the 30 to 40 students who were detained and

questioned has yet been criminally charged. School officials and police are passing the buck about whose choice it is to file charges. According to Roswell Police Public Information Officer Todd Wildermuth, officers responded to Roswell High School around 3:20 a.m. Monday in reference to a burglary alarm that was sounding. When officers arrived, they found “numerous” students at a nearby intersection who tried to enter their vehicles and flee, but officers were able to detain them. “It was determined these students had been involved in vandalizing the school, which they referred to as a senior prank. The students were later

released after questioning,” Wildermuth said, adding that it’s up to the Roswell Independent School District to press charges or not. “What I understood from the police was they were going to investigate and they would decide whether to prosecute or not,” Roswell Independent School District Superintendent Tom Burris said. Burris said he’s allowing Principal Ruben Bolanos to deal with the situation, including complaints and outcry from the public. He said Bolanos has been keeping him updated on the situation, but hasn’t supplied him with a list of the vandals as of Thursday afternoon. “Even if I had that list, I

couldn’t release it,” Burris said, adding he didn’t personally request the list until Thursday morning. When asked if the public See RHS, Page A3

NMMI Lusk Hall reopens

Photos courtesy of KRQE

Above right: Though no windows were smashed and nothing was broken, the students left quite a mess. Above left: A senior prank at RHS went too far.

Trujillo chosen as Dem party boss

By Jeff Tucker Record Staff Writer

Shawn Naranjo Photo

After an extensive renovation, a ribbon cutting ceremony was held Thursday for the stately Lusk Hall on the New Mexico Military Institute campus. The $5.8 million renovation, done by local contractor Waide Construction, adapts the building to be suited to modern needs while still maintaining its rich tradition. The original part of Lusk Hall was built in 1941. The building houses the business offices of the military institute, including human resources, accounts payable, audit services and the superintendent’s offices. Those personnel were temporarily located in trailers while the renovation took place. The architects were Dekker/Perich/Sabatini of Albuquerque and members of the design/construction team were Col. David West, NMMI chief of staff; Kent Taylor, director of facilities; and Mac Rogers, assistant facilities director. From left are Stephen Leos, coordinator/architect, Kent Taylor, director of facilities; Peggy Seskey, Roswell Chamber of Commerce Redcoats; Gen. Douglas Murray, dean of academics; Yukie Ebara and Hervey Gilliland, Redcoats; and Daniel Kemme, Dekker/ Perich/Sabatini.

Proposed marijuana farm withdrawn By Jeff Tucker Record Staff Writer The applicant for a proposed medical cannabis commercial nursery just northeast of Roswell has withdrawn his application. Marlin Johnson, director of the Chaves County Planning & Zoning Department, said Jon Rose has withdrawn an application to have the property at 6227 Devonian St. rezoned from agricultural/residential to industrial. “Regarding our conversation, we have decided not to go forward with the application for a non-profit cannabis production license,” Rose wrote Johnson in an email. Rose and Gerard Desjardins, both of Roswell, on April 10 filed an application with the Chaves County Planning & Zoning Department to open a medical cannabis commercial nursery

just northeast of Roswell city limits in the area known is ABO Industrial Sites, near U.S. Highway 70. Rose, the applicant, and Desjardins, the property owner, requested the property be rezoned industrial for a non-profit, state-licensed cannabis production and distribution facility. Desjardins said Thursday he is not affiliated with the endeavor, other than being the owner of the property proposed for the medical marijuana growing facility. Desjardins said he had no knowledge the property would have been used for a medical marijuana nursery. Desjardins, a nurse anesthetist, is the owner of Case Anesthesia PC. He also said the marijuana nursery would not have carried his business’s name, if the proposal had gone forward. Johnson said he learned about Rose’s request to with-

Today’s Forecast

HIGH 79 LOW 55

draw the application after an article in Wednesday’s Daily Record about the application. “The article had nothing to do with the withdrawal,” Johnson said. “It seems that perhaps the decision had been made earlier, but no one notified us. We would have skipped the publication and the letters to the neighbors, but we have to make our deadlines with the legal process. I don’t know what the real timing for the choice was and did not ask.” The application fee of $160 for the rezoning request was paid in April. “The application fee paid for the money we spent on the case,” Johnson said. Rose said Thursday he withdrew the application for personal reasons. “We’re not pursuing it now,” Rose said. “It’s primarily personal, family related. It has nothing to do with the business other than we’re

sorry we’re not able to pursue it. The thing just didn’t work out at the time, so that’s the way it is.” The Chaves County Planning & Zoning Commission had been scheduled to hold a public hearing June 2 regarding the zoning request and two other unrelated zoning requests. A legal ad in Sunday’s Daily Record states the Chaves County commissioners would consider the recommendations of the Chaves County Planning & Zoning Commission and take final action at the commissioners’ June 25 meeting. In a separate proposal, the Roswell-Chaves County Extraterritorial Zoning Commission on May 12 voted 4-2 in favor of a change of zoning use to allow Pecos Valley Pharmaceuticals Inc. to See FARM, Page A3

The Democratic Party of Chaves County has a new chairman who says he’s committed to making Chaves County once again a two-party county. Michael A. Trujillo, a former Chaves County commissioner, has been elected chairman of the local party for the next two years, succeeding Fred Moran, who had held the post for four years. “Democrats will continue to put people first,” Trujillo said. “We are going to move back to the basics, such as going into neighborhoods to get our message and values across. Being more visible in our communities, working with youth and seniors, non-profits, and offer scholarships and using more of social media - Facebook, Twitter, etc., we will continue to fight for our workers, teachers, veterans and our families. The Democratic Party is still the party that offers a place for everyone.” In other local Democratic Party elections, Pauline Ponce was chosen the local party’s vice chair for 2015 through 2017. Chuck Russell was elected treasurer, Dora Martinez was chosen first secretary and Billye Canady was elected second secretary, all for two-year terms. The elections were held in March. Moran, Melissa Peterson, Sonia Raftery, Tim Raftery and Lea Sides were elected to the Democratic Party’s state central committee. Trujillo, 50, of Lovington, is a third-generation small business owner. He is owner of El Charro Mexican Foods of Roswell. Trujillo served on the Chaves County Commission for two terms, from 2003 through 2010. While serving on the county commission, Trujillo, a sergeant in the New Mexico Army National Guard, was called up for active duty to serve in Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2005 and 2006. Trujillo was chair of the local Democratic Party in 1999 and 2000, before he ran successfully for county commissioner. Trujillo said his goals as party chairman are to increase voter registration and to find quality candidates to contend against Republicans, who are often unopposed in general elections in Chaves County. “As a local party, we like to push for our local candidates, so we’ll be pushing more into commissioners, state representatives and senators and stuff like that,” Trujillo said. “We try to stay out of nonpartisan elections such as school boards

• Thomas Craig (T.C.) Shapard

and city elections. That’s kind of like the rule within that rule, that both parties try to stay out of it. I know every once in a while there are a few things that get in there, but we try and stay out of it.” Currently, Republicans hold every elected office in Chaves County and all eight southeastern seats in the New Mexico House of Representatives, stretching from Alamogordo to Clovis. “My goals for the Democratic Party would be voter registration,” Trujillo said. “That’s the main thing, to concentrate in the areas that we can win at.” Republicans in November won a 37-33 majority in the New Mexico House, taking control of the chamber for the first time since 1954. All 42 state senators are up for election in 2016. Democrats currently have a 24-18 majority in the state Senate. “If we go back to basics, we come out winners and I think that’s where we need to start again,” Trujillo said. “If we can get back to the basics, we’ll be in good shape. As a business owner and a family man and a veteran, I think the values of the Democratic Party as a whole come into mind and we need to go that route.” Trujillo said his other goals as party chairman are to reach out to youths and for the party to become more involved in the community. “As a party, we should be able to do a little extra, come up with scholarships, do a lot of fundraisers for certain non-profits and help them out also,” he said. “The other thing is our youth. We need to get our youth involved in our communities in our elections. Without our children, we have no future. We have to get them involved. That’s a concern for me.” The Democratic Party of Chaves County has monthly meetings at Los Cerritos on the third Thursday of each month. Staff Writer Jeff Tucker may be contacted at 575-622-7710, ext. 303, or at reporter01@ rdrnews.com.

Index

Today’s Obituaries Page B4

• John Richard Parnell Dwyer Jr. (Pat) • Yvonne L. Mayo

Trujillo

Classifieds...........B6 Comics..................B5 Financial..............B3 General...............A2

Horoscopes.........A8

Opinion.................A4

Lotteries. ............A2

Sports. ................B1

Nation..................B4

Weather...............A8


A2 Friday, May 22, 2015

General

Felon found with gun arrested The arrest records available in the police blotter are public information. Any indication of an arrest on a charge and/or multiple charges does not mean the individual identified has been convicted of a crime. All persons arrested are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. If a charge has been dropped and you wish to have a retraction published in the newspaper, please submit written documentation from a court or law enforcement agency showing that the charge was dropped. Please visit the Roswell Police Department’s website at rpdp2c.org/ before calling the newspaper. A convicted felon was found in possession of a firearm and related materials and arrested at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. While serving a warrant at a residence in the 1500 block of West Second Street, police arrested Seth A. Kellum, 29, who was in possession of a .380-caliber Bersa handgun, ammunition and a magazine, according to a police report. Kellum’s address is listed on the report on the 2300 block of North Grand Avenue.

Bikes stolen, found

Two bicycles were reported stolen within a half-hour and one block of each other Wednesday afternoon and recovered by separate police officers. The first incident involving an $85 Chaos bike was reported at 3:39 p.m. on the 400 block of South Missouri Avenue, and the second a $190 Mongoose

model at 4:06 p.m. on the 600 block of South Washington Avenue.

Damage to truck reported

A resident on the 1100 block of South Virginia Avenue reported damages to a 1983 Chevrolet pickup at 7:57 p.m. Wednesday. The pickup w000as damaged and its passenger side window was shattered for a total of $200 in damage, according to a police report.

Juvenile arrested for possession

Police arrested a 14-year-old boy at 2:55 Wednesday at Roswell High School after a school security official said she had found a homemade smoking device in the student’s backpack at 11:30 a.m.

Man arrested for possession

A 22-year-old Roswell man was charged with possession of marijuana at 6:29 p.m. Wednesday at his residence. Jose A. Diaz, of the 400 block of South Delaware Avenue, had 7.2 grams of marijuana at the time of his arrest, according to a police report.

Meter stolen

A resident of South

Wildy Drive reported the theft of an electric meter valued at $1,000 at 6:49 p.m. Wednesday.

Public drinking leads to arrest of local man

Police arrested a 55-year-old Roswell man and charged him for drinking in public. Allan L. Reed, of the 900 block of Davidson Drive, was drinking from a beer can at 6:49 p.m. Wednesday at 1000 W. Second St., according to a police report.

Theft from vehicle at Sally Port Inn

Police responded to the Sally Port Inn at 2000 N. Main St. at 7:51 a.m. Thursday in response to a burglary of $600 in merchandise from a vehicle. The owner of the vehicle reported missing $250 in power tools, $250 in ammunition and $100 in clothes and furs.

$100 in cash stolen

A resident on the 1700 block of North Washington Avenue reported a burglary and theft of $100 cash at 4:29 p.m. Wednesday.

Fugitive located, arrested

Police located a fugitive at 8:29 p.m. Wednesday at 1705 S. Main St.

and arrested her on possession of narcotics and drug paraphernalia. Police arrested Desiree C. Ponce, 21, of the 1200 block of West Deming Street and charged her with possession of dangerous drugs and several assorted items of drug paraphernalia. Last week Ponce was listed by Roswell police as Roswell’s Most Wanted and had been charged with failure to appear, failure to comply with terms of a probation and failure to pay fines, in addition to previous drug-related charges.

Ruckus reported at renter’s residence

Police responded to a disturbance at 7:48 p.m. Wednesday at the 50 block of South Wildy Drive where a rental tenant was causing damage to a property. According to police, a tenant being evicted caused more than $1,000 in damages to household items, while a bathroom mirror also came up missing.

Man charged with aggravated assault

Police arrested an 18-year-old man at 11:26 p.m. Wednesday at a residence on the 300 block of West Seventh Street on a charge of aggravated assault and possession of alcohol. Alexander C. Baker was threatening others with a golf club, while alcohol and a glass smoking device with residue was found at the location, according to a police report.

6 Southeast NM residents, 1 Texan face federal firearms, narcotics charges Staff Report ALBUQUERQUE — Investigations by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Lea County Drug Task Force and the Pecos Valley Drug Task Force have resulted in the filing of federal charges against six individuals who reside in southeastern New Mexico and

a Texan. Five of the seven defendants were arrested Wednesday and made their initial appearances in federal court in Las Cruces this morning. The other two are in state custody and will be transferred to federal custody to face the charges against them. Michael Gibson, 26, of Lovington, was arrested on a criminal complaint charging

him with possession of methamphetamine with intent to distribute and using a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime in Lea County in September 2014. The criminal complaint alleges that on Sept. 10 Gibson sold approximately two ounces of methamphetamine to another person on Sept. 10 in Hobbs. Gibson allegedly displayed a hand-

gun while negotiating the drug deal. Shawn Hedgecock, 43, of Carlsbad, is charged in a criminal complaint with being a felon in possession of a firearm, and possession of an unregistered firearm with an obliterated serial number on Feb. 9 in Eddy County. The

Excludes Children’s picture books.

RFD Call Log­­—May 20 and 21 The Roswell Fire Department responded to these calls for the following dates:

May 20

• At 8:42 a.m., medical call, 2800 block of North Kentucky Avenue. • At 9:59 a.m., medical call, 100 block of East 23rd Street. • At 10:43 a.m., public assistance, 200 block of West 12th Street. • At 10:57 a.m., public assistance, 200 block of East Frazier Street. • At 11:09 a.m., medical call, 200 block of Sherrill Lane. • At 11:24 a.m., medical call, 3300 block of Old Dexter Highway. • At 1:50 p.m., medical call, 600 block of East 23rd Street. • At 2:17 p.m., medical call, 1700 block of South Main Street. • At 3:01 p.m., medical call, 100 block of West Second Street. • At 4:34 p.m., medical call,

1200 block of Auburn Drive. • At 5:27 p.m., medical call, 1500 block of West Second Street. • At 5:32 p.m., medical call, 1300 block of West College Boulevard. • At 5:49 p.m., medical call, North Kansas Avenue and West Second Street. • At 5:50 p.m., medical call, 1500 block of North Greenwood Avenue. • At 9:58 p.m., medical call, 1300 block of McCall Loop. • At 10:12 p.m., medical call, 3000 block of Radcliffe Drive.

May 21

• At 1:04 a.m., public assistance, 500 block of South Wyoming Avenue. • At 4:21 a.m., medical call, 1800 block of South Pennsylvania Avenue. • At 6:53 a.m., medical call, 800 block of Trailing Heart Road.

City needs lifeguards The city’s Parks and Recreation Department is looking for lifeguards at the Cahoon Park Pool this summer. The lifeguard positions will be open until filled, but training will begin Tuesday, May 26. City officials hope to open the pool June 1. Lifeguards, who must be at least 15 years old, are paid between $8 and $9 per hour. Employment will be from May 26 to Sept. 7. Training will be provided by the Roswell Parks and Recreation Department and is

free for those who apply and are selected to proceed in the process. Applicants will be tested both in the classroom and in the pool. To apply, an application and a pre-employment release and waiver form are required and may be obtained at the Human Resource Office in City Hall at 425 N. Richardson Ave. For more information, call the Parks and Recreation Department at 624-6720.

Correction An article in Wednesday’s edition about a proposed medical cannabis commercial nursery just northeast of Roswell should have said Case Anesthesia PC owns the property at 6227 Devonian St., but is otherwise not affiliated with pro-

posed nursery. Gerard Desjardins, owner of Case Anesthesia PC, signed the rezoning application as the property owner. The proposed nursery’s applicant is Jon Rose. The nursery would not be known as Case Anesthesia PC.

Lottery Numbers Roadrunner cash: 5-17-18-19-24

Pick 3: 9-7-5

See CHARGES, Page A3

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404 W. Second • 575-627-6179 • Tues. - Sat. 10-4

1 Stop Spy Shop Grand opening is June 1st - 6th at the Roswell Mall (4501 N. Main). The shop will carry: Professional Surveillance Equipment, Spy Cameras, and listening devices, Quad Copter Drones with and without 1080P cameras, RC Cars, Trucks, and Helicopters and accessories, electric Skate Board w/wireless control that travels 16mph for 18 miles up and down hills. Electronics for the whole family ages 6 to 100.

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WE NEED YOUR HELP! Longtime Roswell resident and former Levi’s employee Paul Martinez is suffering from non-hodgkins lymphoma. Travel and medical costs are too much for the family. Donations can be made online at: www.gofundme.com/pk1u1s or through the mail to:

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Published daily except Monday at 2301 N. Main St., Roswell, N.M. 88201. Copyright Notice

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The entire contents of the Roswell Daily Record, including its flag on Page 1, are fully protected by copyright and registry and cannot be reproduced in any form for any purpose without written permission from the Daily Record. SUBSCRIPTION RATES by carrier delivery in Roswell: $11 per month, payable in advance. Prices may vary in some areas.

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2015

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General

Roswell Daily Record

Charges Continued from Page A2

criminal complaint alleges that on Feb. 9, officers went to Hedgecock’s residence for the purpose of executing state court warrants for Hedgecock’s arrest. During a consensual search of the residence, the officers allegedly seized an unregistered sawed off shotgun and ammunition. Hedgecock was prohibited at the time from possessing firearms or ammunition because he previously had been convicted of the following felony offenses: possession of methamphetamine, possession of drug paraphernalia, concealing identity, and tampering with evidence. Hedgecock is in state custody on other charges and will be transferred to federal custody to face the charges in the criminal complaint. The criminal complaint against Jared Taylor Pendleton, 30, and Jasmine Tapia, 19, both of Hobbs, charges Pendleton with being a felon in possession of a firearm, and charges both Pendleton and Tapia with possession of a sawed-off shotgun in Lea County. According to the criminal complaint, on Oct. 23, 2013, Tapia assisted Pendleton in selling an unregistered sawed-off shotgun to an undercover officer. At the time, Pendleton was prohibited from possessing firearms or ammunition because he previously had been convicted of fraud and the unlawful taking of a vehicle. Pendleton was arrested Wednesday. Tapia is in state custody on related charges and will be transferred to federal custody to face the charges in the criminal complaint. Daniel Ramirez, 19, of Hobbs, was arrested on a criminal complaint charging him with possession of a firearm with an obliterated serial number and using a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime on Dec. 12 in Lea County. The criminal complaint alleges that on Dec. 12, 2014, Ramirez was arrested for resisting officers and was found to be in possession of a semi-automatic handgun with

an obliterated serial number, ammunition, approximately 11 ounces of cocaine, approximately 9.5 ounces of marijuana, and $420 cash. Jestin White, 22, of Hobbs, was arrested on a criminal complaint charging him with possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute on May 19, 2015, in Lea County. The complaint alleges that from Sept. 4 through May 19 White sold approximately 411.1 grams of cocaine, a .22 caliber rifle and ammunition to undercover law enforcement. Dessi Timothy Burton, 22, of Odessa, Texas, was arrested on a criminal complaint charging him with being a felon in possession of a firearm on Sept. 30, in Lea County. The criminal complaint alleges that Burton unlawfully possessed firearms while attempting to sell a semi-automatic pistol, two semi-automatic rifles, a shotgun and ammunition to an undercover officer. At the time Burton was prohibited from possessing firearms or ammunition because he previously had been convicted of child abuse and possession of a controlled substance. If convicted of the charges against them, each of the defendants faces a statutory maximum of 10 years in federal prison on the firearms charges. If convicted on the narcotics charges against them, Gibson and White each face a statutory maximum penalty of 20 years in federal prison. Charges in criminal complaints are merely accusations and defendants are presumed innocent unless found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. These cases were investigated by the Las Cruces and Roswell offices of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Lea County Drug Task Force and the Pecos Valley Drug Task Force with assistance from the 5th Judicial District Attorney’s Office. The U.S. Marshals Service assisted in Wednesday’s law enforcement operation. Assistant U.S. Attorney Maria Y. Armijo of the U.S. Attorney’s Las Cruces Branch Office prosecuted the case.

RHS Continued from Page A1

would find that hard to believe, he replied, “They would.” Roswell Police released photos of the damage to KRQE News 13, but denied the Daily Record’s request Thursday. “It was released by a sergeant, then a commander corrected that decision,” Wildermuth said. Multiple credible tipsters have contacted the Daily Record stating the vandals involved were student athletes, members of the Charlie’s Angel’s Dance Team, top academic students with high GPA’s and overall well-performing students. Burris said he would have to cross-reference the list of offenders, once he gets it, with

Farm Continued from Page A1

use the former Nature’s Dairy plant at 5106 S. Main St. to grow medical marijuana. Several residents voiced biblical, moral, ethical, social, health, criminal, security, property value, privacy and image concerns at the May 12 meeting, while two women spoke in favor of the proposal. The Chaves County Planning & Zoning Department recommended approval of the zoning request from Pecos Valley Pharmaceuticals, citing zoning compatibility and the condition of the neighborhood near the Nature’s Dairy plant. The zoning department did recommend several stipulations, including that the facility be in compliance with all

A3

athletic rosters. If it’s discovered such students are involved, Burris said no favoritism will be shown in the decision to prosecute or not. Wildermuth said officers found no signs of forced entry, a fact which is leading the public to believe a faculty member allowed the incident to take place. Daily Record readers sounded off on social media Thursday, with what some could consider more details about the incident than authorities are releasing. “They had permission. A faculty member let them in. That’s why there were no signs of forced entry. The alarms went off because one of the students tried to exit out the wrong door,” Pat Kuemmerle said. “And the second group of kids who arrived unannounced

came in and sabotaged the toilet papering and moving of furniture ... it escalated out of control quickly. The original group of kids have all cleaned up the school,” Rebecca Chavez said. “If this happened at someone’s home it would be destruction of property. Did the faculty member have permission to be in the school and after hours? Permission to allow students in to vandalize the school? Likely not. This faculty member misused his/her ‘right’ to gain entry to the school and should be held responsible as well,” Amanda Mason said. “They obviously had inside help. That’s a crime, too. Hope you hold those same standards to the adults who played a role in this,” Miguel Acosta said. “They shouldn’t be able to walk. They should be cleaning during the ceremony. They

should have charges pressed against them. They are graduating high school to start out in the world as an adult. So now treat them like one,” Richard Crislip and Jamie Meyers said. Burris said it’s not immediately known how many man hours it took to clean up the mess, and there’s really no estimated damage amount because most everything was cleaned back to its original condition. All 70 teachers and additional staff have keys to the building, he said. Wildermuth said of his partial list of nine student vandals he had in front of him, six were adults. Multimedia journalist Jared Tucker can be contacted at 575-622-7710, ext. 301, or mmnews@rdrnews.com.

state regulations. Johnson said there had been no concerns raised by county departments about the zoning change requested by Pecos Valley Pharmaceuticals. The proposed 9,000-squarefoot former dairy plant would grow up to 450 marijuana plants indoors, not sell to the public, have discreet signage, tight security, employ 10 to 15 people and generate an estimated $20 million in its first five years, with $1.5 million to $1.7 million of gross receipt taxes, said Jeff McWhorter, the chief financial officer for Pecos Valley Pharmaceuticals. Zoning approval does not ensure the Pecos Valley Pharmaceuticals facility will come to fruition, but local zoning approval does enhance the developer’s chances of receiving approval for state-ap-

proved licenses to grow medical marijuana, Kevin Cheney, a consultant for Pecos Valley Pharmaceuticals, told the ETZ Commission last week. Cheney told the ETZ Commission last week that applicants for medical marijuana growing facilities and dispensaries do not necessarily need local zoning approval. If no local zoning issues are involved, Cheney said applicants could receive state approval, without notice to local units of government. State law gives cities and counties no direct authority over the state’s Medical Cannabis Program, whose patients, dispensaries and growing operations are regulated solely by the New Mexico

Department of Health. Cheney said there are currently 23 medical marijuana growing facilities in New Mexico, although none in southeast New Mexico. There are more than 14,000 New Mexico residents enrolled in the state’s medical cannabis program, including about 1,000 cardholders in Chaves and surrounding counties. Cheney said the DOH is slated to grant 12 new medical marijuana growing licenses from among dozens of applicants. Staff Writer Jeff Tucker may be contacted at 575-622-7710, ext. 303, or at reporter01@ rdrnews.com.

HEY KIDS FREE SUMMER KID SHOWS

4501 N. Main Behind The Roswell Mall SHOW TIMES: 9:00 am, 11:20 am & 1:40 pm

Learn church history

June 6 June 9 June 16 June 23 June 30 July 7 July 14 July 21 July 28 Aug 8

Redeemer Christian Fellowship church will be starting a summer-long church history class starting this Sunday morning. Roswell’s Redeemer Christian Fellowship will host a summer-long adult Sunday school series covering the 2,000-year history of the Christian church. All are welcome to attend. Chris Baldock will teach the class, which will run on Sunday mornings from 9-10 a.m. for approximately 15 weeks. Baldock, a graduate of Roswell High and New Mexico Military Institute, has a master’s degree in theology from the University of the Highlands and Islands in Scotland. He also teaches at the Sangre de Cristo Seminary in Colorado. Redeemer Christian Fellowship is a non-denominational reformed congregation located at 900 W. Berrendo Road. If you have any questions, email RCFofficemanager@gmail.com or call 575-627-2008.

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‘Fill a Basket’ set Albertson’s and the Sunrise Optimist Club are joining forces to hold a “Fill a Basket” grocery run for three winners. Optimist Club members wearing bright gold shirts will be taking $1 donations for the next two weekends at Wal-Mart, Westlake Hardware, Albertson’s and Farmer’s Country Market on Main Street. The donors will be entered into a drawing for one-minute, two-minute and three-minute shopping sprees at Albertson’s on June 6. The drawing will occur June 5. Club members also individually will be accepting donations for the drawing. Money raised from the effort will go toward the Sunrise Optimist Club’s many charitable functions in Roswell, including the Vern Stahl Memorial Scholarship, an essay contest, Ronald McDonald House, Girl Scouts, KAPS, the Educational Zoo, Science Olympiad and others.

Friday, May 22, 2015

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A4 Friday, May 22, 2015

Opinion

Roswell Daily Record

Answering all the tough questions

It’s a start. A small one. Hillary Clinton answered six questions in five minutes during a campaign stop in Iowa, making no news and giving prepackaged statements we’ve heard many times before. She has to do a lot better than that. Neither the press, nor her Republican opponents, will let Clinton get away with a campaign strategy that continues to isolate her from meaningful media encounters. The Washington Post has a clock on its website counting the time since Clinton last answered a press question. (The total was 40,150 minutes before the Iowa session.) The New York Times is running a new feature on its politics blog First Draft: “Questions we would have asked Mrs. Clinton had we had the opportunity.” It even asked readers to submit their own suggestions. Republicans have joined the fun. Carly Fiorina, a long-shot candidate for the GOP nomination, boasts that she’s been interviewed more than 30 times and answered “over 300 questions” while Clinton maintained radio

Cokie and Steven Roberts Syndicated Columnists silence. Sure, journalists can be self-absorbed, and it’s certainly true that the voting public does not seem all that bothered by Clinton’s duck-and-cover routine. But as time goes on, another question inevitably emerges: “What is she afraid of?” Is Hillary so fragile, so unsteady on her feet, that she has to be shielded from anything resembling a real live reporter with a microphone in her hand? And what does that say about Clinton’s ability to handle the rigors of the campaign trail — let alone the White House? David Axelrod, the Democratic strategist who helped engineer Barack Obama’s victory over Clinton in 2008, fears she’s making a “terrible mistake.” Interviewed on NBC’s “Meet the

Press,” Axelrod said: “I think she has to get out there, she has to answer questions. And she has to do it routinely so it’s not a major news event when she takes a few questions from the news media.” In one sense, Clinton is just following the strategy pioneered by Obama, who has learned that social media provides him with countless ways to connect with voters who do not involve potentially risky confrontations with determined and knowledgeable journalists. In effect, the White House has created the OBN: the Obama Broadcasting Network. It uses a wide range of platforms — Flickr and Facebook, Instagram and YouTube — to control the images and messages the public sees and hears, unfiltered by independent media scrutiny. Just this week, the president added another outlet to the OBN: his first personal Twitter account. Clinton announced her candidacy using a highly produced video distributed directly through social networks, without a reporter in sight. The Clinton Broadcasting Network is just getting started.

But there’s another plausible explanation for her strategy: She’s not very good at campaigning and never has been. When she did sit for a real interview with ABC’s Diane Sawyer last year, she complained of being “dead broke” when she left the White House — just as she and her husband were about to rake in mega-millions on speeches and book deals. If Team Hillary already had concerns about the perils of live broadcasting, last week only reinforced their anxiety. There was Jeb Bush taking four full days to clarify his answer to a question about the Iraq War from Fox’s Megyn Kelly. And Marco Rubio looked flushed and flustered as another Fox anchor, Chris Wallace, pressed him on the same issue. You can be sure that if either Bush or Rubio gets the Republican nomination, those clips will show up in Democratic ads, but fellow Republicans have already pounced. As Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal put it, “Whoever we nominate as a Republican Party has got to be ready to answer the tough questions.”

Bush, who last ran for office in 2002, has looked particularly rusty on the trail. In an interview with the Christian Broadcasting Network, he opposed gay marriage on the grounds that it did not support a committed, “child-centered family system.” That answer might play well with religious conservatives, but the rest of us, who see gay couples raising children every day, know it is nonsense. Bush and Rubio are hardly alone in their stumbles. Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul got so agitated when pressed by a female reporter on CNBC that he actually put his finger to his lips and told her to “shh.” Deflecting or evading the media is not a trivial matter. Jindal is right. All candidates, in both parties, have “to be ready to answer the tough questions.” Those who fail that test don’t deserve to be president. Steve and Cokie Roberts can be contacted by email at stevecokie@ gmail.com.

Prescription for lower drug costs

When the federal government added a prescription-drug benefit to Medicare, Congress and then-President George W. Bush agreed to a “non-interference” clause. Preventing interference in programs by the legislative or executive branches is often a good thing. However, this clause precludes the government from using its purchasing power to reduce costs for Medicare Plan D participants and taxpayers. Not good. The expansion of Medicare to include a prescription-drug benefit was a positive development. Prescribed medicines have become a much more important, and costly, part of health care since the historic Medicare legislation was approved in 1965. Unfortunately, Congress and Bush failed to allocate adequate revenue to support the drug program, a shortcoming compounded by the non-interference clause. The clause explicitly prevents Medicare from using its enormous bargaining power to negotiate lower drug prices and pass those savings on to consumers. Part D prescription-drug programs are offered and administered by private health plans, subject to approval by Medicare. Those plan providers are indeed able to secure discounts from pharmaceutical companies. But those discounts could be even deeper if Medicare — which reimburses the private plans — negotiated with those same companies or other providers and passed along the savings to the private plans (with provisions for guaranteeing reductions in Part D premiums. (Note: Some Americans have a prescription-drug benefit through their Medicare Advantage, of Part C, plans, an alternative to the conventional Medicare plan.) At the very least, if Medicare had the ability to negotiate — on behalf of Part D providers, their clients and taxpayers — during a pilot project, Americans could assess whether the non-interference clause is a benefit or a liability. A recent study, not the first on this subject, strongly suggests the clause is a liability. For instance, the Department of Veterans Affairs, an arm of the federal government, pays an estimated average of 40 percent less for drugs than the Medicare program does. What’s more, Canada-based providers routinely sell prescription drugs in the United States well below market rates. In 2007, the House of Representatives passed legislation that would have allowed Medicare to directly negotiate with drug companies on price. Facing Bush’s veto threat, the legislation failed to gain additional traction. This month, President Barack Obama proposed that Congress revoke the non-interference clause and enable Medicare to determine if it can negotiate lower drug costs. It’s a proposal that made sense when the prescription benefit was created. It would make even more sense now — especially if the process and benefits could be replicated by the federal insurance exchanges authorized under the Affordable Care Act. Private-sector employers and insurers, as well as the VA, have been able to realize significant prescription-drug savings — for themselves, policyholders and patients — by leveraging their buying power and negotiating lower costs. It’s past time to empower Medicare to do the same. Reprinted from the Panama City News Herald

When they scream ‘Clinton scandal,’ wait for the facts A very strange thing has happened to the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation. Suddenly, journalists who never paid the least attention to the foundation’s work over the past decade or so — and seemed content to let the Clintons and their associates try to do some good in the world — proclaim their concern about the foundation’s finances, transparency and efficiency. Commentators with very little knowledge of any of the foundation’s programs, still unable to distinguish the Clinton Global Initiative from the Clinton Health Access Initiative, confidently denounce the entire operation as suspect. What provoked this frenzy of ignorance and indignation, of course, is the candidacy of Hillary Rodham Clinton for

Joe

Conason

Syndicated Columnist president of the United States. Partisan adversaries of the former secretary of state have been working overtime, subsidized by millions of dollars in Republican “dark money,” to construct a conspiratorial narrative that transforms her husband’s good works into dirty deals. (Transparency is evidently required of the Clintons, but not of their critics.) The main product of that effort, delivered by media mogul Rupert Murdoch amid

a din of promotion in mainstream and right-wing media, is “Clinton Cash,” written by a former Bush speech writer named Peter Schweizer. Compressing lengthy timelines, blurring important distinctions, and sometimes simply inventing false “facts,” Schweizer has attempted to transform the Clinton Foundation from an innovative, successful humanitarian organization into a sham institution that sells public favors for private gain. While many of Schweizer’s most glaring accusations have been thoroughly debunked already — notably concerning the uranium-mining firm once partly owned by a major foundation donor — amplified echoes of his “corruption” meme are damaging nevertheless. Various media figures

who have long hated the Clintons, from Rush Limbaugh to David Frum, feel liberated to utter any outrageous accusation, however distorted or dishonest. But as so often has proved true when such individuals start screaming “scandal” and “Clinton” in the same breath, the sane response is to take a deep breath, suspend judgment and examine relevant facts. Appearing on a recent National Public Radio broadcast, for instance, Frum asserted that the foundation spends far too much on air travel and other expenses. The same philanthropic impact could have been achieved, said Frum, if Bill Clinton had merely “joined the International Red Cross” after leaving the

See CONASON, Page A5

News about dark chocolate is very good indeed DEAR DOCTOR K: Is chocolate really good for the brain? DEAR READER: It sounds too good to be true, but research has found that certain compounds in chocolate, called cocoa flavonols, may protect brain function. In one recent study, researchers tested the effects of cocoa flavonols in 90 healthy 61- to 85-year-olds with good memory and thinking skills. Participants drank a special brew containing either a low (48 milligrams, or mg), medium (520 mg) or high (993 mg) amount of cocoa flavonols each day. After eight weeks, the study participants took tests that measured attention, executive function and memory. People who had consumed medium

Ask Dr. K United Media Syndicate and high amounts of cocoa flavonols every day made significant improvements on these tests, compared to people who consumed low amounts. A previous study by these researchers was published in 2012. That study showed that daily consumption of cocoa flavonols was associated with improved thinking skills

in older adults with a problem known as mild cognitive impairment. Flavonols are a type of plant nutrient found in many foods and drinks. These include tea, red wine, blueberries, apples, pears, cherries and peanuts. They are particularly abundant in cacao beans, which are used to make cocoa powder and chocolate. Flavonols in cocoa have been studied for many years. They have been shown to help lower blood pressure, improve insulin resistance (a precursor to diabetes), improve blood flow to the brain and heart, prevent blood clots and fight cell damage. How cocoa flavonols might boost thinking skills has not been directly studied in

humans. In lab and animal studies, flavonols have been found to help brain cells “talk” to one another. They also protect brain cells from toxins and inflammation. The amount of cocoa flavonols in chocolate varies widely from one chocolate to another. As a rule of thumb, dark chocolate has more flavonols than milk chocolate. Even so, the amount of flavonols in about three ounces of dark chocolate can range from 100 to 2,000 mg. The forms of chocolate that we generally consume — chocolate candies and chocolate pastry — generally are high in both calories and cholesterol-raising saturated fats.

See DR. K, Page A5


Local

Roswell Daily Record

Friday, May 22, 2015

A5

Tyranny difficult to exist when heroes admired, emulated

The Make-A-Wish Foundation arranged for 8-year-old New Mexican Eleck Stone to participate in training with the 75th Ranger Battalion. Eleck has cystic fibrous, but he dreams of doing manly things with manly men. Are little boys not hardwired to want to be heroes and right after potty training? And little girls want a prince on a horse, not a vegan sporting a European shoulder satchel who drives a Prius? Heroes in poem, song and deed inspire a country of free men. When heroes are admired and emulated, it is difficult for tyranny to exist. History is full of examples of the suppression of heroism. The Spartans sought leadership capabilities in the ranks of their captives and permanently silenced them. The British forbid the Irish from playing the fiddle. The Taliban forbids kite flying, dancing (except for 60-year-old men with pre-teen boys and/ or tethered livestock), musical instruments other than the drum, movies and reading other than the Koran. The statists and media-entertainment-sports-propagandists do not honor heroes such as Chief Petty Officer Chris Kyle. The corpulent communist Michael Moore was joined by Ibrahim Hooper, the director of the HAMAS front group the Council of American Islamic Relations

Conason Continued from Page A4

White House. Naturally, Frum doesn’t know what he’s talking about, although that won’t stop him for a second. Among the significant achievements of the Clinton Foundation was to build a system that has drastically reduced the cost of providing treatment for AIDS and other diseases across Africa, the Caribbean and in other less developed countries, saving and improving millions of lives. Bringing

Dr. K

Continued from Page A4

So I’m surely not advising you to improve your heart health by eating a box of chocolates (or a big slice of chocolate cake) each day. The chocolate confection industry is working on new forms of chocolate candies that are richer in flavonols

JERRY HECK Digesting The Elephant (CAIR) in condemnation of the movie “American Sniper.” Hooper, whose birth name is Douglas Hooper, is Canadian and a likely Christian apostate. “America Sniper” is now one of my favorite movies. In addition to the portrayal of an honorable man, the movie had accuracy down to the smallest of detail, including the label on the water bottles. What Hooper and his Islamofascist minions missed was that there is bold and daring actions by Muslims depicted in the film, i.e. the interpreter. Some on the bravest men and women I have known were the local Iraqi citizens. The Kurdish, Christians, Yazidis or Muslims who worked with us on the freshoff-the boat (FOBs), embassy or served as interpreters going out of the wire on missions day after day. These Iraqi patriots sought to improve their country. In Mosul I was afforded with invaluable support staff from the local community. One man Hassam in particular stepped up, introduced

himself and said, “Good to meet you sir. I’ll take a bullet for you or any American soldier.” Moreover, “America Sniper” was a big hit in Baghdad and Erbil theaters. “Honor Diaries” explores the violence against girls and women in the name of the religion of peace. Iranian-born Nazanin Afshin-Jam along with eight women activists, who are or were Muslim, collaborated on the documentary. In 2003 Afshin-Jam won the crown of Miss World Canada. Two years later she fought to gain the release of Nazanin Mahabad Fatehi an 18-yearold Iranian woman who was sentenced to be hanged for stabbing three of her would-be rapists. Culture does not excuse murder. Patriotic constitutional advocate Pamela Geller is not held in high regard by the FemiNAZIs for three reasons. She does not look like Rosie, Whoopie or Ellen. In addition, Geller’s research busts the myth, “that it’s a small world after all” and appeasement will end the imagined grievance held by the radicals in the Middle East. Following the awesome display of gallantry and marksmanship by Garland, Texas. police departments the Islamophilic propagandists pounced on Geller. The condemnation of violence was not even hinted by the main stream media. Instead, the AP released an ad hominem vitriolic diatribe detailing Geller’s divorce

settlement and anti-Islamic hate messaging. This is head-spinning. The AP (anonymous propagandists) is advocating the suppression of free speech! As uncanny as it may seem even Bill O’Reilly, Laura Ingraham and Greta Van Susteran whimped out and are now “Shariah compliant.” Defiantly as Americans, Geller (pamelageller.com) and Robert Spencer (jihadwatch.org/ about-robert) organized a draw Mohamed contest. Capitulation and accommodation lead to relentless demands. In case you have not gotten the memo, Islam is based on tribalism and in being so the tribe does not honor the Golden Rule. I have yet to meet an Islamophile, who has actually been there, done that. Either there is free speech or there is not. The demand to protect and exercise American constitutional rights in America is unequivocal. Conversely, who are the individuals the left lauds admiration toward? For starters, there is the wackiest whack job who wants a whack job. (To think this dude was once on my Wheatie’s box!) There are the Manning-Bregdahl twins as well as the pseudo martyrs Tray … , Michael and Freddie and of course the activist judge who in cahoots with an opportunistic lesbian couple put an Oregon. cake shop out of business, and then once the girls got the

together major donors, including wealthy nations like Norway, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States, with the leaders of poor nations to create these programs, he helped turn back a disease that once threatened to infect 100 million people globally. That effort required many hours of air travel by him and his aides — and many visits to extremely uncomfortable, and sometimes dangerous, places where Frum will never set an expensively shod foot. Like Limbaugh, Frum has claimed that the Clin-

ton Foundation wastes enormous resources while concealing its donors and expenditures from a gullible public. The truth, attested by expert authorities on nonprofit and charitable organizations, is that the foundation spends its funds with considerable efficiency — and it has posted far more detailed information, including the names of 300,000-plus donors, than federal tax law requires. Did the foundation’s staff commit errors during the past 15 years or so? Undoubtedly. Could its operations be more effi-

cient, more effective, more transparent? Of course — but its record is outstanding and its activities have done more good for more people than Frum, Limbaugh, Schweizer, the Koch brothers and Rupert Murdoch would achieve in 10,000 lifetimes. Why don’t these furious critics care about basic facts? It may be unfair to assume that in pursuit of their political agenda, they are indifferent to millions of Africans dying of HIV or malaria. Yet they do seem perfectly willing to hinder an important and useful effort against human suf-

and lower in calories and saturated fat. And there are plenty of low-calorie chocolate recipes on the Internet. The best way to get cocoa flavonols is through dark cocoa powder mixed with a very little bit of added sugar and low-fat milk. Look for cocoa powder that is as natural as possible. (Avoid so-called

“Dutch processed” cocoa powder, as Dutch processing reduces the amount of flavonols.) For chocoholics like me, the research news on chocolate over the past decade has been good. Still, you’ve got to be careful about how

you partake in its benefits. 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.

money, they broke up. Divide and conquer are the despot tools and this tactic is facilitated through the implication of identity politics and victimization that is reiterated regularly by the propaganda ministries: formerly known as America’s free press. After getting caught, George “Staphylococcus” publicly acknowledged what has been obvious for decades. Journalists for the most part are advocates for the Democratic Party and its socialist policies. In the case of this tyrant and his congressional enablers such as the lock-step, rubber stamping, comrade Democrats and the timid majority Republicans, the hero culture of the West is under attack. This just in: Hollywood is producing “Animal Farm,” the movie. Jessie Jackson has been offered the lead as Napoleon the Pig, “Four legs good, Western CIV Bad.” Jerry Heck lives in Roswell and has had a part-time military career as a citizen solider in the Florida Army National and Army Reserve spanning 28 years that has taken him to 26 states and 13 countries including deployments to Bosnia-Herzegovina, Iraq and Afghanistan. He can be contacted at jerry.heckltc@gmail.com.

fering. When you hear loud braying about the Clinton Foundation, pause to remember that two decades ago, these same pundits (and newspapers) insisted that Whitewater was a huge and terrible scandal. Indeed, Limbaugh even insinuated on the radio that Hillary Clinton had murdered Vince Foster, a friend and White House staffer who tragically committed suicide. Politicians and prosecutors spent more than $70 million on official investigations of that ill-fated real estate investment, loudly

proclaiming the Clintons guilty of something, before we finally discovered there was no scandal at all. Talk about waste! So perhaps this time, with all due respect for the vital work of the Clinton Foundation, we should assume innocence until someone produces credible evidence of wrongdoing. To find out more about Joe Conason and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at creators. com.

Under new ownership with original recipes

Letters Dear editor, I am writing to express my appreciation for courtesy and efficiency on the part of City employees. At 1 p.m. I called the city streets department to tell them of a dangerous pothole in the paved alley south of 22nd Street east of Main Street. The lady listened and got the information right the first time, and she was very courteous and professional. An hour later I was driving through the same alley and

saw that the repairs had been finished. I called to thank her. I know the city maintenance crews are very busy doing their best to keep our city able to run smoothly. Such efficient response time and courtesy are to be acknowledged and appreciated. So, to our city employees and specifically to the lady who helped me, I thank you. Curtis Michaels Roswell

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The Roswell Daily Record will be closed Monday, May 25, so our employees may enjoy the holiday weekend with their family and friends. To ensure we continue to provide our readers a quality product, we will have EARLY DEADLINES! CLASSIFIED LINE AD DEADLINE: NOON FRIDAY, MAY 22 FOR: SAT., MAY, 23, SUN., MAY 24 & TUES., MAY 26 DEADLINE FOR LEGALS: 11:00 A.M. THURS., MAY 21 FOR: SAT., MAY, 23, SUN., MAY 24 & TUES., MAY 26 11:00 A.M. FRI., MAY 22 FOR: WED., MAY, 27 DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEADLINE: NOON THURS., MAY 21 FOR: SAT., MAY, 23 SUN., MAY 24 & TUES., MAY 26 NOON FRIDAY., MAY 22 FOR: FOR WED., MAY 27 Our office will open at 8:00 am Tues., May 26.

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Pecos Dining Guide

Roswell Daily Record

Friday, May 22, 2015

A7

Roswell Food Glossary

Happy Memorial Day week-end! Are you expecting visitors from out of State? If so, you might want to introduce them to our local cuisine and restaurants. Here is a little guide of the not always known food items, you can find in Roswell’s authentic Mexican and New Mexico restaurants:

A

dobo - Smokey chile marinade made of chile peppers, garlic, vinegar or citrus juice, garlic and spices. Often served on pork or chicken.

squid or a combination are commonly offered.

Ancho chile – Dried Poblano chile peppers.

Chelada - Mexican beer served in a glass on ice with a lime wedge and salted rim.

B

arbacoa - Meat barbecued in a pit. Depending on the region, the meat may be borrega (lamb) in central Mexican cooking, barbacoa de cabeza (cow head) or cabrito (kid goat) in the Northern Mexican cooking, or cochinita pibil (pork) if the restaurant specialized in Yucatán cooking.

Cordero – Lamb.

Chicharrones - Fried pork rinds. Chilaquiles - Crunchy tortilla strips fried with eggs, chicken and/or cheese, and covered in a red or green sauce. Served for breakfast.

Bolillo - Bread roll used for tortas and sandwiches.

Chile Relleno – roasted, stuffed and fried Poblano pepper.

C

Chipotle – is a smoke-dried ripe Jalapeño pepper.

abrito - Kid goat, often used in barbecue or in taco’s.

Calamar – Squid.

Chorizo - Spicy pork or beef sausage.

Caldo - Broth soup, usually offered as chicken or beef.

Chuleta - Pork chop.

E

mpanadas - Masa dough stuffed with a filling, folded over into a crescent shape, and fried. Fillings vary from sweet to savory. Escabeche – pickled vegetables.

Guisado - Cubes of meat cooked in a sauce.

H

ominy - Dried corn kernels that have been boiled in lime juice and water to remove the hard outer hull. Used in menudo and pozole (both are stews) and to make masa, the base of Tamales.

H

uaraches - Literally means sandals. A thick piece of masa dough about the shape and size of a sandal is fried and covered with refried beans, meat, lettuce, cheese and crema. Huevos Rancheros - Breakfast dish of tortillas topped with fried eggs and coverd in a red salsa.

J

amaica - Cold beverage made by brewing water with hibiscus flowers. Some say it reminds them of pomegranate juice.

L M

engua - Beef tongue. Served in stews, shredded or in Tacos.

Carnitas - Pork roasted in citrus juices, then shredded.

F

lauta - Corn tortilla, rolled up with meat, and fried.

ichelada - “My chelada”, meaning a michelada is your own customized version of a chelada. To a chilled and salt-rimmed Mexican lager beer, one may add hot sauce, Worchestersire sauce, soy sauce, Maggi seasoning, and/or clamato juice.

Cecina - Thinly sliced and cured beef, often served in tacos.

Frijoles Charros - Pinto bean soup with bits of pork or bacon, spices and vegetables.

Mojo de ajo - Garlic sauce, often served over fish filets.

Ceviche - Seafood cooked by marinating in lime juice, mixed with tomatoes, onions, and at times, avocado. Shrimp, fish and

G

Mole - Complex sauce made of many ingredients and having many variations.

Camarón – Shrimp. Carne asada - Marinated and grilled flank steak.

ordita - Thick masa dough shaped like a small pita. Often filled with shredded pork and vegetables.

RestauRant DiRectoRy

Adobe Rose Restaurant.........................575-746-6157 1614 North 13th St., Artesia, NM Cattle Baron Steak and Seafood Restaurant ...............................................575-622-2465 1113 North Main St., Roswell, NM Cottonwood Wine and Brewing ............................. 888-959-9342 or 1 E Cottonwood Rd, Artesia, NM .............575-365-3141 Domino’s Pizza North ............................575-623-3030 2417 North Main St., Roswell, NM Domino’s Pizza South ............................575-622-3030 1124 South Union Ave, Roswell, NM Farley’s Food Fun & Pub .......................575-627-1100 1315 North Main St., Roswell, NM Galactic Sushi.........................................575-910-1959 4311 C. North Main St., Roswell, NM - Next to AT&T Mama Tuckers Bakery ...........................575-625-1475 3109 North Main St., Roswell, NM Martin’s Capitol Cafe..............................575-624-2111 110 West 4th St., Roswell, NM Pasta Cafe Italian Bistro ........................575-624-1111 1208 North Main St., Roswell, NM Peppers Grill & Bar ................................575-623-1700 500 North Main St., Roswell, NM Taste of Thai Cuisine .............................575-622-2412 1303 West Second St., Roswell, NM

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A8 Friday, May 22, 2015

Roswell Seven-day forecast Today

Mostly sunny and warmer

High 79°

VAR at 2-4 mph POP: 20%

Tonight

A severe t-storm late

Low 55°

VAR at 2-4 mph POP: 60%

POP: Probability of Precipitation

Almanac

Saturday

Partly sunny and breezy

82°/51°

SSW at 3-6 mph POP: 20%

Weather Sunday

Monday

Mostly sunny and nice

Partly sunny and nice

80°/52°

Tuesday

Partly sunny and pleasant

84°/53°

SE at 3-6 mph POP: 5%

SE at 3-6 mph POP: 0%

87°/55°

SW at 3-6 mph POP: 5%

New Mexico Weather

Roswell through 8 p.m. Thursday

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

Temperatures

High/low ........................... 56°/51° Normal high/low ............... 87°/56° Record high ............. 104° in 1989 Record low ................. 37° in 1960 Humidity at noon .................. 89%

Farmington 71/44

Clayton 64/52

Raton 68/44

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

0.07" 2.29" 0.83" 6.23" 2.75"

Gallup 68/37

Air Quality Index Today’s Forecast

Santa Fe 68/40 Tucumcari 73/56

Albuquerque 73/48

Clovis 69/55

Good Yesterday’s A.Q.I. Reading

T or C 80/50

Source:Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

Sun and Moon

The Sun Today Sat. The Moon Today Sat. First

May 25

Rise Set 5:54 a.m. 7:56 p.m. 5:53 a.m. 7:56 p.m. Rise Set 10:09 a.m. 11:58 p.m. 11:04 a.m. none

Full

Jun 2

Last

Alamogordo 83/51

Silver City 76/43

ROSWELL 79/55 Carlsbad 82/57

Hobbs 73/58

Las Cruces 83/51

New

Jun 9

Ruidoso 68/47

Forecasts and graphics provided by AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Jun 16

The Stars Show the Kind of Day You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult ARIES (March 21-April 19) HHHH Clear through any mandatory errands and details quickly, as you see a special opportunity or meeting heading your direction. Others admire your resourcefulness, though they also might be intimidated by it. Treat a family member with care. Tonight: As you like it. TAURUS (April 20-May 20) HHH The recent ease of communication has somewhat withered. You will have to be more persistent with confirmation and follow through. A partner could prove to be unusually challenging. Just let this person’s words roll right

Jacqueline Bigar Your Horoscope off you. Tonight: Make it an early night. GEMINI (May 21-June 20) HHHH You have entered a period where everything flows more easily. You might need to make the first move, and quickly at that. You’ll see a new vision of what is possible. Start sharing it with others, and you will like the results. Tonight: Out and about. CANCER (June 21-July 22) HHHH You’ll get a second wind as the day ends. Make sure you have tied up all loose ends and you leave with a

clean desk. Once you meet up with a friend, you’ll loosen up. You might not have realized how much self-discipline you had to use this week. Tonight: Let your hair down. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) HHHH Your momentum picks up as the day gets older. You’ll sense a difference in others’ moods as well. If you want, adjust your schedule to visit with a friend who is having a difficult time. Let go of a need to have situations go as you would like. Tonight: A force to be dealt with. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) HHH You might want to assume a lower profile than usual. You have put all your efforts into whatever you were doing this week. Some time off seems more than necessary. Releasing yourself from obliga-

Wednesday

Partly sunny

89°/58°

N at 3-6 mph POP: 15%

Roswell Daily Record Thursday

Clouds and sun; pleasant

86°/57°

NE at 6-12 mph POP: 10%

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

Hi/Lo/W

Hi/Lo/W

83/51/s 73/48/s 58/29/s 80/57/s 82/57/s 57/34/s 64/52/s 63/33/s 69/55/s 83/46/s 71/46/s 71/44/s 68/37/s 73/58/t 83/51/s 65/40/s 65/42/s 77/46/s 74/58/s 70/54/s 70/32/s 68/44/s 55/27/s 79/55/s 68/47/s 68/40/s 76/43/s 80/50/s 73/56/s 67/44/s

81/48/s 69/46/pc 55/26/t 81/52/pc 83/53/pc 55/33/t 70/46/pc 58/34/s 73/49/pc 78/45/s 70/42/pc 63/42/pc 61/39/s 75/54/pc 79/48/s 64/37/pc 63/39/t 72/44/s 75/51/pc 76/50/pc 60/32/s 66/38/t 52/23/t 82/51/pc 66/42/s 65/39/pc 70/43/s 77/50/s 76/48/pc 65/40/pc

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

tions, even for just a day, revitalizes you. Tonight: Not to be found. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) HHHHH Zero in on what you want, and don’t let anyone stop you. You are heading down the path to victory, and you know it. Be as clear as possible. Understand what is happening with a child or loved one. Make this person’s wish a reality. Tonight: Where the action is. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) HHH Pressure builds, and you’ll be able to reach the goal you have desired. You might want to answer a question a child poses. Be aware of your choices. You understand the power of mystery, but have you experimented with the strength of openness? Tonight: A must appearance.

National Cities Today

Hi/Lo/W

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

64/46/s 77/60/s 76/46/s 68/45/c 78/53/s 63/46/s 60/39/pc 74/65/t 62/46/c 65/41/pc 87/62/s 83/68/pc 80/72/t 72/50/s 67/52/t 73/58/c 67/57/pc 67/61/t

Sat.

Hi/Lo/W

60/46/c 82/63/pc 72/49/s 64/51/s 81/57/pc 71/56/pc 67/47/s 79/68/t 65/45/t 71/51/s 84/58/s 82/67/pc 84/72/c 75/56/pc 67/60/t 76/63/s 70/57/pc 73/57/c

U.S. Extremes

(For the 48 contiguous states)

High: 99° ... Fernandina Beach, Fla. Low: 24° ...................... Custer, S.D.

Today

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

Hi/Lo/W

92/76/t 79/66/t 73/53/s 83/74/t 75/48/pc 67/53/pc 94/73/pc 76/48/pc 83/63/pc 65/36/pc 70/54/c 75/52/s 76/58/pc 64/51/c 67/61/c 66/52/c 84/56/pc 77/52/s

Sat.

Hi/Lo/W

89/78/t 79/61/c 69/57/c 87/76/pc 69/54/s 67/60/t 90/73/t 71/52/s 83/65/s 68/43/s 67/54/c 76/55/pc 75/61/c 59/47/pc 67/62/pc 64/52/c 81/57/s 75/56/s

State Extremes

High: 82° ............................Deming Low: 32° ........................Eagle Nest

National Cities

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

Fronts Cold

-10s

Warm

-0s

0s

Precipitation Stationary

10s

20s

Showers T-storms

30s

40s

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) HHHH You’ll feel as if you have done your fair share in a partnership. On some level, you might be holding your breath to see which way the issue tumbles. Be willing to interact with a key person and clear the air. Tonight: The only answer is “yes.” CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) HHHHH You could be on top of a problem without realizing it. You will like the results more if you lie low for now. Take a walk, and detach from all the mixed messages your mind seems to be playing. Try to maintain a positive attitude. Tonight: The weekend begins now! AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18) HHHHH Defer to others while you can. You might experience an inordinate

50s

Rain

60s

Flurries

70s

80s

Snow

amount of pressure to present a topic in a certain way. A friend doesn’t seem to be getting the complete visual of what you are doing. Honor your own thoughts first. Tonight: Let others make the first move. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20) HHHH Take a stand if you feel you must, but with everything that is happening, your action might lose some of its power. Stay on top of an important project. Take your time this afternoon, and don’t rush a conversation with a key loved one. Tonight: Let the world be your oyster. BORN TODAY Author Arthur Conan Doyle (1859), actress Ginnifer Goodwin (1978), fashion model Naomi Campbell (1970)

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Ice

90s 100s 110s


Sports

Friday, May 22, 2015

Roswell Daily Record

Section

B

Hawks’ Carroll avoids Warriors hold off James Harden, Rockets 99-98 to take 2-0 lead in WCF serious injury, officially OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Stephen Curry scored 33 points to turn back another spectacular performance by James Harden, and the Golden State Warriors held off the Houston Rockets 99-98 on Thursday night to take a 2-0 lead in the Western Conference finals. Harden rallied the Rockets from 17 points down in the second quarter and had a chance to finish off the comeback in the final seconds of the fourth. Instead, Klay Thompson and Curry trapped Harden, who lost the ball as time expired. Harden fell to the floor and put his hands over his head as the Warriors celebrated on the court, the sellout crowd roared and golden-yellow confetti fell from the rafters. Harden had 38 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists, and Dwight Howard overcame a sprained left knee that slowed him down to finish with 19 points and 17 rebounds for a Rockets team headed home in a major hole. Game 3 is Saturday in Houston. Curry, the NBA MVP, made five 3-pointers to go with six assists and three rebounds. He got a big boost from his teammates — notably Andrew Bogut, Draymond Green and Thompson — to regroup after the Warriors lost the big lead in the first half. But the Warriors pulled ahead again late in the fourth quarter because of Curry — with his shot and

listed as questionable

AP Photo

Atlanta Hawks forward DeMarre Carroll lies on the court after he was injured against the Cleveland Cavaliers during the second half in Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals of the NBA basketball playoffs, Wednesday in Atlanta.

points in the first quarter, and the Warriors turned the start of the second into a highlight show without him — big blocks, transition dunks and deep 3s. The most crowd-pleasing moment came when Bogut bounced a pass to Andre Iguodala for a soaring dunk with Howard protecting the rim on a 3-on-1 break. The spurt pushed the Warriors up 49-32 with 7:53 remaining in the quarter. Howard wore a black brace over his sprained left knee. He lacked the usual lift in his legs — unable to contest many of those rim-rattling dunks — but still produced on both ends.

ATLANTA (AP) — An MRI on DeMarre Carroll’s left knee showed no structural damage, and he hopes to play for Atlanta in Friday night’s Game 2 against Cleveland in the Eastern Conference finals, Carroll’s agent said Thursday. Mark Bartelstein told The Associated Press that Carroll has only a knee sprain and “maybe a little” bone bruise. The Hawks confirmed the MRI showed only a knee sprain and said Carroll would be listed as questionable. Asked about Carroll’s status, Hawks coach Mike Budenholzer said “we’re very hopeful.” “I think sometimes you tend to think it could be the worst and right now everything we’re getting back is positive,” said Budenholzer, adding a decision will be made before Friday night’s game after consultations

with Carroll and his doctors. He said Carroll will receive “24-hour treatment.” “He will be getting whatever it takes and as much of it as possible,” Budenholzer said. Carroll was seen walking without crutches at Philips Arena following his MRI. He was not made available for interviews but he said on his Twitter feed he was thankful for the good news. Carroll’s knee appeared to buckle as he was driving to the basket with about 5 minutes left in the 97-89 loss to the Cavaliers. Carroll couldn’t put pressure on the leg as he was helped off the floor. The fear was Carroll had suffered a significant injury that could end his postseason. “Last night was a sleepless night,” Bartelstein said. “We’re all feeling very fortunate this morning.

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Madison Bumgarner homered off Clayton Kershaw and once again outpitched the reigning NL MVP and Cy Young winner, too, as the San Francisco Giants shut out the Los Angeles Dodgers for the third straight day, 4-0 Thursday. San Francisco outscored the Dodgers 10-0 in sweeping the threegame series. The champion Giants have won six in a row overall. This was the third time this season that Bumgarner, the current World Series MVP, had started against Kershaw — the Giants have won all three. Bumgarner (5-2) worked around seven hits and two walks in 6 1-3 innings, striking out six. He improved to 9-3 in his last 13 starts against the Dodgers. Bumgarner became the

first pitcher to homer off Kershaw (2-3). The Giants’ star connected for his seventh career home run, hitting a solo shot into the left field bleachers in the third. Last year, Bumgarner hit four home runs, including two grand slams. He had managed just one single in 17 at-bats this year going into the game. The Dodgers haven’t scored in 31 innings. The last time they were blanked in three straight games was June 2012 by San Francisco. The Giants have won all six games between the teams at AT&T Park this year, matching their longest home winning streak against Los Angeles in 41 years. Kershaw allowed four runs on seven hits and two walks in 7 1-3 innings. He has a 4.32 ERA this year.

Kershaw lost for the third time in 13 starts in San Francisco. He entered the game with a career 0.97 ERA at the Giants’ park. Hunter Pence had two hits and drove in two runs. Noki Aoki added two hits. Angel Pagan slid home on Pence’s single in the fourth. The play was reviewed a n d stoo d as called. Buster Posey singled in the eighth to extend his hitting streak to 13 games and end Kershaw’s day. Pence and Brandon Crawford drove in runs in the eighth. The Dodgers had runners in scoring position in four of the first five innings but went 0 for 7 in those situations. Opponents have two hits in their last 34 at bats (.059) with runners in scoring position against Bumgarner.

NEW YORK (AP) — Pete Rose’s role at the All-Star game in Cincinnati will be determined by Major League Baseball and the Reds after they determine what other obligations the banned career hits leader has. Rose began work as a studio analyst for Fox this month. The network will broadcast the game, which is being played in Rose’s hometown on July 14. “We’re in conversations with the Reds about the

specifics of his involvement at the All-Star Game and how it relates to Pete’s employment, where he’s committed, what he’s going to be available for,” baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said Thursday. “That’s one of those issues that will be resolved. It’s just a question of nailing the details down,” he said. Rose agreed to a lifetime ban in 1989 after an MLB investigation concluded he

bet on Reds’ games while managing the team. He has applied for reinstatement, but Manfred has not given a timetable for a decision. Manfred doesn’t think Rose’s presence will detract from the game. “The idea that any individual could overshadow the great players that we’re going to have at the All-Star Game in Cincinnati is just not something that seems realistic to me,” he said.

AP Photos

Golden State Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) dribbles against Houston Rockets center Dwight Howard (12) during the first half of Game 2 of the NBA basketball Western Conference finals in Oakland, Calif., Thursday. his passes. Curry connected on a 3-pointer, then found Bogut under the rim for a layup that sent the 7-footer flexing his muscles and shouting to the roaring, yellow-shirt wearing crowd. Bogut missed the ensuing free throw, but the Warriors led 96-89 with 2:25 left. Harden, the MVP runner-up, kept finding ways to draw fouls and brought Houston back on free throws. The Rockets also forced the Warriors into an 8-second, backcourt violation before Harden found Howard for an alley-oop that sliced Golden State’s lead to 99-98 with 33 seconds remaining.

Harrison Barnes missed a difficult reverse layup as the shot clock nearly expired. Harden got the ball down the court, but was trapped by Thompson and Curry. Time expired amid the scramble for the ball. The Warriors bench ran onto the court in celebration. Harden lay on the floor until teammates helped him up. That finished a backand-forth contest — one that saw the Rockets rally the same way the Warriors did in Game 1, when they came back from a 16-point deficit in the second quarter. Curry made four 3-pointers and scored 15

Bumgarner slugs homer off Kershaw, Giants blank Dodgers again

AP Photo

San Francisco Giants’ Madison Bumgarner hits a solo home run in the bottom of the third inning off Dodgers starter Clayton Kershaw during a game Thursday in San Francisco.

Broncos defensive end Antonio Smith under investigation in Texas for criminal allegation ENGLEWOOD, Colo. (AP) — Denver Broncos defensive end Antonio Smith is under investigation in Texas over a criminal allegation the local sheriff described Thursday as “sexual in nature.” Smith has not been arrested and no charges have been filed. TMZ first reported the investigation. Fort Bend County Sheriff Troy Nehls said a complaint was made against Smith in November and it was “sexual in nature.” After its investigation, the sheriff’s office forwarded its findings

to the county District Attorney’s Office in February. The district attorney’s office didn’t return phone calls from The Associated Press on Thursday. When contacted by the Denver Post, District Attorney John Healey declined to discuss the nature of his office’s investigation or confirm its target. “Last night, we became aware for the first time of an allegation involving Antonio Smith,” the Broncos said in an official statement Thursday. “We are now in the process of gath-

ering more information.” The 33-year-old defensive end signed a one-year, $2 million deal with the Broncos on April 2. In Denver, he has been reunited with the coach (Gary Kubiak), defensive coordinator (Wade Phillips) and D-line coach (Bill Kollar) under whose tutelage he excelled while playing for the Houston Texans from 2009-13. A 12th-year pro, Smith started 16 games last year in Oakland but the Raiders released him this spring in a move that saved them $3 million.

MLB and Reds discussing Rose role at All-Star Game

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B2 Friday, May 22, 2015

Sports

Sports on TV

All-NBA Teams

Friday, May 22 AUTO RACING 11 a.m. NBCSN — IndyCar, Indianapolis 500 Carb Day, part I Noon NBCSN — Indy Lights, Freedom 100, at Indianapolis 1 p.m. NBCSN — IndyCar, Indianapolis 500 Carb Day, part II BOXING 10 p.m. ESPN2 — John Thompson (16-1-0) vs. Brandon Adams (17-1-0), for vacant NABO/NABA junior middleweight titles, at Corona, Calif. FS1 — Heavyweights, Taishan (4-0-0) vs. Lance Gauch (5-8-2); featherweights, Abraham Lopez (17-0-1) vs. Alfred Tetteh (19-3-1); featherweights, Eric Hunter (19-3-0) vs. Antonio Escalante (29-7-0), at Indio, Calif. COLLEGE SOFTBALL 7 p.m. ESPN — NCAA, Division I playoffs, super regionals, Game 3, Florida State at Tennessee (if necessary) ESPN2 — NCAA, Division I playoffs, super regionals, Game 1, Oklahoma at Alabama 9 p.m. ESPN — NCAA, Division I playoffs, super regionals, Game 3, Georgia at Michigan (if necessary) GOLF 1 p.m. TGC — PGA of America, Senior PGA Championship, second round, at French Lick, Ind. 4 p.m. TGC — PGA Tour, Crowne Plaza Invitational, second round, at Fort Worth, Texas MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL 7 p.m. MLB — Regional coverage, L.A. Angels at Boston or Texas at N.Y. Yankees NBA BASKETBALL 8:30 p.m. TNT — Playoffs, conference finals, game 2, Cleveland at Atlanta NHL 8 p.m. NBCSN — Playoffs, conference finals, Game 4, N.Y. Rangers at Tampa Bay

(Voting on a 5-3-1 basis; first-team votes in parentheses) First Team F LeBron James, Cleveland, (129) 645 F/C Anthony Davis, New Orleans, (119) 625 C Marc Gasol, Memphis, (65) 453 G Stephen Curry, Golden State, (129) 645 G James Harden, Houston, (125) 637 Second Team F/C LaMarcus Aldridge, Portland, (13) 390 C/F DeMarcus Cousins, Sacramento, (18) 220 C Pau Gasol, Chicago, (15) 242 G Russell Westbrook, Oklahoma City, (10) 397 G Chris Paul, L.A. Clippers, (1) 335 Third Team F Blake Griffin, L.A. Clippers, (2) 189 F/C Tim Duncan, San Antonio, (6) 167 C DeAndre Jordan, L.A. Clippers, (12) 175 G Klay Thompson, Golden State — 122 G Kyrie Irving, Cleveland — 112 Others receiving votes: Kawhi Leonard, San Antonio, 155; Paul Millsap, Atlanta, 70; Al Horford, Atlanta, (1) 64; John Wall, Washington, 50; Jimmy Butler, Chicago, 32; Damian Lillard, Portland, 22; Draymond Green, Golden State, 9; Zach Randolph, Memphis, 7; Jeff Teague, Atlanta, 7; Andrew Bogut, Golden State, 6; Nikola Vucevic, Orlando, 6; DeMar DeRozan, Toronto, 3; Rudy Gay, Sacramento, 3; Andre Drummond, Detroit, 2; Gordon Hayward, Utah, 2; Kyle Korver, Atlanta, 2; Joakim Noah, Chicago, 2; Dirk Nowitzki, Dallas, 2; Dwyane Wade, Miami, 2; Carmelo Anthony, New York, 1; Tyson Chandler, Dallas, 1; Mike Conley, Memphis, 1; Brook Lopez, Brooklyn, 1; Kevin Love, Cleveland, 1; Kyle Lowry, Toronto, 1; Khris Middleton, Milwaukee, 1.

NBA Playoffs CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Tuesday, May 19 Golden State 110, Houston 106 Wednesday, May 20 Cleveland 97, Atlanta 89, Cleveland leads series 1-0 Thursday, May 21 Golden State 99, Houston 98, Golden State leads series 2-0 Friday, May 22 Cleveland at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m. Saturday, May 23 Golden State at Houston, 9 p.m. Sunday, May 24 Atlanta at Cleveland, 8:30 p.m. Monday, May 25 Golden State at Houston, 9 p.m. Tuesday, May 26 Atlanta at Cleveland, 8:30 p.m. Wednesday, May 27 x-Houston at Golden State, 9 p.m. Thursday, May 28 x-Cleveland at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m. Friday, May 29 x-Golden State at Houston, 9 p.m. Saturday, May 30 x-Atlanta at Cleveland, 8:30 p.m. Sunday, May 31 x-Houston at Golden State, 9 p.m. Monday, June 1 x-Cleveland at Atlanta, 8:30 p.m.

NHL Playoffs All Times EDT CONFERENCE FINALS (Best-of-7; x-if necessary) Saturday, May 16 N.Y. Rangers 2, Tampa Bay 1 Sunday, May 17 Anaheim 4, Chicago 1 Monday, May 18 Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Rangers 2 Tuesday, May 19 Chicago 3, Anaheim 2, 3OT Wednesday, May 20 Tampa Bay 6, N.Y. Rangers 5, OT, Tampa Bay leads series 2-1 Thursday, May 21 Anaheim 2, Chicago 1, Anaheim leads series 2-1 Friday, May 22 N.Y. Rangers at Tampa Bay, 8 p.m. Saturday, May 23 Anaheim at Chicago, 8 p.m. Sunday, May 24 Tampa Bay at N.Y. Rangers 8 p.m. Monday, May 25 Chicago at Anaheim, 9 p.m. Tuesday, May 26 x-N.Y. Rangers at Tampa Bay, 8 p.m. Wednesday, May 27 x-Anaheim at Chicago, 8 p.m. Friday, May 29 x-Tampa Bay at N.Y. Rangers, 8 p.m. Saturday, May 30 x-Chicago at Anaheim 8 p.m.

American League East Division Tampa Bay New York Baltimore Boston Toronto Central Division Kansas City Detroit

W L Pct GB 23 19 .548 — 22 19 .537 ½ 18 20 .474 3 19 22 .463 3½ 19 24 .442 4½ W L Pct GB 26 14 .650 — 25 17 .595 2

Scoreboard Minnesota 23 17 .575 3 Chicago 18 20 .474 7 Cleveland 17 23 .425 9 West Division W L Pct GB Houston 27 15 .643 — Los Angeles 21 20 .512 5½ Seattle 18 22 .450 8 Texas 18 23 .439 8½ Oakland 14 29 .326 13½ -----Wednesday’s Games Houston 6, Oakland 1 Minnesota 4, Pittsburgh 3, 13 innings Washington 3, N.Y. Yankees 2 Seattle 4, Baltimore 2 L.A. Angels 4, Toronto 3 Detroit 5, Milwaukee 2 Atlanta 2, Tampa Bay 1 Texas 2, Boston 1 Kansas City 7, Cincinnati 1 Cleveland 4, Chicago White Sox 3 Thursday’s Games Baltimore 5, Seattle 4 Detroit 6, Houston 5, 11 innings Toronto 8, L.A. Angels 4 Tampa Bay 3, Oakland 0 Texas 3, Boston 1 Cleveland 5, Chicago White Sox 2 Friday’s Games Texas (Lewis 3-2) at N.Y. Yankees (Pineda 5-1), 7:05 p.m. Seattle (F.Hernandez 6-1) at Toronto (Estrada 1-2), 7:07 p.m. Houston (McHugh 5-1) at Detroit (Simon 4-2), 7:08 p.m. Baltimore (U.Jimenez 3-3) at Miami (H.Alvarez 0-3), 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Leake 2-2) at Cleveland (Carrasco 4-4), 7:10 p.m. L.A. Angels (Richards 3-2) at Boston (Porcello 4-2), 7:10 p.m. Oakland (Kazmir 2-2) at Tampa Bay (Archer 4-4), 7:10 p.m. Minnesota (P.Hughes 3-4) at Chicago White Sox (Samardzija 3-2), 8:10 p.m. St. Louis (Lynn 3-3) at Kansas City (C.Young 3-0), 8:10 p.m. Saturday’s Games Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 1:05 p.m. Seattle at Toronto, 1:07 p.m. Houston at Detroit, 4:08 p.m. Cincinnati at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago White Sox, 4:10 p.m. Oakland at Tampa Bay, 4:10 p.m. Baltimore at Miami, 7:15 p.m. L.A. Angels at Boston, 7:15 p.m. St. Louis at Kansas City, 7:15 p.m. Sunday’s Games Seattle at Toronto, 1:07 p.m. Houston at Detroit, 1:08 p.m. Baltimore at Miami, 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Cleveland, 1:10 p.m. Oakland at Tampa Bay, 1:10 p.m. L.A. Angels at Boston, 1:35 p.m. Minnesota at Chicago White Sox, 2:10 p.m. St. Louis at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m. Texas at N.Y. Yankees, 8:05 p.m.

National League East Division Washington New York Atlanta Philadelphia Miami Central Division St. Louis

W L Pct GB 24 17 .585 — 24 18 .571 ½ 20 20 .500 3½ 18 25 .419 7 16 26 .381 8½ W L Pct GB 27 14 .659 —

Chicago 23 17 .575 3½ Cincinnati 18 22 .450 8½ Pittsburgh 18 22 .450 8½ Milwaukee 15 27 .357 12½ West Division W L Pct GB Los Angeles 24 16 .600 — San Francisco 23 18 .561 1½ San Diego 20 22 .476 5 Arizona 19 21 .475 5 Colorado 15 23 .395 8 -----Wednesday’s Games Minnesota 4, Pittsburgh 3, 13 innings Washington 3, N.Y. Yankees 2 Detroit 5, Milwaukee 2 Arizona 6, Miami 1 St. Louis 9, N.Y. Mets 0 Atlanta 2, Tampa Bay 1 Kansas City 7, Cincinnati 1 Philadelphia 4, Colorado 2 Chicago Cubs 3, San Diego 2 San Francisco 4, L.A. Dodgers 0 Thursday’s Games Arizona 7, Miami 6 N.Y. Mets 5, St. Louis 0 Colorado 7, Philadelphia 3 San Francisco 4, L.A. Dodgers 0 Atlanta 10, Milwaukee 1 Chicago Cubs 3, San Diego 0 Friday’s Games N.Y. Mets (Syndergaard 1-1) at Pittsburgh (G.Cole 5-2), 7:05 p.m. Philadelphia (O’Sullivan 1-2) at Washington (Scherzer 4-3), 7:05 p.m. Baltimore (U.Jimenez 3-3) at Miami (H.Alvarez 0-3), 7:10 p.m. Cincinnati (Leake 2-2) at Cleveland (Carrasco 4-4), 7:10 p.m. Milwaukee (W.Peralta 1-5) at Atlanta (A.Wood 2-2), 7:35 p.m. San Francisco (Vogelsong 2-2) at Colorado (K.Kendrick 1-5), 8:10 p.m. St. Louis (Lynn 3-3) at Kansas City (C.Young 3-0), 8:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs (Lester 4-2) at Arizona (Collmenter 3-5), 9:40 p.m. San Diego (Cashner 1-7) at L.A. Dodgers (Greinke 5-1), 10:10 p.m. Saturday’s Games N.Y. Mets at Pittsburgh, 4:05 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington, 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati at Cleveland, 4:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Atlanta, 4:10 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 4:10 p.m., 1st game Baltimore at Miami, 7:15 p.m. St. Louis at Kansas City, 7:15 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 9:10 p.m., 2nd game Chicago Cubs at Arizona, 10:10 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 10:10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Baltimore at Miami, 1:10 p.m. Cincinnati at Cleveland, 1:10 p.m. Milwaukee at Atlanta, 1:35 p.m. N.Y. Mets at Pittsburgh, 1:35 p.m. Philadelphia at Washington, 1:35 p.m. St. Louis at Kansas City, 2:10 p.m. Chicago Cubs at Arizona, 4:10 p.m. San Diego at L.A. Dodgers, 4:10 p.m. San Francisco at Colorado, 4:10 p.m.

AP Photo

Northern Ireland’s Rory McIlroy plays a shot during day one of the BMW PGA Championship at Wentworth golf club, Virginia Water, England, Thursday. of that and keep everything on an even keel. It is acceptance of bad shots. Every

time I have played well this year, I have been talking about how mentally good

“It’s a fraud. It’s a scam from A to Z,” Zayat told The Associated Press by phone. “It’s total fiction. It’s a total lie.” He said it is a case of blackmail by a criminal. Rubinsky has been convicted of gambling offenses and money laundering, according to the motion to dismiss. The motion said the breach of contract complaint should be thrown out because it was filed beyond the six-year statute of limitations and because the plaintiff can’t produce an actual contract between him and Zayat. Rubinsky’s lawyer, J. Joseph Bainton, said “the action has merit for the reasons stated in the papers filed with the court.” “While I respect Mr. Zayat’s right to dispute the allegations of the complaint,” he added in a

statement Thursday, “I am deeply offended by his defamatory charge that I am a party to ‘a scam and blackmail.’” American Pharoah has won the Kentucky Derby and Preakness and will try for the first Triple Crown in 37 years at the Belmont Stakes next month. Zayat, 52, who is from Egypt, came to the U.S. when he was 16 and lives in New Jersey. He ran a beer distributorship in Egypt, and in 2005, he founded Zayat Stables, which breeds thoroughbred horses in the U.S. After three disappointing runner-up finishes, the owner won his first Derby when American Pharoah took the Run for the Roses earlier this month. A few weeks later, the colt won the Preakness and will be a heavy favorite for the Belmont.

Owner of American Pharoah named in gambling debt lawsuit NEWARK, N.J. (AP) — Ahmed Zayat, owner of Triple Crown hopeful American Pharoah, asked a federal judge to dismiss a lawsuit that accuses him of owing $1.65 million to a man who says he fronted Zayat money for gambling bets placed at offshore casinos. The federal breach of contract lawsuit was filed in March 2014 by Howard Rubinsky of Florida. It said that in 2003, Rubinsky and Zayat entered into a personal services contract. Rubinsky said he advanced Zayat credit at a couple of casinos and that the agreement was that he’d be paid back. He said by the end of 2005, Zayat owed him $2 million. Some has since been repaid, but Rubinsky says Zayat still owes him $1.65 million, something Zayat vehemently denied early Thursday.

Toronto FC 3 5 1 10 13 14 Chicago 3 5 1 10 9 12 Philadelphia 2 7 3 9 11 21 New York City FC 1 6 4 7 9 14 Montreal 1 3 2 5 7 9 WESTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA FC Dallas 6 2 3 21 17 13 Vancouver 6 4 2 20 14 11 Seattle 6 3 1 19 17 9 San Jose 5 4 2 17 12 11 Sporting Kansas City 4 2 5 17 17 15 Houston 4 4 4 16 16 15 Los Angeles 3 4 5 14 11 15 Real Salt Lake 3 3 5 14 10 15 Portland 3 4 4 13 10 12 Colorado 1 2 7 10 9 9 NOTE: Three points for victory, one point for tie. -----Wednesday’s Games Sporting Kansas City 4, New England 2 Friday’s Games Chicago at Columbus, 8 p.m. Houston at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. Saturday’s Games Portland at Toronto FC, 5 p.m. D.C. United at New England, 7:30 p.m. FC Dallas at Montreal, 8 p.m. Vancouver at Colorado, 9 p.m. New York City FC at Real Salt Lake, 10 p.m. Sporting Kansas City at Seattle, 10 p.m. Sunday’s Games Philadelphia at New York, 5 p.m. Orlando City at San Jose, 7 p.m. Wednesday, May 27 Colorado at Seattle, 10 p.m. Real Salt Lake at Los Angeles, 10:30 p.m. D.C. United at Portland, 10:30 p.m. Friday, May 29 FC Dallas at Sporting Kansas City, 9 p.m.

Sprint Cup Odds DRIVER ODDS Kevin Harvick 7-2 Jimmie Johnson 4-1 Kurt Busch 7-1 Dale Earnhardt Jr. 8-1 Brad Keselowski 8-1 Joey Logano 8-1 Matt Kenseth 10-1 Jeff Gordon 11-1 Denny Hamlin 12-1 Carl Edwards 14-1 Kasey Kahne 14-1 Martin Truex Jr. 22-1 Kyle Larson 35-1 Kyle Busch 50-1 Ryan Newman 50-1 Tony Stewart 50-1 Paul Menard 75-1 David Ragan 75-1 Dave Blaney 80-1 Clint Bowyer 80-1 Chase Elliott 80-1 Jamie McMurray 80-1 Greg Biffle 100-1 Danica Patrick 350-1 Field (All Others) 300-1 Copyright 2015 World Features Syndicate, Inc.

Preakness Stakes. 1975 — Artis Gilmore scores 28 points and grabs 31 rebounds to lead the Kentucky Colonels to a 110-105 victory over the Indiana Pacers for the ABA championship. 1988 — The Celtics beat the Hawks 118-116 in Game 7 of the 1988 Eastern Conference semifinals. Atlanta’s Dominique Wilkins finishes with 47 points while Boston’s Larry Bird has 34, including 20 in the fourth quarter. The teams shoot a combined 58.8 percent, the second-highest mark in playoff history. 1993 — Riddick Bowe successfully defends his IBF and WBA heavyweight titles with a second-round knockout of Jesse Ferguson at RFK Stadium in Washington. 1997 — The Chicago Bulls win the lowest-scoring playoff game in NBA history, a 75-68 victory over the Miami Heat. The 143 combined points were two fewer than the previous postseason low set by Syracuse and Fort Wayne in 1955. 2003 — Annika Sorenstam becomes the first woman to play in a PGA Tour event in 58 years when she shoots a 71 in the first round of the Colonial in Fort Worth, Texas. Sorenstam misses the cut the next day by four shots. 2005 — Paula Creamer, 18, makes a 15-foot birdie putt on the final hole to win the Sybase Classic by one stroke and become the second-youngest first-time winner on the LPGA Tour. 2006 — Pat Summitt becomes the newest millionaire coach — and the first in women’s basketball. Tennessee raises Summitt’s salary to $1.125 million for next season and extends her contract six years. 2009 — Dara Torres sets an American record in the 50-meter butterfly at the Texas Senior Circuit No. 2 meet at Texas A&M. The 42-year-old, breezes to victory in the 50 fly, touching the wall in 25.72 seconds to beat her record time of 25.84 seconds from the morning preliminaries. Both her times beat Jenny Thompson’s American record of 26.00 seconds, set in Barcelona in 2003.

Transactions

All Times EDT EASTERN CONFERENCE W L T Pts GF GA D.C. United 6 2 3 21 13 9 New England 5 3 4 19 17 15 New York 4 1 5 17 14 9 Columbus 4 4 2 14 15 12 Orlando City 3 5 3 12 13 14

May 22 1877 — Baden-Baden, ridden by C. Holloway, catches Leonard just before turning into the stretch and wins the Kentucky Derby by two lengths. 1885 — Tecumseh, ridden by Jimmy McLaughlin, wins the Preakness Stakes by two lengths over Wickham. 1902 — Mastermam, ridden by John Bullman, wins the Belmont Stakes by two lengths over Renald. 1906 — Whimsical, the favorite ridden by Walter Miller, wins the Preakness Stakes by four lengths over Content. 1954 — Hasty Road, ridden by Johnny Adams, edges favored Correlation by a neck to win the

BASEBALL American League CLEVELAND INDIANS — Reinstated LHP T.J. House from the 15-day DL and optioned him to Columbus (IL). DETROIT TIGERS — Sent RHP Bruce Rondon to Toledo (IL) for a rehab assignment. KANSAS CITY ROYALS — Sent C Erik Kratz to Omaha (PCL) for a rehab assignment. MINNESOTA TWINS — Optioned INF Doug Bernier to Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Sent RHP Masahiro Tanaka to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (IL) for a rehab assignment. Transferred OF Mason Williams and LHP Eric Wooten from Trenton (EL) to Scranton/ Wilkes-Barre, LHP Miguel Sulbaran from Scranton/Wilkes-Barre to Trenton and OF Danny Oh from Tampa (FSL) to Trenton. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Named Ron Washington coach. SEATTLE MARINERS — Optioned LHP Edgar Olmos to Tacoma (PCL). TORONTO BLUE JAYS — Assigned LHP Jeff Francis outright to Buffalo (IL). Sent SS Jose Reyes to Buffalo for a rehab assignment. National League LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Suspended INF Erisbel Arruebarrena for the remainder of the season for repeated failures to comply with his contract. NEW YORK METS — Announced an affiliation agreement with Columbia (SAL) to begin play next season. ST. LOUIS CARDINALS — Optioned RHP Sam Tuivailala to Memphis (PCL). Reinstated LHP Jaime Garcia from the 15-day DL. SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS — Named Mario Alioto executive vice president of business operations, Jack Bair executive vice president and general counsel, Alfonso Felder executive vice president of administration, Staci Slaughter executive vice president of communications and senior adviser to the CEO.

I have been. I feel like my patience was wearing thin out there today.” Molinari carded a flawless 65, closing his round with two straight birdies on the last two holes. The Italian has three top10 finishes in the last three years at the European Tour’s flagship event and came second at the Spanish Open last week. “It is a great start but you don’t win the trophy on the first day,” Molinari said. “I like the course, I think it rewards accuracy more than others, which suits my game.” Robert Karlsson is two shots behind Molinari. The Swede went round in 67, making two of his six birdies across the last three holes. “It was nice to put a good round together,” Karlsson said. “I was careful off the tee, it is important round here to keep the ball in play. Hopefully this is the start of a good run.”

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Former NFL star Darren Sharper, who already has pleaded guilty or no-contest to sexual assault charges in three states, is set to enter a new plea in a federal case next week in New Orleans. Sharper has entered a not-guilty plea to federal charges that he drugged women with the intent to rape them. But he has long been expected to plead guilty as part of a multi-jurisdiction deal announced in March. On Thursday a change-of-plea hearing was set for May 29 before U.S. District Judge Jane Triche Milazzo. It remains unclear when Louisiana state charges of aggravated rape would be resolved. Sharper stands convicted after entering pleas in Nevada, Arizona and California. He will spend at least nine years in prison.

The federal indictment in Louisiana charged Sharper and another man with distributing the drugs alprazolam, diazepam and zolpidem — more commonly known by the brand names Xanax, Valium and Ambien, respectively — with the intent to commit rape. The two Louisiana state counts of aggravated rape stemmed from accusations that he sexually assaulted two drug-impaired women at his apartment in September 2013. Sharper made a brief appearance in a state courtroom in New Orleans on April 7. But Louisiana District Judge Karen Herman delayed the case pending resolution of the federal charges, raising questions about when the series of plea deals would be culminated and whether there had been any snags in the deal.

MLS

McIlroy opens with 71, 6 shots off leader Molinari at BMW PGA Championship VIRGINIA WATER, England (AP) — Defending champion Rory McIlroy shot a 1-under 71 on Thursday, leaving him six shots behind leader Francesco Molinari at the BMW PGA Championship after a mixed performance he blamed on mental fatigue. Playing for the fourth straight week, the topranked McIlroy failed to recapture the form that saw him surge to a record seven-shot victory at the Wells Fargo Championship at Quail Hollow last week. McIlroy had two birdies and two bogeys in his first five holes, missing a 12-foot putt for par at the first hole after failing to find the green with his approach. He went birdie-bogey-birdie from Nos. 12-14, and could not take advantage of par5s on the final two holes. “Physically I feel fine but mentally I could feel myself getting down on myself out there, which is not something I have been doing the last three weeks,” McIlroy said. “I just need to be aware

Roswell Daily Record

This Day in Sports

Darren Sharper set to plead in federal rape case

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Financial

Roswell Daily Record

Whites moving to Detroit, city that epitomized white flight DETROIT (AP) — Whites are moving back to the American city that came to epitomize white flight, even as blacks continue to leave for the suburbs and the city’s overall population shrinks. Detroit is the latest major city to see an influx of whites who may not find the suburbs as alluring as their parents and grandparents did in the last half of the 20th century. Unlike New York, San Francisco and many other cities that have seen the demographic shift, though, it is cheap housing and incentive programs that are partly fueling the regrowth of the Motor City’s white population. “For any individual who wants to build a company or contribute to the city, Detroit is the perfect place to be,” said Bruce Katz, co-director of the Global Cities Initiative at the Washington-based Brookings Institution. “You can come to Detroit and you can really make a difference.” No other city may be as synonymous as Detroit with white flight, the exodus of whites from large cities that began in the middle of the last century. Detroit went from a thriving hub of industry with a population of 1.8 million in 1950 to a city of roughly 690,000 in 2013 that recently went through the largest municipal bankruptcy in U.S. history. In that time, the city’s population went from nearly 84 percent white to a little less than 13 percent white. In the three years after the 2010 U.S. Census, though, Detroit’s white population grew from just under 76,000 residents to more than 88,000, according to a census estimate. The latest annual census was released Thursday and estimates that Detroit lost about 10,000 more residents in 2014, but it doesn’t include a racial breakdown. Simple math convinced music producer Mike Seger to move from adjacent Oakland County into a rented two-story house on Detroit’s east side that also houses his Get Fresh Studio. Seger, 27, pays $750 per

CATTLE/HOGS

Open high low settle CATTLE 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Jun 15 152.45 153.00 151.85 152.37 Aug 15 150.85 151.60 150.22 150.90 Oct 15 152.20 153.05 151.72 152.62 Dec 15 153.00 153.95 152.95 153.87 Feb 16 153.00 153.97 153.00 153.75 Apr 16 152.60 153.27 152.60 152.95 Jun 16 146.00 146.40 146.00 146.22 Aug 16 143.35 143.90 143.35 143.80 Oct 16 145.50 145.50 145.50 145.50 Last spot N/A Est. sales 69478. Wed’s Sales: 43,020 Wed’s open int: 303849, off -46 FEEDER CATTLE 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. May 15 219.90 220.15 219.80 220.10 Aug 15 217.60 218.42 217.00 217.72 Sep 15 216.80 217.50 216.17 216.82 Oct 15 215.90 216.00 215.25 215.90 Nov 15 214.20 215.15 214.20 215.12 Jan 16 208.77 209.50 208.77 209.25 Mar 16 207.52 208.20 207.52 208.10 Apr 16 207.10 208.00 207.10 208.00 May 16 207.90 Last spot N/A Est. sales 13020. Wed’s Sales: 8,493 Wed’s open int: 39629, up +698 HOGS-Lean 40,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Jun 15 82.25 84.30 81.70 83.77 Jul 15 83.00 84.70 82.57 83.85 Aug 15 83.55 84.50 82.70 84.07 Oct 15 73.62 74.25 73.20 73.92 Dec 15 70.07 70.52 69.72 70.20 Feb 16 72.00 72.30 71.70 72.05 Apr 16 74.10 74.37 74.00 74.37 May 16 78.05 Jun 16 80.75 80.87 80.75 80.85 Jul 16 79.00 79.15 79.00 79.15 Aug 16 78.27 Oct 16 71.25 71.25 71.25 71.25 Last spot N/A Est. sales 72943. Wed’s Sales: 27,640

COTTON

Open high

low settle COTTON 2 50,000 lbs.- cents per lb. Jul 15 64.15 64.93 63.62 63.73 Oct 15 66.32 66.43 65.65 65.72 Dec 15 64.95 65.45 64.58 64.70 Mar 16 65.05 65.40 64.70 64.73 May 16 65.60 65.76 64.96 64.96 Jul 16 66.03 66.24 65.26 65.28 Oct 16 65.38 Dec 16 64.50 64.59 64.50 64.59 Mar 17 65.12 May 17 66.06 Jul 17 66.10 Oct 17 66.10 Dec 17 66.02 Mar 18 65.35 Last spot N/A Est. sales 27500. Wed’s Sales: 27,909 Wed’s open int: 185550, off -2069

GRAINS

Open high

low

settle

WHEAT 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jul 15 514.50 528 511 522 Sep 15 522 535.25 518.50 529.50 Dec 15 535 548.75 532.25 542.50 Mar 16 547.50 562 547.50 555.75 May 16 557.25 569.50 556 563.75 Jul 16 560.25 573 559.50 568 Last spot N/A Est. sales 175897. Wed’s Sales: 140,273 Wed’s open int: 434988, up +1628 CORN

month in rent, and said he wouldn’t have been able to find anything comparable in the suburbs for that price. The average monthly rental rate of a three-bedroom single-family home in Detroit is about $800, as opposed to $1,100 to $1,400 in the suburbs, according to RentRange.com, which collects rental market information. “A young person can move here with $10,000 and start up a small flex space for artists or artists’ studios,” Seger said. “It’s the uprising of the youth being able to have the opportunities to make a future for themselves.” Eugene Gualtieri, a 41-year-old lab technician at the Detroit Medical Center, took advantage of an incentive program. Live Midtown, offered by his employer and several others in the Midtown neighborhood, allowed him to take out a $20,000 home loan that he won’t have to repay if he stays in his condo for five years.

Friday, May 22, 2015

B3

Domestic surveillance fate unclear after lengthy Senate talk WASHINGTON (AP) — The fate of the government’s bulk collection of Americans’ phone records is unclear following an FBI warning, House-Senate disagreements and more than 10 hours of criticisms by a GOP presidential candidate. Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky, the most libertarian-leaning of the major Republican presidential contenders, dominated the Senate floor from 1:18 to 11:49 p.m. Wednesday to decry the National Security Agency’s mass collection of phone data without warrants. In doing so, he highlighted deep divisions within Congress — and among his party’s presidential hopefuls — over the program whose existence was exposed by former contractor Edward

Snowden, now living in Russia. Paul wasn’t coy about the political overtones. His campaign issued a fundraising appeal while he slowly paced and steadily talked in a mostly empty Senate chamber. It also told reporters that several conservative House Republicans were available for interviews after they sat a while in support of Paul in the Senate. It marked the second time in two years that Paul has used a marathon Senate speech to draw attention to a pet issue, and to himself, as C-SPAN cameras provided unbroken footage for Twitter and other social media. In March 2013 he spent 13 hours filibustering John Brennan’s nomination to head the CIA, to under-

score Paul’s opposition to U.S. drone policies. Wednesday’s performance wasn’t an official filibuster because the bill before the Senate dealt with trade, not surveillance. Still, by never sitting or yielding the floor, Paul kept senators from talking on other topics. Paul opposes renewal of key sections of the Patriot Act, which the government cites to authorize the massive examination of who calls who on American phones. The government does not collect the content of the calls. Those sections are set to expire June 1. The Republican-controlled House voted overwhelmingly to end bulk collection of phone data but to allow surveillance on a case-by-case basis if

a special court approves. President Barack Obama supports that change. Paul says it doesn’t go far enough. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky is among those Republicans who want to keep the full program going. But McConnell says the Senate will vote on the House bill, and possibly other versions, before beginning a Memorial Day recess. Siding with McConnell are GOP senators and presidential hopefuls Marco Rubio of Florida and Lindsey Graham of South Carolina. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas and other candidates have taken positions somewhere between McConnell and Paul.

Introduces

Dr. Mohsen Tabrizi Endocrinologist

He will be joining us in July 2015 Please call 575-627-9500 to schedule an appointment or have your primary care provider fax a referral and records to 575-627-9535

402 W. Country Club www.kymeramedical.com

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

chg. +1.02 +1.18 +1.22 +1.07 +.98 +.75 +.62 +.60 +.40

+.38 +1.02 +.95 +1.00 +1.02 +.50 +.60 +.98

+1.22 +.50 +.32 +.27 -.05 -.05 +.02 +.25 +.18 +.25 -.22

chg. -.42 -.24 -.27 -.37 -.47 -.59 -.59 -.19 -.19 -.19 -.19 -.19 -.28 -.26

chg. +9 +9.50 +9 +8 +7.75 +7.50

5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jul 15 360 366.50 359.75 365 Sep 15 366.50 372.75 366.50 371.50 Dec 15 377 383.50 377 382.25 Mar 16 387.75 393.75 387.75 392.75 May 16 395 401 395 400 Jul 16 401 406.50 401 406 Sep 16 398.50 402.25 398.25 402.25 Last spot N/A Est. sales 316257. Wed’s Sales: 299,559 Wed’s open int: 1400984, up +1318 OATS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jul 15 241.25 244.75 240.25 244.25 Sep 15 247 250 247 250 Dec 15 256.50 259 255.25 258.50 Mar 16 261.50 264.25 261.50 264.25 May 16 268.25 271 268.25 271 Jul 16 269.25 272 269.25 272 Sep 16 269.25 272 269.25 272 Last spot N/A Est. sales 655. Wed’s Sales: 970 Wed’s open int: 8858, up +233 SOYBEANS 5,000 bu minimum- cents per bushel Jul 15 941.25 946.50 936.50 938.50 Aug 15 931.75 936.75 928 929.75 Sep 15 921 926 918 920.25 Nov 15 919.50 924.75 916 918.50 Jan 16 927 932 923.50 925.50 Mar 16 933.25 938.25 929 931 May 16 938 942 933.25 935.25 Jul 16 943 948 939.50 941.25 Aug 16 938.75 942.50 938.75 940.75 Sep 16 934.75 934.75 933.25 933.25 Last spot N/A Est. sales 182275. Wed’s Sales: 162,967 Wed’s open int: 696060, up +3665

OIL/GASOLINE/NG Open high

low

settle

+5 +4.75 +5 +4.75 +5 +5 +4

+3.25 +3 +3 +2.75 +2.75 +2.75 +2.75

-2.75 -2 -.50 -1.25 -1.50 -2.25 -2 -1.75 -1.75 -1.50

Feb 16 1.7591 1.7872 1.7591 1.7844 Mar 16 1.7796 1.8013 1.7796 1.7980 Apr 16 1.9880 May 16 1.9625 1.9910 1.9625 1.9910 Jun 16 1.9661 1.9886 1.9572 1.9845 Last spot N/A Est. sales 151402. Wed’s Sales: 166,696 Wed’s open int: 390286, off -46 NATURAL GAS 10,000 mm btu’s, $ per mm btu Jun 15 2.939 3.038 2.920 2.949 Jul 15 2.983 3.081 2.964 2.994 Aug 15 3.005 3.095 2.984 3.012 Sep 15 3.002 3.086 2.989 3.017 Oct 15 3.027 3.121 3.013 3.046 Nov 15 3.109 3.190 3.098 3.135 Dec 15 3.256 3.345 3.251 3.290 Jan 16 3.355 3.430 3.355 3.387 Feb 16 3.336 3.409 3.336 3.373 Mar 16 3.305 3.389 3.305 3.322 Apr 16 3.138 3.190 3.125 3.131 May 16 3.133 3.158 3.120 3.127 Last spot N/A Est. sales 427312. Wed’s Sales: 332,166 Wed’s open int: 1017153, off -11588

METALS

Last

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

$1204.40 $17.111 $2.8710 $0.7935 $1152.30 $1935.50 $1.0224

+.0331 +.0337 +.0327 +.0307 +.0294

Close: 18,285.74 Change: 0.34 (flat)

LIGHT SWEET CRUDE 1,000 bbl.- dollars per bbl. Jul 15 58.81 60.94 58.69 60.72 +1.74 Aug 15 59.32 61.32 59.17 61.15 +1.68 Sep 15 59.55 61.54 59.46 61.39 +1.64 Oct 15 59.87 61.77 59.87 61.62 +1.59 Nov 15 60.10 62.02 60.10 61.92 +1.51 Dec 15 60.55 62.39 60.44 62.21 +1.41 Jan 16 60.95 62.63 60.95 62.47 +1.32 Feb 16 61.57 62.83 61.57 62.68 +1.26 Mar 16 61.78 63.01 61.50 62.82 +1.18 Apr 16 62.03 63.12 62.03 62.95 +1.10 May 16 62.43 63.28 62.43 63.07 +1.01 Last spot N/A Est. sales 628982. Wed’s Sales: 491,629 Wed’s open int: 1627770, up +6572 NY HARBOR GAS BLEND 42,000 gallons- dollars per gallon Jun 15 2.0329 2.0871 2.0325 2.0824 +.0413 Jul 15 2.0192 2.0737 2.0117 2.0679 +.0847 Aug 15 1.9942 2.0452 1.9941 2.0406 +.0799 Sep 15 1.9671 2.0190 1.9671 2.0079 +.0762 Oct 15 1.8158 1.8539 1.8125 1.8513 +.0739 Nov 15 1.7687 1.8118 1.7687 1.8103 +.0686 Dec 15 1.7500 1.7857 1.7470 1.7830 +.0346 Jan 16 1.7569 1.7813 1.7438 1.7781 +.0334

Name AT&T Inc Aetna BkofAm Boeing Chevron Citigroup CocaCola Disney EOG Rescs EngyTsfr ExxonMbl FordM HewlettP HollyFront HomeDp HonwllIntl Intel IntlBcsh IBM JohnJn

Div 1.88 1.00 .20 3.64 4.28 .20f 1.32 1.15f .67 4.06f 2.92f .60 .64 1.32f 2.36f 2.07 .96 .58f 5.20f 3.00f

Last

17,920

18,000 +.034 +.035 +.035 +.035 +.039 +.036 +.034 +.030 +.027 +.026 +.008 +.005

Prev. Day

$1208.90 $17.092 $2.8515 $0.7935 $1156.90 $1935.50 $1.0224

YTD Chg %Chg

35.07 +.45 114.69 +.29 16.73 -.01 147.35 +.93 105.49 +.24 54.84 -.05 41.23 -.12 110.39 +.19 91.49 +1.03 57.75 +1.15 87.21 +.08 15.51 +.21 33.83 +.76 42.88 +.11 112.01 -.09 106.36 +.13 33.55 +.18 26.71 -.19 173.34 -.42 102.42 -.43

18,140

18,400

17,600 17,200 16,800

N

D

+4.4 +29.1 -6.5 +13.4 -6.0 +1.3 -2.3 +17.2 -.6 -11.2 -5.7 +.1 -15.7 +14.4 +6.7 +6.4 -7.6 +.6 +8.0 -2.1

J

18,351.36 15,855.12 Dow Jones Industrials 9,310.22 7,700.57 Dow Jones Transportation 657.17 524.82 Dow Jones Utilities 11,248.99 9,886.08 NYSE Composite 5,119.83 4,075.70 Nasdaq Composite 2,134.72 1,820.66 S&P 500 1,545.79 1,269.45 S&P Midcap 22,536.78 19,160.13 Wilshire 5000 1,278.63 1,040.47 Russell 2000

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

Div

Last

1.80 1.24 3.16 .80 2.81f 1.12 2.24f .30f 1.36 1.40 .78e 2.20 1.96f .52f 1.50f 1.28

60.10 47.42 40.64 27.02 97.20 34.36 81.00 37.23 55.50 85.15 22.06 49.90 76.11 21.97 56.01 34.51

Advertise Your Business Here

CALL TODAY 575.622.7710

M

A

Last

Net Chg

% Chg

18,285.74 8,551.28 589.22 11,239.66 5,090.79 2,130.82 1,542.79 22,495.55 1,256.74

+.34 +47.32 -.06 +29.42 +19.05 +4.97 +1.41 +44.36 -1.00

... +.56 -.01 +.26 +.38 +.23 +.09 +.20 -.08

M YTD 52-wk % Chg % Chg +2.60 -6.44 -4.67 +3.69 +7.49 +3.49 +6.22 +3.81 +4.32

+10.53 +7.92 +10.09 +5.59 +22.54 +12.59 +13.40 +12.34 +12.83

STORY STOCKS

YTD Chg %Chg -.36 -.16 -.63 -.21 -.49 +.06 +.48 +.04 -.13 -.41 +.03 +.21 +.21 -.03 -.07 -.11

+5.8 +2.1 +2.5 -8.8 +2.8 +10.3 +13.0 -12.0 +3.8 -.3 +3.0 +6.7 -11.4 -.8 +2.2 -3.9

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

Get Noticed!

F

INDEXES

52-Week High Low Name

STOCKS OF LOCAL INTEREST

chg.

10 DAYS

18,360

Dow Jones industrials

Lumber Liquidators

LL

Close: $21.10 -4.17 or -16.5% The flooring retailer’s CEO, Robert Lynch, abruptly quit as the company deals with an investigation over imports from China. $80 60 40 20

F

$20.92

M A 52-week range

Vol.: 15.3m (2.5x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $571.41 m

Best Buy

M $84.77 PE: 13.8 Yield: ... BBY

Close: $35.11 1.33 or 3.9% The consumer electronics retailer reported better-than-expected quarterly financial results as it cuts costs and revamps stores. $45 40 35 30

F

$25.50

M A 52-week range

M $42.00

PE: 10.0 Vol.: 18.0m (3.7x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $12.37 b Yield: 2.6%


B4 Friday, May 22, 2015

Nation/Obituaries

Roswell Daily Record

Obituaries

Yvonne L. Mayo

Yvonne L Mayo, 58; the Angel of Silence entered her life on May 18, 2015, and Yvonne was called from labor to rest. Although her journey through this life has ended, she will always be loved, remembered, and deeply missed. She was born in Roswell, NM, to the parentage of the late Charlie Jr. and Lerene Smith. Yvonne received her formal education in the Roswell, NM school district. She was affectionately known as “Venny” by her family and friends. A lifelong resident of Ros-

well, she was employed by the Eastern New Mexico Medical Center for over 12 years. Yvonne married Joseph Mayo, Jr., and to this union two children, Charita and Joseph, III were born. She surrendered her life to Christ at an early age, and attended Church on the Move. Preceding Yvonne in death are her parents; six brothers: Lowell, Virgil, Paul, Charles, Marvin and Manuel Smith; three sisters: Sylvia Kellum, Nila Cooper, and Margaret Ann Peterson; two special nephews, David Smith and TaCory Singleton. Those left to cherish her special memories: one loving and devoted daughter, Charita Thomas and sonin-law Patrick, of Houston, TX; one loving and devoted son, Joseph Mayo III, of Albuquerque, NM; her beloved pets, “Bentley” and “Tico”; four sisters: Larcy Smith-Warner, of Dallas, TX, Arlene Curl and husband Charles, of Red Oak, TX, Charlene Williams and husband David, and Dorothy Smith, all of Dallas, TX. Also left to cherish Yvonne

are numerous nieces, nephews, cousins, special friends: Jackie Dennard, Joann Miller and Diane Harriston; in addition to many other special friends and co-workers. A Funeral Service will be held on Saturday, May 23, 2015, at 10 a.m., at Anderson-Bethany Funeral Home Chapel. Pastor John E. Cannon from Elm Street Church of Christ will officiate. Reception will follow at the Roswell Adult Center, 807 N. Missouri Ave., at 11:15 a.m., for friends and family. Please take a moment to share your thoughts and memories with Lorene Yvonne’s family in the online registry at andersonbethany.com. Services are under the direction of Anderson-Bethany Funeral Home and Crematory.

Thomas Craig (T.C.) Shapard

Mr. Shapard, born July 27, 1951, in San Diego, CA, Naval Air Station, to Dr. E.R. Shapard, III and Elizabeth Roberts Shapard,

passed away May 15 in San Antonio, Texas. He graduated from Memorial High School in Tulsa, OK in 1970, graduated from N.M.M.I in 1972, and University of Texas Permian Basin. Thomas was a Geologist for the State of New Mexico Oil Conversation Department. T.C. is survived by his mother, 94, of Salado, TX, brother Bruce M. Shapard, of San Antonio, Texas, sister Bettina Plunkett and brother-in-law David Plunkett of San Antonio, Texas, nephews, Edwin J. Shapard, Christopher S. Plunkett, Andrew Shapard, nieces, Lauren Shapard, and Elizabeth J. Plunkett. He was preceded in death by his father Edwin R. Shapard, III. T.C., who played football for N.M.M.I., was an avid golfer, hunter, outdoor chef, balloonist, and friend of many. T.C. was a longtime resident of Roswell. A memorial service will be held at 1.30 p.m., May 22, at N.M.M.I., followed by a reception at Pepper’s.

John Richard Parnell Dwyer, Jr. (Pat)

John Richard Parnell Dwyer, Jr. (Pat), 86, of Roswell, died May 02, 2015 at Lovelace Hospital in Albuquerque New Mexico, after a brief illness, surrounded by his loving family. Parnell was born on Oct. 5, 1928, in Akron, Ohio, to JRP Dwyer Sr. and Alma Weakland Dwyer. He moved with family to New Mexico as a young man. Parnell worked for, and retired from, the New Mexico State Highway Dept., where he was a surveyor. Parnell married Shirley Vineyard in

June 1957. After retirement, Parnell’s hobby was rock hunting, and cutting, polishing, and jewelry making followed, by family members all receiving gifts of handmade jewelry or clocks. Survivors include his wife, of the home, 3 daughters, Vondell Michaels (Pat) of Lago Vista, Texas, Lori Carter, of Garden City, Kansas, Marneta Hoel (Steve) of Las Cruces, NewMexico; 6 grandchildren, Scott Odell, Serena Odell Granado, Britney Carter, Shane Michaels, and Tyler and Kaci Hoel; and 7 great-grandchildren. Also surviving are his nephews, Kevin, Mike, Kerry, and Phillip Murphy, and niece Guadalupe Murphy, all of Albuquerque. Parnell was preceded in death by his parents and one sister, Teresita Murphy. A Celebration of Life for Parnell Dwyer will be held on Sunday, May 24, 2015, at Tierra Berrenda Park in Roswell, New Mexico, at 2 p.m. Friends and relatives are invited to attend and share their memories of Parnell.

Obama’s trade bill narrowly clears a key Senate hurdle WASHINGTON (AP) — In a triumph for President Barack Obama, sweeping legislation to strengthen the administration’s hand in global trade talks advanced toward Senate passage Thursday after a showdown vote that remained in doubt until the final moment. The 62-38 vote, two more than the 60 needed, came from a solid phalanx of Republicans and more than a dozen Democrats. But the decisive thumbs-up came — literally, and long past the allotted time — from Democratic Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington after

she and a few others seized the moment as leverage to demand a vote next month on legislation to renew the Export-Import Bank. “It was a nice victory. We’re going to continue and finish up the bill this week,” Majority leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Obama’s most important Senate ally on the trade bill, said after sealing the agreement that Cantwell, Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina and others had sought. The Senate action to move toward a final vote was “a big step forward,”

Obama said at the White House, predicting that a trade deal would “open up access to markets that too often are closed.” The president was up late Wednesday night placing telephone calls to lawmakers, and he spoke with Cantwell again shortly before the vote. Final Senate passage would clear the way for a fierce struggle in the House. The legislation would allow Obama to make trade deals that Congress could either support or reject but not change. Previous presidents have had similar authority, and adminis-

US concludes airstrike in Syria killed 2 children WASHINGTON (AP) — Two children were likely killed during an American airstrike targeting al-Qaida-linked militants in Syria last year, and two other adults were wounded, according to an investigation released Thursday by the U.S. military. The 76-page report concludes that the strikes were designed to destroy Khorasan Group extremists, bomb-making experts, meeting places and facilities where explosives were made and stored. The inves tigation found that the killed and wounded civilians probably lived near one of the targeted locations. This is the first of four ongoing U.S. military investigations into allegations of civilian casualties resulting from airstrikes against Islamic State militants and other extremists in Iraq and Syria that began last August. One other probe into an airstrike in Syria and two investigations into airstrikes in Iraq are still pending. According to the report, the strikes on November 4-5, near Harim City, hit their intended targets, but officials said they could not determine if the civilians were killed by those strikes or secondary explosions caused by the bombings. “From the investigation it can be determined that sound procedures were followed and must be followed in the future,” Lt. Gen. James Terry, commander of the military operations against the Islamic State group in Iraq and Syria, wrote in a

handwritten note on the report. Terry ordered and approved the investigation. The report added, “Reasonable measures were undertaken to avoid the death or injury of civilians during the strike.” It said that, “nonetheless, the death of any civilians is regrettable,” and that the military will continue to try to mitigate civilian casualties “to the maximum extent possible.” Human rights groups have estimated that far more civilians have been killed in U.S. and coalition airstrikes since operations began. The airstrikes against the Khorasan Group that day marked only the second time since the bombing campaign in Syria began that U.S. operations had targeted the group, which officials contend is a Nusra Front cell that has been plotting to attack American and Western interests. According to the report, the airstrikes launched by multiple aircraft destroyed six buildings and damaged two others at two separate compounds. It said initially the compounds were civilian facilities on a “no strike” list, but intelligence assessments concluded they were later converted to military use by the Khorasan Group. The “protected status” of the compounds was lifte d , th e re p o rt s a id , “after determination that their predominant use was for hostile purposes — a meeting place and safe-house for foreign extremists.” It said “multiple intelligence reports” concluded the facili-

ties were used by known members of the Khorasan Group. It said the intelligence assessments indicated the sites were used for meetings and storage and specific bomb-makers and explosives experts — whose names were redacted — met there. The investigation notes that other independent or media reports after the bombings suggested that one of the children killed was the daughter of a Nusra Front fighter. The probe was prompted by numerous reports, photos and video claiming to show a varying number of civilian casualties resulting from the strikes The report said photos showed the bodies of two female children “that were dusty, and which appeared to have sustained injuries to their ear drums, consistent with having been in close proximity to blast overpressure injuries.” The investigation said there had been no indications prior to the strikes that children were present.

tration officials argue that Japan and other Pacific-region countries in a current round of 12-nation trade talks will be unwilling to present bottom-line offers if they know lawmakers can seek more concessions. But the real political divide is over the value of international trade agreements themselves, and the result has been a blurring of traditional political lines. Supporters say such agreements benefit the American economy by lowering barriers overseas and expanding markets for U.S. services and goods.

AP Photo

President Barack Obama waves as he walks across the South Lawn to the White House from Marine One, Wednesday, in Washington, as he returns from Connecticut where he delivered the commencement address at the United States Coast Guard Academy and attended a Democratic National Committee event.


Comics

Roswell Daily Record

Dear Abby

Universal Press Syndicate DEAR ABBY: I just realized I’m six weeks pregnant. I have always wanted to start a family and raise children with my fiance, but I have a big problem. I am an alcoholic and have been struggling with this issue for a few years. I don’t know the effect this could have on my baby, but I know it isn’t good. My fiance also drinks a lot, and our home situation isn’t the greatest for a child because of it. What can I do that would be helpful in my circumstances? I don’t want to put my baby’s life at risk. I tried AA in

the past, but was unsuccessful. I’m afraid I’m destroying my family before it is started. TRAINWRECK IN VIRGINIA DEAR TRAINWRECK: You are right to be concerned. If you plan to have this baby, it’s important that you find a gynecologist and quit drinking IMMEDIATELY! If you can’t find the strength to do it for yourself, then do it for the sake of your little one. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: “There is no safe time to drink alcohol during pregnancy. Alcohol can cause problems for the developing baby throughout pregnancy, including before a woman knows she is pregnant. Drinking alcohol in the first three months of pregnancy can cause the baby to have abnormal facial features. Growth and central nervous system problems (e.g., low birth weight, behavioral problems) can occur from drinking alcohol anytime

during pregnancy. The baby’s brain is developing throughout pregnancy and can be affected by exposure to alcohol at any time. “If a woman is drinking alcohol during pregnancy, it is never too late to stop. The sooner a woman stops drinking, the better it will be for both her baby and herself.”

Friday, May 22, 2015

HHHHH

to Kendra and she’s rude to me at all times. She says she will not give us her blessing if we decide to marry. Because we live only 10 minutes from her and have no possibility of moving farther away, is it possible to have a healthy marriage with such a “cancer” in our lives? Or would our marriage be doomed from the start? Do I stay or do I go? UNSURE IN PENNSYLVANIA

DEAR ABBY: I have been with my girlfriend, “Kendra,” for four years. We’re ready to take our relationship to the next level, but I’m starting to have second thoughts because of her mother. To put it simply, she’s not a nice woman, and she doesn’t have any friends. Her husband died a few years ago, which makes her very much alone. Her only social life is Kendra. Abby, she thinks of me as a threat to their relationship, and she’s trying everything in her power to break us up. She says negative things about me

DEAR UNSURE: Unfortunately, no one can make this decision for you. Much depends upon whether Kendra can recognize how unhealthy her relationship with her mother is and distance herself emotionally. While love can conquer almost everything, unless she can do that, and not allow herself to feel guilty for being happy, marriage to Kendra could be like competing in a marathon with one foot encased in a barrel of cement. I’m not saying don’t do it, but pointing out that if you do, it will be a challenge.

Beetle Bailey

The Wizard of Id

Blondie

Hints

from Heloise

King Features Syndicate Dear Heloise: Here is my hint to keep COMPUTERS running smoothly and save on storage space: Occasionally, I go to the control panel on my computer and click on “uninstall programs.” It pulls up a list of all the programs installed on my computer. I scroll through and uninstall anything I don’t need, don’t use or may have been installed on my computer accidentally. A lot of times, when you download one thing, it downloads a companion program that you might not need. A word of caution: Make sure you know what you are uninstalling and that you don’t need a program before you uninstall it. If you aren’t sure, don’t do it! Pat J. in Chicago

Dilbert

For Better or For Worse

Cleaning out “cobwebs” in the computer can make it run faster. Don’t uninstall if you don’t know what the program is! When in doubt, DON’T. Heloise HHHHH Dear Heloise: When I fly, I use a tote in which I slip my purse, the quartsize travel bag allowed of liquids, e-reader, earplugs, face mask and scarf. It keeps my purse clean if stowed, and keeps those items handy. Peggy R., Kilgore, Texas

Garfield

HHHHH Dear Heloise: We have lots of spiders here in Western Washington. I let them stay over winter so they don’t freeze, but that means that my house has many cobwebs. I have cleaned some of them with my feather duster, but now I need your advice as to how to clean a feather duster. Marilyn T., Washougal, Wash. How nice for you to provide a winter condo for the spiders! Cleaning a real feather duster is easy to do: Use cornmeal and a large paper or plastic bag. Place the duster in the bag, and add a cup or two of cornmeal. Close the bag and shake, shake, shake. You probably want to step outside when you take the duster out of the bag. Shake clean and you are done! What other household items do you have that can be used to clean? Rubbing alcohol, vinegar and baking soda are just three. Order my pamphlet for how to safely clean and save money. Visit my website, www.Heloise.com, for information, or send $5 and a long, self-addressed, stamped (70 cents) envelope to: Heloise/Cleaners, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5001. Cleaning a sponge in the dishwasher? Tuck it between glasses to keep it from flying around. Heloise

Hagar the Horrible

Snuffy Smith

HHHHH Dear Heloise: I love to bake and make loaves of banana nut bread for my friends and family. Because I have to divide the batter into several loaf tins, it can get frustrating scooping the batter. Using a ladle is very helpful. I can get a large scoop and divide the batter easily and evenly. Deanna, via email Sounds yummy! Try this: Rather than using a ladle, make the batter in a mixing bowl that has a spout. Just pour the batter into the pans. Much less cleanup! Heloise

Zits

B5


B6 Friday, May 22, 2015

Classifieds

Roswell Daily Record

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

LEGALS

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Suit Pending...

Notice of Sale...

Notice of Sale...

BC No. 1422314...

Publish May 15, 22, 29, 2015

Publish May 22, 29, June 5, 12, 2015

Publish May 1, 8, 15, 22, 2015

FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTY OF CHAVES STATE OF NEW MEXICO

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

MICHAEL D. SMITH, Plaintiff, vs. WILLIAM CLARENCE WHEELER and ALL UNKNOWN CLAIMANTS OF INTEREST ADVERSE TO PLAINTIFF, Defendants Judge: Steven L. Bell D-504-CV-2015-00248 NOTICE OF SUIT PENDING STATE OF NEW MEXICO TO: ALL UNKNOWN CLAIMANTS OF INTEREST ADVERSE TO PLAINTIFF GREETINGS: You and each of you are hereby notified that Michael D. Smith, Plaintiff, has filed an action in the District Court of Chaves County, New Mexico, Civil Docket No. D-504-CV-2015-00248 wherein you are named or designated as Defendants. The general object of said action is to quiet the Plaintiff's title of the lands, in fee simple, in Chaves County, New Mexico, more particulars described in Exhibit "A" attached hereto:

No. D-504-CV-2014-00219 NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff, vs. BRENDA S. CONYERS, Defendant.

Notice is hereby given that on July 15, 2015, at the hour of 11:30 am the undersigned Special Master, Jennifer A. Taylor or her designee, will, at the west steps entrance of the Chaves County Courthouse, at 400 N. Virginia Ave, Roswell, NM 88201, sell all of the rights, title and interest of the above-named Defendant, in and to the hereinafter described real estate to the highest bidder for cash. The property to be sold is located at 204 W Alameda St, 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 NINE (9) IN BLOCK SEVEN (7) OF SOUTH ROSWELL, IN THE CITY OF ROSWELL, COUNTY OF CHAVES AND STATE OF NEW MEXICO, AS SHOWN ON THE OFFICIAL PLAT FILED IN THE CHAVES COUNTY CLERK'S OFFICE ON MARCH 13, 1891 AND RECORDED IN BOOK A OF PLAT RECORDS, CHAVES COUNTY, NEW MEXICO, AT PAGE 02,

Public Meeting...

Publish May 22, 2015

AND LOT 16, LESS AND EXCEPT that part dedicated as "Glen Alto No. 3, Unit 1 Subdivision" filed June 25, 1979 and recorded in Book G at Page 44 of Plat Records and that part dedicated as "Northern Heights Redivision" filed October 16, 1956 and recorded in Book C at Page 56 of Plat Records ALL in BLOCK 4 of Berrendo Irrigated Farms, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Unofficial Plat filed in the Chaves County Clerk's Office on October 17, 1910, Plat Records, Chaves County, New Mexico. AND The W1/2N1/2 of LOT 2 in BLOCK 9 of Berrendo Irrigated Farms, in the City of Roswell, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Unofficial Plat filed in the Chaves County Clerk's Office on October 17, 1910, Plat Records, Chaves County, New Mexico. ________________________________________________

Ordinance Adoption...

NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING Notice is hereby given that a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Colonias Infrastructure Board will convene at 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, June 4, 2015. The meeting will be held at New Mexico Tech in the Joseph R. Skeen Library, Tripp Room, 801 Leroy Pl, Socorro, New Mexico. The agenda will be available at the NMFA office at 207 Shelby Street, Santa Fe, New Mexico and the web site (www.nmfa.net). Anyone who has questions regarding the meeting or needs special accommodations should contact Angela Quintana at (505) 992-9648. If you are an individual with a disability who is in need of a reader, amplifier, qualified sign language interpreter, or any other form of auxiliary aid or service to attend or participate in the hearing or meeting, please contact Angela Quintana at NMFA, (505) 992-9648, as soon as possible. Public documents, including the agenda and minutes, can be provided in various accessible formats. Please contact the NMFA at (505) 992-9648 if a summary or other type of accessible format is needed. ________________________________________________

NM Chile Commission Meeting...

Publish May 22, 2015 NOTICE OF ORDINANCE ADOPTION

Publish May 22, 2015

NOTICE OF A NEW MEXICO CHILE Notice is hereby given that the Hagerman Town CounCOMMISSION MEETING cil conducted a Public Hearing at its Regular Meeting held on May 12, 2015 and adopted the following OrNotice is hereby given that a meeting of the New Mexdinance: ico Chile Commission will be held in the conference room of the New Mexico Department of Agriculture, ORDINANCE #051215-1, AN ORDINANCE 3190 S. Espina Street, Las Cruces, New Mexico, on ADOPTING THE CODE OF ORDINANCES FOR Thursday, May 28, 2015, at 1:30 p.m. THE TOWN OF HAGERMAN. The date that this Ordinance becomes effective is May Purpose: 27, 2015. A copy of the adopted Ordinance is available for inspection at Town Hall, 209 E. Argyle, during normal business hours, or may be purchased upon payment of a copying fee.

BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., Plaintiff, vs. BILLY R. MCDANIEL, ELISHA MCDANIEL AND FIRESIDE BANK FKA FIRESIDE THRIFT CO., Defendants.

NOTICE OF SALE

You and each of you are further notified that unless you enter your appearance in said cause on or before the 29th day of June, 2015, judgment will be rendered against you and each of you by default, and the relief prayed for in the Complaint will be granted. The Plaintiff's attorneys are Phil Brewer and Adriann including any improvements, fixtures, and attachRagsdale, P.O. Box 298, Roswell, New Mexico 88202- ments, such as, but not limited to, mobile homes. 0298. Subject to all taxes, utility liens and other restrictions and easements of record, and subject to a one month WITNESS my hand and seal of the District Court right of redemption by the Defendant upon entry of an of Chaves County, New Mexico on this 13th day of order approving sale. The foregoing sale will be made May, 2015. to satisfy a foreclosure judgment rendered by this Court in the above-entitled and numbered cause on KATIE ESPINOZA May 11, 2015, being an action to foreclose a mortDISTRICT COURT CLERK gage on the above-described property. The Plaintiff’s judgment is $44,064.35, and the same bears interest By:/s/Janet Bloomer at the rate of 6.5000% per annum, which accrues at Deputy Clerk the rate of $7.85 per diem, commencing on February 5, 2015, with the Court reserving entry of final judgLOT 7, LESS AND EXCEPT that part dedicated as ment against said Defendant Brenda S. Conyers for "Glen Alto Subdivision" filed July 19, 1954 and recor- the amount due after foreclosure sale, for costs and ded in Book C at Page 20 of Plat Records and that attorney's fees, plus interest as may be assessed by part dedicated as "Glen Alto No. 3, Unit 1 Subdivision" the Court. The Plaintiff has the right to bid at such filed June 25, 1979 and recorded in Book G. at Page sale all of its judgment amount and submit its bid 44 of Plat Records, verbally or in writing. The Plaintiff may apply all or any part of its judgment to the purchase price in lieu of AND cash. The sale may be postponed and rescheduled at the discretion of the Special Master. LOT 8, LESS AND EXCEPT the part dedicated as "Glen Alto No. 3, Unit 1 Subdivision" filed June 25, The Court's decree, having duly appointed its Spe1979 and recorded in Book G at Page 44 of Plat Re- cial Master to advertise and immediately offer for sale cords, the subject real estate and to apply the proceeds of sale, first to the costs of sale and the Special Master's AND fees, then to pay the above-described judgment, interest, and costs of sale, and to pay unto the registry LOT 9, LESS AND EXCEPT that part dedicated as of the Court any balance remaining to satisfy future "Glen Alto No. 3, Unit 1 Subdivision" filed June 25, adjudication of priority mortgage holders; 1979 and recorded in Book G at Page 44 of Plat Records, NOW, THEREFORE, notice is hereby given that in the event that said property is not sooner redeemed, AND the undersigned will as set forth above, offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash or equivalent, LOT 10, LESS AND EXCEPT that part granted to the the lands and improvements described above for the Chaves County Board of Education in Warranty Deed purpose of satisfying, in the adjudged order of prioritfiled October 12, 1964 and recorded in Book 233 at ies, the judgment described herein and decree of forePage 75 and that part granted to the Roswell Inde- closure together with any additional costs and attorpendent School District in Warranty Deed filed Febru- ney's fees, costs of advertisement and publication, a ary 12, 1979 and recorded in Book 286 at Page 89, reasonable receiver and Special Master's fee to be deed records and that part dedicated to "Glen Alto No. fixed by the Court. The total amount of the judgment 3, Unit 1 Subdivision" tiled June 25, 1979 and recor- due is $44,064.35, plus interest to and including date ded in Book G at Page 44 of Plat Records, of sale of $1,263.85, for a total judgment plus interest of $45,328.20. Sale is subject to the entry of an order AND of the Court approving the terms and conditions of this sale. LOT 11, LESS AND EXCEPT that part dedicated as "Glen Alto Subdivision" filed July 19, 1954 and recorWitness my hand this 19th day of May, 2015. ded in Book C at Page 20 of Plat Records and that part dedicated as "Glen Alto No. 2 Subdivision" filed May 9, 1955 and recorded in Book C at Page 39 of /s/ Jennifer Taylor Plat Records, JENNIFER A. TAYLOR, Special Master PO Box 91988 AND Albuquerque, NM 87199 Telephone: (505) 433-4576 LOT 14, LESS AND EXCEPT that part dedicated as Facsimile: (505) 433-4577 "Glen Alto Subdivision" filed July 19, 1954 and recor- E-mail: sales@ancillaryls.com ded in Book C at Page 20 of Plat Records and that part dedicated as "Glen Alto No. 2 Subdivision" filed ________________________________________________ May 9, 1955 and recorded in Book C at Page 39 of Plat Records, AND LOT 15,

No. D-504-CV-2012-00187

Review Year-end and Current Financial Statements Review 2015/2016 Proposals Conduct General Business

NOTICE OF SALE

Publish May 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 2015 LEGAL NOTICE Kelly International Corporation (Voluntary Liquidation – BC No. 1422314) Notice is hereby given that this Company has been dissolved and has been struck-off the Register of Companies with effect as of April 1, 2015. Carlyn Jarm Liquidator

GARAGE SALES 002

Notice is hereby given that on May 27, 2015, at the hour of 11:30 AM, the undersigned Special Master, or her designee, will, at the west steps of the Chaves County Courthouse, at 400 N. Virginia Ave, Roswell, NM 88201, sell all of the rights, title and interest of the above-named Defendants, in and to the hereinafter YARD SALE: 900 North described real estate to the highest bidder for cash. Garden (Roswell Livestock The property to be sold is located at 307 South EverAuction parking lot) green Avenue, Roswell, NM 88203-1239 (if there is a Don’t miss this one, items conflict between the legal description and the street include Northface and REI address, the legal description shall control), and is camping equipment, craftsmore particularly described as follows: men tool (new and used),

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 July 25, 2014, being an action to foreclose a mortgage on the above-described property. The Plaintiff’s judgment is $94,921.08, and the same bears interest at the rate of 6.000% per annum, which accrues at the rate of $15.60 per diem, commencing on April 18, 2014, with the Court reserving entry of final judgment against said Defendants Billy R. McDaniel and Elisha McDaniel 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 $94,921.08, plus interest to and including date of sale of $6,318.00, for a total judgment plus interest of $101,239.08. Sale is subject to the entry of an order of the Court approving the terms and conditions of this sale. Witness my hand this 28th day of April, 2015. /s/ Bernadette Gutierrez _ 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 ________________________________________________

PB-2013-63... Publish May 15, 22, 29, 2015 STATE OF NEW MEXICO COUNTY OF CHAVES FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF KENNETH E. MILLER, Deceased. PB-2013-63 NOTICE OF HEARING FOR DETERMINATION OF HEIRSHIP, APPROVAL OF FINAL ACCOUNTING AND DISTRIBUTION AND ORDER OF COMPLETE SETTLEMENT OF ESTATE

power tools, pressure washer, concrete mixer, table saw, pop up camper, used outdoor gear, skiing, hiking, kayaking, biking equipment and a lot more! Friday and Saturday only 8:00am 307 THREE Cross, Sat., 7am. Drum set, small furniture & knick knack's. ESTATE SALE, 52 North Sky Loop, Saturday, 7am4pm. Pottery Barn office console, dining table w/6 chairs, & more. 003

MOVING SALE Fri May 22nd, Sat. May 23rd. 3718 Spring River Rd. Everything for sale 30+ furniture and large items, plus antiques, tools, toys, and home accessories, 380 E. turn right on white mill to Spring River Rd, turn left. 8am-5pm.

Southeast

BAR STYLE patio table & 4 chairs, $200 OBO. 575-291-5905 005

South

ESTATE SALE, 873 Aberdeen Road, Hagerman. Furniture, Freezer, Collectibles, Lawn Equip, 2003 Dodge Caravan and much more! Friday, May 22. 006

Southwest

HUGE SALE at My Thrift Store 4 day sale on memorial weekend, $2 bag clothes, books you buy one and get one 1/2 off, furniture, bedroom sets, jewelry, washer and dryer, 3 boats, and lift truck. Come by and see us. 905 W. McGaffey YARD SALE Help Save A Life 608 West Redwood Fri & Sat. 7am-3pm. Great things for everyone even a Baldwin organ $200. Come by. INSIDE SALE Fri & Sat. 7am-5pm. 3103 S. Lea 301 S. Hemlock FRIDAY ONLY 8:00am Furniture, appliances, misc. household items, doors, windows, cabinets and much more. 3117 MESA Verde St., Saturday, 8am-1pm. Housewares, tools, garden items, & misc. CORNER OF Sycamore & Alameda. CHURCH RUMMAGE SALE. Furniture, electronics, houseold, clothes, baby stuff, books, lots of misc. Burritos, baked goods, drinks for sale. Saturday, 7am-noon. Thank you for your support! 007

TO: Kimberly E. Rodriguez, Kevin E. Miller, Kathleen Mary Miller Luther and All Unknown Heirs of Kenneth E. Miller deceased, and All Unknown Persons claiming any right, title or interest in or to the Estate of Kenneth E. Miller

East

ANNUAL PARKING lot yard sale 1600 E. 2nd Sat. May 23, 8am-? Don't Miss, lots of vendors, loads of stuff!

004

West

4801 W. 2nd, Today. John Deere riding, scale, Bistro set, tools, bayonets. 008

Northwest

HUGE YARD Sale 1224 W. Country Club Sat. 23rd

YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT: 1. on May 1, 2015, Kimberly E. Rodriguez filed a Petition for Determination of Heirship, Approval of Fi3 KENSINGTON Ct., nal Accounting and Distribution and Order of ComSaturday, 8am-2pm. plete Settlement of Estate in the above named Court. 015 Personals 3. A hearing as been set to consider said Petition Special Notice on the 15th day of June, 2015, at 11:00 a.m. in the Fifth Judicial District Court, Chaves County Courthouse, CLAIM FOR a lost title on Roswell, New Mexico, 88202. the body of a 1980 Chevro4. Pursuant to NMSA 1978, §45-1-401, notice of let El Camino, Vin# 1GCthe time and place of the hearing on the Petition is giv- CW80K68R423465, to be en to you by publication, once a week for three conregistered in the name Gloria S. Alvarado. secutive weeks. 5. The name of Kimberly E. Rodriguez’s attorneys are Carson Ryan LLC (Joel M. Carson, III), whose adEMPLOYMENT dress is P. O. Box 1612, Roswell, New Mexico, 88202, OPPORTUNITIES and whose phone number is (575) 291-7606. WITNESS my hand and Seal of the Court this 12th day of May, 2015. FIFTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT CLERK (SEAL) By:/s/Valerie Miranda Deputy Clerk

045

Employment Opportunities

Northeast

401 ROWLAND Dr, Fri & Sat. 7am-? Lot of tools, instruments, knick knacks, Harley Davidson, table saw, furniture, a little bit of everything.

Lot 4 in Block 2 of McLellan Subdivision, in the City of Roswell, County of Chaves and State of New Mexico, as shown on the Official Plat recorded August 11, 1954, in Plat Book C, Page 26, Plat Records of Chaves County, New Mexico,

045

Employment Opportunities

THE OASIS BAR & GRILL located inside the NEW Holiday Inn currently has positions open for: -cook -bartender -server -Dishwasher Apply in person, 3620 N. Main

PUT GRAPHICS IN YOUR AD! ADD A PICTURE OF YOUR PET, YOUR HOUSE, YOUR CAR, YOUR COMPANY'S LOGO! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM CADD DRAFTING Position Full Time - Salary based on experience. Send resume to HR Dept. PO Box 728 Clovis, NM 88102-0728 VALLEY CHRISTIAN Academy is currently accepting applications for experienced school principal and elementary/secondary teachers for the 2015-2016 school year. Interested candidates may obtain an application at 1500 S. Main or call 575-627-1500 AMERIPRIDE LINEN Requisition# 778340 April 23, 2015 to May 23, 2115 Route Driver- CSR Job Description is listed on line at Career Builders Application must be filled out on line at careerbuilders.com. This is a full time position Must be able to pass drug test Competitive salary and benefits. EOE EMPLOYER PASTA CAFE NOW HIRING servers. Apply in person between the hours of 2-4pm.1208 N. Main St. in Roswell, NM CATTLE BARON NOW HIRING servers. Apply in person between the hours of 2-4pm.1113 N. Main St. in Roswell, NM FARLEYS, FOOD, FUN & PUB NOW HIRING servers. Apply in person between the hours of 2-4pm.1315 N. Main St. in Roswell, NM LEARN TO drive in 5 short weeks. Artesia Training Academy has new classes forming. CDL Class A with endorsements. VA approved. 20 years of service to South East New Mexico. Call for more information 575-748-9766 or 1-888-586-0144 visit us at www.artesiatraining.com or visit us on Facebook. DRIVERS WANTED We are looking for energetic people to drive for Domino's. Drivers receive hourly wages, delivery commissions, and tips. Potential for $18-$20 per hour. Commissions and tips are paid nightly. Fun, fast paced job! Great Potential for Growth. Apply at Careers.Dominos.Com LOS CERRITOS Mexican Kitchen is now taking application for servers, cooks, and bussers. Our mission is "To deliver absolute guest satisfaction, EVERY TIME", and we are looking for motivated individuals who believe in great customer service. Competitive pay and we will train the right candidate. Apply in person at 2103 N. Main St. to schedule an interview or call 575-622-4919. AVON, BUY/Sell. I can help you build your business or team. Sandy 317-5079 ISR "OVERHEAD DOOR Co of Southeastern New Mexico." Has positions open for Commercial and Residential garage door installers and installer trainees. Valid New Mexico drivers' license with a clean driving record required. We are a drug free work place and a pre-employment drug test is required. Apply in person at Overhead Door Co. located 200 S. Hemlock Avenue, Roswell, NM. Application are available weekdays 8:00am-12:00 & 1:00 pm - 4:30pm or by appointment. THE NEW Holiday Inn currently has a position open for a Guest Service Agent. Excellent customer service skills a must. Apply in person, 3620 N. Main ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS for Front desk, housekeeping and maintanence at Motel 6, 3307 N. Main. HOUSEKEEPER NEEDED. Apply at Budget Inn West, 2200 W. 2nd.


Classifieds

Roswell Daily Record 045

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

045

MADDY-TAY's Preschool is now hiring. Applicant must have high school diploma and 45 hour course. CDA or its equivalent preferred. Apply at 102 S. Utah. TOBOSA DEVELOPMENTAL Services is currently seeking Direct Care Support Staff for the Residential Department. Experience with developmentally disabled preferred but not required. Please submit current resume with completed application, police background check, copy of High School Diploma and driving record at 110 E. Summit, Roswell, NM 88203 or call (575)624-1025. Salary is negotiable based on experience and education level. Applications open until positions are filled. EOE

LOCAL OIL and gas company seeking a full-time bookkeeping assistant. Requirements include a basic understanding of oil and gas and financial accounting, basic computer skills for word processing, spreadsheets, data entry, and the ability to perform common office related activities such as reception, copying and filing. Salary is negotiable. Full benefit package is available. Qualified individuals are requested to forward their resume, salary requirements and references. Please send resume to PO Box 1897, unit box #399, Roswell, NM 88202 RETAIL SALES and store operations position open, 30-40 hrs per week, neat appearance a must, past sales experience helpful. Apply at 101 S. Main St. Roswell, NM. No phone calls please.

T.A.P.S. Now Hiring Security In Artesia and Hobbs Requirements: High school Diploma, Pass Background check and Must have reliable Transportation. Career minded. 575-910-4748

LOOKING FOR customer service and sales person with outgoing personality, must be a self started, Spanish speaker is a plus, must be able to work Saturdays. Position can be full or part time, position will require good driving record, and a neat and pleasant appearance. Applications taken in person only at 101 S. Main St. Monday -Friday 8am-5pm. Sat 8am-noon.

MAKE UP to $2,500 in ONLY 11 days!! managing firework stand NO INVESTMENT REQUIRED! June 24 - July 4, mrwfireworks.com to submit app, or 830-429-3808 mon-thurs

MEDICAL OFFICE assistant needed asap for busy medical practice. Duties to include all referrals, ins. Eligibility and daily office tasks. Exp preferred but not req. Email resume to rcorn@spinepains.com or fax to 575-625-1013

VETERINARY ASSISTANT needed immediately. This position requires flexible hours plus some on weekends. Janitorial type work makes up a large percentage of the duties. Must have the ability to lift 50 lbs. Will train the right applicant if self-motivated, dependable, friendly, and willing to learn new skills. To apply, mail resume to Smith Animal Clinic, 1209 S. Union, Roswell, NM 88203. Include a cover letter describing yourself a good candidate for this position.

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT The Rodeway Inn is hiring for housekeeping and breakfast attendant. We need applicants who can work morning shifts and who are ready to work in a fun and team oriented environment. Come apply today @ 2803 W 2nd

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Employment Opportunities

ATTN; COMPUTER WORK. Work from anywhere 24/7. Up to $1,500 Part time to $7,500 /mo. Full Time. Training provided. www.WorkServices7.com DRIVER TRAINEESPAID CDL TRAINING! Become a new driver for Stevens Transport! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Earn $800 per week! Stevens will cover all costs! 1-888-528-8864 drive4stevens.com WANT A Career Operating Heavy Equipment? Bulldozers, Backhoes, Excavators. Hands On Training! Certifications Offered. National Average 18-22hr. Lifetime Job Placement . VA Benefits Eligible! 1-866-362-6497 DEAN BALDWIN is hiring General Manager in Roswell, NM. GM is responsible for the strategic planning, business development, and the day to day operation of the facility. Competitive Salary & Benefits Offered. Please send resumes to Christinac@deanbald winpainting.com DEAN BALDWIN Painting Looking to hire a Chief Inspector in Roswell, NM. Responsible for compliance of all Federal, State, and other regulatory directives and guidance, the Quality Assurance department, Quality Control, Inspection, Maintenance Training content and Technical Data. Competitive Salary & Benefits Offered. Please send resumes to Christinac@deanbald winpainting.com NOW HIRING full time housekeepers. Must be able to pass background check and drug screening. Excellent pay with benefits. Please apply in person at 200 E. 19th. No phone calls please.

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Employment Opportunities

GUARDSMARK THE nation's leader in security is hiring security officers. No experience required, but customer service skills a must. Must be HS Grad/GED & 21 yrs. EOE Benefits: Free Life Ins., Uniforms/Tuition Assistance. Starting Pay $9.00hr. Apply by calling 575-347-3230, Mon-Fri, 9am-6pm. OPERATOR WANTED Loco Hills Propane Storage Facility Call Myron: 575-677-2331 Propane license not required to apply I NEED a caregiver for about 29 hours per week, $8.00/hr, must have drivers license. Serious, mature, Inquiries only. 622-4340 TEMPORARY FARM Labor: BU Growers, Bay City, TX, has 5 positions for rice; 3 mo. experience required for job duties listed; must be able to lift 75 pounds; must able to obtain driver’s license within 30 days; once hired, workers may be required to take random drug tests at no cost to worker; testing positive or failure to comply may result in immediate termination from employment; tools, equipment, housing and daily trans provided for employees who can’t return home daily; trans & subsistence expenses reimb.; $10.35/hr, may work nights and weekends; three-fourths work period guaranteed from 7/2/15 – 5/2/16. Apply at nearest NM Workforce Office with Job Order TX287171 or call 505-383-2721. NURSING AT Corizon... No Nights, Weekends or Holidays! Corzon, a provider of health services for the New Mexico Department of Corrections, has an excellent opportunity for Full Time, Days RN or LPN at Roswell Correctional Center in Hagerman. Corizon offers competitive rates and comprehensive benefits with the opportunity to learn a growing specialty! For more info, contact William McCamey, Administrator 575-625-3184 William.McCamey@ corizonhealth.com EOE/AAP/DTR SOUTHEAST NM Community Action Corporation Head Start Program •Is working with pre-school children your passion? •Considering a career with pre-school children? YES! YES! YES! Then Head Start is the program for you!

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

• Ads posted online at no extra cost

(includes tax)

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

PUBLISH THIS AD STARTING DATE ENDING DATE

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

o

o

o

EXPIRES ________

Card # __________________ 3 Digit # (on back of card)________ NAME ____________________________________________ ADDRESS _________________________________________ PHONE ___________________________________________

WORD AD DEADLINE To Place or Cancel an Ad

COMMERCIAL ACCOUNT..........................................................................NOON SUNDAY....................................................................................FRIDAY, 2:00 PM MONDAY....................................................................................FRIDAY, 2:00 PM TUESDAY............................................................................... MONDAY, 2:00 PM WEDNESDAY........................................................................ TUESDAY, 2:00 PM THURSDAY......................................................................WEDNESDAY, 2:00 PM FRIDAY............................................................................... THURSDAY, 2:00 PM POLICY FOR CLASSIFIED ADTAKING Personal Advertising totaling less than $20 will not be billed on an open account, unless the advertiser already has a history of good credit with us. Visa, Master Card & Discover are accepted as prepayment. There will be no refunds or credit on prepaid cancellations. All individuals who are not in our retail trade zone must prepay their advertising. All new commercial accounts must have a standard application for credit on file. If we do not have an approved credit application on file, the advertising must be charged on a credit card until credit is approved. CORRECTING AN ERROR — You are responsible for checking your ad the first day it appears in the paper. In the event of an error, call the Classified Department immediately for correction. THE ROSWELL DAILY RECORD WILL ONLY ALLOW ONE ADDITIONAL DAY FOR INCORRECT INSERTIONS.

CLASS DISPLAY AND STYLE ADS

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

LEGALS

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

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

www.rdrnews.com

We are looking for fun, diverse, dedicated, motivated people to hire for the following positions: Carlsbad Site Supervisor -$21.05 (DOQ) Roswell Teacher-$15.42 -$21.69 (DOQ) Teacher Assistant -$10.23 Education Assistant $15.42 -$21.69 (DOQ) Cook Assistant -$9.46 or Cook Aide -$9.26 Substitutes -$9.26 Benefits for above positions- Medical/Dental, Life/LTD, retirement plans, sick leave, paid Holidays (if eligible) Monday-ThursdayFour day work week! Positions will remain open until filled Review Job Description and work schedule at Department Of Workforce Solutions at 2110 W. Main, Roswell, NM or mail application to 1915 San Jose Blvd., Carlsbad, NM 88220. Go to ww.snmcac.org to print out application packet. SNMCAC IS AN EEOE ARBY’S of Roswell and Dairy Queen North has a position available for General Manager. We will pay TOP salary for experience. Submit your resume or work history to: mjgcorp@cs.com, Fax 575-623-3075 or call 575-622-8711. Please ask for Jay. LOOKING FOR experience housekeepers. Apply in person 2001 N. Main. 575-622-0110 TEMPORARY FARM Labor: Jackie Welch, Vicytoria, TX, has 4 positions for olive orchard; 3 mo. experience required for job duties listed; must be able to lift 75 pounds; must able to obtain driver’s license within 30 days; once hired, workers may be required to take random drug tests at no cost to worker; testing positive or failure to comply may result in immediate termination from employment; tools, equipment, housing and daily trans provided for employees who can’t return home daily; trans & subsistence expenses reimb.; $10.35/hr, may work nights and weekends; three-fourths work period guaranteed from 7/1/15 – 3/31/16. Apply at nearest NM Workforce Office with Job Order TX5049250 or call 505-383-2721. 140

Cleaning

JD CLEANING Service, Licensed and bonded. References 623-4252 WANT CLEAN windows? Sunshine Window Service 575-626-5458 or 626-5153 195

Elderly Care

EXPERIENCED MEDICAL Assistant available for FT Senior home care, excellent references. 626-7379

195

Elderly Care

COMFORT KEEPERS will help your loved one maintain a full and independent life in the comfort of their own home. All of our caregivers are thoroughly screened, bonded and insured. It is our goal to provide the most trusted in-home care service in Chaves County. We would be happy to arrange a free in home assessment to help you learn more. Before you decide on your home care provider, give us a call at 624-9999. www.comfortkeepers.com 200

Fencing

M.G. HORIZONS free estimates for installation. Chainlink, wood, metal & block. 575-623-1991 RODRIGUEZ CONSTRUCTION For wood, metal, block, stucco fencing, Since 1974. Lic. 22689. 420-0100 225

General Construction

A.J. SIMS Construction Storage sheds, wood or metal, metal fences, patios, carports, farm & ranch equipment, barns, portable welding, Lic., Insured & Bonded. Call Alan Sims at 575-420-7112 or Skeet Chrisman at 575-914-8239 ROOFING, PAINTING, remodel. LLD Construction Inc. 575-420-4405 ALPHA CONSTRUCTION New Construction, remodels, additions, concrete & painting. Lic. & Bonded Call Adam 626-2050 235

Hauling

PROPERTY CLEANUPS Tear down old bldgs, barns, haul trash, old farm equip. 317-7738/347-0142. TRASH HAULING. Also clean barns, attics, garages, and basements. Call 575-625-1429. 270

Landscape/ Lawnwork

SPRING CLEAN-up rake leaves, tree trimming, weed eating, haul trash, property clean-up & much more. Call Joseph, 317-2242. LIGHTHOUSE LAWN-SERVICE Free estimates. Affordable lawn care. Call 575-626-0200. GUERRA SPRINKLERS & landscaping, licensed. Free est. Call Jesus 317-9657 GREEN BRO's - Lawn Care affordable, free est. and entire lawn service. 575-910-6436 JOHN DEER Tractor work w/front end loader, backhole & deck mower. EVE: 575-755-7555 EMERALD LANDSCAPING Lawn & sprinkler installation, sprinkler repair, sod, gravel, lawn maintenance. Maintenance/Free Estimates/accept credit cards. Lic#89265. Call: Aaron, 575-910-0150 or Chris, 420-3945 CHAVEZ SPRINKLER CO. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING AND SPRINKLER SYSTEM & REPAIRS, ROCK WORK, TREES, SHRUBS, TRACTOR & DUMP TRUCK WORK. FREE ESTIMATES. CALL HECTOR 420-3167 MOWING, TRIMMING, cutting down trees, landscaping, and etc. 420-0965 YARD WORK, clean-ups, lawns. Handyman svc. David 637-9580. 285

Friday, May 22, 2015 285

MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Become a Medical Office Assistant! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Online training can get you job ready! HS Diploma/GED & PC/Internet needed! 1-888-589-9683. ADVERTISE YOUR driver jobs in 23 New Mexico newspapers for only $100. Your 25-word classified ad will reach more than 142,000 readers. Call this newspaper to place your ad or log onto www.nmpress.org for more information. SELL YOUR structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You don't have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-614-1524 SOCIAL SECURITY DISABILITY BENEFITS. Unable to work? Denied benefits? We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon & Associates at 1-800-591-5109 to start your application today! DONATE YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR BOAT TO HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day Vacation, Tax Deductible, Free Towing, All Paperwork Taken Care Of. Call 1-800-948-7239 DISH NETWORK – Get MORE for LESS! Starting $19.99/month (for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet for $15 more/month.) CALL Now 1-800-315-7043

Dennis the Menace

DIRECTV'S the Big Deal special! Only $19.99 per month - Free premium channels HBO, Starz, Cinemax and Showtime for 3 months and Free Receiver upgrade! NFL 2014 Season Included. Call Now 1-800-264-0340. GOT KNEE PAIN? Back Pain? Shoulder Pain? Get a pain-relieving brace -little or NO cost to you. Medicare Patients Call Health Hotline Now! 1- 800-918-6159 REDUCE YOUR Past Tax Bill by as much as 75 Percent. Stop Levies, Liens and Wage Garnishments. Call The Tax DR Now to see if you Qualify 1-800-309-5124 STOP OVERPAYING for your prescriptions! Save up to 93%! Call our licensed Canadian and International pharmacy service to compare prices and get $15.00 off your first prescription and FREE Shipping. Call 1-800-661-3783 310

Painting/ Decorating

TIME TO PAINT? Quality int/ext. painting. Call 637-9108 QUALITY PAINTING at prices you can afford, Senior discount. Mike 622-0072 330

490

Homes For Sale

#9 HUERTA Ct., 3/2/2, 2025 sqft, great location, north of Goddard HS, cul de sac block, upgrades include hardwood in master bedroom & living room, master bath, kitchen backsplash, lighting fixtures throughout home, shown by appt. only, 575-622-4943. 492

Plumbing

Homes for Sale/ Rent

REASONABLE REPAIRS plumbing, new construction, heat pumps, lic 27043. 317-4147 345

Remodeling

NO JOB too small, repair, remodeling, etc. Reasonable rates, quality work. Licensed and bonded. 5-C Const., Inc. 626-4079 or 622-2552. BERRONES CONSTRUCTION Remodeling, painting, ceramic tile, sheds, additions, fencing, roofing. Licensed. Ray, 626-4153 REASONABLE REMODELING Contractor Specializing on kitchen & bathrooms. New Additions & Roofing. NM Lic. 27043. 317-4147. 350

Roofing

GUARANTEED SHINGLE ROOF JOBS Locally owned. Licensed and insured. 5-C Const. 626-4079 or 622-2552. BERRONES CONSTRUCTION shingles, metal roofing & torch-down roofing. Licensed & Bonded. Call Ray at 626-4153. 395

Stucco Plastering

M.G. Horizons All types of Stucco and Wire lath. Free Estimates 623-1991 STUCCO, LATH, Synthetic, guaranteed work. Memo 575-637-1217 405

Tractor-Work

TRACTOR WORK Lots mowed, discing, blading, post holes. 317-7738 or 347-0142. 410

Tree Service

STUMP GRINDING. Big Stumps & back yard stumps. Tree and shrub work. Free estimates. 317-8037 or 623-4185 FRANK'S Tree Service, Tree trimming & removal, best prices 910-4581 ALLEN'S Tree Srvc. Tree top removal, good clean up, free estimates 626-1835

REAL ESTATE OPPORTUNITY

Miscellaneous Services

ISABEL GONZALEZ from Hair On 214 W. McGaffey services; Highlights, color, perms, wax, airbrush, acrylic nails, manicures, pedicures, change polish, men's cut, women's cut, children's cut, wet set, shampoo/style, nails trim and clean as well as facials. Monday-Saturday 10-5 walk ins or appointments work with your schedule. 575-637-9433 Senior discount and graduation special!!!

Miscellaneous Services

B7

490

Homes For Sale

FSBO: $77K, owner finance w/$7K down, 66 G St., 627-9942. PUBLISHER'S NOTICE

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

2BD $90K w/house in bk & 3Bd $65K, fncd yrds, call M-Th 8a-noon 624 1331 FSBO - 4BR/2ba + office 2541 sqft, 3117 Notting Hill. Stop the car, you have to see this beauty. $294k. OBO Broker co-op 2.5% Call Jim 575-910-7969. HIGHLAND AVE, 3000+ approx. sqft, beautiful home, 3br/2ba, formal living room & dining room, large den, huge playroom, breakfast area, large laundry & pantry, 2 car garage, landscape w/fruit trees, bank loan approved or cash only, $169k. 622-6170 3 ACRE home site in Hondo Valley, 2 acres, water rights, high piped derogation, fruit trees, pasture for horses, quiet and secluded, $150,000. 575-653-4285 FSBO OR rent to buy, n. Sky Loop, 2,437 Sq ft., 4bd/3ba/3 car gar. 575-914-0927

SELL OR RENT YOUR HOUSE FASTER! INCLUDE A PICTURE FOR JUST $6! E-MAIL PICTURES TO CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM 495

Acreages/Farms Ranches/ Sale

40, 80 & 160 +/- acre tracts approx. 12 miles south of Roswell. Owner financing avail. Call Melodi Salas at Ranchline/Taylor & Taylor Realtors, 575-626-7663. EQUESTRIAN CENTER for lease, 24 indoor stalls with tack rooms and outside corrals with 3br apartment upstairs at Buena Vida in Roswell. $1500/mo, $1500/dep. 575-623-1800 500

Businesses for Sale

SELF STORAGE facility 98% occupied 317-0029 FOR SALE 12 1/2% interest in a New Mexico oil and gas operating corporation and 12.375% interest in a Texas partnership. Selling for less than 1/2 the price paid. Sale price $31,500.00. Historical revenues would yield a payout in approximately three years. For details please call 575-623-7161 or 575-626-4890 515

Mobile Homes - Sale

FOR SALE Lancer Mobile home 14x72 2bd+2bath w/extras to be moved. 575-420-8454 or 910-1501 520

Lots for Sale

SPECIAL 1 MONTH ONLY Price reduced to $14,000. Mobile Home Lots for sale: Lot size 50x134. Owner financing w/$4000 down. 50 lots to choose from. On Washington & Brasher. 420-1352 PREMIUM 5 Acre tracts, good covenants (no mobilehomes), Pecan Lands West on Brown Road between Country Club & Berrendo Road. Owner will finance with 10% down. 622-3479, 624-9607, 910-1913, 626-6791, 626-3848 3 LOTS for sale located on Ransom Rd. If interested call 910-0214 535

Apartments Furnished

1&2BD, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 540

Apartments UnFurnished

VALLE ENCANTADA YOUR BEST $ RENTAL VALUE! LARGE 1,2,3 BEDROOMS. FREE UTILITIES. unfurnished, laundry room, playground, pool, ample parking. 2001 South Sunset. 623-3722 TOWN PLAZA APARTMENTS NO HUD ACCEPTED ALL UTILITIES PAID Seniors receive 10% discount Friendly managers. New Renovated EXTRA LARGE 1, 2, and 3 bedrooms. Each 2 & 3 bedroom is multi level, upstairs & downstairs w/ large closets, stove & refrigerator, private patios, and private parking. Complex has a pool, laundry room, and a quiet garden setting environment. Friendly managers on-site. 575-623-2735. 614 W. Jaffa, $800/mo, 3br/2ba, central ht, Hud accepted. Call from 5pm-7pm, by appt. only, 575-626-5290 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. 1&2BD, 3 locations, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 3/1 over stables, 17 El Camino at Buena Vida in Roswell. Water & 1 horse stall incl. $750/mo, $750dep. 575-623-1800 EFF, 1 & 2br, wtr paid, No pets, laundry fac, stove/ref. Mirador Apts, 700 N. Missouri. 627-8348.

540

Apartments UnFurnished

ALL BILLS PAID cable inc. 1BR $569, 2BR $677, 3br/2ba $777/mo., ref air, newly remodeled. 502 S. Wyoming. 622-4944 PICK UP A LIST OF AVAILABLE RENTALS AT BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOME SERVICES, 501 NORTH MAIN. VERY NICE & clean 1 bdrm, duplex. $475/mo, $350/dep. 1215 E. 1st. Call 626-3977 3015 ALHAMBRA, 3 bdrm, 2bts, dbld garage, $1,690.00 furnished 3801 Calumet Rd. -2 acres, 3 bdrm, 2 bts, horse barns$1,500.00, 608 N. Penn B&C-2bd., 2bths, single garage. $900.00 CALL SHERLEA TAYLOR, 575-420-1978 or 575-624-2219 SUNSET APARTMENTS 1601 S. Sunset 623-2494 currently has Studio apartments available for 62 yrs or older, utilities included. Rent is based on income

*NOW ACCEPTING* assisted living/Hud, preferred seniors, all may apply. Large 1, 2, and 3bd available. Call John 623-2735 545

Houses Furnished

1&2BD, util pd, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 550

Houses for RentUnfurnished

3BR/2BA mobile home, great location, seniors only, $750/mo, 910-9648. 47 WILDY 3/2/1 large living & fam. rm. Remodeled kitchen includes stove, micro, refrig, dw, w/d. Rent $985+deposit. No smoking or Hud Call 575-915-6498 or 915-6490 2&3BD, 1&2Ba, pmt hist reqd, No Hud, No Pets, call M-Th 8a-noon 624-1331 1BD 1BA, water paid, $425mo. No appliances, 625-9208 2803 PURDUE 3bd/2ba $1000mo $1000dep. 627-9942 504 W. Albuquerque 2bd refrigerator air, washer/dryer hookup, no Hud, no pets. $600mo $500dep. 914-5402 TIRED OF Landlord Headaches? We can help! Berkshire Hathaway Home Services. 575-624-2262 604 E. LaPaloma Ln. 3/2/2 living & fam. rm Remodeled kitchen incl stove,micro, refrig, dw,w/d. Large stone fireplace 1block to Goddard / Del Note schools Rent $1,375 + deposit incl lawncare. No smoking or HUD. Call 575-915-6498 or 575-915-6490 AVAILABLE JUNE 1st, 3br/1ba, no HUD, $750/mo, $300/dep, central ht/air, 575-840-7717. NICE, SAFE, quiet neighborhood, 3bd, 2ba townhouse, 420-8706 555

Mobile Homes for Rent

2BR/1BA, $700/mo, $700/dep. utilities included 505-508-7334 580

Office or Business Places

EXECUTIVE OFFICE Space For Lease Roswell, NM Will lease all or half of the 3000 square feet newly finished, professional use, office space. Building is monitored by local security service with surveillance cameras, well maintained parking lot, and quite peaceful surroundings. Options available: utilities, in house receptionist, and use of modern Multi Media/Conference room. For details please call Cheri at 575-622-1127 Ext. 11. OFFICE SPACE in down town Roswell. Available Now Approx. 900 sq. ft; 2 bath rm; 4 rooms: $775.00 per month, utilities paid Kraft & Hunter Law Firm 575-625-2000 FOR LEASE, space in Sunwest Centre Office Complex at 500 N. Main St. Various size spaces. Owner-paid utilities and janitorial. Suite customization available. High floor space available for larger tenants. Call Ed McClelland, Broker or come by Suite 606. Office 575-623-1652 or mobile 575-420-2546


B8 Friday, May 22, 2015 580

Office or Business Places

EXECUTIVE OFFICE SUITE for lease: 1000 sqft, newly decorated, private rest room, covered parking at 1210 N. Main. Contact David McGee, Owner/Broker, 622-2401. OFFICE OR Retail space for Rent. Prime downtown area. Please call 622-8711. OFFICE-RETAIL 2108 S. Main, $550mo 627-9942 COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS for lease, 301 W. McGaffey, 204 W. 2nd 637-5315. PROFESSIONAL OFFICE Building For Lease, 401 W. College Blvd., over 2600 sqft w/8 offices & a large reception area. Call Jimmy Barnes at 575-624-8021. 585

Warehouse and Storage

SMALL WAREHOUSES, 800 sqft & 1000 sqft, 14 ft overhead doors. 575-626-0259

605

Classifieds Miscellaneous for Sale

POWER WHEELCHAIR, hospital bed, CPAP breathing unit, 622-7638 WHEELCHAIR, WALKER, bath tfr bench, commode chair, lift chair 622-7638. POOL MEMBERSHIP Linda Vista $1500, 626-7928 FARM FRESH eggs for sale $2.50 a dz, will deliver in Roswell 719-852-0496 FOR SALE King size bed, dresser, mirror and 2 bed stands. $350. 623-0345 THE TREASURE Chest. Anna out of the dungeon, back in the store. Tin toys, dressers, thrifts, Carnival & Depression glass. 1204 W. Hobbs, 914-1855, Weds-Sat, 10-5. 615

Coins/Gold/ Silver/Buy

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

620

Wanted to BuyMisc.

TOP DOLLAR Paid for furniture, collectibles, appliances, antiques, tools, saddles, plus anything else of value. We pay cash with same day removal of all items. Compete/partial households & personal estates welcome. 623-0136 or 910-6031 630

Auction Sales

PUBLIC AUCTION Saturday May 23rd 9am 1709 South Main Roswell (next to Kmart) for complete listing and photos go to www.tlcauction.com 575-626-3184 Preview May 22nd 2-4pm. Building sold everything must go. 635

Good things to Eat

PHAROAH QUAIL eggs for sale, also chick and adults. Call 575-420-9373 FARM FRESH eggs for sale, $2.50/dz, 624-0898 715

Hay and Feed Sale

2 STRING alfalfa bale $10 each, 4X4 barley bale $140, 626-0159

720

Livestock & Supplies

Pets for Sale

Guns & Ammunition

765

WEATHERBY VANGUARD 223 Stainless custom boyd stock $650.00. weatherby vanguard 7mm rem. mag. with mussel brake $600.00 - Ranger 101.6 Double Barrel 20ga. made by Stevens model 330 early Fork-type cocking lever $450.00 - Henry Golden Boy 22 Large loop with scope mounth and 500 rounds ammo $525.00 with the org. box and papers Marlin 39 A 22 1940s model 360 rounds ammo with scope redfield tracker 2X7 scope $450. - 700 Remington 17 Rem. Redfield 3X9X50 $700.00 -Rugar black halk 357 mag. stainless org. box and papers $700.00 575-347-8692

ADD A PICTURE OF YOUR PET FOR SALE FOR JUST $6! E-MAIL PICTURES TO: CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM 2YR OLD male, white, albino, full blooded boxer, great with kids, needs to be the only male dog, $50 re-homing fee. 420-1352 3 FEMALES baby yorkies 327 E. Mescalero Rd Call Wanda 625-5225 FREE KITTENS. Call 520-508-6735 TOY POODLE puppies, shots started, litter box trained, very outgoing, ready for a forever home now, 1M $450, 1F $500. 575-257-0808

Motorcycles & Scooters

775

MALTERANIAN T-Cup male puppy, complete health check including blood work, all shots done, tiny little fluffball, not for home with small children, weighs 3-4 lbs as an adult, $750. 575-257-0808

4 - 8 and FFA show goats for sale 575-626-9865 745

Roswell Daily Record

Pets for Sale

745

790

Autos for Sale

795

03 YAMAHA VStar 700 $2600. Call 910-0042

RV’’s & Campers Hauling

780

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 1989 BOUNDER 34ft motor home with queen bed. Motor only has 10k miles. Call 420-9373 2015 SANDPIPER Fiberglass 5th wheel, 5 slide outs, 2br, 2 central airs, w/d, elect. awning, 4 seasons, many extras, $42,900 OBO. 505-385-3944 '03 WINNEBAGO Sightseer, 31 ft Chevy, LR slide, 57k miles, health forces sale, $9k below blue book, $28,500. Call 623-6105

Autos for Sale

790

2011 FORD Fiesta SE, 37,500 miles, excellent gas mileage, $8,000 OBO. 575-910-2591

Pickups/ Trucks/Vans

2004 GMC Yukon, 150k miles, good condition, $6200. 2001 4x4 Dakota, quad cab, camper shell, 200k miles, great condition, $5300. Call 910-2900.

SHOW US WHAT YOU'RE SELLING! INCLUDE A PICTURE IN YOUR AD FOR JUST $6! E-MAIL PICTURES TO CLASSIFIEDS@ RDRNEWS.COM

2006 PONTIAC, AWD Montana Suburban, 5 passenger van, excellent cond., 124k miles, $6k. 575-625-9408 796

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

SUVS

'97 CHEVY Suburban 1500, 4x4, leather, 3rd row seat, dark green, runs & drives good. 626-5984. 810

Auto Parts & Accessories

410 LIMITED slip rear end for sale 14K miles. Call 575-420-9373

1978 TBIRD, 1 owner, under 100K mi., orig. equip. price neg. 817-789-0194 MECHANIC SPECIAL '89 Club Wagon Str. 6, 1st $500 takes it, 501 S. Kansas. 575-420-4017

EMPLOYEE PRICING FOR ALL! For a limited time you pay what employees pay — Ford Motor Company’s X-plan pricing usually reserved for employees and preferred vendors.

A

T

R

O

S

W

E

ax Hybrid SE 2015 Ford C#1-M 50220 MSRP vings Roswell Ford Sa Rebates

Employee PRICE

23,707

#150379

MSRP Rebates

$ 15,885 $ 1,000

14,885

$

2015 Ford Mustang C Coupe

Employee PRICE

$ 33,380 $ 1,782 $ 500

31,098

$

O

MSRP vings Roswell Ford Sa Rebates Employee $ PRICE

D

$ 41,735 $ 3,275 $ 3,500

34,960

2015 Ford Fusion 4 Dr. S SE #150323

#150289

MSRP Roswell Ford Savings Rebates

R

emor 2014 F150onTr 0 , EcoBoost #14051

2015 Ford Focus 4 Dr. S SE

Employee PRICE

F

$ 21,515 $ 641 $ 2,000

18,874

$

MSRP Roswell Ford Savings Rebates

Employee PRICE

$ 26,800 $ 1,138 $ 1,750

21,912

$

2014 Ford Taurus 4 Dr. S SEL 2015 Ford F250 4x4 C Crew C Cab #150261

ECOBOOST #150262

MSRP Roswell Ford Savings Rebates

L

Navigati With FX Package,

$

2015 Ford Fiesta 4 Dr.

Employee PRICE

$ 26,025 818 $ $ 1,500

L

MSRP Roswell Ford Savings

Employee PRICE

$ 34,215 $ 3,155

31,060

$

#150273

MSRP Roswell Ford Savings Rebates

Employee PRICE

$ 40,120 $ 1,928 $ 4,000

34,192

$

*See Dealer for details. You may not qualify for all rebates. Prices do not include tax, registration and dealer service transfer ploye yee fee. All vehicles subject to prior sale. Not responsible for typographical errors. Image for illustrative purposes only. Employee pricing excludes Raptor and Shelby.

ROSWELL FORD

821 N. MAIN ST. OPEN: MON.-FRI. 8AM - 7PM, SAT. 8AM - 5PM Se habla espanol TOLL-FREE: 877-624-3673 SERVICE DEPT.: 623-1031

www.roswellford.com

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 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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