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  • RGH has you set for last-minute Valentine's Day plans

    Betty Williamson|Updated Feb 11, 2020

    If you happen to be — as I am — a procrastinator, then it is possible that Valentine’s Day has crept upon you and you’ve not yet made plans. Have I got a deal for you. Thanks to other procrastinators in our community, there are still tickets available for Friday’s third annual For the Love of Roosevelt General Hospital dinner and auction that takes place starting at 6 p.m. at the Yam Theatre in Portales. For $35 — the cost of about a dozen roses — you can snag one of those...

  • Catching up with the resilient Brittany Kanmore

    Betty Williamson|Updated Feb 4, 2020

    A year after the accident that almost took Brittany Kanmore's life and landed her on many local prayer lists, I caught up with this resilient young woman over coffee to hear about how she's doing now. There is plenty of good news to share. This ambitious 21-year-old is in her final semester of classes at Clovis Community College, working part time in Clovis, and preparing to open a business of her own in Portales come the end of May. "Everything happens for a reason," she...

  • Thinking big with HGTV Home Town contest

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jan 28, 2020

    If you could make any changes to Portales, what pops into your mind? Maybe a movie theater in one of our empty buildings? A gazebo in City Park or on the courthouse square? A repurposing of the old Santa Fe train depot? A new site and a new life for the Governor Lindsey house on North Boston? Some of us who love Portales have been looking into that proverbial crystal ball this week and dreaming big, thanks to a contest sponsored by a series on Home and Garden Television (HGTV)...

  • Extension clubs offer community, fellowship

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jan 21, 2020

    I first saw a flyer advertising the “Roosevelt County Homesteaders Club” more than a year ago, and I was intrigued. My curiosity heightened when I learned it was a group of mostly young women with a commitment to exploring the skills our grandparents and great-grandparents relied upon: gardening, food preservation, raising chickens, and so on. I finally found a chance to sit in on one of their monthly gatherings last week. It was pure joy. Meredith Eaton is president of the...

  • Imagination Library gift of reading for children

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jan 14, 2020

    When I was a little kid, our mailbox was perched on a wobbly wooden stand a little over a quarter mile from our house. Then (as now), our mail was delivered three times each week. Most days (sandstorms not included), it was a pleasant bicycle ride to retrieve the offerings. What I remember most vividly was that when summer arrived, our “Weekly Reader” newspapers came by mail, and it was always a thrill (I am not using that word lightly) to open the old mailbox and find tha...

  • Hanging fresh calendars time-honored tradition of new year

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jan 9, 2020

    There is something eternally hopeful about hanging up a fresh calendar. Or nine. I recently completed that time-honored annual tradition of trading out all of last year’s calendars for current models. The newest one from the Roosevelt County Electric Cooperative hangs front and center above my computer. The artwork on it — a lovely rendering of the Rogers community school as it looked in the 1940s — takes me right back to seeing the original in progress when I met Arch artis...

  • Better to keep confetti out of celebrations

    Betty Williamson|Updated Dec 31, 2019

    Welcome to 2020. I’m writing this a few days ahead of this first day of a new decade, but if tradition holds true, my New Year’s eve celebration last night likely involved pajamas, a cup of hot chocolate, and maybe a picture puzzle. Those are typically combined with gratitude that we live in the Mountain Standard Time zone, because when that crystal ball drops at Times Square in New York City, it is only 10 p.m. here — a mere hour or so past my normal bedtime. I can usually ma...

  • 1969 getting ready to enter annals of history

    Betty Williamson|Updated Dec 24, 2019

    The concept of “the 50-year rule” was founded by the National Park Service back in 1948 as a good measure of determining when something is old enough to be considered officially “historic.” Accordingly, the 1969 Christmas season is entering the pages of history, even as you read. I scrolled through a few copies of the Portales News-Tribune and the Clovis News-Journal from the week before Christmas a half-century ago to see what was going on in eastern New Mexico and what lo...

  • Forget gift guides and listen to your heart

    Betty Williamson|Updated Dec 17, 2019

    I grew up in an era before "gift-giving guides" were a thing. Or if they were, we never heard about them. These days we are bombarded with electronic suggestions from emails, websites, and magazines offering lists like, "36 gifts for hard-to-please friends," "26 Secret Santa ideas perfect for co-workers," and "23 luxury gifts for the man who has everything." The closest we had to gift-giving guides when I was a kid in the 1960s were the Christmas catalogs issued each year by...

  • 'A Christmas Carol' is a tale that never grows old

    Betty Williamson|Updated Dec 10, 2019

    Long years ago, before my brothers and I had yet learned to read, three of the most-used books in our house were these: Hallmark’s “Poetry for Pleasure,” Margaret de Angeli’s “Book of Nursery and Mother Goose Rhymes,” and a tattered and torn 1929 edition of “The Elson Readers: Book Eight.” It was on page 149 of the last one where we were first introduced by our father to Ebenezer Scrooge. In sessions that spanned multiple nights (we three small children were spellbound, but...

  • Days ahead full of seasonal events

    Betty Williamson|Updated Dec 3, 2019

    When Thanksgiving happens on its latest possible date — as it did this year — it feels as if we are plunged headfirst into the deep end of the Christmas pool almost before the turkey has been digested. Grab a life preserver. The coming days are filled with events to get us all in the holiday spirit, whether we are ready or not. Because of a love for all things quirky, let me begin with the Bazaar Market that is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday in the lecture hal...

  • Good luck being your charming self tomorrow

    Betty Williamson|Updated Nov 26, 2019

    For a mere 50 cents, I picked up a gem at a recent used book sale — “The Woman You Want to Be: Margery Wilson’s Complete Book of Charm.” First published in 1928, mine is from the 18th printing, released in 1942. It’s filled with timeless tips — timeless, I tell you — on how be a better person … OK, a better woman … but you men should listen up, too. If you’re hosting the meal at your house tomorrow, it’s possibly too late to incorporate Wilson’s advice for this year, but come...

  • A dash of national recognition and a swirl of nostalgia

    Betty Williamson|Updated Nov 19, 2019

    Portales' Terri Doerr was watching television on her computer a couple of weeks ago - "mainly ignoring the commercials," she said - when a voice came on that she'd not heard in person for almost two decades. It was her father, Jimmy Self, singing a fragment of a song he wrote and recorded at the Norman Petty Studios in Clovis back in the 1950s. "You're everything I'll ever need to make my dreams come true," Doerr heard her father singing. "You're my recipe for happiness ......

  • Good causes, good music fill up weekend

    Betty Williamson|Updated Nov 12, 2019

    Perhaps in honor of Thanksgiving month — or maybe we are just lucky — this weekend has an overflowing cornucopia of good causes and good music in store for us. I’ll be spending many hours at the Portales Public Library as I do each November when we throw open the doors to the Friends of the Library used book storeroom and practically give books away. Seriously: 25 cent paperbacks and 50 cent hardbacks. That annual sale that supports library activities opens at 5 p.m. Thurs...

  • Grateful to these veterans and all who've served

    Betty Williamson|Updated Nov 5, 2019

    When you put Portales old-timers Joe Blair and Jim Warnica together in the same room, it doesn't take long for the stories to start flying. The two have been buddies since "first or second grade," they say. They can't remember for certain. Blair turned 94 a few weeks ago; Warnica was 93 in July. They have hunted arrowheads and sandhill cranes together, consumed endless cups of coffee, and visited almost daily in places like the post office and the hardware store. They even...

  • Fall brings back Halloween memories

    Betty Williamson|Updated Oct 29, 2019

    When the leaves turn brown and gold and the north wind sends them skittering along the road, I find myself growing nostalgic. It happens every October. One of my earliest memories is from a Halloween, way back in 1964. I wasn’t quite yet 3 that year; my older brother had just turned 4, and my younger brother was an 18-month-old toddler. Our grandfather, Asa Lee Williamson, had been in what we called the Lehman hospital in Portales for a while already by then, his long life g...

  • Exchange student makes return trip to Portales

    Betty Williamson|Updated Oct 22, 2019

    If one happened to be in the United States for a conference in Florida - an 8,000-mile journey from one's home in New Zealand, why on earth would one not consider a quick side trip to Portales? Happily, our friend Mandy Welch did just that last weekend, making a quick return visit to the community where she spent a year of her life as an international Rotary exchange student almost 40 years ago. "I've still got my Ram band jacket - I wore it for years," she reminisced,...

  • Foodies in luck with weekend events

    Betty Williamson|Updated Oct 15, 2019

    If you consider yourself a foodie, you’re in luck this weekend in eastern New Mexico. Things are shaping up to be the culinary equivalent of a perfect storm. Without devoting an inordinate amount of time to research, I’d be willing to gamble that we High Plains denizens may have more opportunities to indulge in a greater variety of specialty foods this weekend than possibly any time in history. (I may be exaggerating, but stick with me.) During the 48 hours that begin at 5 p.m...

  • Artist captures local history in creations

    Betty Williamson|Updated Oct 8, 2019

    Roosevelt County's Gayle Walker is an artist - and a good one - but I think you'd have to call her a local historian as well. Most years for nearly a decade now, she selects one of the small rural communities that dot our county, and puts in hours of research on its history, including interviews with current and former residents. Then she retreats into the well house-turned-studio that sits behind her family's farmhouse near Arch and transforms her findings into an oil...

  • Community's kindness beautiful

    Betty Williamson|Updated Oct 1, 2019

    You would have to look long and hard to find a nicer person in eastern New Mexico than Bill Parson. Even if you don't know his name, chances are you've seen him. Parson was a long-time "cart pusher" at the Portales Walmart and now works in maintenance there. He's also an active Special Olympian, where at the age of 61 he regularly out-bowls and outruns athletes a fourth his age. And he spends at least an hour each day on bicycle, pedaling the streets of Portales, a tall...

  • ENMU's first homecoming a memorable event

    Betty Williamson|Updated Sep 24, 2019

    As Eastern New Mexico University celebrates its homecoming this weekend, it seems fitting to look back to the first one that was held 85 years ago — on Oct. 6, 1934. That first gathering didn’t include alumni. There weren’t any yet. Eastern New Mexico Junior College had only opened for business a few months earlier. The 17 students in the first graduating class wouldn’t receive diplomas until the following spring. But the day-long event on the first Saturday of long-ag...

  • Food distribution looking for new home

    Betty Williamson|Updated Sep 17, 2019

    On the third Saturday of almost every month for the past five years, volunteers have filled the fellowship hall at Central Christian Church in Portales to assist in an impressive community food distribution program called The Emergency Food Assistance Program, or TEFAP. That will happen again beginning at 8 a.m. Saturday at the church at 1528 S. Main. But after that Saturday distribution, TEFAP will be a program without a home in Portales. Organizers are on the hunt for a new...

  • Sharing kidneys across US

    Betty Williamson|Updated Sep 10, 2019

    Clovis second-grade teacher Regina Griego may have the best excuse ever to explain why she's late for school this year. Yes, this year. While her students reported for the new semester on Aug. 12, Griego had a big project she had to finish first. It involved saving a couple of lives. Regina and her husband, Gerald, are both Clovis natives. She teaches at Zia Elementary School, and he's the chief executive officer for the family construction firm, Nick Griego & Sons. They have...

  • Extend a hand of kindness to someone this week

    Betty Williamson|Updated Sep 3, 2019

    My Uncle Jack Williamson called himself a “desperate optimist.” I always liked that term, that desire to keep a positive outlook even in grim circumstances. The older I get, the more I relate. Especially on weeks like this. I write these columns a couple of days before they’re published each Wednesday. As I am at the keyboard committing these words to paper, the communities of Odessa and Midland are mopping up crime scenes and starting to piece together lives that were shatt...

  • A look back at the German POWs of Portales

    Betty Williamson|Updated Aug 27, 2019

    Seventy-five years ago, Bill Vinzant — better known as Billy Glen in those days — was a 10-year-old boy living in Portales, the son of the long-time county extension agent W.G. Vinzant. It was 1944, World War II dominated the headlines, and it was the third consecutive fall without a Roosevelt County Fair, thanks to the ongoing austerity of war. It was also the year that the fairgrounds — which looked a lot different back then — became the temporary home for about 200 German...

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