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  • Coming full circle

    Betty Williamson|Updated Aug 20, 2019

    Albert Flinn's official job title is head rodeo coach for Eastern New Mexico University. This summer, he's also been a trail boss and herd wrangler, searching out "strays" for the upcoming reunion of the school's competitive rodeo teams from 1967 to 1969. Eastern's 2019 College Daze Rodeo, scheduled Sept. 19-21 in Portales, will serve as the roundup corral for the ENMU Rodeo Reunion, with special recognition in store for the members of the 1969 men's national rodeo...

  • Breathe deep and enjoy the fine bouquet of August

    Betty Williamson|Updated Aug 13, 2019

    As I was savoring the heady aroma of raindrops sinking into parched earth during an unexpected rain shower earlier this week, it occurred to me that some of the best scents of the year happen in August: ripening gardens, roasting chiles, back-to-school supplies, fairs. My friends who are better at working the earth than I am have mature tomatoes growing on lush and aromatic green vines right now. It’s almost worth buying plants at a nursery in the spring only for the scent o...

  • Fairs celebrate best things about rural communities

    Betty Williamson|Updated Aug 6, 2019

    I was at a concert outside the Lea County Museum in Lovington last week, enjoying a balmy evening and some good tunes. As the sun set and the evening thankfully began to cool off, multi-colored neon lights started to wink on a few blocks to our east. Although I was puzzled at first, it soon became clear they were the tops of carnival rides, setting up in preparation for the opening of the region’s first county fair this year. If you’re the kind of person who keeps score (an...

  • Good to be reminded that what I have is plenty

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jul 30, 2019

    I was visiting with a new acquaintance last weekend in her lovely home in Portales. During the afternoon, as we sipped ice water and munched on cookies she’d baked earlier in the day, she twice used a word that rarely makes it into conversations any more. In fact, I can’t think of the last time I’ve heard anyone use it. It’s not a challenging or unusual word. It’s not even hard to spell. It was this: Content. I’m talking about the one with the accent on the second syllable; t...

  • Community wishing pianist on way

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jul 25, 2019

    If you ever go looking for James Golden, here’s a tip: He’s probably somewhere within arm’s reach of a piano. He has spent most of his waking hours at keyboards in Portales and Clovis for well over 20 years, accompanying school choirs, collaborating with singers of all ages, performing hymns for churches, providing music for weddings and funerals. What makes that run even more remarkable is that Golden is still a few months shy of his 30th birthday. You see, he started his f...

  • Rotary club helping to 'paint a better story'

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jul 16, 2019

    Amy Corbin, the newly inducted president of the Rotary Club of Clovis, claims that any effort she's ever made at creating artwork has been, well, "disastrous." So why does she have more than 150 works of art currently stacked in her office at Community Healthcare in Clovis? For the best possible cause. Corbin and her fellow Rotarians are hosting a months-long area-wide project called "Painting a Better Story." It's a creative (in every sense of the word) fundraiser that she...

  • Impossible to waste something as precious as a good peach

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jul 9, 2019

    I was at church on a July Sunday a few years back when a friend came up and whispered to me furtively, “The pizzas should be ready Thursday.” I’ll be honest: I didn’t hear much of the sermon that day because I was baffled. Was she speaking in code? Was I missing a key piece of information? Well, yes, it turned out, I was. I’m a notoriously bad listener, and this friend was alerting me to the fact that the PEACHES that were practically breaking the branches of her trees that ye...

  • Starlac made me appreciate a cold glass of milk

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jul 2, 2019

    The recent observance of National Dairy Month may have left you thirsty for an icy cold glass of milk. As for me, my appreciation of the good stuff came from a childhood of drinking Starlac. If that name doesn’t send a shiver down your spine, please allow me to explain. Starlac was what passed for “milk” (and the quotation marks are justified) at our house. A product of the Borden Foods Company, it was marketed as “nonfat dry milk solids” or “dry skim milk.” It was a staple of...

  • Portales Woman's Club looking for help

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jun 26, 2019

    One of eastern New Mexico's oldest community service organizations is facing a daunting challenge, according to its president, and is inviting all of us to help brainstorm a solution. The Portales Woman's Club was organized in 1903, six years before Portales was officially incorporated as a city. Since 1932, it has met in the distinctive beige and turquoise New Mexico territorial-style building at 309 W. First St. that is emblazoned with the group's name. "We've served the...

  • Long live NM's unique and beautiful yucca

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jun 18, 2019

    If the yucca wasn’t already New Mexico’s state flower, its show-stopping display this year would be a good argument for designating it as such. Those tall and distinctive stalks filled with lush cream-colored blossoms have been downright breathtaking this season, adorning our roadways in every direction for more than a month. I wondered how this drought-hardy staple came to symbolize our state. Turns out, it almost didn’t. A scroll back through newspaper archives revea...

  • Grandparents would be pleased to see future of High Plains

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jun 11, 2019

    With Curry County’s Pioneer Days celebration in the books and Roosevelt County set to celebrate its Heritage Days this weekend, I can’t help but think of those folks who settled eastern New Mexico and wonder what they’d make of our annual festivities. My grandparents rolled into this area by covered wagon in 1915. “Pa” and “Ma” (my elders believed in sparse, utilitarian titles) went broke in Pecos, Texas, before loading up their three young kids, hitching up the horses, and r...

  • Rescue efforts need volunteers

    Betty Williamson|Updated Jun 4, 2019

    The loss of her own rescue dog a year ago led Linda Sumption to the cement building at 1700 N. Boston in Portales that houses the cats, dogs, kittens, and puppies picked up each day by Portales Animal Control. "I wanted to do something to improve the lives of abandoned dogs and cats in our community," Sumption said. An English professor at Eastern New Mexico University, Sumption is one of a dedicated corps of local people who devote their hearts, their time, and their spare...

  • Silence nice, but happy to be back in hum

    Betty Williamson|Updated May 28, 2019

    You forget how quiet a house can be until the electricity goes off. It was a fairly regular occurrence when I was a kid, but we’re far more likely to have a quick blink or two these days, and even those are few and far between. (I hope I have not jinxed myself into a summer of interrupted service by committing those words to print.) When those tornadic winds ripped through Roosevelt County on Sunday evening, they took out a lot of power poles. Plenty of folks faced significant...

  • Carve out some time to remember those who've served

    Betty Williamson|Updated May 21, 2019

    I have a slender bound volume that — judging by quality — is probably a copy of a copy of a copy. The silver letters on the red tape that covers the spine read, “SERVICE MANUAL Roosevelt County, NM 1941-45.” It may be as complete a listing as exists of the men and women from our county who served in the armed forces during World War II. To me, it is priceless. Each page honors 10 locals who went to war in the 1940s. There is a grainy 11.2 x 2-inch photo for each person,...

  • Portales hotel caused a stir

    Betty Williamson|Updated May 18, 2019

    Portales' first skyscraper - in my lifetime known as the Plains Hotel and the Portales Inn, but sadly empty since the 1990s - recently received an extensive renovation. It has reopened as the Best Western Plus Portales Inn at 223 W. Second St. We're all invited to a grand opening celebration from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday hosted by the Roosevelt County Community Development Corporation and Roosevelt County Chamber of Commerce. With all due respect, they'll have trouble...

  • Community saves

    Betty Williamson|Updated May 7, 2019

    You probably know the African proverb about how it takes a village to raise a child. The Kanmore family of Portales might argue that it takes a community to save one. They're in a position to know. They returned home on April 25 after a three-month long journey none of them ever expected to take - one that has left them with nothing but gratitude for the people who supported them along the way. • • • Late on the afternoon of Jan. 31, Brittany Kanmore was heading home from clas...

  • ENMU production will benefit hospital

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Apr 30, 2019

    When an upcoming weekend is as busy as this one (seriously, check out the events calendar for the next few days), I especially appreciate a two-for-one opportunity. The Roosevelt General Hospital Foundation and Eastern New Mexico University’s Department of Theater and Digital Filmmaking are teaming up to offer just that. The Pulitzer-prize winning play, “Wit,” by Margaret Edson opens at 7 p.m. Thursday on the Main Stage of the University Theater Center, and $2 of each of the $...

  • Renovation turns up unexpected treasure

    Betty Williamson|Updated Apr 23, 2019

    The recent expansion and renovation at Central Christian Church in Portales turned up an unexpected time capsule of sorts, and an even more unexpected connection with the pastor who blessed it almost 61 years ago. Don Thomas is the current pastor of the church at 1528 S. Main Ave. in Portales, which had its official grand re-opening earlier this month after a high-tech, energy efficient makeover. Thomas said early in the remodeling process he realized that the addition of a...

  • A pony may not be the best choice of childhood gift

    Betty Williamson|Updated Apr 16, 2019

    In case you happened to miss it, a week ago today was Siblings Day. I dug out a childhood photo of my brothers and me on our pony, Peanuts, in honor of the occasion, and it took me on a bumpy trip down memory lane. My brothers and I don’t agree on everything, but we are unanimous on this: If you want to abuse your children, get them a pony. I was too young to remember exactly how Peanuts came into our life. I do know we were not his first family, because by the time he a...

  • Former area resident makes name in baseball

    Betty Williamson|Updated Apr 9, 2019

    For more than 650 families in Curry and Roosevelt counties with baseball-loving kids, Saturday was opening day for the 2019 Little League season. It was also a day filled with more than a little sentiment for one couple with deep connections to eastern New Mexico and the game of baseball. "I love the smell of the grass, I love the crack of the bat, I love a called third strike, and I love the strategy of the game," said Logan White, who may be one of the most successful former...

  • Paramedic preserving ceremonies of remembrance

    Betty Williamson|Updated Apr 2, 2019

    No one says farewell to one of their own more beautifully than the community of first responders - the firefighters, police officers, and paramedics who see front-line action on a daily basis. Now, thanks to a Clovis paramedic with a high-flying drone and a flair for film-making, those poignant services are being preserved in touching videos that capture those impressive ceremonies. If you have access to the internet, you may have seen recent video tributes from the funeral...

  • March's last weekend set to be crazy busy

    Betty Williamson|Updated Mar 26, 2019

    March is wrapping up with a crazy busy weekend. Here’s a list of items you may need to help you get through a handful of the scheduled events: 1. A tiara 2. Dancing boots 3. Work gloves and canned goods 4. A fishing pole 5. A thinking cap Ready? Portales High School has invited all of us to come to the ball as it presents its spring musical, “Cinderella,” for four performances beginning at 6 p.m. Friday in the PHS Performing Arts Center at 201 S. Knoxville. “Tiaras are enc...

  • Come see cowboys take their hand at polo

    Betty Williamson|Updated Mar 19, 2019

    If you’ve never heard of “cowboy polo,” you’re not alone. “Just imagine two four-man teams … cowboys or anyone … on horseback, with brooms trying to hit a beach ball into a goal.” That’s how Mark Clark, one of the co-chairs of Relay for Life of Eastern New Mexico, described it to me. “I don’t think there have been too many people that have seen this sort of thing,” Clark said. That changes at 7 p.m. Friday when the “Gone, But Not Forgotten” Cowboy Polo Tournament twists, tur...

  • Artistic pair is one you'll want to meet

    Betty Williamson|Updated Mar 13, 2019

    Two people you'll want to meet are arriving in eastern New Mexico this week to spend the remainder of March in our area. They're sharing their love of photography, writing, and poetry through a series of events in Portales and Clovis. Don Mitchell and Ruth Thompson call Hilo, Hawaii, their home, but they are returning for their third visit since 2012 to the High Plains, this time as the Jack Williamson Endowed Chairs in Science and Humanities at Eastern New Mexico University....

  • Grady Bright wore an awful lot of hats - and ties

    Betty Williamson|Updated Mar 5, 2019

    During the decades that Grady Bright managed the Melrose Grain Elevator, he was such a fixture at the place that many local people called it "Grady's," instead of its real name. That was only one of the jobs he held during his lifetime in this rural community. "Papaw was everything," his granddaughter Julie Bright said. He filed daily reports to the National Weather Service for more than a half-century, farmed, helped folks with their taxes, worked for the post office, was...

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