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  • Lots of reasons to want to live near a university coming up this weekend

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Feb 24, 2024

    I’ve always said I would never want to live in a community without a college or a university. The coming weekend provides several reasons why, with a “triple play” of fine arts offerings at Eastern New Mexico University: a heartwarming play, a beloved musical, and an afternoon symphony complete with a visiting conductor. First the play. The ENMU Theatre kicks things off Thursday evening with a one-act show called “Native Gardens.” Written by Karen Zacarías and directed b...

  • Angel Ministries help folks feel extra special

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Feb 17, 2024

    After 31 years of providing services for individuals with developmental disabilities, Konnie Kanmore has learned that sometimes it’s the smallest gestures that make the largest impacts. Kanmore is executive director of Absolutely You, a Portales-based organization with branches in Hobbs and Roswell, with a mission of providing “community, support, and assistance residentially and vocationally to individuals with developmental disabilities.” Kanmore contacted me recently askin...

  • I'm the Queen of Clean when travel is on the horizon

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Feb 10, 2024

    I love to travel. I think most of us do. Until recently, however, I thought I was the only one who absolutely, positively despises the days leading up to a planned getaway. When I pencil in an adventure on the calendar weeks or months in advance, it seems like the best of ideas. But as the departure date grows closer, so does the dread. I know it’s irrational, yet without fail I find myself hoping that my plans will be canceled. Perhaps I’ll break a leg. Maybe the airline wil...

  • Donating blood chance to save human lives

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Feb 3, 2024

    With about an hour of time — much of it spent reclining, sipping a drink, and eating a snack — each of us has the power to save (get this) up to three human lives. And yet the American Red Cross says only 3% of us Americans donate blood in a typical year. Prior to last month, I was among the 97% who had not donated — well, at least not in a very long time. After my last two tries were failed attempts — once in 2001 and again in 2009 — I had decided that donating blood was...

  • Let's eat for a good cause -- pancakes to chili on menu

    Betty Williamson, Correspondent|Updated Jan 27, 2024

    On this last Sunday of January, I invite you to open whatever you use for a calendar and jot down some dates because we have several great eating opportunities — many of them for good causes — heading our way. The first takes place today at St. Ann’s Catholic Church in Bovina — their annual German sausage dinner. The church is located at 409 S. Third St. in Bovina, and they’ll be dishing up sausage, mashed potatoes and gravy, green beans, homemade sauerkraut and more from...

  • Sometimes in life it's the little warm and cozy things that matter

    Betty Williamson, The Staff of The News|Updated Jan 20, 2024

    As much as I love crisp cotton sheets dried on a clothesline, when the mercury dips as low as it did last week, the dryer becomes the source of comfort and luxury in my house. I’m old enough to remember before we got the first magical box that transformed soggy laundry into cozy cushions of warmth in only 30 or 40 minutes. Fortunately, I was too young (and therefore too short) to draw much clothesline duty back then. I remember my mother’s red and aching hands, chapped fro...

  • Five dollars' worth of sorry may be priceless

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Jan 13, 2024

    In the late teens or early 1920s, when my dad was still a kid, his family’s home burned to the ground. That home wasn’t much more than a shack, but it held everything he, his parents, and his siblings owned. Homesteaders’ makeshift dwellings dotted our area fairly thickly at the time, so a number of folks came to their support. The one my dad remembered best showed up with five dollars. “A lot of people are going to tell you that they’re sorry this happened,” my dad remembe...

  • Going to commit myself to good turns in new year

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Jan 6, 2024

    I had lunch last month with a fairly large group of family members and friends at a not-inexpensive restaurant in Santa Fe. Collectively, we represented seven or eight households, and most of us had gathered with the idea of picking up our own checks. When we got ready to gather up and leave, however, we learned that one of our group had furtively managed to collect the tab and treat us all. When confronted, our generous benefactor brushed it off, saying, “I try to do a g...

  • Hoping we can take time to be awestruck in new year

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Dec 30, 2023

    I headed out for an evening walk not too long ago, enjoying one of the last beautiful twilights of 2023. In front of me — to the north — the sky was turning from blue to silver, with nary a cloud in sight. The sun was barely below the horizon over my left shoulder, and I was moving along at a good clip to keep ahead of the chill that was setting in. I was maybe a quarter mile from the house when the universe nudged me to turn around and look back. Behind me, the southern sky...

  • Keep tradition of writing letters to Santa alive

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Dec 23, 2023

    I heard an item on the radio a couple of weeks ago that said that rather than old-fashioned letters to Santa, some of today’s youth (being much more adept at technology than … say … me) are now using PowerPoint presentations to compile their Christmas gift lists. While this arguably makes for a more efficient shopping experience for Santa, it cuts out an important historic link for our newspapers. For generations, many kids’ letters to Santa have been routed through their c...

  • It's a holly, jolly tamale season

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Dec 16, 2023

    If asked to complete the sentence, "It isn't Christmas in New Mexico without...," the first word on my list would be "tamales." These savory corn-husk wrapped packets of deliciousness are tasty year-round (I'll eat a good one any day that I can get my hands on it), but they have a special place in many of our hearts and on our tables come December. I'm a do-it-yourself kinda person, but I learned long ago that one thing that is really worth buying from an expert is ... say it...

  • 'A Christmas Carol' returns to Clovis stage

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Dec 9, 2023

    Putting on a play in an older structure that was once a movie theater (hence, no back stage or dressing rooms) might be enough to make even the most experienced director exclaim, "Bah, humbug!" But in this case, that experienced director - Christy Mendoza of Clovis - is leaving the "Bah, humbug" line right where it belongs ... as a line for Ebenezer Scrooge in Charles Dickens' beloved holiday classic, "A Christmas Carol." That's not to say Mendoza hasn't thought it to herself...

  • Fragile boxes connect to memories too precious to alter

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Dec 3, 2023

    There are few things that tug harder at my heartstrings than opening up the boxes of Christmas this time of year. I nearly wrote “Christmas ornaments” in that sentence, but our boxes (and I’m betting yours) contain much more than merely the baubles that will end up on the tree. In fact, they are so saturated with memories that it’s a wonder I have the strength to lift these containers each December. I’m the third of four generations of sentimental packrats who have lived in...

  • Slate of holiday events set for month across Clovis and Portales

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Nov 25, 2023

    As you tuck into that last plate of leftovers today … or polish off a piece of pumpkin pie for breakfast (my personal favorite) … I’ve got some alarming news: Christmas is coming. And it is coming fast. In fact, we are about to be bowled completely over with events celebrating the Yuletide season in eastern New Mexico, and they won’t stop until everyone’s favorite jolly old elf arrives one month from … yikes … yesterday. Local festivities kick off on Tuesday, so grab a pen and...

  • Thankful to live in a world of mostly kind strangers

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Nov 18, 2023

    I had the opportunity to do some air travel at the end of last month. My journey involved four different planes, including one that was delayed enough to make me miss my scheduled connection, and another that ended up with delay upon delay … upon delay. We’ve all heard horror stories of unruly passengers necessitating emergency landings, or at the very least becoming the subjects of viral videos as they display the absolute worst humanity has to offer. In my four flights — i...

  • Family friendly performances on tap

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Nov 11, 2023

    A double dose of family friendly fun is in store for eastern New Mexico theater goers this weekend. Eastern New Mexico University’s Department of Theatre and Digital Filmmaking kicks off the action at 7 p.m. Thursday with its opening night performance of “Bunnicula,” accurately billed as a musical for the whole family. You may be familiar with the lighthearted Bunnicula books by Deborah and James Howe, the first of which was published more than 40 years ago. The musical featu...

  • Thanks to that wagon, pulled by oxen

    Betty Williamson, Correspondent|Updated Nov 4, 2023

    Many families have an unofficially designated genealogist, that one person who doggedly slogs through the past, collecting the fragments of information that tell our histories. In my family, it’s my cousin Sherry. I’m not sure how she became the keeper of our story, but she does it well and I am grateful. It was thanks to Sherry — and an unnamed staff member at the Rice County Historical Society in Faribault, Minn., — that I found myself last week standing in a place I’d nev...

  • Small harvest reminds me to be grateful

    Betty Williamson, The Staff of The News|Updated Oct 28, 2023

    A few weather forecasters are predicting our first frost sometime this week. Some say we may barely miss it; others have us dipping enough degrees below that magical line to put an official end to the growing season. For my "garden" (and I use the term loosely), it will be nothing less than a mercy killing. I take some solace in the fact that this last growing season was challenging many in this parched and scorching region. It's true what they say: Misery really does love com...

  • Season brings memories of haunted houses of yesteryear

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Oct 21, 2023

    By my count, there are more than 20 Halloween or fall-themed community events already on the calendar for the next week and a half as we wind down October in eastern New Mexico. The National Retail Foundation estimates that Americans will plunk down a jaw-dropping (and arguably teeth-rotting) $12.2 billion dollars on candy, costumes, and decorations this season. This is all a far cry (or shriek or mournful wail) from the simple celebrations of my youth. I grew up long before...

  • Greyhounds and peanuts have plenty to celebrate together

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Oct 14, 2023

    What do peanuts and greyhounds have in common? Some might argue it’s hard to find commonalities between a humble legume and a willowy canine. We will have plenty of opportunities to look for some this coming week in Portales as Eastern New Mexico University welcomes former Greyhounds back to campus for its 89th Homecoming and the gates are thrown open at the Roosevelt County Fairgrounds for the 50th Peanut Valley Craft and Music Festival. Thanks to technology perfected by a g...

  • We live in a good area for celestial events

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Oct 7, 2023

    Say what you will about the flat horizons of the High Plains, they offer some of the best skies on earth. I’ve loved our great bowl of sky my whole life, with our unimpeded views of sunrises, sunsets, thunderstorms, rainbows, constellations, and all manner of celestial events. Given all that, one of the wonders that has evaded me is seeing an annular eclipse … that proverbial “ring of fire.” With luck — and some grace from Mother Nature — that will change on Saturday mo...

  • Clovis library namesake dies at 86

    Betty Williamson|Updated Oct 4, 2023

    Oct. 4 On this date ... 1899: News was spreading about the recent murder of a sheep herder outside Portales. Geneologytrails.com provided this account, via the Santa Fe New Mexican: “E. H. Spinks, justice of the peace at Portales, Chaves county, reports the murder of a sheep herder, Perry Eiland, about 18 miles from Portales. “The body was found last Thursday, the murder having been committed at least two days before. “(T)he Sheperd was about 18 years of age and was herdi...

  • Routine grocery run becoming a challenge

    Betty Williamson|Updated Oct 1, 2023

    Historians generally agree that our long ago human ancestors engaged in what was known as the hunter-gatherer culture from around 2 million years ago until 11,000 to 12,000 years ago. With the exceptions of small pockets around the world today, most of us are well-settled into agrarian civilizations, depending on complete strangers to keep us fed and clothed. At least that was the case until a few weeks ago, when the hunter-gatherer culture was reborn with new vigor in...

  • ENMU bringing the party to downtown Portales

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Sep 23, 2023

    Before there was an Eastern New Mexico University … or an Eastern New Mexico College … or even an Eastern New Mexico Normal School, there was a community that very much wanted an institution of higher learning in its city limits. We are only barely shy of a century after citizens of Portales banded together in “one of the most determined and united drives ever launched in this city,” according to the Feb. 10, 1927, Portales Valley News. That drive had one goal -- “Design...

  • Cloudy, rainy days have been balm to the soul

    Betty Williamson, Local columnist|Updated Sep 16, 2023

    I suppose if we lived in a place where we regularly had gray, chilly, drizzly days, it would be possible to grow weary of it. But after a summer under the broiler with the temperature gauge turned to “blazing,” the cooler days we had last week were a balm to the soul. When that tenacious high-pressure dome finally released its grip on our world and slid off early in the week, and cool and blessedly damp air moved in on Tuesday, I pivoted right into fall mode. It seemed too...

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