The Law Offices Of 1301 S. Gregg St. • (432) 264-1800 236090 BigSpringLaw.com 1003 E. FM 700 (432) 267-1480 thekaratpatch.com Monday-Friday 9:30am - 5:30pm 265622 R. Shane Seaton, PLLC Tuesday March 17, 2015 Find us online at: www.bigspringherald.com Volume 110, Number 130 COPYRIGHT 2014 50 CENTS DAILY/$1.25 SUNDAY Hitting the road Arrest made in Cervantes murder Herald Staff Report A 28-year-old man arrested on a charge of murdering Roy Cervantes remains at the Howard County Jail this morning. Fabian Carpenter was arrested on Sunday in Fort Worth on a warrant for murder, according to Howard County Sheriff Stan Parker. He was arrested without incident. On Friday, March 6, emer- Carpenter gency personnel were called to the railroad tracks east of North FM 700 at approximately 8 a.m. in response to a See ARREST, Page 3 HERALD Photo/Julie Bass Kristen Partee, left, co-founder and president of the Yellow Rose Animal Rescue, loads pups onto a trailer with the help of volunteers Monday. The rescued dogs are being transported to Kansas City, Mo. Rescued dogs heading to Kansas City shelter By JULIE BASS Staff Writer More than 40 rescued dogs are taking a road trip. On Monday, the Yellow Rose Animal Rescue Group in Big Spring secured 14 puppies and dogs from the Index Comics Classified 11 7-10 Features 5 Obituaries 2 Sports 6,12 city of Big Spring’s Animal Control pens. These dogs and puppies and others at Yellow Rose are being shipped off to Kansas City, Mo. A group online heard about the Big Spring overpopulation at the pound, as well as Yellow Rose’s struggle to save them all, and offered to help take them in and find them homes. “We are so grateful to the Great Plains SPCA for finding us and offering to help.” said Kristen Partee, co-founder and president of the Yellow Rose Animal Group. “They took 16 dogs last Wednesday and now they are taking another 28.” Animal Control Officer Joanna Taylor, along with volunteers An- Please call 263-7331. Office hours are 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. If you miss your paper, please call (432) 263-7331 before 6 p.m. weekdays. See DOGS, Page 3 A 27-year-old San Angelo man is dead after a two-vehicle accident in Glasscock County Monday morning in which one vehicle was engulfed in flames. According to DPS officials, Juan L. Ocon of San Angelo was pronounced dead by Glasscock County Justice of the Peace Kay Machicek at the scene which was on state highway 158 approximately 14 miles west of Garden City. According to DPS, a 2007 Volvo and towing a tanker trailer driven by 57-yearold Eduwiges Marquez Hernandez was See WRECK, Page 3 Crews work Escape attempt comes to naught to restore for local DWI suspect Sunday water service What started as a simple traffic stop turned much worse for a local man. While on patrol early Sunday, a Big Spring Police Department officer observed a vehicle traveling the wrong way on a one way street in the 200 block of W. Fourth Street, reports state. “The vehicle turned southbound into the 400 block of S. Gregg Street, almost causing a collision with oncoming traffic,” a BSPD news release states. “The officer stopped the vehicle and contacted the driver who was found to be Juan Moran, a white male 40 years of age.” The investigation led the officer to suspect Moran was intoxicated and arrested him. After Moran refused to submit to a breath test, a search warrant was obtained for a blood sample and the suspect was transported to Scenic Mountain Medical Center to secure the sample. “After the drawing of the blood, Moran was being escorted back to the patrol unit, while handcuffed, at which time Moran broke free from the officer and began running away,” the news release stated. “Officers quickly caught Moran and took him back into custody.” Moran has been charged with driving while intoxicated with a prior conviction, a class A misdemeanor, and escape from custody, a third degree felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison. The Most Versatile Cooking Device Ever... Is it a Grill, an Oven, or a Smoker? YES! 264280 Herald Staff Report Police report: Herald Staff Report To reach us: gie Mims, Susan Marquez, and Ronda Doe helped Partee load the puppies up at the pound. “I think that we are just hoping to get the word out and spread awareness that we have a Humane Society here that people can adopt from.” said volunteer Angie Mims. The group talked about all of the animals being dropped off right now, especially puppies. The concern that it isn’t even puppy season was discussed. According to the group, April and May are the puppy months and they will soon be facing overcrowding again as litters come in. 1 dead in accident Widely acclaimed as the original American-designed ceramic cooker, the Big Green Egg was derived from an ancient clay cooking device known as a “kamado”. Originally a clay vessel with a lid, today’s EGG® is a modern ceramic marvel known for producing amazing culinary results for novice and experts alike for over thirty years! Herald Staff Report Residents in the south and west sections of Big Spring experienced a little bit of water woes Monday. City crews were working to repair a 12-inch water value causing those sections to have little to no water pressure for most of the day. Several residents, particularly those in residences at the old Air Force base, reported they had no water early this morning. The city expects to finish repairs today with water service restored to normal. Elrod’s Furniture 2309 Scurry St. Big Spring, TX 432-267-8491 Big Spring’s Oldest, Largest Finest Furniture Store 2 Local Big Spring Herald Tuesday, March 17, 2015 Obituaries Harold Aberegg He is survived by his children, Cassie Lynn Harris and her husband, Rodney, of Midland and Darrell Wayne Aberegg and his wife, Shona, of Leander; five grandchildren, Audom Johnson of Big Spring, Maci Johnson of Austin, Brice Aberegg of San Marcus, and Hayden Aberegg and Sydney Aberegg, both of Leander; one brother, Royce Dee Aberegg and his wife, Janie, of Carbon; two sisters, Brenda Amonett and her husband, Eldon, of Abilene and Judy Latimer and her husband, Bill, of Sand Springs and one sister-in-law, Roma Lee Aberegg of Abilene. In addition to his wife and parents, he was preceded in death by one brother, Tommy Aberegg. Pallbearers will be Hayden Aberegg, Danny Horton, Preston Drewery, Mark Sanders, Mark Johnson and Richie Fleener. Honorary pallbearers will be Dale Kirkpatrick, Jerry King, Joe Bond, James Procter, Ralph Clark, Guy Hodnett, Ricky Phinney and Red Simpson Crew of 312. The family suggests memorials to 14th & Main Church of Christ. Arrangements are by Myers & Smith Funeral Home. Pay your respects online at www.myersandsmith.com Paid obituary Debbie Joyner Debbie is survived by her husband, Patrick Curtis Winn, 85, died Thursday, Joyner of Odessa; four sons, Chad Joyner and wife, March 12, 2015, at Baylor MediCandice of Odessa, T.J. Joyner and wife, Traci of cal Center in Dallas following a Glen Rose, and Wayne Joyner and wife, Amanda, short illness. A celebration of his and Cody Joyner and wife, Crystal all of Odessa; life will be held at 2 p.m. Sunday, eight grandchildren; two brothers, David Shryack March 22, 2015, at the First Baptist and wife, Traci of Stanton and Bart Shryack and Church in Coahoma. wife, Laurie of Leander; one sister, Kim Johnson He was the former owner of A-1 and husband, Bobby of Aledo; and numerous niecPlumbing in Big Spring and later es and nephews. owned Winn’s Continuing EducaShe was preceded in death by her parents, Richtion. ard and Chiquita “Quita” Shryack. He is survived by his wife, Kay; The family suggest memorials be made to the Waland three sons, Mark Winn, Matt Winn and Scott nut Springs Baptist Church, P.O. Box 268, Walnut Winn. Springs, Texas 76690 where her son, T.J., is pastor. Arrangements under the direction of Myers and Arrangements under the direction of NalleySmith Funeral Home. Pickle & Welch Funeral Home & Crematory of Big Spring. Online condolences may be made at: www. npwelch.com Bernard A. Fischer Sr., 84, of Big Spring, died Tuesday, March 10, 2015 at his residence. Services owned James & Annie LaBrew Plumbing, later La- are pending at Myers & Smith Funeral Home. Brew’s Plumbing. He retired in 2010. He spent his leisure time playing dominoes. He is survived by one son, Ralph LaBrew of Dallas; two daughters, Pamela Palmer of Big Spring and Tanitra Lincoln of Fort Worth; a god-daughter; The Big Spring Police in the 200 block of Reone sister, Pear Taylor of Eastover, S.C.; one broth- Department reported finery Rd. and the 3600 er, Paul LaBrew; four grandchildren; four great the following activity: block of Calvin St. grandchildren; and a host of nieces and nephews. • JAMES LEE WOOIn addition to his parents, he was preceded in DARD, 50, of 3601 ConThe Howard County death by two wives, Annie Bell in 1987 and Pat in nally St. was arrested on Sheriff’s Office reported 2003; two brothers, Raymond and Paul; four sisters, warrants for disregard the following activity: Willie Mae, Beatrice, Alberta and Jessie Mae. stop sign and failure to Note – Officials with Arrangements are by Myers & Smith Funeral appear. the Howard County Jail Home. Pay your respects online at www.myersand• JOHNNY LEE JUAR- reported having 70 insmith.com EZ, 33, of 634 Caylor Dr. mates at the time of this Harold Aberegg, 73, of Sand Springs, died Sunday, March 15, 2015, at Midland Memorial Hospital. The family will receive friends from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m. Tuesday at Myers & Smith Funeral Home. Funeral services will be at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at Myers & Smith Chapel, with Rick Cunningham, minister of 14th & Main Church of Christ, officiating. Burial will be at Trinity Memorial Park. He was born May 27, 1941, in Pecos, Texas to Marguerite and Lawrence Aberegg. He grew up in Coahoma and was a lifetime resident of Howard County. During his career he owned A&N Electric, Comet Cleaners and Highland Lanes. For many years he was a supervisor for Red Simpson Pole Line Construction. He married Frances Earnest on April 12, 1963. She preceded him in death on May 28, 1994. He was a member of the 14th & Main Church of Christ and was an avid motorcyclist, traveling the four corners of the United States and Alaska. James LaBrew, 81, of Big Spring, died Wednesday, March 11, 2015, at the Veterans Administration Medical Center. Funeral services will be at 11 a.m. Thursday, March 19, 2015, at Myers & Smith Chapel. He was born on July 24, 1933, to Emma (Rivers) and James LaBrew in Brooklyn, N.Y.. He relocated to Webb Air Force Base in 1951 and had been a resident of Howard County since then. He married Pat Palmer on Dec. 23, 1990, and she preceded him in death on March 5, 2003. He was a master plumber and co- Benjamin Newton Funeral Services for retired Senior Master Sgt. Benjamin F. Newton, formerly of Big Spring, will be Thursday, March 19, 2015, at 10 a.m., at Chisolm’s Family Funeral Home in Killeen. Burial with full military will follow the service at Fort Sam Hous- • Spring Tabernacle Ministries has a faithbased support group for those who need help finding and continuing to walk down the path God has for each of us. Meetings are at 11 a.m. until noon and again Bernard A. Fischer Sr. Police/Sheriff ton National Cemetery at 2 p.m. Visitation will be Wednesday, March 17, 2015, from 6-8 p.m. at Chisolm’s Family Funeral Home in Killeen. Offer condolences at www.chisolmsfuneral.com. Chisolm’s Family Home in Killeen is in charge of arrangements. Support Groups at 5:30 to 6:30 p.m.. The classes take place at Spring Tabernacle Ministries, located at 1209 Wright St. • Weight Watchers meets at 6 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran Church. Weigh-in is at 5:30 p.m. Weigh-in is confidential and you don’t have to talk if you don’t want to. Flexible payment options. • Stepping Stone Group of Narcotics Anonymous meets at Spring Town Plaza (inside the mall, across from the movie box office, next to Sears). Open meeting at 7 p.m. • A Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder support group meeting is at 6:30 p.m. at the VA Medical Center Veteran’s Healing Center. FRIDAY • 7 p.m. — The Stepping Stone Group of Narcot- G&M Auto Care SATURDAY • Alcoholics Anonymous open discussion meeting, 615 Settles, noon to 1 p.m. Open podium/speakers meeting 8 p.m. until 9 p.m. Open birthday night, no smoking meeting the last Saturday of each month at 8 p.m. Covered dish supper at 7 p.m. SUNDAY • Alcoholics Anonymous closed meeting from 11 a.m. to noon at 615 Settles. Open meeting 7 p.m. until 8 p.m. MONDAY • VA Alcoholics Anonymous support group, 7-8 p.m., Veterans Healing Center. • Reformers Unanimous International is a faith-based addictions program helping people find freedom from addiction. Meetings begin at 7 p.m. Mondays at Trinity Baptist Church in Big Spring. Enter at the main entrance of the church. • Stepping Stone Group of Narcotics Anonymous meets at Spring Town Plaza. Open meeting at 7 p.m. TUESDAY • Big Spring and Snyder Parkinsons Support Group meeting at the Big Spring Senior Center at 10:30 a.m. the second Tuesday of the month. Gartman Air Conditioning, Heating & Plumbing NOW YOUR DEALER 264124 900 East 3rd Big Spring, TX 432-263-0808 ics Anonymous meets at Spring Town Plaza (inside the mall, across from the movie box office, next to Sears). • AA open discussion meeting from noon until 1 p.m. at 605 Settles. Open Big Book study meeting, 8 p.m. until 9 p.m. 3206 E. F.M. 700 Big Spring, TX 79720 432-267-9000 432-263-1902 Buster Gartman TACLB003559E 31640 James LaBrew • Alcoholics Anonymous, 615 Settles, noon to 1 p.m.; open 12 & 12 study meeting 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. . THURSDAY • Alcoholics Anonymous, 615 Settles, open discussion noon to 1 p.m.; women’s meeting; 6:30 until 7:30 p.m. Nonsmoking closed discussion meeting, 8 p.m. until 9 p.m. Harold J. Perry, 45, of Big Spring, Texas, formerly of Ithaca, Mich., died Saturday, March 14, 2015 in a local hospital. No services are planned at this time. He was born March 23, 1969, in Sturgis, Mich. and graduated from Ithaca High School in Ithaca, Mich. Harold had worked as a manager for Burger King in St. Johns, Mich.. Survivors include his mother, Linda Heimberger, of Big Spring, Texas; one sister, Verna Perry of Columbus, Ohio; a nephew; and a niece, He was preceded in death by his father, Harold W. Perry; and his step-father, William R. Heimberger. The family suggests memorials to the American Diabetes Association, 3001 N. Big Spring St., Midland, Texas 79705. Arrangements under the direction of NalleyPickle & Welch Funeral Home & Crematory of Big Spring. Online condolences may be made at: www. npwelch.com Curtis W. Winn Debbie Joyner, 62, of Odessa, died Saturday, March 14, 2015, in an Odessa hospital. Graveside funeral services will be held at 3 p.m. Thursday, March 19, 2015, at the Peace Chapel at Trinity Memorial Park in Big Spring. The family will receive friends starting at 2 p.m. Thursday at the Nalley-Pickle & Welch Funeral Home in Big Spring. Debbie was born Feb. 27, 1953 in Basin, Wyo. She moved with her family to Big Spring, Texas, where she graduated from Big Spring High School. She married Patrick Joyner Sept. 13, 1971, in Big Spring. Debbie was a loving wife and grandmother who had a deep faith in God that she passed on to her family. WEDNESDAY • RSD (Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy, a chronic pain disease), a new support and informative group meets at 213 Circle. Call Lucy at (432) 517-9207 for more information. Harold J. Perry was arrested on charges for disorderly conduct – language. • JESSICA GRACE, 29, of 5704 Midway Rd. was arrested on warrants for criminal trespass of property/building/ aircraft/vehicle and expired registration. • CHRISTOPHER ANDREW YANEZ, 22, of 1100 E. 5th St. was arrested on a warrant for another agency. • ANDREW WAYNE ARMSTRONG, 42, of 700 Alysford St. was arrested on charges of possession of drug paraphernalia. • STUART RYAN SHADE, 25, of 1605 State St. was arrested on a warrant for another agency. • DISTURBANCE was reported in the 1900 block of Wasson Rd. • CRIMINAL MISCHIEF was reported in the 500 block of E. 3rd St. • THEFT was reported report. • JESSICA GRACE, 29, was booked by the BSPD on a warrant for criminal trespass and charges of display expired registration. • CHRISTOPHER ANDREW YANEZ, 22, was booked by the BSPD on a warrant for motion to revoke probation. • ANDREW WAYNE ARMSTRONG, 42, was booked by the BSPD on charges of possession of drug paraphernalia. • FABIAN CARPENTER, 28, was booked by the HCSO on a warrant for murder. • STEWARD RYAN SHADE, 25, was booked by the HSCO on warrants for criminal trespass. • ABEL VIRGIL, 29, was booked by the BSPD on warrants for possession of drug paraphernalia, failure to appear and assault. www.BigSpringHerald.com Rich History, Big Possibilities — Big Spring, Texas 432-263-7331 Missed Your Paper: (Main Switchboard) 432-263-7331 432-264-7205 (Fax) (Mon.-Fri. 8a.m.-6p.m. rick Nunez Tommy Wells robert Smith Tony Hernandez Jennifer Cobos General Manager... Ext. 250 Sports Editor...Ext. 237 Circulation Manager... Ext. 252 Production Manager... Ext. 256 Bookkeeper/Business Office... Ext. 255 The Big Spring Herald is a member of The Big Spring Area Chamber of Commerce, Texas Press Association, West Texas Press Association, Texas Daily Newspaper Association, The Associated Press. Published afternoons Mon. thru Fri. and Sunday mornings. All materials copyrighted. POSTMASTEr: Send address changes to Big Spring Herald, P.O. Box 1431, Big Spring, TX 79721. Periodicals postage paid at Big Spring, Texas. USPS 1431-48 USPS 0055-940 ISSN 0746-6811 By THE MONTH HOME DElIvEry: $9.00 monthly; $97.20 yearly (includes 10% discount). MAIl SUBSCrIPTIONS: $14.58 monthly Howard; $18.33 elsewhere. Today's Weather Take note Local 5-Day Forecast Wed Thu 3/18 69/49 Fri 3/19 73/52 Sat 3/20 81/50 Sun 3/21 3/22 62/46 Cloudy with occasional showers for the afternoon. High 69F. A few morning showers. Highs in the low 70s and lows in the low 50s. More sun than clouds. Highs in the low 80s and lows in the low 50s. Cloudy. Highs in the low 60s and lows in the mid 40s. Sunrise: 7:53 AM Sunset: 7:55 PM Sunrise: 7:52 AM Sunset: 7:56 PM Sunrise: 7:51 AM Sunset: 7:56 PM Sunrise: 7:50 AM Sunset: 7:57 PM 71/47 A few morning showers. Highs in the low 70s and lows in the upper 40s. Sunrise: 7:48 AM Sunset: 7:58 PM Amarillo 56/40 Brownsville 75/64 DOGS days. There is an influx because the amount NationalofCities ofCitypeople that were Hi Lo Cond. Atlanta to Big 75 49 pt sunny drawn Spring for BostonThey get 49 here 24 rainand work. Chicago 47 30 pt sunny then say that 80 their landDallas 60 t-storm Denver 43 pthave sunny lord won’t let 63 them Houston 80 64 cloudy their dog, so they dump Los Angeles 80 61 cloudy it Miami here,”said 83Marquez. 66 pt sunny “Now with a lot of peo- Moon Phases ARREST Continued from Page 1 City Hi Lo Cond. Kingsville 75 64 t-storm Livingston 79 63 cloudy Longview 79 60 cloudy Lubbock 63 44 cloudy Lufkin 82 64 cloudy Midland 68 48 rain Raymondville 64 t-storm ple leaving,76they don’t Rosenberg 63 cloudy want to take79their dogs, San Antonio 69 61 rain so San once Marcos again 74 62they rain are Sulphur Springs 79here 59 pt at sunny leaving them the Sweetwater 66 50 rain pound.” Tyler 78 61 cloudy Kellie Frye, a rain driver Weatherford 80 58 Wichita Falls will 69 50 cloudy by trade, transport 7 High • The Big Spring Symphony Board of Directors meets every second Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the symphony office, 808 Scurry Street • A hungry child cannot learn. Food2Kids - Big Spring was created to provide nutrition for hundreds of children who do not get a substantial meal on the weekends. F2K began last November and this volunteer program now serves more than 300 children weekly. Once the need has been identified, F2K fills a sack of food to send home each Friday during the school year. You can help. Volunteers are needed and donations can be sent to Food2Kids - Big Spring, P.O. Box 1641, Big Spring 79721. Find us on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/Food2Kids the dogs to Kansas City. She stood by, assisting Citycrates of puppies Hi Lo Cond.and as Minneapolis 47 29 sunny dogs were loaded onto New York 56 30 rain the horse trailer. Phoenix 86 62 mst sunny San Francisco 68 51 pt sunny44 “We’ve moved Seattle to Kansas 60 47 City rain in dogs St. Louis 55 36 pt sunny all after these 28 ptget up Washington, DC 68 34 sunny there,” Mims said. Yellow Rose Animal Rescue Group is committed to “helping animals rescue humans,” its motto states. It currently has 10 families working with them to foster dogs. They have benefactors who will donate the price of adopting a dog from the animal shelter so that people can get assistance to save a dog and even assist people getting their pets spayed and neutered. “We are looking for land to build our own facility. We are hoping to have that done within the next year,” said Partee As the number of stray dogs increases in Big Spring, the effort of Yellow Rose personnel to save them increases. It is a non-profit organization and all proceeds go to helping the animals, Mims said. The group is on Facebook which has links to Yellow Rose’s web- gibbons. Preliminary autopsy reports performed in Lubbock found that 35year-old Cervantes died First Full from gunshots, Marmultiple 27 Apr 4 prior to being placed on the railroad tracks. On March 7, a search warFrirant was Sat executed Sun at a residence in Big Spring in reference to the investigation. According to a news release, numerous items of evidentiary interest were discovered and collected by investigators with the Howard County Sheriff’s Office, Texas Rangers and the Big Spring Police Department. Law enforcement officials urge anyone with information regarding this incident to contact Crime Stoppers at 4322638477 (TIPS), or text 274637 and in the body of the message type in “kash”(5274) along with Last New train/pedestrian acciMar 13 Mar 20 dent. The body of Cervantes was located, and Index heUV was pronounced dead at theWedscene byThuJustice of the3/18 Peace Robert 3/19 Fitz- 3/20 2 Low • An account has been set up at Wells Fargo Bank for Briana Mendoza to help with medical cost. Briana was recently diagnosed with cancer. • Crossroads Hospice needs volunteers for patient care. Contact Eva at 263-5300. Austin Houston 75/60 80/64 San Antonio 69/61 City Hi Lo Cond. Abilene 71 51 rain Amarillo 56 40 windy Austin 75 60 rain Beaumont 82 60 cloudy Brownsville 75 64 cloudy Brownwood 72 56 rain Corpus Christi 73 62 rain Corsicana 77 62 cloudy Dallas 80 60 t-storm Del Rio 70 60 rain Continued from71Page 1 El Paso 54 rain Fort Stockton 70 53 t-storm Gainesvilleeuthanize 79 55 ptdogs sunny “They Greenville 79 59 pt sunny onHouston Tuesday and 80 64Thurscloudy • For information on Garett Parrish’s condition, or to post messages of support, visit his Facebook page (#GPSTRONG). Parrish was seriously injured in a recent sledding accident. • Home Hospice is in need of volunteers of all ages. The organization is requesting volunteers to sit with patients, make items for patients and help with office work. Volunteers set their own hours. For more information, contact Sherry Hodnett at 264-7911 or 432-213-0150. Dallas 80/60 Big Spring 69/49 Area Cities • Big Spring Area Chamber of Commerce Health Fair is scheduled for April 11 at the Dorothy Garrett Coliseum from 8 a.m. until noon. Admission is free. There will be health screenings, demonstrations, car seat check up, bike rodeo and more. For more information, call the chamber at 432-263-7641. • The All-School CHS Reunion date has been scheduled for Saturday, July 25, 2015. This year’s focus will be on recognizing and honoring Coahoma ISD teachers from throughout the years. Texas At A Glance El Paso 71/54 3/21 7 High 5 Moderate The UV Index is measured on a 0 - 11 number scale, with a higher UV Index showing the need for greater skin protection. 3/22 3 Moderate 0 Leslie Zant 432-267-9455 11 1801 East FM 700-C6 • Order of the Eastern Star Big Spring Chapter 67 meets the third Tuesday of each month at 219 Main St. Dinner begins at 6:30 p.m. Lodge meeting begins at 7:30 p.m. Everyone is welcome. For more information, contact Jimmy Ruth at 270-7263. • The Crossroads Young Marines is taking applications for another boot camp. For more information, call 432-517-4791. Young Marines welcomes boys and girls ages 8 to 18 who are still attending school. • Victim Services is a non-profit independent community-based program serving victims of all violent crime, including, but not limited to, assault, sexual assault and domestic violence. Victim Services advocates are available 24 hours of day, 365 days a year to provide crisis intervention or accompaniment to the hospital and law enforcement agencies as needed. If you can commit to 30-hour training, an interview process and a background check, we need you. For more information, call Linda Calvio at 432-263-3312. • Big Spring and surrounding counties are in need of foster families. Foster parents are the caretakers for the children in the community who have been abused or neglected. For more information on becoming foster parents or adoptive families, call the Children’s Protective Services office at 432-2639669. • The mission of CASA of West Texas is to promote and support quality volunteers who speak for the best interest of abused and neglected children in court in an effort to find each child Continued on Page 3 a safe, nurturing and permanent home. If traveling west bound on you’re interested in vol- SH 158. A 2013 Chevrolet unteering, contact Sara Sonic driven by Ocon Basaldua at 1-877-316- was also heading west 8346. behind the Volvo. Ocon failed to control speed and struck the towing site, where people can unit and was engulfed see upcoming events, into flames, a news animals up for adoption release from the DPS said. and ways to help. Road conditions was The city pound is located off of FM 700 on reported as dry. The the 11th Place Extension. accident was investiThe hours of operation gated by Department of are Monday-Friday Public Safety Highway from 1 p.m.-4 p.m. Ap- Patrol troopers. pointments are available by calling 264-2372. WRECK MYERS & SMITH Contact Staff Writer Julie Bass at 263-7331, ext 232 or email life@ bigspringherald.com the tip. Information can also be left in a secure tip on the Howard County Facebook page —www.facebook.com/ Faye’s Flowers Gifts & More 408 East FM 700 Big Spring ©2010 American Profile Hometown Content Service 264362 3 Local Big Spring Herald Tuesday, March 17, 2015 Big Spring 1013 S. Gregg St. Big Spring, TX (432) 267-2571 FUNERAL HOME & CHAPEL 24th & Johnson 267-8288 Harold Aberegg, 73, died Sunday. The family will receive friends from 5 p.m. until 7 p.m. today at Myers & Smith Funeral Home. Funeral service will be at 10:30 a.m. Wednesday at Myers & Smith Chapel with burial at Trinity Memorial Park. James LaBrew, 81, died Wednesday. Funeral service will be at 11 a.m. Thursday at Myers & Smith Chapel. Curtis Winn, 85, died Thursday. Memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Sunday, March 22, 2015 at First Baptist Church of Coahoma. Ester Gomez, 40, died Wednesday. Services are pending. Bernard A. Fischer, Sr., 84, died Tuesday. Services are pending. Big Spring, Texas 79720 COWBOYS STEAKHOUSE AND RESTAURANT $1.00 Off Adults 50¢ Off Children Sunday Only 11-3 Buffet or Any Entree $9.00 or above 265692 © 2015 Allstate Insurance Co. 264150 Saturday, April 11, 2015 Dorothy Garrett Coliseum 1001 Birdwell Lane For more information, Call (432) 263-7641 264139 Big Spring Area Chamber of Commerce 1 Coupon Per Person Must Be Presented For Discount Expires 3-31-2015 265742 4 Big Spring Herald Tuesday, March 17, 2015 Thank You NIE Sponsors GRADE LEVEL SPONSOR: KBYG Radio CLASSROOM SPONSORS: Leonard’s Pharmacy Mouton & Mouton, Attorneys at Law Scenic Mountain Medical Center CLASSROOM SPONSORS: SCS Technologies Splurge Boutique WesTex Auto Parts 5 Feature Big Spring Herald Tuesday, March 17, 2015 Bird Poop: Quoth the raven, ‘Nunca mas’ D uring the numerous arctic blasts of a new year came the thought of a spring and summer specie. It would enliven our moods with humorous tactics and intelligence. RememBebe bering blends of McCasland croaks and gravelly protests, we would welcome its strident voices. Endless gray, cloudy days, coated sidewalks, and slippery streets would be forgotten, since members of this group were all entertaining characters. In recent years, however, migrating flocks have decreased in size, if present at all. Not one has been brought to us in the last four years. No longer do we see their large numbers that used to accent the outskirts of Lamesa, Andrews and Stanton. Surrounding agricultural land and open spaces had offered insects, mice, sorghums, waste grains for livestock, and melons from gardens. Many of these same fields have now been cleared of trees and brush or lie fallow. Even though the Chihuahuan ravens had left for the winter, they had always gone with a promise of a spring return. Fond memories of our first encounter with one came as I thought someone, somewhere else, might enjoy their company as much as we had. Upon hearing that we had just received an injured raven in 1977, Midge Erskine asked where we were keeping it. With our small, spare bedroom already accommodating a couch, reclining chair, bookshelf, and TV, we had to use the center of a braided rug for placement of its cage. Quickly, Midge suggested that not anything be placed within four feet of the enclosure. When I asked why, she warned that ravens expel their waste that far without even an effort. With no garage, and after telling her it was the only place we had in our starter home, we carefully measured the distance to surrounding furniture. If there was any doubt, we covered the area with plastic. Her second question concerned its injury. Our county attorney’s son had shot the raven. Its wing was broken. The boy’s mother was determined that the large black bird would have every effort to save it. Midge asked, “Compound fracture?” “No bones showing,” was my reply. We hoped to deliver it to her Eos Wildlife Sanctuary when March thunderstorms in the area had lightened their intensity. Once the boy had encountered what he had shot, his remorse overwhelmed his brief pride in marksmanship. He also dreaded his father’s accounting for the incident. Personable, the raven soon had enlisted the boy to its cause. With his mother, he delivered the bird to us. For some unknown reason, the boy had called his feathered charge, “Charlie.” When told this, I assured him the raven would keep that name. Next from Midge came a menu requiring canned dog food, small bits of apple, and lean raw beef. The latter two were its favorites. Then she instructed me to slip my finger underneath the feathers on the back of the raven’s neck. “What did you notice about the feathers when you ruffled them?” she asked. “There’s a white base underneath,” was my surprised comment. She said it was a whitenecked raven. Seldom seen, this area was usually hidden except when the wind uplifts the plumage. Many years and bird books later, the specie name would be changed to Chihuahuan raven. It more accurately reflected the ravens’ locations in the western portion of the Panhandle, southwestern parts of our state, lower southern areas of New Mexico and Arizona, and Mexico. Most noticeable about our temporary guest was its long, thick beak accented by hair-like bristles that extended halfway over it. Another notable feature was ing individual droplets off blades of grass was fascinating. An unending curiosity led the bird to inspect much of the entire fenced yard. To visit it was to have shoes pecked, followed by a tug on the hem of one’s jeans. Playful and inquisitive, the Chihuahuan raven was both clown and persistent gatherer of information. The day it flew to the treetops was one of celebration for all of us. Some day in the future, this scavenger and opportunist would leave to adapt to whatever bounty was offered by a changing landscape. We could only wish it well in the open plains and desert where its varied diet would accept nature’s offerings. Bebe McCasland is author of The Scoop from Bird Poop. She is federally and state licensed to rehabilitate wild birds. Garage doors and door openers Sales - Installation - Service BOB NOYES 264127 Ph 267-5811 its wedge shaped tail. In the short time we had the raven, we noticed nothing missed its attention. Inquisitive, it pecked at everything in the cage, including the cracked corn and maize added to its food dish. Our watches and rings were given close scrutiny as well. Upon delivery to the sanctuary, the raven’s wing was reset. It had a chance for a future release. With that good word also came news that the bird was a female. My call to the boy about the bird’s recovery also informed him that with a slight alteration in spelling, its name had been changed to Charlette. After a lengthy recuperative time, the Chihuahuan raven was released in the backyard to exercise. Catching insects hidden in the grass and under leaves, the bird also enjoyed a sprinkler. To watch it quench its thirst by tak- Cell 270-0811 Northside Community Center 409 E. 3rd St. - Big Spring offering Introduction to Computer Classes: Basic Introduction to Word, Excel, typing and exploring the Internet for a variety of interests. LEONARD’S PHARMACIES PRESCRIPTION SERVICES, INC. 1002 S. MAIN ST. • PH. 267-2711 LEONARD’S RX PHARMACY 701 SCURRY PH. 263-7344 PROFESSIONAL PHARMACY 10TH & MAIN PH. 267-2546 WESTOVER PHARMACY 710 W. MARCY DRIVE PH. 267-1611 DELIVERY SERVICE • CHARGE ACCOUNTS • FAMILY RECORDS • MOST THIRD PARTY CARDS • EMERGENCY PRESCRIPTION SERVICE • OSTOMY SUPPLIES • COMPOUNDING • DRIVE-IN WINDOW “We Appreciate Your Business” 264154 the LEOPARD heart 264123 BOUTIQUE Tanning, Women & Children’s Apparel, Permanent Cosmetics, Botox & More. 2112 Scurry St. Big Spring, TX Tuesday and Thursday 10 am - 12 pm 1 pm - 3 pm (432) 714-4544 For more information call 432-263-2673 110 NE 8th St. 264039 Sports Do you have an interesting sports item or story idea? Call at 263-7331, Ext. 237. Email results to: [email protected] BIG SPRING HERALD Page 6 Tuesday, March 17, 2015 Rose submits application for reinstatement GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Pete Rose has submitted a new request to be reinstated to baseball. Rose agreed to the lifetime ban in August 1989 following an investigation for Major League Baseball by outside lawyer John Dowd that concluded the career hits leader bet on the Reds to win while managing the team. Rose applied for reinstatement in September 1997 and met in November 2002 with Commissioner Bud Selig, who never ruled on the application. Rob Manfred succeeded Selig in January. Manfred said after meeting with the Los Angeles Dodgers in spring training on Monday that he has a formal request from Rose. “What I intend to do is be in communication with his representatives, and we’ll talk about how we’ll handle it from a process perspective,” he said. At the time of the Rose investigation, Manfred was an associate at Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, a law firm that worked on labor law matters for MLB. He was not involved in the investigation. “I want to make sure I understand all of the details in the Dowd Report and Commissioner Bart Giamatti’s decision,” Manfred said. “I want to hear what Pete has to say, and I’ll make a decision.” Rose, who turns 74 next month, denied for 15 years that he bet on baseball. In his 2004 autobiography, “Pete Rose: My Prison Without Bars,” he reversed his stand and acknowledged he bet on the Reds while managing the team. Rose’s lawyer, Ray Genco, said he and his client were declining comment other than to confirm the application had been submitted. These days, Rose spends time is Las Vegas signing baseballs for money. That may not fit the lifestyle then Commissioner A. Bartlett Giamatti suggested when the ban agreement was announced. With 7 teams, Big 12 enters tourney as the best league Weaver dominant in Halo’s 5-3 victory By DOUG FEINBERG AP Basketball Writer TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Jered Weaver allowed only a homer to Robinson Chirinos in five stellar innings, and the Los Angeles Angels beat the Texas Rangers 5-3 Monday. Weaver struck out five and did not walk a batter. The three-time AllStar dropped his spring ERA to 2.53 over 10 2-3 innings. He is in line to start opening day at Seattle’s Safeco Field April 6. Texas starter Lisalverto Bonilla made his his third spring appearance and first start. He sailed through three innings Monday but was roughed up in the fourth inning. Chris Cron doubled in a run to tie the game at 1. Iannetta followed with his first spring homer, a two-run shot. Efren Navarro then singled and stole second when nobody covered second base. Taylor Featherston singled him in. Angels reliever Joe Smith made his first spring appearance and allowed one hit in one inning. He had been experiencing lower body soreness throughout camp. Altuve leads Astros to tie KISSIMMEE, Fla. (AP) — Sabermetrics was very good to Dallas Keuchel Tony Claxton photo (www.claxtonphotography.com) last season, recognizing him as baseball’s best Erin Pollard and the Big Spring High School Lady Steers’ track and groundball pitcher and playing a part in his sefield team will return to action next weekend when they compete in lection as the AL’s Gold the San Angelo Invitational Track and Field Meet. The BSHS boys’ Glove pitcher. team will also be at the meet, which begins on March 27. Keuchel got five of his nine outs on grounders Monday but gave up a home run to John Buck, the first of three hits in a Considering all the with the Patriots, who By ROB MAADDI two-run inning. offseason moves made cut him. Jose Altuve and L.J. AP Pro Football Writer by coach Chip Kelly, One of the most sucHoes had two hits each Tebow Time in Philly? taking a look at the 2007 cessful college quarterand scored Houston’s Tim Tebow worked out Heisman Trophy winner backs at Florida, Tebow runs. Monday for the Philadelwith the huge following started 14 games for Denphia Eagles, two people shouldn’t be a surprise. ver over two years after familiar with the sesTebow could run zone- being selected in the sion told The Associated read plays better than first round of the 2010 Press. Both people spoke NOME, Alaska (AP) — on condition of anonym- Philadelphia’s four cur- draft. He threw for 316 yards in a playoff win The city of Nome is mak- ity because the workout rent quarterbacks. Tebow has not been on with the Broncos, who ing final preparations for was not made public. an NFL team since the traded him for fourthits biggest party of the One of the sources said 2012 season. He was reround pick when they year. The winner of the Tebow worked out at leased by the Jets, then signed Peyton Manning. Iditarod Trail Sled Dog quarterback and left the attended training camp Tebow has been workRace is expected to arrive facility without discussin the summer of 2013 ing in television as an this week. ing a contract. City crews have erected the famous burled arch on Front Street, just a block NEW YORK (AP) — color barrier. Rights Game with Jackie off the frozen Bering Sea. The Los Angeles Dodgers The game, already part Robinson Day will make The Iditarod finish banwill host Seattle in Major of the schedule, will be both events bigger and ner went up Monday afLeague Baseball’s annual held in conjunction with provide more focus on ternoon. Civil Rights Game on MLB’s annual Jackie that issue on a particuThe winner of the 979April 15, the 68th anniRobinson Day, the comlarly appropriate day,” -mile race is expected to versary of Jackie Robinmissioner’s office. Commissioner Rob Mancross the finish line on son’s breaking the sport’s “Combining the Civil fred said. “We think we Tuesday afternoon. Nome prepares to greet winner “The burden is entirely on Mr. Rose to reconfigure his life in a way he deems appropriate,” Giamatti said at the time the suspension was announced. The Hall of Fame’s board of directors voted in 1991 to bar anyone on the permanently ineligible list from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America ballot. Since his last year of BBWAA ballot eligibility would have been 2006, the impact of reinstatement on his Hall chances is not clear. Back in action ... The Big 12 again has seven teams in the NCAA Tournament. Regular-season champion Kansas is a No. 2 seed, and the No. 3 seeds in three of the four regions are from the Big 12 — tournament champion Iowa State, Oklahoma and Baylor. The league also has the nation’s top cumulative RPI and five top-20 teams in this season’s final AP poll. “We’re arguably the best conference in the country,” Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger said Monday. “Still, we need to validate that with some tournament wins and some teams advancing.” This is the second year in a row with seven NCAA teams, making the Big 12 the only league that can boast 14 bids in that span. But only Baylor and Iowa State made it past the opening weekend of the tournament last March, then both lost in the Sweet 16. “I think it is time for our league to step up, and last year was an off year, and we certainly contributed to that by losing in the first weekend, the second game,” Kansas coach Bill Self said. “We do need to do something as a league to validate what everybody else has said about us all year long.” The Jayhawks are the only Big 12 team to make the NCAA Final Four the past 10 seasons, beating Memphis for the national title in 2008. They lost to Kentucky in the 2012 championship game. Big 12 teams made up half the Final Four in 2002 and 2003, with Kansas in both times — joined by Oklahoma in 2002 and Texas the next year. Oklahoma State got to the Final Four in 2004. West Virginia coach Bob Huggins, whose team is in its third Big 12 season, isn’t sure the league has to prove anything in the NCAA Tournament. “Sometimes what gets lost in the excitement of this month is that we’ve already played 30 games. We’re the No. 1 RPI league in the country,” Huggins said. “It’d be great if four of our teams end up in the Sweet 16, or seven of them, really, but ... everybody says well, let’s see what happens with the test of time. I think we have kind of shown what we do over the test of time.” Oklahoma State’s Travis Ford, like the rest of the coaches, takes pride in the Big 12 doing well in March. But he doesn’t believe the NCAA Tournament is a true indication of how strong a team or a league is based on what happens in those games. “I don’t care what happens from this point ... we have the best league in America from top to bottom,” Ford said. “It would nice to see our league take a step forward,” Self said. “I also think this. I don’t think you take away that our league’s had a great year. Just like was the SEC the best league in football this past year? Absolutely. They had a bad bowl season.” AP Sources: Tim Tebow works out for Kelly, Eagles analyst for the SEC Network and ESPN. Kelly recently traded starting quarterback Nick Foles to St. Louis for Sam Bradford. His backup is Mark Sanchez, who was the starter for the Jets when Tebow was there. That was a highly uncomfortable situation for Sanchez. Matt Barkley and G.J. Kinne are also on the roster. Kelly’s remake of the Eagles’ roster has includ- ed trading star running back LeSean McCoy to Buffalo, then signing Offensive Player of the Year DeMarco Murray to replace him. Clearly, Kelly is unafraid to look anywhere for possible upgrades. Although Tebow had some success in Denver, his inaccurate passing and lack of pocket presence has plagued him in the NFL. His strength has been running the ball or improvising. make both events bigger by putting them together.” The Civil Rights game started in 2007. The Dodgers also will host MLB Beacon Award recipients, conduct a youth baseball event and host a baseball and civil rights movement round-table discussion. Manfred said keeping the game on April 15 may make sense going forward. Dodgers to host Mariners on April 15 in Civil Rights Game CLASSIFIEDS BIG SPRING HERALD Tuesday, March 17, 2015 7 CLASSIFIED BIG SPRING HERALD 710 Scurry 263-7331 www.bigspringherald.com Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted Help Wanted - TEXASTONE QUARRIES Is hiring full time laborers to work in the plant and also in the quarry. Benefits available. Apply in person: 1400 Sherrod Rd., Garden City or call 432-354-2569 LAQUINTA INN & SUITES-Accepting applications for all Positions. Must be able to work weekends. Apply at 1102 West I-20. No phone calls please. OFFICE MANAGER needed for Auto Service Company. Computer Skills a Must. Great Attitude. Competive Pay. Refrences Required. Send resume: c/o P.O. Box 1431/218, Big Spring, TX 79721-1431. ELROD’S FURNITURE Now Hiring! Accepting Applications for a Full Time Sales Representative. If you are friendly, reliable and eager to learn, we encourage you to apply. Please apply in Person at Elrod's Furniture for further detail and applications No phone calls please 2309 Scurry Big Spring, TX 79720 BIG SPRING CARPOOL AVAILABLE COLORADO CITY CARPOOL AVAILABLE LAMESA CARPOOL AVAILABLE RNs – All Shifts Job Posting # 252983 Earn up to $4408.55 per month (DOE) LVNs – DAY & EVENING Shifts Job Posting # 252975 Earn up to $2720.05 per month (DOE) Psychiatric Nursing Assistants Job Posting # 250720 Varied Shifts Starting salary $1877.42 per month Contact our Job Center for Job Descriptions or to Arrange a Campus Tour 432-268-7341 or 432-268-7298 Or Complete an application online at https://jobshrportal.cpa.texas.gov/E NG/careerportal/ Once you have completed your application Big Spring State Hospital 1901 North Highway 87 Big Spring, TX 79720 CASHIER and STOCKERS Needed. Weekend Mornings & Afternoons Available. Starting pay $9.00 per hour. Apply at Fast Stop, 1500 E. 4th St. COUNTER & SALES person needed for local Furniture and Appliance Store. Bilingual and outgoing personality a plus. All inquires are to be made in person at 1611 South Gregg, Big Spring. Starting pay $10.50 a hour. HELENA CHEMICAL has 3 openings for Applicator driver, Mechanic, and CDL Driver, requires high school diploma or equivalent. We offer excellent compensation and benefits. Please apply at Helena, 100 S. St. Peter, Stanton. Pre-employment drug screen required. E O E M/F/V/H HIRING IMMEDIATELY TOP NOTCH LANDSCAPING is hiring for all positions! Apply under careers and opportunities at topnotchlandscapingco.com. KITCHEN HELP & CARHOP. Must be Neat in Appearance. Honest & Dependable. No experience necessary will train. Inquire at WAGON WHEEL, 2010 Scurry St. No phone call Please! LICENSED PHYSICAL THERAPY ASSISTANT dynamic home health company looking for an LPTA to work in Big Spring. Great pay, easy computer system, lots of friendly peers. Call us! Dynamic Therapy Services, 432-685-3505. LIMESTONE IS Hiring Full Time Porter/Housekeeper Please Call For an Appointment @ 432-263-7300 or Come In & Apply 1401 N Hwy 87 Big Spring, Tx 79720 LOCAL 25+ Year construction Company seeking experience help. Need trim, door, cabinet experience and painting . General residential and light commercial. 432 267-2296 GILLIHAN PAINT & Body is looking for a shop porter. Driver license needed. Must be honest and dependable, apply in person at 821 W. 4th St. LOCAL LAW office expanding. Immediate opening for administrative position. Outstanding written and verbal communication and strong computer skills needed. Must be dependable, trustworthy, have a positive attitude, and be self-motivated. Will train the right candidate. Send resume to P.O. Box 2211, Big Spring, Tx 79721 or call (432) 264-1800 for an application. BOWL-A-RAMA NEED STAFF All Positions! Work Nights and Weekends. Immediate Start. NEEDED EXPERIENCED Welders and Laborers. Welders Must Have Helmets Gloves and Boots. Laborers Must Have Gloves and Boots. Wage D.O.E. Apply @ 700 N. Owens Big Spring 432-263-2276 NEIGHBORS CONVENIENCE Store now hiring cooks, cashiers, stockers. All Shifts. Apply at 3315 E. FM 700. NOW HIRING full time/ part time employees at WES-T-GO. Apply in person, 1800 Gregg. NOW HIRING Bartender & Combination Cocktail/Food Waitstaff Legacy Restaurant 125 E. 3rd For Application Call 432-213-0946 Must Be @ Least 18. Want to have the adventure of a lifetime without all the fuss? Read! PARKVIEW NURSING and Rehabilitation is ALWAYS hiring Nurse Aides, both certified and non-certified. If you are not already certified, we will help you obtain your certification . We are also hiring for Housekeepers. We are seeking individuals who want a rewarding career and want to make a difference. You can apply on-line at www.parkviewnursing.net or in person at 3200 Parkway. THE COLORADO River Municipal Water District is accepting applications for following positions: Central Control Operator Responsible for monitoring water flows, pressures, and tank levels using SCADA system. Perform administrative support including recording readings, monitoring phone and basic data entry. Basic computer skills including Excel needed. This position involves shift work. Equipment Operator Responsible for maintaining the District’s raw water pipelines, pump stations, and wells. Entry to intermediate level position For additional information visit www.crmwd.org R DIRT CO. LLC has the following positions open for Class B Dumpt Truck Drivers. Health insurance provided for employees. Overtime available. Come by 610 South Main Street, NO PHONE CALLS PLEASE! WE ARE Needing a Flatbed Operator/Wrecker. Must Be Very Clean Cut! Punctual and Professional. TDLR Licensed Preferred. Towing Experienced Not Mandatory. Basic Automotive Knowledge is a Must! We Are EOE. Apply in Person @ 3000 N US Hwy 87. By Steve Becker SHELL STAR STOP looking for New Team Members & Assistant Managers. Full & Part time employees needed. Apply in person at any Shell Star Stop in Big Spring. Excellent wages! Drug Free Environment. STERLING COUNTY Nursing Home is taking applications for housekeepers. We offer medical, dental, and vision insurance plus retirement benefits. for more information please call Amanda Arispe @ 325-378-2134 STERLING COUNTY Nursing Home is now taking applications for full time LVN. We offer medical,dental, & vision insurance plus retirement benefits, competitive pay, shift differentials & travel allowance. For more information call Brad Howard or Amanda Arispe @ 325-378-2134. WAREHOUSE/ DELIVERY Wanted for local Rental Store. Benefits include paid vacation, retirement & health insurance. Requirements are background check, drug screening, good driving record, valid drivers license and be at least 19 years old. Starting pay $10.50 per hour. Apply in person, Credit World, 1611 Gregg. Items for Sale FOR SALE 2001 Wildwood Fifth Wheel Toy Hauler by Forest River, one slideout. Almost new tires. One leak around forward air conditioner. $6000. 512-767-4561. Shroyer Motor Co. “The Home Of Almost Perfect Service” Lost and Found MISSING A Large Long Haired Mail Siamese Marking Cat Missing For 2 Weeks Names Bonze 213-1507 sudoku Fill in the grid so that every row, every column and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 through 9 with no repeats. That means no number is repeated in any row, column or box. 2004 Keystone Outback 30’ Travel Trailer CED! REDU $9,995 2013 XLT Super Crew Cab 2011 Buick Enclave CXL $28,995 $23,995 1-0)7 1-0)7 SOLD 2010 Yukon 4X4 SLT 70K MILES. $ 29,995 2011 GMC Acadia SLT LOADED. 50K MILES. $23,995 PONTIAC GMC www.shroyermotorcompany.com %2$ s ")'302).'4%8!3 263-7625 432-770-1212 888-263-0017 3%%$%!,%2&/2$%4!),3 265760 8 Classified Big Spring Herald Tuesday, March 17, 2015 265831 $55.60 Per Month Call 263-7331 to place your ad today!! AUTO PARTS AVON CARPET CLEANING Specialize in late model quality Pickup parts 262449 Email:[email protected] http://www.youravon.com /kroubison GLASS and • Residential • Commercial • Chain Link • Metal • Cedar • Dog Kennels Now Accepting GENERAL CONTRACTOR COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL ROOFING - PAINTING MASTER REMODELER METAL BUILDINGS CELL (432) 517-0133 ROBERT P. SHAFFER OWNER 432-268-3318 Top Notch Landscaping Landscape design • Swimming pools Ponds • Irrigation • Rockscaping Landscape lighting • Complete lawn care Pavers• Brick & stone• Patios & walkways Complete tree service • Retaining walls Commercial & Residential Get Our Price & Compare Robert Marquez - Owner 263-1613 1-800-525-1389 HOME IMPROVEMENT HOME IMPROVEMENT ENTRY DOORS/ GARAGE DOORS/OPENERS Gibbs Remodeling HOME IMPROVEMENT Call 263-8285 or 270-3282 HOME IMPROVEMENTS CLEANING RS Home Repair 432-213-8722 Call Randy (432) 816-3030 Weekly, Monthly or occasionally. Call For Free Estimate. 265792 Add On's, Baths, Kitchens, Carports, Garages, Garage Doors, Remodeling, Painting And Etc. HOME AND OFFICE CLEANING AND ODD JOBS 432-270-2116 266184 MUSIC (432) 301-5827 270-7733 Call Bryan @ LANDSCAPING Mowing, weedeating, hauling, hedge & tree trimmings, cleanup of lots, alleys & storage buildings. M&S Lawn Care Moonridge Landscaping 6305 E. Midway Rd. Big Spring, TX 79720 Tree Service Complete Lawn Care Large Lot Mowing Complete New Grass Installation Senior Discount Tree Removal, Tree Trimming, Landscape, Small Home Repair, Hauling. (432) 213-8338 OR (512) 800-0809 (432) 517-5554 YOUR AD This Could Be Your Ad FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 432-263-7331 Herald Classifieds Free Estimates All Remodel Needs Of Any Room In Your Home. 267-5811 ALL OF YOUR LAWN CARE 200419 409 E. 3RD Free Estimates LAWN SERVICE Room Additions, Drywall Hanging & Finishing, Bath & Kitchen Remodels, Ceramic Tile, Insallation & Repair. BOB'S CUSTOM WOODWORK Mowing, Weedeating, Trimming, Edge The Yard LAWN SERVICE Call 267-5460 Cell 816-6150 Free Estimates Big Spring Lawn Care Yards, Trees, Clean-Up, Hauling, Garden, Planting, etc. Scoggin Lawn Service (432) 213-0031 Big Spring, TX Remodeling • Contractor Repaired/Remodeled Refinishing Kitchen & Bath Specialist PAINTING Pro Painting Const & Coating 30+ Yrs. Exp./Union Trained • Master Remodler • Commercial/Residential • New Home Const. • Oilfield Painting/Coating • Quality Craftsmanship • Christian Based Ethics San Angelo - Big Spring Call Monday thru Friday 8-5 PEST CONTROL PLUMBING Expert Plumbing and Drain Cleaning Service Now Offering Electronic Leak Detection And Sewer Camera Inspection. Call Southwestern A-1 Pest Control 432.263.0441 Max F. Moore (432) 270-3911 432-213-0489 2008 Birdwell Lane www.swa1pc.com M-36107 TREE TRIMMING DID YOU KNOW? YOUR AD THIS COULD BE YOUR AD There is a Music Shop in the Mall? 258866 FOR MORE INFORMATION FOR SALE ROOFING ROOFING Trying To Get Rid Of Unwanted Items Johnny Flores Roofing & Construction Timmy D's Roofing CALL 263-7331 Herald Classifieds Shingles, Hot Tar & Gravel. All type of repairs! Work Guaranteed. Specializing in Hot Tar Roofs. Doctor of Repairs Free Estimates!! 267-1110 432-466-1102 Free Estimate Metal, Shingle, Flat Roofs Specializing In Metal Whole Roof or Patch Jobs Also (Home Remodeling) Satisfaction Guaranteed (432) 935-1835 CALL 263-7331 Herald Classifieds 258531 (432) 714-4277 257712 Gary's B's Music 263886 233551 Pat's Tree and Yard Service LANDSCAPING You Choose Your Payment Plan!! Free Estimates (432) 263-1580 FAX (432) 263-3711 LAWN SERVICE RAINBOW LANDSCAPING • Tree Trimming • Yard Manicuring • Light Hauling • Water Hauling 220352 VOTED BEST IN BIG SPRING BDA Companies 432-267-3349 LANDSCAPING OUTSIDE SPRING CLEAN-UP 220763 B & M Fence Co. 101 NW 2nd St. LAWN SERVICE GENERAL CONTRACTOR Free Estimates (432) 466-3619 261235 FENCES 258681 3208 E. FM 700 Big Spring, TX 79720 252128 816-6839 Wood & Chainlink Emergency Service Available 24/hr 229714 806-759-1036 / Cell Finest In Fencing Locally Owned Residential and Commercial Garage • Shed • Carports, etc. NO JOB TOO SMALL CALL 258667 Call: Domingo Ortiz Jimmy Marquez-Owner Commercial/Residential Metal Building Steel Buildings Quality Fence Co. A & B Glass Company 264650 Quality Concrete 258652 40 Years Plus Experience FENCES 265370 CONCRETE 262477 CONCRETE 233435 Monday – Friday 8a.m. – 5:30p.m. Ortiz Concrete Const. 236409 Buy or Sell K & Friends Independent Reps Call or Text Kim at 432-664-6007 Since 1947 1511 HWY 350 ● (432) 263-5000 Big Spring, Texas 79720 256909 AVON A Modern Auto Dismantler BIG SPRING HERALD Tuesday, March 17, 2015 CLASSIFIED 9 CLASSIFIED 10 Real Estate for Rent 1403 MARIJO Clean 2 Bdrm, 1 bath with stove and window units. $650.00 Month, $650.00 Deposit. Must have Rental references. Call (432)270-3609 3/1 BATH older home in the country with acreage available for oil companies in the Forsan School District. CH/A will be ready April 1 $1500 monthly Call (325) 949-2194 AFFORDABLE COUNTRY Living- OASIS RV Park has Spaces & Travel Trailers for Rent, Call 432-517-0062 or 264-9907. KENTWOOD AREA, 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, 2 living areas, fenced yard, workshop, very nice house. $1600.00 month, $1600.00 deposit. First & Last month rent, credit/back ground check. Call 432-517-4123. NICE RV for Rent on 1 acre $600.00 all bills paid except propane. Furnished $300.00 deposit (432) 213-4671 Travel Trailers & Spaces for rent. Peaceful Country setting. Call Cindy at 432-213-0243 for trailers, or Brandy 432-213-3608 for spaces. Real Estate for Sale 3 BEDROOM House 2 Full Bathrooms Need Work 68,500 Call For More Info 432-270-0053 You Must Provide Your Own Financing FOR SALE by Owner 3/2 bath on half acre lot in Coahoma School District No owner finance $179,000 Call 432-935-8553 Legals NOTICE TO CREDITORS ESTATE OF BROBBIE DEAN BAYES Notice is hereby given that original Letters of Administration for the Estate of Brobbie Dean Bayes, Deceased, were issued on March 12, 2015, in Cause No. P-14386, pending in the County Court of Howard County, Texas, to: Bobby Bayes and Christopher Bayes. All persons having claims against this Estate which is currently being administered are required to present them to the undersigned within the time and in the manner prescribed by law. Estate of Brobbie D. Bayes c/o Bobby Bayes 3669 E. Derringer Way Gilbert, Arizona 85297 DATED the 12th day of March, 2015. THE LAW OFFICES OF R. SHANE SEATON R. SHANE SEATON State Bar No. 24060918 SHONDA KAY FOLSOM State Bar No. 24066591 P.O. Box 2211 Big Spring, Texas 79721 Telephone: (432) 264-1800 Facsimile: (432) 264-0785 Attorney for Independent Co-Administrators #8649 March 17, 2015 BIG SPRING HERALD Tuesday, March 17, 2015 Tomorrow’s Horoscope Venus Changes Suit for St. Patrick's Day å May the luck of the Irish be with you this Saint Patrick's Day, which happens under the socially uniting Aquarius moon. Also of note, H OLIDAY Venus M ATHIS enters Taurus in the morning, a part of the sky that activates her cravings. Taurus is the sign of appetite, and people will be looking for sensual gratification, quality and luxury now through April 11. ARIES (March 21-April 19). There are times when it's better to risk, but not today. Chance will favor you because you make choices not to take chances. It's as if chance appreciates the break. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). There's a balance to strike between what you want to do and what life seems to keep leading you into. This has to do with a piece of history that needs to be revisited and forgiven. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You'll get the best results because you turn it into a competition or because you realize you're already in one. The challenge will be difficult, uncomfortable, exhilarating and productive. CANCER (June 22-July 22). You don't have to be fearful or tense. Your risk will be minimized by a safety net. When you feel like you have nothing to lose because you'll be saved if you falter, you do much better. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You'll enjoy small talk and casual relationships now. A casual relationship that happens on a regular schedule will at times be more intimate than relationships in your inner circle. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). The family member who is misbehaving will get some of your focus, but try not to dwell there. You have better things to do with your thoughts and better emotions to feel, too. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). The thing is, you won't know how much kindness is necessary for the situation, but it's probably more than most people are applying. Anyway, you won't be sorry if you give a little too much. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Change is much more strenuous than lazily pulling the covers over our head and staying in the cocoon of the life we've built thus far. This day pushes you up and out because you want the change badly enough. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). It doesn't matter that they behave in illogical ways. Your own illogical reaction will be that you try to help and love them anyway. In this case, two wrongs do make a right. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Getting back on track might simply be a matter of making friends who have as much ambition as you have or used to have or want to have. They are out there. Put the word out. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). When you let go, you create space for something else to move in to your life. That doesn't make letting go any easier, but it should make it more of a hopeful process. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You wouldn't bet against yourself, and that's what you're doing if you project a negative and fearful view of the future. No worrying! This thing isn't as major as your mind wants to make it. TODAY'S BIRTHDAY (March 17). You'll be proud of yourself at the end of this year for how hard you worked and how much you were able to accomplish. Stick with a tested plan for the next seven weeks -- that's how you're going to be successful. After that, you can experiment, explore and push the boundaries. May and July are the most romantic months. Cancer and Scorpio people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 4, 2, 33, 37 and 19. FORGET YOUR TROUBLES, COME ON, GET LUCKY, PART TWO: Shamrocks, leprechauns and the color green aren't the only symbols that bring luck during this celebration of all things Irish. What talisman could your sign carry and keep to inspire greater fortunes? See the archives for yesterday's part one report for Aries through Virgo! LIBRA: The mystic star is a sevenpointed star that not only represents your number of the zodiac, but also the seven treasures of the kings: wealth, happiness, love, luck, wisdom, respect and glory. SCORPIO: Your magnetic personality attracts greater fortune with actual magnets, especially naturally magnetic lodestone, also called magnetite. SAGITTARIUS: Dice are your lucky charm. These ancient game pieces have been used since before recorded history. They will remind you that in the risky game of life, anything can happen. CAPRICORN: Jade speaks to your earthy nature, and like you, it stays cool even when everything around it is hot. AQUARIUS: A good-luck compass tells you which direction to move for luck, love, money and more. There's even an app version that suits your techno-style. PISCES: Pet fish bring good luck to you, specifically a goldfish or multiple gold fish. Note, it is said that for every eight goldfish, you should add one black one to the aquarium for temperance. CELEBRITY PROFILES: Happy birthday to Rob Lowe, whose Hollywood life has been filled with the kind of poignancy, thrills, danger, political activism, comedy and romance that one might expect to see in the movies. The Pisces actor with Mercury and Jupiter in fiery Aries writes skillfully about it all in "Stories I Only Tell My Friends: An Autobiography." If you would like to write to Holiday Mathis, please go to www.creators.com and click on "Write the Author" on the Holiday Mathis page, or you may send her a postcard in the mail. To find out more about Holiday Mathis and read her past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2015 CREATORS.COM “WHEN I HAVE AN ASTHMA ATTACK I FEEL LIKE A FISH ” WITH NO WATER. – JACOB, AGE 5 We Can Save You Money By Advertising Your Business In Our Professional Service Directory! 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Around Question Pardon Around SportsCenter Pardon College College Basketball Basketball College Basketball College Basketball College Basketball SportsCenter SportsCenter Basket NBA 30 for 30 SportsCenter SportsCenter SportsCenter 30 for 30 SportsCenter NFL Live SportsCenter BLONDIE BC This Date In History WIZARD OF ID AGNES HI AND LOIS THE OTHER COAST SNUFFY SMITH BEETLE BAILEY Today is Tuesday, March 17, the 76th day of 2015. There are 289 days left in the year. This is St. Patrick’s Day. Today’s Highlight in History: On March 17, 1762, New York held its first St. Patrick’s Day parade. On this date: In 1776, British forces evacuated Boston during the Revolutionary War. In 1861, Victor Emmanuel II was proclaimed the first king of a united Italy. In 1906, President Theodore Roosevelt first likened crusading journalists to a man with “the muckrake in his hand” in a speech to the Gridiron Club in Washington. In 1912, the Camp Fire Girls organization was incorporated in Washington, D.C., two years to the day after it was founded in Thetford, Vermont. (The group is now known as Camp Fire USA.) In 1943, the Taoiseach of Ireland, Eamon de Valera, delivered a radio speech about “The Ireland That We Dreamed Of.” In 1950, scientists at the University of California at Berkeley announced they had created a new radioac- tive element, “californium.” In 1959, the Dalai Lama fled Tibet for India in the wake of a failed uprising by Tibetans against Chinese rule. In 1966, a U.S. midget submarine located a missing hydrogen bomb which had fallen from an American bomber into the Mediterranean off Spain. ® 2015 The Associated Press. 12 Sports Player killed by blood disorder, not by gum CALIFORNIA, Pa. (AP) — A coroner says a women’s basketball player found in her Pennsylvania dorm room in January died from a blood cell disorder, not from inhaling chewing gum, as police first believed. The cause of death for California University of Pennsylvania student Shanice Clark was announced Monday by the Washington County coroner. The 21-year-old Clark was found unresponsive Jan. 18 and couldn’t be revived. The 6-foot senior forward from Toronto was redshirting after playing two dozen games for the Vulcans last season. California borough police say a preliminary report from medical personnel indicated that the death appeared to be accidental. But Coroner Tim Warco blamed it on sickle cell trait, a blood cell disorder that can lead to sudden death in extremely rare cases. ALAMEDA, Calif. (AP) — The Oakland Raiders have released Matt Schaub less than one year after acquiring him to be their starting quarterback. Schaub was beaten out for the starting job by rookie Derek Carr last year and was released Monday just days after Oakland signed Christian Ponder as a backup. Schaub threw just 10 passes in his one season with the Raiders with two interceptions. His biggest contribution came when he took over the holding duties from punter Marquette King. Raiders release Matt Schaub Romney, Holyfield slated to spar SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney and fivetime heavyweight boxing champion Evander Holyfield are set to square off at a charity fight night event in May. Romney’s son Josh Romney confirmed to The Associated Press on Monday that his father will participate in the May 15 black-tie event in Salt Lake City. In full protective gear, Mitt Romney and Holyfield will spar in the boxing ring for a lighthearted fight before the night’s three fights by professional boxers. Baby Chicks and Supplies are 264294 HERE!! Howard County Feed & Supply 701 E. 2nd Street (432) 267-6411 BASEBALL Spring Training Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct Kansas City 11 3 .786 Minnesota 6 3 .667 New York 9 5 .643 Boston 8 5 .615 Houston 6 4 .600 Oakland 9 6 .600 Texas 7 6 .538 Toronto 7 7 .500 Los Angeles 6 7 .462 Seattle 6 7 .462 Tampa Bay 5 6 .455 Cleveland 6 8 .429 Chicago 5 7 .417 Detroit 6 10 .375 Baltimore 4 11 .267 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct Los Angeles 8 2 .800 Miami 8 3 .727 Colorado 7 4 .636 Arizona 8 6 .571 Philadelphia 8 6 .571 Pittsburgh 6 5 .545 St. Louis 6 5 .545 San Diego 7 6 .538 Cincinnati 6 7 .462 New York 6 8 .429 Washington 5 7 .417 Chicago 5 9 .357 Atlanta 4 9 .308 San Francisco 4 11 .267 Milwaukee 3 9 .250 NOTE: Split-squad games count in the standings; games against nonmajor league teams do not. Monday’s Games Boston 4, N.Y. Mets 3 Houston (ss) 2, Atlanta 2, tie Washington 2, Houston (ss) 1 St. Louis 1, Detroit 0 Baltimore 16, Philadelphia 4 San Diego 7, Chicago Cubs 0 Cincinnati 10, San Francisco 4 Kansas City 6, Cleveland 5 L.A. Dodgers 10, Oakland 5 L.A. Angels 5, Texas 3 Arizona 6, Chicago White Sox 2 Tuesday’s Games St. Louis vs. Miami (ss) at Jupiter, Fla., 1:05 p.m. Atlanta vs. Boston at Fort Myers, Fla., 1:05 p.m. Tampa Bay vs. Philadelphia at Clearwater, Fla., 1:05 p.m. Washington vs. Detroit at Lakeland, Fla., 1:05 p.m. Houston vs. Pittsburgh at Bradenton, Fla., 1:05 p.m. Minnesota vs. Baltimore at Sarasota, Fla., 1:05 p.m. Miami (ss) vs. N.Y. Mets at Port St. Lucie, Fla., 1:10 p.m. San Diego (ss) vs. Oakland at Mesa, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Cincinnati vs. Cleveland at Goodyear, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Seattle vs. Chicago White Sox at Glendale, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. L.A. Dodgers vs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Kansas City vs. Chicago Cubs at Mesa, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Arizona vs. San Francisco at Scottsdale, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. Milwaukee vs. San Diego (ss) at Peoria, Ariz., 4:05 p.m. L.A. Angels vs. Colorado at Scottsdale, Ariz., 4:10 p.m. Toronto vs. N.Y. Yankees at Tampa, Fla., 7:05 p.m. NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament Glance ALBANY REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 20 At Berkeley, Calif. Texas (22-10) vs. Western Kentucky (30-4), 5 p.m. California (23-9) vs. Wichita State (29-4), 7:30 p.m. Big Spring Herald Tuesday, March 17, 2015 Scoreboard At Lexington, Ky. Dayton (25-6) vs. Iowa State (1812), Noon Kentucky (23-9) vs. Tennessee State (18-12), 2:30 p.m. Saturday, March 21 At Storrs, Conn. Rutgers (22-9) vs. Seton Hall (28-5), 6:30 p.m. Connecticut (32-1) vs. Francis (N.Y.) (15-18), 9 p.m. At Tampa, Fla. Louisville (25-6) vs. BYU (23-9), 4 p.m. South Florida (26-7) vs. LSU (1713), 6:30 p.m. SPOKANE REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 20 At Durham, N.C. Duke (21-10) vs. Albany (NY) (248), Noon Mississippi State (26-6) vs. Tulane (22-10), 2:30 p.m. At Corvallis, N.C. Oregon State (26-4) vs. South Dakota State (24-8), 5 p.m. George Washington (29-3) vs. Gonzaga (24-7), 7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 21 At College Park, Md. Princeton (30-0) vs. Green Bay (284), 11 a.m. Maryland (30-2) vs. New Mexico State (22-7), 1:30 p.m. At Knoxville, Tenn. Chattanooga (29-3) vs. Pittsburgh (19-11), 11 a.m. Tennessee (27-5) vs. Boise State (22-10), 1:30 p.m. OKLAHOMA CITY REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 20 At Notre Dame, Ind. Minnesota (23-9) vs. DePaul (267), 5 p.m. Notre Dame (31-2) vs. Montana (248), 7:30 p.m. At Iowa City Washington (23-9) vs. Miami (1912), Noon Iowa (24-7) vs. American (24-8), 2:30 p.m. At Waco, Texas Northwestern (23-8) vs. Arkansas (17-13), Noon Baylor (30-3) vs. Northwestern State (19-14), 2:30 p.m. Saturday, March 21 At Stanford, Calif. Oklahoma (20-11) vs. Quinnipiac (31-3), 4 p.m. Stanford (24-9) vs. CS Northridge (23-9), 6:30 p.m. GREENSBORO REGIONAL First Round Friday, March 20 At Columbia, S.C. South Carolina (30-2) vs. Savannah State (21-10), 5 p.m. Syracuse (21-9) vs. Nebraska (2110), 7:30 p.m. Saturday, March 21 At Chapel Hill, N.C. North Carolina (24-8) vs. Liberty (26-6), 11 a.m. Ohio State (23-10) vs. James Madison (29-3), 1:30 p.m. At Tempe, Ariz. Texas A&M (23-9) vs. ArkansasLittle Rock (28-4), 4 p.m. Arizona State (27-5) vs. Ohio (27-4), 6;30 p.m. At Tallahassee, Fla. Florida Gulf Coast (30-2) vs. Oklahoma State (20-11), 11 a.m. Florida State (29-4) vs. Alabama State (17-14), 1:30 p.m. FINAL FOUR At Tampa, Fla. National Semifinals Sunday, April 5 Albany Champion vs. Spokane champion, TBA Oklahoma City champion vs. Dr. Rudy Haddad 52K. “Fully Loaded.” Huge Inventory! 2007 Dodge Sprinter Cargo Van Adults and Pediatrics Urology - Office Treatment of Enlarged Prostate Profile (instead of Surgery) - Urinary Bladder Control Problem with Medication - Kidney Stones with Laser & Shockwave Technology Available Locally 24/7 - Sexual Dysfunction - Low Testosterone Syndrome (432) 267-8787 We Finance (432) 714-4600 $13,950 87 Auto Sales (432) 263-8787 Se Habla Espanol AREAS OF INTEREST: GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE- ADULT MEDICINE SPECIALIST. ASTHMA, CHRONIC BRONCHITIS, HYPERTENSION, JOINT PAIN TESTOSTERONE MANAGEMENT, LOW SEX DRIVE, WEIGHT LOSS. Flu vaccines available. - Vasectomies 264229 We have moved to Suite 304 to serve you better! Practice is recognized as delivering excellent care in Diabetes per Blue Cross and Blue Shield. (Simple Outpatient Procedure Available) Diesel CINCINNATI REDS — Optioned RHP Dylan Axelrod, RHP Carlos Contreras, RHP Daniel Corcino, LHP Ryan Dennick and LHP David Holmberg to Louisville (IL) and LHP Amir Garrett to Daytona (FSL). Reassigned C Ramon Cabrera, RHP Jon Moscot and OF Felix Perez to their minor league camp. CHICAGO CUBS — Optioned INF Christian Villanueva and C Rafael Lopez to Iowa (PCL). Assigned RHPs Corey Black, Pierce Johnson, Armando Rivero and Donn Roach; LHP Hunter Cervenka and INF Logan Watkins to their minor league camp. COLORADO ROCKIES — Optioned LHP Tyler Anderson to their minor league camp. LOS ANGELES DODGERS — Reassigned RHP Chris Anderson, LHP Julio Urias, RHP Josh Ravin and LHP Ryan Buchter to their minor league camp. Optioned RHP Zach Lee, LHP Chris Reed, RHP Mike Bolsinger, RHP Joe Wieland and RHP Carlos Frias to their minor league camp. MILWAUKEE BREWERS — Optioned C Parker Berberet to their minor league camp. Signed C Tyler LaTorre and OF Ariel Estades to minor league contracts. PHILADELPHIA PHILLIES — Placed LHP Cliff Lee on the 60-day DL. Optioned LHPs Jesse Biddle and Adam Morgan, RHP Ethan Martin and OF Aaron Altherr to their minor league camp. Reassigned RHPs Sean O’Sullivan, Seth Rosin, Mike Nesseth and C John Hester to their minor league camp. Released OF Xavier Paul. PITTSBURGH PIRATES — Reassigned INF Stetson Allie, RHP Wilfredo Boscan, OF Keon Broxton, RHP Tyler Glasnow, RHP Adrian Sampson and CERTIFIED BY THE AMERICAN BOARD OF INTERNAL MEDICINE Flu Shots Available Now $13,950 TRANSACTIONS BASEBALL American League BALTIMORE ORIOLES — Optioned INF Christian Walker to Norfolk (IL) and RHP Dylan Bundy to Bowie (EL). Reassigned RHP Hunter Harvey to their minor league camp. Released LHP Mark Hendrickson. HOUSTON ASTROS — Optioned RHP Michael Feliz, INF Ronald Torreyes and RHP Vincent Velasquez to their minor league camp. Reassigned RHP Jordan Jankowski, INF Joe Sclafani and RHP Brady Rodgers to their minor league camp. LOS ANGELES ANGELS — Reassigned RHP Trevor Gott, C Stephen McGee, LHP Sean Newcomb, LHP Atahualpa Severino, LHP Nate Smith, SS Eric Stamets and C Jackson Williams to their minor league camp. MINNESOTA TWINS — Optioned LHP Jason Wheeler and RHP Lester Oliveros to Rochester (IL) and INF Miguel Sano to Chattanooga (SL). NEW YORK YANKEES — Reassigned C Trent Garrison, RHP Nick Goody, C Juan Graterol, LHP James Pazos, RHP Diego Moreno, RHP Luis Severino, OF Jake Cave, INF Cito Culver, OF Aaron Judge and LHP Tyler Webb to their minor league camp. OAKLAND ATHLETICS — Optioned INF Rangel Ravelo to Nashville (PCL) and INF Renato Nunez to Midland (Texas). National League ATLANTA BRAVES — Optioned INF Jose Peraza to Gwinnett (IL), RHP Tyrell Jenkins to Mississippi (SL) and RHP Mauricio Cabrera and LHP Yean Carlos Gil to Carolina (Carolina). Reassigned LHP Brady Feigl and C Jose Yepez to their minor league camp. 220755 1501 W. 11th Place Suite 103 Big Spring, Tx 79720 RHP Angel Sanchez to their minor league camp. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — Optioned OF Brian Goodwin to Syracuse (IL) and LHPs Sammy Solis and Felipe Rivero to Harrisburg (EL). BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MILWAUKEE BUCKS — Signed F Chris Johnson to a second 10-day contract. UTAH JAZZ — Signed F Jack Cooley to a second 10-day contract. FOOTBALL National Football League CAROLINA PANTHERS — Signed Kurt Coleman to a two-year contract. CHICAGO BEARS — Signed G Vladimir Ducasse to a one-year contract. CLEVELAND BROWNS — Signed DB Tramon Williams. Agreed to terms with DL Randy Starks. HOUSTON TEXANS — Signed NT Vince Wilfork. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS — Signed DB Ron Parker. MINNESOTA VIKINGS — Named Andrew Janocko quality control-offense coach and Robert Rodriguez assistant defensive line coach. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS — Signed TE Scott Chandler. NEW YORK GIANTS — Re-signed G John Jerry and CB Chykie Brown. OAKLAND RAIDERS — Released QB Matt Schaub. TENNESSEE TITANS — Agreed to terms with CB Perrish Cox. WASHINGTON REDSKINS — Signed S Jeron Johnson. HOCKEY National Hockey League BUFFALO SABRES — Recalled D Chad Ruhwedel from Rochester (AHL). COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS — Recalled LW Ryan Craig from Springfield (AHL). DALLAS STARS — Reassigned D Jamie Oleksiak to Texas (AHL). VANCOUVER CANUCKS — Recalled G Jacob Markstrom from the Utica (AHL). Reassigned G Joacim Eriksson to Utica. SOCCER Major League Soccer COLUMBUS CREW SC — Waived F Sagi Lev-Ari. NEW YORK RED BULLS — Signed D Kemar Lawrence. COLLEGE ALABAMA — Named John Brannen men’s interim basketball coach. ARIZONA STATE — Suspended junior LB Davon Durant for a violation of team rules. AUBURN-MONTGOMERY — Named Tafadzwa Ziyenge women’s soccer coach. COLORADO — Announced sophomore G Dustin Thomas is leaving the men’s basketball program. DETROIT — Announced it will not renew the contract of women’s basketball coach Autumn Rademacher. GEORGE MASON — Fired men’s basketball coach Paul Hewitt. GEORGIA — Announced the retirement of women’s basketball coach Andy Landers. MIAMI — Promoted Larry Scott to run game coordinator/tight ends coach and Kareem Brown to outside linebackers coach. Named Eric Josephs director of player personnel, Jorge Baez coordinator of on-campus recruiting/offensive personnel, Josh Darrow assistant director of football operations, Evan Cooper assistant director of player personnel and Jake Flaherty offensive graduate assistant coach. SAN DIEGO — Fired men’s basketball coach Bill Grier. MANUEL R. CARRASCO, MD Board Certified in Urology Fellow American College of Surgeons 2011 Dodge Journey Greensboro champion, TBA National Championship Tuesday, April 7 TBA 239703 263633 Bilingual Serving Big Spring Since 1993 1501 W. 11th Place • Suite 304 432-714-4500
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