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Community Mural painting continues in Artesia

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Photos by Mike Smith, Artesia Daily Press

Monday, Artesia firefighters joined the public in painting a mural near Eagle Draw. Painting is open to the public.

City of Artesia deputy fire chief Josh Stites helps paint the Community Mural near Eagle Draw on Monday.

June Gooding painted the Community Mural on Monday near Eagle Draw.

A sign welcomes people to the Community Mural painting on Monday.

Artesia firefighters and police officers joined the general public Monday in painting the Community Mural.

Sports Calendar

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SWIMMING 

• Splash Camp 

Location: Artesia Aquatic Center 

June 2-6 

June 16-20 

June 30-July 4 

July 14-18 

July 28-Aug 1 

Cost: $100 per child 

*Discount* $80 per additional sibling and/or multiple weeks registered. 

575-746-8525 

• Jr Lifeguard 

Time: 9 a.m.- 4 p.m. 

Date: July 21-25 

Ages: 11-14 

575-746-8525 

• Water Fitness 

Location: Artesia Aquatic Center 

Date: Mon, Wed, Fri 9 a.m. 

Tues, Thurs 5:30 p.m. 

575-746-8525 

 

TUMBLING 

Location: Artesia Aquatic Center 

Date: Mon & Wed 

Tiny Tots 1-3 years 11a.m. -12 p.m. 

Beginners: 4-5 p.m. 

Advance:5-6 p.m. 

Cost: $5 per session 

 

BASKETBALL 

• Girls’ Camp 

Dates: June 25-27 

Sessions:K-5th 10 a.m.-12 p.m. 6-9th 1 p.m.-3 p.m. 

Location: Bulldog Pit 

Cost: $60 for the first child; $45 for each additional sibling. Contact: Candace Pollard, 575-910-4034; cpollard@bulldogs.org 

• Girls’ Summer Basketball 

  Times: 8-11 a.m. 

  Dates: June 4 & 5, 9-12, 16-19 and 23-26 

  Location: Bulldog Pit 

  Sessions: Grades K-3, 8-8:50  

  a.m.; grades 4-6, 9-9:50 a.m.;  

  grades 7-9, 10-10:50 a.m. 

 

VOLLEYBALL 

• Bulldog Camp 

  Times: 1 p.m. -3 p.m. 

  Dates: July 1-3 

  Location: Bulldog Pit 

  Ages: Girls entering grades 3-6 

 Cost: $50 (includes camp t-shirt unitl we run out.) 

    Contact: 575-308-6336 

 

SOCCER 

• Bulldog Kids’ Camp 

  Dates: July 7-9 

  Cost: $60 per player;  

  Ages: 4 years – fifth grade 

  Location: The Mack 

  Times: 4yrs-Kinder 8 a.m. -9 a.m. 1st-2nd  9:15 a.m.-10:30 a.m. 3rd-5th 4 p.m.-5:15 p.m.  Contact: Artesia Boys Soccer Boosters 

• Bulldog Development Camp 

  Date: July 7-9 

  Cost: $80 per player 

  Ages: 6th-8th grade 

Time: 5:30 p.m.-7:30 p.m. 

  Location: The Mack 

• Under the Lights 5v5 

  Date: Saturday, July 12 

  Location: The Mack 

  Note: 3v3 for U6; 5v5 for U8 –  

  U14 

 Contact: Artesia Boys Soccer Boosters 

MMA 

• Varsity Academy Summer Camp 

  Dates: June 2-5, June 23-26 July 21-24 

  Times: 8 a.m. – 2 p.m. 

Ages:5-12 

  Location: 1032 S. 13th St. (Abo Shopping Center) 

Note: Snack provided; no gear 

necessary; beginner-friendly;  

students need only bring lunch and water. 

Cost: $100 

Contact: 575-308-1553 

• Summer Classes 

  Dates: All summer, Monday 

  through Thursday 

 Ages:5-13  4 p.m.  

Cost: $50 monthly 

   Contact: 575-308-1553 

BJJ 

Monday through Thursday  

Time: 7 p.m. 

Cost: $65 monthly 

 

TENNIS 

Date: June 9-July 18 

Sessions: 1st-2nd grade 8 a.m., 3rd-5th grade 9 a.m., 6th-8th grade 10 a.m. 

Contact: Tim 772-480-1876 tpalmer@socket.net

Cavern Theater reopens

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Photos and story by Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
achedden@currentargus.com

Historic cinema in downtown Carlsbad celebrates restoration

Barry Pearl was projected on movie screens around the world for the past 47 years as Doody in the 1978 musical “Grease,” a journey in film that led him to Carlsbad Friday, June 20, as guest speaker for the opening of the historic Cavern Theater.

The theater on Canyon Street was shuttered in the 1980s and reopened following a nine-year project led by the city of Carlsbad and Carlsbad MainStreet, a nonprofit that promotes businesses in downtown Carlsbad.

Restoring and updating the aging theater cost about $8.4 million, raised through a combination of state grants and local lodger’s tax revenue after the City Council voted in 2015 to accept the property as a gift from the family of late owner Bob Light. The project to restore the property began in 2016.

Councilors pledged not to spend money from the city’s General Fund budget on the project, and on Friday almost a decade of fundraising along with five phases of construction and upgrades came to fruition in Friday’s screening of “Grease” and a street party held outside the theater on Canyon Street.

For Pearl, 75, the theater opening was part of what he called “the gift that keeps on giving” – his small role in the classic film as one of the supporting members of the T-Birds greaser gang headed by Danny Zuko, who was played by John Travolta.

By mere happenstance, Pearl is the cousin of Sandi Countryman, human resources director for the city of Carlsbad, who notified her cousin of the theater opening and its theme weeks in advance, luring him to the New Mexico desert for the event.

Pearl is originally from Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and first traveled to New York City in 1961 as an actor in the Broadway musical “Bye, Bye Birdie.” A 1976 move to California landed him a role in a TV series, “C.P.O. Sharkey,” alongside Don Rickles. Two years later, Pearl was cut from the series but was offered the role that would follow him for the rest of his life.

“It transcends the paycheck,” Pearl said of his role in “Grease” during an interview in the lobby of the Cavern Theater. “It’s my wonderful haunting.”

Since the film was released to rabid praise, he’s participated in “Grease”- themed conventions, plays and other promotions all over the world, including England, Scotland and cities across Australia. But Pearl said events in American small towns like Carlsbad are unique.

“Everybody deserves to be entertained. Just because your life is here doesn’t make you any less important,” he said. “I love the warmth here.”

Also attending the premier was Carla Nymeyer, 66, whose father, Bill Bartlett, designed and led the construction of the Cavern Theater before its original opening in 1951. Bartlett along with his grandfather C.W. Bartlett designed, built and operated movie theaters throughout the region and at one point, 10 of those theaters were operating across Carlsbad, Loving and Artesia.

Although Bill Bartlett died in 2013 at 92, Nymeyer said memories of her dad are preserved in the original tiles still in place in the Cavern Theater’s lobby and several other historical aspects maintained in the restoration.

The theater was sold to Kansas City-based Commonwealth Theaters in 1975, Nymeyer said, remembering that it meant she had to pay for tickets and popcorn for the first time in her life.

“It’s emotional,” she said of Friday’s reopening. “I’m proud of it. Dad would be, too, if he was alive.”

New Mexico Rep. Cathrynn Brown (R-55) said she was proud of the unique, public-private partnership that funded the work to rebuild the theater.

The fifth and final phase costing about $3.3 million was funded by a Regional Recreation Centers/Quality of Life Grant from the New Mexico Department of Finance and Administration to pay for electronics, audiovisual components and acoustics.

The rest was paid for through the New Mexico Economic Development Department’s Historic Theaters Initiative, which since 2013 has provided funds in support of theaters in 11 cities throughout New Mexico.

Carlsbad MainStreet received a $350,000 capital outlay award through the initiative in 2023.

“There was some state money that was applied,” Brown said. “It’s just a great asset for the community. What’s old is new again.”

Managing Editor Adrian Hedden can be reached at 575-628-5516, or @AdrianHedden on the social media platform X.

14 million acres of BLM, Forest Service land potentially for sale

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Sarah Rubinstein
Artesia Daily Press

Up to 14 million acres of public land in New Mexico will be eligible for sale to private buyers according to the federal reconciliation bill currently making its way through the Senate.

U.S. Forest Service land and Bureau of Land Management land in places in southern New Mexico such as Alamogordo, Cloudcroft, Tularosa, Carlsbad and Ruidoso will be eligible for sale.

However, according to the bill, between .50% and .75% of the land across Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming will be sold.

The bill text does not rule out the sale of public land to foreign nationals, stating: “Not later than 30 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary concerned shall publish a notice soliciting nominations of tracts of Bureau of Land Management land and National Forest System land for disposal by the Secretary concerned under this section from interested parties, including States and units of local government.”

U.S. Rep. Gabe Vasquez (D-NM) issued a statement of condemnation of the action on the bill.

“There’s been no public input and no consultation with the communities who live, work, and depend on these lands,” he said in a press release.

Those who oppose the bill will protest Monday outside the Western Governor’s Association’s annual meeting in Santa Fe, according to a press release by the Center for Biological Diversity.

New Mexico, being a less urban state than most, relies on its public lands, said deputy Southwest director of the Center for Biological Diversity Brian Nowicki.

“(People) love the access, and they love the ability to get straight out into nature,” he said.

“It is extremely difficult for me to understand how the Forest Service would be able to just determine that they were going to liquidate American public lands and did not have the input and cooperation of the city and state in making that happen,” Nowicki added.

Summer rains don’t hamper fishing

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Information and photos provided by the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish

Fishing conditions at New Mexico’s lakes and streams have not changed this week as the state receives beneficial rainfall.

In eastern and southeastern New Mexico, fishing for catfish was fair to good using cut bait at Sumner Lake. Fishing for walleye was slow to fair using crankbaits.

At Carlsbad Municipal Lake, fishing for catfish was slow to fair when using chicken liver.

In Lincoln County at Bonito Lake, fishing for trout was good when using PowerBait.

Around Truth or Consequences, fishing for crappie was slow using rubber shad lures.

At Elephant Butte Lake, fishing for white bass was very good when using curly-tail jigs. Fishing for largemouth bass was slow to fair when using topwater lures.

The streamflow along the Rio Grande below Elephant Butte Dam on Wednesday morning was 1,930 cubic feet per second (cfs). Fishing for catfish was good using pack bait and worms below Elephant Butte Lake and Caballo Lake.

In northern New Mexico, Streamflow along the Pecos River near Pecos was 98.1 cfs as of Wednesday morning. Fishing for trout was good using worms on Cow Creek and when using olive green Woolly Buggers on the main river.

Along the Rio Grande, streamflow below the Taos Junction Bridge on Wednesday morning was 332 cfs. Fishing for rainbow trout was fair to good when using Glitter Green Garlic PowerBait and red Rooster Tail spinners.

Fishing for northern pike at Cochiti Lake was good when using minnows. Fishing for largemouth bass was slow when using curly-tail grubs.

In Albuquerque, fishing for largemouth bass at Tingley Beach was fair to good using soft, plastic purple-and-black worms.

This fishing report provided by the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish, has been generated from the best information available from area officers and anglers. Conditions encountered after the report is compiled may differ, as stream, lake and weather conditions alter fish and angler activities.

Ruidoso Derby winner in Rainbow trials

Ruidoso Downs Race Track

Javier Rodriguez, owner of Ruidoso Derby champion FDD Dreams, would like to see another racehorse step up and try to hook his front-running gelding Sunday afternoon.

“I don’t think we’ve seen his best yet,” Javier said as he awaited FDD Dreams’ appearance in this weekend’s $700,000 Rainbow Derby trials at Ruidoso Downs Race Track.

“I’ve been watching his race videos and it seems like when he gets out in front he’s looking around for another horse to challenge him,” Javier said. “He needs to show us what he’s capable of doing and I believe it’s more than what we’ve seen thus far.”

FDD Dreams will be ridden by Luis Martinez and will start from the No. 9 post as the 2-1 morning line favorite in Sunday’s sixth race. The 3-year-old quarter horses recording the 10 fastest times in the 440-yard trials will advance to the Rainbow Derby final on Saturday, July 12.

FDD Dreams is currently on a four-race win streak that includes two major stakes events – the Texas Classic at Lone Star Park in Grand Prairie, Texas, on Nov. 16 and the June 7 Ruidoso Derby. The gelding has seven career wins and earnings exceeding $1.2 million.

“He’s such a smart horse,” said trainer Xavier Rodriguez. “He’s always interested in what’s next. He’s very unique — for instance we’ll catch him dancing in his stall and fans have watched that online. He’s a happy horse that likes what he does.”

Trials also will be held on Sunday for the $550,000 Rainbow Oaks for three-year-old fillies at 440-yards. The final of the Oaks will also be run on July 12.

Shaken Goin On and jockey Justine Klaiber will start from post 6 in the second race. The 2-1 morning line favorite is trained by Rodolfo Valles and owned by James Sills and Abel Flores, who paid a $40,000 supplemental fee to enter the Oaks trials.

Shaken Goin On won the $430,000 Los Alamitos Oaks on March 22 in California and has seven career wins with earnings of $312,000.

There will be six Derby and five Oaks trial races on Sunday with first post at 1 p.m.

Congress must act to pull USPS back from the brink

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Martha Diaz Aszkenazy

The United States Postal Service is on the brink of a self-induced collapse. The failed policies of the Delivering for America Plan have driven away customers through a combination of sky-high rate increases and degraded service. David Steiner, who will take over as Postmaster General on July 14, 2025, has a tough job to do and little time to do it with some estimates indicating the USPS could be insolvent as soon as 2028.

Congress has a key role to play in helping him right the ship but must get off the sidelines and act. A useful step occurred earlier this week with a hearing before the House Oversight Subcommittee on Government Operations. The National Newspaper Association (NNA) provided a statement for the hearing that lays out key actions Congress can take to help restore the USPS.

We emphasized that NNA members serve their communities, providing news on local events and civic matters that are not covered anywhere else, and that they depend on the USPS to get their papers to subscribers. The USPS — and by extension the small businesses in the communities they serve — faces an immediate and existential crisis. We urge Congress to act swiftly and compel meaningful reform at the USPS.

Here are three actions Congress can take right now to get the USPS back on track and keep commerce in America moving:

Demand the USPS Board halt the Delivering for America Plan including the large rate increase planned for July 13, 2025. This increase, far above the rate of inflation will only deepen the hole and ties the hands of incoming Postmaster General David Steiner, who should have the opportunity to assess the situation. The same holds true for the network consolidations and service cuts. Every customer that is lost through these increases and service reductions is one less Steiner can rely on in the future.

Modernize and empower the USPS regulator. Effective checks and balances are needed to keep the USPS on track. Congress needs to update and modernize the postal regulatory process to better safeguard against excessive rates and poor service by passing H.R. 3004, The USPS SERVES US Act.

Measure newspaper costs accurately. Congress should compel accurate measurement of newspaper service and hold the USPS accountable for maintaining and improving service quality by enacting H.R. 2098/S.1002, the Deliver for Democracy Act

These are all commonsense steps Congress can take to address what has been clearly a failed approach by USPS management. Steiner has a huge job ahead of him and will need all the help he can get.

Congress must act now to make sure the nation’s next Postmaster General is not the last one.

Martha Diaz Aszkenazy chairs the National Newspaper Association and is publisher of the San Fernando Valley Sun/El Sol newspapers in California.

The world is on fire in 2025

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By Trip Jennings

The United States has been at war off and on for a quarter century. It feels like forever.

Now we appear on the verge of entering another conflict.

Over the weekend President Trump gave the order for military strikes against Iran in an attempt to hobble the country’s nuclear program, joining Israel in its attempt to neuter a regional adversary and what some consider an “existential threat” to Israel’s very existence.

I’m not going to debate the wisdom of the U.S. military strike against Iran, or speculate on the possible scenarios that could spin off from the action, including a wider regional conflict in one of the more complicated regions on the globe.

No, this is a column about a quainter, more naive time not so long ago: 1989, to be precise.

That was the year the Berlin Wall fell, marking the beginning of the end of the Cold War. The Berlin Wall was a bigger-than-life symbol of hostilities between the United States and the Soviet Union, its archnemesis. Two years after the wall fell the Soviet Union collapsed.

I remember the years after the fall of the Berlin Wall as a joyous, hopeful time. There were cheering crowds in Berlin and stunned press conferences in Washington as our nation’s leaders tried to make sense of it all.

One day, there were two superpowers vying for supremacy around the globe. The next, there was only one. And it was the United States.

I got caught up in the optimistic fervor. As a young reporter at my hometown newspaper I interviewed a German exchange student who was experiencing the fall of the Berlin Wall thousands of miles from home. I profiled a local physician who had returned to his hometown in the former Soviet-occupied East Germany for the first time in decades.

There seemed to be a collective sigh of relief at the end of the Cold War. It was possible to imagine a world free of war after decades of hostilities between two nuclear-armed adversaries.

It is hard to remember how truly scary the Cold War was for many Americans. Two nation-states circling one another warily, threatening a hot war and potential nuclear annihilation that some predicted could end human civilization as we know it should the conflict ever come to pass. It never did.

Instead, the two superpowers fought proxy wars across the globe: in Latin America, Southeast Asia, Central Asia, and Africa. And when heads of state didn’t fit their geopolitical interests, they toppled them. (It is worth mentioning this is exactly what the U.S. and Great Britain did in 1953 when the countries’ intelligence agencies helped depose Iran’s prime minister Mohammad Mosaddegh and replaced him with Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah of Iran. A quarter century later, the Shah was himself deposed in the 1979 Iranian revolution).

There was nothing quaint about the Cold War. Looking back, however, it is tempting to view a world in which there were two power centers — the U.S. and the Soviet Union — as a less dangerous one than a world with multiple power centers. As the Greek philosopher Aristotle observed more than 2,000 years ago, nature abhors a vacuum. Turns out, it’s true of geopolitics, too.

The era of naivete matured in the decade after the fall of the Berlin Wall. More than a few Americans found themselves under the spell of American exceptionalism, including me, believing the United States had won an existential battle for the ages against the Soviet Union, besting its adversary in a competition of ideas and economic systems .

But reality quickly disabused us of this hubris.

Almost 10 years to the month after the Soviet Union collapsed, the 9/11 terror attacks struck New York City and Washington, D.C., killing thousands.

Less than a month later, the U.S. began bombing Afghanistan and days later came the invasion of the Central Asian country, whose nickname “the graveyard of empires” Afghanistan had earned honestly over two millennia. A year and a half later, the U.S. invaded Iraq. Suddenly, the globe’s sole superpower found itself in a war with two fronts.

Then came the global economic collapse of 2007-08, the rise of China as a successor to the Soviet Union and competitor to the U.S., the COVID pandemic of 2020, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

Suddenly, the world seemed like it was cracking apart.

But there was still more horror to digest. The horrific slaughter of 1,200 Israelis by Hamas came in October 2023, shocking much of the world. That was followed by Israel’s invasion of Gaza and the subsequent slaughter of tens of thousands of Palestinians, many of them women and children. This too shocked much of the world.

In recent days, the news continued to document the carnage, with Israel attacking Iran and the U.S. joining in on the bombing.

As I write this Monday afternoon, the Associated Press is reporting that President Trump has announced that Israel and Iran have agreed to a total ceasefire. It is always difficult to tell what’s real with this administration, and what’s propaganda.

I hope the ceasefire holds if there is one.

The world is on fire. The last thing we need is more gasoline to fuel the flames.

And just think a few decades ago, in a long-ago time that feels like a fairytale in 2025, I was a naive American who watched the Berlin Wall fall and Soviet Union collapse, and believed the world was finally at peace.

What a sucker.

Since 2005, Trip has covered politics and state government for the Albuquerque Journal, The New Mexico Independent and the Santa Fe New Mexican. In 2012, he co-founded New Mexico In Depth, a nonpartisan, nonprofit media outlet that produces investigative, data-rich stories with an eye on solutions that can be a catalyst for change.

Jesus Christ is Lord

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Rick Smith

Jesus is Lord!  Do you believe that?  If you don’t then your aren’t saved.  You are only saved by faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.

Jesus is Lord and we ought to pattern our thinking after His.  “Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus…”  (Philippians 2:5).  If Jesus is Lord, then you and I ought to begin to think His thoughts after Him.  Jesus sets the example for the Christian to live and work.  I know what you are thinking.  You think, “I am not Jesus.  I can’t be what He is.”  And you are right, but Jesus is our example to follow and our Lord to obey.  Whatever Jesus did and said we should willing do.  “Know ye not, that to whom ye yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants ye are to whom ye obey; whether of sin unto death, or of obedience unto righteousness?” (Romans 6:16).  Our question is not, “What did Jesus do?”   But, if we want to think like Jesus, we ask, “What did Jesus do and say?”

So what did Jesus do?  Jesus, Who is eternally God and Lord, became a servant.  “But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men…” (Philippians 2:7).   Jesus “… emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men.“(Philippians 2:7 ESV).  Jesus left His glory behind to become like you and me.  Jesus did this in order that He could suffer and die for our sins to bring us to God (1 Peter 3:18).  Jesus became God’s Servant to serve us as the Lamb of God to cover our sins by His death on the cross.  Jesus also served us.  Jesus served us by giving His life as a ransom for our sins (Mark 10:45).  If that is the mind of Christ, then it should also be ours.  We should forget ourselves and serve others by bringing the Good News of Jesus to them in both word and deed.

This requires us to humble ourselves like Jesus our Lord did.  “And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.” (Philippians 2:8).  If Jesus is our Lord, then we must humble ourselves.  This goes completely against our sinful flesh.  We are self promoting and, therefore, selfish and self-centered.  This is the sin that I have to confess and repent constantly.  “Let nothing be done through selfish ambition or conceit, but in lowliness of mind let each esteem others better than himself.” (Philippians 2:3).  Jesus humbled Himself.  Jesus denied Himself His rights as God to save us.  We must follow His example by humbling our selves and serving others.  Jesus is Lord!

Because our Lord did these things, God the Father exalted Jesus’ Name above every name.  Philippians 2:9-11 is wonderful in exalting Jesus.  Jesus’ Name is exalted so much that John 1:12 says that “…as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name…”  My friend you can only be born again through Jesus.  You can’t “born” yourself – it is not a decision that you make.  You are born again when you trust in Jesus – even just in His Name.  I want to make this perfectly clear.  You cannot be saved, you cannot be born again, without confessing that Jesus is Lord.  That means that Jesus is the unique Son of God and that He is God incarnate – in the flesh.  “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved…” (Acts 16:31; Romans 5:1; 10:9).

Please turn your eyes upon Jesus.  Forsake your sin surrender your all to Jesus as your Lord and Savior.  Let Jesus have His Own way with your life.  I pray that you will receive the grace of God through faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.

If you have any questions, we invite you to visit with us this Sunday. Worship at 10:50 A.M.  We are located at 711 West Washington Ave.  Check our sermon videos on Youtube @ricksmith2541.  Send comments and prayer requests to prayerlinecmbc@gmail.com.

Masked Rider appears at Red Raider Weekend

Tim Keithley
For the Ruidoso News

Keithley’s Korner

It’s an extremely important job being Masked Rider at Texas Tech University—one that junior Rose Rosas does not take for granted.

“You are a role model for so many young students who look up to you and Centennial Champion,” Rosas said. She’ll be aboard the TTU mascot on Saturday at Ruidoso Downs Racetrack for “Red Raider Weekend” as the 64th Masked Rider in school history.

Rosas and 11-year-old Centennial Champion will make about three public appearances per week throughout the upcoming school year. Most of those involve children in the Lubbock and west Texas region wanting to get an up-close peek at Texas Tech royalty.

“I’ve been involved in the Masked Rider program for two years already,” Rosas said. “There is a pretty big-time commitment along with caring for the horse. It’s a lot of hard work, but it’s an honor to be named Masked Rider. It’s a very prestigious role.”

Rosas was born in Florida and grew up in Brady, Texas, where she spent time on a goat and cattle ranch nearby. That’s where she learned to ride, taking it more seriously her freshman year in college. She is an animal science major with an emphasis on AI production and embryo transfer technology for sheep and goats.

“I was a member of Future Farmers of America and 4-H in high school which led me to my future interests,” she said. “The experience that I’m having as an ambassador for Texas Tech has been a tremendous asset to my college career.”

Rosas said being a Masked Rider takes hard work, dedication, and the willingness to inspire others.

“When you put on the mask and cape, you embody so much more than your own personal self-interests,” she said. “You represent the standards of our university and I’m proud to serve in this role for my year as the Masked Rider.”

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