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Where ‘the best’ rest

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Adrian Hedden
Artesia Daily Press
achedden@currentargus.com

State veterans cemetery coming to Carlsbad via $8M in federal funds

Mack Dyer served for 21 years in the U.S. Army. He fought in Operation Desert Storm in 1991 and Operation Iraqi Freedom in 2003.

Dyer 55, retired from the service in 2009, and today works in the oil and gas industry. But he said he’ll never forget his time in the military and the sacrifices of others who served alongside him.

Veterans throughout New Mexico deserve their own resting place, Dyer said, out of respect for their service to the nation.

“We have to honor the sacrifice veterans made to fight for this country,” said the Roswell veteran, who also serves as senior vice commander of the New Mexico Veterans of Foreign Wars. “If we don’t recognize the past, we’re doomed to fail.”

A 10-acre plot of land on Fiesta Drive next to Sunset Cemetery in Carlsbad will meet that need as the site for a state-operated veterans cemetery in New Mexico’s rural southeast corner. When fully built out over the next half century, the cemetery will be the final resting place for thousands of deceased service members.

The New Mexico Department of Veterans Services presented its plans for the “50-year” project Wednesday, Feb. 25, during a public forum at the Carlsbad American Legion.

About 100 local veterans attending the meeting gained insight into the project and plans for the cemetery over pizza, hot dogs and beer served by American Legion staff.

“I think it’s something that’s going to be great for all veterans. It’s long overdue,” Dyer said. “It’s an earned benefit for everyone in this room. It will provide a solitary place for our nation’s best to rest.”

An ‘aggressive plan’

The first phase of the cemetery will be paid for with an $8 million federal grant from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, assuming design plans are completed this fall, said Edward Mendez, New Mexico director of veterans benefits.

That money is for the first 1,500 burial sites – 500 in-ground burials, 500 cremation sites and 500 pre-placed crypts. The funds also will be used to install a memorial wall, administration building and committal shelter.

Mendez said work will likely begin in January or February of next year and take about 16 to 18 months to complete. When the first phase of the cemetery is filled up, he said the state will apply for subsequent grants to build out the site over the next five decades to accommodate thousands more interred veterans.

Using an additional five acres donated by the city of Carlsbad for future expansions, Mendez said, the cemetery should have enough space to meet demand for 50 years.

The money is available through the VA’s Veterans Cemetery Grant Program, which offered the funding to New Mexico. The offer initiated a process that requires the state to achieve multiple milestones in the design phase, leading to 100% completion of plans by Sept. 30.

When the phase-one plans are approved by the VA, Mendez said, New Mexico will be able to hire a contractor chosen through a competitive bidding process. When the state and the contractor agree on a final plan, and the VA approves, the grant funds will be awarded and work can begin.

“It is a robust and aggressive plan, but we’ve done it before,” Mendez said. “We kind of know what we’re doing. As long as we’re on track we think we’re in good shape.”

‘Unfinished business’

Carlsbad’s veterans cemetery will be the fourth built in New Mexico by the state, joining completed cemeteries in Angel Fire, Gallup and Fort Stanton.

The state created plans for all four in 2014 when the VA program began but faced delays caused by a lack of funds, said Jamison Herrera, cabinet secretary for the New Mexico Department of Veterans Services.

“It’s been an uphill battle, with a lot of back and forth,” Herrera said. “There was some consternation as to if we would ever get this project done. This is a big step in the right direction.”

State veteran cemeteries are open to all veterans in New Mexico, and adding one in Carlsbad will provide access to veterans throughout the southeast region of the state, cutting down on travel times for funerals and ceremonies, said Carlsbad Mayor Rick Lopez.

The rural southeast corner of the state is often left out of public funding projects, Lopez said, despite providing large portions of New Mexico revenue via the oil and gas industry.

He said the region’s veterans deserve a cemetery just like those in northern New Mexico.

“Sometimes, I feel like Carlsbad is forgotten about by the state. We are here to announce now that we are not forgotten,” Lopez said. “This is a super important project for us. Establishing a cemetery here in Carlsbad will provide a closer option for our veterans and their families. That access is important.”

State Rep. Cathrynn Brown (R-55) said the cemetery was a priority of hers since taking office in 2010, and the state of New Mexico owed it to the Cavern City for the many current and former residents who sacrificed for their country.

“It’s a little shocking that it’s taken so long, but it’s important that we get this project done,” Brown said. “This, to me, is unfinished business.”

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

Prairie chicken no longer ‘endangered’

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Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
achedden@currentargus.com

A grouse native to the plains of southeastern New Mexico lost its federal protections after outcry from industry supporters and decades of debate.

The Wednesday. Feb. 26, announcement from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service came in response to a federal court order in Texas last year and was the final step in removing federal protections and restrictions to development on lands where the bird was believed to dwell.

The lesser prairie chicken was listed as endangered in November 2022 in its southern distinct population segment (DPS), which the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service used to describe the bird’s southern range in southeast New Mexico and West Texas.

The chicken’s northern segment, covering portions of Colorado, Kansas, Oklahoma and the northern Texas Panhandle, was listed as threatened.

Endangered status means the agency believes a species’ extinction is imminent. The listing requires a federal recovery plan be put in place while often setting aside lands for habitat critical to recovery.

Threatened status indicates an endangered listing may soon be warranted.

The lesser prairie chicken is known for its distinctive mating dances during the spring, in breeding grounds throughout the plains of its range known as “leks.” The male birds inflate reddish air sacks on the sides of their heads and extend yellow feathers above their eyes, stamping into the sand to attract females.

This process known as “lekking” can be impeded by industrial infrastructure such as fences or oil wells, according to a 2022 report from the Fish and Wildlife Service, as the prairie chickens naturally avoid tall structures where predators may perch.

The report blamed a rapid decline in the prairie chicken’s numbers on heavy growth in agriculture and energy development throughout the bird’s range.

The grouse’s historical range was diminished by about 90%, the report read, and its population across the five-state range sat at just about 32,00 birds from an historic population believed to top 100,000. Those numbers led to Fish and Wildlife’s listing of the lesser prairie chicken as endangered but with the arrival of a new federal administration, the agency reversed course last year.

The shift began after backlash from the oil and gas and agriculture industries, and allegations the listing and recovery efforts could negatively impact local economies and the industries that drive them.

A federal lawsuit was filed in 2023 by the state of Texas and fossil fuel trade group the Permian Basin Petroleum Association. In August 2025, U.S. District Judge David Counts sided with the plaintiffs, issuing a ruling to vacate the lesser prairie chicken’s endangered status.

In its latest decision published last week to the Federal Register, the interior department said delisting was “necessary to comply” with the court, and that no opportunity for the public to submit comments on the matter would be offered.

This followed an August 2025 motion the Fish and Wildlife Service filed in the lawsuit, asking the court to reverse the agency’s own decision to list the species.

Specifically, the agency said its previous leaders falsely separated the species into two “distinct population segments” (DPS), and that a new listing procedure was needed to correctly apply federal law.

“The Service concedes that it improperly applied its DPS Policy in a manner that tainted the substance of the final listing rule,” read the motion. “Given the seriousness of the error identified, the Service will be unable to correct the rule’s defects on remand short of engaging in an entirely new analysis.”

The apparent alignment between the court and the Fish and Wildlife Service followed an executive order issued by President Donald Trump titled “Unleashing American Energy” as he took office in January 2025.

Trump via the order called on federal agencies to limit restrictions on domestic fossil fuel production. This included multiple endangered species listings that occurred under Trump’s predecessor, President Joe Biden.

“President Trump’s removal of the Lesser Prairie-Chicken from the federal Endangered Species Act list is a long-overdue victory for Texas farmers, ranchers, and energy producers,” said Texas Department of Agriculture Commissioner Sid Miller in a Feb. 26 statement. “For years, rural Texans stood shoulder to shoulder with the oil and gas industry to fight back against a weaponized federal bureaucracy masquerading as conservation.”

The decision to delist drew uproar from the environmental community with multiple groups arguing the delisting put industry interests ahead of the environment.

“The Lesser Prairie Chicken is a metaphorical ‘canary in the coal mine’ for New Mexico’s grasslands. They need large tracts of native grasslands to thrive, and their numbers have dwindled dramatically over the past several decades,” said Demis Foster with Conservation Voters New Mexico.

“Research also shows that when it comes to ecosystem resiliency, every species matters.”

Jason Rylander with the Center for Biological Diversity called the decision “shameful,” and said that the Center planned to defend the species’ endangered status in court via an ongoing appeal the organization filed against the Texas court’s ruling in the Fifth Circuit U.S Court of Appeals.

It was the Center, then known as the Biodiversity Legal Foundation, that first petitioned the Fish and Wildlife Service in 1995 for the lesser prairie chicken to be listed as endangered.

It was listed as threatened in 2014, but a subsequent lawsuit filed by oil and gas industry groups in federal court for the Western District of Texas in Midland led to a reversal of that decision. The Center filed again to list the species in 2016, and sued the federal government in 2021, leading to the 2022 listing.

No decision was yet issued on the appeal as of Monday, March 2.

“We’ve been fighting for decades to protect these birds because they’re special and they have a right to exist,” Rylander said. “It’s shameful that the Trump administration sees fit to sacrifice these magnificent birds for oil and gas industry profit.”

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

Senate committee supports Steve Pearce for BLM director

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Adrian Hedden
Carlsbad Current-Argus
achedden@currentargus

Former New Mexico Congressman Steve Pearce was approved by a U.S. Senate committee to become director of the federal Bureau of Land Management.

The Energy and Natural Resources Committee voted 11-9 on Wednesday, March 4, in favor of President Donald Trump’s nomination of Pearce to run the bureau. The nomination now goes to the full Senate for a confirmation vote.

The Bureau of Land Management, a sub-agency of the U.S. Department of Interior, oversees 245 million acres of federal public land along with 700 million acres of underground mineral rights. The acreage lies mostly in 12 states in the American West, including New Mexico, which means the bureau is tasked with overseeing oil and gas development on public land, a key driver of New Mexico’s economy accounting for about half of the state’s fossil fuel.

A Republican from Hobbs, Pearce served seven two-year terms as U.S. House representative for New Mexico’s 2nd Congressional District – from 2003 to 2009 and from 2011 and 2019. The 2nd District includes most of southern New Mexico, including its deep-red southeast corner consisting of portions of Eddy, Lea and Chaves counties.

Pearce ran for governor of New Mexico instead of seeking reelection to Congress in 2018, losing to current Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham. He chaired the New Mexico Republican Party from 2018 to 2024.

Pearce owned oilfield services company Lee Fishing Tools until 2003 when the business was sold to Key Energy Services.

The committee vote to advance Pearce’s nomination was held without debate, although members questioned the nominee during a Feb. 25 hearing. The vote fell along party lines with all the committee’s Republican members voting in favor while the panel’s eight Democrats and one independent voted against.

The nomination needs 51 votes to be confirmed by the Senate where Republicans hold a 53-47 majority. A confirmation vote has not been scheduled.

Pearce’s prior association with the oil and gas industry was a sticking point for U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-NM) who serves as ranking member of the Energy and Natural Resources Committee and voted against Pearce’s nomination.

During his hearing before the committee last week, Pearce touted his experience in Congress while representing the 2nd District, which includes vast stretches of federal public land in the southern portion of the state.

He said the federal government should collaborate with local communities and the industries they depend on while balancing the needs for outdoor recreation.

“If confirmed, I fully intend to uphold these same principles as BLM director and ensure local input is a key factor in my decision-making,” Pearce said during his opening remarks. “I have also seen firsthand the importance of our public lands and support those missions completely.”

Ahead of Wednesday’s vote, Heinrich voiced concerns about Pearce’s past support of selling federal public land and opposing conservation designations such as national monuments.

“When Congressman Pearce testified,” Heinrich said, “he promised that he would not recommend rolling back national monument designations, something which is extremely important to me; and he acknowledged that (the bureau) cannot conduct large-scale selloffs of public lands under existing law, which is correct.

“I intend to hold him to these statements. But I also know that commitments to follow the law by previous Trump administration nominees have proven unreliable at times.”

The vote to advance Pearce’s nomination drew criticism from environmental groups, and support from industry leaders.

Camilla Feibelman, director of the Sierra Club’s Rio Grande Chapter, which covers New Mexico and portions of West Texas, said she was concerned about Pearce’s past support of reductions in national monument acreage and cutbacks to regulations intended to reduce air pollution linked to oil and gas.

“These lands belong to all of us and are an economic engine for our communities,” Feibelman said. “Americans deserve a trustworthy leader who would prioritize managing our cherished public lands for the good of all, rather than selling them off to polluting corporations.”

Dan Naatz, chief of policy for the Independent Petroleum Association of America, a national oil and gas trade group, said Pearce’s experience in the federal government, and a “multi-use” philosophy for public lands – including mineral development and conservation – make the former congressman the right choice to lead the Bureau of Land Management.

“It’s important that the head of the BLM understand the multiple use mandate for federal lands management as enshrined in law,” Naatz said. “Pearce’s background in Congress and serving the state of New Mexico qualify him to lead the agency.”

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

Your Voice Matters to Your Local Newspaper

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Hello, I am Richard Connor, Editor and Publisher of El Rito Media’s five newspapers. Often, when residents see our paper or read our websites, they say, “Oh. Thank goodness we have a local newspaper again.” Many do not realize that we have revived, renovated, and built strong local newspapers in five cities. We are proud of that work, and we want to continue improving. To do that, we need your help.

We are currently conducting a community survey, and we invite you to participate.

Share Your Feedback

Our mission is simple: to serve this community with accurate, relevant, and meaningful local journalism. To do that well, we need your input.

We have launched this survey to better understand how you read our stories, what topics matter most to you, and how we can improve. Whether you are a daily reader, an occasional visitor, a print subscriber, or primarily engage with us on social media, your feedback will help shape the future of local news in your community.

Why This Survey Matters

Local journalism works best when it reflects the priorities of the people it serves. This survey will help us:

  • Understand how often residents read our coverage
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Your responses will guide decisions about our coverage, our platforms, and how we invest our resources.

If you would like to share your thoughts, click here to complete the survey.

Our Commitment to the Community

As a local newspaper, we cover city government, schools, public safety, business, community events, and more because these issues directly affect daily life. We take seriously our responsibility to provide accurate, fair, and useful reporting.

Journalism works best as a conversation. This survey gives you an opportunity to tell us:

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Help Shape the Future of Local News

Strong local news depends on community involvement. Your participation will help ensure that our newspapers continue to reflect the values, concerns, and priorities of the people who live here.

The survey takes only a few minutes to complete, and your responses will remain confidential.

If you value local journalism and want to see it thrive, please take the survey and let your voice be heard.

Opinion: Trump fulfills his promise

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Cal Thomas

If you wanted to look at it this way, President Trump is keeping his promise to end wars by taking out an Iranian regime that has made war on us and underwritten terrorism throughout the Middle East and the world since its 1979 revolution.

In killing Iran’s top leadership, including Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and 40 others, President Trump has done what no other American president would do. People with Iranian heritage took to the streets across America to celebrate and praise U.S. and Israeli forces. Isn’t it nice to see pro-American demonstrators for a change?

The usual suspects, including the New York Times and virtually all Democrats – save Sen. John Fetterman of Pennsylvania – are again on the wrong side. They apparently are OK with the slaughter of an estimated 30,000 Iranian civilians who were demanding a change in their totalitarian government. Some of the most ardent critics of what Israel did in Gaza following the Oct. 7, 2023 murder of Israeli civilians, have been mostly silent about the massive slaughter of unarmed Iranian civilians by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

The Left, which loves to resurrect the Nazis and compare them to President Trump, should consider what Ben Caspit wrote in the Jerusalem Post: “Iran has been caught with its pants down. Its proxies are frozen with fear or responding weakly just to say they did something. Senior figures are being taken out in bulk. Missiles are being fired sparingly. True, it doesn’t end until it ends, and the ending is still ahead of us, but the turnaround is one of the most astonishing in history. Compare it to Nazi Germany, which went from an empire that nearly took over the world to a heap of ruins in six years. Iran was on the way to controlling the entire Middle East. Now it’s being pounded by the two best air forces in the world and fighting for its life. These are historic days, no less.”

In a statement following the first wave of attacks, President Trump said: “This is not only Justice for the people of Iran, but for all Great Americans, and those people from many Countries throughout the World, that have been killed or mutilated by Khamenei and his gang of bloodthirsty THUGS. … This is the single greatest chance for the Iranian people to take back their Country…”

Stories are now appearing online of Iranian sleeper cells that could attack and kill Americans here. If they do, the blame should go to President Biden and other administrations which let them in because of lax border and immigration policies. Better stay out of crowded places, including shopping malls and other target- rich environments. The State Department issued a “travel warning” for Americans.

The operation will curtail oil shipments from Iran to China, which gets 90 percent of its oil from Tehran. China might also be pushing back any plans to invade Taiwan. Russian President Vladimir Putin must also be concerned about the technological and military triumph of Israel and the U.S. Might he re-think his war against Ukraine? One can only hope.

Some European leaders, who have been reluctant to act when it comes to Iran (but always criticize Israel for defending itself), are now backing the U.S. and Israel when they don’t have to do the fighting. Most Arab and Muslim states, which have been hit with Iranian missiles, are for the moment expressing opposition to the regime and supporting the attack.

If – and war always contains a lot of ifs – if the end of this operation is the turnover of Iran’s government to leaders who will no longer promote terrorism, fully restore women’s rights and a free press, honest voting and repair relations with the U.S. and the West, President Trump will have become the most consequential president in decades. If that happens, he might even win the Nobel Peace Prize he has long sought.

Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com. Look for Cal Thomas’ latest book “A Watchman in the Night: What I’ve Seen Over 50 Years Reporting on America” (HumanixBooks).

Youtsey defeats Todd in Artesia mayor’s race

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Mike Smith
Artesia Daily Press
msmith@elritomedia.com

Jeff Youtsey, a safety representative for HF Sinclair Navajo Refinery and a 14-year veteran of the Artesia City Council, defeated retired law enforcement official Terrance Todd by just 20 votes Tuesday in the race to succeed outgoing Mayor Jonathan Henry.

Youtsey, 61, had 798 (50.63%) of the 1,576 votes cast in the mayoral election and Todd, 65, had 778 votes (49.37%), according to unofficial results provided by the city clerk’s office.

In addition to a new mayor, Artesia residents chose three new city councilors in the March 3 municipal election and affirmed the candidacies of two incumbent council members who faced no opposition.

Youtsey, interviewed by phone Wednesday morning, thanked his family and supporters who campaigned for him and also thanked Todd for sticking to the issues.

“Terry ran a very good campaign,” Youtsey said. “I’m looking forward to working for the city.”

In an email Thursday morning to the Daily Press, Todd congratulated Youtsey and the others who won their respective races.

“It was close across the board,” he said.

“I applaud the citizens who came out to vote but, in all honesty, wish there would have been a larger turnout.  I don’t ever want us to take for granted the freedoms we have and by voting you’re exercising a say in those freedoms.”

Youtsey, who will take office as mayor April 1, said he’s still processing his victory.

“I’m trying to absorb it all,” he said. “It’s going to take a few days to wrap my head around it.”

The mayor-elect said his immediate priorities include meeting with Henry and finding a successor for the District 3 council seat left vacant by Youtsey’s move to the mayor’s office. The city council will appoint a councilor to serve the remaining two years of Youtsey’s term.

Ongoing street projects will top his early-term agenda, Youtsey said.

“We’ve been working on main arteries for 12 to 14 years. I’m looking forward to tying in and redoing lesser traveled streets,” he said.

In Tuesday’s city council races, District 1 Councilor Raul Rodriguez was reelected without opposition and District 4 Councilor Michael Bunt was unopposed in his campaign to retain the council slot he gained by appointment after no candidate filed for the seat in 2024. The term expires in 2028.

Joseph W. Wright defeated Nathan N. Ryno in the race to replace District 2 Councilor George Mullen, who decided not to seek reelection. Wright, 72, a retired site director from the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center (FLETC), prevailed with 144 votes (54%) while Ryno, 50, a teacher in the Artesia Public Schools, had 125 votes (46%).

“Right after the results were posted, I went and gave Mr. Wright congratulations on his victory,” Ryno said in a text message Tuesday night. “I am disappointed of course but I will be back.”

Wright said in a telephone interview Wednesday morning that he wants to listen and learn before being sworn in April 1.

“The first step is to listen. I want to listen to everybody and learn and I will move forward from there,” he said.

Voters returned Allen Kent Bratcher, 68, to the council in District 3, which he served before running unsuccessfully for mayor in 2022.

Bratcher an educational assistant with Artesia Public Schools who defeated write-in candidate Matteo Doporto, 372 votes (79%) to 99 (21%), replaces Wade Nelson who decided not to run for another term.

Former Councilor Terry Hill, 77, won election to the District 4 council seat vacated by Councilor Dickie Townley who did not seek reelection.

Hill defeated Charles Morgan Wagner II, 36, in a race decided by only four votes 214 votes (50.4% ) to 210 (49.5%).

Hill ran for unsuccessfully for mayor in 2022 when his term on the council expired. He had served on the council for 17 years.

“We’ve got a lot of infrastructure that needs to be finished up,” Hill said during an interview Tuesday night at City Hall.

Tuesday’s unofficial results will be canvassed March 10 by the Eddy County Board of County Commissioners in Carlsbad, said Artesia City Administrator Hayley Klein.

Artesia residents cast a total of 1,583 ballots in Tuesday’s election, according to City Clerk Summer Valverde who said the city has 11,018 eligible voters. That means turnout for the election was slightly more than 14%.

Mike Smith can be reached at 575-628-5546 extension-2361.

Jeffrey Youtsey wins Artesia Mayor’s race

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Mike Smith

Artesia Daily Press

msmith@elritomedia.com

Artesia mayor pro tem Jeffrey Youtsey will serve as Artesia’s new mayor, according to unofficial election results.

Artesia residents voted Tuesday to have Youtsey, 61, replace outgoing Mayor Jonathan Henry, who decided not to run for a second term.

Youtsey defeated challenger Terrance Todd in a close race.

Youtsey had 51% of the vote, while Todd had 49% of the votes cast across Artesia.

Artesia will have some new city council members. In District 2, Joseph W. Wright, defeated challenger Nathan Ryno 54% to 46%.

In District 3, former councilor Kent Bratcher returns defeating write-in candidate Matteo Doporto 79% to 21%.

In District 4, former city councilor Terry Hill defeated challenger Charles Morgan Wagner II 50.4% to 49.5%.

Incumbent District 1 councilor Raul Rodriguez received a free pass as did District 4 councilor Michael Bunt. He was appointed to the position in 2024 and was voted to finish out the term until 2028.

Hayley Klein, Artesia city administrator, said the results would be canvassed by the Eddy County Board of County Commissioners on Tuesday.

More information coming soon to artesianews.com and Thursday’s Artesia Daily Press.

Artesia girls miss state tournament

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JT Keith
Artesia Daily Press
jtkeith@elritomedia.com

The Artesia Lady ’Dogs’ basketball season came down to one game: Win and they were in. The home game was at the Pit against the Goddard Rockets, a team they had beaten twice this season and as recently as a week ago.

But on Friday, the Lady ’Dogs’ shooting deserted them, and they could not recover. Goddard controlled the tempo, frustrated Artesia’s offense, forced turnovers and walked out with a 49-30 win.

The loss cost Artesia a trip to the state tournament. The NMAA seeding committee selected only three teams from District 4-4A: the regular-season champions, the Portales Rams, the eighth seed; the Lovington Wildcats, the ninth seed; and Goddard, claiming the 16th seed and final spot.

Even with the season ending earlier than they had hoped, the Lady ’Dogs made notable strides in coach Candace Pollard’s second season. Artesia increased its win total from 10 to 14, showing signs that the program is building toward long-term stability.

The team absorbed multiple setbacks along the way, losing forward Jenna Whitmire early on to injury, guard Kailee Padilla for the season with a knee injury and center Gracen Kuykendall for a week with a nose injury and possible concussion. These blows forced Pollard to rely on younger players.

Despite the adversity, Artesia finished the regular season fighting. They won two out of their three games, with victories against Goddard at home and a 40-37 upset win against the eighth-ranked Lovington Wildcats on the road on Tuesday. That performance showed the team’s grit and potential.

While a tournament berth slipped away, the foundation appears set. With key players returning next year and a deeper bench emerging, the Lady ’Dogs expect to be in the postseason conversation again.

JT Keith can be reached at 575-420-0061, or on X @JTKEITH1.

CULINARY CONFIDENTIAL: Meatloaf Cakes with Hatch Chile Mashed Potatoes & Buttered Corn

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Bruce Lesman

These individual meatloaf cakes are one of those dishes that look a little playful on the plate, but eat like pure comfort. When I serve them at home, guests always comment on how satisfying they are—familiar, yet just dressed up enough to feel special. One cake per person keeps the presentation clean and lets each plate feel intentional, not overloaded.

Serves 4 (1 cake per person)

Meatloaf Cakes

– 1 1/2 lb. ground beef (80/20) – 1/2 lb. ground pork – 1 cup milk – 2 eggs – 1 cup seasoned breadcrumbs – 1/2 cup finely diced onion – 2 cloves garlic, minced – 1/4 cup ketchup – 2 tbsp Worcestershire sauce – 1 tsp smoked paprika – Salt and black pepper to taste – 8 slices bacon – Barbecue sauce, for finishing

Preheat oven to 375°F. Combine all ingredients except bacon and barbecue sauce in a large bowl and mix gently until just combined. Divide mixture into four equal portions and shape into round cakes. Wrap each cake with two slices of bacon, securing with toothpicks if needed. Place on a parchment-lined sheet pan and bake for 30 minutes. Remove from oven, lightly brush the tops with barbecue sauce, then return to the oven for an additional 10 minutes, until cooked through and lightly caramelized.

Hatch Chile Mashed Potatoes

– 2 lbs Yukon Gold potatoes, peeled and cut – 1/2 cup whole milk, warmed – 4 tbsp unsalted butter

– 1/2 cup roasted Hatch green chiles, finely chopped – Salt to taste

Boil potatoes in salted water until tender. Drain well and mash with warm milk and butter until smooth. Fold in Hatch chiles and season to taste. Spoon or pipe onto plates for a refined presentation.

Buttered Corn

– 2 cups corn kernels – 2 tbsp butter – Salt to taste

Warm corn in a small sauté pan with butter until just heated through. Season lightly with salt.

To Serve

Place one meatloaf cake in the center of each plate. Add a generous piped swirl of Hatch chile mashed potatoes and a restrained spoonful of buttered corn on the side. Finish each meatloaf cake with a light drizzle of barbecue sauce just before serving for sheen, flavor, and a polished presentation.

Bruce Lesman is a seasoned culinary executive with decades of experience in luxury hospitality and wellness dining. Prior positions include Corporate Food and Beverage Director for Cunard and Seabourn Cruise Lines, Vice President of Operations for Canyon Ranch Wellness Resorts.

Egg-drop event at space museum simulates space flight in Alamogordo

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Laurel Berry
Artesia Daily Press

On February 20, 1962, John Glenn became the first American to orbit Earth, aboard the Friendship 7 Mercury capsule. Although Russia’s Yuri Gagarin was the first human to accomplish this feat, Glenn’s flight was three times as long as Gagarin’s single orbit. Launching him aloft enough to reach orbit was one herculean feat but, arguably, getting him safely back down again was more important. Dealing with what turned out to be an erroneous signal indicating that one of the spacecraft’s landing bags had deployed, keeping the heat shields in their proper places became paramount, lest Glenn burn up, capsule and all, upon reentry. All went by plan and Glenn and his Friendship 7 landed safely with a splash in the Atlantic Ocean.

With that flight in the history books, the New Mexico Museum of Space History chose to celebrate the success of bringing Glenn safely back to Earth 60 years later with an egg drop as part of their Science Saturdays series. Participants made their own space capsules with pop cans and parachutes of plastic grocery bags or coffee filters and string. Cotton balls, pipe cleaners, and balloons provided padding for a fresh chicken egg, which was placed in a small ziplock bag to contain any mess if the egg-stronauts went splat after being dropped five stories from the roof of the museum.

A variety of capsule designs were created in the Tombaugh Education Center located on the museum’s campus. Then the efficacy of the amateur engineering projects were put to the test when museum Education Specialist Marie De Leon released each capsule to float or fall to the parking lot below. Some parachutes functioned beautifully, others struggled to fill with air, all hit the pavement with a clank of can on asphalt.

When the shower of capsules concluded, participants retrieved their contraptions, pried off the tape and parachutes and retrieved the ziplock baggies with their egg-stronauts inside. There was about a 50-50 success rate. Jason Brady, whose egg did not make it, noted “the balloons in the can are the key” in successfully bringing the egg safely back to Earth. De Leon also mentioned that making a coil from the pipe cleaners and placing that under the egg was another idea that would have possibly cushioned the egg upon impact, though none of the participants had thought to use them in this way.

The experience of designing a capsule specifically to safeguard its passenger was a peek at what NASA engineers face when planning space flight, while honoring John Glenn’s successful space mission.

Science Saturdays are held monthly at the New Mexico Space History Museum, on the last Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. More information can be found at nmspacemuseum.org.