Focus
FORT STANTON'S APPEAL

Nisha Hoffman and other members of Fort Stanton, Inc., are making
strong appeals to New Mexico residents and others interested in preserving
living history.

church at Fort Stanton
Fort Stanton has seen continuous service to its country and the
state of New Mexico for 149 years. Kit Carson and John J. "Black Jack" Pershing
served at this fort. The famed 9th Cavalry of Buffalo Soldiers were stationed
there. The fort was primary in the Indian Wars of the 1870s and the 1880s. At
Fort Stanton was the first hospital for the treatment of tuberculosis for the
marine services in the US, and it was the first internment camp for Germans
during World War II. As the cornerstone of Lincoln County, it culturally served
the Apache, Hispanic and Anglo populations, and played a pivotal role in the
Lincoln County War. These are just a few of the many reasons it is vitally
important to preserve for posterity this historic living treasure.

Marine cemetery at Fort Stanton
Fort Stanton, Inc. needs federal monies allocated in the 2005
budget for its continued survival, and they were told a big file of letters
would make a valued impact. Write letters, if possible on letterheads, to U.S.
Representative Steve Pearce as soon as possible. For security reasons, his
office prefers letters via fax; that number is given below.
Representative Steve Pearce
1408 Longworth House Office Bldg.
Washington, DC 20515
Attention: Ricardo Bernal
fax 202-225-9599
Fort Stanton, its history past and present, has
been presented in earlier Roswell Webmag issues, which can be accessed by
clicking on the archive button.
U.S. LANDS ON MARS!
HISTORICAL MEMORIES OF JANUARY 2004 WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH THE
TELEVISED IMAGES OF WILDLY ECSTATIC NASA SCIENTISTS AS THEY LEARN, ALONG WITH
THE REST OF US, OF THE SUCCESSFUL LANDING ON MARS.
FUNCTIONING U.S. ROVERS SUCCESSFULLY LANDED -- NOT ONCE BUT
TWICE, JUST WEEKS APART -- ON MARS AND BEGAN THEIR GEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS,
SENDING IMAGES BACK TO EARTH.
HISTORICALLY, THE MARS EXPLORATION BEGAN 40 YEARS AGO WHEN THE
USSR MADE THE EARLIEST ATTEMPTS TO TRAVEL TO MARS, OR AT LEAST TO DO
"FLY-BYS," BEGINNING IN 1960.
THOSE EARLIER UNSUCCESSFUL MISSIONS BY USSR AND U.S.A. PAVED THE
WAY FOR MAN'S ULTIMATE SUCCESS. IN 1971, A U.S. MISSION WAS ABLE TO
SEND IMAGES OF MARS BACK TO EARTH.
IN THE PAST FEW WEEKS, WE HAVE WITNESSED, AND SHARED THAT
EXPERIENCE WITH THE REST OF THE TELEVISED WORLD, THE FIRST TRULY SUCCESSFUL MARS
MISSION, AFTER 40 YEARS OF ATTEMPTS.
THE TWO LAUNCHES FOR THE CURRENT U.S.A. MARS MISSION BEGAN ON
JUNE 10, 2003 AND JULY 7, 2003. AFTER TRAVELING HUNDREDS OF MILLIONS OF MILES,
THEY LANDED JANUARY 3 AND JANUARY 23, 2004 WITH THEIR ROVERS -- SPIRIT AND
OPPORTUNITY -- ON OPPOSITE SIDES OF THE PLANET. SOON BOTH ROVERS BEGAN TO
DO THE EXPLORATION WORK THEY WERE SENT THERE TO DO.
THE PRIMARY PURPOSE OF THIS MISSION IS FOR MANKIND TO LEARN OF
ANY PAST HISTORY OF WATER ON MARS. IT IS ALSO TO STUDY ALL OTHER ASPECTS OF THE
SURFACE, INCLUDING ITS SOIL AND ROCKS, AS WELL AS ITS
ATMOSPHERE.
FOR HIGH RESOLUTION IMAGES, DETAILS AND UP-TO-DATE INFORMATION
ABOUT THE CURRENT MARS EXPLORATION, CLICK ON THE LINK BELOW, WHICH WILL TAKE YOU
TO THE NASA'S MARS MISSION WEBSITE.
THIS SITE WILL ALSO ANNOUNCE PROJECTED MARS EVENTS IN LOCATIONS
ACROSS THE COUNTRY. ONE IS SCHEDULED AT THE NEW MEXICO MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY
IN ALBUQUERQUE ON JUNE 6, 2004.
http://marsrovers.jpl.nasa.gov/gallery/all/spirit.html
NASA'S BEST PHOTOS TAKEN FROM THE HUBBLE
FOR A FANTASTIC BRIEF VOYAGE INTO DEEP SPACE, COMPLETE WITH ADDED
SOUND EFFECTS TO ENHANCE THE ADVENTURE, CLICK ONTO THE LINK BELOW TO SEE ACTUAL
NEBULAS, NOVAS, SUPERNOVAS, STARS, SUNS AND GALAXIES AS PHOTOGRAPHED FROM THE
HUBBLE.
IT'S MISSION IS SCHEDULED TO END IN 2010, AND FOUR YEARS LATER
REENTER OUR ATMOSPHERE AND BURN UP. INSTEAD, ASTRONOMERS WANT THE HUBBLE
TO BE REFURBISHED AND IT'S USE EXTENDED ANOTHER 10 YEARS. PRESERVING THE
HUBBLE IS AN ONGOING DEBATE.
THE JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE IS SCHEDULED TO REPLACE THE HUBBLE
IN 2011.
http://wires.news.com.au/special/mm/030811-hubble.htm
NEWS
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JANUARY 11, 2004
CONTACT:
Lance Ross
Nadine Guillén
505-342-7616
505-342-7615
800-642-6689, ext. 7616
800-642-6689, ext. 7615
lross@nmlottery.com
nguillen@nmlottery.com
ROSWELL WOMAN WINS $129,000 ON GAME SHOW; SETS NEW
MEXICO RECORD
ROSWELL - A life-long Roswell
resident has set a record for prizes won by New Mexicans on the
nationally-syndicated "Powerball Instant Millionaire" television game show. Kathi Silvas won $129,000, breaking the
previous record of almost $71,000, by following instructions she said came in a
dream.
Silvas watched the episode at home Saturday night (January 10) with about
three dozen family and friends. It
had been taped in Las Vegas shortly before Christmas, but she was embargoed by
producers from discussing her prize until after the program aired.
The program is based on the popular Powerball lottery game played in New
Mexico, plus 23 other states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin
Islands. Fourteen of those 26
lotteries participate in the TV game show.
Each lottery sends one contestant per episode, and at-home players
receive prizes based upon the contestants' prizes.
Silvas was
trying for a $1 million top prize by correctly revealing dollar signs under each
letter of the word "Powerball" without revealing an "X." The nine-letter word hid seven dollar
signs and two Xs. The object of the
game is to get seven consecutive letters without revealing an “X,” winning $1
million. Beginning with $1,000,
each letter guessed correctly doubled her previous prize. Although one "X" appeared when she chose
the letter "P," she kept playing until she had won $128,000 in the game's final
round, plus $1,000 from an earlier qualifying round.
"I had a dream a couple of weeks before the taping," she said. Silvas followed the selections in her
dream and chose her letters alphabetically (A-B-E-L-L-O-P), missing the million
dollars by just one selection. However, she had another target: a light-hearted
rivalry with her husband's friend, Orlando Chavez of Roswell, who had been on
"Powerball Instant Millionaire" last September. Chavez won almost $41,000, and his guest
at the taping last year was Silvas' husband, Gilbert.
"My initial goal was to beat Orlando," laughed Silvas, a receptionist at
a Roswell radio station.
Silvas was passed over during the first two segments of Saturday's
program. She was selected in the
third segment, won a qualifying round, and felt the pressure as the lone
contestant in the fourth segment, "Instant Millionaire," trying to win $1
million.
At one point game show host Todd Newton reminded her that she could walk
away with the $64,000 she had already
won, try to double her prize, or lose half if she revealed a second "X." With the studio audience shouting "Play"
and "Go," Silvas was faced with two remaining letters.
"Is it the 'W' or the 'R?'"
Newton asked.
"I looked for my husband,"
she recalled later. "What letter do
I pick now? I couldn't hear his
voice or see him. I had already hit
an ‘X,’ and that was ok .... I hadn't lost anything. That 'P' cost me $800,000. I had already gotten this far. So I didn't hesitate."
She turned to Newton and said,
"Let's go with the 'W' for 'win.'"
Silvas made the right choice,
and her $64,000 doubled to $128,000 with a dollar sign under the "W." The "R" was hiding the remaining "X,"
which would have cut her prize in half.
She screamed, the audience began hollering, and she started shaking as
her husband rushed the stage.
The show was seen in New Mexico on the state’s three CBS Television
affiliates, KRQE (Albuquerque), KBIM (Roswell) and KREZ
(Durango/Farmington).
She plans to use part of her
prize to pay bills and remodel her home.
But most will be invested in savings, with some set aside for a son's
college education. Silvas plans to
continue working, and said she wants to take some time off "and do some Kathi
stuff" after what she called a tough year that included being laid off from a
previous job.
"Before the taping the
announcer said to me, 'You go, girl.' Afterward he said, 'You really took me
seriously, didn't you?'" she laughed.
Even with a big prize, VIP
treatment, including limousine service and first-class hotel accommodations
provided all contestants, Silvas said she and her husband remained frugal the
duration of the trip. The most
extravagant purchase they made was a $20 souvenir tee-shirt. It was, however, the Silvas' first real
honeymoon, she said .... 15 years after they were married.
But she
said other contestants, members of the studio audience and even production crew
members came up to her on the street during the duration of her visit,
congratulating her.
"Having the studio audience
root for you when you're on the set is really neat," she said. "You can really feel it. It was good to have people to share the
excitement with."
She said that the impact of
her prize really didn't sink until her return flight landed at the Albuquerque
International Sunport.
"I saw my stepdaughter,"
Silvas recalled. "I started
crying. I lost it and knew it was
real."
And in Roswell, keeping her
secret until the show aired was tough in a city in which she grew up. She would just smile and say she “did
well’ when friends and co-workers asked how much she had won. But people have told her that it went to
a nice, well-deserving person.
New Mexico’s previous $71,000 record
on “Powerball Instant Millionaire” was won last spring by Mark Hendon of
Alamogordo.
Scratch tickets sold as part of the
"Powerball Instant Millionaire" game are among the New Mexico Lottery products
that have so far raised more than $195 million for public education in the
State. All Lottery profits are
currently earmarked for the Lottery Success Scholarship program, which has
already provided in-state college tuition for more than 25,000
students.
NEW MEXICO LOTTERY AUTHORITY
The New Mexico Lottery
began April 1996, now has 63 employees, and is governed by an unpaid
seven-member authoritative board of volunteers, appointed by the state’s
governor. The Legislative Finance Committee has advisory oversight of the
Lottery. The projected fiscal 2003 sales is $137 million, all proceeds going to
the Lottery Tuition Fund, which directly benefits the state’s students in the
form of educational scholarships.
NMLA invests today in its
state's future of tomorrow.
A few NMLA employees and
most of its board members gathered for its annual meet this year in New Orleans
in mid-September, along with other members of the North American Association of
State and Provincial Lotteries.
tour -- with French
Creole Marcelle, tour-guide extraordinaire -- portions of the New Orleans area
along with a NMLA companion in Byways of the previous issue by clicking on
Archives button.
NEW MEXICO'S LOTTERY SUCCESS SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM
Through the Lottery
Success Scholarship Program, New Mexico high school graduates (or GED
recipients) who want to attend a New Mexico public college or university can get
his and her tuitions paid as a result of profits from the New Mexico
Lottery.
For more information visit the New Mexico Lottery Authority site:
http://www.nmlottery.com/Games.htm
Since July 1, 2003, New Mexico Lottery has been providing a new
vitally important benefit to residents of New Mexico. Legislature for the Amber
Alert was passed, and NMLA joins with the New Mexico State Police, local law
enforcement agencies and the New Mexico Broadcasters Association as partners in
the Amber Alert program. Nearly 1,200 lottery retailers statewide will be
notified when State Police issue an Amber Alert after a child has been kidnapped
or is believed to be in immediate danger. A message will be sent to every
lottery terminal in New Mexico and retailers will be asked to print out the
Amber Alert message and post it in signage provided by the New Mexico Lottery. A
number of high-volume retailers with flashing lighted electronic display (LED)
lottery signage will also show the information.
About 20 state lotteries nationwide now participate in the Amber
Alert program or will shortly. Law enforcement officials in New Mexico, Arizona,
Colorado and Texas will be able to relay Amber Alert information to lottery
retailers from one state to the next if conditions warrant.
YOU MIGHT BE A RESIDENT OF NEW MEXICO IF
...
... SECURITY IS A FULL TANK OF
GAS.
Following 2 drought status maps -- effective January 21, 2004 --
are from this website: http://www.nm.nrcs.usda.gov/

yellow = alert mild; orange = warning moderate; red = emergency
severe
