Monday, August 29, 2022

Drusedum to address home club

John Drusedum will speak to his home club this week as Rotary District 5520 governor.


Governor Drusedum will meet with the Roswell Rotary Club Board of Directors and then will address the whole club on Thursday (Sept. 1)


John is co-founder of LGR Projects LLC, a New Mexico company that purchases and manages rental real estate. In addition, he and his wife Sharon are owners/managers of the Lonely Goat Ranch and Chuckwagon located just outside of Roswell.


They also own a unique Roswell hair salon, Strands of Gold LLC.


John received his BA and MA from SNU and served churches in Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico in pastoral ministry for 30 years.


In 1998, John co-founded the web and graphic design studio VaporWerks Inc. He and his co-founder closed the studio in 2004.


He grew up on the East Coast in a Philadelphia bedroom community. He is a Vietnam War-era veteran, serving in the U.S. Navy as a data systems technician — now known as IT.


John has been married to Sharon, a native “Roswalien,” since 1981. They have 2 adult daughters, 1 adult son, and 9 grandchildren.

 

John became a member of Rotary in April 1996 while living in Santa Fe. He has held various leadership roles as a member of the Rotary clubs of Santa Fe Centro; Rio Rancho; Austin-Oak Hill (now Southwest Austin), Texas; is a past president of the Roswell Sunrise Rotary Club; member of the Roswell Rotary Club; and has served as District 5520 as assistant governor and lieutenant governor.


He is a multiple Paul Harris Fellow (as is Sharon and 2 of their 3 children), a member of the Paul Harris Society, and he and Sharon are major donors.


In 2018-19, John and Sharon were the host family to a Finnish Rotary Exchange student, with whom they continue to stay in contact.

 

Some of his hobbies/passions include chuckwagon cooking, bass guitar, classic cars, empowering the next generation, clean water/sanitation, and peace initiatives.

John Drusedum, Rotary District 5520 governor, and his wife Sharon are shown before the start of the July 4 Independence Day Parade in El Paso. John will address his home club on Thursday.

 

Friday, August 12, 2022

Ranger discusses Bitter Lake refuge

Steve I. Alvarez, outdoor recreation planner and refuge ranger at Bitter Lake National Wildlife Refuge, addresses the Roswell Rotary Club at its Aug. 11 meeting.
 

Exchange student meets club

Sakurako “Sakura” Kamitani, the Roswell Rotary Club’s exchange student from Japan, makes her first comments to the club at the Aug. 11 meeting.

Monday, August 8, 2022

Planning Scrap Happy Quilt Show

Roswell Rotarian Carolyn Mitchell holds a sign promoting the Scrap Happy Quilt Show on Sept. 16-17 at First Church of the Nazarene, 501 N. Sycamore Ave. The show, sponsored by Pecos Valley Quilters, will donate proceeds to local charities.

Speaker reports on United Way

Laura Weathers, assistant executive director of the United Way of Chaves County, reports on the community fundraising organization at the Aug. 4 Rotary Club meeting. She said the annual fundraising drive kicks off next month. Goal for the drive is $400,000, she said.

Paul Harris Fellows honored

Roswell Rotarians Steve Henderson (left) and Shawn Powell were presented pins during the Aug.  4 meeting, honoring them as Paul Harris Fellows. Making the presentations was Carolyn Mitchell.

 

Paperwork catches up

Mark Bleth receives his Roswell Rotary Club New Member Kit from fellow Rotarian J.P. Cheney. The paperwork trailed Mark’s membership in the club. Mark’s category is “Real Estate Sales.”

Sunday, August 7, 2022

Family remembers Jerry Childress

Childress
Retired Brig. Gen. Gerald “Jerry” Childress passed peacefully in his sleep on July 7, 2022. He was 91.


Jerry was known to many across the nation and locally as a leader, mentor, educator, volunteer, and avid supporter of many community groups. His contagious work ethic and positivity will be greatly missed.


Born Aug. 11, 1930, Jerry started his life in a modest coal miner family farmhouse in an area of southwestern Virginia called Camp Creek, Dickenson County. As the oldest boy of six children to Logan and Hettie Childress, he was a dedicated brother and consummate supporter of his family and their rural upbringing. Education and public service were key to their family values.


Jerry wanted to be an agriculture and shop teacher and was able to join the ROTC program at Virginia Polytechnic Institute (now Virginia Tech) where he attained his degree in Agriculture Education and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the Army.


Upon graduating as a proud and supportive Hokie, he served in the Field Artillery branch of the Army and the 82nd Airborne Division. He later went on to graduate from the National War College, while simultaneously obtaining his Master’s degree in International Aairs from George Washington University.


He ultimately achieved being one of the youngest non-wartime promotions to brigadier general. Some of his highest honors included the Legion of Merit, Bronze Star Medal, Meritorious Service Medal, Air Medal, Joint Services Commendation Medal, Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal, and eight Vietnam Service Medals.


After 25 years of active-duty service and a distinguished military career in the Army, he retired in 1977 and soon after became superintendent of New Mexico Military Institute.


Jerry was most proud of his time and tenure at NMMI. While there he grew the student population and worked with the Board of Regents and the state Legislature to fund and oversee multiple building projects, including the Toles Learning Center and the Godfrey Athletic Center. His love of the school and persistent interaction with its alumni ranks culminated in numerous continuing scholarships and campus improvements, including the Daniels Leadership Center.


His eorts resulted in New Mexico Military Institute ranking as one of the top high school and junior college military academies in the country, embodying its motto of “Duty, Honor, and Achievement.”


His service around the world for his military duties, which included foreign land conflicts, shaped him as a leader who was passionate about people and kindhearted to all. Never one to be idle, he also embarked on a variety of business and philanthropic projects to support Roswell, his true home, as he embraced its people, culture, and community — serving for all.


His lifelong love of golf, and his 65th birthday gift to a Golfsmith school for club making, led to the Cool Star Golf shop where people from all over New Mexico and beyond came for golf clubs, repairs, and plenty of banter!


Jerry will not only be remembered for what he did with his life, but more so for the countless lives he impacted along his way. Whether it was the service to his country, the White House, the Pentagon, helping coin the Army slogan “Be All You Can Be,” the leadership of New Mexico Military Institute and Wentworth Military Academy, the Betty Ford Center, Roswell Rotary Club, Salvation Army, or as a founder of First Tee of Southeastern New Mexico Jerry never lost his humble roots and Can-Do Attitude.


Jerry is survived by his partner and loving wife of more than 65 years, Martha “Marty” Childress; his brother, Byran Childress; sister, Vicey Quillen; daughter, Jane Harvard (husband Je Harvard); son, Gordon Childress (wife Lauri Childress); grandchildren, Jeremy (wife Ally Harvard), Julia Harvard (fiancé Connor Robertson), Nicholas Childress, Hadley Childress; great-granddaughter, Stella Harvard; and his many good friends throughout Chaves County and beyond.


The family also would like to recognize the Boys of Autumn Friday lunch group, past and present, which Jerry looked forward to every week. Jerry’s family would especially like to thank his kind and loving helpers: Isabel, Veronica, Susan, and Viola.


Many say and arm … We have lost one of the GREAT ones! He would want us all to remember to treat others as we would like to be treated and most importantly … “Keep Chargin’!”

EDITOR'S NOTE: This obituary was written by the family of former Roswell Rotary Club member Jerry Childress.

Tuesday, August 2, 2022

Rotary Exchange student arrives

Sakurako “Sakura” Kamitani, the Roswell Rotary Club’s exchange student from Japan, arrived at midnight Saturday (July 30).


Greeting Sakura at the Roswell Air Center terminal was a group led by club president Bianca Cheney.


The greeters included Karl Hendricks and Brice Hager, longtime family friends who are learning to speak Japanese; Colton Felmar, Roswell Rotary Club’s outbound student to Sweden in 2019-20 from New Mexico Military Institute; and host parents Mark and Maria Bleth.  


Sakura is 16 years old with an older brother and younger sister. Her historic hometown has about 470,000 people. Her father is a Rotarian and also was an exchange student many years ago.

Welcoming Sakura to Roswell are (from left) Karl Hendricks, Brice Hager, Colton Felmar, Mark Bleth, Sakura, Maria Bleth, and Rotarians Richard Madison, JP Cheney, and Bianca Cheney.

Monday, August 1, 2022

Jerry Childress service Aug. 20

Childress

A memorial service will be conducted at 3 p.m. Aug. 20 for retired Brig. Gen. Gerald “Jerry” Childress, who died July 7 in his sleep at his Roswell home.

The service will be conducted at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, 505 N. Pennsylvania Ave. The service also will be live-streamed on the St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church and LaGrone Funeral Chapel websites for family members and friends who are unable to attend.


A private family interment will be conducted later at the Santa Fe National Cemetery.


Jerry, 91, was a longtime member of the Roswell Rotary Club.


He was a combat veteran of the Vietnam War who was appointed superintendent and president of New Mexico Military Institute after retiring from the Army.

Bruce Stubbs discusses astronomy


Bruce A. Stubbs speaks to the Roswell Rotary Club about amateur astronomy at its July 28 meeting. Bruce is past president of the Roswell Pecos Valley Rotary Club.