Rachel Williamson is a junior at Mayfield High School.
Her school activities include membership in the Honor Society and Key Club; participation in Track and Field events; and serving as a math tutor. She has participated as a member of the Team America Rocketry Challenge.
Community activities include working with the Southwest Environmental Center and the Civil Air Patrol.
Her hobbies and interests include math, science, aerospace, flying small planes, and rock climbing.
Future plans are to earn a college degree and become an astronaut or an aerospace engineer.
Rachel is the daughter of Jill and Les Williamson.
Jordan Pruett is a junior at Onate High School.
His school activities include serving as a section leader of the school orchestra and creating sculptures. He has played a violin solo at the Solo and Ensemble Festival; has earned the Life Badge in Boy Scouts; and has received an Academic Excellence Award.
Community activities include membership in the Boy Scouts of America and his Church Youth Group.
His hobbies and interests include sculpting, drawing, writing, football, playing the violin, engineering, wrestling, math, science, water and snow skiing, and wake-boarding.
Future plans are to earn a college degree.
Jordan is the son of Kristin and Tyler Pruett.
Tough Enough to Wear Pink 2009 Campaign
- Laura Conniff shares details of the 2009 Tough Enough to Wear Pink Campaign which includes events through September and October, 2009.
- Over $750,000 raised by Cowboys for Cancer Research endowment. All funds stay in New Mexico for breast cancer research, public education, and cancer screenings for women who do not have the resources to finance mammograms.
- In 2008, over 300 women in Dona Ana County were provided with mammogram services
- NMSU Aggies participate in a “pink out” at the NMSU v. Prairie View football game on September 12, 2009.
- For a list of TETWP events, go to http://www.pinkaggie.com/schedule.htm
Continuing the Dream Capital Campaign
- On September 1, 2009, Donna Brown, Executive Director and Terra Van Winter, Director of Development attended a meeting of the Rio Grande Rotary Club where they received a check for $32,625. The monies originated from a grant received through the Rotary’s Tri-District Conference and will be used for the purchase of furniture for the additional patient rooms that were added during the expansion of Mesilla Valley Hospice’s La Posada residential care facility.
- Clubs which participated in the grant were: Rio Grande Rotary Club, Las Cruces Rotary Club, Mesilla Valley Rotary Club, Anthony Rotary Club, Juarez Campestre, Club Rotario Torreon Empresarial, Chihuahua Crece, Club Rotario de Chihuahua, AC, Torreon Centenario, Juarez Club Rotari – Paso Del Norte.
STUDENT ROTARIAN SEPTEMBER 2009
Taylor Black is a junior at Mayfield High School.
Her school activities include Varsity Cheerleading, track, student government, yearbook, and Fellowship of Christian Athletes.
Interests include cheerleading, track, and spending time with family and friends.
Future plans are to earn a college degree become a physical therapist.
Taylor is the daughter of Tommy and Nancy Black.
STUDENT ROTARIAN SEPTEMBER 2009
Natalia Tenorio is a junior at Onate High School.
She is a member of the National Honor Society and has served as a class officer for the organization and participated in community service projects through the Society.
Interests include reading, cooking, and babysitting.
Future plans are to earn an advanced degree in the field of science.
Natalia is the daughter of Thomas and Beverly Tenorio.
Summer Picnic August 2009
A great time was had by all at the August 1st picnic at Joni’s.
The weather blessed us with warmth, rain and sunshine. Our chef’s Vic Villalobos, Tom Kemp and Lowell Catlett (Joni’s husband) filled us with a delicious array of pizzas from Joni’s and Lowell’s brick pizza oven (Vic was so impressed with it he went home and ordered one), and a beautiful salad. We also shared in a birthday cake, to help Mike Beckett celebrate his birthday, provided by Veronica, Mike’s wife, and a delicious apple crisp. And of course the ubiquitous Margarita machine served up its always delectable beverage, to the joy of all who consumed its tangy elixir. Good food, drink and conversations shared with fellow Rotarians and their families, what more could you ask for?
Las Cruces Rio Grande Rotary August Student of the Month
Ashley Sullivan is a senior at Mayfield High School and
the daughter of Laura and Mark Sullivan.
Ashley’s school activities have been Student Council, Volleyball, and Varsity Softball.
She received the Academic Athlete Award for Volleyball 2006; Underclassman Award – Best in Science 2007; Underclassman Award -4.0 – 2009; All District AAAAA Honorable Mention Catcher 2007-2008-2009; Academic Letter 4.0; Mesilla Valley Maze Employee of the Year 2008.
She has worked in the community as volunteer Assistant Coach for girls 12 and under softball.
After graduation she plans to bring one of her very important dreams to reality by attending Colorado State University in Fort Collins, CO. After graduating from college she would like to travel and broaden her horizons.
Retiring Military K-9 Heroes Desperately Need Adoption Revisions
You Can Make the Difference!
Retiring Military K-9 Heroes Desperately Need Adoption Revisions
One phone call made the difference between life and death
for 10 year old Military Working Dog (MWD) Benny B163. It was November 29, 2007, and MWD Benny B163, a lithe, active 10 year-old German Shepherd Narcotics detection/ Patrol dog had just been scheduled for euthanasia the following week. Benny received his “stay of execution” when now-owner Deborah Kandoll made the call to Langley AFB, Virginia, on that very day trying to locate a retiring MWD available for adoption. After 50 phone calls, with 30 of them being wrong numbers given by well-meaning base and post operators, Kandoll had finally located a retiring MWD Hero to give a loving Forever Home.
Although the Military Working Dog Adoption Bill H.R. 5314, was passed in 2000, most Americans remain unaware that they can adopt these unsung MWD Hero dogs after their service days are over. The bill provides for adoption of retiring military working dogs by their handlers, law enforcement agencies and by qualified civilians able to provide the care and conditions these animals need.
Though this MWD Adoption Bill should guarantee these courageous war heroes a Forever Home and soft place to land, valid problems exist which are capable of preventing such an ending. Many
times heartbroken handlers are unable to adopt their former partners owing to today’s rapid tempo of multiple deployments in support of the Global War on Terrorism. Law enforcement agencies are not routinely made aware of the availability of these highly-trained animals, and civilians do not know HOW find which MWDs are coming up for retirement. As in Kandoll’s case, there were no readily accessible MWD Facility Contact numbers to easily locate retiring MWDs. Sadly, some adoption-suitable MWDs fall through the cracks into euthanasia for want of an adoptive home as MWD Benny nearly did!
For this reason, Benny’s owner, Deborah Kandoll in March 2008, created the website Military Working Dog Adoptions, www.militaryworkingdogadoptions.com, which is full of MWD facility Contact Numbers and informative tips so civilians can navigate through the often frustrating and discouraging Retiring MWD adoption process. Local
military installations may be contacted to see if older MWD veterans coming up for retirement might be available for civilian adoption. The link for direct contact with many U.S. Military Working Dog Facility Contact numbers is http://www.militaryworkingdogadoptions.com/donations.html
In December 2008, Military Working Dog Adoptions, through website reader donations, was responsible for the transport of adopted MWD Milly from Kunsan AB, Korea, to her adoptive family’s home in Pennsylvania. According to current military policy, since Milly had been retired in Korea, she had to be transported back as a “pet” at the cost of $1935 !!! Subsequently, Military Working Dog Adoptions also transported retired MWD Rik and MWD Dexter back to the US from Hawaii and Italy, respectively, as “pets” after their retirement. Even though MWDs are considered “bonafide military members” during their careers, a human soldier’s “return to home station” does not apply to our K-9 Veterans once they have retired!
Kandoll is actively seeking four policy changes which would require the military to improve conditions for retiring K-9 Heroes by doing the following:
- Implement a Standardized Operating Procedure among all the services regarding MWD Adoptions.
- Set a standardized length of time for the retiring MWD’s paperwork being processed through Lackland AFB.
- Make it MANDATORY to list all adoption-suitable MWDs world-wide on the Lackland AFB DoD website:
http://www.lackland.af.mil/units/341stmwd/index.asp
- Make it MANDATORY for all adopted OCONUS (OVERSEAS) MWDs to receive transport back to the U.S. via military air. As it now stands, retired OCONUS (OVERSEAS) MWDs must be transported at adoptive owner’s expense as a “pet”!The grim reality is that if a MWD is retired at an overseas military installation and is not adopted because of prohibitive transport costs, euthanasia is the usual course of action.
In addition, Kandoll strongly urges concerned, dog-loving Americans to contact the Air Force Chief of Staff, General Norton Schwartz at 1400 Defense Pentagon, Washington, DC 20301-1400, requesting the aforementioned changes as well as requesting answers as to why such inefficiency and poor administration of the current Retiring MWD Adoption program is allowed to continue to exist!
Kandoll’s own adopted MWD Benny B163, through the Providential timing of that one telephone call, now lives a retired life befitting his ten years of devoted military service.
Through their lives of selfless service, every unsung K-9 Hero faithfully upholds this promise in our nation’s defense…
My eyes are your eyes to watch
And protect you and yours.
My ears are your ears to hear
And detect evil minds in the dark.
My nose is your nose to scent
The invader of your domain
And…so YOU may LIVE…
MY LIFE is also yours…
We, as Americans, can choose…whether by personal adoption, donation or allowing our voices to be heard…to make a difference in the life of deserving retiring Military Working Dog Heroes,. The Pentagon’s MWD Division has already indicated to Kandoll that “everything is fine within the Retiring Military Working Dog Adoption program”, when, in fact, nothing could be further from the truth! Hero MWDs who languish in kennels for 23 hours a day for three, six, and ten months at a time while waiting for their adoption paperwork to be processed are subject to the “Solitary Confinement” befitting criminals–not that of faithful, devoted military K-9s who have spent their whole lives in defense of this nation! They deserve to be adopted with a MINIMUM of bureaucratic red tape in order that they might live out their remaining years with dignity in a loving family!
There is NO DOUBT that dog-loving Americans could change the current realities many Retiring MWDs face. Only in the UNITY of our response to the situations many MWDs are forced to experience, will we succeed. Join together to shine the spotlight of discovery on todays insufficient “retiring MWD Adoption Program!” Let those in power hear our unified voices as we proclaim “Support our Troops” applies to our K-9 Troops, too! After all, many soldiers are enjoying their TODAYS and planning their TOMORROWS because of what an MWD did for them YESTERDAY!
By Deborah Kandoll
575-415-3137 or 575-551-6658
2821A Quay Loop
Holloman AFB, NM 88330
Benny and Debbie presented the plight of the MVD Adoption Program and the need to adapt these beautiful, extremely well trained dogs to the Rio Grande Rotary on July 28th, 2009. The group was touched by the story and impressed with the work Debbie has done to save these dogs. Could there be a much better place to adopt from, imagine the excitement of having an animal that responded to you commands the first time you asked. Where do we sign up our children for this training.
Please support Debbie and her efforts to find homes for these dogs, spread the word.
Rio Grande Rotary’s July Student Rotarian
Tess Williamson is Rio Grande Rotary’s July Student
Rotarian. Tess is a junior at Mayfield High School.
Her school activities include Student Government and varsity tennis. She has received the President’s Education Award; Outstanding Student in Business Award; and several athletic awards for participation in District and State Tennis competitions.
Community activities include volunteering services to Ag Day and her church. She also makes blankets and donates toys to UNM Children’s Hospital.
Interests focus mainly on tennis.
Future plans are to earn a college degree and become an interior designer.
Tess is the daughter of Kerry and Lisa Williamson.



















