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Senior Birthdays

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June 1

Eva Garcia, Berta Moreno, Ruby Perez June 3

Adelle Lynch, Manuel Urias, Ricky Funk, Charles Hampton, Paul Laughlin, Letha Gonzales, Linda Bratcher, Hilda Huerta June 4

Annie Jackson, Charles Brown, Cheryl Martin June 5

Robert Sinclair, Janie Smith, Jesus Serna, Mark Pearson June 6

LaVerne Carlo, Becky Johnson, Maria Ruiz, Celia Olivas, Dee Dee Steed, Yolanda Bonilla, Karen Doncouse, Roberta C. Soto June 7

Yolanda Romo, Lisa Garthwaite, Mike Stegall June 8

Sherman Countryman, Veta Vaughn, Elvira Bryand, Lora Crumrine, Danny Olds June 9

Corrine Torres, Paul Anaya, Joseph Schiel, Christina Chavez June 10

Nadine Weddige, Jess Briggs, Dennis Atherton, Cheryl Jordan June 11

Donald Lawson, Denise Sevcik, Jodie Montoya, Bernabe Cruz June 12

Cecilia Rojas, Antonio Garcia, Patty Baker, Barbara Curl, Danielle Gordy, Pat Valenzuela

Senior MealSite Menu

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13th Street and Gilchrist Avenue 575-746-6712 June 10-14 Monday

Fried chicken, wild rice, carrot and raisin salad, brownie Tuesday

Red chile beef and potatoes, refried beans, flour tortilla, pumpkin pie Wednesday

Hamburger mac, green beans, Mexicorn, strawberries and cantaloupe Thursday

Pork chops, scalloped potatoes, green beans, cornbread, orange and pineapple salad Friday

Chili cheese dogs, potato wedges, broccoli salad, watermelon

Artesia Senior Center Activities

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202 W. Chisum Ave.

575-748-1207 June 10-15 Monday

8:15 a.m. – Exercise video

9 a.m. – Creative Crafters

1 p.m. – Dominos: Train and 42

1:30 p.m. – Sewing Tuesday

8:15 a.m. – Exercise video 9-11 a.m. – Free watch batteries (limit two) 9 a.m. – Hand and Foot

9:30 a.m. – Woodworking; line dancing 10 a.m. – Line dancing at Good Life 10 a.m. – Fusing Fun

1 p.m. – Ceramics; sewing

2 p.m. – Poker

6:30 p.m. – Stained glass Wednesday

8:15 a.m. – Exercise video

9 a.m. – TOPS 1 p.m. – Fathers’ Day Party (coke floats) 1 p.m. – Woodburning; dominos: Train and 42

1:30 p.m. – Sewing

Thursday All Day – Bridge

8:15 a.m. – Exercise video

9 a.m. – Painting

9:30 a.m. – Beginners’ line dancing 10 a.m. – Line dancing at Artesia Healthcare and Rehabilitation 1 p.m. – Bridge; open art studio

1:30 p.m. – Swedish weaving

2 p.m. – Texas Hold ‘Em

2:30 p.m. – Stained glass

6:30 p.m. – Stained glass 7-9:30 p.m. – Dance (Kay) Friday

9 a.m. – Hand, Knee and Foot 9 a.m. – Creative Crafters 1 p.m. – Bingo

1:30 p.m. – Sewing Saturday

7-9:30 p.m. – Dance (County Line)

Did you know June 6 is…

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Yep, it’s a thing!

Ingredients:

Cake 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour 1 tsp baking soda 1 tsp baking powder 3/4 tsp salt 2 tsp ground cinnamon 1 tsp ground ginger 1/2 tsp ground nutmeg 1/4 tsp ground allspice 3/4 cup granulated sugar 1/2 cup brown sugar 2 large eggs 2 cups unsweetened applesauce 3/4 cup vegetable oil or canola oil 1 tsp vanilla extract Cream Cheese Frosting 8 oz cream cheese, nearly at room temperature 6 Tbsp butter, soft 3 cups powdered sugar 1 tsp vanilla extract Directions:

To make the applesauce cake: Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray a 13 by 9-inch baking dish with non-stick cooking spray.

In a large mixing bowl whisk together flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, cinnamon, ginger, nutmeg, and allspice for 30 seconds. Make a well in the center and set aside.

To a separate large mixing bowl add granulated sugar, brown sugar, and eggs. Using an electric hand mixer beat on medium speed until fairly pale and fluffy, about 2 minutes.

Add applesauce, vegetable oil and 1 tsp vanilla extract to sugar mixture and blend with hand mixer until combined.

Pour applesauce mixture into well in flour mixture then gently fold and stir mixture just until there’s no longer streaks or pockets of flour. Mixture will be lumpy and that’s okay.

Pour mixture into prepared baking dish. Wiggle pan to level batter out even.

Bake in preheated oven until toothpick inserted into center comes out free of batter (a moist crumb or two is fine), about 30 to 40 minutes.

Let cake cool on a wire rack (to speed up cooling you can cool in the fridge).

To make the cream cheese frosting: Add cream cheese, butter, powdered sugar and vanilla to a large mixing bowl.

Using an electric hand mixer (with clean beater blades), blend mixture on low speed until combined. Then increase speed to high and whip for several minutes until light and fluffy.

If needed you can freeze the frosting in 3 minute increments, stirring between intervals, until it’s firmed up some.

Frost cake with cream cheese frosting then cut into slices.

Seniors enjoy oil painting classes

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The Artesia Senior Center hosted a series of oil painting classes June 3-7 with instructors Sandra Boulden and Betty Jo Allen. Above, Boulden led the class through the painting of Southwest pots. Below, Allen guided her students through the painting of a windmill with a mountain background.

Adoptive Child

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Name: Marcus Age: 15 His Story: Marcus is an easygoing, respectful young man. He likes to keep to himself but enjoys sports or anything to keep him active. Marcus does well in school and blossoms in advanced classes. He makes friends easily and gets along with peers and staff. Marcus is eager to start afresh and has an open preference for who his forever family will be.

For more information about foster programs through the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department, please call 1-800-432-207

Ronald Reagan, 40th U.S. president, dies

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Looking back 40, 30 and 20 years ago, the following are excerpts from the Artesia Daily Press.

40 years ago June 2-8, 1984

A total of 72 golfers – some of them brighteyed and bushy-tailed, others not quite so active this early in the morning – get some words of wisdom form Bobby Branch, right, before teeing off in the second round of the Bulldog- Myco Invitational Golf Tournament June 2 at the Artesia Country Club.

———-Artesia High School Graduates Sam Peppard, left and Lynn Bratcher receive congratulations from Artesia Valley Lions Club president Bill Carpenter for being chosen as scholarship recipients by the organization. About 60 students applied for the stipend.

———-After years of declining enrollments the nation’s elementary schools are facing a rising tide of students, a new government study reveals. The number of Americans under age 5 climbed to 17.8 million as of the previous July, up from 16.3 million in 1980 and the most in that age bracket in 15 years, the Census Bureau reported in a study released May 31.

———-Colorado June 4 lost a six-year Supreme Court battle in New Mexico over the use of water from the Vermejo River. The nation’s highest court, by an 8-1 vote, ruled that Colorado had no legal right to divert water from the river, which flows from the Colorado mountains just north of New Mexico south through New Mexico and into the North Canadian River, a tributary of the Arkansas River. The dispute between the states first arose in 1975 when a Colorado court awarded the Colorado Fuel and Iron Steel Corp. a conditional water right to divert a substantial amount of water from the river’s tributaries. New Mexico water users obtained a court injunction against the proposed diversion, and Colorado officials then turned to the Supreme Court for help.

———-Bernalillo County Clerk Dolores Waller said it rained on her parade June 5, causing light early voter turnout in the primary election in the state’s most populous county. But she said she believed rainy weather in Albuquerque affected the turnout. Voter turnout throughout New Mexico was generally listed as light to moderate. Artesia followed the state trend in a light to moderate voter turnout that morning. A total of 676 persons had cast ballots by noon June 5, although skies were sunny and weather presented no problem.

———-A Senate committee passed an amendment that would authorize $58 million to upgrade 206 miles of state highway leading to the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant near Carlsbad. Artesia Chamber of Commerce manager Dave Dillard, a member of the board of directors of the Southeastern New Mexico Highway Commission, said U.S. 285 between Los Alamos and the WIPP site is the route to be upgraded with the federal funds. Dillard said the quality of upgrading will be similar to the two-lane highway between Vaughn and Encino, which features extra wide shoulders.

30 years ago

June 2-8, 1994

Rescue personnel remove one of the victims of a four-vehicle collision June 1 near Loco Hills. Police reported that at 4:25 p.m. June 1 a line of vehicles was stopped by a flagman one and a half mile east of Loco Hills on U.S. 82. The driver of the Chevrolet pickup, Jeffry Haidler, 23, of Hobbs, reported to the State Police he fell asleep, awoke and locked the brakes before colliding with one of the stopped vehicles and causing a chain reaction involving the Chevrolet, two Ford trucks and a Ford Explorer.

———-Artesia Junior High School student Brett Boneau shows the map and certificate he was awarded for winning the school-level National Geography Bee. The school-level bee, at which students answered oral questions on geography, was the first round in the sixth annual bee, which is sponsored by National Geographic WORLD, the Society’s magazine for children, and Amtrak. Boneau won by answering a question on Indonesia.

———-Artesians Aaron Willbanks, driving, and Jonathan Parson and Paul Price, pushing, show the winning form they used competing with the Bennie’s Western Wear entry in the outhouse race at that year’s Old Timers’ Day in Hagerman. Bennie Mason said it was the fourth year in a row that the Bennie’s entry won the race, which is about 200 yards in length.

———-Members of Artesia Garden Club celebrate the signing of a proclamation declaring June 5-11 as National Garden Week in Artesia. Members shown with Mayor Ernest Thompson, center, are, from left, Dutch Ferriman, Norma Boling, Dorothy Frazee, Sharon Stall, Nancy Newlon and Carole Ciskowski.

———-Central Elementary students who were the top fund raisers in the American Heart Association Jump Rope for Heart in April received their awards late last month. They are, from left, second-grader Calley Vandiver, third place; fifth-grader Court Rossi, first place; and third-grader Carin Riley, second place. About 100 students entered the event, with the school raising more than $2,000.

———-Eddy County Commissioners gave final approval to a $14 million budget after deciding to increase the number of deputies needed to provide security at district court to three. Judge James Shuler said three deputies are needed to provide security for the two courtrooms, witness rooms, public restrooms and hallways. A motion to add the third deputy to the 1994-95 budget was approved with the provision that if the third person was not needed, commissioners would be notified. Cost of adding one deputy to the county payroll totals $35,000.

20 years ago June 2-8, 2004

Commissioners approved an Alternative Sentencing Unit at the June 1 Eddy County Commission Meeting. The program incorporates a new Misdemeanor Compliance Program (MCP) to monitor offender’s compliance with the conditions of probation imposed by a district or magistrate court. According to Warden Leslie Johnson of the Eddy County Detention Center, the program is designed as a way to keep offenders out of jail, therefore reducing the cost to the county.

———-Local residents and owners of cabins burned by the 38,000-acre Peppin fire in south-central New Mexico are accusing the U.S. Forest Service of botching the early response to the fire. The exchange came at emotional meeting the night of June 2 that was meant to inform the public about the effort to fight the fire. It was the first opportunity for some people who lost cabins in the fire to confront the Forest Service. The lightning-sparked fire was reported May 15 in rugged terrain in the Lincoln National Forest in south-central New Mexico. It initially crept along the ground before exploding May 23. Lincoln National Forest ranger Buck Sanchez said the area was too rough and hazardous to safely deploy firefighters. But as he explained the decision, a woman in the audience shouted that the Forest Service chose to let the fire burn.

———-Recent Artesia High School graduate Miguel Duran consistently dominated the boys’ shot put competition throughout the course of his senior track and field season. Now, he’ll get one more opportunity to show off the skill that secured a 2004 Class 4A state shot put title. Duran was the only member of the AHS track and field program invited to the prestigious Great Southwest Track and Field Classic this year and he will compete against the best seven states have to offer June 4 in Albuquerque.

———-Ronald Reagan, the cheerful crusader who devoted his presidency to winning the cold war, trying to scale back government and making people believe it was “morning again in America,” died June 5 after a long twilight struggle with Alzheimer’s disease. He was 93.

———-Curtis Tolle tees off during the second round of the 2004 MYCO Bulldog golf tournament June 5 at the Artesia Country Club. Tolle is competing in the tourney’s championship flight. The Bulldog will conclude June 6 with round 3.

———-Eric Duncan, a 2004 graduate of Artesia High School has received an appointment to the Air Force academy in Colorado Springs, Colo. He will report to basic training at the academy on July 1.

———- (EDITOR’S NOTE: Looking Back was compiled By Daily Press Staff)

Hermosa Elementary Living Wax Museum

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Hermosa Elementary School held its popular Living Wax Museum last month, through which fifth-graders portray a figure they admire, providing information on that person’s life to visitors. This year’s living wax figures ranged from historical greats like Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson to Dr. Seuss, Simone Biles and Blanche Stuart Scott, likely America’s first female aviator.

Unity has to begin with us

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There was a tavern near a college campus, and it was a favorite hangout for many of the students. As Parents’ Weekend approached, they posted a sign that said, “Bring your parents to lunch. We’ll pretend we don’t know you.”

One of the local churches countered with a signboard that read, “Bring your parents to church. We’ll pretend we do know you.”

So, how well do you know yourself? I mean, truthfully and honestly know yourself? Because I wonder if how well we do or do not know ourselves has a direct impact on how deeply we are willing to be considerate of others, their opinions, lifestyles, etc.

Max Lucado said that one day his wife brought home a monkey. His daughters were thrilled but he wasn’t. He had all kinds of questions. Where was the monkey going to eat? His wife said that it was going to sit at the table and eat with them, just like the rest of the family.

Then he asked her where it was going to sleep? And she told him it was going to sleep in their bed. Then he asked, “But what about the smell?”

And she said, “Oh, he’ll get used to you. I did.”

Then Dr. Lucado went on to say, “Before you comment on the odor of someone else, check your own odor first.” That’s what Jesus meant when he said, “Let the one who is without sin cast the first stone.”

Unity has to begin with us. And it has to begin with our personal relationship with Christ. We have to be one with Christ, first.

Make no mistake. As Billy D. Strayhorn has observed, unity isn’t easy. Most of us have never learned how to disagree in love, or how to love those with whom we disagree. We’re like the poet who wrote: “To dwell above with saints we love, That will be grace and glory.

To live below with saints we know; Well, that’s another story!”

Unity isn’t easy. But Jesus not only prayed for it, he modeled it for us. Remember when the disciples came to him complaining about the people who were preaching and doing signs and wonders in Jesus’ name but weren’t part of the “in crowd” of disciples?

They were ready to run them out of town or call down lightning upon their heads. Jesus told the disciples not to stop them and said, “A good tree cannot bear bad fruit.”

Christian unity is not determined by whether we agree with each other about every interpretation of scripture or doctrine or form of church government. Christian unity IS determined by whether we love one another, and whether we reflect the love of God in Christ for the world.

A Canadian by the name of Ashleigh Brilliant draws cartoons to go with pithy sayings called “Pot Shots.” In one “Pot Shot” two people with walking sticks in hand are climbing a mountain in knee-deep snow. The caption reads: “Keep Climbing Upwards! You may never reach the top, but it’s definitely in that direction.”

We have to continue to work toward unity and understanding – between each other, between the races, between cultures and between denominations. We may never reach it, but by working toward it, at least we’ll be going in the right direction.

Have a great weekend!


(EDITOR’S NOTE: David Grousnick is the pastor of First Christian Church.)

With berries and goats, a ‘farmastery’ reaches out to its neighbors

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On a warm, sunny morning in farm country, a group of 40 preschoolers and their parents fanned out across several rows of crops to pluck strawberries from beneath crowns of green leaves.

Later, the children sliced the berries they had gathered and added bananas, kale and yogurt to blend into smoothies before heading out to feed chickens and goats. They then strolled through a wooded trail (spotted a turtle!) and took turns at a pair of swings hanging from a tree. The morning concluded with an outdoor lunch prepared by a dietitian and chef.

The outing Wednesday morning (May 29) was part of a wellness program called Grow It, one of several offered to young families living in North Carolina’s Triangle region by Spring Forest, a farm and new monastic community, or “farmastery.”

The 23-acre farm is located amid lush green meadows and stands of pine about 5 miles north of Hillsborough, a historic town best known as a haven for artists and writers. In 2016, Elaine Heath, an ordained United Methodist and a former dean of the Duke Divinity School, settled down here with her husband, Randall Bell, and launched a small community known as the Church at Spring Forest.

Heath developed the idea of a shared life of faith while teaching in Texas, at Dallas’ Perkins School of Theology. But the idea has come into full bloom on this farm, which grows food, supports refugee resettlement and provides outdoor retreats for people in the healing professions.

“The No. 1 purpose of the farm is to foster circles of community,” said Heath, who serves as the community “abbess,” traditionally the female superior in a community of nuns, but here the pastoral leader.

“Fostering community has always been important, but especially now because our culture is so polarized,” she added. “Gathering people around food, growing food, preparing food, eating food, sharing food — that breaks down all these barriers and assumptions people have.”

The farm cultivates 3 acres of fruits and vegetables and 3 acres for livestock. It sells vegetables and eggs through its CSA, or community supported agriculture model, in which people buy shares in advance of the growing season and then get a weekly box of produce. (Though the farm is not certified organic, it uses organic methodology, which means the land is farmed without synthetic pesticides or fertilizers.)

But it is also organized as a faith community, part of the new monastic movement that began three decades ago among lay Protestants who looked to Roman Catholic and particularly Celtic Christianity for inspiration on how laypeople could work, eat and worship as a community.

Spring Forest has four family units living on the farm, but 16 people in total who consider themselves part of the core community, even if some live miles away. Those 16 are committed to the rule of life at Spring Forest: prayer, work, table, neighbor and rest.

The whole group gathers Monday through Friday at 8 a.m. for a 30-minute Zoom meeting, where they share concerns and read prayers they have written. Once a month there’s an in-person Saturday worship service — so as not to compete with area churches that hold services on Sunday. The farm has no physical church building, and the service typically takes place outdoors, followed by a meal.

Along with the regulars, there are a handful of divinity school students from Duke and Perkins who serve as interns. (The church is part of the United Methodist Church’s “Fresh Expressions” initiative.)

Despite the deep Christian commitments of its core members, Spring Forest sees itself as collaborating with people from other faith traditions or no faith tradition.

Grow It, the Wednesday morning program for children and parents, has no faith component. Central to the program is a group of mothers and children, refugees from Afghanistan, who have settled in the area. Volunteers from the farm pick them up in an old church bus and bring them back to their homes. Spring Forest also provides transportation to a Friday English as a Second Language class at a nearby church.

Shaima Muradi, a Muslim woman originally from Afghanistan, coordinates the refugee outreach and serves a translator and liaison. She said the mothers appreciate the opportunity to let their children roam outdoors, connect with nature and eat a nutritious lunch. “These families don’t have any knowledge of the community and once they start coming, they feel so comfortable, they love it, and it’s no pressure, we’re all happy here,” said Muradi.

Heath was helping her Perkins students organize a shared home for a group of African refugees living in subpar rentals in Dallas when she first got involved with alternative faith communities. She especially credits a former student, an immigrant from Kenya named Francis Kinyua, now a UMC pastor in Nebraska, with helping her establish Spring Forest after introducing her to ideas about regenerative farming wrapped around a life of work and prayer.

The farm on which Spring Forest sits was once home to a Black family whose house was set on fire in an act of racial violence in the 1960s. For that reason, Heath dedicated the piece of the land around a chimney that remained as a place of healing for different kinds of trauma, including trauma to the Earth.

Joan Thanupakorn, who lives in Durham, was at Wednesday’s Grow It event with one baby on a carrier strapped to her chest and another walking through the woods with her father. She and her husband have taken on a challenge of spending 1,000 hours outdoors this year, or about three hours a day, she said.

“It’s so nice to get some hours in,” Thanupakorn said. “And there’s not a lot of low-cost things in the area, and so it’s nice to have something that’s affordable.” (Grow It is free.)

Piotr Plewa, a visiting scholar at Duke University, came with his son, Max. He said he liked the exposure to refugee children and also the lessons about farming.

“Here kids can see that they can pick up a strawberry from the ground and eat it,” Plewa said. “There are people who think that a fruit is only good if you buy it from a store.”

Those are the kinds of lessons Heath is happy for children to learn.

Heath, whose main chore on the farm is caring for the goats, said that is the kind of learning that lies at the heart of Christianity, which she likes to practice more than to preach.

“We’re creating a deeply contemplative community that’s also very active in the world and that’s here for our neighbors,” she said. “For me, Christian discipleship is really about creating communities and helping people to love well.”