New Mexico
Hispanic Heritage fills up a New Mexico year
It’s Nationwide Hispanic Heritage Month in a state dripping with Hispanic heritage.
New Mexico has the best Hispanic inhabitants as a proportion of the whole inhabitants (49.26%) of any state within the nation. Which means many points of Hispanic tradition are woven into the on a regular basis lives of all New Mexicans, no matter ethnicity.
Given how New Mexico’s historical past is heavy with Hispanic surnames, I requested native Hispanos if Hispanic Heritage Month means something in Albuquerque, or if it will get misplaced within the shuffle of familiarity. With one out of each two New Mexicans figuring out as Hispanic, that’s a variety of Hispanic civic leaders, lawmakers, public servants, entrepreneurs, artists and tradespeople contributing mightily to the well being and welfare of the Land of Enchantment each single day.
There’s a lot variety inside our Hispanic inhabitants: Many cite their roots from early Spanish explorers; others are newer immigrants from Mexico, South and Central America and the Caribbean.
The oldsters I talked to agreed one month out of the yr isn’t sufficient to do justice to the immense contributions of Hispanics on this nation. However the month does present a time of reckoning and reflection, important to overcoming challenges.
Combating to be heard
“You’ll be able to’t assault one thing that’s invisible,” stated Diane Torres-Velásquez, an affiliate professor within the Faculty of Schooling and Human Sciences on the College of New Mexico. Regardless of the apparent cultural affect of Hispanics, particularly inside New Mexico, they nonetheless lack enough illustration in all branches of the federal authorities, however particularly the judiciary, she stated.
“It’s a time to replicate on the place we’re on this society — and the place we’re is ignored,” Torres-Velásquez stated. “Our voices are usually not heard. Quotas are placed on our participation and the place different minority teams are celebrated for being concerned, we’re restricted.”
Torres-Velásquez, president of Latino Schooling Job Drive, lately obtained the Lifetime Achievement – Excellence in Neighborhood Service Award from MALDEF (Mexican American Authorized Protection and Academic Fund) for civil rights organizing and her work on the long-running academic fairness case, Martinez v. State of New Mexico, which highlighted gross disparities within the state’s schooling system. She and others concerned within the case labored to ascertain Hispanics had been the vast majority of New Mexico’s scholar inhabitants. Schooling officers “didn’t know the demographics … they didn’t know Latinos had been the bulk inhabitants. In the event you don’t handle the wants of the bulk inhabitants — if the bulk fails, everybody fails. That was the driving drive of the lawsuit,” she stated.
Making a constructive contribution
John P. Salazar is a Stanford-educated lawyer on the Rodey Regulation agency in Albuquerque, primarily working towards in actual property and land use and growth regulation. However he’s at all times sought out alternatives for public service, first doing professional bono work for LULAC (League of United Latin American Residents) because it sought to ascertain some inexpensive housing tasks. He’s made it his mission to assist present extra financial alternative for New Mexicans, serving in management roles in each the Higher Albuquerque and Hispano chambers of commerce.
He gave me an interesting overview of how the financial fortunes of native New Mexican Hispanics fell with the disruption of the land-grant system after the Mexican-American warfare, then rose incrementally with statehood and entry to a public schooling system. New Mexico’s financial system was largely agrarian- and mercantile-based, devoid of producing jobs till World Struggle II when the military-industrial advanced introduced bases and nationwide labs to the state.
The warfare was a game-changer for New Mexicans in some ways. “They had been very happy with America and proud to be Individuals,” Salazar stated. “They had been good troopers.” Returning veterans, capitalizing on the GI Invoice, had entry to loans to purchase houses. That they had entry to schooling they didn’t have earlier than.
“Now, when it comes to financial milestones, as soon as you should purchase your individual dwelling, you begin gathering fairness; you begin accumulating wealth, fairness in your house. And by getting educated on the GI Invoice … you enhance your incomes energy. So swiftly, it was basically a quantum leap within the financial situation of these returning troopers and their households.”
Salazar continues to imagine that “mental infrastructure” is the important thing to unlocking New Mexico’s financial potential, even because the state reveals indicators of being “found” by “massive gamers” resembling Fb, Amazon and Netflix.
“I believe schooling is the important thing as a result of in a single era, you may make a dramatic distinction within the financial situation of a member of the family.”
Salazar thinks Hispanic Heritage Month is vital as a result of “despite the fact that Hispanics are the most important ethnic minority in america, Hispanics are comparatively invisible. So it’s vital for the remainder of the nation to understand that Hispanics are making a constructive contribution to America, within the arts, within the professions, actually within the army, in educating, and even in serving to harvest the crops that we eat.”
Proving a therapeutic affect
For Eliseo “Cheo” Torres, Hispanic Heritage Month is a platform to share a hidden, if misunderstood, facet of Hispanic tradition — the custom of the curandero, or herbalist folks healer.
After retiring from an administrative submit at UNM final yr, Torres now has a full-time deal with curanderismo — one thing he was uncovered to at a younger age rising up in South Texas.
He and a colleague at UNM usually give lectures on the historical past and lore of curanderismo with the hope of legitimizing it — and dispelling notions it’s witchcraft.
Essentially the most acquainted instance of a curandera is the namesake character of the Rudolfo Anaya novel “Bless me, Ultima.”
Curanderos use a “holistic” — thoughts, physique, spirit — strategy to therapeutic and infrequently make their very own tinctures from crops they collect themselves.
“I’m working with some healers from Mexico who’re doing analysis. … I believe there’s some actually good points of conventional drugs that we should always research, analysis and get extra folks concerned with it — convey it into the mainstream. Chinese language drugs has achieved it. Ayurvedic drugs from India has achieved it. Why can’t we do it?”
* * *
No examination of Hispanic Heritage Month can be full with out a go to to the Nationwide Hispanic Cultural Heart on Fourth Road.
There, guests can get a way of simply how various the Hispanic expertise in America has been — and continues to be.
Even in our very Hispanic state, Hispanic Heritage Month is an invite to grasp that U.S. Hispanics aren’t a monolith.
New Mexico
New Mexico routs San Diego State, and it’s The Pits
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – Remember the San Diego State basketball team that couldn’t rebound?
It’s back.
The Aztecs struggled mightily in that department earlier this season despite a roster with six players at 6-foot-9 or taller, then seemed to solve the issue during the endless stream of practices over the semester break with an endless stream of rebounding drills. And then Saturday at The Pit happened.
New Mexico wasn’t shooting particularly well, but you don’t need to when you attempt 19 more shots than your opponent because you keep rebounding your misses. The result: a 62-48 New Mexico win on national TV that puts the Aztecs 2½ games behind the Lobos (14-3, 6-0) in the Mountain West race.
There’s still a long way to go, and the schedule softens considerably for the Aztecs over the next month. But they won’t compete for the conference title if they can’t play better a mile above sea level or rebound better (or shoot or take care of the ball) at any elevation.
“We had to beat them at their own game,” Lobos coach Richard Pitino said. “We knew we had to defend and rebound to win the game, because offense was going to be hard to come by. That’s what San Diego State has done for so long, and they’ve obviously won a lot of games.
“It wasn’t going to be a masterpiece, and that’s fine. To me, it was a beautiful win.”
And an equally ugly loss.
Last year’s Aztecs team struggled in the six games at 4,500 feet or above, losing five of them.
This edition didn’t look much better, quickly trailing by double digits coming off a pair of impressive wins at lower elevations – 76-68 at Boise State last Saturday and 67-38 at home against Air Force on Wednesday despite trailing by 12 early.
The “OR” (for offensive rebounds) column on the stat sheet told you all you needed to know: 18-3, Lobos.Second-chance points: 14-1, Lobos.
First-half points: 20, the fewest by the Aztecs in 93 games.
Or look at it this way: Both teams shot 35%, but New Mexico had 67 attempts to SDSU’s 48.
“It’s a recipe for a loss on the road,” coach Brian Dutcher said, “which it was.”
The Aztecs (10-4, 3-2) briefly pulled within five points in the opening moments of the second half, then surrendered two offensive boards on the next possession that the Lobos converted into a wide-open corner 3-pointer.
Soon, SDSU was down 20 and that was pretty much that.
As the final seconds ticked off, New Mexico students chanted, “Who’s your daddy?”
“The special thing about basketball is that basketball is just like life,” said Jared Coleman-Jones, who had 10 points and four rebounds. “Some days you don’t have the best day, and today we didn’t have the best day on the glass.
“We’ve got to take that as grown men and we have to get back in the lab. … That’s one thing we’re going to have to emphasize – a lot – for the whole season: the glass, offensively and defensively. Because that wins us games.”
Part of the issue was scheme. If you take one thing away on defense, you expose yourself in other areas and the question becomes whether your opponent can exploit them.
The Aztecs, as they often do, opted to switch all ball screens in an effort to prevent New Mexico point guard Donovan Dent – the front-runner for Mountain West player of the year averaging 19.3 points and 6.9 assists – from turning the corner and getting straight-line drives to the basket. That much worked, at least in the first half, holding Dent to four points.
But that meant an Aztecs guard was now switched onto a Lobos big. And to do that, the guard defends in front to deter the easy post entry and invite the far more difficult over-the-top pass.
The problem: The 6-10, 240-pound Nigerian center now has inside position under the basket for the rebound on a missed shot against your 6-3, 175-pound guard.
New Mexico’s Mustapha Amzil had 11 rebounds. Nelly Junior Joseph and Filip Boronvicanin had nine each. Guard Tru Washington had five. No SDSU player had more than four.
“For the most part, I thought we did a good job taking Dent out of the game in the halfcourt,” Dutcher said. “He’s a dynamic player. But you give and take with some of these defensive game plans. At the end of the day, it’s a team that’s averaging close to 85 points per game. We hold them to 62 in their building and they shoot 36%, but then they get 18 offensive rebounds and second-chance opportunities.”
Second-chance scoring: 14-1, Lobos.
“We did talk about it,” said Pitino, whose team has won seven straight since a Dec. 7 overtime loss against New Mexico State. “They were switching. We felt like that would be an advantage, and our guys really took advantage of it.”
Of course, the Aztecs weren’t much better at the other end, either, in what was statistically their worst offensive performance of the season.
They didn’t make a perimeter shot until 3:43 left in the first half. They had nine first-half turnovers. They shot five air balls. They missed 13 layups. They were 9 of 17 at the line. Miles Byrd had 14 points but needed 13 shots. Fellow starting guards Nick Boyd and BJ Davis were a combined 2 of 14. And when they did miss, they couldn’t chase down the rebound.
“We’re going to miss shots, but we have to get second-chance opportunities,” said Dutcher, whose team had 15 and 24 offensive boards in the previous two games, both wins.
Of their three Saturday, two were “team rebounds” off a foul or out of bounds. They had only one player actually grab an offensive board, and that was by Byrd after Boyd missed a fast-break layup. And then he missed the follow.
The only difference from last year’s 88-70 spanking on national TV at The Pit was that they didn’t blow a 12-point lead.
They led 2-0 and 4-2 this year before the Lobos erupted for a 12-0 run and never really looked back.
It was always going to be big ask, though, taking such a young team (without injured senior guard Reese Waters) into The Pit and mile-high elevation for the first time. Seven members of the nine-man rotation had never experienced the crazed Lobos fans, and four had never played at altitude (and only two had ever played extended minutes above 4,500 feet).
They looked the part: sluggish, discombobulated, out of rhythm, out of sorts.
“You get that first wind, you get that second wind, it’s that third wind that you start feeling it,” said Coleman-Jones, whose previous stops were in the lowlands at Northwestern and Middle Tennessee. “You start feeling the air get a little thin in your lungs. When you try to sprint back, you’ve got a piano on your back.”
Notable
Next up: a pair of home games against Colorado State (Tuesday) and UNLV (Saturday) … The team flew commercial to Albuquerque and, for the first time this season, took a charter flight home given the quick turnaround before Colorado State … Byrd tweaked an ankle with 8:49 to go when he crashed into the courtside advertising boards. He returned but did not score again … Miles Heide played after sitting out Wednesday’s game with the flu but only for seven minutes. Demarshay Johnson Jr., also out Wednesday with the flu, was on the trip but did not suit up …
Dent had a more productive second half thanks to some fast-break baskets and free throws, finishing with 16 points and five assists. The Lobos, though, were only plus-seven points with him on the floor … New Mexico shot only 6 of 28 (21.4%) on 3s … The Lobos also had big advantages in fast-break scoring (13-2), points off turnovers (9-1) and points in the paint (32-20) … After last year’s highly criticized officiating performance from a crew with little or no experience at The Pit, a veteran crew was assigned Saturday: Kelly Pfeiffer, Larry Scirotto and Deldre Carr.
Originally Published:
New Mexico
Rep. Hembree resigns of New Mexico Legislature
SANTA FE, N.M. (KRQE) – The New Mexico State Legislature announced the resignation of Representative Jared Hembree on Saturday. A press release states the Chaves County lawmaker is stepping down due to unforeseen health-related circumstances that need immediate attention.
“It is with a heavy heart that I step down from the State Legislature,” Rep. Hembree said in a statement. “Serving the people of my district has been a profound honor. My family and I believe in Chaves County, and we must prioritize my health to ensure that we can serve in good faith in the future.”
Opening day for the 2025 New Mexico Legislative Session is January 21.
New Mexico
NM Gameday: Jan. 10
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