Thursday, July 1, 2010

No One Injured In Church Wall Collapse

By John Severance

LEMITAR – A day later, general contractor Dewey Christenson still was shook.
Christenson and his crew had been working on restoring the La Sagrada Familia, a Catholic church in Lemitar.
But at 12:35 Tuesday afternoon, the wall, all of the sudden, collapsed.
“It was horrifying,” Christenson said. “I am sure God protected us by bringing it down without anybody in there.”
Christenson and his crew had installed some scaffolding inside the church in the morning and decided to take a lunch break.
When they returned from lunch, the wall came down.
“I was going to send two of my guys underneath the floor to help shore up the structure by putting in some blocks,” Christenson said early Wednesday morning. “It just went. We wanted to shore up the structure and then bring the wall down.”
“Praise God, it’s near miraculous nobody got hurt,” said Father Andy Pavlak, the pastor of San Miguel Parish that includes missions in Lemitar, Alamillo, Kelly, Luis Lopez, San Antonio, Magdalena, Polvadera, Riley and Socorro.
“This is truly a sad day for the Roman Catholic Church in Socorro County. We have been working diligently to preserve the history and integrity of this church and unfortunately, time, wear and the elements have taken too great a toll on this historic and holy place.
On Wednesday, Christenson said he was waiting on an adobe specialist and structural engineer.
“I am not qualified to say if it is fixable,” Christenson said.
La Sagrada Familia is 179 years old.
“The wall is made of adobe plaster and a lot of churches made back then have this problem,” Christenson said. “The water whicks up into the adobe and deteriorates it. We have lost several churches around the state with the same problem. “This is an incredible wakeup call,” Pavlak added. “We will be inspecting all the churches. All of them have been plastered with cement plaster including this one (San Miguel Church in Socorro).”
Pavlak said walls collapsed at a church in Questa recently.
“The water gets trapped between the cement and the adobe,” Pavlak said. “You noticed that there was a lot of powder where the wall collapsed. Dewey put his hand behind the plaster and there was nothing.”
Pavlak and Christenson had gotten a go-ahead from a structural engineer Tuesday night to go into the choir loft area inside the church.
Early Wednesday morning, two angels, 10 statues, some pews, an organ, and old confessional and nine of 14 stations were recovered from the church.
The church had been closed since last fall when plaster started falling from the ceiling and the floors began to buckle.
Pavlak said he has been conducting mass once a month in Lemitar at the home of Lorella and Bill Chavez, who are the majordomos (or caretakers) of the church. The Chavezes live across the street from the church.
The pastor also said he has heard from Beau Braswell, who put the last roof in at the church and they talked about ways to take the pressure off the remaining three walls.
“I am hoping we can take the pressure off the walls, but we also don’t want to destabilize it,”
Pavlak is fearful that some strong gusts of wind could bring the whole church down.
On Tuesday night, Pavlak held a mass and he cited Gospel Mathew 16:3-19, which is about the feast of Saint Peter and Paul. About halfway through the passage, there is this quote, “And so I say to you, you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my Church.”
“I’m glad God has a sense of humor,” Pavlak said. “How ironic. Or is that a message?
According to a history book about the San Miguel Churches, Sagrada Familia Mission was built in 1831 and the land was donated by Juan Platero. The building has a resemblance to San Miguel in Socorro. And according to the book, Don Pablo Sanchez and his wife are buried underneath the present Altar. They were a prominent family in the Catholic Community. In front of the church are buried other notables of the town who were bearers of responsibility known for their work in the church.
One Lemitar resident probably summed it up best Wednesday morning when she said, “It’s a sad day for Lemitar.”

Photos by John Severance
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Flooding Wreaks Havoc In San Antonio

By John Severance

SAN ANTONIO -- Rhonda Malone has lived off Highway 1 near San Antonio for the past 19 years.
And she has never seen anything like it.
Monday’s thunderstorm caused the arroyos and the ditches to overflow, which closed roads, stopped trains, flooded properties and farmer’s fields.
“I was scared,” said Malone, who works at the Socorro Police Department. “I didn’t want it to come into the house. After it was over, I was out there shoveling, trying to get the water off my property.”
Next to Malone’s house was a field that was still underwater 24 hours later.
“That field filled up quickly,” Malone said. “I had never seen it fill up that quickly. It filled up a couple of years ago when it rained three days in a row. But never like this.”
Undersheriff Les Torres said his office received numerous calls Tuesday night.
The sheriff’s department closed the road as mud and water caked the asphalt and boulders could also be found in the roadway.
“Highway 1 experienced a lot of problems,” Torres said. “There was a big puddle by the Savedras. And there were some other washouts. We were out there for a long time. The arroyos were running and the ditches were at capacity.”
According to the National Weather Service, only .56 inches of rain fell on the Socorro area on Tuesday. Many believe that more than an inch and probably two fell south of Socorro in the San Antonio area.
“Heavy rain caused the ditches to overflow and there was too much arroyo water and it couldn’t handle it all,” said Johnny Munyo of the Socorro Water Conservancy. “It has happened before in different places. It’s never the same.”
At John Montoya’s farm down Highway 1, the field was flooded and damage was done to a cement ditch that runs down the side of the property.
John Montoya Jr., Montoya’s son who works in the public affairs office of the National Guard, pointed out holes that run underneath the ditch and cracks that appeared in the cement.
“See that crack?” Montoya Jr. asked. “That was not there yesterday.”
The Montoyas and the Soil Conservation District had split the cost of the ditch.
“It’s going to be tough to get this ditch system fixed,” Montoya Jr. said. “The water undermined the integrity of the system. This storm was as bad as the one we had three years ago when it rained for three straight days.
“There definitely was a lot of water. The damage was really really bad.”
On the other side of the Montoya’s property, Chris Lopez’s field also was under water.
Also in the San Antonio area, the Wades, who live on Farm-Market Road, breathed a sigh of relief.
“Dad (Dave Wade) said without a doubt we got about two inches of rain,” said his daughter Cindy Wade. “It was a combination of rain in the hills and us getting the rain. It could have been worse if the rain had lasted longer.
“We were lucky. We had just bailed our hay by 1 p.m.. There are farms out here that still had their hay down.”
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Magdalena In Search Of Backup Well

By John Larson

MAGDALENA – The residents of Magdalena may face another water crisis similar to the one last year if a backup well is not in working order, according to a report by Mayor Sandy Julian at Monday night’s village board meeting.
“We have no backup well. The Spears and Benjamin wells are down, and if something happens to our (one working) well, the people of Magdalena will have no water,” Julian said. “The secondary well is near the Trujillo well and it was never hooked up to the main line. We’re going to have to get engineers in to have it checked.”
The need for a backup was exemplified last year when water was in short supply for three days in March, 2009, when a major pump failure in Magdalena’s main water well resulted in the draining of the village’s water tanks.
Because of water shortage, classes at Magdalena Schools were cancelled for two days, and Fred Hollis and Jerry Wheeler of Socorro County Fire and Emergencies Dept. helped Marshal Larry Cearley get bottles of drinking water to the elderly and home-bound.
The American Red Cross in cooperation the Walmart Distribution Center in Los Lunas responded to the situation with a pallet of 54 cases of bottled water.
The failure was due to the fact that the contractor - four years before - had failed to install a anti-vibration collar, what’s called a “spider”, on the submersible pump. Over time the normal vibrations damaged the pump’s wiring, resulting in a short circuit which burned out the pump.
In April, 2009, the village government began the process for getting that backup well on-line.
That process was halted when the state government pulled funding from the project.
Julian said funding for getting the exploratory well completed will be hard to acquire.
“I might have to go to Santa Fe to try to get loans or grants,” she said. “Rita will have to help look for other places to apply for grants.
“I’m worried that if something happens, we won’t have water. Right now we have nothing to back us up. We may have to be in debt for the rest of our lives, but we need to have a backup well.”
Julian said in the meantime
she located a company in Albuquerque that could get a pump installed within 24 hours.

In other village business:
• Julian appointed Trustee Barbara Baca to assist Fire Chief Art Rauschenberg with paperwork. “I want her to work with Art on what needs to be ordered and what not to order,” Julian said.
•Deputy Marshal Brad Welton has turned in his resignation to be effective July 11. “He will work through Old Timers weekend and that’s it,” Julian said, “He sent a letter to Larry which was given to me.”
•Julian asked the Board for guidance on how to proceed with a request to making sidewalk repairs on Main Street between Third and fourth streets. The sidewalk can either be removed completely or replaced with new cement, Julian said. “Dean Otero said he could do the work himself, but we have to buy the cement. Or we could just tear it out and pack the dirt down, and not worry about it anymore.” She said, if approved, there was a possibility of other residents wanting sidewalks on their streets repaired. The board tabled the issue “until we know which way we’re going.”
• The Board approved a request from Rauschenberg to spend $9,000 on supplies and needed upgrades for the volunteer fire department, including a new glass front door and various firefighting tools.
• Julian said repairs to one of the village vehicles needs to be done and a quote has been submitted by Winston’s garage. “I was told he could go ahead and do the work, and hold the bill until August, “to help out the village (financially).”
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Something Happened On The San Agustin Plains In ’47

By Anne Sullivan
For the Mountain Mail

Editor’s note: This was written and published in the June 25th and July 2nd, 1997 issues of Magdalena Mountain Mail for the 50th Anniversary of the UFO Incident in 1947.

July 3rd, 1997 was the 50th Anniversary of the Roswell Incident. For months the motels in Roswell were sold out for the entire week devoted to celebrating the famous 1947 UFO crash. The scheduled hoopla in Roswell included a parade, a film festival, a rock concert, a costume contest, a bicycle run and a glow-in-the-dark golf tournament. Any spare time the visitor has can be spent at the two UFO museums. Any spare money can be spent for teeshirts, toys, gimmicks and statues that only the outer limits of the imagination can curb.
But what about the other UFO crash in 1947, the one on the San Agustin Plains?
The story goes this way: at the very same time as the Roswell crash on July 3, 1947 something most peculiar may have happened somewhere on the San Agustin Plains.
The players in this drama are:
• Barney Barnett - resident of Socorro who worked for the Soil Conservation Service. Barnett, who died around 1969, was very well thought of and respected as a model of probity by all who knew him, many still living in this vicinity.
• Harold Baca, neighbor and friend of Barney Barnett and father of the
proprietor of Harold’s Store on South California Street in Socorro.
• Gerald Anderson, five years old in 1947, has an amazingly perfect recollection of the happenings in early July, 1947.
• Six or so archeology students from (maybe?) the University of Pennsylvania. Never identified and never located.
• Air Force personnel, identified only as a disagreeable red-haired officer and a black soldier.
Nothing at all was heard about any odd events on the Plains for many years. Fast forward two decades. Around 1967 or 1968 when he was very ill with cancer of the mouth and throat, Barney Barnett told Harold Baca that his cancer was caused by the flying saucer he saw on the San Agustin Plains. “Where?” a startled Baca asked Barnett, who replied, “The San Agustin Plains out past Magdalena. There was three little guys and I leaned down to look at them and I got some of that radiation.”
The Roswell Incident written by Charles Berlitz and William Moore includes an interesting account of Barnett’s encounter on pages 57 to 63 in which Barnett is supposed to have told several people about it in 1950.
According to the book, on or about July 3rd, Barnett was out working near Magdalena and came across “a large metallic object” with some not-exactly-human dead bodies around it. He described the bodies as having large round hairless heads with small eyes. Also viewing the remains were some archeology students from the University of Pennsylvania or the U. of Michigan. All were escorted away by Air Force personnel and cautioned strongly not to say anything about what they saw.
Enter Gerald Anderson who came forward in 1990 after viewing a segment of Unsolved Mysteries telling about the San Agustin Plains crash. Gerald Anderson was five years old in 1947 and claims to have been with his father, his uncle, his cousin and his brother on a summer morning when they came across “a silver object stuck in the ground at a weird angle.” Later in 1990 Gerald picked out a small hill on Dave Farr’s land east of Horse Springs and declared it the place. He remembered the archeology students and Barney Barnett and being chased away by the Air Force in the person of a nasty red-haired officer and a black soldier. He also reported that two of the four aliens were alive. Gerald Anderson passed a polygraph test in 1991 but his testimony is understandably disputed by some UFO experts. Note that Barney Barnett makes no mention of the Anderson family’s presence.
Crash At Corona by Stanton Friedman and Don Berliner, written in 1992, covers Anderson’s account on pages 87-97 and 105-108.
Stanton Friedman has done some speedy research on the incident at Horse Springs, as have several other UFO experts. But the lengthiest research, as yet unpublished, has been done by Victor Golubic.
Victor, who lives in Phoenix, was one of a number of UFO aficionados that Jacky Barrington, editor of the Magdalena Mountain Mail, sicced on me, all for the sake of a story, the big story. All of them were nice but single-minded and multi-worded. Volumes of words on UFOs and aliens bombarded my ears in the spring and summer of 1995.
So it was with trepidation, if not earplugs, that I offered to accompany Victor on an excursion to the supposed site of the crash near Horse Springs.
However, Victor wasn’t at all what I expected. First of all, he was young enough to be my grandson. Although extremely enthusiastic about UFO research, he was able to converse about other things. Unlike the authors of a few books I’ve read about the Roswell crash, Victor doesn’t have a theory into which he bends and crushes the facts to prove. Like me, Victor would love to find evidence of a UFO crash here but he’s equally open to the possibility that it never happened.
On July 5th, 1995 we drove down State Road 12 to the place near Horse Springs identified by Gerald Anderson. Victor had already obtained permission from Dave Farr to enter his land. Just north of Horse Springs, we turned east on a dirt track. By and by we came to a hill on our left and Victor said, “This is it.” It was a hill looking much like every other hill with a few trees. Nothing to say that it was or wasn’t something fantastic. My main reservation was, that if this were the place, it would be most unlikely for anything to have crashed there without everyone in Horse Springs knowing about it.
No one did. Victor and I spoke with several people who resided in Horse Springs in 1947 and none remembered anything unusual that summer.
Several remembered a plane crash by the Armijos’ Old Horse Springs store sometime around 1945. No one could pinpoint the exact year, but one had a distinct memory of going to see the crashed plane. “It was a military plane and the pilot was dead,” said one resident of Horse Springs.
That site, when Victor and I looked at it, yielded nothing, but 50 years wipe away a lot.
The Air Force was a presence in Catron County during the late forties, staffing what they said was a radar tower on the road to the Marvin Ake ranch. People remember seeing Air Force vehicles on the roads, but no one we spoke to spotted one carrying bodies of the extra-terrestrial kind.
From Quemado to Reserve to Datil and Socorro, in person and by telephone, Victor interviewed people who had lived in these here parts during those years. Occasionally I went along, and I quickly became an admirer of his technique. Infinitely patient, he was willing and eager to spend hours listening to people talk on all subjects. Gradually Victor would lead them back to the subject at hand. He would return a few months later to talk to them again and telephone at intervals to see if they remembered anything else. With the aid of his computer and out-of-town phone books, Victor tracked down people all over the country.
Tracked them down, talked to them and found nothing really conclusive regarding the San Agustin Plains UFO crash.
These sources are not named in this unscientific article because we never mentioned any intent to publish our findings; we were just making inquires.
We heard many fascinating tales handed down over the years, but no first-hand knowledge.
A Quemado resident recalls a visitor in 1946 (a year before the famous crash) who said, “I just stopped in Magdalena and there was a thing from space. There’s people in it and they tell me one of ‘ems still alive.”
Another Quemado resident knew a man from Mangus who saw a shiny thing in the mountains one summer in the late forties.
A few Aragon residents recall hearing about the incident. “Just that there was tracks,” said one. And from another, “There were strange people. They were moving. It looked like a plate.” They admitted that this was hearsay, which they did not necessarily subscribe to.
Most remembered first hearing about the UFO crash in the 1980s when the investigators started appearing in Catron and Socorro counties. There must be people out there who saw or heard about something in the fifties or before. But where are they?
Instead of answers, there are questions.
Did Barney Barnett, whose Soil Conservation work usually took him west from Socorro, go east that day and come across the Roswell UFO crash?
Could the crash that Barnett saw be the main part of the crash that also left pieces at Corona?
Did the crash occur on San Agustin Plains but not near Horse Springs? This is the theory I prefer. Remember, Harold Baca quotes Barney Barnett as saying, “out past Magdalena.” To me that means on the way to Datil but closer to Magdalena. Describing Horse Springs, one would more likely say, “south of Datil.”
There is some – not evidence, but hearsay to support this theory. According to a Magdalena resident, the UFO is purported to have crashed about 15 miles west of Magdalena, possibly around Wolf Well or Tres Montanas.
Yet a man from Socorro says Barney Barnett told his father that the crash occurred somewhere between Datil and Horse Springs.
And there we have it. Or don’t have it.
Can you add anything to this research? If you know or have heard anything, please get in touch with me in care of this paper.
I’d love it if a UFO had really landed or crashed on the Plains, but I’m not starting to stencil any teeshirts or make a mold for the souvenir mugs. Certainly if I were a UFO pilot and had to crash land my ship, the San Agustin Plains would be a mighty tempting spot.
Perhaps on the 100th anniversary on July 3rd, 2047, we’ll outdo the Roswell celebration. Perhaps by then we’ll know the answer.
Did it or didn’t it?

Second Thoughts In 2010

On rereading bits of material for retyping this article I found something very interesting on page 60 of The Roswell Incident concerning a conversation with Mrs. Maltais, a long-time friend of Barney Barnett’s to whom he told his story in 1950. When asked if Barnett had said exactly where he saw the wreckage, Mrs. Maltais replied, “I remember he said it was prairie – “the Flats” is the way he put it.”
To me and old time residents of our locality, the Flats refers to the flatland east of Magdalena, most of it located north of U.S. 60.
Could we have been looking in the wrong place?
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Old Timer’s Reunion

By John Larson

MAGDALENA – No matter what the weather – come rain or come shine- nothing puts a damper on the fun locals and visitors can have at this year’s Old Timers Reunion weekend.
The annual three day village party returns for its 39th year with rodeos, music, family fun, and, of course, the barbecue.
In the very beginning the Old Timers Reunion was a small event.
Juan Gutierrez, who was Magdalena’s mayor in 1972, said no one expected it to grow larger over the years.
“It was just a few people who started it,” Gutierrez said. “Cecil and Vera Owsley I remember were part of it. But just about all the old timers are gone. We’re the old timers now.”
He was owner of the West Bar until he closed it in1994, and has seen many changes in the town since the first Old Timers Reunion. Gutierrez is a Socorro County Commissioner now, but his involvement in local government goes back to the late 1960s, when he was on the Magdalena Village Board of Trustees. From 1970 to 1974 he was Socorro County Clerk. He was also county road superintendent from 1966 to 1970.
Things get underway Friday, July 9, when vendors will be open for business at the rodeo grounds with cuisine to please every palate.
The Arts and Crafts building (Community Center) is the place to register for a quilt donated by the Magdalena Quilters who are making the quilt.
From the rodeo arena to the Indian Village to the Spanish Village to Magdalena Schools’ Fine Arts Building, visitors will find something to entertain them throughout the weekend.
Activities at the rodeo arena start at 10:30 a.m. Friday morning with the Stick Horse Rodeo, where toddlers and Kindergarten age kids are seen riding their wooden steeds in a variety of contests that simulate traditional rodeo events.The grand entrance for the Kids Rodeo happens 9 a.m. Friday when the older ones, ages 6-18, get the chance to ride and rope for the spectators in the grandstand.
The popular Murillo Brothers’ band provides the entertainment for the Street Dance beginning at 9 p.m. Friday near Village Hall on North Main Street. No alcoholic beverages are permitted, and families are invited to join in the fun.
The most attended event during the Old Timers Reunion weekend is the parade down First Street (Highway 60). The parade beings at 10 a.m., and Highway 60 traffic will be diverted on the east side of town at Chestnut, and on the west side at Highway 107. Old timer Bobby Baker, a retired Forest Service employee, is the Grand Marshal this year and will be leading the parade.
Immediately after the parade the annual barbecue lunch begins serving, generally at about 11 a.m. Pat Trujillo is head honcho of the barbecue who gets much needed help from Charlotte and Chad Perkins. The beef is cooked in a pit starting Friday afternoon. The price of the complete meal is $9 for adults and $6 per child, and includes a drink.
The Century Rodeo and Roping gets underway immediately following the crowning of Darlene Pino, who has the honor of being this year’s Old Timers Queen, in front of the grandstand at noon.
For those wanting to learn what the old days in Magdalena were like, Old Timers story-telling will be held on the old railroad loading dock outside the public library at 1 p.m. The Old Timers Reunion Saturday night dance commences at 8 p.m. at Magdalena Schools' Fine Arts Building. Music is provided by DJ Heavy C Carlos Vega. Admission is $8 per couple, $5 single, and children under two are admitted free. Refreshments will be available at a concession booth manned by the Yucca 4-H club. A silent auction is to be held in conjunction with the dance. No alcohol is permitted. Bright and early Sunday morning the air around the rodeo grounds will be filled with the cooking of sausage, bacon, and pancakes cooking on the grill. The pancake breakfast starts at 7 a.m. and the $5 price goes to helping Magdalena’s volunteer fire department. Follow the aroma to the grandstand kitchen at the rodeo grounds. Pancakes will be served until the batter runs out.
At 6:30 a.m. eager runners will sign up at the new Village Hall to participate in the Magdalena to Kelly 7K Run/Walk, and hopefully make it back to town before the pancakes run out. Entry fee is $10.
The final event in the rodeo arena starts at 9 a.m. Sunday when the roping competition begins.
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Magdalena Marshal's Blotter

Information for the following items was provided by the Magdalena Marshal's office.

June 18
An officer took a report at 7:10 p.m. of an Aggravated Battery on a Household member located on Ash Street in Magdalena. Charges have been filed against the male subject.

June 20
An officer took a report at about midnight on an intoxicated juvenile.

June 21
An officer took a report at 1:30 p.m. of violations of release and phone threats. The male subject was picked up and taken to the Socorro County Detention Center. Additional charges have been filed.

June 23
An officer responded at 10 p.m. to an unattended death on Kelly road.
June 28

An officer took a report at 9 a.m. of a Burglary located on Ash Street. A suspect has been located and charges are pending.

June 28
An officer took a report at 9:40 a.m. of a Burglary on Oak Street. The case is under investigation.

According to Marshal Larry Cearley, bears have been seen looking for food in the Magdalena area. “Please be cautious with trash and animal food in and around your residences,” he said.

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Fourth Of July

Fourth of July festivities at Macey Center feature a full day of live music, along with a water slide, jump balloon, and barbecue.
Sponsored by the Performing Arts Series, City of Socorro, and EMRTC, there is no charge for the music, but food will be sold onsite.
11 a.m., Socorro Community Band
Noon, Martial arts display by the Tech Martial Arts Club and Socorro Martial Arts Academy
1 p.m., Clan Tynker: juggling, magic, stilt-walking, comedy
2:15 p.m., Stasia-Marian-Jim Band: country, folk
3:30 p.m., Syd Masters and the Swing Riders: Western swing
5:30 p.m., Robbie Jude: Spanish music
8 p.m., Remedy: variety
After dark, about 9:30 p.m., fireworks.
Organizers ask that people do not bring fireworks to the concert site.
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Reported Bear Sighting In Magdalena

By John Larson

MAGDALENA -- Reported sightings of a black bear, or bears, on the southern fringe of the village is a reminder to leave no edibles outside, according to Marshal Larry Cearley.
“The normal pinon crop and other staples of bears is low this year, and they are looking for something to eat,” Cearley said. “We’ve had reports of bears begin attracted by pet food, bird feeders, feed for horses, like oats, and of course, open trash barrels.”
The state’s Department of Game and Fish District Wildlife Supervisor Bobby Griego, based in Magdalena, said one trap has been set for a few days.
As of press time Wednesday plans had been made to set an additional trap.
“We think it is the one bear that has been hitting two or three houses,” he said. “Hopefully we can catch it.”
But bears are doing what comes naturally, looking for food when they are hungry said Marty Frentzel of Game and Fish.
“If there’s something to eat they will go for it,” Frentzel said. “This is the time of year we try to help people ‘bear-proof’ their property. Although the bears [in the Magdalena Mountains] are not being as aggressive as in the Sandia-Manzano area, the late spring damaged some of their food sources. They are usually eating a lot of vegetative materials, grass, plants. Some of that is simply not available.”
Frentzel said “attractants” include grain in bird feeders, dog food left outside, compost piles with watermelon or cantaloupe rinds, and household trash.
“Another precaution is to not have firewood stacked against the house. That’s the perfect place for rodents to breed, and bears will sniff them out,” Frentzel said.
Special Hours
The Magdalena Post Office will operate under special hours Saturday, July 10, due to Old Timers Weekend activities.
Postmaster Greg Vivian said counter hours for this Saturday only will be 8 a.m. to 10 a.m.
Vivian said all mail will be in boxes by 10 a.m.
Vet Van Available
As a public service for veterans in need of transport to the Albuquerque Medical Center, Socorro D.A.V. Cinnabder Paul Drake has authorized a 2-3 month trial to determine if the project can be self-sustaining.
To this end, a six-seat van has been purchased. On Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, trips will depart the Socorro DAV at 7 a.m. and return from Albuquerque beginning at 2 p.m.
A 10-day advance notice and small voluntary contribution are requested. Volunteer drivers to date include Jack Duffy, Peter Romero, Leonard Clapes and Charlie Hartwell. Phone 838-1094. For further details, leavea brief message, name and return phone number.
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Cibola Forest Unveils Summer Fire Restrictions

The Cibola National Forest, Magdalena Ranger District implemented fire restrictions last Saturday, June 26. Cibola National Forest Supervisor Nancy Rose explained, "With the recent increase in temperatures, higher winds, continued dry conditions that are drying vegetation, the potential for Wildland fires has increased and we feel it is necessary to take these precautions.”
As always, fireworks are prohibited on all national forest system lands, she said.
The following restrictions apply to the Magdalena Ranger District.
Open Campfire Restrictions:
Campfires, charcoal grills and stove fires are prohibited on national forest lands except in Forest Service developed camp and picnic grounds where grills are provided.
Pressurized liquid or gas stoves, lanterns and heaters meeting safety specifications are allowed. Please contact the Cibola National Forest for more details regarding where fires are allowed.
Smoking is allowed within an enclosed vehicle or building; a developed recreation site; or while stopped in an area at least three feet in diameter and free of all flammable material.
Call Mark Chavez for more information at 505-346-3900, or the Magdalena Ranger District Office at 575-854-2281.
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OBITUARY: Rudolpha A. (Aragon) Gomez

Rudolpha A. (Aragon) Gomez
Sept. 1, 1942-June 23, 2010

Rudolpha A.(Aragon) Gomez, age 67, passed away Wednesday, June 23,2010 at her home in Magdalena. Rudolpha was born on September 1, 1942 to Ramon and Beatrice (Castillo) Aragon in Reserve.
She is survived by her daughter, Jemma Gomez and fiancé Tung Pham of Gilbert, Ariz.; her sons, Joshua Gomez of Magdalena; and Jacob Gomez of Las Vegas, Nev.; her grandchildren, Jesiah; Lena; Jordan; Armando; Clarissa; Joseph; and Monique; sisters, Rose Aragon; Frances Chavez; Vivian Torres; Cecilia Abbots and husband, David; and Sr. Celine Aragon; brother, Andrew Aragon; and many nieces, nephews, and cousins.
Rudolpha was a resident of Magdalena since 1957. She was a member of St. Mary Magdalene Church.
Rudolpha was preceded in death by her loving husband, Gilbert M. Gomez in 1989; a sister, Belia Baca; and a brother Bobby Aragon.
A Rosary was recited on Sunday, June 27, 2010 at St. Mary Magdalene Catholic Church in Magdalena, NM. On Monday, a Mass of Resurrection was celebrated with Father Andy Pavlak also at St Mary Magdalene Catholic Church. Burial will take place in the Magdalena Cemetery. Pallbearers were David Aragon, Steven Aragon, Robert Torres, Michael Torres, Leroy Trujillo, and Pat Trujillo.
Those who wish to send condolences may do so at www.danielsfuneral.com. Services have been entrusted to: Daniels Family Funeral Services, 309 Garfield, Socorro, NM 87801, (575) 835-1530
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