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Ruidoso in August
By Gregg WendorfAdvance News JournalSome people like hot weather. I like it too, but I’d prefer the 80s as opposed to the 90s or 106, like we had last summer.Still, give me a choice between 25 degrees Fahrenheit and 106 in the shade, and I’ll choose the latter.Some people tell me on occasion that they hate the heat, and I say, well, sorry, but you’re living in the wrong place.Indeed, by May, the Rio Grande Valley is already seeing daytime highs of 90 degrees. In fact, all of this week, daytime highs for Hidalgo County will be in the low- ...
Tackling The Back Way Into Guadalupe Mtns NP On Electric Power (Part 2)
Sign up for daily news updates from CleanTechnica on email. Or follow us on Google News!. Once the road finally finds its way out of the desert and onto the mountain range, a gradual climb begins. It’s still pretty rough here and there, with lots of ups and downs, but there are no more climbs so steep that the road needs a patch of pavement to survive the thunderstorms.
Alamogordo Police report two fatalities in crash at White Sands Blvd. and 10th St.
Two people died in a three-car crash at the intersection of White Sands Blvd. and 10th St. on April 7. Austin Dawhan, 23, was allegedly traveling 114 miles per hour down 10th street in a blue Chrysler Sebring when he ran a red light and collided with a Saturn driven by 73-year-old Susan Diane Narveson, according to a report by the Alamogordo Police Department.
New Mexico cities must abandon their efforts to punish homelessness
Over the years, we’ve seen every manner of anti-panhandling law introduced, passed, revoked, and re-introduced in cities across New Mexico. Many of the laws that have come and gone were repealed because they were unconstitutional. But it hasn’t stopped cities from trying again and again to push unhoused people out of sight through the threat of arrest; city officials invariably tinker with the language and see if it passes muster.
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