Wednesday, March 30, 2016

EVERY SATURDAY IN APRIL - $1 for a bag of books!!!

Now's the month (only on Saturdays) when all great people come forward to replenish their bookshelves and find those quintessential books for presents in the future for special people

Plan ahead & Stock up in APRIL. 

 EVERY SATURDAY 10am to 2 pm is $1 
(ONE DOLLAR!) 
for a whole BAG OF BOOKS!



This from my fellow librarian, Trish Koenig.  She has moved from Ruidoso  Library to a branch library of Rio Rancho.  Best of luck at your new library, Trish.  AND thanks for this cute conglomerate of why we love books AND libraries!


April means Amnesty!


Return your overdue items in good condition and have your fines waived.
Sally knows - stay in good grace with the library to keep on checking out books & movies!

Reminder - No fooling - April First Friday - April 1st @ 7 p.m.


Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Donate items for the Plant & Garden Sale

THE PLANT & GARDEN SALE!  
Saturday, May 7.  9 am to 2pm.
Save the DATE! 


Do you have too many plants?   Yard art you no longer like or you've changed your style?   Plant stands that need a paint job?  Pretty pots or wind-chimes you'll never use? Lawn furniture that blows away in our ferocious winds? Bring your plants & stuff by the library for volunteers to spruce up to sell at the Plant & Garden Sale.  It goes to a good cause...your favorite library!

ADVISORY: NMDVS to Host Veterans Cemetery Town Hall Meeting Tomorrow at Ft. Stanton

For Immediate Release
  March 29, 2016

  NMDVS to Host Ft. Stanton Cemetery Town  Hall Meeting
  TOMMOROW (Wednesday, March 30) (3pm)

 Ft. Stanton Historic Site Cafeteria
(117 Black Jack Pershing Rd.)


  (FT. STANTON, NM)- New Mexico Department of Veterans' Services Secretary Jack Fox and State Cemetery Program Director Tom Wagner will join other state officials tomorrow to host a 3p.m. town hall meeting at the Ft. Stanton Historic Site Cafeteria to give an update on the progress of the new Fort Stanton State Veterans Cemetery.

  Governor Susana Martinez has worked to secure state and federal funds to build rural veterans cemeteries in New Mexico. New Mexico's veteran population is currently served by Fort Bayard and Santa Fe National Cemeteries, as well as Fort Bliss National Cemetery in El Paso, Texas. More than 170,000 veterans live in New Mexico, and more than half of them live in rural areas that are simply too far from the national cemeteries in Santa Fe or Fort Bayard.

  The new cemetery in Fort Stanton will include 650-gravesites, a main entrance, roads, administration complex, and maintenance facility, a Columbarium with niches for 480 urns, all landscaping, and other supporting infrastructure. This location will be readily accessible to more than 52,000 veterans and eligible family members. Those living in communities like Alamogordo, Roswell, Capitan, and Carrizozo will all be within 75 miles of this location.


When: 3 p.m. Tomorrow (Wednesday, March 30)
  Where: Fort Stanton Historic Site Cafeteria
                 117 Black Jack Pershing Rd.
                 Fort Stanton, NM 88323

  Respectfully,

  Ray Seva
  Public Information Officer,
  New Mexico Department of Veterans' Services
  (505) 362-6089 mobile
  www.dvs.state.nm.us<http://www.dvs.state.nm.us/>

  New Mexico Department of Veterans' Services
  Office of the Secretary
  406 Don Gaspar
  Santa Fe, NM  87501
  ATTN: Ray Seva/Public Information Officer
  (505) 827-6352 office

Monday, March 28, 2016

Southwest Wildfire Awareness Week is March 27 – April 2, 2016 #NMFire #OneLessSpark #FireAdapted

March 27, 2016 by npsnmfireinfo




The federal, state, and tribal partners of the Southwest Prevention and Information Committee invite you to join us in promoting Southwest Wildfire Awareness Week, March 27 – April 2, 2016. This year’s theme is “Where We Live, How We Live, Living with Wildfire.”  The focus of the week is to increase awareness and to promote actions that reduce the risk from wildfire to homes and communities.

We encourage you to take advantage of this opportunity to reach out to your local community, neighborhoods and media with wildfire prevention and preparedness information.

(NOTE:  The Moon Fire in Ruidoso that started March 28 is in an area previously mitigated.  Even with these ferocious winds, the fire at this time is staying predominately on the ground.) 
 
A variety of wildfire prevention materials are available at the Little Bear Forest Reform Coalition table at the  Sacramento Mountains Wood Industry Summit at the Ruidoso Convention Center March 30 & 31.

You can order many free Firewise outreach materials (including brochures, posters, bookmarks, DVDs, door hangers, stickers, and an interactive Firewise Challenge Exhibit Kit) from http://firewise.org/catalog.aspx.

Thank you for your commitment to promoting wildfire prevention and preparedness.  We appreciate your support!

More info at NMFireInfo.com

Saturday, March 26, 2016

@ the Ruidoso Convention Center March 30 & 31

You might want to check out this conference. TWO Stihl chainsaws to be given away in drawings.  One is a door prize and the other will be given away by the Little Bear Forest Reform Coalition.  Come by their table to sign up.  Chainsaws includes an extra year's warranty and a six-pack (of oil!).  See you there...

Friday, March 25, 2016

April 1 First Friday @ 7 p.m.


Loretta Hall presents: New Mexico is a Treasure Trove of Space History
 From Anasazi star watchers forecasting seasonal changes for agriculture planning through the development of manned spaceflight and into the new era of commercial space industries, New Mexico has been a major contributor to understanding and exploring the universe.  

This illustrated presentation will provide an overview of an aspect of our state's history that is not well known but has been  important to New Mexico's economy and the United States' technological progress for eighty-five years.

Loretta Hall is an Albuquerque-based freelance writer specializing in science and engineering topics.  She is the author of six nonfiction books.  The most recent one, Space Pioneers: In Their Own Words, consists of annotated excerpts from oral history interviews of ninety men and women who were involved in various national and international space programs from 1945 through the space shuttle era.  It was named "Best Book" in the 2014 New Mexico-Arizona Book Awards and received a Silver Award in the Science category of the 2014 IndieFab Book of the Year Awards.  Hall's 2011, Out of this World: New Mexico's  Contributions to Space Travel, is a history of New Mexico researchers' crucial contributions (including those of high-altitude balloonists) to NASA's manned space programs and to the emerging commercial space industry.  It won six regional and national awards. 

Hall is a member of the Historical Society of New Mexico, the National Space Society, and New Mexico Press Women
 
 This program at the Capitan Public Library is brought to the public by the Historical Society of New Mexico.

Hall's books will be available for purchase and autographs.  Refreshments served after the presentation.



 




Also by Loretta Hall: The Complete Space Buff's Bucket List: 100 Space Things to Do before You Die

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Book Club selection for April

Book club selections for April and May are now available on the Kindles to check out. Hard copies are also available.
Book club meetings are held the first Thursday of every month at 10:00 am.

Join us on April 7th to talk about the Secret of the Tsil Cafe by Thomas Fox Averill and enjoy some tasty chile treats.







May book will be Ladies of the Canyons by Leslie Poling-Kempes.

N2SS giving away CLOTHES this week - Thursday - Saturday

Clearing out Winter to make way for Spring.  All winter clothing is free to the community through
 Saturday, March 26.

Learn more about LCMC plans

Creative Aging Advisory Committee to Lincoln County Agenda for Friday, March 25, at ENMU-Ruidoso, room 115, starting at 9 am. For more information, contact Clara Farah, 575-973-7835 or email clrfarah@gmail.com

Health Care: Future Plans for Lincoln County Hospital.  Elaine Allen, L.C. County Commissioner and Steve Duffy, Hospital Fundraising Consultant.
Housing:  USDA Home Loan Program for Rural First-time Buyers.  Jessica Sheldon
Social Activities and Community Involvement:  Margaret Lucero, Alamogordo Senior Center's Manager, and  Problem Gambling.
Transportation: Lincoln County Transit Taskforce:  Bonnie Ambrose, Cecile Kinnan, Paula Tipton.
Employment Updates:  Phyllis Starr, Employment Counselor for 50+, Aging and Long Term Services.

Monday, March 21, 2016

Artist @ the Library. Works of Madeleine Sabo on display March & April




Art Without Sight

We sometimes take our eyesight for granted as we go through life. But, to those who lose this precious sense, it can be overwhelming.  A lose of sight is even more devastating to an artist – a person whose life’s work and world revolves around creating art and seeing it evolve.
Fortunately, even if an artist suddenly becomes blind, the artist can still use the “mind’s eye” to create art. Claude Monet painted even though he had failing eyesight.  Van Gogh often complained of vision problems and is rumored to have been color blind.  
Blindness is debilitating, but as some of the masters have shown, this does not make it impossible to create art.  Throughout her entire life, Madeleine Sabo has been in love with art and expressed herself through her creative artistic skills.  In 2008 Madeleine had a dramatic change in her life.  She had contracted MRSA, a type of bacteria that is resistant to certain antibiotics, resulting in a blood staph infection that left her with detached retinas.  After many surgeries and drug therapy, Madeleine has only slight blurry black and white vision with some color perception in the periphery of her left eye.
As a person who does not give up, Madeleine continues to develop and utilize her life skills as an artist.  Prior to losing her sight, she painted in great detail with acrylics.  Now, still using the same medium, she paints bigger, freer more abstract, more electric and definitely more colorful paintings!  While painting is still her first love, Madeleine has now taken on new new medium, clay.  Ceramics have provided her with a rewarding art form in which she can use her tactile skills.  Her ceramic leaf bowls have become extremely popular.  And, she continues to work on a wood lathe, creating beautiful wooden vases and bowls.  Because of her developed tactile touch, she prides herself in the satin like finishes applied to the wood. All of this – done by a woman who is almost completely blind!


Friday, March 18, 2016

Steve Havill writer workshop appreciated by local novice writers

Steven F. Havill, author of 27 novels.  His latest Posadas County mystery, Come Dark , is due on the shelves April 2016.

Our favorite local* author, Steve Havill, gave a writers workshop on March 14 at the library.  This workshop was the last workshop at the Capitan Public Library provided by a grant from Otero County Electric Coop. 

All six workshops were a smashing success.  Thanks to Pearl Tippin for creating and organizing the workshops, to Otero County Electric Coop for the grant and to Preston Stone for giving us the heads up that grants are available from OCEC for organizations such as our library for community education and enrichment.

Once again, thanks to Pearl for the wonderful assortment of art workshops: singing, acting, fabric painting, drawing (with confidence) and two writing clinics.  And hats off to our chef, Teri Neff, for the fantastic catered meal at the Havill writer workshop.



* (well, technically Havill's not local anymore since he moved away from Lincoln County, but WE still consider him one of our favorite LOCAL authors AND he is still a New Mexico author with  novels set in New Mexico.)

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

Saturday, February 27, 2016

1st Friday on March 4 at 7 pm "The Old Dowlin Mill"


Join Lyn Kidder on a visual journey down memory lane of days-past Ruidoso.  Kidder published with Arcadia Publishing another Images of America book on Ruidoso using the photos of 
Carmon Phillips

the owner of the old Dowlin Mill 
and long-time photographer in Ruidoso.   

Photographer Carmon Phillips and his wife Leona Mae moved to Ruidoso in 1945. Her family owned a cabin there and the young couple had visited as often as their wartime-issued gas coupons would allow.They leased the old adobe mill, which was practically a ruin, and went to work restoring it. They built a small building on a adjoining lot, a building that served as a gift shop, photo processing lab and their home until 1951, when the shop was moved to the mill.

An enthusiastic promoter, Phillips photographed nearly every aspect of Ruidoso life during the 1950s and 1960s. His collection of more than 6,000 negatives was donated to the Hubbard Museum of the American West by his daughter, Delana Clements.

"Carmon was interested in so many things, and he worked so hard to document the life of Ruidoso. Even if you don't know the people in the photos, they make a charming portrait of early Ruidoso."


Lyn Kidder and her husband, Frederic Moras, left Pennsylvania in 1989 heading west. 
They spent seven years traveling and working (and skiing!) in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho,
 Alaska and Wyoming.  
Lyn began writing with Frederic contributing the photography. 
In 1997, the couple landed and stayed in Ruidoso .
Lyn has been published in Alaska Magazine, Alaska Geographic,
Ceramics Monthly, Wyoming Farmer-Stockman, 
Medical Laboratory Observer, New Mexico Magazine
and New Mexico Business Journal.
She had poetry published in Verbalize, a medium of the students of 
liberal arts at a small Wyoming college. 
While living in Barrow, Alaska, (300 miles north of the Arctic Circle, 
right next door to Santa Claus) she wrote Barrow, Alaska from A to Z, the only guidebook to that northernmost community, and Tacos on the Tundra,
the story of the world's northernmost Mexican restaurant and
the crazy woman who started it all., Fran Tate. 

Refreshments after the presentation.

Saturday, February 20, 2016

Free Art Workshop - Drawing with Jeannie Adams: March 4 & 5


FREE Drawing Workshop @ the Capitan Public Library

Friday & Saturday

March 4 & 5  

 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. each day

This is two-part workshop so it is necessary to come both days
Jeannie Adams teaches drawing: emphasis on line & composition
*    Learn to be confident and to not be afraid of making a mark on paper
*    Beginners are welcome, you do not need to be a proficient artist
*    Wear clothing that you don't mind getting charcoal or crayon or other media on
*      Bring your art supplies, if you have any, such as your 4B pencils & sketch pad
*      Supplies will be provided otherwise
*      Come and have FUN!

Space must be reserved with Pearl Tippin at 575-354-7021 or pearlofcapitan@gmail.com

Classes held in the library at: 101 E. 2nd Street, Capitan 575-354-3035
 
These art workshops come to the library courtesy of a grant provided by
 Otero County Electric Cooperative, Inc.
Jeannie Adams in her studio