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New Mexico’s Legal & Financial Weekly
Sept 9, 2011
Vol. 1.82 No. 37
FORECLOSURE SALES: 9
PROBATE:24
AUCTIONS: 11
NOTICE OF SUITS: 3
OTHER: 26
SPANISH NOTICES: 3
Fabuloso! Figures in Clay from the Van Deren and Joan Coke Collection opens at the National Hispanic Cultural Center
A
LBUQUERQUE – The National Hispanic Cultural Center (NHCC) Art Museum recently received the largest gift in its history—the Van Deren and Joan Coke Collection of Mexican Arte Popular. This collection consists of more than 1000 works acquired by the donors between 1980 and 2000. The NHCC Art Museum’s latest exhibition ¡Fabuloso!: Figures in Clay from the Van Deren and Joan Coke Collection, features approximately 200 of these amazing works. A free public reception for the exhibition will held Sunday September 18, 2011 from 2 to 4 pm. The exhibition runs through Summer 2012 “ I would like to thank Joan Coke for this wonderful donation” said Cabinet Secretary Veronica Gonzales. “The NHCC staff and other staff members from DCA did an excellent job with the design of this exhibit and I hope that the visitors to the NHCC enjoy it as much as I do” she continued. Van Deren Coke, who died in 2004, was a photographer, curator, professor, author, and critic, whose early work fell into the purist tradition of his mentors, Ansel Adams and Edward Weston. Coke was founding director of the University of New Mexico Art Museum. He later served as curator at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. During this career, his excitement about Mexican arte popular never flagged and, later in life, his wife, Joan, matched him in enthusiasm. Together, the Cokes became avid fans of Mexican ceramics and in how
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the artists conveyed individual artistic vision and complex stories of community and place. Favorite subjects of the artists include politics, popular culture, religion, family, community, and nature, and their approaches are often humorous or irreverent. ¡FABULOSO!: Figures in Clay from the Van Deren and Joan Coke Collection offers a glimpse into the diversity of figural clay works created in Mexico and celebrates both the identified and unidentified ceramic artists who create beauty out of nothing but earth, air, fire, and water. The National Hispanic Cultural Center, a division of the Department of Cultural Affairs, is dedicated to the promotion and preservation of Hispanic art and culture at the local, state, national, and international levels.
Don’t Get Suckered by Job-Hunt Scams Dollars & Sense by David Uffington
H
unting for a job shouldn’t have to include protecting yourself from possible scams, but the reality is that you must if you’re doing your job search online. Fake job listings are everywhere: online job boards, email and phony company websites. Some are very creative and look authentic. Here are some keywords that are indicative of likely scams: Internet business development or coaching, business opportunity, work at home, refundable fee, guaranteed income, undisclosed federal jobs, guaranteed job, consultant and easy work. In spite of the ease of communicating via the Internet,
if you’ve received an email offer or see an online posting and don’t know if it’s genuine, ask for a phone number to call and speak to a human. Check out the phone number before you call. Try www. anywho.com and click on Reverse Lookup, which also will give you the address. Do a Google search for the address, too. Learn how to tell the true address of an online link by putting your cursor over it and seeing if it matches the words before you click. Beware especially of any Internet address that consists mostly of numbers with a pattern like this: xxx.xx.xxxx. That’s an indication of a new Internet address. If you get anonymous email and
someone claims to want to hire you for a job you don’t even remember applying for (quite possible if you’re sending out lots of resumes), scammers likely will ask for information such as your Social Security number, date of birth, home address and even your creditcard availability and card number. Verify, verify, verify before you give out personal information, including your Social Security number. If the job is a scam and you provide that number, as well as your name and address, you’ve just gift wrapped the means for identity theft. With email, a genuine address should include the company’s name, not so-and-so at Gmail or
Yahoo.com. You, on the other hand, can make use of one of those temporary email accounts because in time it’s sure to fill with spam. If you sign up with a big online job list such as Monster.com, use a P.O box for your home address. Use an initial for your first name. Best bet: Hook up with multiple in-person personnel agencies or recruiters. They’ll have access to the real jobs. David Uffington regrets that he cannot personally answer reader questions, but will incorporate them into his column whenever possible. Write to him in care of King Features Weekly Service, P.O. Box 536475, Orlando, FL 32853-6475, or send e-mail to columnreply@gmail.com. (c) 2011 King Features Synd., Inc.