HCS 283-5

Page 1

Established in 1929

Health City Sun

The

www.healthcitysun.com

Published by Defined Publishing, Inc.

New Mexico’s Legal & Financial Weekly

Feb. 3, 2012

Vol. 2.83 No. 5

FORECLOSURE SALES: 26

PROBATE:24

AUCTIONS: 5

NOTICE OF SUITS: 11

OTHER: 17

SPANISH NOTICES: 0

Dancing Earth’s “Night of Stars, Moon, Water” Comes to the National Hispanic Cultural Center

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LBUQUERQUE – Dancing Earth, the nation’s award-winning Indigenous contemporary dance ensemble, is proud to announce “Night of Stars*Moon*Water*,” its first festival of international Indigenous contemporary performing arts, in partnership with the National Hispanic Cultural Center. This unique event, moving from powwow to poetry and percussion in a vital and riveting expression of diversity, will take place on Friday, March 9 and Saturday, March 10 at 8 PM in the NHCC’s Albuquerque Journal Theatre, Roy E. Disney Center for Performing Arts. “Night of Stars*Moon*Water*” features 12 of Native America’s finest performing artists, including Dancing Earth’s own soloists, guest artists from the Santa Fe Indian School Poetry Team, Miss Blackfoot Nation of Canada 2008, and unforgettable songstress Sina Soul. Each will take to the stage in a stunning solo that highlights their special talents like stars shining in the night. Showcasing the individual humanity at the core of devotion to the emerging field of Indigenous contemporary arts, these courageous, innovative performers embody the essence of what it means to bring culture to life. The festival is designed to preview and support the creation of Dancing Earth’s new work, an eco-production dedicated to awareness of Native perspectives on water. In honor of this upcoming theme, festival performances will culminate in a multidisciplinary improvisation about water, with vocals, rhythms, movement, and poetry combining in a ritual of intention. Dancing Earth, the foremost contemporary Indigenous dance company in the United States, is an intertribal ensemble including dancers from 14 North American Nations as well as Indigenous artists from Central and South America. The company has been awarded the National Museum of the American Indian’s Expressive Arts Award as well as a National Dance Project production and touring award; director Rulan Tangen was recently honored as the first Dance Fellow for Artistic Innovation by the Native Arts and Cultures Foundation. Tickets for “Night of Stars*Moon*Water*” are $15, $20, and $25, and can be purchased in person at the NHCC box office, at 505-724-4771, or through the Center’s website at www.nhccnm.org. The NHCC is located at 1701 4th Street SW on the corner of 4th Street and Avenida César Chávez. The National Hispanic Cultural Center, a division of the New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs, is dedicated to the promotion and preservation of Hispanic art and culture at the local, state, national, and international levels.

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How To Finance Your College Education

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o attend college, most students must pass a very rigorous testfinding the money to pay for education. Finding that money is harder every year. With college costs rising more quickly than medical care, The Wall Street Journal recently reported that 88 percent of families are having difficulty paying for college. In the past, college tuition was paid for with savings, supplemented by government or bank loans. Today, it’s usually savings, spending from current income and borrowing. “Last year, 10 million families took out college loans-loans that are not discharged in bankruptcy,” said Justin Draeger, National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators. Because it costs so much to go to college, the majority of students leave with more than $23,000 in debt.

Starting salaries for most college graduates are $17,000, says Fox News. Although fewer grants and loans will be given to students this year, there are still financial resources available if you know where to look for them. “There are billions of higher education dollars that annually go unused because people just do not know about the money, where it isÊand how to get it,” said Idalah D. Womack, MSW, LCSW, author of “1 True College Money Since 1978,” sixth edition (Infinity Publishing). Womack was the first person in her family to go to college. She was inspired to write the book because of her own experiences trying to get financial aid, and the current sixth edition contains more than 30 years of her research combined with college students’ experiences. Womack offers a few of her tips to

get started: • Take a pen, paper and quarters to a library. Be prepared to gather/copy a large amount of information. • Go to the reference desk of your local public, high school, college or college departmental libraries. Ask for books about scholarships, fellowships and internships that pay for higher education. • Grants originate from business, government, private and/or foundation sources. Successful and wealthy graduates often donate money in an effort to give back and help other students. Many of these grants can be found in college catalogs. • While you are awaiting applications for financial help, start looking for a college. • Contact the Continuing Education Department at colleges and request information about their services, work-

study grants and cooperative education programs. For more information, call (877) Buy-Book or you can visit www. buybooksontheweb.com. (NAPSI)—


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