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El Paso Times from El Paso, Texas • 8

Publication:
El Paso Timesi
Location:
El Paso, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

EL PASO TIMES, Monday, January 19, 1987 Page 2-B Crash- NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE WEATHER BROADCASTS: NWS radio 162.475 mgx The Weather Channel cable channel 7 Other information: (915) 772-8894 Recorded report: (915) 778-9343 Today in th region and forecast highs ll 7 Flagstaff 24 Santa Fe Oklahoma Gty A 34 Albuquerque I snow NEW MEXICOWEST TEXAS showers, partly sunny Phoenix Copyright 1W7, El Paso Times Information and forecasts for El Paso's and southern New Mexico's most complete meteorological report are supplied by ACCU- Weatherlnc. 33 Ruidoso 34 Lubbock I 38 Dallas lucson -v sbad Abilene Southern New Mexico will be not as cold today, with some sun. Highs will be 40 to 48. Tonight will be partly to mostly cloudy, with lows from 20 to 28. Tuesday will be mostly cloudy, brisk and chilly, with highs from 38 to 46.

West Texas will be a bit milder today, with a mix of sun and high clouds. Highs wilt be from 42 to 48. Tonight will be partly cloudy, with lows from 20 to 28. Tuesday will be partly cloudy, breezy and chilly, with highs from 40 to 46. Continued from IB Wakefield's 20-year-old daughter, Wendolyn Wakefield, suffered multi- Ele broken bones including two roken legs in the crash.

She was in critical condition for several days. The driver of the other car, Hopper, had been treated and released at the hospital. A third victim from the van, Gary Sombke, also had been injured critically. The young people were members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. During the crisis, community members responded through blood donations, visits and cards, Wendell Wakefield said.

Wakefield said family members have become more involved in organizations against drunken driving. Hood said she was in the accident the day after her graduation from Brigham Young University. She plans to become an elementary school teacher once she is able. Wendolyn Wakefield had to postpone her plans to enroll at BYU this semester. Her father said that "there are purposes behind everything." "If this gets anybody to quit driving when they drink it's going to be a high price to pay," he said.

-1 4S? El Paso sunny, chilly EL PASO WEATHER Fort Stockton 45 Austin Over the next several days, very chilly weather will be the rule. A system now moving through the northern Rockies will bring a chance of flurries Wednesday, but no accumulation is expected. Temperatures will stay well below normal tor the season, with highs mainly in the 40s. REGIONAL WEATHER Hermosillo i I Houston San Antonio 4Hy 45 Chihuahu FIVE-DAY FORECAST WIND FORECAST 'j Average Highest Average speed gust direction Sunday 5 12 Today 6 14 Tuesday 10 20 NE Wind speeds and directions art measured at El Paso International Airport by the National Weather Service. CITY Alamogordo Albuquerque Amarillo Aries ia Austin Brownsville Carlsbad Chihuahua Cloudcroft Corpus Christ! Dallas Deming Flagstaff Houston Las Cruces Lubbock Midland Oklahoma City Phoenix os well Ruidoso San Antonio Santa Fe Silver City Tucson Tulsa Truth or Cons.

SUN TODAY TUE WED 33epc 3920OC 3626C 3426C 265S 3421C 3216C 3818pC 2214sn 3120pc 29lSe 2915C 3618S 45MpC 4030C 3628C 4331S 4532S S033C 4430sh 5841C 5844DC 60JSc S535DC 33llpc 4428pc 4031C 3729C 4323S 4530BC 4034C 4034C 18 Is 27150C 2417sf 2415sf 5138pC 5l39pc 5836C 5333pc 3530sf 3B30S 3826C 4332C 45270C 4029C 4029C 355pe 3514DC 303DC 325s 54380C 4834S S234C 48Msh 3010pC 4427pc 4127C 4127C 2617sn 3422pc 3114C 3115C 3212s( 4026OC 3824sf 3426sf 2422sn 3524C 3326c 3324sf 50315 S638S S432pC 583SS 3617DC 4327pC 4027C 3627C 28-6DC 332pc 3019C 2817C 4630S 4732S 5232C 4632sh 1910sf 2417sf 2213sf 2713DC 30llS 4024pc 3729C 3729c 4623S S23K SO250C 5227s 272Ssn 3424C 3426C 3224sf 356pC 4327DC 4029C 4029C TODAY Not as cold, with sunshine and some clouds. HIGH 45 LOW 26 TUESDAY Brisk and chilly, with some clouds. HIGH 43 LOW 22 WEDNESDAY Mostly cloudy and cold, with the possibility of flurries. HIGH 40 LOW 17 THURSDAY Sunny to partly cloudy, brisk. HIGH 45 LOW 20 FRIDAY Fairly sunny, still chilly.

HIGH 48 LOW 22 WIND CHILL EL PASO CALENDAR Precipitation Sunday 0.02 inch Year to date 0 29 Inch Average year to date 0.19 inch Average January 0.38 inch So far this month 0.29 inch Temperatures Jan. II High ..36 Normal high 58 Record high 77 in 1921 Low 9 Normal low 30 Record low 9 in 1987 Moon phases 1st quarter Feb. 5 Full moon Feb. 13 Lasf quarter Jan. 22 New moon Jan.

29 Sunrise today 7:09 a.m. Sunset today 5:42 p.m. Duel Sunday 8 a.m. 16 noon 32 4 p.m. 26 Today a.m.

19 noon 36 4 p.m. 41 Wind-chill temperatures are based on wind speed and give a better idea than a thermometer reading of how cold the weather leels. The (aster the wind blows, the faster the body loses heat; therefore the feeling of cold increases. POLLUTION FORECAST Forecast key for cities: Numbers are highlow temperatures. Letters indicate: sh (showers); (rain); (thun Air quality will be moderate today, then good Tuesday and Wednesday.

derstorms); (sunny); (cloudy); sn (snow); I (ice); sf El Paso calendar is supplied by El Paso's National Weather Service office. (snow flurries); pc (partly cloudy) Today across the nation Continued from IB has a barbecue." Tackman has a specific marketing strategy. The county depends on tourism considerably. So, he said, every issue will carry at least one feature on a county tourist attraction the Catwalks in Glenwood or the gold-mining ghost town of Mogollon. Tackman has targeted four towns in surrounding counties from which he hopes to pick up much of his advertising Socorro; Springerville, Safford, and Silver City.

And why should businesses in those towns want advertising in the Courier? It's simple, Tackman said. In a county with no supermarkets, no car dealerships, no drugstores, no department stores and no dentist, many residents of Catron do a good part of their business outside the county. Meanwhile, Hutchinson continues to publish the Firestarter, whose motto is "Keep the home fires burning," from his home in Glenwood. The Firestarter began in 1979, primarily in response to Catron's fight with the Air Force over its plans to conduct jet fighter flights over the area and the resulting controversy over sonic booms. Hutchinson said legal notices concerning the planned activities were not reaching the people most involved the residents of Catron County.

Hutchinson said that so far, the Courier has had an impact on the Firestarter's circulation, but "not a great deal. We've lost a few and gained a few." Advertising, he said, has been split between the two weekly papers according to whether people are "pro one political faction or another." NATIONAL WEATHER CITY SUN TODAY TUE WED CITY SUN TODAY TUE WED Anchorage 3733C 4432r 4230C 403OC Little Rock 3837r 3828sf 3826C 3626C Aspen 25IOc 20 lOsn 23-IOpc 26 Ss Los Angeles 241s 242s 6444S Atlanta 4239r 4230r 4830S 4834C Louisville 4l37r 3823sh 3222pc 3528pc Bangor ll-10sf 3420C 32l6pc 3219pc Memphis 4541r 4028s 4026pc 3830c Billings 4018C 246C 24IOs 3215pc Miami 8373pc 8272pc 8066pc (J068pc Birmingham 4630C 4628pc 4632r Minneapolis 2 1 3s 2216C 2012sf 1810sl Boise 2913C 276pc 219pc 3212pc Nashville 504Ir 4227c 4225pc 3828C Boston 33l7sf 34J6r 3420pc 3425pc New Orleans 7454sh 4635pc 5435S 4248C Buffalo 3423sn 33l8sn 2920C 3124C New York 3427sh 4232r 3726pc 36731pc Casper 26llc 180sf 18 2s 240pc Omaha 328S 2719c 2717C 2516C Cedar City 280pc 3010pc 286pc 34llpc Philadelphia 3i2Sr 4524r 4224pc 4032pc Charleston, S.C. 5047r 7242sh 563opc 4839r Pittsburgh 4435r 4027r 3220sf 3829C Charleston, W.V. 4837sh 4428r 3625pc Portland, Ore. 3828C 4531pc 4233pc 4237c Charlotte 335r S435sh 4B32pc 4438c Rapid City 4623sf 228c 224c 202c Cheyenne 35llpc 22Ssf 20Os 242S Reno 36lOc 3612s 3814S 38I6S Chicago 2622c 3214sn 2613pc lopc Richmond 4l35pc 4842r 4935r 4633r Cincinnati 3430r 3324T 3222sf 3224sf St.

Louis 3027sf 3124sn 3I22C 2920C Cleveland 3732sn 3425sn 3222sf 3025sf Salt Lake City 279pc 25IOc 2510pc 29l5pe Davenport 28l7sf 2620C 2818C 26lic San Diego 54ls 4242s 4444s 46465 Denver 391 Is 256sn 200sn 32Bs San Francisco 5338C 5640s 5642S 5644pc Des Moines 31ISs 27lvc 27I6C 26I2C Seattle 4034sh 4330pc 4332pc 4535sh Detroit 3328sn 3020sn 30l7s 3020sl Sioux Falls 29 2s 25l6sf 226C 204C Duluth I7I0sf 18I0sf 146SI 12Oc Tampa 7946pc 8l60pc 7456pc 7658PC Grand Island 356s 25lec 26I3C 25I4C Washington 373lr 4629r 4027pc 3933C Great Falls 4l29pc 232c 256S 3014pc 7X 222? SUNDAY'S EXTREMES Indianapolis 3330sf 3322sn 3020sf 3224sf Jackson, Miss. 5953r 4630c 5232s 4634c The national high was 86 in North Dade County Kansas City 2413c 2920C 29lle 2714C and Fort Myers, la. Las Vegas 4928pc 52415 The national low was -27 in Alamosa, Colo. WORLD WEATHER CITY SUN TODAY TUE WED CITY SUN TODAY TUE WED Acapulco 9171S 90725 91715 Madrid 4925DC 4728DC 4727pc 4430pc Amsterdam 30-22C 3428pC 3632pc 3832pc Manila B472sh 887 lpc l469pc 8669pc Athens 6049c 6049c S847pc 5947pc Mexico City 74S0pc 7248pc Beirut 72560C 7256sh 7254pc 7256pc Montreal 105sn 249c 166C 2012OC Berlin 2112C 23ltc 2412C 25 18c Moscow 2412pc 26I4DC 2414pc 281Bpc Buenos Aires 8643pc 8643pc BB44pc Nassau 647lpc 8471pc 8472sh 8472pc Cairo 7652S 74SOs 7452S Paris 3224C 3729pc 373tpc 4033pc Copenhagen 3230c 3532pc 3732pc 3934pc Peking 35l9pc 3717pc 32l6pc Geneva 27-20C 3018pc 3318pc 32I6DC Rio de Janeiro 8874sh B6774C 8674C 8876pc Hong Kong 4842C 6i60c 6559T 6359C Rome 4538DC 47360C 4534DC Jerusalem 684lpc 694ipc Stockholm 253pc 278pc 278pc 30IOpc Lima 8070C 8071C 8272pc 8270pc Sydney 9072pC 9272pe 9272pc 9070pc Lisbon 5642DC 5B44DC 5846pc 4047DC Tokyo S244T 4l36pc 4632pc 4634pC London 4033C 4236pc 4438pc 4636pc Vienna 2821C 2821C 302 1c 3224pc NATIONAL FORECAST The upcoming week looks to be wintry over much of the nation. The only warm weather will remain in central and southern Florida.

Tuesday, another major storm will hit interior New England. Parts of New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine could get a foot or more of snow. Behind the storrrf; Wednesday and Thursday look to be brisk and cold in New England and the Middle Atlantic states. Although parts of New Mexico still are digging out from Friday's storm, another system will bring a bit more snow to New Mexico and Colorado Tuesday. That system will bring some rain and snow to parts of Texas Wednesday.

The storm that has produced heavy snow from Arizona to Oklahoma will bring a variety of weather to the East today. Significant snow is likely from northern Illinois to western New York, with more than 6 inches in some spots. Freezing rain and sleet will slow travel in parts of Pennsylvania, New York and New England. Coastal areas from South Carolina to southern New Jersey will be mild. However, these areas will have rain to accompany the mild weather.

Some areas west of the Mississippi River will have precipitation. Snow showers are expected in Minnesota and the Dakotas, and parts of Colorado and Wyoming will have a bit of snow. Snow. deaths in the area center Saturday night. And about 50 people spent the night at a church in Mountainair, southwest of Moriarty in Torrance County.

Richard Ness, the county's emergency coordinator, said more than 10,000 head of cattle were in danger because of deep snow. He said the U.S. Department of Agriculture was being asked to help feed the trapped animals. drive trucks were having trouble with the 4 feet of snow and 7-foot drifts that kept residents housebound. Interstate 40 motorists stranded in the Moriarty area Friday and Saturday were able to resume travel Sunday morning, police said.

About 80 stranded motorists slept at the Moriarty community Continued from IB But many residents of the rural areas around Moriarty, 40 miles east of Albuquerque, were trapped without food and medication. National Guard trucks Saturday and Sunday took supplies to families in need of help. National Guard Col. Alex Garcia said even the big four-wheel- Children Continued from IB "(Indians from the Tesuque Pueblo) have a real philosophy that all learning doesn't come out of books. Other experiences are just as valuable." Penny Garcia teacher Maria Consuelo Garcia, 80, of Las Cruces died Thursday.

Visitation will be from 3 to 9 p.m. today in San Jose Funeral Home Chapel, with rosary at 7 p.m. Funeral Mass will be at 8 a.m. Tuesday in St. Ignatius Catholic Church.

Burial will be in Fort Bliss National Cemetery. She was a former resident of El Paso. Bernardina Solis Rodriguez, 57, of El Paso died Sunday. Visitation will be from 8 to 10 p.m. Tuesday in Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church, with rosary at 8 p.m.

Funeral Mass will be at 9 a.m. Wednesday in the church. Burial will be in Mount Carmel Cemetery. She is surivived by her husband, Emilio. She was a homemaker and had been a resident of El "Paso since 1960.

Arrangements are by Hillcrest Funeral Home. Jerry Taylor, 47, of El Paso died Saturday. Visitation will be from 4 to 9:30 p.m. today in Martin Funeral Home, where chapel service will be at 11 a.m. Tuesday.

Burial will be in Mount Carmel Cemetery. He is survived by his wife, Margaret. He had lived in Alamogordo for many years and had lived in El Paso eight months. Maria Elena Zamora, 40, of El Paso died Saturday. Visitation will be from 2 to 9 p.m.

Tuesday in Hillcrest Funeral Home, with rosary at 7 p.m. Funeral Mass will be at 11 a.m. Wednesday in Cristo Rey Catholic Church. Burial will be in Mount Carmel Cemetery. She was a homemaker and had been a lifelong resident of El Paso.

Avila, 37, of Pecos, Texas, died Friday. Office for the dead will be at 7 p.m. today in St. Patrick Cathedral. Funeral Mass will be at 10:30 a.m.

Tuesday in the cathedral. Burial arrangements are pending with Hill-crest Funeral Home. A native of Mexico, he had been a deacon at St. Pius Catholic Church in El Paso, as well as assistant pastor at San Antonio and Holy Mother of the Light Catholic churches in El Paso. He was serving at Santa Rosa Catholic Church in Pecos at the time of his death.

Olivina Aldaco Bejarano, 65, of El Paso died Friday. Visitation will be from 3 to 5 p.m. today in Hillcrest Funeral Home and from 7 to 9 p.m. today in Cristo Rey Catholic Church. Rosary will be at 8 p.m.

today in the church. Funeral Mass will be at 1 p.m. Tuesday in the church. Burial will be in Anthony, N.M., Cemetery. She was a home-maker and a one-year resident of El Paso.

Nieves C. Casas, 57, of El Paso died Saturday. Visitation will be from 3 to 9 p.m. Tuesday in Hillcrest Funeral Home, with rosary at 7 p.m. Funeral Mass will be at 10:30 a.m.

Wednesday in Our Lady of the Valley Catholic Church. Burial will be in Mount Carmel Cemetery. She is survived by her husband, Jesus. She was a homemaker and had" been a resident of El Paso since 1981. Ada M.

Embleton, 87, of El Paso died Sunday. Memorial service will be at 2 p.m. Wednesday in Hillcrest Funeral Home. She was a home-maker and had been a resident of El Paso for five years. Death notices are listed according to location of the mortuary.

DEMING Harry Sumner Call, 84, of Deming died Saturday. No services are scheduled. The body will be cremated. He is survived by his wife, Inez. Arrangements are by Baca's Wheeler Funeral Home.

LAS CRUCES Ruby Moselle Mcintosh, 85, of Las Cruces died Saturday. Graveside service will be at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Masonic Cemetery. She is survived by her husband, J. Earl.

She was a homemaker and had been a resident of Las Cruces since. 1957. Arrangements are by Graham's Mortuary. Enrique A. Narvaez, 80, of Las Cruces died Friday.

Rosary will be at 7 p.m. today in Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in Tortugas, N.M. Funeral Mass will be at 10 a.m. Tuesday in St. Genevieve's Catholic Church in Las Cruces.

Burial will be in St. Joseph's Cemetery. He is survived by his wife, Emma. He had been a resident of Las Cruces since 1914 and was a retired city worker. Memorial contributions may be made to the American Cancer Society.

'Arrangements are by Graham's Mortuary. Elva Jean Taylor, 44, of Las Cruces died Thursday. Funeral will be at 3 p.m. today in Graham's Mortuary Chapel. Burial will be in Hillcrest Memorial Gardens.

EL PASO COUNTY The Rev. Victor Soreque because they're not equipped to handle the outside world," Smith said. That's why, at the Tesuque Day School, academics are important. And so is learning about the outside world. Penny Garcia, who teaches 'the older children, said the double emphasis is one reason she likes teaching at the school.

"They have a real philosophy that all learning doesn't come out of books," Garcia said. "Other experiences are just as valuable." It is a cozy school, with kindergarteners in a small room by themselves, and the fourth-, fifth- and sixth-graders in a larger room, with a library in between. There is a second, smaller building where first- through third-graders attend class next to the kitchen. Comfortable cooking smells filled the air of the classroom as the youngsters studied their lessons. Vickie Downey works in the large building, in a smaller room next door to the kindergarten class.

She is the bilingual teacher. For these children, the second language is Tewa, their link to the past as they grow older. Most of the children, she said, "don't speak it. But they hear it at home. Their language has a lot to do with traditions and culture their whole life." She has four children who attend the school, and as a parent, she said she is pleased the education.

Studying their language, she said, "has to do with their ihilosophy in life. The Indian, anguage has a whole lot of meaning. A mountain isn't just a mountain. (The Tewa word for mountain) has a whole lot of feeling the life that a mountain carries. In the English language, you just say mountain.

That doesn't mean anything." The school emphasizes the Indian tradition of community spirit, Downey said. "In the English world, you just have the immediate family," Downey said. "In the Indian sense, you have relatives outside of that." 1 Learning those distinctions, those shades of difference between the'two worlds, helps the Indian children grow and learn the lessons they will need as adults, the educators said. "In the past, grandparents really emphasized that you get an education so you can succeed," Downey said. "But they also emphasized you have to know who you are and where you're coming from." A sign on the wall in the upper grades' classroom shows the depth of the children's roots: "Pueblo of Tesuque A.D.

1680." An Apple 2 computer in the corner of that room reveals a possible future for some of the children. Gazing down at two children as they run educational programs on the computer is a giant poster of an Indian storyteller. Once again, the two worlds meet and unite to benefit the Children. 7.

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