Event promotes healthy kids
More than 5,000 people attended the National Hispanic Cultural Center Foundation’s Dia del Nino celebration Saturday.
The center, in partnership with New Mexico Children, Youth and Families, sponsored the event to promote healthy, literate children and families in New Mexico.
According to the center’s Web site, about 400,000 New Mexicans don’t have health insurance.
Maggie Smith, owner of Striped Couch Productions, said she was hired to coordinate a bike ride to start the day’s festivities.
“We decided to do a bike ride because I’m a cyclist, and I think most people can do a bike race. Participants had the choice of doing a 10-mile, a 22-mile and a 54-mile ride,” she said. “So, we had different distances for all levels. If you were just a beginner, you could do a 10-mile ride, and people that are more serious cyclists could do the 54-mile ride.”
Cyclist Karen Sheff said she competed in the 22-mile ride to begin her cycling career.
“I did it because I’m starting to train for a century (a 100-mile bike ride) in the fall, hopefully in Tucson,” she said.
At the finish line, students from the Crystal Mountain School of Therapeutic Massage were on hand to help any bikers in pain.
Jennifer Thomas, an instructor at the school, said the event was beneficial for all New Mexicans.
“I think it’s great. It’s important to promote other types of health care, and events like this teach people about other types of preventative medicines,” she said.
There were 65 booths offering free health care, including diabetes and blood-pressure screenings and immunizations for children.
Health insurance representatives were on hand to give free consultations.
There was also a train ride, a petting zoo, a book drive and crafts for children at the event.
Susan Sophia said she went to the event for the free entertainment.
Tags: del, dia, nino
May 1st, 2008 at 12:43 am
Oh yeah… but we’re suppose to embrace the Left Behind and Lion, Witch, and Wardrobe crap… fucking religious fucknuts. Can we go back to persecuting them again? Throwing them to the lions and shit.
May 1st, 2008 at 1:33 am
Junk food is a treat. There’s nothing wrong with a small dish of sliced, deep fried potatoes, bought piping hot from a street vendor, or deep fried breaded chicken, once in a blue moon.By the same token, a lovely birthday cake is not a travesty. The problem is when a child’s diet is overwhelmed by the sweet, greasy and bland, and where they cannot enjoy real flavours, real fruit, unadulterated vegetables and meats and unsweetened milk.
May 1st, 2008 at 2:24 am
The books are fantastic. Any catholic who is afraid of them is extremely insecure in their faith.The books are completely silent on whether the religion described is even Christian.
May 1st, 2008 at 3:14 am
To hear Catholics railing against a fictional work of art because of what they call ‘intellectual dishonesty’ is just plain funny. I mean, the central ritual of Christianity is where they all gather around and eat a dead man’s body and drink a dead man’s blood because they think they will live forever if they do and because they think they will be punished forever if they don’t. If that isn’t ‘intellectual dishonesty’ then there is no such thing as ‘intellectual dishonesty’.And I Am Being Very Kind About All Of This…
May 1st, 2008 at 4:05 am
Oh whatever happened to that happy go luck freedom loving USA we used to admire?
May 1st, 2008 at 4:55 am
The Catholics I grew up with were some of the craziest (in a good way) fun people I knew. They fucked, swore, did drugs and generally raised hell. Guess the church isn’t as handy at molding minds as it thinks.If you can’t promote your world view with that amount of influence/control there’s something wrong with your world view or you suck or both.