Alberson to Run for Senate in District #37

Cathey Alberson
Cathey Alberson, a native New Mexican, announced her candidacy for the New Mexico Senate, District 37 this afternoon in a press release: Cathey earned her Bachelors of Finance Degree from NMSU and employed these skills at both a local CPA firm and a local bank.
Mrs. Alberson has been married to her husband Dennis for 24 years . They have two sons and three daughters. Cathey and Dennis have been small business owners for 19 years.
Cathey is committed to Las Cruces, and knows the importance of community service. She has been active in the Junior League and the Republican Party of Dona Ana County. Cathey has a heart for our youth, working with organizations that provide political education to our young people and encouraging them to be involved in their community, state, and nation. As a tennis coach for our youth, she has promoted active participation in the United States Tennis Association.

Cathey Alberson and Family
She has also served other communities through mission trips to Juarez, New Orleans, and various cities in Texas. Cathey believes it is a moral responsibility to be involved in the lives of others and to serve them as opportunities arise. As a mother of five, Cathey is passionate to see families represented and supported in the New Mexico Legislature. She sees a need for small businesses of New Mexico to have a voice in Santa Fe. The next generation will have to live with the decisions and actions of this generation and Cathey is resolute about leaving a legacy of ethical standards in business and life, while teaching young people how to be involved and responsible for their state.

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New Mexico's $400 Million Dollar Industry

El Musico
ROSWELL, N.M. (KRQE) - Horse racing brings in more than $400-million into New Mexico's economy every year a nd now the champions of tomorrow are being born today, sometimes as many as seven a day. From the point these horses take their first breath, to the point when they're ready to take on the track, Susan Hunter is there. She's what some call a mid-wife for race horses.
"It's a really cool thing to get to be that much in their life when they're growing up," said Hunter. Her place in Roswell, Hunter Creek Farms, has about 140 horses, with 95-percent being race horses, bred for the track.
Up to 150 horses are delivered at Hunter's farm each year from January until June, when up to seven are born in one day.
El Musico
"It is so amazing, I've done over 13-hundred and it's still the coolest thing I've ever, every baby is still just like the very first time," explained Hunter.
Pregnancy for horses can last around 11 months, and Hunter said each one of these mares on her farm are ready to have their baby any minute, which is why she keeps a close eye on them.
"I have 24 cameras around in the barn, in the pens outside the barn, so I can watch the mares constantly, even if I'm not out there with them," Hunter said. Read full story here: News New Mexico

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