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Mar. 18—ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The New Mexico Court of Appeals upheld a conviction in the high-profile case of a man accused of beating a high school student with a shovel — almost killing her ...
Sep. 25—The state Court of Appeals on Wednesday reversed a 2nd Judicial District Court judgment in a lawsuit that would have required the New Mexico Children, Youth and Families Department to ...
Belén Consolidated Schools is a school district headquartered in Belen, New Mexico, US. Within Valencia County , in addition to the vast majority of Belen, the district includes the municipality of Rio Communities and the census-designated places of Adelino , Casa Colorada , Jarales , Madrone , Pueblitos , and Sausal .
State courts of New Mexico. New Mexico Supreme Court [1] New Mexico Court of Appeals [1] New Mexico District Court (13 judicial districts) [2] New Mexico Magistrate Court [3] Bernalillo County Metropolitan Court [4] New Mexico Municipal Court [2] New Mexico Probate Court [2] Federal courts located in New Mexico. United States District Court for ...
Belén High School (BHS) is a public high school located in Belen, Valencia County, New Mexico. [7] A part of Belén Consolidated Schools , it opened in 1916 as the first public high school in Valencia County.
The Dixon School Case (Zellers v.Huff [1]) was a lawsuit started in 1948 in New Mexico contesting the use of nuns, religious brothers and priests as teachers in publicly supported schools under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.
While the southeast portion of the county is in the Alamogordo district, that district contracts education of residents there to the Dell City Independent School District of Dell City, Texas, [3] due to the distances involved, as the mileage to Alamogordo from the former Cienega School was 100 miles (160 km) while the distance to Dell City is 20 miles (32 km).
New Mexico's public buildings began to grow in scale and ambition in the 1880s, spurred by the arrival of the railroad. With skilled workers, modern building materials, and more advanced construction techniques now available, larger and grander county courthouses emulating those in the eastern states were seen as points of civic pride.