Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[20] [1] Stores in Douglas sell jackalope doe milk, but The New York Times questions its authenticity on grounds that milking a jackalope is known to be fraught with risk. [13] [21] One of the ways to catch a jackalope is to entice it with whiskey, the jackalope's beverage of choice. [22] [23] The jackalope can imitate the human voice ...
The former Santa Fe Railway Shops in Albuquerque, New Mexico, consist of eighteen surviving buildings erected between 1915 and 1925.The complex is located south of downtown in the Barelas neighborhood, bounded by Second Street, Hazeldine Avenue, Commercial Street, and Pacific Avenue.
The structure was designed by Santa Fe architect William Lumpkins. [4] In 1975, luxury men's department store Goodman's relocated from the Santa Fe Plaza. [5] In 1977, the center added a Montgomery Ward and JCPenney as anchors and a United Artist two-screen theater.
Jul. 10—Kroger and Albertsons Cos. on Tuesday made public the list of locations the grocery chains plan to sell as part of their planned merger, though none in Santa Fe appear to be affected.
Albuquerque. Burque [3] [4] The Duke City [5] The Q [4] [6] Anthony – Leap Year Capital of the World (shared with Anthony, Texas) [7] Carlsbad – Cavern City [8] Cloudcroft - A Pasture for the Clouds [9] Gallup – Native American Capital of the World [10] [11] Hatch – Chile Pepper Capital of the World [12] [13] Las Cruces. The City of the ...
The population is estimated to be 923,630 as of July 1, 2020, [7] making Greater Albuquerque the 61st-largest MSA in the nation. The Albuquerque MSA forms a part of the larger Albuquerque–Santa Fe–Los Alamos combined statistical area with a 2020 estimated population of 1,165,181, ranked 49th-largest in the country.
Coronado Center is a shopping mall in Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States.Built in 1965 by the Homart Development Company, a defunct real-estate division of the department store Sears, the mall has undergone several renovations and expansions in its history which have led to it becoming the largest building by area in New Mexico. [1]
Santa Fe: A Walk Through Time. Layton, Utah: Gibbs Smith. ISBN 1586851020. La Farge, John Pen (2006). Turn Left at the Sleeping Dog: Scripting the Santa Fe Legend, 1920–1955. University of New Mexico Press. ISBN 978-0826320155. Lovato, Andrew Leo (2006). Santa Fe Hispanic Culture: Preserving Identity in a Tourist Town. University of New ...