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Presentación de los últimos resultados de la Encuesta Gallup Dominicana, quien hizo este estudio exclusivo para el periódico HOY.
Gallup-Hoy: 91.3% de la población aprueba 2 años de gobierno de Danilo Medina.
The group left to right: David Dierks, UI Foundation, Judy Hauge, Quill and Scroll office manager, Ellen Hoeppner, a long time friend from The Gallup Organization, Dick Johns, former Quill and Scroll executive director, Nancy Johns, Sarah Van Allen, and Barbara Gallup.
Photos by Professor Dick Johns.
Sen. Tom Udall (D-NM) hosts a workforce roundtable at UNM-Gallup to talk with local health care experts about how to create partnerships that strengthen education and career pipelines and help meet the demand for health care jobs in Western New Mexico.
Photos by Andrew Junker/CATHOLIC SUN.
The Apr. 23 episcopal ordination of Bishop James S. Wall, fourth Bishop of Gallup.
(c) 2009 The Catholic Sun. All rights reserved.
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/El_Rancho_Hotel_%26_Motel
"El Rancho Hotel, Gallup, New Mexico, is a historic hotel built by R.E. “Griff” Griffith,[2] the brother of film director D.W. Griffith. The pair encouraged early film production in the surrounding area.[2] It is located on old U.S. Route 66 and became the temporary home for many Hollywood movie stars.The rambling, three-story hotel building has a large portico with a central balcony reminiscent of the Southern Plantation style. The National Park Service describes it as having a “rusticated fantasy appearance.” Materials include brick, random ashlar stone, and roughewn wood with a wood shake roof and brick and stone chimneys. The lobby features a spectacular walk-in fireplace made of brick and random ashlar stone surrounded by twin stairways made of split logs that lead to the second floor guest rooms.[2] The slogan “Charm of Yesterday, Convenience of Tomorrow” is rendered in neon above the main entrance.[3]
It is on the Trails of the Ancients Byway, one of the designated New Mexico Scenic Byways.[4]
History
It opened in 1937 as a base for movie productions. Employees were trained by the Fred Harvey Company.[5]
With the opening of Interstate 40, the property fell into decline. Armand Ortega bought the hotel at a bankruptcy auction[6] and restored the property.