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Pets Of The Week: Charlie And Chestnut

Charlie, a 3-year-old, 57lb sweetheart, has overcome a tough past — clipped ears and a heartworm battle — and come out healthy, trained, and full of love. Through our Paws in the Pen program, he spent 8 weeks learning basic training alongside two devoted inmate partners and is now ready for a forever home. Charlie is affectionate, gentle, and endlessly forgiving. He loves to be near, leans into pets, and meets you with eyes that say, “I still believe in love.” Fully vaccinated, neutered, microchipped, and trained, he’s ready to show a family the joy of a second chance. Apply on our website to meet Read More

SFCC Pickleball Club Host Yuletide Pickeball Palooza Dec. 14

SFCC News:

SANTA FE — Santa Fe Community College’s Pickleball Club will present a Yuletide Pickleball Palooza Sunday, Dec. 14 at the William C. Witter Fitness Education Center (FEC), 6401 Richards Avenue, Santa Fe, 87508.

Pre-registration is required online at https://bit.ly/4pdiw7d. Time slots accommodate players of all levels. Beginner and Intermediate play is from 10 a.m. to noon (doors open at 9:30 a.m.).

Advanced and Advanced Intermediate play is from 1 to 3 p.m. (doors open at 12:30 p.m.).

The event will support SFCC students in two ways. Fifty percent of the $20 registration Read More

NM’s Changing Climate And Our Health: Candidates Respond

HCNM News:

SANTA FE — Healthy Climate New Mexico is pleased to invite the public to our Town Hall for Governor and Lieutenant Governor candidates of both parties, 6 to 8 p.m., Thursday, Dec. 4, at the CNM Workforce Training Center, 5600 Eagle Rock Ave NE, near Alameda and I-25 in Albuquerque, New Mexico 87113. 

Doors open at 6 for networking and information tables, and the Town Hall is from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Refreshments will be provided. 

“In 2026, New Mexico voters will elect a new governor. As we approach the primaries, it is critical that voters are aware of the candidate’s plans to safeguard our communities’ Read More

Home Country: Last Person On Earth

Home Country
By SLIM RANDLES

As I lay there in my super-duper borrowed-from-the-Army mummy bag, I had time to think about things. Mostly, I pondered how stupid I’d been to take a dog team out across the North Slope of Alaska in November.

As I can now contemplate, 50 years later, it was a dumb thing to do, making the first crossing north to south from Prudhoe Bay’s frozen oil fields to the Brooks Range. Brooks Range roughly translates to “that frozen rockpile there to the south.”

But even then, in the deadly silence of the arctic, I knew my doing this was… well, me. I guessed at the time it would cost me my life, Read More

Sangre de Cristo Chorale Holiday Concert Will Feature Lauridsen’s Mid-Winter Songs Dec. 6-7

Courtesy/Sangre de Cristo Chorale

SCC News:

SANTA FE — The Sangre de Cristo Chorale will perform its holiday concert, Mid-Winter Songs, at 4 p.m., Saturday, Dec. 6 and Sunday, Dec. 7 in Santa Fe. Both concerts will be at the First Presbyterian Church of Santa Fe. Celebrating its 48th season, the 52-voice Chorale is led by Music Director George Case and accompanied by pianist Deborah Wagner.

The centerpiece of this concert is Morten Lauridsen’s five-movement choral symphony Mid- Winter Songs for chorus and piano. Based on the poetry of British poet and novelist Robert Graves, Mid-Winter Songs Read More

New ACCT, CSCC Report Reveals Who Community College Trustees Are And Why They Serve

ACCT News:

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Association of Community College Trustees (ACCT) in partnership with the Center for the Study of Community Colleges (CSCC) released Community College Trusteeship in 2025: A Commitment to Serve. This report is the most comprehensive analysis to date of community college trustees: who they are, why they serve, and what they perceive to be the most critical priorities and challenges for their institutions and the sector.

“Community college trustees are publicly elected and appointed officials who volunteer their time to serve higher education institutions Read More

Luján, Escobar Introduce Bicameral Legislation To Address Deadly Hate Crimes By Closing Dangerous Loophole

NATIONAL News: 

WASHINGTON, D.C. — U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.) introduced the Disarm Hate Act, legislation aimed at addressing hate-motivated gun violence in communities across the United States. The bill would protect vulnerable communities by closing a dangerous gap in federal law, prohibiting individuals convicted of misdemeanor-level hate crimes – or those who received an enhanced sentence for a misdemeanor offense following a judicial finding of hate- or bias-based motivation from purchasing or possessing firearms. Congresswoman Veronica Escobar (D-Texas) leads companion Read More

Robinson: Rethinking The American Revolution

By SHERRY ROBINSON
All She Wrote
© 2025 New Mexico News Services

The USA is a miracle, and the revolution that made it possible could easily have gone the wrong way. These were a couple of thoughts I had after watching “The American Revolution,” on PBS. Instead of the tidy history I learned in school, the revolution was a sprawling and complex series of events.

What the creators want us to know is that the United States was born of violence and division. And it was as much a civil war as a revolution because a great many colonists were loyal to Britain. They thought rebellion was insanity.

Britain was an Read More

Heinrich Hosts Roundtable To Underscore How Cuts To Public Lands Workforce & Cost Of Health Care Is Harming New Mexico Families

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M), Ranking Member of the U.S. Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee and co-founder of the U.S. Senate Stewardship Caucus, met with the New Mexico State Forester, public lands advocates, and small business owners to discuss the Trump Administration’s cuts to the public lands workforce and attacks on Americans’ public lands, Nov. 21, 2025. Courtesy photo

U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich (D-N.M), meets with New Mexicans facing skyrocketing health care costs because of Trump and Republicans’ refusal to extend the Affordable Care Act’s enhanced premium tax Read More

FBI: Gallup Man Charged With Involuntary Manslaughter

FBI News:

ALBUQUERQUE — A Gallup man has been indicted on federal charges for allegedly killing another person while driving recklessly.

According to court documents, Aug. 11, 2024, Justin Othermedicine, 22, an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation, killed John Doe while operating a motor vehicle with reckless disregard for life.

Othermedicine is charged with involuntary manslaughter and will remain on conditions of release pending trial, which has not yet been scheduled. If convicted, Othermedicine faces up to eight years in prison.

Acting U.S. Attorney Ryan Ellison made the announcement Read More

Luján Unveils Legislation To Reverse SNAP Cuts, Restore Food Security For Millions Of Americans

U.S. SENATE News:

WASHINGTON, D.C. — Last week, U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Luján (D-N.M.), Ranking Member of the Senate Agriculture Committee’s Subcommittee on Food and Nutrition, Specialty Crops, Organics, and Research, led the entire Senate Democratic Caucus in introducing the Restoring Food Security for American Families and Farmers Act of 2025 to repeal the devastating Republican cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) made in the Republican Budget Betrayal.

During the Republican shutdown, Senator Luján’s efforts to ensure millions of Americans would receive their Read More

Duplicate Bridge In Los Alamos: Nov. 19, 2025

BRIDGE News:

Former resident Mike Hall played in our Wednesday game this week. Winners this week were Neill Goltz and Jerry Morzinski on Monday, and Jerry Fleming and Cliff Rudy on Wednesday.

Flight B winners were Jan Barnes and Reggie Fuchs on Monday and Reggie Fuchs and Bobby Haynes on Wednesday.

Today’s hand is very competitive, even at the game level, which is unusual. Before you look at the auction and play, look at the four hands and visualize the bidding.

Board 12: West is the dealer and N/S are vulnerable.

West is the dealer and opens 1NT. I would not be surprised if North made a preemptive Read More

Holmans USA Celebrates 70 Years As New Mexico-Grown Technology Partner

Holmans CEO John Santoru

HOLMANS USA News:

          • As HOLMANS USA celebrates its 70th anniversary, the company is reflecting on its transformation from a 1955 map shop into a national technology provider with enduring ties to New Mexico’s public-sector and research institutions, including its long-established presence in Los Alamos.

HOLMANS USA is celebrating its 70th anniversary, marking seven decades of evolution from a local map and surveying shop founded in 1955 into a nationally recognized technology partner supporting customers across four time zones.

Originally established as Holman’s Read More

New Mexico Court Of Appeals Celebrates Milestone By Judge J. Miles Hanisee Who Has Written 1,000 Opinions

Court of Appeals Judge J. Miles Hanisee holds a gift from his law clerks displaying the names of the 1,000 court cases in which he wrote the opinions. From left, Kara Shair-Rosenfield (former clerk), Court of Appeals Judge Kristopher Houghton (former clerk), Walker Boyd (former clerk), Judge Hanisee, Mary Helen Pavlides (clerk), Breanne Potter (clerk), Graciela Esquivel (former clerk), and Oliver Stephanz (former clerk). Courtesy/NMSC

NMSC News:

ALBUQUERQUE — The state Court of Appeals honored Judge J. Miles Hanisee this week for his contributions to New Mexico law by writing 1,000 opinions Read More

Los Alamos Researchers Receive Laboratory Fellows’ Prizes

Top row, Matthew Biss, Sowjanya Gollapinni. Bottom, Andrei Simakov and Etienne Vermeulen. Courtesy/LANL

LANL News:

  • Simakov recognized for research; Biss, Gollapinni, Vermeulen for leadership

Four Los Alamos National Laboratory researchers have been awarded Laboratory Fellows’ Prizes: Andrei Simakov received the Fellows’ Prize for Research and Matthew Biss, Sowjanya Gollapinni and Etienne Vermeulen received the Fellows’ Prize for Leadership.

“We are honored to celebrate the extraordinary accomplishments of this year’s Fellows’ Prize recipients,” Laboratory Director Thom Read More

Fr. Glenn: Tossing Out Garbage

By Fr. Glenn Jones:

I saw a good inspirational video on social media the other day. It began with a driver’s angry tirade at a cab driver after a narrow miss almost fender bender, and the cabbie simply just smiled and waved back. The passenger asked him how he could be so calm and so friendly in such a situation. Mr. Cabbie quietly responded that people are like garbage trucks—they collect and carry so much frustration, disappointment and anger, and when the garbage piles up, they need a place to dump it—and sometimes it just happens to be on us. But, realizing this pent up emotion is not really targeted Read More

Posts From The Road: Oklahoma Aquarium

Shark Tunnel: The popular shark exhibit and Shark Tank Adventure Tunnel at the Oklahoma Aquarium leads visitors through the 500,000-gallon shark tank, where they can watch sharks swim around and view the largest number of bull sharks living in an aquarium setting anywhere. Photo by Gary Warren/ladailypost.com

Pot-bellied Seahorse: The Pot-bellied Seahorse is a unique fish. that appears to have a head like a horse, tail of a monkey, and fins of a fish. Seahorses are the only known animal where the male gives birth. The brood pouch is used to hold eggs. The female will deposit up to 700 eggs into Read More

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