Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Historic Jayhawk State Theatre of Kansas, is a theater located in downtown Topeka, Kansas, United States. The theatre opened on August 16, 1926. The theatre opened on August 16, 1926. The Jayhawk Hotel & Crosby Bros shopping complex where attached to the theatre making it a grand complex for visitors to eat, sleep and be entertained.
The Topeka Performing Arts Center is a 2,425-capacity performing arts center located in Topeka, Kansas. Opened in 1939, it was built in the Art Deco style and was renovated in 1991, and reopened that same year officially named the Topeka Performing Arts Center.
The Stormont Vail Events Center, formerly known as Kansas Expocentre, is a 10,000-seat multi-purpose arena built in 1987 in Topeka, Kansas.Previously, the Topeka Sizzlers of the Continental Basketball Association, Kansas Koyotes indoor football team,Topeka Tarantulas, Topeka ScareCrows, Topeka Pilots ice hockey and Topeka Tropics of the National Arena League (NAL) teams played there.
Boulevard Theatres opened its first location May 2022 in Towne West Square. [2] The location is in the former Warren Theatres Movie Machine, a 5 screen multiplex. [3] In preparing this theatre for opening, Boulevard Theatres installed new projectors and sound, refreshed the auditoriums and remodeled the lobby and concessions area, introducing Wichita's first fully self-serve movie theatre ...
See every football schedule for teams in the Topeka-area. Friday nights are right around the corner. See every football schedule for teams in the Topeka-area. ... East Kansas City (Mo.), Oct. 18 ...
Greensburg is a city in and the county seat of Kiowa County, Kansas, United States. [1] As of the 2020 United States census , the population of the city was 740. [ 4 ] It is home to the world's largest hand-dug well .
Suicide is being investigated as the manner of death for an adult fatally struck by a vehicle late Friday on Interstate 470 near S.W. 21st Street, a city of Topeka spokeswoman said Wednesday.
On May 4, 2007, a tornado hit Greensburg, destroying the center. [9] The well reopened on May 26, 2012. The new visitor center, also known as the Big Well Museum, contains a circular timeline of the city of Greensburg in three stages, including the beginnings of Greensburg, the Tornadic event, and the Eco-Friendly Rebuilding of Greensburg.