Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 2003, the Apple Core won the Triple Crown EJHL Championship, finishing as regular season and post-season champions. In 2013, the various Tier III junior hockey leagues in the north east went through a re-organization, which included the Apple Core joining the Atlantic Junior Hockey League. The Atlantic Junior Hockey League then re-branded ...
Originally the site of the Westroads Shopping Center anchored by Stix, Baer & Fuller, the property was sold in 1984 to Hycel Properties, which demolished most of the mall except the Stix north wing, including Walgreens (demolished and now a recently closed Weber Grill restaurant), [4] and built the Saint Louis Galleria.
St. Louis Mills, also known as St. Louis Outlet Mall, was a shopping mall in Hazelwood, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis, Missouri, United States. Opened in 2003, the mall struggled with tenancy for many years before closing in 2019. The first redevelopment effort, a sports complex called the Powerplex STL, operated from 2019 to 2023. It was ...
One of the malls it retrofitted after a Macy’s closure is Stonestown Galleria. In the San Francisco mall, a former Macy’s is now a Whole Foods, movie theater, sporting goods store and health ...
The Eastern Junior Hockey League (EJHL) was a USA Hockey-sanctioned Tier III junior ice hockey league. Founded in 1993 by Dan Esdale, [1] [2] the EJHL had fourteen teams from across the Northeastern United States. The EJHL champion then competed for the National Championship against the champions of the other Tier III leagues and a host city. [3]
Facing competition from St. Louis Galleria, which opened in 1984 and was expanded in 1992, Plaza Frontenac's new owners hired Michael Mindlin and David Suttle, of Hellmuth, Obata, & Kassabaum, who developed a merchandising strategy for the re-positioning and renovation of Plaza Frontenac that resulted in a new mix of day spa, art theater, white ...
The junior pro hockey league team intended to build a complex with four sheets of ice, replacing its aging facility at 7201 Hickman Road in Urbandale. But costs for the work rose, and negotiations ...
On Labor Day 2011, the Continental Hockey Association officially changed its name to the Eastern States Hockey League. [1] After the 2012–13 season, the ESHL disbanded after several teams left to join the newly renamed Eastern Hockey League or one of the newly formed United States Premier Hockey League Elite or Empire Divisions.