Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Malabar Branch Library is a branch library of the Los Angeles Public Library located in the Boyle Heights section of Los Angeles, California. The Malabar Branch began in 1914 as a book depository in a Sunday school room at the Brooklyn Heights Methodist Church on the corner of Evergreen Avenue and Malabar Street.
The County of Los Angeles Public Library operates the East Los Angeles Library. [57] [78] The East Los Angeles Library opened on May 1, 1923; originally it was a collection of books in a store. A building was built to house the collection several months later.
April 2, 1987 (655 W. Jefferson Blvd. University Park: Landmark large-event venue; headquarters of the Al Malaikah Temple, a division of the Shriners: 4: Aloha Apartment Hotel
In 1890 Soto Street was "a dirt road lined with pepper trees." [2] By 1927 the city had decided to pave it as an arterial.[3] [4] [5] The intersection of Soto Street and Brooklyn Avenue (now called Cesar Chavez Avenue) came to be considered the most important intersection in East Los Angeles, both when it was the center of the Los Angeles Jewish community (the largest Jewish community in the ...
The dough is barely blistered, the bubbles just-singed. The pizzas crunch with each bite, especially the chewy-interiored crust. There’s pop-punk blaring out of the speakers, there’s clam on ...
(Christina House / Los Angeles Times) It was a particular kind of box. The one used by the restaurant features artwork of a pizza kitchen: There's a brick oven, shelves stocked with ingredients ...
This home was built around 1877 in East Los Angeles (Lincoln Heights) for a man named Richard E.Shaw. This 19th Century Mansard style residence was sold to the city and moved to Heritage Square Museum in 1971 from 1926 Johnston st, Lincoln Heights 90031.
Todd Martens, Los Angeles Times features columnist, partakes in an immersive, game-like experience at the Atwater Village branch library in Los Angeles. The project, called the Bureau of Nooks and ...