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The Broward Center for the Performing Arts is the managing partner of the theater and is assisting NSU to provide additional cultural programming opportunities for Broward County residents, university students and faculty members, especially in the central region of the county. Many quality productions have already taken place in the Center.
The Parker Playhouse is a 1,147-seat theatre in southern Florida.. The Playhouse was established by Dr. Louis Parker. [1] The curtain rose for the first time on February 6, 1967 as E.G. Marshall and Dennis O'Keefe starred in Neil Simon’s The Odd Couple.
Location: 707 NE 8th Street, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33304; Rose and Alfred Miniaci Performing Arts Center, equipped with lighting and acoustics, and a satellite downlink for viewing broadcast and transmitted productions, this hall is used for many types of community events, corporate gatherings, lectures and children's productions. Capacity: 498
A quick check-up today shows a place on Northridge Drive with 27 specialists tending 10,000 patients, as many as 150 a day for 28,000 patient visits per year. ... Sunderlin sees 24 patients a day ...
DiSaronno got into an argument at home, police arrived, and they found drugs in the apartment. She received probation, spent three weeks in detox, but couldn’t kick her addiction.
Dr. El Sanadi, who became president of Broward Health in December 2014, committed suicide on January 23, 2016. El Sanadi was a practicing emergency medicine physician at Broward Health Medical Center, chief of emergency medicine for Broward Health and chairman of the Florida Board of Medicine. [20]
In January 1985, thirteen sites were considered for a proposed Broward County Convention Center. One of the leading sites was a 25-acre (1,100,000 sq ft; 100,000 m 2) parcel that included a 15-acre (650,000 sq ft; 61,000 m 2) trailer park near Fort Lauderdale–Hollywood International Airport at U.S. 1 and Northwest 10th Street.
Television competition came to South Florida first on two stations in the ultra high frequency (UHF) band, originally licensed to Fort Lauderdale. WFTL-TV (channel 23), the first post-freeze TV outlet in the state, [ 44 ] [ 45 ] started on May 5, 1953, [ 46 ] as an outlet for previously unseen NBC programs; some NBC output remained on WTVJ. [ 47 ]