Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "Cinemas and movie theaters in Louisiana" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C.
Monroe is the ninth-largest city in the U.S. state of Louisiana, and is the parish seat and largest city of Ouachita Parish. With a 2020 census -tabulated population of 47,702, [ 4 ] it is the principal city of the Monroe metropolitan statistical area , the second-largest metropolitan area in North Louisiana .
Pecanland Mall is an enclosed shopping mall in Monroe, Louisiana, United States. The mall was named Pecanland because the land on which the mall is located was formerly a pecan farm. The mall is on Interstate 20 near U.S. Highway 165, the two major highways in the area. Pecanland Mall has 6 anchor stores: Belk, Tilt Studio, Dillard's, Dick's ...
Cinemas and movie theaters in Louisiana (8 P) F. Film festivals in Louisiana (6 P) Films set in Louisiana (2 C, 184 P) Films shot in Louisiana (1 C, 230 P)
The theater officially opened on September 29, 1911, as a performing arts venue charging $10 US per person for admission. It was in 1942 that the theater was acquired by Malco Theaters Inc. and transformed into a movie theater which was located only two blocks from the Temple Theater (above).
I-10 was widened to three lanes in each direction from the I-10/I-12 split to Highland Road (exit 166) from late 2008 to spring 2013. [citation needed] On April 8, 2017, Louisiana DOTD broke ground on the reconstruction of seven miles (11 km) of I-10 between I-49 (exit 103) and the Atchafalaya Basin.
The Monroe metropolitan area, officially the Monroe metropolitan statistical area, is a metropolitan statistical area in Northern Louisiana that covers three parishes—Ouachita, Union, and Morehouse. According to the 2020 census, the MSA had a population of 207,104.
KNOE-TV has been the dominant news station in the Ark-La-Miss for more than a quarter-century. It has won numerous state, regional and national journalism awards, including the 2008 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for News Director Taylor Henry's investigative series on rogue members of the Louisiana National Guard who looted stores they were deployed to protect during Katrina.