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In the early 1990s, Harkins acquired several theaters operated by Mann Theatres. Most of the theaters acquired were a result of a lawsuit. [10] In 1988, Harkins re-opened the Cine Capri theater in Phoenix. The original Cine Capri was the largest screen in Arizona, measuring more than 70 feet (21 m) long.
Goodrich Quality Theaters: 30 281 Grand Rapids, MI Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Missouri, Florida Harkins Theatres: 35 501 Scottsdale, AZ Arizona, California, Colorado, Oklahoma Laemmle Theatres: 9 44 Los Angeles, CA Los Angeles, California Landmark Theatres: 52 252 Los Angeles, CA
In 2016, Harkins announced that they're planning to re-brand all of the Cine Capri theaters, with the exception of the Scottsdale 101 theater to CINÉ 1, which is now called CINÉ XL. [ 4 ] Harkins President, Mike Bowers says the reason for the rebrand is because the Cine Capri name didn't carry as much weight in different states than it does ...
The Plaza Theater was the crowning jewel of 1920s development on West Congress Street in Tucson and the only indoor Spanish language theater in Southern Arizona.The theater was designed by renowned local Tucson architect Roy Place in 1930 for A. Kaufman a local commercial developer and pioneer merchant and leased to Los Angeles theater operator Joe Gross.
Chino Hills is served by Omnitrans' OmniLink demand-response service open to the general public. For $2.50 each way, one can travel throughout the city and transfer for free to the Omnitrans public bus at the Chino Hills Marketplace and the Chino Hills Civic Center. The dial-a-ride service operates five days a week, mostly during daytime hours ...
Heaven Is for Real is a 2014 American Christian drama film written and directed by Randall Wallace and co-written by Christopher Parker, based on the 2010 book Heaven Is for Real by Pastor Todd Burpo and Lynn Vincent. The film stars Greg Kinnear, Kelly Reilly, Connor Corum, Margo Martindale, and Thomas Haden Church. [3]
A housing shortage has recurred and apparently reached the crisis stage. In a 2014 California treatise on real estate development, the authors opined that "[C]ommunities across California continue to confront the challenge posed by a scarcity of housing, particularly of affordable housing. In the last several decades, housing production in the ...
The Williams claim to the Chino Rancho was patented in 1869. Beet sugar factory in the Chino Valley, with Mount San Antonio visible to the left, c. 1906. Richard Gird was the next owner of the Rancho. Beginning in 1887, his land was subdivided and laid out. It became the "Town of Chino", and incorporated into a city in 1910. [12]