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Pentagram City (or The Pentagram) is a massive urbanized city in the center of the first circle of Hell inhabited by demons both native to Hell and those formerly human. The main roadways are laid in the shape of a pentagram , and common establishments are casinos, nightclubs, adult film studios, brothels, restaurants, television stations, and ...
Washington DC's former city hall is an example of neoclassical architecture, which was in vogue when it was built John A. Wilson Building , current municipal building, also known as the District Building
The screensaver depicts a slowly looping city street in the foreground, composed of businesses, a diner, a movie theater, and a city hall. Across a body of water in the background sits a silhouette of skyscrapers and buildings, with unusual amounts of chaos: volcanoes, a spaceship, a robot monster, and more. The complimentary color scheme is ...
In a small village, the houses abut each other, forming a ring around the central square.The majority of the villagers are cruel and hypocritical: the cleaning woman harvests, but never shares the apples from the tree in the square; the parish priest is an alcoholic and spits on the prisoner; the miser hoards his gold coins; the nosy old woman spies on her neighbours; and a married man berates ...
It’s the latest fuel added to the fire at Prairie Village City Hall. The housing debate, which has now morphed into a protracted political battle, has divided the northeast Johnson County city ...
A Town Called Panic (French: Panique au village) is a 2009 internationally co-produced stop-motion animated adventure fantasy comedy film directed by Stéphane Aubier and Vincent Patar from a screenplay co-written by Aubier, Patar, Guillaume Malandrin and Vincent Tavier.
Apr. 29—The smell of new construction is in the air as visitors enter the new Teutopolis Village Hall. Teutopolis Village President Greg Hess decided not to run for another term this year ...
In 1911, the city of Huntington purchased a piece of land next to the county courthouse on 5th Avenue to construct the Huntington City Hall, using Verus T. Ritter's style of Neoclassical architecture. The building was completed in 1915 and included a 2,500-seat auditorium named The Jean Carlo Stephenson Auditorium. [1] [4]