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The Tara Theatre was opened in June 1968 by Loew's Theatres. It embodied the modernist architecture popular at the time. It embodied the modernist architecture popular at the time. Originally called Loew's Tara , the theater's name memorialized the fictional Tara plantation, home of the O'Hara family in Margaret Mitchell 's novel Gone with the ...
4925 N Academy Blvd, Colorado Springs. Florida. 8909 US Highway 19, Port Richey ... Georgia. 6550 Tara Blvd, Jonesboro. Illinois. 4625 N Sterling Ave, Peoria. 902 Commons Drive, Geneva. 1604 N ...
Tara Performing Arts High School was founded on March 17, 1994. [2] It began as an after-school program for middle schoolers, and developed into a high school in 1997. It graduated its first class in 2001. [3]
Tara Golf & Country Club was the first stage of development, including single-family homes, veranda-style condos, multi-story terrace condos with elevator access, and paired villas. Country Club membership was mandatory and was included with each lot or parcel. In 1992, a shopping center and elementary school were built in Tara. [3]
Young powered the Hawks to a wild 124-121 win over the Utah Jazz on Tuesday night with one of the most ridiculous shots of his career. Young's shot was only half of the finish at the Delta Center.
Tara is a fictional plantation in the state of Georgia, in the historical novel Gone with the Wind by Margaret Mitchell. In the story, Tara is located 5 miles (8 km) from Jonesboro (originally spelled Jonesborough), in Clayton County , on the east side of the Flint River about 20 miles (32 km) south of Atlanta .
The north end of Clayton County has part of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport, thus Tara Field served general aviation, especially for the Atlanta Motor Speedway immediately next to it. At its July 12, 2011, meeting, the Clayton County Board of Commissioners voted to sell the airport to Henry County in a deal worth $17.7 million.
In 1889 Horace W.S. Cleveland proposed that the city of Omaha develop a series of "broad ornamental avenues, known as boulevards or parkways" designed "with a tasteful arrangement of trees and shrubbery at the sides and in the center", similar to the comprehensive plans of European cities in the mid-19th century.