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The Summit, which opened in October 1997, is a 1 million square foot (93,000 m 2) upscale lifestyle center located at the intersection of U.S. Highway 280 and Interstate 459 in Birmingham, Alabama, United States, between the suburbs of Mountain Brook and Vestavia Hills.
An Iranian-born research scientist who filed a federal discrimination lawsuit alleging a co-worker at the University of Alabama at Birmingham harassed her for nine years because of her ethnicity ...
Abd al-A'la al-Sabziwari (1910–1993) Abdulrahman Fattahi (born 1950s) Abdollah Javadi-Amoli (born 1933) Ahmad Jannati (born 1927) Ahmad Mojtahedi Tehrani (1923–2008) Ali Akbar Ghoreishi (born 1928) Ali Mohammad Dastgheib Shirazi (born 1935) Ali Movahedi-Kermani (born 1931) Ali Khamenei (born 1939) Fakhraddin Mousavi (1930–2021)
Faraz Fatemi (born 1977), Iranian footballer; Faraz Fatmi, Indian politician belonging to Janata Dal (United) Faraz Jaka (born 1985), American professional poker player and businessman; Faraz Javed, television journalist, presenter, and producer in the US and United Arab Emirates; Faraz Kamalvand (born 1976), Iranian football coach; Faraz Khan ...
And since the University of Alabama's sorority membership is one of the largest in the country (with more than 2,000 women rushing 24 sororities every year), the school invests in them. Most of ...
Eastwood Mall Theatre was also the site of the world premiere of the 1976 film Stay Hungry, which was set and filmed in Birmingham. In 1967, Newman Waters sold Eastwood Mall to Alabama Farm Bureau (today known as ALFA), which owned the property until the mid-1980s. A competing mall, Century Plaza, opened across the street in 1975.
The Regions-Harbert Plaza is a 32-story, 437-foot-tall (133 m) office building in Birmingham, Alabama.Originally known as the AmSouth-Harbert Plaza, it was renamed on July 13, 2007, after AmSouth Bancorporation - the building's largest tenant - merged with Birmingham-based Regions Financial Corporation.
The Morris Avenue Historic District is an industrial district in Birmingham, Alabama. The district covers Morris Avenue from 20th Street to 25th Street and First Avenue from 21st to 26th Street. The Morris Avenue section comprises a set of late 19th century masonry warehouses that were Birmingham's main food distribution center until the 1950s. [2]