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The Devil Mountain Run takes place each year in March and is a 10k/5k/1-mile organized run starting in the Downtown area of Danville. Hot Summer Sundays Car Shows, which is held on Hartz Avenue in Downtown Danville on one Sunday in September, features hundreds of vintage pre-1960s automobiles on display with live music.
Chabad of Danville & S. Ramon: Danville [28] Chabad of Davis: Davis [29] Chabad of the Delta: Brentwood [30] Chabad of Downtown Los Angeles: Los Angeles [31] Chabad of Downtown S. Diego: San Diego [32] Chabad of El Cerrito: El Cerrito [33] Chabad Jewish Community Center of Folsom: Folsom [34] Chabad of Fremont Jewish Center: Fremont [35]
The first sporting event was a Stockton Thunder hockey game on December 10, 2005, in front of a sold-out crowd of 10,117, a game where the Thunder beat the Phoenix RoadRunners, 4–0. [ 5 ] On October 24, 2023, Adventist Health and ASM Global announced plans for a new partnership that will rename the city of Stockton's 10,000-seat facility to ...
Pacific Commons is a master-planned, mixed-use development consisting of 840 acres in Fremont, California currently in development by Catellus Development Corporation.It sits on part of the site of what was once the Fremont Dragstrip/Baylands Raceway Park and the Sky Sailing Airport, a glider field.
The Tri-Valley encompasses the cities of Dublin, Livermore, Pleasanton and San Ramon, the town of Danville, and the CDPs of Alamo, Blackhawk, Camino Tassajara, Diablo, and Norris Canyon. The area is known for its Mediterranean climate, wineries, and nature. It is primarily suburban in character.
Eureka Mall – Eureka – now a conventional outdoor shopping center Fallbrook Mall – West Hills (November 12, 1963 – 1997) – now Fallbrook Center Florin Mall – Sacramento (February 1968 – February 28, 2006) – now Florin Towne Centre
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Eugene O'Neill had won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1936, and used the prize money to build what he named Tao House above Danville. [3] O'Neill and his wife lived in the home from 1937 to 1944. [4] By the time he moved here, O'Neill had already lived in over 35 places, but he called this secluded house his "final home and harbor". [5]