Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Raising Cane's River Center (originally named the Riverside Centroplex and later the Baton Rouge River Center [1]) is an entertainment complex in downtown Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Opened in 1977, the complex includes: an arena, ballroom, exhibition center, theatre and library. The venue hosts over 500 events per year.
The Prince Hall Masonic Temple is a historic building located at 1335 North Boulevard in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.. Originally designed in 1924 as a meeting hall for the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, the building housed the Temple Theatre and the Temple Roof Garden, which represented two major point of entertainment for African-American citizens of Baton Rouge.
The shooting occurred in theater 14 [9] during the 7:10 p.m. screening of Trainwreck, held at the Grand 16 movie theater in Lafayette. [10] [11] John Russell Houser, 59, went to the theater alone, bought a ticket ten minutes late into the movie, [12] and sat for several minutes in the theater's second-to-last row.
INDIANAPOLIS--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Indianapolis-based appliance and electronics leader h.h.gregg (NYS: HGG) announced today the grand opening of a Baton Rouge store this Thursday, November 15 th at ...
Baton Rouge River Center Arena (2004-16) Address: 275 River Rd S Baton Rouge, LA 70802-5809: Location: Raising Cane's River Center: Owner: Baton Rouge Area Convention & Visitors Bureau: Operator: ASM Global: Capacity: 8,900: Opened: January 14, 1977 () Tenants; Baton Rouge Kingfish (1996–2003) Baton Rouge Bombers (1997–98)
SMG, formerly Spectacor Management Group, was an American worldwide venue management group headquartered in West Conshohocken, Pennsylvania, that specialized in managing publicly owned facilities.
Addis has an easy, small-town feel in West Baton Rouge Parish along the Mississippi River. Known for a strong sense of community, this town is safe and boasts unique shops and eateries, with ...
The Strand Theatre in Shreveport, Louisiana, United States, opened in 1925 as a Vaudeville venue and was nicknamed "The greatest theatre of the South" and the "Million Dollar Theatre" by its builders, Julian and Abraham Saenger of Shreveport, owners of the Saenger Amusements Company, which operated theaters throughout the American South and in Central America.