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Drive-in theaters in Omaha; Name Built Capacity Location Notes 76 West Dodge Drive-In Theatre [15] 1948 [114] 648 cars [114] Dodge corner of 76th Street [15] It was closed on July 17, 1983, and was demolished. [114] A strip mall now stands on the site. [114] At the time it closed, it was noted as being Omaha's oldest drive-in theater. [115]
Westroads Mall is an enclosed shopping mall in Omaha, Nebraska at the intersection of 100th and Dodge Streets (U.S. Route 6). It is the largest mall in Nebraska . [ 2 ] The mall's anchor stores are The Container Store , Von Maur , JCPenney , Dick's Sporting Goods , Dillard's , and AMC Theatres .
The KPTM news department made plans for expansion in 1998 with the launch of a 3 + 1 ⁄ 2-hour morning newscast, Good Day, as well as an 11 a.m. newscast. Pappas invested $1.5 million in new equipment and a new news set and doubled the news staffing. The previous set was then shipped to the Pappas-owned Nebraska Television Network (NTV) in ...
"Honorable Mr. Morgenthau," a film about Roosevelt's wartime secretary of the treasury, shows how antisemitism in US government prevented rescue missions of Jews
Quad Cinema 40°44′10″N 73°59′45″W / 40.735977°N 73.995904°W / 40.735977; -73.995904 The Quad Cinema is New York City 's first small four-screen multiplex theater Located at 34 West 13th Street in Greenwich Village , it was opened by entrepreneur Maurice Kanbar , along with his younger brother Elliott S. Kanbar in October ...
A tornado plowed through suburban Omaha, Nebraska, on Friday afternoon, damaging hundreds of homes and other structures as the twister tore for miles along farmland and into subdivisions. Multiple ...
Its location was at 8601 West Dodge Rd. The theater's screen was the largest of its type in the United States. Despite the protests of local citizens, Hollywood legends, and the National Trust for Historic Preservation , the theater was demolished in 2001 by Nebraska Methodist Health System for a parking lot.
Omaha, 1937 John Eberson , a nationally notable architect, designed the theater in 1926 as an example of the "atmospheric" theater popular during the 1920s. In a style created by Eberson, these atmospheric theaters simulated romantic outdoor Mediterranean courtyards with a night sky above, including twinkling stars and drifting clouds.