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The first Championship/Indy car races in the Dallas/Fort Worth area took place at Arlington Downs Raceway in nearby Arlington, Texas. AAA sanctioned five races from 1947 to 1950. USAC sanctioned ten Championship car events at Texas World Speedway in College Station, Texas. The race was discontinued when the track closed in 1981.
The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex, officially designated Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington by the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, [a] is the most populous metropolitan statistical area in the U.S. state of Texas and the Southern United States, encompassing 11 counties. Its historically dominant core cities are Dallas and Fort Worth. [5]
The Dallas Examiner; Tre Weekly News Magazine - headquartered in Garland, serving the Vietnamese immigrants in DFW metroplex; White Rock Lake Weekly - serving all of East Dallas, distributed for free; White Rock Lake Weekly. World Journal - published in Richardson, serving Dallas; The Fort Worth Star-Telegram is based in Fort Worth, and The ...
The average Dallas-Fort Worth commuter spent roughly the same amount of time sitting in traffic in 2022. ... according to tallies computed by Texas A&M’s Transportation Institute. A committed ...
In Dallas–Fort Worth, the duo met businessman Ross Perot Jr. and flew in Perot's helicopter to scout a piece of land that was owned by Perot. The land impressed the duo, [ 38 ] and by November 30, the Star-Telegram reported that the two were planning to build a 150,000-capacity speedway at a cost of around $75,000,000 (adjusted for inflation ...
In May 1993, KDFW became the first television station in Dallas–Fort Worth to launch a weekend morning newscast, with the debut of a two-hour Saturday broadcast from 8 to 10 a.m. (the program—which, uniformly with the weekday morning newscasts and formerly titled News 4 Texas Morning Edition, was re-titled Good Day Dallas [now Fox 4 Good ...
Premier Gun Shows, LLC has produced the Fort Worth show since 1972, along with other shows across Texas. This weekend’s event will see over 1,000 tables full of guns, knives and accessories.
The arena was designed by the 2015 Driehaus Prize winner David M. Schwarz [3] and is owned by Fort Worth and managed by the not-for-profit Multipurpose Arena Fort Worth (MAFW). It hosts concerts, sporting events, and family entertainment, and serves as the home of the Fort Worth Stock Show & Rodeo .