Boston theater scene ready for big time acting troupes say (The Daily Free Press)
One of UA’s Theater and Dance grads comes home (Tuscaloosa News)After graduating from the University of Alabama’s theater and dance department in December 2004, Stephen Tyrone Williams hit the boards running.
FurnitureBlue.Com Quick Ships Home Theater Seating, Leather Recliners and Massage Chairs In Time For the Holidays (PRWeb)Furniture Blue home theater seating, leather recliners and Human Touch Massage Chairs are quick ship items that arrive in 1 - 3 weeks, making them ideal gifts for the holiday season. (PRWeb Nov 30, 2007)
Thousands Fail To Sign Up For Road Home Appointment (WDSU New Orleans)Nearly 12,000 applicants for homeowner aid through the Road Home program haven’t signed up for appointments to calculate their grants.
Vigil Planned Outside Carson’s Home (WRTV Indianapolis)Friends and supports plan a candlelight vigil outside Julia Carson’s home.
National Jazz Museum in Harlem Finds a Permanent Home (All About Jazz)A rendering of the new retail and residential complex planned for 125th Street in Harlem. (Image: Empire State Development Corporation) After years of delay and political squabbling, state officials have selected Danforth Development Partners to redevelop the long-vacant Victoria Theater on 125th Street, once Harlem’s largest and most elegant theater.
In the Theater District, Merchants and Fans Are Eager for Reopening Night (New York Times)Fans and merchants in the Theater District welcomed the news of a tentative settlement of the Broadway strike.
Tags: home theater design, home theater magazines, home theater review, home theater furniture, home theater store
- Vigil Planned Outside Carson's Home (WRTV Indianapolis)
- St. Paul children's theater moves upstage (Minnesota Public Radio)
- Boston theater scene ready for big time acting troupes say (The Daily Free Press)
- Stage Co.'s Holiday Home Tours helping raise money to cover expenses of new permanent home (The Southern Illinoisan)
- Setting paint into motion (The Oregonian)



















