User:Evolauxia
Appearance
This is a Wikipedia user page. This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user whom this page is about may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Evolauxia. |
| MOS | CITE - CTT - CTE - FN | PIC | TAB | | TM | TMPL | STUB - SC | CG - CGB | VAND - IP - AIV | DR | PJ | S | EC |
Wikipedia:Babel | ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
Search user languages | ||
Miscellanea | ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
|
You can help improve the articles listed below! This list updates frequently, so check back here for more tasks to try. (See Wikipedia:Maintenance or the Task Center for further information.)
Fix wikilinks
Update with new information
Expand short articles
Check and add references
Fix original research issues
Improve lead sections
Add an image
Translate and clean up
Help counter systemic bias by creating new articles on important women.
Help improve popular pages, especially those of low quality.
Village pump |
---|
Policy (new post) |
Technical (new post) |
Proposals (new post) |
Idea lab (new post) |
Miscellaneous (new post) |
KiMo Theater is a theater and historic landmark located in Albuquerque, New Mexico, on the northeast corner of Central Avenue and Fifth Street. It was built in 1927 in the extravagant Pueblo Deco architecture, which is a blend of adobe-style Pueblo Revival building styles (rounded corners and edges), decorative motifs from indigenous cultures, and the soaring lines and linear repetition found in American Art Deco architecture. The name Kimo, meaning 'mountain lion', was suggested by Pablo Abeita in a competition sponsored by the Albuquerque Journal. The theater opened on September 19, 1927, with a program including Native American dancers and singers, a performance on the newly installed $18,000 Wurlitzer theater organ, and the comedy film Painting the Town. According to local legend, the KiMo Theatre is haunted by the ghost of Bobby Darnall, a six-year-old boy killed in 1951 when a water heater in the theater's lobby exploded. The tale alleges that a theatrical performance of A Christmas Carol in 1974 was disrupted by the ghost, who was supposedly angry that the staff was ordered to remove donuts they had hung on backstage pipes to appease him. This photograph shows the facade of the KiMo Theater, seen from across Central Avenue.Photograph credit: Daniel Schwen
Student and Autodidact
Multi-licensed with the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike License versions 1.0 and 2.0 | ||
I agree to multi-license my text contributions, unless otherwise stated, under Wikipedia's copyright terms and the Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license version 1.0 and version 2.0. Please be aware that other contributors might not do the same, so if you want to use my contributions under the Creative Commons terms, please check the CC dual-license and Multi-licensing guides. |
Categories:
- User en-N
- User fr-3
- User pt-2
- User es-1
- User la-1
- User python
- User c
- User c++
- User for
- User java
- User r
- User latex
- Wikipedians who use Blender (software)
- Wikipedians who use Adobe Photoshop
- Wikipedians who use GIMP
- Wikipedians who use Adobe Illustrator
- Wikipedians who use Inkscape
- Wikipedian vector graphics editors
- Wikipedian scientists
- Wikipedians interested in mathematics
- Wikipedian amateur radio operators
- Wikipedian aircraft pilots
- Bisexual Wikipedians
- Androgynous Wikipedians
- Wikipedians contributing under CC BY-SA 2.5
- Wikipedians contributing under CC BY-SA 1.0
- Wikipedians contributing under CC BY-SA 2.0
- Wikipedian photographers
- Wikipedian professional writers
- Wikipedians interested in art
- Wikipedians interested in the built environment
- Wikipedians interested in data science
- Wikipedians interested in film
- Wikipedians interested in games
- Wikipedians interested in geography
- Wikipedians interested in history
- Wikipedians interested in justice
- Wikipedians interested in law
- Wikipedians interested in literature
- Wikipedians interested in medicine
- Wikipedians interested in music
- Wikipedians interested in nature
- Wikipedians interested in radio
- Wikipedians interested in science
- Wikipedians interested in social sciences
- Wikipedians interested in technology
- Wikipedians interested in travelling