THIS IS NOT sufficient NOR EFFECTIVE notice!
Does it also need to be printed in Spanish?
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Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Only required in both English and Spanish if it is on a sign.LSL wrote:Houston Alley Theater has a correctly phrased 30.06 notice, in English only, printed on each ticket in tiny print.
Is this sufficient notice?
Does it also need to be printed in Spanish?
I have heard the argument made that the ticket is an agreement and by accepting the ticket and entering the theater you are accepting the terms of the agreement.RX8er wrote:That's a good one but I'm not sure if that would be effective notice. Do they make you sign the back of the ticket? How do they know someone has read the ticket? Is it on the whole ticket or the half that you get back?
I can't tell you if I've ever read a movie theater ticket.![]()
I get the ticket, hold them folded in between my fingers with a Coke and Popcorn in the other hand. Walk up to the ticket kid, takes it, and then the other half it goes in to shirt pocket or opposite pocket that has contraband candy from Neighbor Market.
JP171 wrote:the alley theatre can post away, i'll walk right past it, its a city owned building!
I have heard this as well. But when I buy a ticket, I am agreeing not to sue or to release my image for their use, not that I have been notified I could be arrested? I don't disagree this could be considered notice and I don't ever want to be a test case for it either. Also, when you buy those types of ticket generally don't you sign or have to agree to something before getting the tickets. I remember the last tickets I got for the Circ de Soleil, I had to agree to a hundred things before I could type in my CC info. I just can't see how getting the print on the back of a ticket wold be considered notice. If this was the case, then many more folks skip hte big ugly sign and just hand out little advert flyers when you walk in the doors with the notice somewhere hidden.jmra wrote:I have heard the argument made that the ticket is an agreement and by accepting the ticket and entering the theater you are accepting the terms of the agreement.
Not saying I agree with the argument - just that I have heard the argument made.
I would also point out that 30.06 says "Written communication" means:...a card or other document on which is written language identical to the following:..."
If you walk into an establishment and are handed a card with the correct language but toss it before reading it, have you received notice? According to the code I think you have. I believe the same standard would apply to the ticket. Buyer beware.
EEllis wrote:JP171 wrote:the alley theatre can post away, i'll walk right past it, its a city owned building!
Alley theater isn't city owned, it was privately built by a non-profit opening in 68 and is still operated and owned by the same non-profit. For those who don't know the Alley is a live theater with 2 stages in downtown Houston. The notice on the tickets is legally sufficient for a 30.06 warning. You will be risking arrest if you carry in the venue.
Firearms are prohibited
The Texas State Legislature, in 1995 passed Senate Bill 60, which has been codified as a State law, VTCS art. 4413 (29ee). It permits Texas citizens who have obtained the proper license to carry concealed firearms. The same law (section 32) explicitly grants private employers in the State the right to prohibit their employees and visitors from possessing firearms on the employer's premises.
With this notification, the Alley Theatre is informing you that it prohibits firearms on its premises, and reserves the right to search persons, parcels and vehicles on same. This policy applies to all employees, patrons and visitors to the facility.
I don't know but am curious so....JP171 wrote:EEllis wrote:JP171 wrote:the alley theatre can post away, i'll walk right past it, its a city owned building!
Alley theater isn't city owned, it was privately built by a non-profit opening in 68 and is still operated and owned by the same non-profit. For those who don't know the Alley is a live theater with 2 stages in downtown Houston. The notice on the tickets is legally sufficient for a 30.06 warning. You will be risking arrest if you carry in the venue.
yes its CITY owned, maintained and supported same as the wortham center, miller outdoor theatre and a host of others
State Class Code Land Use Code Building Class Total Units
XV -- Other Exempt (Government) 4680 -- Cultural Facility E 0
Land Area Building Area Net Rentable Area Neighborhood Market Area Map Facet Key Map®
37,241 SF 109,437 0 5900 5001 -- Central Business District 5457A 493L
Yeah nope, owned by it's own non-profit, built in 68. Some land was donated and the rest purchased , never city owned and not connected financially to the other theaters. Heck man google it! In addition to being one of the oldest theater companies in the country it is the only major one in Houston to own it's own building and in addition to actually making money, which it does most years, last I heard they have an endowment of just under 20 mill.JP171 wrote:EEllis wrote:JP171 wrote:the alley theatre can post away, i'll walk right past it, its a city owned building!
Alley theater isn't city owned, it was privately built by a non-profit opening in 68 and is still operated and owned by the same non-profit. For those who don't know the Alley is a live theater with 2 stages in downtown Houston. The notice on the tickets is legally sufficient for a 30.06 warning. You will be risking arrest if you carry in the venue.
yes its CITY owned, maintained and supported same as the wortham center, miller outdoor theatre and a host of others
State Class Code Land Use Code Building Class Total Units
XV -- Other Exempt (Government) 4680 -- Cultural Facility E 0
Land Area Building Area Net Rentable Area Neighborhood Market Area Map Facet Key Map®
37,241 SF 109,437 0 5900 5001 -- Central Business District 5457A 493L
http://www.alleytheatre.org/Alley/A_Home_of_Our_Own.asp" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; Just because it's stupid to have to argue about it.In May of 1962, the Houston Endowment, a charitable trust established by the late Jesse H. Jones and Mrs. Jones, made the initial gift to the Alley of approximately one half block of land in the center of the new civic center downtown for a new building. Then, in October of that same year, the Ford Foundation announced a gift of $6.1 million to nine non-profit theaters, including a grant of $2.1 million to the Alley to construct the new building and to help it in its developmental phase for the first 10 years. But, to qualify for the grant, the Alley was required to raise an additional $900,000 locally.
During the hot summer of 1963, a city-wide campaign yielded 25,000 individual gifts, securing the grant and assuring there would be a new theatre for the Alley. “The Chronicle’s” seven column headline read: “Alley Drive Smashed Over Top,” and the news was flashed on the Times Square marquee in New York City. Some of the people leading the campaign were George A. Peterkin, and T. N. Law, Isaac Arnold, J. W. Link, Jr. and John H. Lindsey.
By the following Spring, the Alley had acquired 21,000 square feet of adjacent land, making about five/sixths of the block available for the new building. As the project’s pace accelerated, Ulrich Franzen was signed as the prime architect and plans were drawn for the building; the Alley received both a playwright in residence award from the Ford Foundation (for Paul Zindel) and another grant of $1.4 million from Ford Foundation to support innovative theater architecture.
deleted due to not wishing to continue this, have a good day of course your rightEEllis wrote:Yeah nope, owned by it's own non-profit, built in 68. Some land was donated and the rest purchased , never city owned and not connected financially to the other theaters. Heck man google it! In addition to being one of the oldest theater companies in the country it is the only major one in Houston to own it's own building and in addition to actually making money, which it does most years, last I heard they have an endowment of just under 20 mill.JP171 wrote:EEllis wrote:JP171 wrote:the alley theatre can post away, i'll walk right past it, its a city owned building!
Alley theater isn't city owned, it was privately built by a non-profit opening in 68 and is still operated and owned by the same non-profit. For those who don't know the Alley is a live theater with 2 stages in downtown Houston. The notice on the tickets is legally sufficient for a 30.06 warning. You will be risking arrest if you carry in the venue.
yes its CITY owned, maintained and supported same as the wortham center, miller outdoor theatre and a host of others
State Class Code Land Use Code Building Class Total Units
XV -- Other Exempt (Government) 4680 -- Cultural Facility E 0
Land Area Building Area Net Rentable Area Neighborhood Market Area Map Facet Key Map®
37,241 SF 109,437 0 5900 5001 -- Central Business District 5457A 493L
http://www.alleytheatre.org/Alley/A_Home_of_Our_Own.asp" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; Just because it's stupid to have to argue about it.In May of 1962, the Houston Endowment, a charitable trust established by the late Jesse H. Jones and Mrs. Jones, made the initial gift to the Alley of approximately one half block of land in the center of the new civic center downtown for a new building. Then, in October of that same year, the Ford Foundation announced a gift of $6.1 million to nine non-profit theaters, including a grant of $2.1 million to the Alley to construct the new building and to help it in its developmental phase for the first 10 years. But, to qualify for the grant, the Alley was required to raise an additional $900,000 locally.
During the hot summer of 1963, a city-wide campaign yielded 25,000 individual gifts, securing the grant and assuring there would be a new theatre for the Alley. “The Chronicle’s” seven column headline read: “Alley Drive Smashed Over Top,” and the news was flashed on the Times Square marquee in New York City. Some of the people leading the campaign were George A. Peterkin, and T. N. Law, Isaac Arnold, J. W. Link, Jr. and John H. Lindsey.
By the following Spring, the Alley had acquired 21,000 square feet of adjacent land, making about five/sixths of the block available for the new building. As the project’s pace accelerated, Ulrich Franzen was signed as the prime architect and plans were drawn for the building; the Alley received both a playwright in residence award from the Ford Foundation (for Paul Zindel) and another grant of $1.4 million from Ford Foundation to support innovative theater architecture.
Houston First Corporation ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Houston_First_Corporation" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; ) runs the city owned theaters but has nothing to do with the Alley