Newton str
Boston, MA 02135
Pasha owns and operates a number of Boston's trendiest nightlife venues and gourmet restaurants. We Publish E-Newsletters, Create content driven interactive websites and keep you "In The Know" about the Social Scene. Visit our beautiful spaces for exceptional service and unforgettable entertainment. For more information on each space please visit the following websites: http://venuboston.com/ http://iconnightclub.com/ http://curelounge.com/ http://abbylaneboston.com/ http://trattorianewbury.com/
The Ray Lavietes Basketball Pavilion at the Briggs Athletic Center is a 2,195-seat multi-purpose arena in the Allston neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. Owned by Harvard University, it is the second-oldest college basketball arena still in use (Fordham University's Rose Hill Gym (1924) is older).Originally known as the Briggs Athletic Center, it was originally named for LeBaron Russell Briggs, dean of Harvard College 1891-02 and the school's athletic director for 17 years. Briggs also served as president of the NCAA. It included an indoor track and batting cages, which were popular with local collegiate and professional baseball players, including Ted Williams. In 1981, the Gordon Indoor Track and Tennis Facility (located adjacent to Harvard Stadium and the Bright Hockey Center) opened, and the building was refurbished as the new home to the Harvard basketball program, replacing the Malkin Athletic Center in Cambridge. The women's first game in the building was on November 26, 1982 against Chicago, and the men's was a day later against neighbor and rival MIT. In March 1996, the building was rededicated to Ray Lavietes '36, a two-time basketball letterman who made a $2.1 million contribution to a second refurbishing project in 1995 and 1996.
Check us out at these links if you want to keep up-to-date on what Red Sky is doing! Website: http://redsky-studios.com/ Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/redskyllc Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/redskystudiosllc
Glitter Tower is a production company specializing in themed events. From anime and music to sci-fi and esports, we run the things YOU want to do.
The Harvard Advocate, founded in 1866, is the oldest continuously published collegiate literary magazine in the country. Over its past 145 years, it can count T.S. Eliot, Conrad Aiken, and Norman Mailer among its members and e.e. cummings, Jack Kerouac, and Tom Wolfe as contributors to its pages. A quarterly magazine, its mission is to publish the best art, fiction, poetry, and prose that the Harvard undergraduate community offers. To subscribe to the Harvard Advocate: www.theharvardadvocate.com/content/subscribe-0 To donate to the Harvard Advocate: www.theharvardadvocate.com/content/donate
Enjoy fast and easy car rental bookings fromĀ Enterprise Rent-A-CarĀ at one of our 6000 branches, in cities, airports and neighborhood near you.
We specialize in making a diverse selection of session beers, as well as getting crazy and making some higher alcohol beers. At the moment, we are still just home brewers, but are in the process of finding a location and getting a license soon. For now, come to one of our BrewBQ's and have some there, hell you can even give us a hand brewing too! Kevin
The Class of 1959 Chapel is a non-denominational chapel located on the campus of Harvard Business School in Boston, Massachusetts. It was designed by Moshe Safdie in 1992, as part of a master plan to complement the existing 1927 campus architecture by McKim, Mead and White that would allow for Business School to expand along the Charles River. It was funded by a gift from alumni from the Class of 1959. It was engineered by Weidlinger Associates and built by Richard White Sons, Inc. for a cost of approximately $2.5 million.StructureThe chapel consists of an concrete cylinder surfaced with a layer of patinaed bronze. On one side of the cylinder is a pyramidal glass greenhouse that houses a below-ground koi pond decorated with live plants, a small waterfall, and concrete blocks that serve as stepping stones.Outside the chapel is a rectangular marble tower containing a two-story steel pole and a large bronze ball. The tower is a functioning clock; as the ball moves up and down the pole, lines on the tower indicate the time of day. The timepiece was designed by Karl Schlamminger.InteriorThe chapel itself occupies nearly all of the ground floor of the building and is accessed through a tall metal door from the greenhouse. The interior is a two-story stone cylinder with several semi-circular concrete constructions scalloping the walls. At the top of the cylinder are thin windows with several long prisms designed by the artist Charles Ross that create raking light and occasionally rainbows across the austere concrete interior.