Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sterns was a nightclub located at Highdown Towers on Highdown Hill in Worthing, West Sussex. It was situated off the A259 road just north of Ferring on the South Downs . It became known as a major centre of UK rave culture in the south of England during the late 1980s and early 1990s.
The Jefferson–Chalmers Historic Business District contains 57 buildings bordering East Jefferson Avenue, running for eight blocks between Eastlawn Street and Alter Road, at the border between Detroit and Grosse Pointe Park, Michigan. Most of the buildings front onto Jefferson, but a few front onto side streets in the block adjacent to Jefferson.
Sterns may refer to: Sterns (surname) Stern's, defunct U.S. department store chain; Sterns Nightclub, defunct nightclub in Worthing, West Sussex, England; Stern's Pickle Works, defunct pickle factory based in New York; The Sterns, American band
Frederick Stearns Building, c. 1910. Frederick Stearns & Company, established in 1855, [4] was a leading pharmaceutical manufacturer in 19th century Detroit. In the late 1890s, Frederick K. Stearns (son of the firm's founder, Frederick A. Stearns) commissioned William B. Stratton to design this building [3] (Stratton also designed Stearns's personal home, the Frederick K. Stearns House, a few ...
The highly anticipated Arcenciel (Arc-en-ciel) which caters to LGBTQ+ community opens to public on Thanksgiving eve at 14925 Livernois.
The Players Club of Detroit was founded in 1911 by a group of local Detroit businessmen as an institution to encourage amateur theater. [3] From the beginning, it was a strictly male club. [ 2 ] For the first 15 years of the club's existence, they were forced to perform in different venues each month, including the Detroit Athletic Club , the ...
Livernois Avenue becomes less prominent as it crosses M-102 (8 Mile Road) into Ferndale, but is still lined with commercial businesses.Livernois then becomes a divided highway again at Marshall Street (between 8 and 9 Mile) and continues to be one until its first physical interruption at 9 Mile Road for a supermarket parking lot.
The drug became popular in the US first on the disco/club scene of the 1970s and then at dance and rave venues in the 1980s and 1990s. In the 2000s, synthetic phenethylamines such as 2C-I, 2C-B and DOB have been referred to as club drugs due to their stimulating and psychedelic nature (and their chemical relationship with MDMA). [68]