Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[7] [8] With additional chapters in New Rochelle [9] and Suffolk County, [10] the Hells Angels also have a presence in the Hudson Valley, [11] and on Long Island, [12] in the Greater New York area of Downstate New York. The New York City charter is among the club's largest, [13] and, along with the Cleveland chapter in Ohio, is responsible for ...
Confederate Angels Motorcycle Club, in Richmond, Virginia (defunct) [86] [87] Deathmasters Motorcycle Club [88] Delinquents Motorcycle Club, in California; Demons Blood Brotherhood Motorcycle Club; Demon Knights Motorcycle Club, in New York [89] Desperado's MC [59] Dirty Dozen Motorcycle Club, in Arizona (patched over in 1997) [90] Forty Seven ...
The New Jersey faction is small, but is backed by the New York City chapter – one of the club's largest. [235] Three Hells Angels were beaten by a group of Pagans members and associates outside a bar in Woodland Township on January 1, 2005. [236]
New York Police Commissioner Edward Caban resign ed Thursday amid a federal investigation into the department's nightclub enforcement, according to sources familiar with the matter.. Caban, the ...
Saint Vitus was opened in April 2011 by Arty Shepherd, Justin Scurti, and George Souleidis, along with two silent owners. [6] The space was formerly a plumbing school and before that a social club, and the owners hired Matthew Maddy to design the space, with the main intention to be a metal-themed bar that only occasionally held live shows. [7]
The Roxy (sometimes Roxy NYC) was a popular nightclub and former disco roller rink located at 515 West 18th Street in New York City. Located in the Chelsea section of Manhattan , it began as a roller disco in 1978, founded by Steve Bauman, Richard Newhouse and Steve Greenberg. [ 1 ]
52nd Street is a 1.9-mile-long (3.1 km) one-way street traveling west to east across Midtown Manhattan, New York City, United States. A short section of it was known as the city's center of jazz performance from the 1930s to the 1950s.
View of a night-time baseball game at Yankee Stadium between the New York Yankees and the Minnesota Twins. This is a list of professional and semi-professional sports teams based in the New York metropolitan area, including from New York City, Long Island, Lower Hudson Valley, Northern and Central New Jersey, and parts of Western Connecticut.