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Providence, Rhode Island recent comments:

  • The Yena Center, Bharat Gandhi (guest) wrote 17 years ago:
    We are very glad to say that This is where pratik got admission for MBA.
  • Peter Pan/Bonanza Bus Terminal, ew (guest) wrote 17 years ago:
    great station i luv pp buses
  • Roger Williams National Memorial, Mary (guest) wrote 18 years ago:
    Liberty of Conscience Roger Williams National Memorial commemorates the life of the founder of Rhode Island and a champion of the ideal of religious freedom. Williams, banished from Massachusetts for his beliefs, founded Providence in 1636. This colony served as a refuge where all could come to worship as their conscience dictated without interference from the state.
  • The Foxy Lady, wikizeekia wrote 18 years ago:
    A fine establishment. One of the many....ok, the ONLY reason Providence is close to my heart :-D
  • U.S. Post Office, Will Bowling (guest) wrote 18 years ago:
    Formerly known as the Turnkey Post Office. It was the first automated Post Office in the United States.
  • Cuban Revolution Restaurant & Bar, Angela Mauro (guest) wrote 18 years ago:
    fun, great food, reasonable prices
  • Nightingale-Brown House, julia (guest) wrote 18 years ago:
    Public Humanities Open House is happening now. come on by! (friday 5/2)
  • Festival Ballet Providence, Deborah Abramson (guest) wrote 18 years ago:
    I'm working on a short documentary on the Festival Ballet in the spring of 2007.
  • Nightingale-Brown House, Stephanie Fortunato (guest) wrote 18 years ago:
    The National Historic Landmark building was constructed in 1792 and housed five generations of the Brown family. In 1993 the John Nicholas Brown Center for the Study of American Civilization, located within the Nightingale-Brown House, officially opened to the public. Two years later, in 1995, the Center became part of Brown University. The JNBC is the home of Brown University's Public Humanities program. Public Humanities students and faculty work to connect the public to history, art, and culture. The JNBC sponsors programs that consider the ways in which the humanities enrich everyday life.
  • Providence Performing Arts Center, mp (guest) wrote 18 years ago:
    It was never Loew's Ocean State; it was opened as Loew's State and became the Ocean State when Loew's ceased to operate it.
  • Chinese Restaurant of the Month™, Dita Parlo (guest) wrote 18 years ago:
    There may never be another Chinese restaurant at this site forever, for all we know. Apparently, the space was never legal.