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  Nearby: 15, Somerville: 32, Massachusetts: 610

 
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 • (617) 623-9561
Bar
Dress:Casual
Hours: Daily 11am-1am
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Somerville.MA:Image:SligoPub
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Irish dive bar with cheap booze and stellar jukebox. Brews run around $3.25 at Sligo Pub and their selection is pretty darn good. Once you make it past the smell of stale beer and the cryptic graffiti in the bathroom, you'll feel right at home at this hidden Davis Square haunt.
 
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 • (617) 776-6896
Restaurant
Zagat-Rated
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Bar
Hours: Daily 11:30am-1am
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Somerville.MA:Image:Theburren
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The Burren, a great rocky expanse in Ireland's County Clare, is one of the world's truly unique places. Its ancient, awe inspiring stone structures hold secrets from the past that may never be unraveled. Closer to home, The Burren, Irish Pub and Restaurant in Somerville's Davis Square, is now one of Boston's truly unique places. It captures the mythical nature of its namesake with a rich old world feel that takes hold and slowly pulls you toward another time.
Open since January 1996, the Burren's history reaches back farther than that. It is actually the realization of a dream shared by two young Irish musicians, Tommy McCarthy and Louise Costello. Tommy and Louise began playing together nearly 10 years earlier. Today people can gather to enjoy a drink, the warmth of good friends and the excitement of live traditional Irish music, in the Burren, a dream come true.
 
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The Nexus Theater Center, a new not-for-profit professional company, is dedicated to performing live theater for the Boston community.
 
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GreaterBoston:Image:Urbaninteractive
With Urban Interactive augmented reality tourism adventures, it’s fun to be a dick. Seriously. In 2006, entrepreneur Nick Tommarello set out to spice up Boston’s humdrum tourism scene with a series of interactive games that combine The Amazing Race with The Da Vinci Code. Players, who sign up at the company’s website, sleuth around the city competing with other teams to solve a mystery. You meet up at a central location (either in City Place (near the Common), Copley Square, or Harvard Square, and are briefed on your "mission." Then, you complete a series of challenges/puzzles that take you around key historical sites (the State House, Beacon Hill, etc.) After each one (for example, finding a series of addresses and solving an anagram that incorporates residents' names) you enter the answers into a blackberry-type device, and receive a message that leads you to the next step. The group's Mother's Day offering includes "Common Sense vs. SmartMax" in Downtown Crossing where two groups vie to recover a long-lost relic, reputed to bestow important powers.
The whole exercise takes under two hours (though it depends on how fast/competitive your team is - you get points for speed), and would be ideal for a family (with school-aged or older kids) visiting the city or a fun outing with friends.
 
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 • (617) 776-0552
www:Image:Flickr:554200639
This throwback to the 1970s exudes what Somerville used to be like before the influx of young professionals. Hipsters flock to Sacco’s Bowl-Haven to strike out with candlepin bowling and play a few rounds of reasonably priced pool. For billiards, the managers charge by the minute, instead of per game, so be careful no to lollygag between shots. The real surprise for Bowl-Haven newbies is the joint’s jukebox—-offering an array of ‘90s alt-rock staples like The Smashing Pumpkins and Pearl Jam to ‘70s classics from Led Zeppelin and David Bowie.
 
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Movie Theater
Hours: Daily: 4pm - 8pm
Parking:Street
Theaters:3
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Somerville.MA:Image:SomervilleTheatre
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Originally built in 1914, the Somerville Theatre is a throwback to an era when the neighborhood lineup included a diverse array of entertainment options ranging from opera to silent movies to vaudeville. The current incarnation offers a similar eclectic mix of flicks and up-and-coming rock ‘n’ roll acts. However, it’s the theatre’s reverence for performers like the Magnetic Fields and movie marathons like the Boston Sci-Fi Film Festival that maintains this haunt’s street cred.
MORE INFO: More than a million dollars' worth of renovations later, the Somerville Theatre is no longer just a national historical landmark—it's now a plush national historical landmark. In addition to its regular showings of second-run mainstream and independent films, the theatre also features live plays and concerts of all genres (tickets through TicketMaster, usually $20-40). They also boast the cheapest weekday matinees in the city for a mere $4. Also check out their affiliate Capitol Theatre for continued screenings. Films $6.50, seniors and children $4.50 before 6pm; prices vary for musical and theater events.
This section contains information from Harvard Student Agencies' Unofficial Guide to Life at Harvard.
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