Nashville's historic Climax Saloon – a bar, gambling hall, and brothel – was located on Cherry Street (now 4th Avenue North) adjacent to Printer's Alley in an area know as the Gentlemen's Quarter or Men's Quarter.
You have to win the 300 on your first game after entering the gambling hall, when you get the prompt from Haruka that she wants to see you win. If you quit and she says ' too bad' or whatever, you have to leave and re-enter the gambling hall before you can try to impress her again. This is a building that contains both a Western-style casino and an Eastern-style gambling hall that features Koi-koi and Oicho-kabu. In all the gambling games, progress is measured solely with. A high-end casino can have elven dancing maidens on stage, specialty dwarven drinks, and rich patrons sitting at the tables offering wild adventures. A low-end gaming hall can be wall-to-wall with reprobates, staffed with ogre bouncers, and carry the ever-present threat of a table-tipping bar brawl. Go to the Champion District to find the Gambling Hall. In the dialogue options choose: Three Times, Can I talk to Moon, Chateabriand, blue. You will enter inside where after the cutscenes you will have to defeat Hamura and his men. Kaito is with you, so try to fight safely and do not let yourself be surrounded. This Judgment (Judge Eyes) walkthrough will guide you through all the main choices and investigations of Chapter 8 for 100% completion. Chapter 8 Choices After some more cutscenes at the start of the chapter, you'll have to head over to the Law Office to pick up Hoshino, then have to take a taxi to the Police Station to speak with Ayabe.
Built in 1887 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the upper floors of the four-story Italianate-style building were closed for several decades and have been restored as part of the boutique Dream Hotel Nashville.
The Climax Saloon was owned by principals of the George A. Dickel and Co. distillery. The three-story saloon began operation in 1887, with a saloon bar on the ground level, pool tables and gambling on the second floor, and prostitution brothel in the bedrooms on the top level. The bedrooms had false wall panels, allowing the working girls a place to hide from police in the event of a raid.
From the late 1880s until 1914, the Gentlemen's Quarter was Nashville's most sordid and lewd area. It was a place where any self-respecting Victorian lady of the time refused to walk down the street. A woman who valued her reputation did not ever venture into this block. It was densely populated with saloons and other adult or erotic businesses catering to the interests of men.
The Gentlemen's Quarter was able to proliferate due to a several ideal circumstances of the time. A constant and abundant supply of male customers, including attorneys from nearby office buildings; businessmen travelling from the famous Maxwell House hotel, which was located adjacent to quarter; and plenty of construction workers and riverboat crews from the nearby Cumberland River. Lax enforcement by local police and support from popular Tennessee whiskey distilleries also played a key role in growth of the gentlemen's quarter.
In the Gentlemen's Quarter, men could get a shave and a haircut, buy a new suit, have a lunchtime meal in the city (somewhat of a new trend in the 1890s), enjoy an alcoholic drink in one of the many saloons, or participate in more scandalous and illegal activities like gambling or prostitution. In an era of strict social rules, the Climax Saloon and many others in the Printer's Alley area provided men a place to drink, gamble, and curse without judgment.
Nashville police were very aware of the illegal activities occurring in the gentleman's quarter. Occasional raids did take place but they often resulted in only a nominal fine.
It's known that the George A. Dickel Company Distillery used a method of acquiring or constructing saloons in Nashville, to create outlets for selling their whiskey. The Dickel company owned the Climax Saloon, which survived on 4th Avenue until being demolished for replacement by Dream Hotel Nashville, which features some original fixtures and architectural elements from the old saloon and hotel. The Dream is one of several new boutique hotels in Printer's Alley.
Jack Daniel is said to have made visits to all the saloons on Cherry Street, buying a round of Jack Daniel's whiskey for everyone in each saloon. According to legend, Daniel, who was only 5'2″ tall, would accumulate followers in each establishment, following him to the next place for another free round.
The Maxwell House Hotel (from which the coffee got its name) stood across the street at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Church Street until it burned on Christmas night, 1961. The reputation of the Men's Quarter became so unsavory that the Maxwell House, which had its main entrance on Fourth Avenue, established a separate ladies' entrance around the corner on Church Street. Two Men's Quarter saloon buildings, though not the saloons themselves, survive on Fourth Avenue: the Climax at 210 Fourth Avenue North, and the Southern Turf at 212 Fourth Avenue North. The Italianate Utopia Hotel at 206 Fourth Avenue North was designed in 1891 by Hugh Cathcart Thompson, architect of the Ryman Auditorium. The ornate Victorian facades of these buildings stand in vibrant contrast to most of their contemporary neighbors.
In the years leading up to final closure of the Climax Saloon in 1914, local churches including the The Union Gospel Tabernacle (known today as The Ryman) and Tulip Street Church preached against alcohol consumption and the sinfulness of the Cherry Street brothels and saloons. A growing national abstinence movement took hold in Tennessee and found powerful political allies. A series of laws ultimately closed all the saloons in the state, leaving only illegal speakeasies in Printer's Alley and surrounding areas.
Eurico Guterres in 1999 | |
Born | 4 July 1969 (age 51) Waitame, Uatolari, Viqueque, Portuguese Timor |
---|---|
Allegiance | Aitarak |
Years of service | 1999–2000 |
Other work | Leader of PAN East Nusa Tenggara (2005–2015) |
Eurico Barros Gomes Guterres (born in Waitame, Uatolari, Viqueque, Portuguese Timor, 4 July 1969)[1] is a pro-Indonesian, anti-Timorese independence militiaman recruited by the Indonesian military during East Timor's bid for independence between 1999 and 2000. He was involved in several massacres in East Timor, and was a chief militia leader during the post-independence massacres and destruction of the capitalDili.
Indonesia officially convicted and sentenced Guterres to ten years imprisonment in November 2002, for which he was incarcerated in 2006 until 2008. In August 2003 he formed Laskar Merah Putih (The Red and White Warriors) in Indonesian Papua.
Elsham leader Aloysius Renwarin reported Guterres had 200 members consisting of Indonesian expatriates from Maluku, Timor and Sulawesi in December 2003 when Guterres requested the local government to provide his organisation offices in Timika, Papua.
Background[edit]
Guterres was born in Uatulari (near Viqueque), East Timor. His parents were killed in 1976 by Indonesian TNI forces due to their known pro-Fretilin views. Guterres later accused Fretilin of their deaths, after his allegiance to Indonesia was established.[citation needed]
Young Guterres was brought up by an Indonesian civilian until he was sent to attend the Sacred Heart of Jesus Catholic school in Becora, Dili. He left senior high school and became involved in petty crime, including involvement in a government-protected gambling hall at Tacitolu, Dili.[citation needed]
Judgement Gambling Hall Vegas
In 1988, Indonesian military intelligence detained him for his alleged involvement in a plot to assassinate President Suharto, who was to visit Dili in October. At this time, Guterres switched from being pro-independence to being pro-Indonesia. He became an informer for the Army's Kopassus special forces and a double-agent against the independence movement, which expelled him around 1990.[citation needed]
A counter-insurgency officer, Prabowo Subianto, took recruited Guterres into Gardapaksi in 1994, an organisation that gave cheap loans to start small businesses, but also used borrowers as informants and in pro-military vigilante squads. East Timor Governor José Abílio Osório Soares supported Gardapaksi, which developed a record of human rights abuse.[citation needed]
In 1997, with a high school certificate supposedly provided by the military, he began attending the Economics Institute in Dili. Though the Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Ekonomi (STIE) was run by pro-integrationist Filomeno Hornay, Guterres attended only three semesters. He is married to the niece of Bishop Nascimento of Baucau, and has three children.[citation needed]
He is the primary suspect in the Liquiçá Church Massacre of April 1999, according to information gathered by the UNTAET Crime Scene Detachment.[2] He was sentenced to 10 years of imprisonment in 2002 by a special court, and began serving his sentence in 2006.[3] In 2008, he was released from prison following an appeal to the Supreme Court of Indonesia.[4]
He was part of the National Mandate Party (Partai Amanat Nasional or PAN) between 2003 and 2004. He served as leader of PAN East Nusa Tenggara from 2005 to 2015. And then became PAN East Nusa Tenggara Counselor and PAN Central Leader Council. In October 2017, he resigned from PAN, as several of his friends had earlier quit the party.[5]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^According to other sources: 17 July 1974, but this is believed to be unlikely, see http://yayasanhak.minihub.org/mot/cons92z%20-%20Eurico%20Guterres.htm
- ^Facts and legal proceduresArchived 21 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Donnan, Shawn (4 May 2006). 'Pro-Jakarta militia leader begins sentence'. Financial Times. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
- ^'Eurico Guterres: Saya Tidak Akan Tuntut Ganti Rugi'. KOMPAS.com (in Indonesian). 4 April 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
- ^Oby Lewanmeru (12 October 2017). 'Wah! Ini Alasan Mengapa Eurico Guterres Mundur Dari Partai Amanat Nasional'.
Judgement Gambling Hall &
From the late 1880s until 1914, the Gentlemen's Quarter was Nashville's most sordid and lewd area. It was a place where any self-respecting Victorian lady of the time refused to walk down the street. A woman who valued her reputation did not ever venture into this block. It was densely populated with saloons and other adult or erotic businesses catering to the interests of men.
The Gentlemen's Quarter was able to proliferate due to a several ideal circumstances of the time. A constant and abundant supply of male customers, including attorneys from nearby office buildings; businessmen travelling from the famous Maxwell House hotel, which was located adjacent to quarter; and plenty of construction workers and riverboat crews from the nearby Cumberland River. Lax enforcement by local police and support from popular Tennessee whiskey distilleries also played a key role in growth of the gentlemen's quarter.
In the Gentlemen's Quarter, men could get a shave and a haircut, buy a new suit, have a lunchtime meal in the city (somewhat of a new trend in the 1890s), enjoy an alcoholic drink in one of the many saloons, or participate in more scandalous and illegal activities like gambling or prostitution. In an era of strict social rules, the Climax Saloon and many others in the Printer's Alley area provided men a place to drink, gamble, and curse without judgment.
Nashville police were very aware of the illegal activities occurring in the gentleman's quarter. Occasional raids did take place but they often resulted in only a nominal fine.
It's known that the George A. Dickel Company Distillery used a method of acquiring or constructing saloons in Nashville, to create outlets for selling their whiskey. The Dickel company owned the Climax Saloon, which survived on 4th Avenue until being demolished for replacement by Dream Hotel Nashville, which features some original fixtures and architectural elements from the old saloon and hotel. The Dream is one of several new boutique hotels in Printer's Alley.
Jack Daniel is said to have made visits to all the saloons on Cherry Street, buying a round of Jack Daniel's whiskey for everyone in each saloon. According to legend, Daniel, who was only 5'2″ tall, would accumulate followers in each establishment, following him to the next place for another free round.
The Maxwell House Hotel (from which the coffee got its name) stood across the street at the corner of Fourth Avenue and Church Street until it burned on Christmas night, 1961. The reputation of the Men's Quarter became so unsavory that the Maxwell House, which had its main entrance on Fourth Avenue, established a separate ladies' entrance around the corner on Church Street. Two Men's Quarter saloon buildings, though not the saloons themselves, survive on Fourth Avenue: the Climax at 210 Fourth Avenue North, and the Southern Turf at 212 Fourth Avenue North. The Italianate Utopia Hotel at 206 Fourth Avenue North was designed in 1891 by Hugh Cathcart Thompson, architect of the Ryman Auditorium. The ornate Victorian facades of these buildings stand in vibrant contrast to most of their contemporary neighbors.
In the years leading up to final closure of the Climax Saloon in 1914, local churches including the The Union Gospel Tabernacle (known today as The Ryman) and Tulip Street Church preached against alcohol consumption and the sinfulness of the Cherry Street brothels and saloons. A growing national abstinence movement took hold in Tennessee and found powerful political allies. A series of laws ultimately closed all the saloons in the state, leaving only illegal speakeasies in Printer's Alley and surrounding areas.
Eurico Guterres in 1999 | |
Born | 4 July 1969 (age 51) Waitame, Uatolari, Viqueque, Portuguese Timor |
---|---|
Allegiance | Aitarak |
Years of service | 1999–2000 |
Other work | Leader of PAN East Nusa Tenggara (2005–2015) |
Eurico Barros Gomes Guterres (born in Waitame, Uatolari, Viqueque, Portuguese Timor, 4 July 1969)[1] is a pro-Indonesian, anti-Timorese independence militiaman recruited by the Indonesian military during East Timor's bid for independence between 1999 and 2000. He was involved in several massacres in East Timor, and was a chief militia leader during the post-independence massacres and destruction of the capitalDili.
Indonesia officially convicted and sentenced Guterres to ten years imprisonment in November 2002, for which he was incarcerated in 2006 until 2008. In August 2003 he formed Laskar Merah Putih (The Red and White Warriors) in Indonesian Papua.
Elsham leader Aloysius Renwarin reported Guterres had 200 members consisting of Indonesian expatriates from Maluku, Timor and Sulawesi in December 2003 when Guterres requested the local government to provide his organisation offices in Timika, Papua.
Background[edit]
Guterres was born in Uatulari (near Viqueque), East Timor. His parents were killed in 1976 by Indonesian TNI forces due to their known pro-Fretilin views. Guterres later accused Fretilin of their deaths, after his allegiance to Indonesia was established.[citation needed]
Young Guterres was brought up by an Indonesian civilian until he was sent to attend the Sacred Heart of Jesus Catholic school in Becora, Dili. He left senior high school and became involved in petty crime, including involvement in a government-protected gambling hall at Tacitolu, Dili.[citation needed]
Judgement Gambling Hall Vegas
In 1988, Indonesian military intelligence detained him for his alleged involvement in a plot to assassinate President Suharto, who was to visit Dili in October. At this time, Guterres switched from being pro-independence to being pro-Indonesia. He became an informer for the Army's Kopassus special forces and a double-agent against the independence movement, which expelled him around 1990.[citation needed]
A counter-insurgency officer, Prabowo Subianto, took recruited Guterres into Gardapaksi in 1994, an organisation that gave cheap loans to start small businesses, but also used borrowers as informants and in pro-military vigilante squads. East Timor Governor José Abílio Osório Soares supported Gardapaksi, which developed a record of human rights abuse.[citation needed]
In 1997, with a high school certificate supposedly provided by the military, he began attending the Economics Institute in Dili. Though the Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Ekonomi (STIE) was run by pro-integrationist Filomeno Hornay, Guterres attended only three semesters. He is married to the niece of Bishop Nascimento of Baucau, and has three children.[citation needed]
He is the primary suspect in the Liquiçá Church Massacre of April 1999, according to information gathered by the UNTAET Crime Scene Detachment.[2] He was sentenced to 10 years of imprisonment in 2002 by a special court, and began serving his sentence in 2006.[3] In 2008, he was released from prison following an appeal to the Supreme Court of Indonesia.[4]
He was part of the National Mandate Party (Partai Amanat Nasional or PAN) between 2003 and 2004. He served as leader of PAN East Nusa Tenggara from 2005 to 2015. And then became PAN East Nusa Tenggara Counselor and PAN Central Leader Council. In October 2017, he resigned from PAN, as several of his friends had earlier quit the party.[5]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^According to other sources: 17 July 1974, but this is believed to be unlikely, see http://yayasanhak.minihub.org/mot/cons92z%20-%20Eurico%20Guterres.htm
- ^Facts and legal proceduresArchived 21 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^Donnan, Shawn (4 May 2006). 'Pro-Jakarta militia leader begins sentence'. Financial Times. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
- ^'Eurico Guterres: Saya Tidak Akan Tuntut Ganti Rugi'. KOMPAS.com (in Indonesian). 4 April 2008. Retrieved 11 February 2020.
- ^Oby Lewanmeru (12 October 2017). 'Wah! Ini Alasan Mengapa Eurico Guterres Mundur Dari Partai Amanat Nasional'.