There's music -- live or DJed -- every night at Acme, a college bar plopped onto Annapolis's Main Street.
With a futuristic theme and a good selection of beers, this small, basement-level pool hall stands out from the crowd.
The largest indie rock venue in D.C. is actually four venues in one, so you can check out bands, dance to a DJ or go to the Red Room to shoot pool.
Almost too cool to be a college bar, Bridges has numerous pool tables, good happy hour specials and weekly dance parties.
Happy hours, trivia, DJs, food specials and sports viewing keep George Mason students (and neighborhood regulars) happy.
Thirty pool tables, numerous shuffleboard tables, five jukeboxes, numerous couches, big-screen TVs and two full bars have made Buffalo one of D.C.'s most popular pool halls.
Your usual mid-size dance club.
This is a relaxing place to grab a hearty meal and on Tuesdays it serves up some of the best Dixieland jazz in the District.
A College Park landmark, this bar is packed with students on the weekends, and is Terp Central when Maryland sports are on TV.
College alumni groups pack the place to watch their games on more than 100 TVs.
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