Filter Options
Required*
Filter
Medford / Massachusetts / United States
0.0

Centrally located in Medford Square, this pre-school focuses on offering active, play-oriented activity to those enrolled. Children are separated into three rooms, based on age (infant, toddler or pre-school). The school's website keeps parents up-to-date on closings due to weather, as well as openings in the different age groups.

Frankfort / Kentucky / United States
0.0
The Kentucky Department of Travel offers a range of recreational services. It operates self-guided tours to various destinations throughout the state, including the Berea Tourism Center, Kentucky Horse Park, Old Town Artisan Village and Fitchburg Furnace. The department provides information on interstates, parkways and major routes, as well as operates welcome centers and highway rest areas. It provides hunting, fishing and boating opportunities. The department offers information on theatres, restaurants and other entertainment venues. Its website features a photo library, calendar of events and CD media kits. The Kentucky Department of Travel provides licenses, permits and online visitor s guide.
Sammamish / Washington / United States
0.0

The Pine Lake Community Center is a venue on the Sammamish Plateau that can be rented to hold weddings, parties, meetings, receptions and other events.

The center's lodge was built in 1938 and can hold about 150 people. In addition to parties and receptions, the lodge is the site of various classes, including exercise, yoga and dance.

As of December 2010, the rental price for Friday from 5pm to midnight was $300, plus a $100 non-refundable cleaning fee. On Sundays, the rental fee is $40 per hour, plus a $100 non-refundable cleaning fee.

The site also has a baseball or softball field as well as a gravel parking lot.

The nonprofit group, which is privately owned, also calls itself the Pine Lake Community Club. The office phone is 425-392-4041. An information phone number is 425-392-2313.

Salem / Massachusetts / United States
0.0
Salem Sound Coastwatch is a non-profit coastal watershed organization that works with government agencies, businesses, other non-profit organizations and citizens from the communities of Manchester, Beverly, Danvers, Peabody, Salem, and Marblehead, Massachusetts. Salem Sound Coastwatch is dedicated to taking cooperative action to protect and enhance the environmental quality of the Salem Sound Watershed. Salem Sound Coastwatch works to achieve this mission through municipal partnering, scientific investigation, education, and stewardship. Our top priorities are protection of coastal habitat, commercial and recreational marine resources, and water quality. Salem Sound Coastwatch, then named Salem Sound 2000, was established as an informal working group in 1990 when a handful of citizens, local officials, and businesses became concerned with the lack of attention paid to the coastal embayment of Salem Sound. In 1995, the organization became one of the five local governance committees ( LGCs ) for the Massachusetts Bays National Estuary Program to facilitate regional implementation of the Comprehensive Conservation and Management Plan ( CCMP ). Within this role, Salem Sound Coastwatch assists the communities in the Salem Sound Watershed with activities such as water quality monitoring, protective bylaw development, grantsmanship, and public education all with the ultimate goal of helping to shape and implement CCMP actions. Salem Sound Coastwatch has grown substantially in the past eighteen years and is now recognized throughout the region for its environmental programs. Salem Sound Coastwatch programs include volunteer monitoring programs ( Clean Beaches & Streams, Coastal Habitat Invasives Monitoring Program, Wetland Health Assessment Toolbox, Stream Teams ), on-the ground restoration projects ( salt marsh and anadromous fish habitat restoration and stormwater remediation ), public education ( beach water quality and stormwater education ), and municipal assistance ( technical assistance and grant writing ). For an overview of past activities, see our 2008 Year In Review. 1. Increasing the publics knowledge and appreciation of the natural resources of the Salem Sound Watershed and the immediate and chronic threats to the ecological health of the watershed.
Woburn / Massachusetts / United States
0.0

The After School Club is a childcare program for school aged children, based out of facilities located at the Lutheran Church of the Redeemer. On school days the program runs from 2:30 p.m.-5:45 p.m., while during school vacations and in the summer full days are available. The After School Club can only serve a capacity of 45 children at a time. The program is fully licensed with staff trained in first aid and CPR.

Hunt / Texas / United States
0.0
Founded in 1924, Camp Stewart for Boys is a privately owned, Christian-oriented, non-denominational camp for boys ages six to sixteen. The camp is located in the heart of the famed Texas Hill Country near the headwaters of the Guadalupe River. Campers live in native rock-and-cedar cabins, with indoor plumbing rather than in tents or caves. They sleep in built-in bunk beds rather than on the ground. Meals are served family-style in a comfortable dining hall. Camp Stewart has a wide variety of indoor and outdoor activities and facilities for campers, including an archery range, nature and ecology programs, nature hikes, climbing walls, canoeing, glass etching, ceramics, leatherwork, an National Rifle Association certified rifle range, tennis lessons and tournaments, golf lessons and tournaments, choir and band activities, swimming programs and Red Cross life-saving instruction, water skiing, Tarzan rope swing and horseback riding. Camp Stewart for Boys is located near Hunt, Texas.
Wellesley Hills / Massachusetts / United States
0.0

Established as a social and athletic club in 1893, the Maugus Club is nearly as old as the town itself. Members enjoy badminton, squash, softball squash, North American hardball courts and six candlepin bowling lanes. Bowling lanes are available to the public upon appointment. The club is home to Nick's Olympic Wrestling School and named after an Indian Chief named John Maugus who once owned most of the land associated with the town of Wellesley. There is a $200 initiation fee, and additional charges apply after that.