Prospect Park Alliance Tennis

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Prospect Park Alliance Tennis Prospect Park Alliance Tennis Learn & Play Doubles This league is a combination of 2015 – 16 Season instruction and doubles play for Tuesdays, 9 – 11 am 2.5 player and above. 6-Week session: $300 Individual session: $65 Register up to one week in advance. To sign up, please The Prospect Park Tennis Center complete the registration form. Payment in full is required at the Parade Ground is a program due upon registration. of the Prospect Park Alliance. No refunds. No make ups for missed sessions. Player Proceeds go toward the ongoing subsitutions are allowed. maintenance of the Tennis Center. 24-hour advanced notice required to cancel reservations. 50 Parkside Avenue prospectpark.org/tennis Tel (718) 436-2500 prospect_park prospect_park prospectparkbrooklyn Brooklyn, NY 11218 Fax (718) 972-2690 Ways to return form: Prospect Park Tennis Center In person: 50 Parkside Avenue, Learn & Play Doubles Brooklyn, NY 11218 By fax: (718) 972-2690 Registration Form 2015 – 16 By mail: Prospect Park Alliance, Tennis Center. 95 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, NY 11215 Your Information Name M F Address City State Zip Telephone Email Emergency Contact Name & Number Session (please check your choice) Learn and Play ($300/6 sessions) Individual session ($65) Give a Kid the Gift of Game Please consider making a charitable contribution with your payment. Your gift will support scholarships for children in the Junior Development Program at the Tennis Center. All contributions are fully tax deductible. Yes, I would like to add $ as a contribution to the Junior Development Scholarship Fund. Your Payment Information Payment method: Check Credit Card Cash Payment $ + Contribution $ = Total $ Make all checks payable to Prospect Park Alliance Tennis. To pay by credit card please fill in the information below: Credit Card # Exp. Date Cv2# Card Holder Name (print) I authorize the Prospect Park Tennis Center to charge the credit card listed below for charges incurred at Prospect Park Tennis Center. Credit card payments are not accepted by email. If submitting via email, call (718) 436-2500 x305 to provide credit card information. Signature Date Waiver and Release from Liability The participant (parent/guardian if under 18 years of age) assumes full responsibility for the risk of injury while participating in all activities at the Prospect Park Tennis Center. The participant and their parent/guardian agree to hold harmless and indemnify NYC Parks and Recreation, Prospect Park Alliance and the Prospect Park Tennis Center from all liability, loss, cost, claim or damage resulting from participating in any activity at the Prospect Park Tennis Center, and grant permission for the promotional use of photos of participants at the Prospect Park Tennis Center. Signature Date For Office use only Series 1: Cash, Check, Credit Card Amount Day Series 2: Cash, Check, Credit Card Amount Day 50 Parkside Avenue prospectpark.org/tennis Tel (718) 436-2500 prospect_park prospect_park prospectparkbrooklyn Brooklyn, NY 11218 Fax (718) 972-2690.
Recommended publications
  • Prospect Park Primary Source Packet
    PROSPECT PARK PRIMARY SOURCE PACKET Student Name Prospect Park Primary Source Packet INTRODUCTORY READING "Timeline." Park History. Prospect Park Alliance, Web. 28 Jan 2014. ADAPTATION In 1834, the City of Brooklyn was chartered, and during the next 30 years it became the third largest city in the country, following only New York (Manhattan) and Philadelphia. Thousands of European immigrants settled in the growing city and sprawling farms gave way to homes. At the same time public parks were gaining popularity in America. Beginning in 1858, the design team of Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux transformed more than 800 acres of jagged rock into Central Park in Manhattan. It was the first landscaped public park in the United States. Soon after a movement grew in Brooklyn for a park of its own. Leading the effort was James Stranahan, a businessman and civic leader. In the early 1860s, Stranahan argued that a park in Brooklyn "would become a favorite resort for all classes of our community, enabling thousands to enjoy pure air, with healthful exercise, at all seasons of the year…." Calvert Vaux sketched Prospect Park’s present layout for Stranahan. Vaux convinced Olmsted to join the effort, and construction of the park began on July 1, 1866 under their supervision. Olmsted and Vaux’s plan included rolling green meadows, carriage drives with scenic lookouts, waterfalls, springs and a forest. Organized sports gained popularity throughout the first half of the 1900s and the Park continued to host parades and celebrations that drew huge crowds. Parks Commissioner Robert Moses opened the zoo, bandshell and several playgrounds in the 1930s.
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  • PROSPECT PARK (Excluding the Friends' Cemetery), Borough of Brooklyn
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  • Dog Map Brochure 2021 for Website
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  • New Leader for Landmark Prospect Park
    For immediate release Contact December 8, 2010 Eugene Patron (Alliance), (718) 965-8954 [email protected] Vickie Karp /Phil Abramson (Parks), (212) 360-1311 NEW LEADER FOR LANDMARK PROSPECT PARK Emily Lloyd’s years of experience applauded as perfect for building upon the acclaimed work of retiring Park visionary and steward, Tupper Thomas Parks & Recreation Commissioner Adrian Benepe and Prospect Park Alliance Board Chairman Albert H. Garner announced today that Emily Lloyd has been chosen as successor to retiring Prospect Park Administrator and Prospect Park Alliance President, Tupper Thomas. Lloyd will assume the dual positions that Thomas has held since 1980 and 1987 respectively, beginning January 31, 2011. Lloyd’s years of public service make her a well known and respected figure in New York. She has served as Commissioner of the New York City Department of Environmental Protection and Commissioner of the Department of Sanitation, as well as an Executive Vice President at Columbia University and most recently Chief Operating Officer at Trinity Real Estate. “It’s great news for Prospect Park, Brooklyn, and the people of New York City that Emily Lloyd is taking on a new challenge as Prospect Park Administrator and President of the Prospect Park Alliance,” said Commissioner Benepe. “Emily is a proven leader with a wealth of experience managing complex projects at the intersection of the public realm and citizen activism in New York City. I have every confidence that the park’s stunning transformation overseen by Tupper Thomas will continue and thrive under Emily’s new leadership.” “The Prospect Park Alliance has had a formative hand in the Park's transformation over the past 30 years under Tupper Thomas' leadership,” said Garner.
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