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Kalahari Resorts operates some of the largest indoor water parks in the United States. The Round Rock location's 223,000-square-foot indoor water park is the largest in the United States, [ 3 ] followed by the Pocono Mountains location's 220,000-square-foot water park, the 173,000-square-foot waterpark in Sandusky and the Wisconsin Dells ...
Tswalu Kalahari is a luxury private lodge [4] in the reserve, a member of National Geographic Unique Lodges of the World. There are nine suites at the Motse Lodge, with the private Tarkuni having five suites.
1 The Cuando River; 2 Caprivi Strip; 3 Mudumu National Park and Lianshulu Lodge, the end of the Linyanti Swamp; 4 Linyanti Swamp and Mamli National Park, where a ridge of Kalahari sand blocks flow to the south-east; 5 Okavango River and delta which sinks into the Kalahari sands; 6 Linyanti River; 7 Lake Liambezi (dry when photo was taken); 8 ...
Great Wolf Lodge in Dallas, Texas. Great Wolf Resorts, Inc. (formerly known as Great Wolf Lodge) is a chain of resort hotels and indoor water parks. The company owns and operates its family resorts under the Great Wolf Lodge brand. [2] In addition to a water park, each resort features restaurants, arcades, spas, and children's activities. [3]
The Sands of Kalahari (1960) The Mantrackers (1960) Night of the Axe (1972) I've Got Viktor Schalkenburg (1975) The Tiger Heart (1997) Three Novels and a Story (1995) Serengeti(1995) God is Blind (1996) Sagaponack (1999) Meadow Lane (1998) Sagaponack (2010)
The Sands Hotel and Casino was a historic American hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada, United States, that operated from 1952 to 1996. Designed by architect Wayne McAllister , with a prominent 56-foot (17 m) high sign, the Sands was the seventh resort to open on the Strip.
Sands of the Kalahari is a 1965 British adventure film starring Stuart Whitman, Stanley Baker, Susannah York, Harry Andrews, Theodore Bikel and Nigel Davenport, based on the 1960 novel The Sands of Kalahari by William Mulvihill. [1] The screenplay was written by Cy Endfield and the uncredited William Mulvihill and directed by Cy Endfield.
It was also the recording venue for several live albums, including Frank Sinatra's Sinatra at the Sands, [2] Sammy Davis Jr.'s That's All! [3] and The Sounds of '66, [4] and Dean Martin's Live at the Sands Hotel - An Evening of Music, Laughter and Hard Liquor. [5] The Copa Room's showgirls were known as "The Copa Girls."