Delaplaine's 2014-2015 Country Club Tennis Rules


Book Description

The ultimate country club handbook for those who love tennis. Featuring rules, regulations, etiquette, round robin formats and more. Emphasizes the "unspoken" rules of country club play. Sophie Delaplaine has been a tennis player all her life. She was a champion when she played in school and has continued to play all her life. She plays at La Gorce Country Club in Miami Beach, among many of the other highly regarded courts in Florida, such as Fisher Island and Indian Creek, she has had every opportunity to examine the game with a keen eye.




Delaplaine's Country Club Tennis Rules


Book Description

Delaplaine presents the ultimate country club tennis handbook for those who love tennis. The guide addresses rules, regulations, etiquette, round-robin formats, and other topics.




Delaplaine's Country Club Tennis Rules


Book Description

Sophie Delaplaine's updated version of the most current "rules," both spoken and unspoken, written and unwritten, regarding tennis at the club.




The Social Project


Book Description

Winner of the 2015 Abbott Lowell Cummings prize from the Vernacular Architecture Forum Winner of the 2015 Sprio Kostof Book Award from the Society of Architectural Historians Winner of the 2016 International Planning History Society Book Prize for European Planning History Honorable Mention: 2016 Wylie Prize in French Studies In the three decades following World War II, the French government engaged in one of the twentieth century’s greatest social and architectural experiments: transforming a mostly rural country into a modernized urban nation. Through the state-sanctioned construction of mass housing and development of towns on the outskirts of existing cities, a new world materialized where sixty years ago little more than cabbage and cottages existed. Known as the banlieue, the suburban landscapes that make up much of contemporary France are near-opposites of the historic cities they surround. Although these postwar environments of towers, slabs, and megastructures are often seen as a single utopian blueprint gone awry, Kenny Cupers demonstrates that their construction was instead driven by the intense aspirations and anxieties of a broad range of people. Narrating the complex interactions between architects, planners, policy makers, inhabitants, and social scientists, he shows how postwar dwelling was caught between the purview of the welfare state and the rise of mass consumerism. The Social Project unearths three decades of architectural and social experiments centered on the dwelling environment as it became an object of modernization, an everyday site of citizen participation, and a domain of social scientific expertise. Beyond state intervention, it was this new regime of knowledge production that made postwar modernism mainstream. The first comprehensive history of these wide-ranging urban projects, this book reveals how housing in postwar France shaped both contemporary urbanity and modern architecture.




Palms and People in the Amazon


Book Description

This book explores the degree to which landscapes have been enriched with palms by human activities and the importance of palms for the lives of people in the region today and historically. Palms are a prominent feature of many landscapes in Amazonia, and they are important culturally, economically, and for a variety of ecological roles they play. Humans have been reorganizing the biological furniture in the region since the first hunters and gatherers arrived over 20,000 years ago.




Delaplaine's 2016 Country Club Tennis Rules


Book Description

The ultimate country club handbook for those who love tennis. Featuring rules, regulations, etiquette, round robin formats and more. Emphasizes the "unspoken" rules of country club play. Sophie Delaplaine has been a tennis player all her life. She was a champion when she played in school and has continued to play all her life. She plays at La Gorce Country Club in Miami Beach, among many of the other highly regarded courts in Florida, such as Fisher Island and Indian Creek, she has had every opportunity to examine the game with a keen eye.




The Medicean Succession


Book Description

Cosimo dei Medici stabilized ducal finances, secured his borders, doubled his territory, attracted scholars and artists to his court, academy, and universities, and dissipated fractious Florentine politics. These triumphs were far from a foregone conclusion, as Gregory Murry shows in this study of how Cosimo crafted his image as a sacral monarch.







Who's who in American Law


Book Description




The Unintended Reformation


Book Description

In a work that is as much about the present as the past, Brad Gregory identifies the unintended consequences of the Protestant Reformation and traces the way it shaped the modern condition over the course of the following five centuries. A hyperpluralism of religious and secular beliefs, an absence of any substantive common good, the triumph of capitalism and its driver, consumerism—all these, Gregory argues, were long-term effects of a movement that marked the end of more than a millennium during which Christianity provided a framework for shared intellectual, social, and moral life in the West. Before the Protestant Reformation, Western Christianity was an institutionalized worldview laden with expectations of security for earthly societies and hopes of eternal salvation for individuals. The Reformation’s protagonists sought to advance the realization of this vision, not disrupt it. But a complex web of rejections, retentions, and transformations of medieval Christianity gradually replaced the religious fabric that bound societies together in the West. Today, what we are left with are fragments: intellectual disagreements that splinter into ever finer fractals of specialized discourse; a notion that modern science—as the source of all truth—necessarily undermines religious belief; a pervasive resort to a therapeutic vision of religion; a set of smuggled moral values with which we try to fertilize a sterile liberalism; and the institutionalized assumption that only secular universities can pursue knowledge. The Unintended Reformation asks what propelled the West into this trajectory of pluralism and polarization, and finds answers deep in our medieval Christian past.