Distant Corners

Distant Corners
Author: David Wangerin
Publisher: Temple University Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2014-02-14
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 9781439906316

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In Distant Corners, his follow-up to Soccer in a Football World, David Wangerin details several of the people, places, and events that shaped American soccer history. Despite its struggle for popular acceptance, soccer in the United States has a rich history. Wangerin profiles Tom Cahill, the almost-forgotten "father of American soccer," and writes passionately about the 1979 North American Soccer League season, the high-water mark of the game in the twentieth century. Wangerin shows how the American appetite for soccer has ebbed and grown over the years, chronicling the game at the college and professional levels and describing the city of St. Louis's unique historic attachment to the sport. Wangerin believes that the time is ripe for American fans to look into their own history and recognize the surprisingly deep connection their country has to soccer.

Compromise Planning : A Theoretical Approach from a Distant Corner of Europe

Compromise Planning : A Theoretical Approach from a Distant Corner of Europe
Author: Louis C. Wassenhoven
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 421
Release: 2022-03-28
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3030943313

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The purpose of the book is to elaborate a planning theory which departs from the plethora of theories which reflect the conditions of developed countries of the North-West. The empirical material of this effort is derived from a country, Greece, which sits on the edge between North-West and South-East, at the corner of Europe. No doubt, there is extensive international literature on planning theory in general from a bewildering variety of viewpoints. The interested professional or student of urban and regional planning is certainly aware of the dizzying flood of books, articles and research reports on planning theory and of their never-ending borrowing of obscure concepts from more respectable scientific disciplines, from mathematics to philosophy and from physics to economics, human geography and sociology. He or she probably observed that there is a growing interest in theoretical approaches from the viewpoint of the so-called “Global South”. The author of the present book has for many decades faced the impasse of attempting to transplant theories founded on the experience of the North-West to countries with a totally different historical, political, social and geographical background. He learned that the reality that planners face is unpredictable, patchy, and responsive to social processes, frequently of a very pedestrian nature. Planning strives to deal with private interests which planners are keen to envelop in a single “public interest”, which is extremely hard to define. The behaviour of the average citizen, far from being that of the neoclassical model of the homo economicus, is that of an individual, a kind of homo individualis, who interacts with the state and the public administration within a complex web of mutual dependence and negotiation. The state and its administrative apparatus, i.e., the key-determinants and fixers of urban and regional planning policy, bargain with this individual, offer inducements, exemptions, derogations and privileges, deviate unhesitatingly from their grand policy pronouncements, but still defend the rationality and comprehensiveness of the planning system they have legislated and operationalized. It is by and large a successful modus vivendi, but only thanks to a constant practice of compromise. Hence, the term compromise planning, which the author coined as an alternative to all the existing theoretical forms of planning. This is the sort of planning, and of the accompanying theory, with which he deals in this book. It is the outcome of experience and knowledge accumulated in a long personal journey of academic teaching in England and Greece, research, and professional involvement.

The Harrovians

The Harrovians
Author: Sir Arnold Henry Moore Lunn
Publisher:
Total Pages: 338
Release: 1926
Genre:
ISBN:

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Fifty Years of New Japan

Fifty Years of New Japan
Author: Shigenobu Ōkuma
Publisher:
Total Pages: 672
Release: 1909
Genre: History
ISBN:

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The Poster

The Poster
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1060
Release: 1922
Genre: Posters
ISBN:

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Harper's Monthly Magazine

Harper's Monthly Magazine
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1068
Release: 1902
Genre: American literature
ISBN:

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American Fork

American Fork
Author: George B. Handley
Publisher: John Hunt Publishing
Total Pages: 375
Release: 2018-05-25
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1780995407

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Zacharias Harker is a brilliant botanist and an aging recluse. Haunted by his mistakes and living without his wife and daughter for the past twenty years, he hatches the idea to write his magnum opus, a book on the implications of climate change for humanity focused on the wildflowers of Utah's Wasatch Mountains. Just prior to the tragedy of 9/11, he hires a young artist, Alba, to paint flowers for the book. Over the course of their unlikely friendship, Harker convinces Alba to return to Chile to learn the story, long hidden from her by her mother, of her father's disappearance under Pinochet. Alba's discovery of her family history and her experience listening to the stories of Chileans who have resisted a government ruled by fear inspire her return to Utah with renewed purpose. As America grows more distrusting of immigration and diversity, Alba commits her art to the protection of the environment and to a more inclusive meaning of family and belonging while she and her husband, John, strive to learn Harker's hidden past and include him in their lives before it is too late. Rooted in the Mormon heritage of Utah but hemispheric in its reach, American Fork is a story of restoration and healing in the wake of loss and betrayal.

Future Days

Future Days
Author: David Stubbs
Publisher: Melville House
Total Pages: 514
Release: 2015
Genre: History
ISBN: 1612194745

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"First published in Great Britain in 2014 by Faber and Faber Ltd"--Title page verso.

From President to Prison

From President to Prison
Author: Ferdynand Antoni Ossendowski
Publisher: DigiCat
Total Pages: 286
Release: 2022-07-21
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

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In this historic novel, author Ferdynand Antoni Ossendowski gives his account of his personal experiences during the Russo Japanese War and in the Revolution of 1905, as it affected the Far East. The book offers one of the most intimate pictures of life in the dreaded Russian prisons of Siberia and Manchuria that has ever been drawn to the western world, by one who has himself lived through the regime of these institutions.