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While many authors have written about what urban plans should
contain and how they should be used, this comprehensive book leads
you step by step through the entire plan preparation process.
Citing examples from across the country, Larz Anderson shows how to
prepare, review, adopt, and implement urban plans. He explains how
to id
Planning the Built Environment takes a systematic, technical
approach to describing how urban infrastructures work. Accompanied
by detailed diagrams, illustrations, tables, and reference lists,
the book begins with landforms and progresses to essential
utilities that manage drainage, wastewater, power, and water
supply. A section on str
While many authors have written about what urban plans should
contain and how they should be used, this comprehensive book leads
you step by step through the entire plan preparation process.
Citing examples from across the country, Larz Anderson shows how to
prepare, review, adopt, and implement urban plans. He explains how
to identify public needs and desires, analyze existing problems and
opportunities, and augment long-range general plans with
short-range district and function plans. Anderson presents these
guidelines as tasks. For each task, he explains the rationale
behind it, recommends a procedure for completing it, and identifies
the expected results. Throughout, Anderson encourages improvisation
he urges planners to adapt the guidelines to meet local needs.
Excerpts from recently adopted general plans illustrate Anderson's
points and provide examples of variations even within his
recommendations. A related glossary gives comprehensive definitions
to words that, though not technical, have meanings specific to the
urban plan. Anderson's clear and readable style makes this book a
must, not only for the professional, but for the student bewildered
by the complexities of forming urban plans. Guidelines for
Preparing Urban Plans is a valuable textbook for undergraduate,
graduate, and professional courses in planning theory and planning
administration, as well as workshop-style studio courses.
This is a new release of the original 1931 edition.
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
Kessinger Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of
rare and hard-to-find books with something of interest for
everyone!
The history of blacktop basketball in fast-paced words and
pictures. A New York street hustler. A lonely man in a Maryland
prison. A confused Native American on a reservation in Idaho. What
do they all have in common? They are among the best pickup
basketball players in the country. In Pickup Artists, Lars Anderson
and Chad Millman tell the complete story of the street game from
its mythical past to its glorious present. Using original reporting
to examine the evolution of playground basketball, Anderson and
Millman are the first journalists to unravel the thickly woven
tapestry of the sport's subculture. Today's super-hyped,
corporate-sponsored tournaments weren't always the norm. The
foundation of the game was laid with sweat in the 1920s and it has
grown from a rudimentary sport to a sophisticated exhibition.
Basketball is more than macho melodramas acted out in America's
inner cities. It's a town meeting in the heart of Indiana and
symbol of freedom for prisoners in jail. Anderson and Millman tap
into the essence of pickup basketball, examining its importance
everywhere the game is played. They profile not just legends like
Earl Marigault and Joe Hammond, but players like Fred "Spook"
Stegman, the man who carries the legacy of being the first to
connect the playgrounds with colleges, and Gregory Vaughn, whose
tragic death in the 1980s exposed the underground world of drugs in
basketball. Forget about the NBA and showtime. Pickup basketball is
about basketball on the blacktops, at its most basic level. It's
about the unusual lives of some of the nation's best players you've
never heard of. Until now.
In this stunning work of narrative nonfiction, Lars Anderson
recounts one of college football's greatest contests: "Carlisle vs.
Army," the fateful 1912 gridiron clash that had far-reaching
implications both real and symbolic.
The story centers on three men: Glenn "Pop" Warner, who came to the
Carlisle Indian School in 1903 and saw beyond its assimilationist
agenda, molding the Carlisle Indians into a football juggernaut and
smashing prejudices along the way; Jim Thorpe, who arrived at
Carlisle as a troubled teenager-only to become one of America's
finest athletes, dazzling his opponents and gaining fans across the
nation; and a hardnosed Kansan back named Dwight Eisenhower, who
knew that by stopping Carlisle's amazing winning streak, he could
lead the Cadets of Army to glory. But beyond recounting the tale of
this momentous match, Lars Anderson reveals its broader social and
historical context, offering unique perspectives on sports and
culture at the dawn of the twentieth century.
Filled with colorful period detail, "Carlisle vs. Army" gives a
thrilling, authoritative account of the events of an epic afternoon
whose reverberations would be felt for generations.
Praise for "Carslisle vs. Army":
"Richly detailed and gracefully written . . . In an often
overlooked football era, Anderson found a true Game of the
Century."
"-Sports Illustrated"
"[A] remarkable story . . . "Carlisle vs. Army" is about football
the way that The Natural is about baseball."
-Jeremy Schaap, author of "Cinderella Man"
"A great sports story, told with propulsive narrative drive . . .
Anderson allows himself to get inside the heads of his characters,
but as in the best sports-centered nonfiction (Hillenbrand's
"Seabiscuit" and Frost's "Greatest Game Ever Played," for example),
the technique is based on solid research."
-"Booklist" (starred review)
"A masterly tale of the gridiron."
-Neal Bascomb, author of "Red Mutiny"
"A magnificent story that's as rich in American history as it is in
sporting lore. "Carlisle vs. Army" is a dramatic and moving book,
told with an unrelenting grace."
-Adrian Wojnarowski, author of "The Miracle of St. Anthony"
"Gripping, inspiring coverage of three powerful forces'
unforgettable convergence: the sports version of "The Perfect
Storm.""
-"Kirkus Reviews"
On November 29, 1941, Army played Navy in front of 100,000 fans.
Eight days later, the Japanese attacked and the young men who
battled each other in that historic game were forced to fight a
very different enemy. Author Lars Anderson follows four
players--two from Annapolis and two from West Point--in this epic
true story.
Bill Busik. Growing up in Pasadena, California, Busik was best
friends with a young black man named Jackie, who in 1947 would make
Major League Baseball history. Busik would have a spectacular
sports career himself at the Naval Academy, earning All-American
honors as a tailback in 1941. He was serving aboard the U.S.S.
"Shaw when it was attacked by Japanese dive-bombers in 1943.
Hal Kauffman. Together, Busik and Kauffman rode a train across the
nation to Annapolis to enroll in the Naval Academy. A backup
tailback at Navy, Kauffman would go on to serve aboard the U.S.S.
"Meredith, which was sunk in 1942. For five days Kauffman struggled
to stay alive on a raft, fighting off hallucinations, dehydration,
and--most terrifying of all--sharks. Dozens of his crewmates lost
their minds; others were eaten by sharks. All the while Kauffman
wondered if he'd ever see his friend and teammate again.
Henry Romanek. Because he had relatives in Poland, Romanek heard
firsthand accounts in 1939 of German aggression. Wanting to become
an officer, Romanek attended West Point and played tackle for the
Cadets. He spent months preparing for the D-day invasion and on
June 6, 1944--the day he would have graduated from West Point had
his course load not been cut from four years to three--Romanek rode
in a landing craft to storm Omaha Beach. In the first wave to hit
the beach he wouldalso become one of the first to take a
bullet.
Robin Olds. The son of a famous World War I fighter pilot, Olds
decided to follow in his father's footsteps. At West Point he
became best friends with Romanek and the two played side-by-side on
Army's line. In 1942, a sportswriter Grantland Rice named Olds to
his All-American team. Two years later Olds spent D-day flying a
P-38 over Omaha Beach, anxiously scanning the battlefield for
Romanek, hoping his friend would survive the slaughter.
The tale of these four men is woven into a dramatic narrative of
football and war that's unlike any other. Through extensive
research and interviews with dozens of World War II veterans,
Anderson has written one of the most compelling and original true
stories in all of World War II literature. From fierce fighting,
heroic rescues, tragic death, and awe-inspiring victory, all four
men's suspenseful journeys are told in graphic detail. Along the
way, Anderson brings World War II to life in a way that has never
been done before.
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