Tennis Club NewsMonday, September 30, 2019
Tournament: 1: A knightly sport of the middle ages between mounted combatants...."
2: a championship series of games or athletic contests"
-Webster' New Collegiate Dictonary
"That seest a game play'd home, the rich stake drawn,
And takest it all for jest."
-Leontes
The Winter's Tale
Act 1, Scene 2
Peter, Liz, Becky, and Kevin.
Peter and Liz prevailed over Becky and Kevin in the Mixed Doubles Finals
The news is still tournament frenzy. All the tournaments have been played. Congrats to the winners and to all the participants. And big thanks to Liz Herbert for running the show. Liz, with a big assist from Lou, shopped and arranged and set up and assigned and encouraged and pacified, and...
And the winners are:
- Men's Singles: Peter Urban
- Women's Doubles: Molly Downer/Liz Herbert
- Men's Doubles: David Hemenway/Ken Turnbull
- Women's Singles: Julia Moore
- Mixed Doubles: Liz Herbert/Peter Urban
- Women's Senior Singles: Molly Downer
- Women's Senior Doubles: Sharon Black/Becky Boyd
- Men's Senior Singles: Steve Kendall
- Men's Senior Doubleds: David Hemenway/Ken Turbull
- Senior Mixed Doubles: Michelle Schaffer/David Hemenway
Congratulations to the winners and to all the participants.
Let's look at some photos:
Michelle and David prevailed over Steve and Kate
Jessie, Esther, Sharon, Becky
Sharon and Becky prevailed over Jessie and Esther in Senior Women's Doubles
Steve
Zach and Liz
Ken
Kate, Julai, Mary, and Lucinda
Len watches
Lucinda
Kevin and Becky
Vin
And new staff member, Madi
Cambridge Tennis Club Oktoberfest
October 5 2:30-5:00
Come for German beer, brats, tennis, and wear your finest Oktoberfest outfit
. Beer and nonalcoholic drinks and your favorite German Sausages to grill will be provided.
There will be pro organized play from 3-5.
Please bring your favorite German appetizer or dessert.
Prizes will be awarded for the best outfit.
September is usually the second busiest month at the club (June is usually the busiest). Play in October falls off precipitously. The courts will be good and it will be easy to book one. Come play.
The website has a tradition of blurbing books written by members. Let's try a new feature: club artists with current or upcoming shows.
We invite all club artists to send us info or blurbs on their shows.
A call for contributors: We need some on-the-spot correspondents. Please send us opinions or comments or jokes or observations or pleas. Or stories.
Some links of interest:
Rogers Cup
ATP World Tour
WTA Tennis
The Book Blurb. The Blurb will note books not necessarily about tennis, but authored by CTC members. So, if you members have recently, or maybe not so recently, written a book that you'd like blurbed, please let us know.
We have some new books to blurb:
The Age of Living Machines: How Biology Will Build the Next Technology, a book about science for general readers,by club member and former President of MIT, Susan Hockfield. Amazon says: "...we are on the cusp of a new convergence, argues world-renowned neuroscientist Susan Hockfield, with discoveries in biology coming together with engineering to produce another array of almost inconceivable technologies―next-generation products that have the potential to be every bit as paradigm shifting as the twentieth century’s digital wonders."
p> "The fundamental question of information philosophy is cosmological and ultimately metaphysical. What is the process that creates information structures in the universe?" Heady stuff, no?Well, the club's own Bob Doyle who works much magic here behind the scenes tackled this little issue in his book, Free Will: The Scandal in Philosophy. And the club's own Craig Lambert wrote a nifty, readable article for Harvard Magazine on Bob and his place in the free will issue. Take a look at Craig's article,Two Steps to Free Will.
In the midst of renovating garages and ruling vast sectors of cyberspace, Bob Doyle wrote a bit of a magnum opus: Free Will: The Scandal in Philosophy by Bob Doyle. "The fundamental question of information philosophy is cosmological and ultimately metaphysical. What is the process that creates information structures in the universe?"
We have a new book by a club member, Game, Set, Match: Billie Jean King and the Revolution in Women's Sports, by club member, Susan Ware. The book is: A Publishers Weekly Top 10 Sports Book.
We have some new books from club member, Julie Baer:
Love Me Later
Julie Baer presents us with a unique book. Her fantastic artwork depicts nature and people in a special way. -- Bookreviewcafe.com
I Only Like What I Like
"CHILDREN BEWARE –will have you trying the untried, 'cause it's FUN! The collages fill you up to the eyeballs."
Take a look at: William P. Homans, Jr., A Life in Court, by Mark S. Brodin. Bill Homans was a long time member of the club with "a storied legal career." A lot of folks at the club knew and liked Bill. He could tell a story or two, couldn't he?
We want to mention New Classic American Houses, a book by Dan Cooper about the architecture of Albert, Righter, and our own John Tittmann. "New Classic American Houses is an architectural page-turner brimming with creative interpretations of traditional forms."
Hot off the presses, a new book by Faith Moore, Celebrating a Life, Planning Memorial Services and Other Creative Remembrances. "Celebrating a Life" provides the ideas, inspiration, and how-to advice needed for creating a meaningful memorial service. Light-hearted but sensitive, this thoughtful guide covers it all."
While We Were Sleeping by David Hemenway.
"This book powerfully illuminates how public health works with more than sixty success stories drawn from the area of injury and violence prevention."
The Parents We Mean To Be: How Well-Intentioned Adults Undermine Children's Moral and Emotional Development by Rick Weissbourd.
The New Yorker review said, "In this ardent and persuasive inquiry, Weissbourd, a Harvard psychologist, warns that 'happiness-besotted' parents do children a disservice by emphasizing personal fulfillment over empathy."
Some useful links:
Here's a link to the espn site, with pro ranking.
And a club member (let's call him Sol) suggested a link to the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, R.I. The site is rich.
"On the court, tennis players exchange not only ground strokes but lots of information. It's a richly interactive sport, both verbally and non-verbally. If players communicate clearly, simply, and consistently, the game will proceed more quickly, and with less fuss and misunderstanding. Here are a few guidelines that can make the game more fun, friendly, and fair for all...."
We've had some requests to run Craig Lambert's piece, sampled above, on Tennis Communication. (We'd better leave this link up on the newspage permanently.)
The Yearbook link will take you to the last newspage from 2016. From there you can see the whole of the Persistent Archive of last year's news.
Website Note: The time and temperature icon below is a link to a Cambridge weather site.
Joe DeBassio, Webmaster.
Website Note II: The honey-comb icon is also a link. It takes the clicker to an archive of all the past news pages so that said clicker can read the news pages for the whole year (2016). The less-than link (<) next to the honeycomb icon will take clickers to the previous issue of this year's newspage.