Monday 14 June 2010

Sculling the Thames



Each summer, the Maidenhead Rowing Club offers courses in Learning 2 Row. Each Monday and Wednesday for four weeks throughout the summer, small groups are groomed in the art of sculling. Where better to learn this sport, I thought, as Britain is among the world's leading rowing nations as evidenced by the many Olympian medals and annual regattas.

Acquiring this skill has fulfilled a personal lifetime dream. I remember as a youth, being impressed watching an American television report portrait of an eighty-seven year old British grand dame rowing in the early morning mist near Harvard University. She made the exercise look deceptively effortless.

Somehow I thought that rowing was about strength and endurance. While those are necessary requisites, the key quality required is balance. Seating oneself on a scull is comparable to straddling a toothpick in the midst of the Thames River while hoping to remain dry.

As I find myself once again in the viewing stand for the women's (17-19 June 2010) and men's (4th July weekend) regattas at Henley-on-the-Thames, I'll be focused on the gingerly balance and synchronized efforts of these pros - two essentials that constitute life. God grant us both these qualities in liberal measure as we seek to serve Him, others and self.

Friday 4 June 2010

Newbold Students Talk with Google


Today marked an important 'first' in history, when Newbold College students Jose Escobar, business major and NSA President, and Fanni Tuske, English literature major joined the Principal for a presentation organised by the Bracknell Forest Chamber of Commerce (purportedly the largest Chamber in the UK) at Ascot Racecourse.

The presenter was Richard Robinson, Head of Google's Business Markets. Robinson focused on how businesses can maximize their impact in today's market via the internet, he shared some of the strategies behind Google's success and he predicted that cloud computing and use of mobile devices (smart phones) to access information to be the current sweeping trend. Laptops are fast fading - handheld devices are 'in'. Anyone with a web presence in today's market would have deemed this presentation to be cutting edge!

The Principal, newly elected member of the Chamber of Commerce Council, has been asked to head an initiative intended to engage the educational and business sectors in more meaningful ways. Today was the maiden voyage of such an endeavour.

Thursday 3 June 2010

British Bobbies



Where does the term 'bobby' originate?

Sir Robert Peel is acknowledged by many as one of Britain's greatest statesmen of the 19th century. He served as a member of parliament, home secretary and twice prime minister. He has been seen as both the founder and betrayer of the Conservative Party and also the real founder of the Liberal Party. However, his greatest achievement was creating the modern British police force, affectionately referred to as 'bobbies', derived from Sir Robert Peel's nickname, 'Bobby'.