Need to install some replacement windows in your home, but are unsure with what brand to go with? Find out how you can find great energy efficient windows in your town with these easy tips and tricks for any homeowner.
Posts Tagged ‘Duncan’
Energy Efficient Windows Make for Great Replacement Windows Posted By : R. Duncan
How to Get the Best Replacement Windows for Your Home Posted By : Duncan
It can be a difficult task to find the right replacement windows for your home, let alone the right contractors to get the job done. Use these simple tips when trying to find the right people for your replacement windows project.
Michael Clarke Duncan Dating Omarosa
Omarosa’s Ultimate Merger? A partnership with Green Mile star Michael Clarke Duncan.The heavyweight actor has reportedly found love with Omarosa Manigault-Stallworth — business-savvy baddie who found fame as the resident villainess on Season One of Donald Trump’s The Apprentice. Duncan and Manigault-Stallworth began dating after meeting at a Los Angeles grocery store last spring — [...]
Real Estate Website Technology Reviewed Posted By : Duncan Wierman
This article discusses real estate technology versus the human factor.
Friday Playlist
THE WEEKEND’S COME
TIME TO THROW YOUR TROUBLES AWAY
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This week’s Playlist is all about the longing in various forms – longing to connect and dance with some that makes us smile, longing to shine where so often we feel a touch dull. Richard and Linda Thomposon start things off with the high hopes of “I Want To See The Bright Lights Tonight,” followed the equally daydream rich “When I Paint My Masterpiece,” Dylan and The Band’s classic worked over nicely by Tim O’Brien and Del McCoury. Then, a couple quality bands from the “H” section of the alphabet, Hoots & Hellmouth and the Hackensaw Boys with “The Good I Know You Know” and “Stranger’s Waltz,” respectively. This is followed by nu-folk-innovators Fire On Fire‘s “Liberty Unknown,” Elton John‘s shimmering cover of Lesley Duncan’s cult favorite “Love Song” and finally Chris Thile‘s “Ready For Anything” from his superb solo album Deciever. May your weekend find all your hopes fulfilled, kids!
And check out last week’s U.K. rich Playlist with The Cribs, Muse, The Smiths and more! Playlist assembled by JamBase Associate Editor Dennis Cook, who is generally just about as easy as Sunday morningÂ… |
Cunning stunts
Interesting week for students of political communications. Two big moves by UK politics’ current best communicator David Cameron. First he very publicly kicks Alan Duncan in the soft parts over his offhand remarks about MPs expenses how tough life is on state subsidised grilled ficelle croutons. He followed up with his big speech on cutting [...]
Gerald Bracey: Obama and Duncan Champion Test Abuse
The President of the United States and his Secretary of Education are violating one of the most fundamental principles concerning test use: Tests should be…
Tom Vander Ark: Stealth Education Reform Beats the Health Debacle
Watching the Sunday morning arguments about health reform, I was struck by how fortunate we are that Obama’s team snuck education reform into the stimulus bill.
MoD contests injured soldier payouts
Government seeks to overturn ruling that two servicemen who suffered complications should have compensation increased
The government is attempting to deny injured soldiers full compensation for their health problems, it emerged today.
The Ministry of Defence will go to the court of appeal on Tuesday to try to overturn a ruling that two injured servicemen who suffered complications should have their compensation increased.
The MoD is arguing that the pair should be compensated only for the initial injuries and not subsequent health problems, the Sunday Times reports. The appeal follows the ruling of three judges that the injuries should not be treated as being separate from subsequent treatment.
British troops are suffering their heaviest casualties since the beginning of the conflict in Afghanistan in 2001. A soldier from the 40th Regiment Royal Artillery was killed in an explosion in Lashkar Gah in Helmand province yesterday, the 20th to die this month, bringing the total number of British casualties to 189.
The subjects of the MoD’s appeal are reported to be Anthony Duncan, a soldier with the Light Dragoons who was shot in the left thigh while on patrol in Iraq in September 2005, and Matthew McWilliams, a Royal Marine injured during a training exercise.
After a series of operations to close the wound, Duncan suffered constant pain in his leg and required counselling to deal with “mental anguish” brought on by the injury, the Sunday Times said. He initially received £9,250 in compensation, but he appealed and a tribunal awarded him a lump sum of £46,000 and a guaranteed weekly payment.
McWilliams is said to have been awarded £8,250, which was increased on appeal to £28,750 along with a guaranteed weekly payment because of damage to his knee following surgery.
The MoD confirmed that a high court appeal was in process, and said it was unable to comment on the cases. A spokesman said: “We are committed through the armed forces compensation scheme to paying appropriate compensation to wounded service personnel.”
Last week the former prime minister Sir John Major questioned whether troops were being adequately compensated when injured by Taliban bombs. He said the system “does not adequately address lifelong disability and, particularly, disabling mental conditions”.
Major said the gap between the maximum payment for physical injury of £570,000 and the maximum for mental injury of £48,875 was “too wide”.
Rep. John Duncan’s Ex-Aide Claims Co-Workers Sprayed Perfume On Her Lunch
A former employee of U.S. Congressman John Duncan Jr.’s Knoxville office has filed a lawsuit in federal court claiming she was wrongly terminated because of her age.
Balancing acts
Yoga, rock climbing and … fondu. Welcome to the Alpine health retreat where guests are told ‘too much purity can be boring’
I am half-way up a rock face and being told to position my bottom. “Lean back into it,” a cheerful voice bellows. “It’s just like sitting in an armchair.” I peer gingerly beneath me. I see a vertical drop. A harness is digging into my crotch. I reflect that, if Ikea made armchairs like this, they’d have gone bust long ago.
I try not to give into blind panic and remember what my instructors told me the night before. “Climbing is the lazy man’s way to enlightenment,” they said, smiling over cold meats and fondu. This sounded promising: I am unquestionably lazy and in dire need of enlightenment. “It’s about flexibility, balance and focus.”
There’s the catch, I realise, as I hover in mid-air, hands scrabbling and feet clinging to the minutest of ledges. I possess none of those qualities. I have never felt less enlightened. But this is no time for quibbling as the harness is about to cut off my circulation and I think vertigo may set in at any moment. I close my eyes and jump.
If my pre-climb pep talk was noticeably lacking in sporting machismo, that’s probably because my instructors are not your average gung-ho outdoor types. When not shooting up rock faces, Saskia Anley-McCallum runs an eco-chalet in the French Alps whose mission is to help you “tap into your source”. John Falkiner, her pony-tailed Australian cousin, may be a legendary mountain man who was the stunt double for two Bond baddies, but when he talks of climbing his buzzwords are poise, mental clarity and psychological strength.
Together, and with the help of several other like-minded souls, they have created a unique hideaway in the heart of the Haute Savoie where guests can sign up not only for mountain climbing but for yoga as well. My session on a top-rope is preceded by a morning doing the downward dog in the middle of forest-clad mountains.
New arrivals at La Source, the converted Savoyard farmhouse near Samoens which Saskia and her husband Duncan have transformed into a beautiful and spacious retreat, will realise one thing straight away: this is no ordinary hotel or Alpine chalet. I have been alerted to this by Saskia, who in an email describes it as a “crazy 21st-century commune”, and while avoiding the more terrifying implications of collective living, it does have an instantly welcoming feel unlike anywhere else I’ve ever stayed.
Guests tend to eat together every day in the airy, open-plan kitchen-cum-living room – healthy but hearty fare cooked by resident chef and naturopath, Leticia. Many people share rooms, and we are encouraged to take part in “karmic yoga” – a cunning device whereby everyone tries to do a daily chore or contribute in some way to the running of the chalet. I suspect this ancient spiritual guideline has been co-opted by Saskia as a means of getting more of the housework done. Well, why not? I do my karmic duty early one morning by fetching the fresh cows’ milk from the farmhouse next door, a crucial ingredient in the bowls of steaming porridge that are served up to everyone upon their return from morning yoga.
As La Source is situated in one of the most beautiful spots of Europe, it is no surprise that Saskia’s yoga and meditation classes take place outside, weather permitting. The group usually heads to Lac Bleu, an artificial lake in the Vallée du Giffre, and practises in the shadow of the mountains. Most of my fellow yogis have years of experience and more strength in one of their thighs than I have in my entire body. But Saskia adapts the movements for different abilities and, as an almost complete beginner, I don’t feel left behind. In fact, I rather enjoy it. By the end, I am nearly asleep. My kind of sport.
We head out one evening for a rustic Savoyard dinner of bread, wine and fondu – not very organic and not very healthy, but, in John’s words, “if you’re pure all the time it gets a bit boring”. While we eat I asked my hosts what motivated them to bring together two activities which, to an outsider, might seem incompatible. “It’s all the art of balance and movement,” John explains, his weathered skin betraying a lifetime spent outdoors. “Yoga is about attitude, concentration. Climbing is balance, effective power and concentration. The two complement each other perfectly.”
The next day, as I take my vertical baby steps on a rockface near Sixt-Fer-à-Cheval, I begin to see what he means. Working out how to manoeuvre yourself up a mountain requires total concentration and nerves of steel. Actually doing it requires you to have the same combination of bendiness and strength that it takes to perform sun salutations or shoulder stands. In both sports, you are in your own little world, and your success depends as much on the power of your mind as on the power of your body. That’s the theory, at least; in practice, I only made it 15 metres before having my armchair moment. But then there’s always next time.
Saskia’s big idea about La Source is that everything – the stunning location, the relaxed ambience, the wood-chip-fuelled hot tub – is geared towards helping guests get back in touch with nature and with themselves. Near the end of my stay she tells me of one guest, a Russian woman, who, within two days of returning to Moscow, chucked in her job and decided to become a mountain leader in Peru. I’m not about to do anything that drastic, but I have had a lovely time and go home feeling refreshed and markedly more tranquil. Does that count as tapping into my source? I’m not sure. But whatever it is, it feels pretty good.
• The next rock-climbing holidays run from 23 July, 8 Aug and 3 Sept, and cost €729 for seven days, inc breakfast, most dinners, yoga, lake trip and pick-up from Cluses station, but exc flights. Min four, max six people per course. Available through Responsible Travel (01273 600 030, responsibletravel.com/climbingandyoga). Rail Europe (08448 484 074, raileurope.co.uk) has fares from £168 return from London to Cluses inc sleeper.




