Around The Bend

The Cosmic Fate of a Used Bicycle
memoir by Gregory E. Larson
"Preface: We all use different tools, utensils and things in our everyday lives. I’m sure that you can look back and remember something to which you had an attachment – maybe a car, bike, toy, doll or tools and utensils that became a part of you. This is a memoir of the first bicycle I had. An additional note: I used this same title for an article I wrote in a creative writing class in 2009, and decided to write the same story now, but from a different perspective." (Read More)
Larson%2BBicycles%2Bw%2Bmom.jpg


With a bike, the world became a bigger place.
 

One More Laugh captures the $1 million Pace under the guidance of Tim Tetrick in 1:47.4.

2010 Meadowlands Pace - One More Laugh & Tim Tetrick
 
NOTE: As Gregory makes his entrance, he is carrying four bottles of water...which makes me think that he was preceded by a juggling act.

Gregory Peck Makes His First Appearance | Carson Tonight Show
 
Last edited:
"In the "Get Back" docu-series, Paul McCartney wonders aloud if "Peter has the original" tape - leaving fans thirsting over the prospect of potentially even more lost Beatles music. In an exclusive interview with 'Almost Beatles Songs,' Peter Asher answers this decades-long riddle and shares his experience during the great lost McCartney session of December 1965."

THE GREAT LOST McCARTNEY SESSION OF 1965!

"Paul's gift for writing songs (on his own and in collaboration with co writers) for other artists is something which is often overlooked. "Nobody I Know" was the big hit he penned for Peter and Gordon mid 1960s. In that decade he also wrote songs for Cilla Black, Cliff Richard, PJ Proby and Mary Hopkin. Along with lyricist Tim Rice he wrote a song called Hot As Sun which was recorded by Elaine Paige a couple of decades later. In the early 1960s there was a stream of songs for other artists but I'm not sure if he's done it recently. Btw he's playing drums on The Ballad of John and Yoko." - Phillipe Cook
 
Mar 29, 2012,

"There's little question that NASA's three-decade Space Shuttle program was one of mankind's greatest engineering achievements, and it turns out that properly ending it is a significant engineering challenge in its own right. The Atlantic has some superb pictures posted of the Shuttles' final weeks in Cape Canaveral as they're torn down, stripped of valuable components and toxic chemicals, and shipped out to their final resting places around the country, hopefully inspiring a new generation of space explorers for many decades to come."
Read More

space-shuttle-atlantic.1419966641.jpg

Space Shuttle decommissioning

iu

What The Endeavour Space Shuttle Looks Like From The Inside.

 


Back
Top