Piñata Cookies
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Bag of Randomness
- Are there any vehicles made today in which the gear shift is behind the steering wheel and you have to pull back and then down, other than trucks?
- It’s good to heard that the Dallas Sidekicks will be back, and it’s nice to hear that Tatu will be part of the team as their coach.
- Romney is correct in saying that anyone could have given that order to kill Bin Laden, but before that order could be given, a change in strategy to hunt him down had to be put in place. Bush stated that he really didn’t care about Bin Laden and moved the focus off of him. But I will give Bush credit and say he was certainly right when he said that “terrorism is bigger than one person.”
- I’m surprised that Kate and Sawyer from LOST haven’t been in more stuff since the end of that series.
- High School Senior Brings Life-Size Cardboard Tim Tebow to Prom
- A crazy Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders cake
- Chris Bosh with a great video/photo bomb
- Deaf student will play in an University of Arkansas band
- Jason Segel’s rejection letter from Hillary Clinton
- An interesting story about a black female Mormon Republican who could become the first black Republican congresswoman in the House of Representatives.
- Boy, 11, urinates on $36K worth of Apple MacBooks
- Come this June, a once in a lifetime event will happen, you can see Venus pass in front of the sun.
- Upper class customers on Virgin Atlantic will have ice cubes with Sir Richard Branson’s head on them.
It’s like he’s Bruce Willis in “Unbreakable”
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — An Indiana high school basketball standout who survived a Michigan plane crash last year that killed his father and stepmother after surviving a 2003 crash that killed his mother plans to play college basketball next year.
Austin Hatch, of Fort Wayne, made a verbal commitment to play basketball at the University of Michigan before the June crash near the Charlevoix airport. He told the Detroit Free Press in an interview published Tuesday that he’ll be on the court with the Wolverines in 2013.
“The most difficult thing is just missing my biological family, because I’m the only one left,” he said. “I wish there was an instructional manual in how to deal with this kind of loss.”
Hatch, who was 16 at the time of the crash, said he’ll use a scholarship to live the life he and his father always had imagined. He has yet to be cleared to play and said he didn’t care, trusting his doctors will tell him when it’s appropriate. He said he thinks no one else can relate to his situation.
“No one that I know of,” he said. “If there is someone, I haven’t met them yet.”