Saw a late evening performance of The Wall movie by Pink Floyd at the Leicester Square Empire ticket EE10

Saw a late evening performance of The Wall movie by Pink Floyd at the Leicester Square Empire ticket EE10


I queued up outside Bradley’s records in Sheffield to buy Diamond Dogs by David Bowie on its release date today. I say queued there was just me and my school mate Craig Feetham. It was his idea. He had a cassette recorded and I had a record player, so I actually bought the first copy of Diamond Dogs in Sheffield because he had to go downstairs for his. Yes very shallow, but it felt good at the time. We managed to sneak back to school after morning assembly without any bother too!
As we bought early copies we were lucky enough to get the ones with the dog’s willy on show. Later versions had this area blacked out.
I passed my Cycling Proficiency Test in my last year of primary school. The test was a school-based road safety programme designed to teach us how to ride safely on public roads. It was run organised through local education authorities and the police.

Before going onto the road, we were taught:
We had to bring our own bikes. An instructor (in our case PC Lapper) checked
Unlike today’s playground-based training, much of the 1960s test took place on real roads near our school.
We practised:
PC Lapper observed us riding a short route. We were assessed on:
It wasn’t like a modern driving test — it was firm but encouraging. Most of us passed after training.
We received a certificate and a badge

Wisewood junior school used Hillsborough swimming baths for swimming lessons. At the baths, now a Weatherspoons pub called Rawson Spring, we could earn swimming certificates, starting at 25 yards. Public baths at that time were built to the imperial standard before metrication (25 yards = 22.86 metres).
Here’s how swimming certificates typically worked in the 25 yard pool of the 60s:


Higher Distance Awards
Some pools including ours offered:

