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  1. May 26, 2024 · import existing book. December 15, 2009. Edited by WorkBot. link works. October 31, 2008. Created by ImportBot. Imported from University of Toronto MARC record . Options--spinal cord injury and the future by Barry Corbet, 1986, A. B. Hirschfeld Press, available through National Spinal Cord Injury Association edition, in English - 5th ed.

  2. May 1, 2014 · Barry Corbet. Barry Corbet, who survived a 1968 helicopter crash with a T12/L1 spinal cord injury, edited New Mobility magazine from 1991 to 2000. A widely published author and filmmaker, Corbet made a trio of films — Changes, Outside and Survivors — and wrote the book Options: Spinal Cord Injury and the Future. 2023 saw the release of Full Circle, a documentary that adapted material from ...

  3. Dec 31, 2019 · • Former Jackson Hole resident James, Barry Corbet, 68, died in Golden, Colorado. He was a renowned mountain climber and skier. Corbet's Couloir is named for him, and he was

  4. Dec 1, 2014 · Barry’s Story (as it appeared in AARP Magazine, Jan.-Feb. issue, 2007): The author of “Embedded,” Barry Corbet — writer, editor and former mountaineer and filmmaker — did go home. Because his surgery results fell short of his hopes and his other shoulder deteriorated further, he did not regain the full physical independence he would ...

  5. Oct 20, 2023 · Barry Corbet, an intrepid skier, mountaineer, explorer, filmmaker, and Jackson Hole legend, broke his back in a helicopter crash in 1968. Frustrated by a pre-ADA culture that did not accept or ...

  6. Barry Corbet. Director: The Moebius Flip. Barry Corbet was a pioneer climber and extreme skier. He was a member of the Mount Everest Expedition in 1963. As a young man, Barry built a life that revolved around adventure in the mountains. Barry was born in Vancouver, British Columbia and later moved to the United States to attend Dartmouth College. After dropping out of school several times ...

  7. Feb 1, 2024 · The real Corbet's first descent was completed by a man named Lonnie Ball. This video from Stannyland tells Ball's Corbet's story. In 1960, a ski mountaineer named Barry Corbet spied the line and claimed, "Someday someone will ski that," hence becoming the Couloir's eponym. And Corbet, who went on to become a leader in the disability community ...