eyeglasses News Archive

14-Dec-2007

 

  • Get Out (The Beaver County Times)
    No Depression magazine proclaimed Alejandro Escovedo as ?Artist of the Decade.?


  • School clubs collect eyeglasses (Southfield Eccentric)
    The Interact Service Clubs of Groves High School and Seaholm High School will again collect eyeglasses for the visually impaired.


  • A JOYFUL CHRISTMAS (Asbury Park Press)
    Twenty-five years ago, Paul Chalakani took the stage for the Spring Lake Community House's inaugural production of "Scrooge," a musical based on Charles Dickens' classic holiday tale "A Christmas Carol."


  • Obituary: Hardie liked construction, plants, singing (San Antonio Express-News)
    From managing projects for the Zachry corporation to growing tomatoes and flowers in a hydroponic greenhouse, John Ford "Jack" Hardie wore a variety of hats throughout his life.


  • Even with employer's coverage, families worry (The Record)
    Over the last decade, whether Rosa Sayas, 52, has had health insurance for herself or her children has depended on one thing: where she worked. The Paterson resident is among the 158 million Americans who get health insurance coverage through their employers.


  • Son, 11, tells jury of night his father was killed (Bristol Herald Courier)
    CLINTWOOD, Va. ? Eleven-year-old Dustin Stanley told a Dickenson County jury Wednesday that he pulled the cover over his head and stayed in bed nine months ago as his father, Deron Ray Stanley, was stabbed to death in the next room.


  • School clubs collect eyeglasses (Southfield Eccentric)
    The Interact Service Clubs of Groves High School and Seaholm high schools will again collect eyeglasses for the visually impaired.


  • Flexible spending account deadline approaches quickly (Courier-Post)
    Ah, the end of the year, a time for reflection, family gatherings -- and a mad dash by those with money left in their flexible spending accounts to spend it: on eyeglasses, extra contact lenses, cold medicine.


  • Local artist Bart Parnall will show works Monday (The Post and Courier)
    Local artist Bart Parnall's style is modern and minimalist, and his medium unusual.


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