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eyeglasses News Archive09-Mar-2008
Tracking the Violent Life of Milosevic's 'Tiger' (NPR) In Hunting the Tiger, journalist Christopher S. Stewart tells the story of how Zeljko Raznatovic, a petty criminal, rose to head one of Serbia's most notorious death squads.
Cat-astrophe with happy ending (The Palm Beach Post) Cats may have nine lives, but only the luckiest of them get second chances.
Is Mural A Step Back Or Work In Progress? (The Tampa Tribune) Betty Briggs remembers the morning, some 30 years ago, when City Manager Nettie Mae Draughon summoned her husband, John, to make urgent repairs to the new train mural he'd painted on the side of a downtown building.
Excerpt: 'Hunting the Tiger' (NPR) His name was Zeljko Raznatovic, but when I first came to know him, most of the world called him Arkan. I met Arkan ? or at least his shadow ? on a sweltering summer train ride through war-battered Serbia. It was July 1998 and my girlfriend and I had been backpacking through Europe for about a month.
Webster police reports (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle) Glasses gone: Police arrested a 44-year-old Webster man around 5:45 p.m. Feb. 29 for stealing eyeglasses and a New Castle Brown Ale glass from Hegedorn's, 964 Ridge Road. An employee saw the man put the items in his jacket.
This news may make you sick (The Charlotte Observer) The news just doesn't get better for beating the cost of health care in retirement. The costs continue to rise faster than inflation and insurance continues to fall short for many. The challenge of paying for medical care results in new ways of thinking for savers. While many retirees have relied on their past employer to help pay medical costs, a recent ruling by the Equal Employment ...
University Medical Center at Princeton gets award (Princeton Packet) PRINCETON -- University Medical Center at Princeton (UMCP) has received a statewide Community Outreach Award for a program that provides vision care services for medically underserved people in Mercer County.
Heed Signs Of Gambling Problem (The Tampa Tribune) Each time I go to my local newsstand, I see someone buying scratch-off lottery tickets by the dozen. More and more often these days, according to the proprietor, it's a woman.
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