eyeglasses News Archive

13-Sep-2007

 

  • 'Michigan Chillers' author in town to promote reading (The Bay City Times)
    Michigan author Johnathan Rand is known for his ghost stories. But donning comical eyeglasses and making snarling sounds during a visit Tuesday to Linsday Elementary School in Bay City, he had about 65 fourth-graders in stitches.


  • Time has not eased the pain of a woman who lost her daughter (Merced Sun-Star)
    September 13th is the longest day for Patricia McDougall -- a day that was indelibly etched into her mind for the rest of her life.


  • Retired police officer shoots at assailant (Royal Oak Daily Tribune)
    FERNDALE-- A retired Detroit police officer fired three shots at a teen who hit him in the face and stole the officer's $2,000 designer eyeglasses, police say.


  • $5,000 offered in hunt for fugitive (Detroit News)
    WATERFORD TOWNSHIP -- Police announced a $5,000 reward Wednesday for information leading to the arrest of a township man wanted in the fatal shooting of his wife on Friday.


  • St. Charles obstetrician touched many lives (Daily Herald)
    For more than 10,000 babies born in DuPage County, Dr. Edward Gulling's face was their welcome into the world.


  • Savannah-Chatham school bus drivers vote to join Teamsters (Savannah Morning News)
    The final tally left no room for doubt.


  • 'Shoot 'Em Up' strangely fun (The Daily Democrat)
    The pervasively strong bloody violence that runs nonstop through "Shoot 'Em Up" is an American tribute to the Hong Kong action cinema popularized by director John Woo, most particularly in "Hardboiled."


  • Colored lenses OK, just not for every day (Reno Gazette-Journal)
    Q: I am planning to buy new eyeglasses. I can't decide whether to have the lenses tinted. I tried colors such as pink, purple and amber. They look cool. But my friends say clear lenses would go with more outfits. Are they right?


  • Survivor confronts her fear (The Huntsville Forester)
    It?s a place she vowed she would never set foot in again, but at age 82 Eva Olsson now has the strength to return to the site where unspeakable acts of brutality were carried out on her and her family.


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