eyeglasses News Archive

16-Sep-2007

 

  • Ghost Walk opens Oct. 5 (The Ironton Tribune)
    The rest of the year Dave Swartzwelder is a friendly kind of guy, but come October, he?ll turn, well, into quite a monster. At least on the weekends.


  • Group honored for helping kids deal with HIV/AIDS (Miami Herald)
    Children living with HIV/AIDS have plenty of negative stuff to deal with. Each summer, 60 of them get to try to forget some of those problems while they attend Camp Hope in Houston. Helping to make that possible is Tuesday's Angels, a support group for the Children's Diagnostic & Treatment Center in Fort Lauderdale.


  • New center has space; now it needs food (Palatka Daily News)
    In the rear of the Palatka Christian Service Center is the Heart of Putnam County, a 1,700-square-foot food pantry with only one corner used to feed Palatka?s hungry.


  • Mission changes lives (Honolulu Star-Bulletin)
    For 120 days this summer, the U.S. Navy took teams of medical specialists to five Pacific basin countries, aiding more than 31,000 patients. This was the second year for what the Navy is calling "Pacific Partnership" humanitarian assistance missions.


  • A year later, Nolan recalls his 'bad decision' (San Jose Mercury News)
    As young players on a young 49ers team, quarterback Alex Smith and wide receiver Arnaz Battle have often admitted mistakes and vowed to learn from them.


  • Day of Caring shows volunteer spirit is strong (The Olympian)
    I returned to my high school alma mater Friday, but it wasn't to see the Homecoming Court unveiled, which it was, or pick up my daughter from classes ? wrong high school, and she's driving anyway.


  • 7 p.m. Mondays starting Sept. 24, WMAQ-Channel 5: (Chicago Sun-Times)
    It's the year of the dork, and Chuck is the dork of dorks. He works in a Best Buy-ish place one day. The next, he incidentally gets his brain packed full of national security secrets and turns into a super brainiac spy against his will.


  • A Safe Place (The Mail Tribune)
    WHITE CITY ? Mark Setta knows the sense of extreme hopelessness that accompanies addiction; he was there in the mid-1990s.


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