| 'Grump' travels the planet to find bliss
He visited the country during winter and said he found a certain beauty in the cold and the darkness. Such a chilly climate usually encourages warm relationships, Weiner found. "The cold inspires people to cooperate, traditionally. If you go back a few hundred years, people in cold climates have to cooperate or they die together. It's that simple," he said. Weiner found a different flavor of happiness in Switzerland, where he discovered people are content partly because everything runs like clockwork. Simple pleasures like trains arriving on time contributed to national happiness, he said. But there may be a much sweeter reason why Switzerland is a happy place. "The Swiss eat a lot of chocolate, and let's not forget that," Weiner said.
Lawrence F. Fitzner
Services: At 10 a.m. Monday funeral services will be at the United Methodist Church in Logan. Lawrence F. Fitzner, 93, died at the Muleshoe Area Medical Center at Muleshoe, Texas, on Thursday, Oct. 25, 2007, following an extended illness. Mr. Fitzner was born Nov. 16, 1913 in Logan to Frederick and Clary Ray Fitzner who homesteaded in Logan 1907. He attended and graduated from the Logan school system in 1931. Following graduation, he attended the Panhandle State Collge. He was a member of the Logan Methodist Church for more than 80 years. He had been a rancher in the Logan area and worked for the New Mexico State Department of Transportation. He married his wife, Winnie Mae Whitehead, Feb 27, 1942 in Tucumcari. He loved the outdoors especially the mountains, his family said. Surviving Mr.
Wind chill advisory tonight
A wind chill advisory remains in effect until 6 a.m. Monday. Very cold air will filter into the region behind an arctic cold front for today and tonight. The combination of very cold temperatures and winds will produce wind chill values between 10 below and 15 below zero through tonight. A wind chill advisory is issued when a strong wind will combine with cold temperatures to create dangerously cold conditions for exposed skin. The wind will make it feel like it is between 10 and 24 degrees below zero for a period of several hours. Those planning to venture outdoors should use common sense and dress warmly. Current forecast .
Camping it up on a culinary Kiwi tour
Our three-hour meet-and-eat walk shows us the relaxed and aspirational side of the city, where young Kiwi guys and girls mooch about over their 'flat white' - espresso with steamed milk - and butchers dispense tips on how to hang lamb until it's curling off the bone. At an indoor market, we're introduced to the indigenous fruit and veg: the kumara, a sort of sweet potato; bright red yams that look like witchety grubs; and golden kiwi fruit, sweeter and softer than their sharp green cousins. 'I remember going to Britain in 1988,' says Cathy, 'and thinking I didn't want to come back, because in New Zealand we had no cafes, no delis, no good food.' The most adventurous cooking came from overseas: restaurants were invariably French or Chinese. Now Wellington boasts four fine-dining restaurants that could hold their own in any metropolis.
Fugitive roundup corrals six
Little said the department has filed for "about a dozen" new escape warrants to replace those that vanished. More new warrants are likely. He said the state has found no single cause of their disappearance. In some cases, it appears warrants were never filed after an escape. Others apparently were purged as law enforcement agencies moved from paper-based systems to computerized networks. More than 80 additional state inmates imprisoned in local jails have escaped over the past 25 years and remain at large. The state Department of Correction has insisted that the responsibility of finding those escapees falls on local sheriffs' offices, but Little said Tuesday that the state is working with several counties to rectify "some individual situations we have identified" in which warrants don't exist.
Acne and Rosacea Getting You Down? Laser, Light and Cosmetic Treatments Give Patients a Much-needed Boost
It is estimated that approximately 50 million people in the U.S. alone are affected by acne vulgaris, and another 14 million Americans experience the redness, flushing and pronounced blood vessels associated with rosacea. While there are no cures for these persistent skin conditions, dermatologists are broadening their treatment options. .
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