By Greg Zyla
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Q: Greg, I remember many years ago you wrote a column on the cars you ve owned in your lifetime. Can you give us an update as many years have gone by since then? Also, could you touch on today s awesome pony muscle cars like the Mustang, Camaro and Challenger? What s your opinion, do you have a favorite, do they have a future and which of the cars you owned do you miss the most? Glenn, Mays Landing, New Jersey
A: Glenn thanks for your question and I dug up my old columns to find that the column on the cars I owned appeared in May 2009. Let s start with the muscle car question, and then we ll touch on the updated cars I ve owned in my lifetime, including race cars this time too.
What s Up Doc column: How much more infectious are the new variants of COVID? telegram.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from telegram.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Heffner column: Time for fathers
Dr. Elaine Heffner
Columns share an author’s personal perspective.
“But he’s a human being, and a terrible thing is happening to him. So attention must be paid. … Attention, attention must be finally paid to such a person.” This quote, from Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman,” is spoken by the mother in the play, about the father. These days, the quote should read “a terrible thing is happening to her,” as attention must finally be paid to the mother.
Mothers are paying a terrible price for the consequences of the pandemic. When schools shut down, it was mothers primarily who were making lists and schedules, searching for activities to keep children occupied, supervising online education, while at the same time keeping up at home with their own paid work and household responsibilities. Although many fathers were also working from home, mothers knew it would be up to them to figure out how to do three jobs at once - par
Melissa Crawley
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A misstep tests a couple’s relationship, African American visual artists are recognized and a crusader for justice is reimagined for a new audience.
Dispatches: Weekly TV news
NBC is rebooting the classic sitcom “Kate and Allie.” The updated series is about two best friends who are raising their children together in one household. Erica Oyama will write and executive produce. The original show aired on CBS for six seasons.
ABC gave a pilot order to “Once Upon a Time” creators, Adam Horowitz and Edward Kitsis, who are developing a potential new series called “Epic.” It’s described as a romantic anthology that reinvents fairy tales.