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TX Houston/Galveston TX Zone Forecast Feb. 25, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail _____ National Weather Service Houston/Galveston TX 1058 PM CST Thu Feb 25 2021 TXZ237-261000- 1058 PM CST Thu Feb 25 2021 .REST OF TONIGHT...Cloudy. A 30 percent chance of showers... possibly mixed with drizzle in the evening, then a 40 percent chance of showers after midnight. Patchy fog after midnight. Lows in the mid 60s. South winds 5 to 10 mph. .FRIDAY...Mostly cloudy. Patchy fog early in the morning. A slight chance of showers in the morning. A slight chance of drizzle in the late morning and afternoon. A slight chance of showers late in the afternoon. Highs in the mid 70s. South winds
Skip to main content Currently Reading Book World: Walter Mosley's new Easy Rawlins book is a masterful mix of mystery and social commentary Maureen Corrigan, The Washington Post Feb. 8, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail - - - There comes a moment in every Easy Rawlins mystery I've read, where I realize I have no idea what's going on. The plot picks up speed, becoming a hectic Tilt-a-Whirl ride where dead bodies, cold-stone killers, femmes fatales, crooked cops and lost spaces in Los Angeles whiz by at top velocity. It's at this moment - when I'm most exasperated with Walter Mosley as a writer - that I'm also most admiring. Because, once again, I realize that I don't care all that much that I can't keep track of what's going on - no more than I care that I can't keep track of what's going on in "The Maltese Falcon," "The Big Sleep" or "Cotton Comes to Harlem."
Frankford Police Chief Laurence Corrigan told the Town Council at its Monday, Feb. 1 meeting that he has completed the process of having the department certified by the U.S. Department of Justice. This will allow the police department to apply for federal funds, he said. âWe reached this level through a lot of hard work,â Corrigan said. âThis is the beginning of a new day for the Frankford Police Department,â he said. The certification is active for three years from Jan. 25, which is when he received the notification, Corrigan said. He also told the council that the department is âon the waiting listâ with the state budget office for a four-wheel drive vehicle. âObviously, thatâs a high need,â he said.
Skip to main content Currently Reading Book World: Why is 'The Push' so popular? Perhaps because it plays into a mother's worst fears. Maureen Corrigan, The Washington Post Jan. 21, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail By Ashley Audrain - - - The new year's first blockbuster novel is "The Push," by Ashley Audrain, a psychological suspense tale about a mother's fears that her preschool-age daughter may be a psycho killer. If this premise sounds familiar, you may be recalling The Mother of All Evil Spawn Stories, the 1956 film "The Bad Seed." (When I was growing up in New York, occasional reruns of "The Bad Seed" would play on "The Million Dollar Movie," which featured the same "classic" film every afternoon for a week, thus imprinting it on malleable viewers' brains.) "The Bad Seed," which was inspired by a 1954 novel of the same name by William March, also was a psychological suspense tale about a mother who suspects her young daughter is a budding Ted Bundy in pigtails. In "The Bad Seed," the mother gets confirmation of her ghastly suspicions pretty quickly; in Audrain's deft and immersive thriller, the mother - and we readers - don't know the truth until the very last line of the novel. Don't peek.