Recap: Bayla receives a letter from her family in Poland. One line in the letter worries her. They’re nervous about a possible attack from Germany.

 Friday night, Tante Aimee lit the candles in the large formal dining room. The long table was set with a lace cloth and sparkling china dishes. Cut red roses from the garden sat in a crystal vase on the table, scenting the air.

 The similarity between the beginning and end of life is quite remarkable. A baby is often born with little to no hair, no teeth, and sleeps most of the day. It needs to be fed, changed, and wheeled around in a stroller in order to get from place to place. Adults can observe babies for hours as they ooh and aah over every adorable move and sound they make. At the end of life, many elderly people lose their hair and teeth. They sleep a lot, need to be fed and bathed, and are often pushed in a wheelchair in order to get from place to place. One life ends, another begins. It’s known as the circle of life.

 As the New Year begins, millions of people want to transform their bodies.

While weight goals can be very effective, performance goals can lead to sustained fitness for the long run. Getting leaner and stronger is a byproduct of achieving these performance goals.

Fairytale Preschool Center has happily been a staple of the diverse Rego Park community offering a vast array of creative early childhood educational services. With the start of 2020, a unique opportunity with 10 limited openings is now available for low-income parents of children ages 2 through 4 to place their youth in a local caring center-based environment staffed with certified educationalists and instructors at the competitive weekly fee make-up of home-based programs. The 7-hour initiative is designed to start at 9 am and commence at 4 pm giving working moms and dads the possibility to sustain regular work times at the low cost of only $850 monthly. Additional add-on amenities are available on a case-by-case basis to further your preschooler’s social skills.

 Dear Alice,

Many nutritionists encourage or even push their clients to exercise, but I notice you don’t. Why not? Isn’t exercise part of a healthy lifestyle? Shouldn’t all your clients be exercising? Don’t get me wrong, I actually don’t really like exercising, I just want to make sure I’m not doing something wrong.