50 Ways To Beat the Cold

16. Novels that cover three or four generations. Or try Douglas Southall Freeman's unabridged, four-volume biography of Robert E. Lee. Or Walker Percy's essays, collected some time ago in "Sign Posts in a Strange Land." Gibbon's "Decline and Fall" may be best of all. Wrap yourself warmly while reading, and nod off sometime during his description of the customs and mores of the Germanic tribes on the Roman Empire's ever shrinking borders. His history may tend to run on, but his English is a joy.

17. Write a hot letter to the editor.

18. Save a winter weather report to read in August. It'll sound delightful.

19. Chop wood. (Particularly good for working out emotional problems, and much cheaper than psychoanalysis.) Second choice: a punching bag.

20. Hot lemonade.

21. Exercise - indoors.

22. Chinese food, Szechwan variety. Go for the red stars on the menu.

23. Five-alarm chili. Easy on the Fritos, lettuce and cheese; heavy on the meat, sauce and chili peppers. There are those who put the Fritos on top and those who put 'em, inexplicably, on the bottom. And never the twain shall meet.

24. Extra covers, preferably country quilts.

25. An electric blanket.

26. Nightcaps. Both varieties.

27. Try the sauna.

28. Rock 'n' roll.

29. Square dancing.

30. Ravel's "Bolero." To quote the composer himself, it may not be music, but it's magnificent. If it doesn't warm your blood, report to the morgue.

31. Some foot-stompin', knee-slappin' country fiddlin'.

32. See "South Pacific." Or check out Elizabeth Taylor in "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof." Or maybe Kathleen Turner and William Hurt in "Body Heat." Or any movie set in New Orleans.

33. A goose down comforter.

34. Dixieland jazz, not the cool kind.

35. Exercise the mind; turn off the teevee. (Which is a good idea for any time of the year.)

36. Think of FEMA. Or the Internal Revenue Service. If that doesn't get your ire up, nothing will.

37. See if you can still do 100 push-ups. Breaks for hot tea and general resuscitation allowed.

38. Sweaters. Galoshes. Gloves. Parkas. Layers in general. Everything your mother told you to wear and then some.

39. Longhandles.

40. Cuddle.

41. Piping hot oatmeal.

42. Hot chocolate. Don't forget the marshmallows.

43. Toasted marshmallows.

44. Bathroom heaters.

45. Tea. Or black coffee with a soupcon of bourbon. Irish coffee, but for goodness' sake forget the whipped cream. It gets in the way of the Jameson's, or whichever brand of Irish you prefer.

46. Scarves. Woolen ones with a fringe.

47. Balaclavas, not to be confused with baklavah - which wouldn't hurt, either.

48. Footsie pajamas.

49. Bring the pets indoors. Make it a three-dog night.

50. Watch "Animal Crackers." It may not make you any warmer, but the Marx Brothers will make you feel better.