Word: henly
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Given the presence of a Cockney Casanova, Alfie's plot predictably unreels more like a score card than a scenario. Among the standard items is the eager middle-aged nymph (Shelley Winters) who entertains Alfie in a big bath tub. One of the more pathetic entries is the hen-shaped wife of a sick friend-they take char together, and then Alfie makes a grab at the old girl, just to "round off the tea nicely." And then there is the nubile nurse (Shirley Anne Field)-while Alfie is recuperating from overexertion in a TB sanatorium, she comes round...
...else got even a sniff from a fish until just before the 3 p.m. quitting time. And then Delaware's Governor Charles L. Terry hauled in a 7-ft. 7-in. marlin to edge out Tawes. Ah well, Delaware's state bird is the blue hen chicken, and that's surely better than hasenpfeffer...
...very wonderful to know the embryo can "click" prior to hatching, but I am skeptical of the click's effectiveness in communicating the time of emergence. The latter is based entirely on the period of incubation, which is never begun by a smart hen of any of the gallinaceous birds until the entire clutch is laid. Grandmother kept fertile eggs gathered from the poultry yard in a cupboard until she had enough for a "setting," which may have required several days. Then a "broody" hen was allowed to "set" on the clutch. After 21 days, all the eggs hatched...
...Rome's Gallerie La Salita. He is Richard Serra, 27, whose credentials include a Master of Fine Arts degree from Yale and a Fulbright fellowship; he is currently deep in his zoo period. On exhibit were crude cages in which disport two turtles, two quail, a rabbit, a hen, two guinea pigs and a 97-lb. sow. The big pig oinks away as part of a work called Live Pig Cage I. "I'm not saying the pig is art or is not art," says the artist, "but she makes a form." Other goodies on view include...
Died. Mrs. Charles Guggenheimer, 83, mother hen for New York's outdoor summer concerts at Lewisohn Stadium, who for 44 years gave the city the low-cost privilege of enjoying the richest in music, including Rosa Ponselle, Marian Anderson, Artur Rubinstein and George Gershwin; after a long illness; in Manhattan. The wife of a wealthy lawyer, "Minnie," as concertgoers called her, knew little or nothing about music-except that she liked it and wanted everybody else to. She started promoting concerts as a lark in 1918, carried on for the rest of her life and grew famous, both...