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Show rJ,t Over the Hudson: M,feues in the Night: Walter Silhouette, in sinatra (who Pidgeon and n yQUng (ans have about ubound by a between them) y conversation rcff oL wars-getung and Duchess ol uu. riving at her groom hit ( Three reTtemng-a colytimist that 50th streei .'cornering the Zrt TscotJ ?' are exaggerated. m8 Louise Albritton's "Palm Springs tan"-in the Stork. . . . ielta Livingston, attractively gray, Belle Living prohibition reminiscing aooui Z. j . o 47th Street bar. . . . Lfve yretoungat the Wedgwood Wedg-wood Room. . Sec'y Byrnes (at a party in the Hampshire House) toasting Gromyko: "Those whom war hath brought together-let no peace put asunder!" Sallies in Our Alley: Fred Allen was lunching at Lindy's with his announcer K. Delmar, alias Sen Claghorn The waiter brought the check. . . "Give it to him, said Fred, "he does the commercials." commer-cials." ... At the Carnival a H wood producer was being panned. . . . "But," defended a friend, "he has a heart of gold." . . . "Yeh," persisted per-sisted the knocker, "yellow and hard." The Moom Fitchlz: "Dragon-wyck" "Dragon-wyck" lights the fuse for a stunning display of emotional pyrotechnics. "The Falcon's Alibi", Is another clue-by-clue saga of a sleuth-happy gumshoe handcuffed by a mediocre tale. . . . "The Wife of Monte Chris-to" Chris-to" offers cloak-and-dagger stuff set in an era when a man's best friend was his sword. . . . "She-Wolf of London" concerns a gal on a spook spree, who scares up a passable quota of tingles. . . . "Last Ride" spins a few cliches in their graves. . . . "Junior Prom" is replete with frantic jive cacophony that sounds like a jukebox calling to its mate. E. Hillman, the mag editor, relays this chuckle: A girl energetically elbowed el-bowed her way into the subway. Maneuvering a seat, she hurriedly pulled a comb from her purse and ran it through her hair. She applied powder, lipstick and adjusted her earrings. She straightened her stocking seams and drew on a pair of gloves. She consulted her watch. Then she shut her eyes and went to sleep! Quotation Marksmanship: Andrew An-drew Carnegie: The man who dies rich dies disgraced. . . . H. Felton: As friendly as a fairy tale. ... A. Corio: It is easier to toss a heavy brick than a light compliment. . . . R. Connell: There is no greater bore than perfection. . . . O. Henry: She looked at him with the unique luminosity in her eyes that comes to a girl with her first suitor and a kitten with its first mouse. . . . N. Donovan: She had a dreamlined figure. . . . Anon: The art of being a parent consists of sleeping when the baby isn't looking. . . . H. Jameson: The difference between you and the other people is that their money looks bigger and their troubles smaller. . . . Ben Franklin: Where there's marriage without love there will be love without marriage. mar-riage. Midtown Vignette: During the tense days of last week when Mr. Gromyko walked out of the U N Security Council a crowd gathered around the entrance to the Plaza Hotel where some of the delegates are tepeeing. ... Two well-dressed women got caught in the crowd "Wonder what's the matter," said the first. "Some movie star, I sup-' sup-' MI don,t think s." said Xr' " S-he SaW 8 lonS- black offlc al limousine pull up, "I think " must be those Social Security fellows fel-lows from the Bronx!" Main Street Smalltalk: Kav Scott weds John Nerney on the 27ft "3a7n aTiS and Mary McDonnell 'oi OU Soften Ready" 8re Doin" e paid 7, r Lana 'ner wld J f ,r h" Coast mane; Helena V. " ' ' Prin to her K Ch 'S bron? ta her borscht over a certain wed- asked rTrTorm he exec will' k ' ' A P network shakeuT1 tenVla ' day- May there be Jus L more of thn 11 as many 01 them as you can stand -at:ahwomnaM,Ura,S: The boy booTs to the p !!-e yaUor cow-Bnk. cow-Bnk. Yipee- CUy ow crowded wUhe,23l'dS,rect g" typewriters h fo-"" Ur tie featured in . T " : e ncw erdasher's Til S aLex,ng'"n hnb- ' ' The ig ons LRnHhaS51 fls-nd fls-nd Street Z J "P n ",e Rockette Girl r ? pcdilt-' pcdilt-' ' The E. 28m ci'.?10? - n,mlst. |