|
Rainbows rise again on the Henry's Fork. (rainbow trout)
From:
Sunset
| Date:
June 1, 1994| Author:
Raskin, Bruce
| COPYRIGHT 1994 Sunset Publishing Corp. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.Copyright information
|
One of the West's classic fly-fishing streams stages a comeback
DUSK IS RAPIDLY fading to dark as I zigzag my way through the stubby sage and head upstream along the bank. In less than 20 minutes the trout will stop rising, but for now, massive ripples regularly break the river's even flow as several big trout gulp down insects floating on the surface.
I ease out into the river until water almost seeps over the top of my waders, strip 30 feet of line off my fly reel...
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
Rainbows rise again on the Henry's Fork. (rainbow trout)
Sunset
; One of the West's classic fly-fishing streams stages a comeback DUSK IS RAPIDLY fading to dark as I zigzag my way through the stubby sage and head upstream along the bank. In less than 20 minutes the trout will stop rising, but for now, massive ripples regularly break the river's even flow as
|
|
Henry's lesson should pay off
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
; Henry's lesson should pay off MU guard learns to bring his best By LORI NICKEL of the Journal Sentinel staff Friday, December 1, 2000 The teasing message that Quentin Richardson left on Cordell Henry's cell phone was just the beginning. Even Henry's own family gave him a hard time. Seemed like the
|
|
NOT YOUR AVERAGE JOE; Henry's life nearly as surreal as his music
Daily Breeze
; Joe Henry probably knows fame better than anyone who isn't famous yet. The L.A.-based singer counts among his childhood friends not one but two of the most renowned figures ofthe 20th century. The first was serial murderer Jeffrey Dahmer. "He was like a lot of kids at that age -- awkward," says
|
|
HENRY THE GREATEST! Millions saw him last night portrayed on TV as a lecherous tyrant and torturer. Yes, Henry VIII was all those . . . as well as the biggest spender in history, our first Eurosceptic and the man who invented the dark art of spin-doctoring
Daily Mail
; HENRY VIII straddled his kingdom and his age like a colossus. Muscular, broad shouldered, richly dressed and festooned in jewellery, he stares confidently at us from Hans Holbein's portrait. This is the Bluff King Hal of popular imagination: a 16th-century prop forward with a broken nose who
|
|
HENRY THE GREATEST! Millions saw him last night portrayed on TV as a lecherous tyrant and torturer. Yes, Henry VIII was all those . . . as well as the biggest spender in history, our first Eurosceptic and the man who invented the dark art of spin-doctoring.
The Daily Mail (London, England)
; Byline: LAWRENCE JAMES HENRY VIII straddled his kingdom and his age like a colossus. Muscular, broad shouldered, richly dressed and festooned in jewellery, he stares confidently at us from Hans Holbein's portrait. This is the Bluff King Hal of popular imagination: a 16th-century prop forward with a
|
|
Majesty in all its magnificence When David Starkey (left) was asked by the National Art Collections Fund to create his fantasy art collection, he chose Henry VIII's reckless accumulation of opulent objects, everything from Holbein to solid gold ear-scrapers
The Sunday Telegraph London
; Henry VIII may be best known for the number of his wives, but it is the sheer number of his possessions that should really clamour for attention. He had by far the largest library then accumulated in England. He amassed about 2,000 pieces of gold and silver plate, much of it studded with jewels,
|
|
A self-made scientist. (Joseph Henry)(Cover Story)
Weatherwise
; Joseph Henry, the most famous American physical scientist of his day, ever got the chance to go to college and never learned to spell correctly. Henry was born in Albany, New York, on December 17, 1797, the son of an alcoholic cartman who died when Joseph was 13. Even before his father's death,
|
|
NOW THE SKY'S TAKE-OFF? Henry hinted to fans that he would stay on their flight of fancy
Daily Mail
; ... crushing Champions League Final defeat? 'We must pick ourselves up and make sure we come back stronger next year.' With last night's news that Henry had rejected Barcelona's advances, Arsene Wenger's side have fresh hope of doing just that, and the Arsenal captain ...
|
|
THE VOICE, THE PEN AND THE FEUD JEFFERSON AND HENRY WERE UNITED AGAINST TYRANNY. SO WHY DID THEY HATE EACH OTHER?(OUR MILLENNIUM)
The Virginian Pilot
; Byline: JOHN-HENRY DOUCETTE, STAFF WRITER PATRICK HENRY, the Voice of Liberty, coined the phrase, ``Give me liberty or give me death and Thomas Jefferson, the Pen of Independence, borrowed liberally from John Locke in extolling . . life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. . . '' Nearly two
|
|
No king so common.(Henry IV of France )(Editorial)
Risk Management
; Henry IV of France (1553-1610) was born into a country riven by religious warfare and political infighting. A shrewd and personable man who cared not to spend his life in battle, he figured out ways to defuse the great conflicts before him. In 1593, he renounced Protestantism and became a Catholic,
|