Word: astraye
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Technical Stopover. Still, the generally excellent response to the U.S. appeal was perhaps best attested by the increasingly defensive tone of Peking and Hanoi. Red China's party paper Jenmin Jih Pao was soon wailing about "well-intentioned people" whom the U.S. campaign had led astray, asking in foot-stamping frustration: "How could the Johnson Administration fool the clear-sighted people with such tricks?" Whether Peking was referring to Hanoi, or to nonaligned nations, clearly it thought the message was getting through to someone important...
...Justice Department's best-laid plans, however, may yet go astray. The Senate has already passed and the House is considering a bill that would exempt from antitrust action the banks involved in the six current cases. The bill would also make it vastly more difficult for Justice to bring antitrust suits against other U.S. banks, which many Congressmen feel are already amply regulated by federal agencies...
...such questions, no answers were forthcoming, for U.S. public relations officers fell silent after some initial muttering about the plane going astray "in bad weather." Later, it was suggested that the Telex line that was to relay the flight plan was out of order, and the French might have gotten a garbled version. This did not alter the fact that there is a blanket prohibition against foreign air photos of French soil without permission of the government; even when the U.S. wanted photos of the American cemetery at Ste.-Mère-Eglise last year, it had to get approval...
...returns to the States to eradicate a business associate, leaving his two snazzy chassis in the care of Bodyguard Art Carney. On a swimming expedition, Shirley and the Rolls are left unguarded just long enough to entertain Alain Delon, utterly persuasive as a gigolo-photographer who cannot resist going astray for a pretty face, particularly...
Harold Tovish, another well-known artist, is exhibiting his work at the Swetzoff Gallery (119 Newbury St.) One of this sculptor's fine heads is now on exhibit at the Museum of Fine Arts. In his recent work, however, he seems to have gone spectacularly astray perhaps under the influence of Pop art. Here he is displaying pieces constructed since 1962, with prices starting at $6000. I am puzzled about why such an artist and a gallery should go to so much trouble over objects of so little interest, but perhaps other will disagree...