Word: tour
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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LUCY IN LONDON (CBS, 8:30-9:30 p.m.). Anthony Newley takes Lucille Ball on a "Special economy guided tour" of London by motorcycle sidecar in this musical comedy special...
...other government chiefs may stay at their embassies. Caring for the 1,000 newsmen expected to descend on Manila is an even more complicated matter, as Washington belatedly realized when it came to the task of ac commodating the 200 journalists who will cover Johnson's entire tour. Hastily the White House sent summonses for help to two former White House press secretaries-James Hagerty, who helped arrange Ike's 1959 visit to Asia, and Pierre Salinger, who helped plan John F. Kennedy's two European jaunts. At the same time, White House Press Secretary Bill Moyers...
...Campaigner Johnson is not, after all, to be denied the delights of pulling crowds and pressing palms. His six-nation Asian tour will take care of that. It will also, conveniently, bring him home less than a week before election day, and will keep Hubert Humphrey tied to Washington while he is away. By absenting themselves from domestic politics in the cause of foreign relations, Johnson and his Vice President could hardly do more to help embattled Democratic candidates...
...Lili Kraus has been a celebrated soloist in Europe for more than 30 years. Daughter of an impoverished scissor sharpener, she was born in Budapest, became a prodigy at six, taught adult students at eight, became a full-fledged soloist at 20. In 1940, while on a concert tour of Java, she was stranded by the war and eventually placed in a Japanese forced-labor camp. Denied access to a piano for most of the three years of her imprisonment, she "continued to play organically," deciding that "either I go to the dogs or I make the experience the treasure...
Prince Souvanna Phouma, premier of Laos, will be an official guest of Harvard today. His tentative schedule calls for a tour of the University at noon; lunch at the home of John Kenneth Galbraith, Paul M. Warburg Professor of Economics; a visit to Widener Library and the Fogg Museum; a talk with George P. Baker, dean of the Business School; and dinner at Quincy House, with a speech there afterwards...