OCR Text |
Show ? Iosmo voLiian " Y Y"Y Y , 4. 7 i 1 K H '1 Y, 1 ,Y- - I v I' Y f L Y' Y r SUNDApf HERALD, OCTOBER 6, 1963 I By WINIFRED N. JONES A s the political winds of the wprld move east and west in the turbulence of our times, women are carried afar or stand valiantly on their home ground. Some women find their opportunities in other endeavors which thrust them into the glare of the footlights bf the theatre or related arts. Others devote themselves to passing s heritage of thought and ideals to their families. On college campuseg? younger women are becoming increasingly xSoncernedJ with wider issues of national and international import and are participating in organized anjd unorganized activities io support their viewpoints. The world turns 'round and 4s the warmth of the surj torches each point, woinen find they are holding more and more a place of importance in the affairs bf their immediate locale, their na- tion and their world. v. .:!. 4 V, Y.,..'. life;-- , - 'v . r i r y : ' " ' , .. J1 ! " T?i -- - 4 " ll f - V.?'. " r ' 15 A j 11 1 ,': II" IMM -- ,l,.v itflii Y 1 (if J i. i w MW MIMIII J rff3niiiv,yiin GIFT 'OF. GRATITUDE k vacation Beginning a in Greece, (Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy is greeted at Athens airport and handed a small gift by a grateful Greek rl, Chrysanthemi Papakotski, 12. The girl was sent to the tjvo-wee- United States for heart surgery after the girl's mother goc a note to ivirs jenneay aurmg ner lybi visit! to Greece. Herald- - U PI Telephotos ) . ' iiiiiiiiiil f " J ' I 'I - m ' 'fc 'v,'S- - f- . J I ' I --Wt I ' X ' ' - i 5 ' III & 5- - :d -' ' I "? I f fr ' "it. "i. Illli F '. xjo nU V ' 1 Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu, CHANGE OF PACE -- ' J I' 1? Y ""PJi-- - Y 6. ? of South Viet Nam President Ngo Dinh Diem, inspects a new Parisian hairdo before leaving for the United States where she will make a visit, during her current trip away from her native land, whee she is involved in that country's political Itruggle. sister-in-la- w ' 1 Y(;r Y Yt ,Y"i. - . X - wm iff; 11 i hin itftvy ! " : ' ' - . Y - ' .'r ; . ' ''' ' y, - ' r - LlJw 1 1 1 rt" - -- - " - r ' - " I ' sji Ji' l - Y-- W. 1 i & -- .I kr ' j ?? ;J ), ; Y , - 1 f" ir mm ft m,t 'i - , ' ) - 1. i, nir v r '.wiuL.;,. .... BEAUTIFUL UTAHN: Actress e Day, formerly of Utah, rceives beaded headdress from Mrs. Sorja Sel- wyn, Maori dancer in Honolulu fwhere Aroha-nu- i ifiss Day and the Maori Dance Co. will participate in dedication of the Polynesian Cultural I Center Oct. 12. anti-segratipn- ist ban-- " XI Is; S COEDS CONCERN Displaying ners, college students! stage a giant rally I rr 'x ' ' '111 j iA J q T ! t . ) y Y ' 'yr ' ! fY- Awai ji " STAR AT HOME Broadway masical star Carol Lawrence, who recently comedy became the bride of singer Robert Gpulet, is proud of. her skill as cook. "I'm at home on tne range as much as I'm at home on ' the stacre." she savs. 3 1 " J w . LPm 'a o Ycr y - 4t V fJ IN w y ..r 1 I " ; v I at tPrinceton to boycott the appearance of Governor Ross University Barnett of Mississippi, ohe of the many pro and con demonstrations being) participated in by youhg people r throughout the country. ,,.F Y3 , Irwin ! iSpsi! v:.: : ::.: La-ra- in -- 145-memb- - Y - l'A'' ' i '": i 'i r:;i' flry; YYY f' r?' Yi, "--- '. S , v K ,f v f Mli'i , ... - ' 'h'. Y" ', '.. i ' j il i fj j 1 Y, -'.A - " pvl s --v rf. f I v. s -- ! V ? : vy ASv'-- t " Y ;V - if, I ; : ' i- - YC?vfT Y !; - ' I I it i't k- $ - - - -- 1 (YV v. viV Yv o r ft , , xLx r:::.'SJi:ii-::Sa:i:jj- ... tiW fifth ' VI 5 s J --Y, V'S:;-'"- v f I s i v ( X Kits::-- ! ' ' . ' ' I i I - - i' - Y- -v fc-- r i . IK er p! Y,J ,ilq "'-- 0 " r Mrs. Gloria Richardson, chairman of the Cambridge: Action) Committee, who announced at a prpss conference that FIQHTER will shift their integration drive to Schools and industry to give Cambridge officials a chance to come up with' an, alter- -' nate to the recently defeated Public Accommodation Bill of the writer whose "Spoon River Anthology" has been dramatized, coijgratulates the play's stars backstage! They are Betty Garrett and Charles Aldman, who directed the play. SPOON RIVER Mrs. Edgar Lee Masters, center, Widow! t j ' : s . t i y '.' ; ( .' - 1 |