THEY ALSO SERVED...
If they could do little else, the 38 lonely Hungarians in the now almost deserted Olympic Village at Melbourne furnished, along with the thousands of other refugees in Vienna and elsewhere, a valuable and poignant reminder of their country's fate. Although they had been cleared by Australian immigration authorities and made proper application for asylum in the U.S., they were still held up by Washington red tape. They could only sit and wait
IN QUARTERS ONCE OCCUPIED BY U.S. TRACK AND FIELD MEN, HUNGARIAN ATHLETES LISTEN CAREFULLY AS OFFICIAL EXPLAINS TO THEM HOW THEY CAN GET TO AMERICA
INJURED WATER-POLO PLAYER ZADOR COMPLETES QUESTIONNAIRE
U.S. VICE-CONSUL C. T. YORK (SECOND FROM LEFT) OFFERS ASYLUM TO SWIMMER KATALIN SZOKE
AT THE OLYMPIC VILLAGE DINING HALL, HUNGARIANS TAKE TIME OUT TO EAT BUT STILL TALK OF FREEDOM
MARGIT KORONDI KILLS TIME PLAYING RUMMY WITH TEAM MATES WHILE FELLOW GYMNAST NAGY RELAXES
GOLF AT THE SUMMIT IN GEORGIA
President Eisenhower and Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent of Canada discussed world problems last week in the relaxed and companionable atmosphere of the Augusta National Golf Course
AS ST. LAURENT PLAYS FAIRWAY SHOT, PARTNER ED DUDLEY, AUGUSTA PRO, AND MRS. HUGH O'DONNELL, ST. LAURENT'S DAUGHTER (LEFT), WHO TEAMED WITH IKE (CENTER), LOOK ON. MATCH ENDED, OFFICIALLY, IN A TIE

