; GAY DUTCH FOLK $ . s m on se hests ies â€" â€" C e s e s esA se caros l se e s s ce n e 1:'“:t':-"':/':::3 % i *¢ o l i Â¥ io AFRICAN CHAIRâ€"MANâ€"One of Emperor Haile Selassie‘s workers looks at the regal chairs he has just set up for an African conference in Addis Ababa. Dry house is used to dry out vegetables. _ Women are making own soup. Linenâ€"making is an old art. _ Workers hoist body on "wolsa" or windlass Smithy hammers out miniature horseshoe of kind that kept wagons moving FUOD FANCIERS will follow their noses to the "cookie house" and the "pie house" when the Pennsylvania Dutch spread out their wares for their annual Folk Festival in Kutztown, Pa., the first week in July. For the less hungry, the fairgrounds will include demonstrations of pine tar burning, cider pressing, shaving shingles for roofing, hoeâ€" down demonstrations, "schpotza" making (a maple sugar delicacy) and basketâ€"making. It‘s the largest such folk festival in the United States. WELL SUITED FOR SPACEâ€"Space suits and computers are used with a simplified mockup of an Apolio moonship (background) in a Minneapolis plant. Bill Summers adjusts computer for Jim O‘Neill inside the space suit. A SIGN OF DISOBEDIENCEâ€"Although swimming in Seine is prohibited, these Paris youngâ€" sters dive in for the first swim of the season. River bank was crowded in first heat wave. Distributed by King Features Syndicate. sentnentocs ssoote EOeC o0 IN THE FASHION GAMEâ€"Hugh O‘Brian (foreground) and Tommy McDonald of the Philadelphia Eagles clown with a football as proâ€" ducer David Merrick watches. They‘re on ‘"Ten Best Dressed" list. Sous .. . . S on eiien c nE OE L o otnl L.A se cearctatence CUSTOMER IN CAPRIâ€"Casually dressed, Brigâ€" itte Bardot leaves shop in Capri with photograâ€" pher Jicky Dussard, who‘s been linked with her. 1y