People: Jan. 9, 1984

In the eyes of the Vatican, which is still considering her annulment request, she remains married to French Playboy Philippe Junot. But that did not stop Princess Caroline, 26, from tying the knot last week with Stefano Casiraghi, 23, son of a wealthy Italian businessman. After exchanging vows and gold bands in a 20-minute civil ceremony at Monaco's royal palace, the newlyweds waved magnanimously from a balcony to the cheering crowd outside. The tiny gathering—only 23 close friends and relatives, including Casiraghi's parents, Caroline's father Prince Rainier III, 60, Sister Stephanie, 18, and Brother Albert, 25—sampled a three-tier chocolate cake but dropped no crumbs of comment for the throng of reporters and well-wishers waiting below. Which led to some inevitable pishing and tushing. The hastily planned nuptials, in particular, appealed to the parturient interests of some. Speculation was only heightened by a newspaper report quoting Casiraghi as saying, "We want a child as soon as possible."

The invitation from Yuri Andropov to visit the Soviet Union last summer made her the nation's premiere pre-teen good-will ambassador. And last week Samantha Smith, 11, was on the road again, this time in Kobe, Japan, to address a children's symposium on the 21st century, sponsored by organizers of the technology and science fair Tsukuba Expo '85. Before the meeting, Smith visited a Buddhist complex set in the hills of eastern Kyoto, cheerfully signing handkerchiefs pressed on her by housewives who recognized her and sipping from three waterfalls believed to bring good fortune.

In her opening message to a group of 56 children the next day, Smith, with the help of some speechwriting tips from her dad, painted an optimistic picture of the future, where computers "will transfer good food, good shelter and good clothing to the people who need them." The "Angel of Peace," as she is called by the Japanese press, also proposed an "international granddaughter exchange" to increase understanding in the world.

"Then," said Smith, "the year 2001 can be the year when all of us can look around and see only friends—no opposite nations, no enemies and no bombs." As for the year 1984, she will start that back in Manchester, Me., where her what-I-did-on-my-vacation compositions must be making sixth-grade history.

As the laconic superpilot Chuck Yeager in The

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MANOJ, a police officer stationed in Mumbai, on why he and other police don't criticize their leaders for failing to meet promises to improve dire working conditions after last fall's deadly attacks on the Taj hotel

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