Monday, Jun. 20, 1949

Married. Leland Hayward, 46, cinemagent, majority co-owner of Southwest Airways and Broadway producer (Mister Roberts, South Pacific); and Nancy Gross ("Slim") Hawks, 31, perennial Best-Dressed Woman of the Year (she spends some $10,000 a year on clothes); he for the third time (his second was Actress Margaret Sulla van), she for the second (two days after her final decree from Cinema Director Howard Hawks); in Manhasset, N.Y.

Died. Sir Frederick Ogilvie, 56, Scottish principal of Jesus College, Oxford, onetime director of BBC (1938-42); of cancer; in London. Educator Ogilvie, who lost his left arm in World War I, was an expert economist (The Tourist Movement, an Economic Study--1933) and an academic recluse until he was unexpectedly named to head British broadcasting. It took a royal garden party to persuade him to take the job, but he earned a knighthood on retirement.

Died. Sigrid Undset, 67, Danish-born Norwegian novelist (Kristin Lavransdatter), 1928 Nobel Prizewinner (she gave the $42,000 prize money to charity); of bronchitis; in Lillehammer, Norway. The daughter of an archeologist, young Sigrid shared her father's researches into the Scandinavian Middle Ages, made use of the studies in her bestselling (300,000 copies in the U.S. alone; 17 translations) trilogy chronicling Norway's rich medieval past. A convert to Roman Catholicism and an anti-Nazi, Mme. Undset barely escaped Nazi-occupied Norway, returned from the U.S. in 1945 to her 900-year-old Norse home.

Died. Louis Haines ("Uncle Lew") Wentz, seventyish, Oklahoma oil multimillionaire, philanthropist and Republican bigwig; of coronary thrombosis; in Ponca City, Okla.

Died. Louis Jean Malvy, 74, onetime French Minister of Interior (1914-17; March-April 1926), co-defendant in a controversial treason trial involving Espionagent Mata Hari and the sale of 1917 war secrets; of a heart attack; in Paris. Acquitted of treason, Malvy was exiled for malfeasance but returned in 1923 to carry on his political-financial career (he opposed paying France's U.S. war debts).

Died. John Tinney McCutcheon, 79, 1931 Pulitzer Prizewinning cartoonist of the Chicago Tribune; after long illness; in Lake Forest, Ill. (see PRESS).

Died. William Robert Timken, 83, co-founder (with his late brother Henry Holiday) in 1898 of the firm that became Timken Roller Bearing Co., largest U.S. manufacturers of the tapered roller bearings used in automobiles, machinery, etc.; of a stroke; in Croton on Hudson, N.Y.

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