Monday, Jul. 02, 1951
Born. To Deanna Durbin, 29, onetime cinema songstress (100 Men and a Girl), and Charles Henry David, 45, U.S.-naturalized French movie director: their first child, her second, his third, a son; in Paris. Name: Peter Henry. Weight: 9 Ibs. 8 oz.
Married. Marjorie Bertha Morgenstierne, 19, "Miss United Nations of 1946" and daughter of Norway's Ambassador to the U.S. Wilhelm Morgenstierne; and Physicist John Howard Coleman, 25; in Washington, D.C.
Married. Michael Lewis, 21, son of the late novelist Sinclair Lewis and Columnist Dorothy Thompson, recent graduate of London's Royal Academy of Dramatic Art; and Bernadette Nanse, 21, French socialite; in Woodstock, Vt.
Divorced. Stanley Raymond ("Bucky") Harris, 54, onetime boy wonder of baseball, now manager of the Washington Senators, whom he steered to their first and only World Series championship in 1924; by Elizabeth Sutherland Harris, fiftyish, daughter of West Virginia's late Senator Howard Sutherland and sister of Lieut. General. Richard K. Sutherland (ret.), MacArthur's World War II chief of staff; after 24 years of marriage, three children; in Titusville, Fla.
Died. Hymie ("Loud Mouth") Levin, 53, junk dealer's son who became Al Capone's chief "collector" in Chicago during Prohibition, later teamed up with Jacob ("Greasy Thumb") Guzik in the red-light and gambling rackets; after long illness; in Chicago.
Died. Dr. Harry Watson Martin, 61, since 1937 medical director of 20th Century-Fox Studios, husband of famed Hollywood Gossip Columnist Louella O. ("Lolly") Parsons in one of the film colony's happiest marriages; of an undiagnosed ailment contracted while on South Pacific duty in World War II with the Army Medical Corps; in Hollywood.
Died. Franc,ois Fratellini, 72, worldfamed clown of Paris' Medrano arena, leaving his brother Albert as the only survivor of the Three Fratellinis, who kept a generation of Europeans laughing, drew a 1949 boo from the U.S.S.R. ("reactionary . . . bourgeois . . . classical exponents of buffoon games"); of cancer; in Le Perreux, France.
Died. Carla de Martini Toscanini, 73, wife of the famed conductor and one of the musical world's "most important second fiddles," who for 54 selfless years cut the Maestro's hair, cooked for him, attended to all the daily drudgeries which he hated; of a heart attack; in Milan, Italy.
Died. John Sheldon Doud, 80, father-in-law of General Dwight D. Eisenhower; of a cerebral hemorrhage; in Denver.
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