Monday, Mar. 17, 1952

Born. To Jeanne Grain, 26, cinemactress (Pinky, The Model and the Marriage Broker), and Paul Brinkman, 34 radio manufacturer: their fourth child first daughter; in Hollywood. Name: Jeanine. Weight: 7 Ibs. 9 oz.

Married. Alison Attlee, 21, daughter of Britain's former Labor Prime Minister; and Captain Richard L. L. Davis, 24, agent for a paper manufacturer; in Great Missenden, England.

Remarried. George Randolph Hearst, 47, eldest son of the late publisher William Randolph Hearst; and Collette Lyons, 37, film comedienne of the '30s; to buttress the legality of a Mexican marriage ceremony performed last October; he for the fifth time, she for the second; in Los Angeles.

Divorced. By Carol Marcus Saroyan, 27: William Saroyan, 43, novelist (My Name Is Aram), playwright (The Beautiful People) and sometime songwriter (Come On-A My House); after a nine-year off & on marriage (divorced in 1949, they remarried last year) and two children ; in Santa Monica, Calif.

Divorced. By Mary Rogers Brooks, 38, daughter of the late Will Rogers: Walter Brooks III, 37, an heir to the fortune left by his grandmother, Mrs. Edward T. Stotesbury, who paced Palm Beach society for two decades, and onetime stepson of General Douglas Mac-Arthur, after 1 1/2 years of marriage; in Santa Monica. She claimed he became belligerently drunk at least twice a week.

Died. Giacomo Rimini, 63, voice teacher and veteran Chicago Civic Opera Co. Baritone; in Chicago. After his U.S. debut in 1916, he married Soprano Rosa Raisa, formed one of the most enduring husband & wife teams in grand opera.

Died. Hans Frederick Arthur Schoenfeld, 63, career diplomat who served in twelve U.S. embassy posts throughout Europe and Latin America, held the ticklish job of Minister to Finland during most of World War II (1937-44); of a heart attack; in Washington.

Died. Charles Shannon Hand, 66, borough works commissioner for Manhattan, onetime secretary to New York's Mayor Tames J. Walker, publicity man for such Democratic candidates as Herbert Lehman, John N. Garner, Alfred E. Smith, Franklin D. Roosevelt; in Manhattan.

Died. Alanson P. Brush, 74, pioneer automan, early designer for the Oakland Motor Car Co. (forerunner of General Motors' Pontiac Division); in Detroit. Designer of the first Cadillac engine in 1902, he later built the Brush Runabout, me of the first autos using coil-spring suspension and built-in shock absorbers.

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