Monday, Jul. 04, 1955

Married. Ann Clark Rockefeller, 20, Wellesley senior and elder daughter of Under Secretary of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare Nelson A. Rockefeller; and the Rev. Robert Laughlin Pierson, 29, Episcopal clergyman; in New York City.

Married. Adlai E. Stevenson III, 24, Harvard Law School student and eldest son of the 1952 Democratic presidential candidate; and Nancy Lewis Anderson, 21, Smith College graduate; in Louisville.

Married. Richard S. Aldrich, 52, theatrical producer (The Moon Is Blue), currently deputy director of the Foreign Operations Administration Mission in Spain; and Elizabeth Boyd, 29; he for the third time (his second: the late actress Gertrude Lawrence, about whom he wrote the current bestseller, Mrs. A.)', in Tangier, Morocco.

Married. George Jean Nathan, 73, dean of Broadway drama critics, renowned as one of the century's most entrenched and articulate bachelors ("Marriage is based on the theory that when a man discovers a particular brand of beer exactly to his taste he should at once throw up his job and go to work in the brewery"); and Julie Haydon, 45, wraithlike stage actress; after an 18-year courtship, a nine-year engagement; aboard the cruise liner Santa Rosa in Caribbean waters.

Divorced. James Roosevelt, 47, Democratic Congressman from California; by Romelle Schneider Roosevelt, 39, his second wife; after 14 years of marriage, three children; in Pasadena, Calif.

Died. Borrah Minevitch, 52, popular harmonica player of the 1930s and leader of the "Harmonica Rascals" band; of a cerebral hemorrhage; in Paris.

Died. Silliman Evans, 61, president-publisher of the Nashville daily Tennessean (circ. 112,947) and longtime key figure in Democratic Party politics; of a heart attack; in Fort Worth, where he had attended the funeral of Publisher Amon Carter (see below).

Died. Lloyd Paul Stryker, 70, nationally known criminal lawyer and master of old-style courtroom oratory, counsel for Alger Hiss in his first perjury trial (which ended in a hung jury); of a cerebral hemorrhage; in Manhattan.

Died. Alexander Antonovich Troyanovsky, 73, first (1934-39) Soviet Ambassador to the U.S., father of Oleg Troyanovsky(currently acting as Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov's interpreter in San Francisco); after long illness; in Moscow.

Died. Amon G. Carter, 75, publisher of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram; of a heart attack; in Fort Worth (see PRESS).

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