Monday, Oct. 27, 1958

Marriage Disclosed. Herbert von Karajan, 50, Salzburg-born orchestra conductor, widely known as "Generalmusik-direktor of the continent of Europe," who was recently divorced (TIME, Sept. 22) by his second wife after 16 years of marriage; and Eliette Mouret, 19, French model; in Megeve, France.

Died. Josef Wintrich, 67, president of West Germany's Federal Constitutional Court, which in 1956 handed down the decision outlawing the Communist Party in West Germany; of a heart attack; in Karlsruhe, West Germany.

Died. Jack Norton (real name: Mortimer J. Naughton), 69, who was known to millions through his role on stage (Ziegfeld Follies, Earl Carroll's Vanities) and screen (The Farmer's Daughter, The Fleet's In) as a staggering drunk, usually in top hat and tails; of a respiratory ailment; at Saranac Lake, N.Y.

Died. Winona Fisher, 70, daughter of 98-year-old Primitivist Painter Anna Mary Robertson (Grandma) Moses; of a heart attack; in Cambridge, N.Y. Of Grandma Moses' ten children, two survive. Seven years ago, at 63, Winona returned from California to look after her aging mother.

Died. Esme Stuart Lennox Robinson, 72, Irish dramatist (The Whiteheaded Boy, The Lost Leader, The Far-Off Hills'), a longtime director of Dublin's Abbey Theatre, short-time secretary to George Bernard Shaw; in Dublin.

Died. Sir Douglas Mawson, 76, Australian explorer of the Antarctic, longtime (1920-52) professor of geology and mineralogy at the University of Adelaide; in Adelaide. Born in Yorkshire, Douglas Mawson went to Australia as a child, made his first journey to Antarctica in 1907 under Ernest Shackleton, was one of three men to reach the south magnetic pole. Leading his own expedition in 1911, he discovered George V Coast; and on one of the most legendary Antarctic journeys, he was the only survivor among three men, at one point had to stew his sledge dogs to stay alive. In 1929 he made a third expedition that rough-mapped the coastline of Australia's Australia-sized land claim in Antarctica.

Died. Celso Cardinal Costantini, 82, Chancellor of the Holy Roman Church, longtime apostolic delegate in China; in Rome. The death of Cardinal Costantini reduced the College of Cardinals to 54 and its Italian membership to 17.

Died. Abram Garfield, 85, patriarchitect of Cleveland, son of U.S. President James Abram Garfield; in Cleveland. As a boy, Garfield lived briefly in the White House during his father's short presidency in 1881.

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