Monday, Apr. 11, 1960

Married. Yul Brynner, 39, shaved-pate, Vladivostok-born Hollywood star; and Doris Kleiner, 32, Yugoslavian-born brunette, now a Paris fashionhouse director; ic for the second time, she for the first; n Mexico City, five days after his divorce from First Wife Virginia Gilmore.

Married. Pat Suzuki, 29, the little (4 ft. 11 in.) Nisei girl with the big voice, who for 16 months has been belting out

Enjoy Being a Girl in Broadway's Flower Drum Song; and Mark Shaw, 38, fashion photographer; she for the first time, he for the second; in Baltimore.

Divorced. By Corrine Calvet, 34, busty, French-born cinemactress: Jeffrey Stone, 34, TV actor; after five years of marriage (during which, she testified, "I was an emotional mess"), one child; in Santa Monica, Calif.

Divorce Revealed. John Daly, 46, TV newsman and What's My Line? moderator; and Margaret Neal Daly, 47; after 23 years of marriage, three children; via an Alabama quickie last February.

Died. Edwin King Daly, 63, president since 1936 of Horn & Hardart Co.'s Automat restaurants, active Catholic layman who was made a Knight of Malta and Knight Commander of the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem by Pope Pius XII; of a heart attack; in Bryn Mawr, Pa.

Died. King Norodom Suramarit, 64, pro-Western monarch of Cambodia, who barely escaped assassination last fall, is survived by his son, Prime Minister Prince Norodom Sihanouk; after a long illness; in Pnompenh.

Died. Tuanku (i.e., ruler) Abdul Rahman, 65, English-trained lawyer and Malayan state chief who, when Malaya became an independent federation within the British Commonwealth in 1957, was elected to a five-year term as the nation's first nonhereditary king (at the same time that Tengku [prince] Abdul Rahman, no kin, became the federation's Prime Minister); in his sleep; in Kuala Lumpur, Malaya.

Died. Russell Vernon Mack, 68, Republican Representative from Washington's Third District since 1947, onetime owner and publisher of the Hoquiam Washingtonian; of a coronary occlusion; on the floor of the House.

Died. Ivan Karaivanov, 71, Bulgarian-born, Moscow-trained international Communist agent who organized Iraq's Reds during World War II, sided with Yugoslavia during the Tito-Stalin rift, became a close Tito crony, a member of the Central Committee of the Yugoslav Communist Party; of kidney and heart ailments; in Belgrade.

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