Friday, Nov. 08, 1963

Married. Peter Cook, 25, lean and hungry-looking member of the merciless quartet of English satirists who wrote and became the stars of Broadway's long-running Beyond the Fringe; and Wendy Snowden, 23, his Cambridge sweetheart; in Manhattan.

Divorced. By Jill St. John, 23, neon-haired Hollywood playgirl: Lance Reventlow, 27, auto-racing son of Millionairess Barbara Hutton; on the ground of mental cruelty (she said he bullied her into "participating in dangerous sports"); after 3 1/2 years of marriage, no children; in Los Angeles. Settlement: $86,000.

Died. Lord Evans, 60, Windsor court physician since 1949, a Welsh kidney specialist who signed the death certificate of King George VI, attended the births of Prince Charles, Prince Andrew and Princess Anne, in 1956 advised Prime Minister Anthony Eden to resign during the Suez crisis for reasons of health; of cancer; in London.

Died. Msgr. Hugh O'Flaherty, 65, Irish Roman Catholic priest and Vatican civil service official who, while delivering Red Cross parcels to prisoner-of-war camps in Italy during World War II, set up an escape ring that smuggled hundreds of U.S. and British soldiers to freedom by disguising them as nuns, monks, bus drivers and garbage collectors, for which he won a chestful of Allied medals and the unofficial title 'Pimpernel of the Vatican"; of a heart attack; in Cahirciveen, Ireland.

Died. Adolphe Menjou, 73, Hollywood's type-cast boulevardier and self-styled arbiter of sartorial elegance, the Pittsburgh-born son of an immigrant hotel manager, who became king of the silver screen's lounge lizards with A Woman of Paris in 1923, at his peak earned $200,000 a year and spent a good chunk of it replenishing a 2,000-item wardrobe (plum bowlers, mauve gloves, light grey dinner clothes), later turned to meatier roles, beginning as the city editor of The Front Page (1930) and ending as the unkempt eccentric of Pollyanna (1960), yet forever maintained his dandy image with such outfits as a mink-collared ulster, paisley scarf, brown Borsalino hat, sapphire-studded watch, and cigarette case inscribed "To Adolphe Menjou, from his warmest admirer, Adolphe Menjou"; of hepatitis; in Beverly Hills.

Died. Elsa Maxwell, 80, party giver to high society; of heart disease; in Manhattan (see MODERN LIVING).

Died. Thomas Terry Connally, 86, longtime (1929-53) U.S. Senator from Texas; of pneumonia; in Washington, D.C. (see THE NATION).

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