Monday, Jul. 14, 1975

They met several weeks back, danced at a Manhattan discotheque, and he invited her to his home for a drink. With Husband Mick Jagger on the road with his Rolling Stones tour, Bianca Jagger, 30, last week took Jack Ford, 23, up on his invitation. Jack's home, of course, is the White House, and Bianca arrived with Artist Andy Warhol and plans for a Jack Ford story in Warhol's Interview magazine. "This must be the meeting of the Weird Washington Photo Club," joked the President's son nervously as Andy, Bianca and White House Photographer David Kennerly clicked away with their cameras. After cocktails on the South Balcony, Nicaraguan-born Bianca then accompanied Jack on a tour of the homestead. Though she dubbed her host "a super fellow," she was obviously just as impressed by the First Family's lifestyle. Said Bianca: "I want to be President."

Newspapers rejected their advertising, the Chicago Transit Authority refused to display their posters, and a clutch of American Nazi Party members showed up to picket. Nonetheless, some 750 delegates of the American Communist Party managed to get together at Chicago's swank Ambassador Hotel for their first convention in three years. "Some people have said that we should love this country or leave it," intoned California Delegate Angela Davis, "[but] we are going to fight like hell to get this country back." Fighter Davis was bothered, though, by the fact that the party had chosen such an unproletarian meeting place. "I don't like being here," she said as she sat eating a cantaloupe in the lobby. "We got this fruit at a grocery down the street. That will do me."

For Chris Evert, Wimbledon was more like Waterloo. First she was upset in the semifinals by Billie Jean King. Then ex-Boy Friend Jimmy Connors brought Actress Susan George on his arm to watch his own upset in the men's singles (see SPORT). Said Chris: "He is no longer my fiance, and all thoughts about marriage have been shelved." All of which helped Billie Jean look like the coolest competitor around. She acquired a striking outfit that she threatened to wear (but did not) to the Wimbledon ball: Charlie Chaplin's Little Tramp costume. Then, having proclaimed this her final major tournament, she defeated Evonne Goolagong Cawley to win her sixth Wimbledon singles crown.

"A simple fracture of the tibia," announced Dr. Hamilton Hutchinson after examining the left leg of Alabama Governor George Wallace. Less simple, apparently, was the question of just how the presidential aspirant managed to injure himself. Shot and partially paralyzed three years ago, Wallace now has no feeling in his legs, but he noticed a swelling and felt a slight rise in temperature. After taking X rays, Hutchinson theorized that his patient broke the shinbone while riding his electric exercise bicycle or during one of his therapy sessions on the parallel bars. At any rate, Wallace now faces not only his normal wheelchair confinement, but also six weeks in a cast. No one, presumably, will be allowed to autograph it.

"Each year has been better than the last because we have grown together." So said Lovelorn Columnist Ann Landers in a 1969 paean celebrating her 30th anniversary of marriage to Businessman Jules Lederer. Last week she wrote another open letter to her 54 million readers and announced that her marriage was coming to an end. Friends of the couple, who are both 57, suggest that the breakup may be due to the strains of maintaining separate careers. Lederer, former president of the Budget Rent-A-Car Corp., has spent much of his time in London in recent years, tending to a troubled restaurant business. Columnist Landers, however, refused to disclose any specifics of the separation: "Please don't write or call and ask for details. The response would be: 'Sorry, this is a personal matter.' "

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