Monday, Apr. 28, 1980

MARRIED. Mukarram Jah Barkat Ali Khan, 45, eighth Nizam (ruler) of the former Indian principality of Hyderabad and heir to what was one of the world's great fortunes; and Helen Simmons, 31, daughter of a retired Australian steel executive and mother of the couple's 15-month-old son Azam; he for the second time, she for the first; in Perth, Australia, where he has a half-million-acre sheep ranch.

MARRIED. Stirling Moss, 50, champion British racing driver; and Susie Paine, 27, an advertising executive; he for the third time, she for the first; in London. Moss, who won 194 races, including 14 world championship Grand Prix events, driving for Mercedes-Benz, Maserati and Lotus, retired after a near fatal crash in 1962 that left his vision blurred and slowed his reflexes. He returned to the track last month, this time in a British race for saloon (sedan) cars, but did not finish because his Audi 80 broke down.

MARRIAGE REVEALED. John Paul Stevens, 60, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, appointed by President Gerald Ford in 1975 to fill the seat long held by the late William O. Douglas; and Maryan Mulholland Simon, 48, like the judge a former Chicagoan; both for the second time; at an undisclosed location in Virginia; on Dec. 1, 1979. Stevens, a lawyer who in 1970 was named to the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago, was divorced last year from Elizabeth Sheeren Stevens, his wife of 37 years and mother of his four children.

DIED. Charlotte Henry, 67, flaxen-haired Hollywood heroine, who starred in such prewar entertainments as Babes in Toyland, Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm and, most notably, the 1933 Alice in Wonderland, in which she played Alice to Cary Grant's Mock Turtle, Gary Cooper's White Knight and W.C. Fields' Humpty Dumpty; of a brain tumor; in San Diego.

DIED. Jean-Paul Sartre, 74, French existentialist philosopher and man of leftist letters; of heart disease; in Paris (see WORLD).

DIED. Levi Jitzhak Grunwald, 86, the Tzehlemer Rebbe, leader of a minor sect of Hasidim in Brooklyn, who touched the lives of all observant American Jews by requiring enforcement of the most rigorous standards for the preparation of kosher food; in New York City. Born in what is now the Soviet Ukraine, Grunwald was grand rabbi of Tzehlem, a town in northern Austria, when in 1938 he led his congregation to the U.S. to escape Nazi persecution; later he aided the postwar resettlement of many Hasidic Jews, whose men wear broad-brimmed black hats, grow their sideburns into long curls and never shave, heeding the biblical injunction: "Ye shall not round the corners of your heads, neither shall thou mar the corners of thy beard."

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