Monday, Oct. 13, 1980

BORN. To Henry Winkler, 34, actor (Heroes, The One and Only) best known for his portrayal of "the Fonz" in the television series Happy Days, and his wife of two years, Publicist Stacey Weitzman, 32: a daughter, his first child, her second; in Los Angeles. Name: Zoe Emily.

MARRIED. Malcolm McDowell, 37, impish English actor (A Clockwork Orange, Caligula); and American Actress Mary Steenburgen, 27 (Goin' South); he for the second time, she for the first; in New York City. The couple met two years ago while playing strangers who fall in love in the film Time After Time.

ILL. Steve McQueen, 50, cool, rugged star of action films (The Great Escape, Bullitt, Papillon); of a rare form of chest cancer; in Los Angeles. McQueen, who was married for the third time in January, to Model Barbara Minty, 26, had for months denied rumors of the ailment. Last week he confirmed that doctors had told him in April he was suffering from mesothelioma, a cancer usually regarded as incurable. Since then, he added, a regimen of treatment, including oil baths, vitamins and "positive thinking," had "extraordinarily" improved his condition. Said McQueen: "The reason I denied that I had cancer was to save my family and friends from personal hurt and to retain my sense of dignity as, for sure, I thought I was going to die."

DIED. Princess Anne of Denmark, 62, British-born wife of Prince George and cousin of England's Queen Elizabeth II; of a heart attack; in London. Born Anne Bowes-Lyon, she married Prince George, the Danish military attache in London and a distant cousin of Denmark's Queen Margrethe II, in 1950, after the dissolution of her marriage to Lord Anson. She and Anson had a daughter and a son, Photographer Patrick Lichfield.

DIED. Edward V. Jones, 71, architect and interior designer who carried out authentic period restorations at the White House (including the Oval Office), the State Department reception and drawing rooms (taking inspiration from 19th century Philadelphia houses, 18th century Virginia interiors and the notebooks of Thomas Jefferson), and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City; of a heart attack; in Albany, Ga.

DIED. Thomas F. ("Sandy") Richardson, 73, a member of the famed Brink's gang that made off with $2.8 million in Boston 30 years ago, including enough in currency ($1.2 million) to make it the largest cash holdup in U.S. history at the time; of cancer; in South Weymouth, Mass. Richardson, a sometime longshoreman, was one of eleven men charged with the crime in 1956, only five days before the state statute of limitations would have run out.

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