Monday, Apr. 04, 1983

BORN. To Lisa Hoffman, 28, and Dustin Hoffman, 45, Academy Award-nominated star of Tootsie: their second child, first daughter; in Los Angeles. Name: Rebecca. Weight: 7 Ibs. 12 oz.

MARRIED. Richard Dreyfuss, 34, Academy Award-winning actor (The Goodbye Girl), and Jeramie Rain, 34, a TV writer-producer; he for the first time, she for the second; in Beverly Hills.

HOSPITALIZED. George Corley Wallace, 63, elected in 1982 to a fourth term as Alabama Governor despite being in a wheelchair since a 1972 assassination attempt; for pain in his lower abdomen and related depression, which his physician says is also caused by his problems as Governor; in Birmingham. It is his third trip to the hospital since his January inauguration, but a spokesman says that Wallace "is still very much in charge."

HOSPITALIZED. Gloria Swanson, 84, legendary film star (Sunset Boulevard) who credits her longevity and ageless glamour to a diet of spring water and vegetables; for an undisclosed illness; in New York City.

DIED. Adriana Ivancich, 53, aristocratic Venetian socialite and prizewinning artist of dust covers for Ernest Hemingway's books, who as a beauty of 18 was beloved of the aging, alcoholic writer and inspired Renata, the heroine of his 1950 novel, Across the River and into the Trees; by her own hand (she hanged herself from a tree); at her farm in Capalbio, Italy. In a 1980 book, The White Tower, she contended that the love story had been more a father-daughter relationship than a May-December scandal.

DIED. Bob Waterfield, 62, one of pro football's most famous pre-Namath quarterbacks, who led the Cleveland, later Los Angeles, Rams from 1945 to 1952, winning a world championship his first year; of lung failure after a long illness; in Burbank, Calif. He was married to Movie Actress Jane Russell from 1943 to 1968.

DIED. Anthony Blunt, 75, impeccably proper curator of the British royal family's art collection from 1945 until shortly before he was publicly unmasked in 1979 as a onetime Soviet spy; of a heart attack; in London. As a scholar of 17th and 18th century European art, Blunt was a model of well-bred civility and fastidious integrity. But as a Cambridge don in the 1930s he recruited Soviet agents, and as a member of British intelligence during World War II he leaked information to the Soviets. Though he was allowed to continue advising the Queen until his retirement, he privately confessed to British authorities in 1964 that he was the "fourth man" along with three notorious fellow Cambridge traitors: Guy Burgess, who died in Moscow in 1963; Donald Maclean, who died in Moscow last month; and H.A.R. ("Kim") Philby, still living in the Soviet Union.

DIED. Thomas S. Gates, 76, a patrician Philadelphian who, as Secretary of Defense in the last year of the Eisenhower Administration, overhauled Pentagon management procedures, helping prepare the way for modern weapons and tactics, and authorized the ill-fated U-2 spy-plane flight of Francis Gary Powers; after a long illness; in Philadelphia. A banker by profession, Gates was president of the Morgan Guaranty Trust Co. from 1962 to 1965 and chief of the U.S. mission in Peking in 1976-77.

DIED. Ivan M. Vinogradov, 91, Soviet mathematician and one of the world's experts in number theory, an abstruse specialty concerned with the properties of whole numbers; in Moscow. As director of the Institute of Mathematics since 1932, he reportedly used his considerable power to keep Jewish mathematicians out of the scientific establishment's upper levels. This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so viewer discretion is required.