Monday, Feb. 13, 1956

Born. To Victor Borge, 47, Danish-born pianist-comedian, and Sarahbel Roach Borge, 35: their second child (his third, her fourth), a daughter; in Waterbury, Conn. Name: Frederikke.

Married. Guri Lie, 26, blonde daughter of first U.N. Secretary-General Trygve Lie; and William Zeckendorf III, 26, son of Real-Estate Tycoon William Zeckendorf and a vice president of his father's Manhattan real-estate firm, Webb & Knapp; in Winchester, Va.

Died. Max O'Rell Truitt, 52, son-in-law of Senator Alben W. Barkley and father-in-law of Barkley's younger stepdaughter, solicitor for the old Reconstruction Finance Corp. (1935-37), member of the U.S. Maritime Commission (1938-41); of a stroke; in Washington.

Died. Paul Patterson, 55, governor of Oregon since 1952, when he stepped from the presidency of the state senate to fill the post vacated by Douglas McKay, who had resigned to become U.S. Secretary of the Interior; of a heart attack, three days after announcing that he would run on the Republican ticket in November against Senator Wayne Morse; in Portland.

Died. George Davis ("Buck") Weaver, 64, star third baseman for the old Chicago White Sox (1912-20), who was barred from baseball for "guilty knowledge" of the 1919 Black Sox scandal; of a heart attack; in Chicago. Weaver continually pleaded his innocence, spent his last years as a parimutuel clerk at local racetracks.

Died. Robin ("Bazooka Bob") Burns, 65, top-rank radio and film (The Arkansas Traveler, I'm from Missouri) comedian of the '30s and '40s; of cancer; in Encino, Calif.

Died. Sir Hubert Houldsworth, 66, chairman since 1951 of Britain's National Coal Board, which directs the mining and marketing of all coal in Britain; of a coronary thrombosis, less than 24 hours after he had been confirmed in a hereditary baronetcy; in London.

Died. Charles Grapewin, 86, oldtime Broadway comedian-turned-Hollywood character actor, who performed in more than 100 films, notably as Grampa in The Grapes of Wrath; in Corona, Calif.

Died. Charles Edward Taylor, 87, designer and builder of the four-cylinder, 12-h.p. aircraft engine used by the Wright brothers at Kitty Hawk; of asthma; in San Fernando, Calif.

Died. Maria Clopton Jackson, 93, widow of C. S. ("Sam") Jackson, doughty founder (in 1902) of Portland's independent Oregon Journal (circ. 182,257), longtime board chairman of the Journal Publishing Co.; in Portland, Ore.

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