Monday, Apr. 30, 1956

Born. To Jill Faulkner Summers, 22, only child of Nobel Prizewinning Novelist William Faulkner, and Paul Dilwyn Summers Jr., 27, University of Virginia law student: their first child, a son; in Charlottesville. Va. Name: Paul Dilwyn III. Weight: 7 Ibs. 13 oz.

Married. Ruth Chandler Roosevelt, 21, granddaughter of F.D.R., daughter of Elliott, now a Colorado rancher; and Henry D. Lindsley III, 27, Midland, Texas oilman; in Fort Worth.

Married. Autherine Juanita Lucy, 26, first Negro student admitted to the University of Alabama, who was suspended and then expelled after stormy protests by segregationists (TIME, March 12); and the Rev. Howard Foster, 27, ministerial student; in Dallas.

Married. Grace Kelly, 26, Philadelphia-born cinemactress; and His Serene Highness Prince Rainier III of Monaco, 32; in dual civil and religious ceremonies in Monaco (see FOREIGN NEWS).

Married. Margaret Truman, 32, only child of former President Harry S. Truman; and E. Clifton Daniel Jr., 43, assistant to the foreign editor of the New York Times; in Independence, Mo. (see NATIONAL AFFAIRS).

Divorced. Artie Shaw, 45, clarinet-tootling bandleader, author of the self-analytical autobiography The Trouble with Cinderella; by wife No. 7, onetime Cinemactress Doris Dowling, 32; after nearly four years of marriage, one child; in Las Vegas, Nev. Among Shaw's better-known former wives: Cinemactresses Lana Turner and Ava Gardner (Nos. 3, 5), Novelist Kathleen (Forever Amber) Winsor (No. 6).

Died. Raymond Waller, 19, the National Muscular Dystrophy Research Fundation's poster boy since the organization's founding in 1950; after wasting away from the disease for 15 years; in Port Arthur, Texas. Adopted by widowed Mrs. Louise Waller from an orphan home in Austin after he was discovered as an abandoned infant in a Waco movie theater, Raymond fell an early victim to the crippling disease that afflicts some 200,000 people in the U.S. and for which neither cause nor cure is known.

Died. Charles MacArthur, 60, newsman, playwright (coauthor with Ben Hecht of The Front Page) and husband of Actress Helen Hayes; of an internal hemorrhage; in Manhattan (seeTHEATER).

Died. William Henry Harrison, 63, president of International Telephone & Telegraph Corp., director of procurement and distribution of radio and electric equipment for the armed forces during World War II, head of the Government's Defense Production Administration during the Korean war; of a heart attack; in Garden City, N.Y.

Died. James Floyd Smith, 71, onetime dauntless barnstorming flyer and test pilot, who invented the modern ripcord parachute, founder of the Pioneer Parachute Co.; of cancer; in San Diego.

Died. Irene Langhorne Gibson, 83, the "Original Gibson Girl," widow of Artist Charles Dana Gibson, second of the "five beautiful Langhorne sisters of Virginia" (including Britain's Lady Astor); in Greenwood. Va. As pictured by her husband, with her sweetly haughty expression, hourglass figure and stylish pompadour, she became the gaslight era's symbol of genteel femininity, influenced the dress, manners and flirtations of a generation of U.S. girls.

Died. John Arnold Heydler, 86, old-time sportswriter, chairman of the board and longtime (1918-34) president of baseball's National League; after long illness; in San Diego. Heydler began his career as a printer's devil, once carried a proof of a Government document to the White House, where he recited Casey at the Bat for President Cleveland. He helped to install baseball's first commissioner, Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis, and was a pioneer in establishing the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, N.Y.

Died. Emil Nolde (real name: Emil Hansen), 88, pioneer German expressionist painter, who, with others of a group called Die Bruecke (the Bridge), brought a vivid emotional style into German painting; in Seebuell, Germany. A major influence on German art, Nolde painted vigorous, glowing canvases, was a member of the Nazi Party, sold his "decadent" painting to Art Lover Hermann Goering while Hitler looked the other way.

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