Friday, Jan. 03, 1964

Married. Sue Lyon, 17, cinema's Lolita-in-the-flesh; and Hampton Lamsden Fancher III, 25, her constant friend on the Iguana set in Puerto Vallarta; he for the second time; in West Los Angeles.

Married. Anne Spencer Lindbergh, 23, student at Paris' Sorbonne University, third of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh's five children and third to marry; and Jacques Feydy, 22, son of a professor of art history; in a civil ceremony attended by her father and mother, at Douzillac, near Perigueux, France. Of her siblings, Jon Morrow, 31, has four children; Land Morrow, 26, has one child; Scott, 21, and Reeve, 18, are unmarried.

Married. Letitia ("Tish") Baldrige, 36, Jackie Kennedy's former social secretary, who on departing the White House last May said "the only thing I regret is that I didn't find a good man to marry"; and Robert Hollensteiner, 32, Chicago real estate agent; in Manhattan.

Married. Gloria Vanderbilt, 39, spotlighted heiress: and Wyatt Emory Cooper, 39, Hollywood scriptwriter (The Chapman Report); she for the fourth time (the others, in order: Actor's Agent Pat di Cicco, Conductor Leopold Stokowski, Director Sidney Lumet), he for the first; in a civil ceremony, in Arlington, Va.

Divorced. Norman Mailer, 39, novelist (The Naked and the Dead); by his second wife, Jeanne Campbell Mailer, 34, daughter of the Duke of Argyll, and columnist for her grandfather, Lord Beaverbrook; on grounds of incompatibility; after 20 months of marriage, one child; in Juarez, Mexico.

Divorced. Jascha Heifetz, 62, Russian-born violin virtuoso; by Frances Sears Heifetz, 53, his second wife, who charged he tried to lock her out of their Beverly Hills home; after 16 years of marriage, one child; in Santa Monica, Calif.

Died. Gorgeous George, 48, who got nowhere in professional wrestling as plain George Wagner until he changed his name, did his peroxided hair in pageboys and upsweeps, after which wrestling fans gladly paid him $70,000 a year for ten peak years in the late 1940s and early '50s to see him take his lumps from the regular guys; of a heart attack; in Los Angeles.

Died. William Joseph Green Jr., 53, longtime (since 1948) Democratic Representative from Pennsylvania's Fifth District, iron-fisted boss of Philadelphia's Democratic machine, who overturned 68 years of Republican rule in Philadelphia in the 1951 mayoralty election, delivered a city majority for Kennedy in 1960, helped elect Mayor James Tate this fall; of acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis; in Philadelphia.

Died. Horace Elgin Dodge Jr., 66, only son of the founder of Dodge Motor Co.; of cirrhosis of the liver; in Detroit. A career sportsman, Dodge dispensed large chunks of the family fortune for souped-up speedboats and five wives (five children) who consumed more than $2 million in alimony and settlements. Sure to come: a battle royal over Dodge's will, which declares itself "null and void" if he is survived by his mother, now 93. Stakes: $2,000,000 in Dodge's personal funds, and eventually $65 million now in Mamma's name.

Died. Sir Jack Hobbs, 81, the Ty Cobb of British cricket, who almost singlehanded won the game's symbolic "Ashes" for Britain in 1926 after 14 straight years of galling Australian supremacy, in 1953 was awarded professional cricket's first knighthood, an honor that forever raised the status of professional players, until then required to address their amateur brethren as "Sir"; after a long illness; in Hove, Sussex.

Died. Marcellus Hartley Dodge, 82, longtime (1920-1955) chairman of Remington Arms Co.; in Madison, N.J. Voted the "luckiest" member of the 1903 Columbia graduating class after inheriting his grandfather's $60 million arms fortune, Dodge used $300,000 of it to bail out the floundering New York Times in 1905, two years later, at 26, married Ethel Geraldine Rockefeller, thus adding an estimated $70 million to the family purse, all of which he shrewdly employed in the stock market and in building Remington into one of the nation's biggest small-arms manufacturers. There are no children: Dodge's only son, M. Hartley, died at 22 in a 1930 auto crash.

Died. Jacob J. Shubert, 86, last of the three boys from Syracuse who founded Broadway's theatrical empire; of a stroke; in his Manhattan penthouse atop Sardi's 44th Street restaurant. In the partnership, Older Brother Sam was the producer and Middle Brother Lee the businessman; "J.J." touched both sides of the business, playing backer to Florenz Ziegfeld, producing more than 500 shows, and sending Eddie Cantor, Al Jolson, Marilyn Miller and Bert Lahr on their way to stardom. Until 1956, when the U.S. Government settled an antitrust suit, the Shuberts controlled half of all U.S. legitimate theaters; the business (24 theaters in Manhattan and four other cities) is still worth an estimated $50 million, and two days before J.J.'s death, the Government moved to get $15,705,387 in death taxes from Lee's estate (he died in 1953).

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