Friday, Oct. 29, 1965
Born. To Jayne Mansfield, 32, full-time exhibitionist, sometime movie actress (the upcoming Fat Spy), and Matt Cimber, 29, her third husband and manager: her fifth child, their first, a son; in Hollywood.
Born. To Sam Mele, 43, the American League's Manager of the Year for taking the Minnesota Twins to the top, and Mary Clemens Mele, 35: their fifth child, second son; in Quincy, Mass.
Married. Christine Keeler, 23, redheaded call girl, whose 1963 stories of life among London's toffs led to the resignation of her occasional lover, Tory War Minister John Profumo, and the suicide of her protector, Osteopath Stephen Ward; and Engineer James Leathermore, 24; in Reading, England.
Married. Peter Hall, 34, director of Britain's Royal Shakespeare Theater; and Jacqueline Taylor, 29, his secretary; he for the second time; in Stratford on Avon, England.
Married. Madalyn Murray, 46, Baltimore's professional atheist; and Richard Franklin O'Hair, 52, expatriate artist living in Mexico; both for the second time; in Austin, Texas.
Marriage Revealed. Susan Strasberg, 27, Broadway's once-dazzling Anne Frank (1955) and still-suffering film ingenue (Kapo), and Chris Jones, 24, ABC's Jesse James; in Las Vegas, on Sept. 25.
Died. Marie McDonald, 42, Hollywood performer and former Tommy Dorsey vocalist built up by press agents as "The Body," who made it big in the tabloids with endless escapades--six marriages, escape from an Australian psychiatric clinic, a suspicious kidnaping; from as yet undetermined causes; in Hidden Hills, Calif.
Died. Enrico Piaggio, 60, Italy's Vespa king, a wartime aircraft manufacturer who revolutionized European road travel with his 1946 development of a low-cost motor scooter that now sells in more than 120 countries; of peritonitis; in Varramista, Italy.
Died. Ernst Hohner, 79, third-generation head of Germany's House of Hohner, producer of 95% of the world's harmonicas, who took over the firm in 1923, added a line of electronic instruments and a music-printing plant, and developed the company town of Trossingen into a tourist favorite known as the "Singing Village"; of heart disease; in Trossingen, Germany.
Died. Paul Tillich, 79, eminent Protestant theologian; following a heart attack; in Chicago (see RELIGION).
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