Friday, Aug. 05, 1966

Born. To Maria Schell, 40, Viennese movie star (End of Desire), and Veil Relin, 39, director of a Viennese avant-garde theater: their first child, a daughter; about a month ago in Munich. Her pressagent says they plan to marry as soon as possible.

Born. To Sir Laurence Olivier, 59, No. 1 flower of Britain's theater knighthood, and Joan Plowright, 36, his actress wife: their third child, second daughter; in Hove, Sussex.

Married. Janet Jennings Auchincloss, 21, half-sister of Jacqueline Kennedy; and Lewis Polk Rutherfurd, 21, Princeton '66; in Newport, R.I., in an event-of-the-season ceremony in which John F. Kennedy Jr. was a page, Caroline a flower girl, and Jackie among the almost 900 guests.

Died. Tony Lema, 32, a top professional golfer, last year's No. 2 money winner ($101,817) behind Jack Nicklaus, who endeared himself to newsmen and fellow pros as "Champagne Tony" by setting up the bubbly all around after each victory; in the crash of a twin-engined light plane, along with his wife and two pilots; on a golf course near Munster, Ind.

Died. Frank O'Hara, 40, poet, art critic and associate curator of Manhattan's Museum of Modern Art; of injuries suffered while standing on the beach when a "beach-buggy" driver, blinded by approaching headlights, swerved and ran over him; on Fire Island, N.Y.

Died. Arthur Bernard Langlie, 65, Republican politician and publisher, son of a grocer, who rose on the wave of a Seattle reform movement to become the only man to serve three terms as Governor of Washington State (1941-45, 1949-57), bringing parsimony and Presbyterian morality to the office, but lost a 1956 Senate race, retired from politics to a job as president and later chairman of McCall Corp.; of leukemia and a heart ailment; in Seattle.

Died. Enola Gay Tibbets, 72, whose name entered history when her son emblazoned it on the B-29 that dropped the Hiroshima atomic bomb; of a stroke; in Orlando, Fla.

Died. Edward Gordon Craig, 94, British theater producer and designer, the son of Actress Ellen Terry, who acted with Henry Irving, designed sets for Stanislavsky, was a friend of Max Reinhardt, a foe of George Bernard Shaw, the lover of Isadora Duncan, and a controversial genius widely credited with many of the major stage innovations since the turn of the century; of a stroke; in Vence, France.

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