Monday, Jun. 15, 1970

Born. To Lynda Bird Johnson Robb, 26, and Marine Corps Major Charles S. Robb, 30, their second child and former President Johnson's fourth grandchild, a girl; in Bethesda, Md.

Married. Katharine Lindsay, 19, daughter of New York Mayor John Lindsay and a sophomore at the University of Pennsylvania; and Richard Schaffer, 23, a 1969 graduate of the Wharton School of Finance; in a civil ceremony at Gracie Mansion, the mayor's residence in Manhattan.

Died. Terry Sawchuk, 40, New York Rangers' back-up goalie who during a 21-year career in the National Hockey League set a record of 103 regular-season shutouts and was considered by many to be the game's greatest goal tender; of a blood clot in the lung following injuries suffered in April during a brawl with Teammate Ron Stewart; in Manhattan.

Died. Albert Lamorisse, 48, French film maker (The Red Balloon, Stowaway in the Sky) whose aerial cinematics in high-spirited childhood fables enraptured international audiences in the '50s and '60s; when an Iranian army helicopter from which he was shooting a documentary hit a power line and crashed near Teheran.

Died. Richard King Mellon, 70, Mellon fortune seigneur (see BUSINESS).

Died. Menasha Skulnik, seventyish, irrepressible Yiddish comedian and Broadway actor (The Fifth Season, The Flowering Peach, The Zulu and the Zayda) for 60 years; in Manhattan. His explanation for his popularity: "People laugh not from the jokes but from the situations I am in. I play the little guy --the schlemiel--against the world."

Died. Edwin C. Johnson, 86, three-term Democratic Governor of Colorado and U.S. Senator from 1937 to 1955; following a hernia operation; in Denver. A conservative, "Big Ed" was offended by immorality among Hollywood actors and actresses and called for a congressional investigation. "Unconventional free-love conduct must be regarded for what it is," he said, "an assault upon the institution of marriage."

Died. Hjalmar Horace Greeley Schacht, 93, Hitler's financial wizard in the early years; in Munich. Selected by Hitler as Finance Minister in 1933, Schacht used his genius in the financing of the Fuehrer's rearmament program. But he broke with Hitler over the Nazi invasion of Austria and was imprisoned in 1944 as a suspected conspirator against the state. Tried by the Allies as a war criminal, he was acquitted and returned to banking.

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