Monday, Sep. 11, 1972

Married. Jimmie Fidler, 74, old-time Hollywood gossip commentator who began tattling his rapid-fire tales about the stars on radio in 1933; and Kathryn Davis, 57, a former secretary for Flying Tiger airlines; he for the sixth time, she for the second; in Reno. -

Marriage Revealed. F. (for Francis) Lee Bailey, 39, criminal lawyer with a penchant for headline cases; and Lynda Hart, 25, a charter airline stewardess; he for the third time, she for the first; on Aug. 26 in Des Moines, with Iowa Governor Robert Ray and Captain Ernest Medina, Bailey's erstwhile client and current business associate in attendance.

Died. Prince William of Gloucester, 30, bachelor first cousin of Queen Elizabeth II, former Foreign Office commercial attache and ninth in line of succession to the British throne; of injuries suffered when the light plane he was piloting crashed during an air race; in Wolverhampton, England.

Died. Lale Andersen, 59, German cabaret singer whose sultry recording of Lilli Marlene was a radio favorite on both sides of the battle lines during World War II, and who recently published her memoirs. The Sky Has Many Colours (TIME, Sept. 4); of a heart attack; in Vienna.

Died. Lewis ("Redd") Evans, 60, songwriter and music publisher who collaborated on such hits of the 1940s as There! I've Said It Again, No Moon at All. and that World War II harbinger of Women's Lib, Rosie the Riveter; in New Rochelle, N.Y.

Died. Angelo Cardinal Dell'Acqua, 68, Vicar General of Rome and former Vatican Under Secretary of State who was considered a leading candidate for the papacy in the event of Paul VI's retirement; of a heart attack; while leading a pilgrimage in Lourdes, France. The death of Dell'Acqua, one of the Pope's closest aides, was the second in the Sacred College of Cardinals within a month and the fourth this year, reducing its number to 116.

Died. Baron Magnus von Braun, 94, former German official and father of Rocketman Wernher von Braun; in Oberaudorf, West Germany. The descendant of Prussian nobility whose genealogy reaches back to the 13th century, the baron served as press spokesman for both Kaiser Wilhelm II and the revolving-door governments of the early Weimar Republic. In 1932 he was appointed Minister of Agriculture by Chancellor Franz von Papen but retired from public life the following year when Hitler came to power.

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