Monday, Jan. 22, 1973
Born. To Elliott Gould, 34, Hollywood's comic anti-hero most recently turned serious (Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice, M*A*S*H, The Touch), and Jenny Bogart, 20, his girl friend: their second child, first son; in Hollywood. Name: Sam.
Married. Sandy Duncan, 26, sunny heroine of TV's Sandy Duncan Show until its cancellation last month; and Dr. Thomas C. Calcattera, 35, California surgeon who removed a tumor from behind Duncan's left eye in 1971; both for the second time; in Carson City, Nev.
Marriage Revealed. Ernest Borgnine, 55, beefy, bearlike Academy Award winner (Marty, 1955) and former TV skipper of McHale's Navy; and Tove Newman, 30, beauty-products businesswoman; he for the fifth time, she for the second; in Niagara Falls N.Y.; on Nov. 24.
Died. Stanley Glaubach, 48, prolific graphic designer and artist whose wry sculptures in plastic, papier-mache and other materials appeared on the covers of Esquire, New York and, on six occasions last year, TIME (most recently: TIME's nutrition cover, Dec. 18); of a heart attack; in Manhattan.
Died. Albert Glen ("Turk") Edwards, 65, bruising 260-lb. offensive and defensive tackle for the old Boston Redskins (later the Washington Redskins) from 1932 to 1940; of emphysema and lung cancer; in Kirkland, Wash. Edwards' aggressive pursuit of opposition quarterbacks and ball carriers helped his team to three championships. Later he served as Redskins' head coach for two seasons and in 1969 was elected to the football Hall of Fame.
Died. James Henle, 81, longtime president of Vanguard Press (1928-52) and first publisher of some of his generation's best-known authors, including Saul Bellow (Dangling Man, The Victim), James T. Farrell (Studs Lonigan trilogy), Dr. Seuss and Mystery Writer Rex Stout; of Parkinson's disease; in Arlington, Va.
Died. Ernest Arigell, 83, national board chairman of the American Civil Liberties Union (1950-69), who helped launch the A.C.L.U.'s historic legal attacks on Government loyalty oaths, the death penalty, segregated juries and censorship of mail; in Manhattan.
Died. Roy Ruggles Johnson, 89, former newsman and radio broadcaster whose 1913 scoop for the Worcester (Mass.) Telegram exposed Jim Thorpe's minor fling in professional baseball, causing the athlete to lose his two 1912 Olympic gold medals; in Worcester.
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