Monday, May. 29, 1950

Married. Princess Kazuko, 20, daughter of Emperor Hirohito, and Toshimichi Takatsukasa, 26, $20-a-month museum clerk and a cousin of the Dowager Empress Sadako; in Tokyo, after a formal ceremony in which she gave up her imperial rank and privileges (the bridegroom's family was reduced to commoner status upon adoption of the 1947 Constitution).

Married. Susan Reed, 23, hazel-eyed, harp-playing folk singer; and James Karen, 26, actor; in Manhattan.

Married. Lowell Thomas Jr., 26, photographer-son of the radio commentator; and Mary Taylor Pryor, 22, daughter of Samuel F. Pryor, Pan American World Airways bigwig and onetime Republican National Committeeman; in Greenwich, Conn.

Married. Marva Trotter, 34, former wife of retired Heavyweight Champ Joe Louis; and Dr. Albert Lee Spaulding, 30, internal medicine specialist; in Chicago.

Divorced. Marion Hargrove, 30, best-selling wartime humorist (See Here, Private Hargrove); by Alison Pfeiffer Hargrove, 27; after 7 1/2 years of marriage, two children; in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico.

Died. Alfred Julien Lomen, 61, president of the Lomen Commercial Co. of Nome, Alaska, onetime owner with his brothers of the largest reindeer herd in the Territory, Arctic rescue expert (he was the first white man to reach the scene of the 1935 Will Rogers-Wiley Post plane crash); after long illness; in Seattle.

Died. General Giuseppe ("Peppino") Garibaldi, 70, grandson and namesake of Italy's famed, red-shirted Liberator, onetime ardent antiFascist, author (A Toast to Rebellion); in Rome. A soldier in six wars, Garibaldi, at 23, led 3,000 Venezuelan rebels against Dictator Cipriano Castro, later became Francisco Madero's chief of staff in the Mexican revolution of 1910-11, organized an Italian Legion to fight for France in World War I. At first violently opposed to the Black Shirts, he eventually shifted his allegiance to Mussolini during the Ethiopian campaign but was put into jail by the Nazis during World War II.

Died. David Marvin Goodrich, 73, longtime (since 1927) board chairman of the B. F. Goodrich Co. (rubber); last of Founder Dr. Benjamin Franklin Goodrich's two sons, both of whom took a hand in the business; in Mount Kisco, N.Y.

Died. Aurelio Miro Quesada, 73, editor of Peru's outstanding daily, El Comercio, and head of the powerful Miro Quesada family, one of the three most important in Peru; of a heart ailment; in Lima.

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