Monday, May. 12, 1952

Born. To Shirley Temple, 24, Hollywood's No. 1 curlylocks of the '30s, and second husband Lieut. Commander Charles A. Black, 32; their first child, her second, a son; in Washington, D.C. Name: Charles A. Jr. Weight: 6 Ibs. 12 oz.

Married. Prince Edmond Poniatowski, 26, great-great-great-grandnephew of Stanislas August Poniatowski, last King of Poland (1764-95); and Anne Darwin Goodrich, 27, granddaughter of James Putnam Goodrich, onetime (1917-21) Governor of Indiana; in Rhinebeck, N.Y.

Marriage Revealed. Henry Jacques Gaisman, 82, wealthy inventor (swivel chairs, razors, men's belts) and retired chairman of the board (since 1938) of the Gillette Safety Razor Co.; and his former nurse, Catherine Vance, 33; both for the first time; last month, in Hartsdale, N.Y.

Divorced. By Celeste Holm, 33, actress of stage (Affairs of State) and screen (All About Eve): third husband A. Schuyler Dunning, 38, airline public-relations executive; after six years of marriage, one son; in Los Angeles.

Died. Dr. Louis Wirth, 54, University of Chicago sociologist, who regarded the modern big city as one of the sorriest products of civilization, once said: "We will either master this ominously complicated entity or perish under it"; of a heart attack; in Buffalo.

Died. James Murchie Eaton, 64, pioneer airline organizer and vice president of American Overseas Airlines (until it was sold to Pan American World Airways in 1950); in Manhattan.

Died. Miss Mary N. Winslow, 64, longtime civil servant, adviser to Nelson A. Rockefeller's Office of Inter-American Affairs during World War II; of a kidney ailment; in Washington, D.C.

Died. Howard W. Blakeslee, 72, Pulitzer Prizewinning science editor (since 1928) of the Associated Press; ten days after he covered the atom bomb test at Yucca Flat, Nev.; of a coronary thrombosis; in Port Washington, N.Y.

Died. Dr. Juan Carlos Blanco, 72, Uruguay's first Ambassador to the U.S. (1941-48), onetime dean of the Washington diplomatic corps; delegate to the League of Nations and United Nations; of a heart ailment; in Montevideo.

Died. Colonel Ernest K. Coulter, 80, founder of the worldwide Big Brother movement to help delinquent boys, for 22 years (1914-36) general manager of the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, onetime Spanish-American War correspondent for the New York Herald; in Santa Barbara, Calif.

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