Monday, Oct. 14, 1957

Died. Augustus Goetz, 56, playwright, collaborator with his wife Ruth since their marriage (in 1930) on adaptations (Andre Gide's The Immoralist, Theodore Dreiser's Sister Carrie, and, most successfully, The Heiress from Henry James's Washington Square); of a heart ailment, after long illness; in Manhattan.

Died. Josephine Lyons Scott Pinckney, 62, South Carolina poet (Sea-Drinking Cities) and novelist (1945's bestselling Three 0'Clock Dinner); of respiratory infection complications; in Manhattan.

Died. Walter Duranty, 73, bald, wooden-legged (from a 1924 train wreck), Pulitzer Prizewinning (1932) New York Times foreign correspondent (1913-39), novelist (One Life, One Kopeck), autobiographer (I Write as I Please), longtime (1921-34) No. 1 Timesman in Russia and No. 1 Russian apologist in the U.S. (when Stalin doomed some 3,000,000 peasants to death from starvation by withholding grain, Duranty wrote: "You can't make an omelet without breaking eggs"); of a stomach ailment; in the Orlando, Fla. hospital where he last week married his second wife, Anna Enwright, widow of a Florida judge. Duranty became well acquainted with the Kremlin oligarchy (said he: "Moscow stands for progress"; said Stalin: "You have done a good job of reporting"), accompanied Foreign Affairs Commissar Maxim Litvinoff when he came to Washington in 1933 searching for U.S. recognition, later covered the Spanish Civil War (1936-39) from the Loyalist side.

Died. Eugene Adams Yates, 76, harassed veteran of the politically explosive Dixon-Yates power contract, chairman of the Southern Co., vice president and director of the Alabama, Georgia, Gulf and Mississippi Power Companies; of a heart attack; in Manhattan. When the Atomic Energy Commission contracted with Middle South Utilities head Edgar Dixon and Yates to build a plant near Memphis to supply the AEC with power, the deal was bitterly attacked by public power proponents as a scheme to undercut TVA, became a major 1956 campaign issue.

Died. Carlo Blymyer Dawes, 92, widow of Vice President (1925-29) Charles Gates Dawes; in Chicago.

Died. Bernard Ralph Maybeck, 95, pioneer modern architect, "grandfather of the California style," designer of the Palace of Fine Arts for San Francisco's 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition; in Berkeley, Calif. Some 5 ft. small, his head ever topped, outdoors or in, with a knitted tam-o'-shanter, his gnomelike beard imitating Santa Claus, Maybeck was one of the first to design walls of glass, one of the first practitioners of "open planning" to allow for expansion, invented (in 1890s) the kitchen-dining-living-room combination.

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