Monday, Jan. 11, 1960

Born. To William Francis Quinn, 40, Governor of Hawaii, and Nancy Ellen Witbeck Quinn, 40: their seventh child, fifth son; in Honolulu. Name: Gregory Anthony. Weight: 8 Ibs. 9 oz.

Married. Michael Flanders, 37, bearded British comedian of the two-man hit Broadway show At the Drop of a Hat; and Claudia Coburn Davis, 26, a research assistant with Radio Free Europe; in Manhattan.

Married. Ernest Borgnine, 42, Oscar-winning cinemactor (Marty); and Katy Jurado, 32, Mexican cinemactress (High Noon); both for the second time; in Cuernavaca, Mexico.

Died. Fausto Coppi, 40, Italy's idolized bicycle-racing champ whose zest and heart rate (30 to 40 per minute) helped him win the Tour d'ltalie five times, the Tour de France twice; of pneumonia; in Tortona, Italy.

Died. Margaret Sullavan, 48, cello-voiced actress who brought a youthful vibrancy to a variety of roles on stage (The Voice of the Turtle, The Deep Blue Sea), screen (Three Comrades, No Sad Songs for Me) and TV. married a series of show-business personalities: Actor Henry Fonda. Director William Wyler, Producer Leland Hay ward (fourth and last husband: Businessman Kenneth Arthur Wagg); presumably by an overdose of barbiturates; in New Haven, Conn.

Died. Paul Sauve, 52, Quebec's longtime (1946-59) Minister of Social Welfare and Youth, who became Premier of Quebec on the death of Maurice Duplessis last September, relaxed Quebec's intransigence toward the Canadian federal government and Canada's English citizens; of a heart attack; in St. Eustache, Quebec.

Died. Ante Pavelic, 70, fanatical Croatian nationalist who carried the logic of national self-determination to its ultimate conclusion and sacrificed his countrymen to the savagery of the Nazis, represented more than any other living person the bitter, neurotic type of Balkan extremist who helped plunge Europe into two devastating wars; of the effects of a bullet lodged in his body three years ago by an assassin; in Madrid. Embittered by the Allies' creation of Yugoslavia after World War I, Pavelic promised obedience to Nazi Germany in return for a new state of Croatia with himself at the head of it. In the course of the war, he ordered or sanctioned the slaughter of 800,000 Serbs, Jews and Croats.

Died. Alfonso Reyes, 70, world-roaming Mexican poet (Gulf of Mexico), essayist (The Position of America) and diplomat, who delved lovingly into the history of his land without becoming insular, offered the synthesis of cultures in Mexico and South America as a possible model of harmony for the rest of the world; of a heart attack; in Mexico City.

Died. Margaret Mary Emerson, 75, Bromo-Seltzer heiress who kept high society agog with her array of rich husbands: 1) Smith Hollins McKim, a physician; 2) Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, who went down with the Lusitania; 3) Raymond T. Baker, a Nevada prison warden who became director of the Mint; 4) Charles Minot Amory, a playboy; of a heart attack; in Manhattan.

Died. Dr. Leo Loeb, 90, German-born, Swiss-educated pathologist, whose pioneer researches (into the importance of heredity and sex hormones) led Harvard's great Physiologist Walter B. Cannon to remark: "It is impossible to view cancer research from any angle without finding it enriched by Dr. Loeb"; in St. Louis.

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