Friday, Mar. 10, 1967

Married. Liza Minnelli, 20, Judy Garland's songbird daughter; and Peter Allen, 23, Australian song-and-dance man; in Manhattan.

Married. Prince Charles of Luxembourg, 39, younger brother of reigning Grand Duke Jean of Luxembourg; and Joan Douglas Dillon, 32, daughter of Investment Banker C. Douglas Dillon, onetime U.S. Secretary of the Treasury; she for the second time; in Guildford, England.

Married. Robert Bolt, 42, British playwright (A Man for All Seasons) and Oscar-winning film scenarist (Doctor Zhivago); and Sarah Miles, 24, British actress (Blow-Up); he for the second time; in Woking, England.

Died. Mark DeWolfe Howe, 60, professor of constitutional law at Harvard, who served his apprenticeship as a clerk to Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes (whose life he later chronicled in a definitive biography), went on to become one of the nation's foremost legal historians and teachers and an indefatigable campaigner for civil liberties and rights; of a heart attack; in Cambridge, Mass.

Died. Norman Tishman, 65, big-city real estate developer who, with his four brothers, anticipated the transformation of Manhattan's Park Avenue from a high-income residential address to an ideal office-building location with construction of the Universal Pictures Building in 1947, then cashed in ($156 million assets last year) on the high-rise building boom across the U.S.; of a disease of the nervous system; in Manhattan.

Died. Henry Robinson Luce, 68, founder of TIME, LIFE, FORTUNE, SPORTS ILLUSTRATED; of a heart attack; in Phoenix (see p. 26).

Died. Dave Dreyer, 72, Tin Pan Alley composer who made his fame in the 1930s by writing such toe-tapping tunes as Cecilia, Me and My Shadow, Back in Your Own Back Yard; of a kidney disease; in Manhattan.

Died. Gerard B. Lambert, 80, venturesome businessman who made Listerine a U.S. household word by coupling his father's antiseptic mouthwash to the word halitosis (meaning bad breath in Latin), was so successful that he was able to sell out for $25 million in 1928, after which he spent four years, from 1931 to 1934, putting an edge on Gillette Co. (by introducing a one-piece razor and the blue blade) before retiring for good to sail his J-class sloops Yankee and Vanitie in numerous America's Cup trials without notable success; of arteriosclerosis; in Princeton, N.J.

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