Monday, Jan. 10, 1972

Born. To Seiji Ozawa, 36, conductor of the San Francisco Symphony and onetime protege of Leonard Bernstein, and Vera Ozawa, an ex-model: their first child, a girl; in San Francisco.

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Married. Pia Lindstrom, 33, WCBS-TV newswoman and daughter of Ingrid Bergman; and Joseph Daly, 32, New York real estate broker; she for the second time, he for the first; in Manhattan.

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Died. Peter Duel, 31, co-star of ABC's popular cowboy comedy series Alias Smith and Jones; of a self-inflicted gunshot wound; in Hollywood, An alumnus of Manhattan's American Theater Wing, Duel went to Hollywood five years ago. There he was in demand on such network television shows as Name of the Game, Combat, The Fugitive and The Bold Ones. He starred opposite Judy Carne in the series Love on a Rooftop before taking the role of Hannibal Hayes (alias Joshua Smith), one of two not quite reformed desperadoes in search of vocational guidance.

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Died. General Emmett ("Rosie") O'Donnell Jr., 65, a commander of U.S. bomber forces in the Pacific during World War II and the Korean conflict; of a heart attack; in McLean, Va. A Brooklyn boy whose pink cheeks earned him the nickname Rosie, O'Donnell was a light, fleet West Point halfback before obtaining his commission in 1928. He led B-17 Flying Fortresses defending American positions in the Philippines early in World War II, later evacuated Allied troops from Burma and airlifted supplies "over the hump" of the Himalayas. After receiving his first general's star in 1944, O'Donnell led the first land-based B-29 raids on Japan--which six years later became his headquarters when he was chief of the Far East Air Forces Bomber Command, directing strikes against Communist targets in Korea. After serving for four years as commander in chief of the Pacific Air Forces, he retired in 1963.

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Died. John Marshall Harlan, 72, retired Supreme Court Justice (see THE NATION).

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Died. Max Steiner, 83, longtime movie-score composer; in Hollywood. A Viennese prodigy, Steiner began songwriting and conducting while still a teenager. He migrated to the U.S. in 1914, wrote music and did arrangements for George White and Florenz Ziegfeld, then went to Hollywood in 1930. Of his more than 200 scores, three won Oscars--for The Informer (1935), Now Voyager (1942) and Since You Went Away (1944).

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