Monday, Mar. 25, 1974

Born. To Natalie Wood, 35, perennial Hollywood starlet, and Robert Wagner, 44, onetime hot property at 20th Century-Fox who has most recently been starring in the television series It Takes a Thief: their first child, a daughter; in Hollywood. Name: Courtney. Wood and Wagner were married in their bobby-sox days of 1957 and were divorced four years later. Each was remarried and had a daughter; in 1972 they were remarried to each other.

Born. To Mia Farrow, 29 (TIME cover, March 18), whose unexpected pregnancy during filming of The Great Gatsby gave the movie's producers a scare, and Andre Previn, 44, former Hollywood jazz pianist who now leads the London Symphony Orchestra; their fourth child, third son; in London. Name: Fletcher Farrow Previn.

Married. Mariola Martinez-Bordiu Franco, 21, third-year architecture student and granddaughter of Spain's octogenarian ruler Generalissimo Francisco Franco; and Rafael Ardid Villoslada, 27, a Madrid lawyer; near Madrid. The lavish wedding was held in Franco's private chapel in the three-century-old Pardo Palace, attended by liveried footmen, witnessed by Franco's chosen successor Prince Juan Carlos, by the entire government and by every Spanish grandee in the realm.

Divorced. Ryan O'Neal, 32, boyish, hockey-playing star of Love Story and, more recently, Paper Moon; and Leigh Taylor-Young, 29, attractive but unaccomplished movie actress (I Love You, Alice B. Toklas, The Horsemen) who met O'Neal when they were co-stars of the television soap opera Peyton Place; after seven years of marriage, one son; in Santa Monica, Calif.

Died. Lillian Red Wing St. Cyr, 90, an American Indian who played the part of Nat-U-Rich, the Indian girl, in Cecil B. DeMille's first film, The Squaw Man (1914); in New York City. Red Wing later appeared in a number of westerns and after her retirement became active in Indian affairs.

Died. Sidonie Matsner Gruenberg, 92, a founding mother of the science of child care and family relations; in Manhattan. A prolific producer of books, pamphlets and articles that encouraged parents to be authoritative with their children rather than authoritarian, Gruenberg provided guidance on everything from how much allowance to give the kids to what they should know about sex. She was director of the Child Study Association of America from 1923 to 1950 and editor in chief of the Encyclopedia of Child Care and Guidance (published for the first time in 1953).

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