Monday, Aug. 26, 1974

Married. Marvin Mandel, 54, Governor of Maryland; and Jeanne Blackistone Dorsey, 37, descendant of one of Maryland's founding families; both for the second time; in a Jewish ceremony in Annapolis. Mandel and his first wife Barbara ("Bootsie"), 54, who for five months refused to leave the Governor's mansion following her husband's public declaration that he intended to marry Mrs. Dorsey, were divorced just half an hour before the wedding. The bride divorced former Maryland State Senator Walter B. Dorsey in 1969.

Died. Mrs. Park Chung Hee, 49, highly esteemed First Lady of South Korea (see THE WORLD).

Died. I. Robert ("Bob") Kriendler, 60, Marine Corps veteran of World War II and urbane president of the 21 Club, Manhattan's lavishly appointed former speakeasy that offers social status along with costly food and drink, youngest of the four brothers who steered "friends of the house" to the right tables over the years; of a heart attack; in Westhampton Beach, N.Y.

Died. Clay L. Shaw, 61, the only person ever to stand trial for the assassination of President John Kennedy; of cancer; in New Orleans. In 1967, two years after his retirement as managing director of New Orleans' International Trade Mart, Shaw was accused by New Orleans District Attorney Jim Garrison of conspiring with Lee Harvey Oswald to kill J.F.K. After many months of noisy proceedings--during which Garrison produced a motley assortment of informants and witnesses--the jury took less than an hour to acquit Shaw in March 1969. Garrison then tried to prosecute Shaw for perjury but was stymied by the federal courts.

Died. Karl Earl Mundt, 74, former Republican Senator from South Dakota; in Washington, D.C. A college speech teacher before his election to Congress in 1938, the stocky, amiable Mundt applied his oratorical talents to the cause of American isolationism before Pearl Harbor awakened him to international concerns. A supporter of the United Nations and sponsor of the bill creating the Voice of America, he became a tough postwar antiCommunist. As acting chairman of the House Un-American Activities Committee, he helped young Richard Nixon push the investigation of Alger Hiss. Elected to the Senate in 1948, Mundt reluctantly chaired the McCarthy-Army hearings six years later. After suffering a stroke in 1969, he refused to resign and in February 1972, he became the first Senator ever to be stripped of seniority and key committee assignments by his fellow legislators.

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