Monday, Jun. 07, 1982
ENGAGED. Marie Osmond, 22, singing, smiling princess of the land of Osmond; and Steve Craig, 25, former Brigham Young University basketball star who now plays semipro. The couple plan to marry June 26, in a family-only ceremony in the Salt Lake Mormon Temple, followed by a reception for 4,000.
DIED. Romy Schneider, 43, international movie star; of "natural causes," possibly a heart attack; in Paris. Born in Austria to celebrated acting parents, Schneider made 13 West German films in her teens, mostly costume romances. Fed up with such "Shirley Tempelhof" roles, she moved to France and acted parts from comedy to sultry mystery in dozens more flicks shot in Europe (Boccaccio '70) and a few in the U.S. (What's New Pussycat?). Twice divorced, Schneider was depressed by the accidental death last July of her son David Haubenstock, 14, who was impaled on a wrought-iron fence while visiting relatives outside Paris.
DIED. Cevdet Sunay, 82, President of Turkey from 1966 to 1973; of a heart attack; in Istanbul. A cautious architect of political compromise, Sunay helped preserve Turkey's fragile democracy during a turbulent period when the military and parliament frequently clashed.
DIED. Thomas B. McCabe, 88, industrialist who excelled in both private and public enterprise as chief executive officer of the Scott Paper Co. and as chairman (from 1948 to 1951) of the Federal Reserve Board; in Swarthmore, Pa.
DIED. Harry Solomon, 92, professor of psychiatry emeritus at Harvard Medical School and compassionate early champion of the deinstitutionalization of mentally ill patients; in Boston. As superintendent of the Massachusetts Mental Health Center from 1943 to 1958, Solomon humanized the treatment of the mentally ill by eliminating such practices as continuous restraints and overmedication.
DEATH REVEALED. Marty Hoey, 30, Washington State mountaineer who was trying to be the first American woman to conquer Mount Everest; of injuries in a fall on May 15; in the Himalayas, 2,600 ft. short of the 5 1/2-mile-high summit. Hoey was the only woman on a team scaling the rarely climbed Great Couloir of the mountain's north face.
DEATH REVEALED. Joe Sawyer, 75, paunchy, villainous character actor of more than 300 movies, starting in the 1930s, who bullied but finally succumbed to the likes of Pat O'Brien and Humphrey Bogart in San Quentin and who later won fame with the video generation as the bumbling, comic Sergeant Biff O'Hara in TV's The Adventures of Rin Tin Tin from 1954 to 1960; of liver cancer; in Ashland, Ore., on April 21.
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