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Though the estate of high-living Comedian Ernie Kovacs proved to be heavily encumbered by debts (among them: $250,000 in U.S. tax liens), his widow, Actress Edie Adams, refused to regard herself as a charity case. When a group of show business luminaries led by Milton Berle rallied to stage a fund-raising TV series for her benefit, Edie declined, explaining that "it would have embarrassed Ernie, and besides, there are so many worth while things that really need help." To support their three daughters, the pert comedienne proposed to rely on her own endeavors, which currently include a lucrative contract to film commercials for cigars which Chain Smoker Kovacs burned up at the rate of $40 a day.
In sickness and in health, Marilyn Monroe, 35, has always found ex-Second Husband Joe DiMaggio, 47, tall, dark and handy. Last week, visiting him for the second straight year at the winter encampment of the New York Yankees, she discreetly stayed out of view in the DiMag menage at Fort Lauderdale's Yankee Clipper Hotel for two days before Batting Tutor Joe cut practice to put her on a plane in Miami, wound up all the way from centerfield for a goodbye buss. Fetching up next in Mexico City, Marilyn scoffed at rumors that she might remarry DiMaggio ("We tried it once"), but admitted that "I'm keeping my eyes open." Then, buttonholed about the deep-water ordeal (TIME, Feb. 16) of Jayne Mansfield, Marilyn indicated one matter on which her eyes were wide-screen open. "I'd never," sniffed she, "let myself get lost on a desert island with a publicity man."
Wending his nomadic way home from the U.S. via Spain, Saudi Arabia's King Saud, 60, descended on Malaga in his Boeing 720 and took over the sumptuous Castillo Santa Catalina. His fortnight's rental (including a bed custom-made to his outsized dimensions) came to $10,000, but after two days, Saud restlessly roared off to Torremolinos. Although His Majesty had neglected to pay the bill, the Castillo's proprietors remained unruffled. Saud, it was understood, had arrived in Spain with a $340,000 bank draft and for walking-around moneytraveler's checks totaling $1,000,000.
In an interview with TV's David Brinkley, James B. Donovan, 46, pooh-poohed outcries that he had done the Kremlin a favor by helping engineer the exchange of Spymaster Rudolf Abel for U-2 Pilot Francis Gary Powers. "The only information Abel could communicate to Moscow now," insisted the Manhattan lawyer, "would be descriptions of life in the penitentiary in Atlanta." Donovan doubted, too, that the Russians would reassign Abel to espionage duty. Said he: "There would always remain the lingering suspicionespecially in a semi-Oriental mind that he had made some private deal with me to become a double agent."
