Monday, Jun. 21, 1954
Born. To Sara Delano Roosevelt, 22, granddaughter of F.D.R., daughter of Jimmy, and Anthony di Bonaventura, 24, concert pianist: a son; in Washington, B.C. Weight: 8 lbs. 5 oz.
Born. To Ann Blyth, 25, singing cinemingenue (The Student Prince), and Dr. James McNulty, 35, Hollywood obstetrician: their first child, a boy. Name: Timothy Patrick. Weight: 7 Ibs. 8 oz.
Born. To Victor Borge, 45, Danish-born pianist-wit whose Comedy in Music has broken all Broadway records for one-man shows (ninth month, heading toward 300 performances), and Sarahbel Roach Borge, 34, his second wife: a son. Name: Victor Bernhard. Weight: 6 Ibs. 8 oz.
Married. Nina Foch, 30, blonde cinemactress (Executive Suite); and James Lipton, 29, TV soap-opera actor; she for the first time, he for the second; in Brooklyn.
Married. Arthur Schwartz, 52, Broadway composer (By the Beautiful Sea) and producer (Inside U.S.A.); and Mary Grey, thirtyish, Broadway actress; both for the second time; in Sands Point, L.I.
Married. The Rev. Dr. Donald Grey Barnhouse, 59, pastor of Philadelphia's Tenth Presbyterian Church, entrepreneur of canned sermons, radio preacher on 60 stations; and Mrs. Margaret N. Bell, 45; both for the second time; in Manhattan.
Died. Arthur Greenwood, 74, treasurer of Britain's Labor Party, for 37 years a top figure in British Socialism; after long illness; in London. Dour, scholarly Greenwood, known because of his encyclopedic knowledge as "The Human Blue Book" was Minister without Portfolio in Churchill's wartime coalition Cabinet (1940-42), served Labor governments as Minister of Health and Lord Privy Seal, turned down a viscountcy because of his distrust of hereditary titles.
Died. Charles Francis Adams (TIME, Nov. 4, 1946), 87, great-great-grandson of President John Adams, great-grandson of John Quincy, cousin of Henry, yachtsman and onetime Secretary of the Navy (1929-33); after long illness; in Boston. He became an ardent Hoover supporter, but as Navy Secretary bitterly opposed Hoover's reductions in naval appropriations. America's leading yachtsman, he skippered the Resolute to victory over the late Sir Thomas Lipton's Shamrock IV in the 1920 America's Cup races, at the age of 73 brought off an unparalleled sweep of U.S. yachting's triple crown: the Puritan, Astor and King's Cups. A shrewd lawyer and financier, he raised Harvard's investments from $13 million to $120 million in 30 years as treasurer, made his alma mater the most heavily endowed university in the U.S.
This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.