Friday, Nov. 01, 1968

Born. To Lynda Bird Johnson Robb, 24, and Major Charles S. Robb, 29, currently on duty in Viet Nam with the 1st Marine Division: a girl, their first child, and President Johnson's second grandchild; in Bethesda, Md.

Married. Princess Moune, 33, daughter of Laotian Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma, currently a foreign-affairs adviser in her father's cabinet; and Perry J. Stieglitz, 48, cultural-affairs attache of the U.S. embassy in, Vientiane; she for the second time, he for the first; in a traditional Buddhist ceremony; in Vientiane.

Married. Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy, 39; and Aristotle Socrates Onassis, sixtyish (see PEOPLE).

Died. Dom Aurelio Maria Escarre, 60, Catalan monk, who for 24 years as Abbot of Montserrat scrapped with the Franco regime until the government forced him into retirement three years ago; of a liver and kidney disease; in Barcelona. Dom Aurelio castigated the government for "not obeying the basic principles of Christianity," and turned Montserrat into a sanctuary, often protecting those sought by Franco's police.

Died. Julius Fleischmann, 68, heir to the Fleischmann liquor fortune, who used his wealth to help finance the Ballet Russe, Manhattan's Metropolitan Opera and numerous Broadway plays (Pygmalion, 1946; Caesar and Cleopatra, 1949); of cancer; in Cincinnati.

Died. Marshall Cassidy, 76, onetime jockey, steward, executive secretary of The Jockey Club (1941-64) and secretary-general and vice president of the prestigious New York Racing Association (1955-60), who pioneered the nationwide adoption of saliva and urine tests for horses, devised and popularized the photofinish camera; of injuries he suffered in an automobile accident three months ago; in Glen Cove, N.Y.

Died. Erwin C. Uihlein, 82, president (1933-61) and chairman (1961-67) of the Jos. Schlitz Brewing Co.; of a heart attack; in Milwaukee. Under his command, Schlitz grew into one of the largest breweries in the business (1967 sales: $394 million), second in the U.S. only to St. Louis' Anheuser-Busch.

Died. Lightfoot Solomon Michaux, 84, Negro evangelist, whose messages of hope lifted the spirits of untold thousands during the Depression; of a stroke; in Washington, D.C. "Let me hear them screams, pilgrims!" shouted Michaux in his nationwide radio sermons from Washington. So many people responded with screams and cash that Michaux was able to feed some 250,000 of the city's poor at his soup kitchen in 1933.

This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.