Monday, Jun. 22, 1970

Married. Peggy Fleming, 21, ice-skating queen and U.S. gold medalist in the 1968 Winter Olympics at Grenoble, and Gregory Jenkins, 24, medical student at the University of Texas; in a Presbyterian ceremony in Los Angeles.

Died. Gerald Miller, 42, TV news reporter, whose body was found and identified last week; when the Jeep in which he was riding was bushwhacked May 31 by Viet Cong rocket fire, killing the Cambodian driver, an Indian cameraman and Reporter George Syvertsen 33 miles southwest of Phnom-Penh.

Died. Dr. Abraham Maslow, 62, eminent psychologist and author noted for his pioneering work on humanistic psychology; of a heart attack; in Menlo Park, Calif. Maslow's revolutionary theories, published in such books as Motivation and Personality and Psychology of Science, pointed the way toward encounter-group psychotherapy.

Died. Frank Laubach, 85, missionary whose "each one teach one" educational technique helped 100 million people learn to read in Asia, Africa and South America; of leukemia; in Syracuse.

Died. Alexander Kerensky, 89, second Premier of the short-lived provisional government that tried to bring democracy to Russia after the overthrow of the Romanov Czars; of heart disease; in Manhattan. A moderate socialist who first gained prominence as an eloquent defense attorney, Kerensky turned against Czar Nicholas II after the "Bloody Sunday" massacre of 1905, in which a procession of workers was cut down by Czarist troops. Reassured by constitutional reforms, he sided with the regime and was elected to the Duma (Parliament) in 1912. When repression increased again during World War I, Kerensky began to speak out against the Czar, and in the revolution that followed, eventually took over the provisional government. When General Lavr Kornilov--whom Kerensky had appointed commander of the army--attempted an unsuccessful coup d'etat, Kerensky lost face by turning to the Bolsheviks for help. Deriding Kerensky's weakness and taking full credit for crushing the coup, the Bolsheviks gained the support of enough revolutionary elements to climb to power on Nov. 7, 1917. After vainly trying to rally support, Kerensky went into hiding and escaped from Russia in 1918. He lived in England, and then France until 1940, when he moved to the U.S. to spend his remaining years teaching and defending his leadership of "the Kerensky revolution."

Died. E.M. Forster, 91, British novelist (A Passage to India) and sage (see BOOKS).

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