Monday, Jul. 22, 1974

Born. To Luci Baines Nugent, 27, home-loving younger daughter of the late President Lyndon Johnson, and Patrick Nugent, 31, general sales manager for radio station KLBJ in Austin, Texas: their third child, second daughter; in Austin. Name: Rebekah Johnson Nugent, after L.B.J.'s mother.

Married. Nona Sadat, 16, sandy-haired second daughter of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat; and Hassan Marei, 24, son of Sadat Counselor Sayed Marei; both for the first time; in Maamoura, Egypt.

Married. Antoinette Sibley, 35, diminutive, radiant superstar of Britain's Royal Ballet; and Panton Corbett, 36, London banker; both for the second time; in London.

Died. Stephen John Roth, 66, federal district court judge who in a 1971 decision (now being reviewed by the Supreme Court) ruled that Detroit public schools were racially segregated as a result of state and local policies and ordered them to integrate, through the use of busing, with schools in 52 suburban districts; of a heart attack; in Flint, Mich.

Died. Cornelius Vanderbilt Jr., 76, restless offshoot of one of New York's richest families; of a heart attack; in Miami Beach, Fla. Opting for journalism over college, Vanderbilt embarrassed his clan in Farewell to Fifth Avenue (1935), a candid volume of childhood memories that caused his name to be struck from the Social Register. Living and working in an elaborately furnished trailer--"I would rather be a vagabond than a Vanderbilt," he once wrote--he periodically skittered round the world to interview celebrities for various newspapers and magazines. He was married seven times, divorced six.

Died. Paer Lagerkvist, 83, titan of Swedish literature and 1951 Nobel laureate; following a stroke; in Stockholm. The rebellious son of devout Lutheran peasants, Lagerkvist was enchanted with the Fauvist and Cubist artists of pre-World War I Paris. After experimenting with expressionism in a host of early, pessimistic poems and plays, Lagerkvist, who described himself as "a religious atheist," later developed the starker, more realistic prose style necessary to his vision of humanitarian idealism. In the U.S., he was best known for The Dwarf (1945), a bitter, allegorical novel about human greed, and Barabbas (1951), an enigmatic tale of man's struggle to achieve religious faith.

Died. Earl Warren, 83, Chief Justice of the United States from 1953 to 1969 (see THE LAW).

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