Monday, Jun. 11, 1945

Born. To Hedy Lamarr, 30, nacreous, thrice-wed cinema beauty; and John Loder, 47, tweedy British cinemactor and onetime pal of the Duke of Windsor: their (and her) first child, a daughter; in Hollywood. Name: Denise. Weight: 72 lbs.

Married. Christine Cromwell White, 22, dark-haired Dodge-heiress, daughter of ex-U.S. Ambassador to Canada James Henry Roberts Cromwell; and Lieut. Edward I. Williams Jr., 27, A.A.F. ; she for the second time, he for the first; in Stamford, Conn.

Divorced. Lieut. Commander Herbert S. S. Agar, 47, 1934 Pulitzer Prize historian (The People's Choice) and New Dealing editor (Louisville Courier-Journal), for the past two years assistant to U.S. Ambassador John Winant in London; by his second wife, Eleanor Carroll Chilton Agar, 46, Smith-and Oxford-educated socialite-litterateur; after twelve years of marriage (no children); in Palm Beach, Fla.

Died. Johannes Maarten de Moor, 49, beetle-browed Dutch jurist and maritime authority, Netherlands delegate to the United Nations War Crimes Conference; on the eve of the conference's convocation; of blood poisoning; in London.

Died. William Kennon ("Hello World") Henderson, 74, onetime owner of Shreveport's radio station KWKH (formed from his own initials), who once made U.S. airways blue with his frequent harangues against chain-stores and Her bert Hoover ; of a heart attack ; in Shreveport, La. An admirer and intimate of the late Huey Long, Radioman Henderson made one of the loudest noises in early broadcasting (until depression and chain-broadcasting squeezed him out) ; as a side line sold lucky listeners his photograph and a 1-lb. can of "Hello World" coffee for $1.

Died. Lindsay Crawford, 76, rough & tumble Irish editor, first Irish Free State consul in the U.S.; in Manhattan. President of the Self-Determination League of Ireland, Canada and Newfoundland, Protestant Irishman Crawford stumped so explosively for total Irish independence that he was once pelted with snow and ice by a Canadian crowd, once drowned out by an irate audience's bawling God Save the King.

Died. Colonel Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright, 80, Assistant Secretary of War under Harding, Republican Congressman from New York (1923-31), cousin to Jap-imprisoned Lieut. General Jonathan ("Skinny") Wainwright; after long illness; in Rye, N.Y. A prohibitionist, he retired from Congress rather than vote wet to please his cocktailing constituents in suburban Westchester County.

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