Monday, Oct. 21, 1957

Born. To Jerry Lewis, 31, raucous movie and TV comedian, and Patti Palmer Lewis, 32: a fourth son, fourth child; in Santa Monica, Calif. Name: Christopher Joseph. Weight: 7 Ibs. 3 oz.

Born. To Robert Bruce Mathias, 26, two-time Olympic decathlon winner ('48, '52), all-round athlete turned Hollywood actor, and Melba Wiser Mathias, 26, his former classmate: a second daughter, second child; in Los Angeles. Name: Megan Louise. Weight: 6 Ibs. 9 1/2 oz.

Married. Marlon Brando, 33, mumbling cinemactor; and India-born Cinemactress Anna Kashfi (real name: Johanna O'Callaghan), 23; both for the first time; in Eagle Rock, Calif, (see PEOPLE).

Married. Annette Dionne, 23, most vivacious of the Canadian quintuplets, the first to wed; and Germain Allard, 24, a finance-company agent; in Montreal.

Married. Stirling Moss, 28, lean, daring auto-racing ace, first Englishman to win Italy's Mille Miglia; and Katherine Molson, 22, millionheiress daughter of Montreal Brewer F. S. Molson; in London.

Married. Princess Shahnaz, 17, green-eyed daughter and only child of Iran's Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi (by his first wife, Egypt's Princess Fawzia, sister of ex-King Farouk); and Ardashir Zahedi, 28, U.S.-educated agricultural engineer, son of ex-Premier Fazlollah Zahedi (who helped to boot out weepy Mohammed Mossadegh in 1953 and was later himself edged out on charges of corruption); in Teheran's Royal Palace.

Died. Carlos Llamas Romulo, 32, Georgetown University-educated Manila lawyer, World War II hero, eldest son of General Carlos P. Romulo, Philippine Ambassador to the U.S. and delegate to the U.N.; in a plane crash south of Manila.

Died. William Clark, 66, tall, wealthy (Clark thread fortune heir), cantankerous former judge on the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, who left the bench to serve as a lieutenant colonel in World War II, returned to find his seat filled, sued claiming the G.I. Bill guaranteed him his job (he lost); of a heart attack; in Nuwara Eliya, Ceylon. Harvardman ('11) Clark first gained fame in 1930 by ruling that the 18th (prohibition) Amendment was invalid, a decision unanimously reversed by the Supreme Court.

Died. Jekuthiel Ginsburg, 68, gentle, absent-minded Polish-Jewish emigre professor of mathematics at Yeshiva University, founder (1932) and editor of the quarterly Scripta Mathematica, onetime child prodigy (he tutored university students when he was 16), author (Numbers and Numerals); of a heart attack; in Manhattan.

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