Friday, Sep. 22, 1967

Born. To Winston Spencer Churchill, 26, Sir Winston's journalist grandson (The Six Day War), and Minnie d'Erlanger Churchill, 27: their third child, second daughter; in London.

Married. Joseph S. Clark, 65, two-term Democratic Senator from Pennsylvania; and Iris Cole Richey, 46, onetime PR woman; he for the third time, she for the second; in Washington, two weeks after Clark was divorced by Noel Hall Clark, his wife of 32 years.

Divorced. Jose Ferrer, 55, film star (Enter Laughing); by Songstress Rosemary Clooney, 39, his third wife; for the second time; after 14 years of marriage, five children; on grounds of mental cruelty; in Santa Monica, Calif.

Died. Varian M. Fry, 59, perpetrator of one of World War IPs neater coups, who in 1940 went to Vichy France, as head of a privately sponsored Emergency Relief Committee ostensibly organized to provide money for blacklisted intellectuals, in reality operated for 24 months as an underground railroad, spiriting some 1,500 people out of the country (among them: Painter Marc Chagall, Physicist Otto Meyerhoff) until authorities at last expelled Fry; of a heart attack; in Easton, Conn.

Died. Thomas E. Millsop, 68, retired president (1954-61) and chairman (1961-64) of National Steel Corp., fourth biggest U.S. producer; of a heart attack; in Weirton, W.Va. Millsop signed on as a Weirton Steel salesman in 1927, was president within nine years, moved up to head parent National in 1954, then girded for the future, installing computerized equipment and a huge new Chicago mill. Result: National was the only company among steel's Big Eight to show a sales increase (16%) during the industry's 1957-62 slump.

Died. Leonard P. Lord, Baron Lambury of Northfield, 71, retired chairman of British Motor Corp., world's sixth largest automaker (behind Fiat), who rose from draftsman to managing director of Morris Motors, then in 1938 joined archrival Austin Motor Co., where he became chairman in 1945, and in 1951 engineered the Morris-Austin merger into B.M.C.; of a heart attack; in Gloucestershire.

Died. Rupert Edward Cecil Guinness, Earl of Iveagh, 93, fifth-generation boss of Guinness Stout, world's second largest brewer (just after Anheuser-Busch), who took over Ireland's largest private employer in 1927, plunged into export trade, saturating British pubgoers with "My Goodness, My Guinness" billboards, and before retiring in 1962 made it the world's largest beer exporter; in Woking, England.

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