Monday, Oct. 23, 1972

Born. To The Netherlands Princess Irene, 33, and Prince Carlos Hugo de Bourbon-Parma, 42: twins, a boy and girl, their second son and first daughter; in Nijmegen, The Netherlands Names: Jaime Bernardo and Marguarita Maria Beatrice.

Married. Art Garfunkel, 30. singer and songwriter once teamed with Paul Simon and now an actor (Carnal Knowledge); and Linda Marie Grossman, 27, an architect; both for the first time; in Nashville, Tenn.

Died. Vera Micheles Dean, 69, international affairs scholar; in New York. After earning a doctorate at Yale, she started a 30-year career with the Foreign Policy Association, serving as its research director and editor. She was an early advocate of rapprochement with the Soviets, pleading for a benign internationalism that would stress economic rather than military aid to backward nations. Among her books: Foreign Policy Without Fear (1953), The United States and the New Nations (1964) and The U.N. Today (1965).

Died. Miriam Hopkins, 69, sprightly blonde star of dozens of movies in the 1930s and '40s; of a heart attack; in New York. A vivacious talker with a honeyed Georgia drawl off-camera, Hopkins on-screen cast shrewd eyes on her leading men. One of her early hits was Director Ernst Lubitsch's Trouble in Paradise (1932). She heightened her stardom with the title role in Hollywood's first full-length Technicolor feature, Becky Sharp (1935), and the controversial These Three (1936). One of Hopkins' major professional regrets: turning down the female lead in It Happened One Night, which won an Oscar for Claudette Colbert.

Died. Prescott Sheldon Bush, 77, former U.S. Senator from Connecticut (1952-63), and father of U.N. Ambassador George Bush; in New York. A longtime confidant and golf partner of Dwight Eisenhower's and a banker by training, Bush was an authority on Government finance and the economy. Despite his lack of seniority, he wielded considerable and conservative influence on the Banking and Currency and Joint Economic committees.

Death Revealed. Yelena N. Khrushchev, 35, daughter of the late Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev; on July 14. Once a student of law and journalism, Yelena was the youngest of Khrushchev's five children. Her death was unreported in Russia, but her tombstone was discovered by a sharp-eyed American official visiting her father's grave. She is buried near him in Moscow's Novodyevichy Cemetery.

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