Monday, Dec. 12, 1983

BORN. To Phyllis George Brown, 34, Miss America of 1971 and NFL Today host, and John Y. Brown Jr., 49, Governor (until next week) of Kentucky: their second child, a daughter; in Lexington. Name: Pamela Ashley. Weight: 7 Ibs. 10 1/2 oz. Asked Older Brother Lincoln, 3 1/2: "How long does she stay before she goes back?"

MARRIED. Miguel Vazquez, 18, the world's greatest trapeze artist and the only aerialist ever to execute a quadruple somersault; and Rosa Segrera, 21, his flying partner; both for the first time; in Venice, Fla., the winter home of the Ringling Bros, and Barnum & Bailey Circus. After a Roman Catholic ceremony, a circus parade, including elephants, tigers and clowns, wound its way to an arena where the newlyweds climbed the trapeze for their first flight as husband and wife. They rode off atop an elephant wearing flower garlands and a JUST MARRIED sign.

RECOVERING. Ahn Ji Sook, 7, and Lee Kil Woo, 4, the South Korean children brought to the U.S. by President and Mrs. Reagan after their November Far East tour; from surgery to repair heart defects; in Roslyn, N.Y. The two were moved out of intensive care last week and should be healthy enough to return home before Christmas.

EXECUTED. Robert Austin Sullivan, 36, convicted murderer; by electrocution, despite clemency pleas from seven Florida bishops and Pope John Paul II; at the state penitentiary in Starke, Fla. Sullivan was found guilty of the 1973 slaying of the night manager of a restaurant outside Miami. Although he first confessed to the crime, Sullivan later recanted. His cause was then taken up by priests who counseled him in prison. Sullivan's execution was the ninth in the U.S. since the Supreme Court lifted the ban on capital punishment in 1976.

DIED. Christopher George, 54, jut-jawed actor who played men of action in the TV series The Rat Patrol and The Immortal; after a heart attack; in Los Angeles.

DIED. Clement Zablocki, 71, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee; after a heart attack; in Washington, D.C. A onetime Milwaukee civics teacher, Zablocki was first elected to Congress in 1948 and, at his death, was in his 18th term. Initially a supporter of the Viet Nam War effort, he later became one of the chief sponsors of the 1973 War Powers Act.

DIED. Richard Llewellyn, 76, British author whose bestselling lyrical novel about a heroic family of Welsh coal miners, How Green Was My Valley (1939), was made into an Oscar-winning film by Director John Ford; after a heart attack; in Dublin. His 27 other works include the popular 1943 novel None But the Lonely Heart. This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so viewer discretion is required.