Monday, Dec. 20, 1943

Born. To Cinemactor Charles Boyer, 45, and Pat Patterson Boyer, 32, Yorkshire-born onetime cinemactress: a son, their first child; after ten years of marriage; in Los Angeles. Weight: 6 lb. 4 1/2 oz.

Married. Mary Phillips Ellsberg, 22, only daughter of famed submarine salvager Captain Edward Ellsberg, USNR; and Army Lieut. Edward Adolphus Benson, 26, Rutgers '39, Aleutians veteran; in Westfield, NJ.

Married. Evelyn Nelson, baby-voiced songstress "Wee Bonnie Baker" (Oh, Johnny, Oh, Johnny, Oh!); and First Lieut. John Morse, of the Army's Signal Corps; she for the second time, he for the first; in Manhattan.

Sued for Divorce. Fletcher Martin, 39, Thomas Hart Benton's successor as chairman of the Kansas City Art Institute's painting department; by Maxine June Ferris Martin, 28, onetime Iowa hospital supervisor; after two years of marriage (his third, her first), ten months of separation; in Kansas City.

Died. Kaname Wakasugi, 60, Japan's Commissioner General for the 1939-40 New York World's Fair; of a gall-bladder ailment; somewhere in Japan.

Died. Marvin Hunter McIntyre, 65, secretary to the President since 1933; after long ill health; in Washington. Frail, pale, poker-playing, close-harmonizing McIntyre worked as a reporter before he joined the Navy Department as a public-relations man in 1918 and met Assistant Secretary of the Navy Franklin D. Roosevelt. McIntyre was business manager of F.D.R.'s 1932 campaign, was thereafter rewarded with his post as the White House's special lobbyist, buffer and public-relations man. For the next eleven years he racked his wraithlike body with an average of 270 daily phone conversations, numberless face-to-face encounters with Presidential callers.

Died. George Arthur ("Pop") Corry, 80, Grand Old Man of U.S. sailing, perpetual commodore of the International Star Yacht Racing Association; in Manhattan. When the Star class of sloops (overall length 22 ft. 8 3/4 in.; beam 5 ft. 8 1/4 in.; draft approximately 3 ft. 4 in.) was designed in 1911, high-collared, Long Island Sounder Corry registered his Little Dipper as No.1. He won some 500 trophies, taught hundreds of amateur sailors, in 1939 was chairman of the international Star races at Kiel.

Died. Daniel Boone Lloyd, 83, dean of the U.S. Senate's official reporters; after 66 years on the job; of a heart attack; in Washington.

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