Friday, Mar. 15, 1963

Born. To Ingemar Johansson, 30, Sweden's ex-heavyweight champion; and Birgit Lundgren Johansson, 26, his bride of ten months: a son; in Gothenburg.

Born. To Margaret Truman Daniel, 39, Harry's daughter, and Elbert Clifton Daniel Jr., 50, an assistant managing editor of the New York Times: their third son; in Manhattan.

Married. Hedy Lamarr, 47, Vienna-born former film siren (Ecstasy), and Lewis William Boies Jr., 42, film-colony lawyer; she for the sixth time, he for the second; in Fresno, Calif.

Divorced. By Peter Sellers, 37, Britain's master of movie mimicry (I'm All Right, Jack): Anne Sellers, 32; on grounds of her adultery; after eleven years of marriage, two children; in London.

Died. Nancy Ann Boyd, 20, first girl, and sixth young American, to die while on duty overseas with the U.S. Peace Corps; in the crash of a DC-3; near Davao in the Philippines.

Died. Dr. Dorothy Hansine Andersen, 62, pathologist at Columbia's College of Physicians & Surgeons, who in 1938 was the first U.S. doctor to describe cystic fibrosis of the pancreas, a fatal hereditary disease; of cancer; in Manhattan.

Died. Walter Prescott Webb, 74, gruff, leathery historian of the U.S. West, a saddlebred Texan, author (The Great Plains), and longtime University of Texas professor; in an auto crash; near Austin.

Died. Irving Sands Olds, 76, former board chairman of U.S. Steel Corp. (1940-53), an affable Pennsylvania lawyer who made his early mark on Wall Street, joined U.S. Steel in 1936 as a director and within four years was the man in charge, leading Big Steel through the war years and to expanded production afterward; of cancer; in Manhattan.

Died. Dr. William Carlos Williams, 79, general practitioner of small-town medicine and U.S. poetry; of a stroke; in Rutherford, N.J. (see MEDICINE).

Died. Alfred Claude Bromhead, 86, British movie pioneer and co-founder of Gaumont films, who scored a newsreel triumph by filming the London arrival of Boer War leaders in 1902, gave Britons talkies in 1909, and color in 1913; of a heart attack; in Richmond, England.

Died. Ahmed Lotfi el Sayed, 91, Egyptian elder statesman and scholar, rector of Cairo University, onetime Minister of Education, emancipator of Moslem women by insisting on their right to a university education, translator into Arabic of Plato and Aristotle; in Cairo.

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