Friday, Nov. 18, 1966

Married. Lady Sarah Spencer-Churchill, 44, daughter of the Duke of Marlborough and distant cousin of Sir Winston; and Guy Burgos, 28, her partner in a Manhattan art gallery; she for the second time; in Manhattan, one month after she divorced Publisher Edwin Russell and eleven days after Russell married her second cousin, Iris Paine.

Died. Eddie Erdelatz, 53, Naval Academy football coach from 1950 to 1959, who took over the Middies when they were about to abandon ship (four wins in five years), produced a stunning 14-2 upset over undefeated Army, went on to post an impressive nine-year record of 50 wins, 26 losses, 8 ties before quitting after protesting the academy's strict limits on practice time, scholarships and ticket allotments; of cancer; in Burlingame, Calif.

Died. Henry Krajewski, 54, the Secaucus, N.J., pig farmer who wanted to be President, in 1949 formed his own Poor Man's Party and got himself on the New Jersey ballot in 1952, 1956 and 1960, campaigning with a wiggling porker under his arm and the slogan "No piggy deals in Washington," also ran for other offices in other years, never polling many votes, but once, in 1954, being credited with taking enough ballots (his vote: 35,241) away from the Democrats to help give Republican Clifford Case his first U.S. Senate victory; of a heart attack; in Secaucus.

Died. Dr. Manfred S. Guttmacher, 68, Baltimore psychiatrist and ranking U.S. expert on criminal insanity, who examined some 5,000 defendants over 36 years, was a leading opponent of the controversial M'Naghten rule (which holds a defendant legally insane only if unable to tell right from wrong), and a star defense witness in the 1964 Jack Ruby trial, testifying that even under M'Naghten, Ruby was insane when he shot Lee Harvey Oswald; of leukemia; in Baltimore.

Died. Murray D. Lincoln, 74, a pioneer in the cooperative movement, who I in 1920 took over the fledgling Ohio

Farm Bureau Federation formed to pool farmers' purchasing power and made it one of the U.S.'s biggest farm coops, in 1926 founded a mutual auto-insurance firm that became Nationwide Insurance Companies (3,000,000 policyholders, $760 million assets), then after World War II took the idea of little people helping little people to CARE, ot which he was the first president; of pneumonia; in Columbus.

Died. Ruth Shipley, 81, longtime (1928-55) head of the State Department's Passport Division, known as "the Czarina of the Potomac" by liberals who objected to her zealous enforcement of regulations restricting the travel of Communists and their friends; of a heart attack; in Kensington, Md. F.D.R. had his own phrase for her--"a delightful ogre"--possibly because he once intervened on behalf of a friend denied a passport, had to report back: "Mrs. Shipley says no and that's it."

Died. Sir Gerald Dodson, 82, Recorder of London (senior judge at Old Bailey criminal court) from 1937 to 1959 and one of Britain's wittiest justices; of leukemia; in London. Among his shafts: he told a defendant claiming to have a split personality, "Both of you will have to go to prison for 18 months," advised a man accused of threatening to shoot a girl because she would not go out with him, "You can't make love at the point of a revolver with any success," and informed a witness claiming that in Nigeria a man could have as many wives as he wanted, "In this country we only have monotony."

Died. Sir "Evelyn Wrench, 84, a wellborn journalist from Northern Ireland and longtime chairman of The Spectator, who in 1918, in order "to draw together in the bond of comradeship the English-speaking people of the world," founded the English-Speaking Union of the Commonwealth, to facilitate cultural exchanges, give scholarships, hold conferences, in 1920 founded a U.S. counterpart, saw the groups grow to more than 100,000 members; of a heart attack; in Marlow, England.

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