Born. To Victoria de los Angeles, 38, black-eyed Spanish soprano; and Enrique Magrina, 39, her manager-husband; their first child, a son; after 15 years of marriage; in Barcelona.
Married. Claudia Martin, 19, starlet daughter of Singer Dean Martin; and Gavin Murrell, 23, would-be cinemactor; in a surprise elopement that, said Mrs. Martin, left Daddy Dino livid ("You couldn't print what he said when he heard the news"); in Las Vegas.
Married. Evelyn Mitchell, 53, longtime secretary to Aluminum King Arthur Vining Davis, who left her $1,000,000 in cash when he died last fall, plus his Biscayne Bay mansion and a lifetime income;, and Terence George Campbell, Florida real estate man: he for the second time; in Manhattan.
Divorced. William Orville Douglas, 64, Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court since 1939; by Mercedes Davidson Douglas, 46, his second wife; after 81 years of marriage, no children; on grounds of cruelty (she said he told her he couldn't stand to have her around); in Goldendale, Wash.
Died. Philip Leslie Graham, 48, publisher of the Washington Post and Newsweek; by his own hand (shotgun); near Marshall, Va. (see PRESS).
Died. Stephen Thomas Ward, 50, Britain's prince of ponces; by his own hand (sleeping pills); in London (see THE WORLD).
Died. Mark Winfield Cresap Jr., 53, who until July 15 was president of Westinghouse Electric Corp., a Harvard Business School graduate who in 1951 left the industrial consultant firm he helped found (Cresap, McCormick & Paget) to revamp the Westinghouse management structure, and in his five years as president brought the company into the forefront of nuclear development; following surgery for a gastric hemorrhage; in Pittsburgh.
Died. Theodore Roethke, 55, poet and professor of English at the University of Washington, who built his spare verse upon recollections of his hothouse childhood (his father was a commercial gardener in Saginaw, Mich.), blending the imagery of orchid, loam and garden creature with deceptively simple singsong; of a heart attack; on Bainbridge Island, in Puget Sound, Wash.
Died. Oliver Hazard Perry La Farge, 61, author, anthropologist and a descendant of the Founding Fathers, who devoted his life to the plight of the American Indian, eloquently presenting it first in his 1929 novel, Laughing Boy, then as longtime head of the Association on Indian Affairs, lobbying ceaselessly to win the Indians less fuzzy paternalism and more schools, medical care and opportunity; of pulmonary emphysema; in Albuquerque.
Died. James David Zellerbach, 71, chairman of Crown-Zellerbach Corp., world's second largest forest-products firm, U.S. Ambassador to Italy from 1956 to 1960, a slight, bespectacled Californian, who took over the family company in 1938, helped its sales grow to nearly $600 million, found time for civic enterprises (the San Francisco Symphony, Golden Gateway redevelopment plan), served ably in a dozen public posts and produced in his private vineyard a California wine that made French diplomats swallow respectfully; of a brain tumor; in San Francisco.
