Newspaper Page Text
Page 12
— Griffin Daily News Wednesday, November 12,1975
Obituaries
Edward Wallace
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
former Assistant Director of
Corporate Relations and Adver
tising for the International
Telephone and Telegraph Corp.,
Edward Wallace, died Tuesday
in Sarasota, Florida, ITT
reported. He was 67 years old.
An ITT spokesman in New
York said Wallace, who retired
as a corporate vice president at
ITT, lived in Port Charlotte,
N.C.. at the time of the death.
The spokesman said Wallace
was born and educated in
Minneapolis and began his
career in journalism at The
(Minneapolis) Journal.
His career included work as a
reporter and an editor for the
Associated Press in New York
and was director of news and
special events and program
manager for NBC in Phila
dephia before joining ITT.
Wallace is survived by his
wife, Evelyn. Funeral services
will be held Friday in North
Charlotte, the spokesman said.
Mrs. Kelley
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI) -
Several hundred law enforce
ment officers, relatives and
friends attended funeral ser
vices Tuesday for Ruby D.
Kelley, wife of FBI Director
Clarence M. Kelly.
Mrs. Kelley, who had been ill
for several years, died Sunday
of cancer. She was 62.
Among those at the funeral
were Attorney General Edward
Levi, Kansas City Mayor
Charles B. Wheeler, Police
Chief Joseph McNamara, Ex
ecutive Director Glenn King of
the International Association of
Chiefs of Police, and Associate
FBI Director Nicholas Cal
lahan.
Mrs. Kelley had been hospi
talized for several weeks at
Menorah Medical Center. She
was born in Kansas City. She
and Kelley were married while
he was a student at the former
Kansas City University.
Mrs. Kelley remained in
Kansas City because of her
illness after Kelley was ap
pointed FBI director. Kelley
left Washington each Thursday
to spend the weekend with his
wife.
St. John Waddell
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UPI) -
St. John Waddell, former
associate editor of The Com
mercial Appeal died Tuesday
after a long illness. He was 79.
A 1918 graduate of Yale
University, Waddell began his
newspaper career as a reporter
for The Commercial Appeal in
1920. He subsequently worked
for the New Orleans Times-
Picayune and the North China
Press in Shanghai before
returning to Memphis in 1923.
After a stint in city govern
ment and private business, he
rejoined the Commercial Ap
peal in 1934 and held various
positions including real estate
editor, managing editor and
associate editor before his 1970
retirement.
He is survived by his widow,
Mrs. Pauline Townsend Wad
dell, a daughter and three
grandchidren. Funeral services,
followed by burial at Forest
Hill Cemetery here, were
scheduled for today.
Marty May
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -
Marty May, a singer and
comedian for more than half a
century, died Tuesday at a Las
Vegas hospital at the age of 77.
May suffered a heart attack
at his home and died several
hours later at Sunrise Hospital.
He retired from the stage
several years.
His career spanned vaudville,
Broadway and the Las Vegas
“Strip”. May teamed with
Jackie Gleason in the Broad
way show “Artists and Mo
dels”. He introduced the song
“There’s No Business Like
Show Business” in the stage
version of “Annie Get Your
Gun”.
He is survived by his widow,
June, one sister, a son, and two
grand children.
Professor
BALTIMORE (UPI) - Wil
liam Bennett Kouwenhoven, the
Johns Hopkins University
professor who pioneered the
electric defibrillator for stop
ping irregular heartbeats and
the external cardiac massage
technique, died Monday night
at Johns Hopkins Hospital, it
was announced Tuesday. He
was 89.
The family planned a funeral
in Baltimore Thursday morning
before transporting the body to
the family burial plot in
Brooklyn, N.Y.
Kouwenhoven accomplished
much of his work in the care
and treatment of cardiac
patients after he retired at 68
from a distinguished career in
electrical engineering.
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I For his contributions to
; medicine and his “ageless
i genius,” the former dean of the
i Johns Hopkins School of Elec
trical Engineering received the
1973 Lasker Award.
’ In recognition of his pioneer
■ ing work in the field of cardiac
; care, Johns Hopkins awarded
1 Kouwenhoven in 1969 the only
1 honorary medical degree ever
conferred by the school.
Katherine Nolen
WARE, Mass. (UPI) - Mrs.
Katherine Mary Nolen, 25, wife
of Rep. James P. Nolen, R-
Ware, was to be flown home
from Bermuda today for burial.
Mrs. Nolen was killed Mon
day when her rented mini-bike
collided with a flatbed truck.
Bermuda police said the
accident was still under investi
gation, but suggested Mrs.
Nolen was not used to the local
custom of driving on the left
side of the road.
The Nolens, married July 16
in Fitchburg, had arrived in
Bermuda Sunday for their
delayed honeymoon.
Mrs. Nolen, a native of
Worcester and daughter of a
Holy Cross College professor,
taught physical education at
Palmer High School until June.
Nolen, an attorney, has served
in the legislature since 1959.
Both avid tennis buffs, they
met on a tennis court
They were to have honey
mooned in July, but postponed
it because Nolen’s brother,
author Dr. William Nolen,
underwent open heart surgery.
Just a piece of paper?
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (UPI) — Israel has vowed to
treat the General Assembly’s anti-Zionism resolution as
“no more than a piece of paper” and said Nazi leader
Adolf Hitler “would have felt at home” at the United
Nations.
The assembly brushed aside determined U.S. opposition
Monday night, voting 72 to 35 with 32 abstentions to brand
Zionism “a form of racism and racial discrimination.”