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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 3

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
3
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Donahey Dies; All About People Ex-Governor Aldo Ray Is Divorced (P)-John W. Donahey, 61, former SANTA and son of a former governor Grant Hospital Thursday. joust a with hand of the surgery February 24 and had been of Maj. Gen. Death was due to a heart attack.

Ray was He was lieutenant governor in Democratic administration of former Gov. Michael V. DiSalle in 1959- 62. He had been district director of the Small Business Administration a since leaving the state post. Mr.

Donahey was born in New Philadelphia, one of the 12 children of Mr. and Mrs. A. Vic Donahey. The father was governor of Ohio from and U.

S. senator from 1935-41. He received his early education in New Philadelphia and attended Ohio State University. His first positions were as commission clerk for the state, field supervisor for MotorDonahey ists' Mutual Insurance and general agent for the Donahey Insurance Agency. From the mid-30s until the late 1940s he was associated with various offices of the Reconstruction Finance Corp.

In 1952 he made his sufirst, bid for elective office in an unsuccessful race for S. Senate. He was defeated again in a 1954 bid for the Democratic nomination for state treasurer. He was nominated for the post in 1956 but lost in the general election. He won the nomination for lieutenant governor in a sevenway contest in 1958, and was elected to the office that November.

He was a staunch advocate of economy in government, believing in it down to the string-saving level, and prided himself on turning back something from his office budget each year. He leaves his widow, the former Gertrude Walton; a son, three sisters, five brothers and three grandchildren. Funeral services were set for 11 a. m. Monday at the Schoedinger State Street Chapel in Columbus, with graveside services at 3 p.

m. in New Philadelphia. Laser Beam To Carry Voice And Music, Too WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Georgetown University physicist says he has developed a way of transmitting FM music and voice simultaneously over a beam of light. According to the university, his discovery. frequency modulation of a laser "revolutionize the field of communications." The physicist, Dr.

William reported his invention in an application the U. S. Patent Office. In theory, light waves can be used to carry sound in much the same way radio waves do. But until the advent of the laser GRAF OPTICIANS 1415 Enquirer Bldg.

617 VINE 381-2299 Son Of COLUMBUS, OHIO Ohio lieutenant governor and U. S. senator, died in He had undergone convalescing satisfactorily. beam, no light source was intense enough and tightly beamed enough to serve as a carrier wave in communications. Because light frequencies are vastly greater than radio's, Dr.

Thaler hopes to make possible simultaneous transmission of half: a million separate voice channels over the same laser beam. Laser devices emit highly concentrated beams which, because the waves are all the same length, can travel long distances without appreciable spreading. Close to the source, they are intense enough to vaporize steel or drill holes in diamonds. Output Doubles OTTAWA- -To meet U. S.

newspaper needs, Canadian newsprint mills have doubled their output in the last 20 years. 14L LOOK TOMORROW'S ENQUIRER For Information on Our Warehouse FIRE SALE The Lite House Corner Plainfield Montgomery Road AMPLE PARKING FOR ALL Up the creek on your INCOME TAX Don't let all the changes in BOTH your income tax get you FEDERAL down. Take it to BLOCK for fast, accurate service. Often AND you save more in added deSTATE ductions than the nominal smart thing to do. charge involved.

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and Sun. 9-5-921-4480 No Appointment Necessary March 4, 1967 THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Page 3 Singer's Home Looted Thursday by was 20 when the twice- divorced actor brought her from England for their wedding in 1960 in Calistoga. Now 27, Mrs. Ray testified that the 40-year-old actor once threatened to throw her from a top-floor suite in a Rome hotel. Her suit alleged extreme cruelty.

The couple separated in January 1966. The couple has two children, Paul, three, and Eric, two. The divorce terms give Mrs. Ray monthly alimony of $1300 and assets worth $375,000. Because of her age in 1959, General Bennett former honorary physician to Queen Elizabeth HI- Ray refused to let Johanna go to MONICA, (P)-Actor Aldo Ray lost a British general in 1959 before winning the general's daughter -with the blessing finally Roland Bennett.

divorced his wife Johanna, who with Ray. Four months later, General Bennett America, "It will be all right with the general," Ray said at that time. Negro Named May Queen DURHAM, N. C. -A Negro honor student from Sumter, S.

Mimi Reuben, has been elected May Queen by fellow students at Duke University's Woman's College. The college has 1635 students. Miss Reuben, the first Negro to receive the honor, will represent Duke on the court of the Azalea Queen at the Wilmington Azalea Festival in April. She is a senior in political science and plans to enter graduate study next fall to prepare herself for a career in teachinfeuben, a member of Phi Beta Kappa, was elected May Queen in a campus-wide vote at Woman's College. They Still Can Smile Eleanor Dart, left, Odgen Kellog Jr.

and Dad Couple Rescued After Two Week Mountain Ordeal SAN FELIPE, Mexico (P)-A college student and his bride-to-be, rescued after a two week ordeal of hunger and cold on a desolate Baja California peak, attribute their survival to skill, determination -and a mountain rescue specialist. "We never panicked. We've both had lots of mountain climbing experience," Miss Eleanor Dart, 20, said Thursday. And she said that she and Ogden Kellogg 21, plan to be married. "We had been talking about it before, but he asked me to marry him while we were on the mountain and I agreed.

We don't know when it will be, but we have marriage plans," she said. Mr. Kellogg was brought down from the 7200-foot level of Mt. Diablo late Thursday in a daring helicopter rescue in semidarkness. Mountain rescue teams from the San Diego and Los Angeles areas struggled through most of the day to lift him by rope up a 250-foot cliff from a ledge where he had been trapped since about mid-February.

The helicopter brought him to the base camp on a dry lake bed near the foot of the peak, about 160 miles south of San Diego, Calif. It was at the base camp that Mr. Kellogg and Miss Dart met in an emotional reunion. She was found Wednesday in a canyon on the mountain slopes, and said she last heard Odgen calling from the ledge about five days before. "Then I didn't hear any more and I didn't know if he was alive or dead," she said.

"I'm so glad he is safe." The two left Claremont, February 3, intending to spend a college vacation climbing the rugged foot peak, the highest in Baja California. They were reported missing when they failed to return to classes February 13. Miss Dart said she and Mr. Kellogg reached the top of the mountain after about five days of climbing and were ready to descend when the weather turned cold. "The wind blew for two days and it was too cold to travel.

We just stayed in the sleeping bags," Miss Dart said. "We were running out of food and I was becoming weak from exposure," she recalled. "So we decided that Ogden would go help." She camped for several days alone, then began to work her way down. "I had decided that Ogden had not made it and that I was going to have to do it on my own," she said. "Then I had to camp because 1 I was too weak to go any further.

I said to myself, 'this is it, kid. You've got to depend on someone else to save you The next day Edward Bernhard, an experienced climber nicknamed the "Batman of Baja," for his mountaineering feats, found the girl where she had camped in a canyon. He arranged for a helicopter to take her out after she directed him to the area where she had last heard Mr. Kellog's voice. Mr.

Bernhard, a member of the Sierra Club, found Mr. Kellogg Thursday morning, trapped on the ledge. Mr. Kellogg, the son of Mr. and Mrs.

Ogden Kellogg Sr. of Gold Hill, said he had fallen down the cliff soon after leaving Miss Dart. Mr. Kellogg Sr. was a part of the search team.

NEW YORK (UPI) -Two robbers invaded the Greenwich Village townhouse of soprano Leontyne Price Thursday night while she was singing "Aida" at the Metropolitan Opera and made off with $75,000 worth of furs, gowns and jewels, police reported. The men, one wearing a stocking mask, gained access to the house by pretending to deliver flowers to the diva. They jumped her housekeeper, Lulu Schumacher, when she opened the door and tied her up, leaving her under a sofa in the living room. Miss Price said her most serious loss was her concert gowns which she had laid out for a tour begin- Price ning Monday. Negro To Wed Italian Beauty LIEGE, Belgium, (P) Braxilian Negro soccer star Jose Germano renounced all claims to his is Italian fiancee's fortune Thursday as he completed legal arrangements for his marriage to Giovanna Agusta, the beautiful daughter of an Italian millionaire industrialist.

Germano, 24, and Miss Agusta, 21, signed a document listing their properties and agreeing to keep them separate. Should they divorce, partners would recover the property each brought into the marriage. The agreement was drawn up by lawyers for Germano and Count Domenico Agusta, Milanese manufacturer of racing motorcycles who failed to dissuade his daughter from the marriage. The lawyers said the agreement complies with Italian, Belgian and Brazilian laws. Germano, whose family is poor, plays for a team in Liege.

Miss Agusta left Milan early last month and hid in the Netherlands and Belgium to be with Germano, whom she has known more than three years. In several dramatic meetings with her parents, the girl rejected their pleas that she give up the soccer star. But she and Germano agreed to put off a religious wedding for two years and have only a civil ceremony now. TOP OF THE NEWS Vietnam ORDNANCE teams comb the seared village of Lang Vei for evidence which may identify the planes that killed 83 South Vietnamese and wounded 200. NEW INCREMENTS of U.

S. military power are being applied against Communist forces in Vietnam, but administration officials shy away from the word "escalation." PRESIDENT JOHNSON takes the first formal step toward seeking court action to halt a four-month-old West Coast shipyard strike said to be hampering the Vietnam war effort. Washington THE GOVERNMENT doesn't plan any widespread enforcement campaign this year to push states into line with the new uniform summer time law. National ADAM CLAYTON Powell says he'll appeal his expulsion from the House to the courts, and he'll also run again if a special election is called. "I might be back in Congress next week," says the Harlem Democrat.

ATTORNEYS for Clay L. Shaw, arrested in the New Orleans investigation of the Kennedy assassination, are said to be considering asking Federal court to take jurisdiction of the case. International DEFENSE MINISTER Lin Plao, missing four months, is reported back in Peking and playing a part in Mao Tsetung's fight to stay in power. DEMONSTRATORS screaming anti-British slogans prowl the streets as a terrorist victim is buried in troubled Aden. FEBRUARY Ray KEY TO HOME FASHION SAVINGS LAST DAY THO LAST CHANCE TO SAVE! It has been a great event, a happy month for the many who kept many dollars while decorating their homes with furniture that makes dreams of beauty, charm, comfort and elegance come true.

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Pages Available:
4,581,924
Years Available:
1841-2024