Pubdate: Sat, 09 Feb 2002
Source: San Francisco Chronicle (CA)
Copyright: 2002 Hearst Communications Inc.
Contact:  http://www.sfgate.com/chronicle/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/388
Author: Susan Sward

ROSEMARY WOODRUFF - LSD GURU'S EX-WIFE

Rosemary Woodruff, former wife of psychedelic guru Timothy Leary, died 
Thursday in her home in Aptos at age 66.

Surrounded by friends, Ms. Woodruff died of complications from a heart 
attack she suffered a week earlier.

Born April 26, 1935, in St. Louis, she grew up in that city and dropped out 
of high school to marry an Air Force officer when she was 17. That marriage 
ended quickly, and she moved to New York in the 1950s.

She told friends later that it was there that she received her real 
education, living in the bohemian community of lower Manhattan that was 
populated by jazz musicians and artists.

In 1965, she met Leary, a former Harvard University psychology professor 
who was the host of weekend events where participants took LSD at a country 
estate in Millbrook, N.Y. Leary -- who coined the oft-quoted phrase "turn 
on, tune in, drop out" -- had been dismissed from the Harvard faculty in 
the early 1960s for his experiments with drugs.

Ms. Woodruff moved in with Leary and was co-host of the events, which were 
attended by numerous celebrities, including English author Aldous Huxley, 
psychologist R.D. Laing, actor Peter Fonda and artist Saul Steinberg. She 
became the third of Leary's four wives in 1967 at an event that the New 
York Times reported was directed by Ted Markland of "Bonanza."

Kate Coleman, a Berkeley author who wrote a recent profile of Ms. Woodruff, 
said, "Rosemary was known by the nickname 'Ro.' She was the epitome of hip 
and beauty. She knew everyone -- Yoko Ono and John Lennon. She kept in 
touch with Huxley when he was in L.A."

Coleman said Ms. Woodruff told her that she helped her husband escape in 
1970 from a California state prison where he was serving a 10-year sentence 
for a marijuana conviction.

Ms. Woodruff told Coleman that she raised the funds that financed the 
escape, in which Leary made his way to a prison roof, traversed the prison 
grounds on a cable and then jumped to his freedom on a road outside the prison.

The Weathermen, a revolutionary youth group, helped Leary pull off the 
escape, Coleman said. The couple then made their way to Algeria, where they 
were given sanctuary for a while by Black Panther leader Eldridge Cleaver 
in his compound there.

The couple's marriage broke apart in the mid-1970s, and Ms. Woodruff 
traveled throughout Europe and Latin America before "living underground in 
Cape Cod for 14 years" because she still faced a pending drug charge in 
Laguna Beach and her former husband had told the FBI about her role in his 
escape, Coleman said. Leary himself was captured by authorities in 
Afghanistan in 1973 and remained in prison in California until he was 
released by Gov. Jerry Brown in 1976.

In 1994, authorities in Orange County dropped charges against Ms. Woodruff, 
and she surfaced in Half Moon Bay, where she ran a bed-and-breakfast 
establishment for five years until her health failed, Coleman said. Ms. 
Woodruff then moved to Aptos and gave some guest lectures at the University 
of California at Santa Cruz.

Leary died in 1996 of prostate cancer at the age of 75. In Leary's last 
months of life, Ms. Woodruff and her former husband were reconciled and she 
helped care for him, Coleman said.

Friends said plans have not yet been finalized for a memorial service.
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