Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, June 10, 1963, Page 1, Image 1

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    h .I.; sic i los
CSX.KiF.A; ioctKEN?3 DIV.
In The-
Day's lews
By FRANK JENKINS
In the news of this morning
at least up to the hour this is
written - there is nothing that
GOES BANG! '
It isn't a big headlines day.
In a graduation address at
American University, President
Kennedy announces a moratorium
on nuclear testing in the atmos
phere as a part of a new "hiRh
level" effort to resolve the five
year old test ban deadlock with
Russia.
He said:
"The U.S. does not propose to
conduct nuclear tests in the at
mosphere SO (LONG AS OTHER
NATIONS DO NOT DO SO."
He conceded that successful con
clusion of a nuclear test ban trea
ty depends on Soviet leaders
adopting a "more enlightened at
titude." But, lie added, "I believe
we can help them do il bv SET
TING THE EXAMPLE 'in all
areas of human relations."
Weal her
Klamath Falls, Tultlaht anal Lakavlaw
Gtntrally lair ttinwoh Tvaiday. Shqh!
Iv coelar tonight, Iowa 32-jr. Slightly
warmar Tuaaday. High 45-7f. Oacraai
n windl tonight. Norttiatly S-la m-p.li.
Turtday.
High yaslarday 4
Low this morning 41
High yaar ago 71
Low yaar ago 4t
Procip. pati 24 noun .M
Sinca Jan. 1 ft 41
Soma pariod last yaar l.ll
mt
w ami WtW$
Weather
AGRICULTURAL FORCCAST
Improving condlfhMt nit Hv dtyt
with Mght rlWng to TMOj low 12-M.
Mort tunihlnt ku wtnd, no prKlpita
don txptcttd. light-Inch Mil timiMri
tvrt U dtgrtot. Haying outlook good
to oxcoltont.
Pricf Tn Cents 14 Paget
KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON'. MONDAY, JCNE 10. 13
Telephone TU 4-8111 No. 71&4
mmif kmmmm Mimatmkm on Ik-le
sts
) i o n
Well, it's worth a try
So long as we KEEP
POWDER DRY.
OUR
i I1""1-1 1 immfmMmmmmmnmKvmtK,unmmHMm9mmmim MPMMajapapiaaMajajiao
WW laalrtiWlaM '' - nniaif ' ajtLiiia.ii.ajii.il " -4- , -r - r -- f m ; 1111111 la 11 111111111 11111 11 '
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presi
dent Kennedy today announced a
moratorium on U. S. nuclear test
ing in the atmosphere as part of
new high-lever effort to re
solve the five-year-old test ban
deadlock w ith Russia.
"The United States does not pro
pose to conduct nuclear tests in
In his address this morning.
President Kennedy noted that
Russia and the United States have
never opposed each other on the
battlefield, and then added:
"Both the United States and its
allies and the Soviet Union and
its allies have a mutually deep
interest in a just and genuine
peace and in halting the arms
race."
True enough.
But
The Soviet Union is ruled by
communists whose purpose is to
CONQUER THE WORLD FOR
COMMUNISM.
As long as that remains true,
an eventual clash is inevitable. As
long as the U.S.A. remains the
U.S.A., Americans will never sub
mit to communism w ithout a bat
tle to the death.
Mr. Kroosh might as well put
that in his pipe and smoke it.
A ,h0URflt. I TUSCALOOSA, Ala. (UPI) A fcience. Wallace intends to "stand
We might have clashed withfolce of mn,e (han 800 police-in the doorway" to keep Negroes
n. .:. ..,- aicL u'a ninNT men backed by TOO National Vivian Malone and James Hood
w minht have clashed w ith ' Guardsmen maintained order in out of the university.
Russia over live Russian settle- this college town today on Uie eve Wallace has said, however, that
,ouu police ol-
. -iiimj.'
ALL SMILES Dark-haired Cathy Ross of Chiloquin, left, won the
rhinestone-studded crown that will send her as 1963 Klamath County
Dairy Princess fo state competition at Portland. She was crowned
Saturday night at a dinner-dance at Reames Golf and Country Club by
James Chance, Merrill, master of ceremonies. She is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Ross, Chiloquin, Modoc Point ranchers. She was
presented with an armful of red roses by the sponsoring groups, the
Klamath County Dairymen's Association and the Klamath County Farm
Bureau. Numerous gifts were presented to the three candidates by local
firms. In picture, left to right, are Gene Lee of Bonanza, Princess Cathy,
and Nancy Wenz, Klamath Falls. Some 200 persons saw the ceremony.
Huge Force Prepared Cathy Ross
Tn if nan I nut firtlor Wins Crown
ments on the Northern California I t tlie pending registration 01 two the huge lorce of
coast. We DIDN'T. negroes ai ine university 01 ma-
But that was before COMMU-i "ma.
N1SM look over Russia. Gov. Geoi-gf C. Wallace was
scheduled to fly here Irom Mont
gomery this afternoon to take per
sonal charge of plans for blocking
the enrollment of two Negro stu-
American t'niicr- dents Tuesday. Despite a federal
1 injunction against his inter-
In conclusion, two questions:
1.-Where is American Univer
sity?
2. What is
sily?
ficers and Guardsmen was here
to keep law and order and not to
keep the Negroes off the campus.
Wallace was due here at 3:45
p.m., EDT.
Arrest Unite Men
Officers arrested 15 white men
during the weekend and confiscat
ed a small arsenal of pistols.
Kiamatn county s new Dairy
Princess. Cathy Ross of Chilo
quin, beamed for her audience
when the awaited announcement
was made on status of the three
pretty contestants
crown Saturday night
Golf and Country Club.
The jeweled crown was placed
Hoffa Faces Charge
Of Attempted Bribe
id-July Test Ban Talks
To Be Conducted In Moscow
No Talks
Scheduled
In Dispute
PORTLAND (UPH-No negoti
ating sessions have been sched
uled in the labor dispute that has
idled an estimated 19.000 lumber
workers in three states, federal
mediators said today.
Federal Mediator George Walk
er said his of lice was constantly
in touch with both sides. Asked
he thought there would be a
negotiating session Uiis week he
said it was "hard to tell but it is
possible."
The International Woodworkers
of America 1IWA1 and the Lum
ber and Sawmill Workers (LSWi
last week struck St. Regis and
U.S.
the atmosphere so long as other
states do not do so." he declared.
"We will not be the first to re
sume.
Kennedy said the new test ban
talks, expected to start in Mos
cow in mid-July, will carry with
them "the hopes of all mankind.
He warned, however, that "our
hopes must be tempered with the
caution of history," an allusion to
past failures in the area.
The talks were agreed upon by
Kennedy, Soviet Premier Nikita
Khrushchev and British Prime
Minister Harold Macmillan as the
result of a recent exchange of cor
respondence. But they will be
conducted at a level somewhere
short of the foreign ministers.
The chief executive, who an
nounced the step in a commence
ment address at American Uni
versity here, said the terrible
threat of atomic annihilation im
plicit in tlie current arms race
called lor "a trosh start on nu-i
clear test ban negotiations.
Demonstrates "Good Faith"
He then announced tlie mora
torium on atmospheric testing,
saying that "such a declaration is
no substitute for a formal bind-
it might have been if the his
tory of Uie past 18 years had been
different, he said this country
"must persevere in the . . . hope
that constructive changes without
the Communist bloc might bring
within reach solutions which now
seem beyond us."
Voters Face
County Unit
School Issue
Klamath voters have an im
portant task before them today,
June 10, in the county-wide elec
tion on school district consolida
tion. The question is whether or not
the city elementary school district
will join the county district to
form a single county-wide dis
trict, automatically dissolving the
Mamath Union High School District.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPH surance broker: Larry Campbell, wages. Four other members of
Teamsters president James Hoffa business agent for Teamsters Lo- the Big Six Weyerhaeuser
and 10 other persons appear incal 299 in Detroit; Nicholas J. Crown Zelleibach, International1
lederal court here today to an-;lweel. Huntington, W.Va., ana Paper and Rayonicr shut down
inn trpatv hut T hnno. It uill
helo us achieve one " Hn rallprf Tne Herald and News has prc-
Ule move a demonstration of "our P"1 Brai 01 pro ana
good faith and solemn conviction." 00,1 material in an etlort to give
The most recent U. S. lest in TCrf Sme Das" T acclslon
the atmosphere was held in the R"'cnls ar0 ur8ed '? v0..tc:
Plywood in a dispute over Pacific last Nov. 4. Kennedy an- ncuer ,yc.s or n0' 80 tne wU1 ;
nounced then that tlie explosion ure. "V" w """
marked the end ol an atmosDhericr"lv',a'
series started Uie previous April Voting hours in both districts
for the 1963 ser '''"''S" ' attempt to bribcjlhrec Huntington detectives, Her-loperations jn Oregon, Washington!
it at Reames!01" "coiruPt1)' intluence" jurors' man A. Frazier, Alfred Paden and;an(j Northern California on the
jand prospective jurors at Holfa's Albert P. Cole.
$1 million conspiracy trial
year.
is lo-
Death Term
Appeal Nixed
used for moving cotton bales.
Wallace reiterated Sunday night
Here are the answers:
1. American University
caied in Washington. D C.
2. It is a coeducational liberal
arts colleae. It was chartered in
1893. and is controlled by the
Methodist church. It has a college
of arts and sciences, a School of
Public Affairs, and a Graduate
School.
Us normal r0'pn' ls "V ;a hearing lo Larry West Shipley.i police officers. Behind this first
Ki.-iit.-iui iiu,.i. v jc:vijnnville. Ore., who is un- line of delense more tnan iiiOAia
on her dark curls by the master
of ceremonies, James C 11 a n-c e,"
Merrill, who opened a sealed en
velope containing the judges' de
cision. The choice was made on
speech ability, dairy background,
noise and ahilitv to evnfain uhat
,i. : u j. 1 for II a.m.. EDT.
n . -.--1 1 i..;ine vmiuiume ttuuiu mi to lur-
rilies Snguns ana , nooKS, s flnd , , named
last; The indictment alleaed the three
detectives attempted to influence
The dcfcndniOs,- indicted .by oithe outcome ot.the trial by calling
special grand jury last month,
were to be arraigned before Fed
eral Judge Frank Gray Jr. Hoffa
said he would plead innocent.
The arraignment was scheduled
ucts.
all fivcl'
theory that "a strike against one
is a strike against all.
No new negotiating sessions
have been announced between an
other large employer group. Tim-,
ber Operators Council, and thei
two unions. The some 196 mem
bers of the TOC still were oper
ating.
but that underground tests would! are from 2 to 8 p.m. The Fre-
continue in Nevada. jmonl Elementary benool, 715 mgn
The Russian continued atmos-lslreet- is tho m Puin8 Tlace
phcric tests into December and tor residents of the city elcnwtv
counts of an indictment returned
M'.i' a 11a nntitrl twoivn tin In
that he would trv lo prevent thel lh contest is held annua ly ' ' " ' . . -mm
ckiw 11 urn mi;ki4iiuik .ire tun- due if convicted on each count.
versity. but pledged he would do Sponsors are tlie Klamath The Teamsters chief, on his ar
il in a siern irameworK 01 law louniy uairvmcn s association irjva iere Sunday night, com
ano oraer. ana me remain county raim 0lained he could not get a fair
I Wallace put col. Ai ungo. cnici Bureau.
WASHINGTON lUPD The of the Department of Public Safe-1 Judges were Beth Anderson. Of-
U. S. Supreme Court today denied ;ty. in cnarge 01 state ana locaiifice Service and Employment
4.000.
Phone Firm
Asks Boost
of Linda Jean Stevens, 16. Willa-
mina, Ore., on Aug. 8. 1981.
The brief order leaves the stale
:of Oregon free to carry out the
jexecution. A death dale will be
'set in Lincoln County Circuit
.Court.
I Shipley and Glen Douglas Dixon
I both were convicted of first de-
.,, . , . , oree murder in the slaving of the
SALEM .UP '-1' f ir. vhose bullet - riddled body
increases for l 0 regon , commu- P forcst ncar
nine, re requested today by Iuncijon
Pacific Northwest Bell. ... . . . ,1.
T E Bolgcr. the firm's vice! Shipley received a death sen
president and general manager, jt'nce and Dixon was sentenced to
said the areas are being reclassi-
tied because of growth. ' Tlie petition for Supreme Court
The telephone company asuea review was meu ny Atiorney sun
der sentence to die for the slaying! bama National Guardsmen were
.gencv. Mayor Robert Veatch
and Kurt Osterman of KOTI-TV.
Escorts lor the candidates were
held in reserve in the event theylDon' Born Poe VaeVi Wayne
the public utility commissioner
for authorization to begin using
the new rates in July.
athan U. Newman of the Ameri
can Civil Liberties Union in Port
land
were needed.
Include Special Forces
Maj. Gen. Alfred Harrison, slate
adjutant general and Guard com
mander, said the units included
two companies of "special
lorces."
Tlie special troops wore vari
colored berets to identify them
from regular Guardsmen. Tliey re
ceived rigorous training at Ft.
Benning. Ga., which Harrison
said even surpassed Commando
and Ranger training.
He said the Alabama group was
one of seven such units in the
nation and was regarded as the
"toughest in the Army." He said
the special troops can handle any
assignment w ith dispalcn
Walker. Beatty. and Charles Mil
an!. Klamath Falls.
Lawrence Cooper, administra
tive assistant of First Presbyteri
an Church, gave the invocation.
Mary Jane Paygr was organist.
Mrs. Rav Hobson, Merrill, intro
duced the guests and gave other
announcements
Bob Fair. Henley, sang with
Tracv Swenson. Tulelake, accom.
panist. Susan Tubach sang two
solos with Mrs. Paygr at the or-
. "V 1 " jji, ""-" ":
J 1, itn
1
1
gan and readings were by Barba-ij.y ooo Tlie indictments alleged
ra Pitts and Chris Spielman. Bell offered a prospective juror
Among those present were Mr. i-in non and offered a Nashville
and Mrs. Edwin Wenz, parents ofman $25,000 to persuade two jur
Nancy, went is a director 01 me
Klamath County Dairymen's Asso
ciation: Mr. and Mrs. Bud Lee,
parents of Gene: Mr. and Mrs.
L. H. Ross, parents of Princess
Cathy: Mr. and Mrs. Emil Tofell.
Klamath Countv Farm Bureau;
prospective jurors on the tele
phone and telling them of the
"publicity and national import-
ante connected with the case.
They allegedly made the calls
while posing as reporters of the
Nashville Banner.
Hoffa was tried here last year
on charges that he and the late
Owen 1 Bert 1 Brennan, an inter
national Teamsters vice president,
accepted 11.008.057 from Commer
cial Carriers. Inc., a Detroit-based
automobile hauling firm, in viola-:
tion of the Taft-Hartley law.
The nine-week case ended in a nrKTnv iiiPh ni. hard Car.
It would be impossible lo find mistrial when the jury was unable dina Cushing urges abolition of
unbiased ury. Hoffa told news- lu "" " '"" ,,v"the "lamous promises wnicli tne
Inal any
States.
ihere
the United
Vow Change
Suggested
there has been speculation thev
may oe preparing lor a new series
later this summer to offset what
U. S. officials consider this coun
try 9 lead in nuclear power.
Tlie chief executive coupled his
announcement with an appeal to
tary district. The several polling
places tor county district resi
dents appeared wi the front page
of tlie Herald and News, Sunday,
June 9. County district residents
arc reminded that their pre
cincts have been changed end
all Americans for sober soul) tne new precincts are also listed
searching on the question of racial! in Sunday's story.
men when he got out of his pri- '"S e'S1" WWKS " 'rsumony
vate plane here.
He said Atly. Gen. Robert Ken-1
ncdy had gone on television and
said "Hoffa is guilty ol this, and
Bill Seeks
Equal Pay
Hoffa is guilty of that, and juries
who didn't convict him didn't
know what they were doing."
The indictments returned by the
grand jury charged that bribes to
taling at least $75,000 were offered
to influence jurors and prospec- WASHINGTON 'UPP Posi
tive iurors to vote for Hoffa's ac-!dent Kennedy planned lo sign
quittal. into law today a bill extending'on the side of the church fathers
Catholic church asks of a non-
Catholic in a mixed marriage.
The cardinal described as "an
irritant to many" the promises
which primarily require that chil
dren of a mixrd marriage be
baptized and reared as Catholics.
Cardinal Cushing made known
his views in two interviews with
Ihe Rev. Walter M. Abbolt, S.J..;
feature editor of the Catholic
weekly publication America.
The high prelate placed himsell
Henry F. 'Bustcn Bell of thcjequality of the sexes to the pay
Bronx, New York, w as accused of
conspiring lo offer bribes totaling
01s to vole lor Mona s acquittal.
Lawrence Mcdlin, a Nashville
businessman, was charged with
offering s prospective juror 110,
000. and Thomas Ewing Parks of
window,
Tlie new law w ill forbid the em
ployers of 27.5 million U.S. work
ers to pay women less than men
for doing the same work.
The legislation docs not cover
all women workers and will not
take effect for one year. But de
spite its limitations, advocates of
women's rights called the meas
ure their most significant ad-
Nashville was accused of olfcring vance in many years.
the son of a juror $10,000 lo be
Mrs. Wilbur Reiling. co-chairman split with his father.
ot the 19(3 stale dairy princess The government also contended
contest, and Wilbur Reiling. sec-hat Ewing King, president of
retary of the Klamath County Teamsters Local 327. olfered lo
Dairymen's Association: Mrs.
Stanicy Masten Jr., chairman ol
Klamath County Dairymen's
Wives: Lawrence Geraghly, pres
ident of the Klamath County Dai
rymen's Association, and Albert Other delendants
Grant, association vice prcident. lucre Allen Dorlman.
assist the husband of a woman
juror in obtaining a promotion in
No one knows now how many
of tlie nation's 24 million women
workers eventually v ill gel higher
pay as a result of the new law.
Advocates of the bill tiled specific
examples of wage discrimination
because of sex. but made no esti-
Ihe highway patrol if he would mates of the totals,
persuade his wife lo vole fori The equal pay bill passed Con
Holla's acquittal. gress with little controversy alter
who want a resumption of Vati
can Council II. The first council
was convened by Pope John
XXIII.
If tlie council follows tlie pas
toral approach of tlie late pon
tiff, Cardinal Cushing said, "there,
should be considerable changes in
church law."
Chief among these, he said,
should be a rewriting of church
law on mixed marriages and ab
olition of the church's index of
prohibited books.
The cardinal said "tlie require
ment that a non-Catholic partner
make the famous promises before
marriage is an irritant to many,
and some . . . make the promises
in had faith.
"If we no longer required the
promises, we would nol be revok
ing any divine taw; we would not
equality as well as their attitude
toward nuclear testing and getting
along with Kussia generally.
"Wherever we arc. we must
all, in our daily lives live up to,
the age-old faith that peace and
freedom walk together." Kennedy
said. "In too many of our cities
today, the peace is not secure be
cause freedom is incomplete"
The President conceded that
successful conclusion of a nuclear
lest ban treaty depended on So
viet leaders adopting "a more en
lightened attitude." But he said
that "I believe we can help them
to do it" by setting the example
in all areas of human relations.
Never War Kenmles
Noting that Russia and the Unit
ed Slates never had opposed each
otlier on the battlefield, Kennedy
said both the United States and
its allies, and the Soviet Union and
its allies, have a mutually deep
interest in a jusl and genuine
peace and in hailing the arms
race."
Urging Americans to "deal with
the world as it is" and not as if
If voters have any questions
they can contact Harold Ashley,
city school clerk. TU 4-3432, or
Dale Goode, county school clerk,
TU 2-2301.
n the rate 'years of futile efforts to establish be changing any dogma 01 the
Chicago in-1 wage parity in the law. church."
Hatfield Warns
Of Guard Need
WIIITTIEH, Calif. (UPI '-Gov
Mark Hatfield of Oregon warned
Saturday that tlie United Stales
must guard against sacrificing its
own indepen'lence in a world of
interdependence
The governor spoke at Hie 60th
commencement exercises at Whit
tier College.
He urged tlx graduating stu
dents to "take action which will
prove thai government can recog
nize opportunity without yielding
In importunity.
Fire District
Vote Slated
Residents of the Suburban Rur
al Fire Protection District will
vote in a special election at the
Suburban Fire Station, 2342 Get-
Ic Street, between tlie hours of
2 and 8 p.m. Tuesday, June II,
to determine w hether Uie tax levy
for the district should be in
creased $38,139.02.
Tlie Suburban Fire District in
cludes generally that area from
Washburn W ay east to about one
mile past the Lakeview Junction
and from Eberlein Avenue south
to Airway Drive.
G. A. Robustelli. president 01
tlie district's board of directors,
has slated that Increasing the tax
levy is necessary because suffi
cient funds to provide adequate
fire protection in the district can
not be raised within the limits ol
the tax base for the district.
The growth and development
of tlie district, necessitating addi
tional personnel and fire-fighting
equipment, has increased more
rapidly than the increase permit
ted in tlie tax levy, he pointed
out.
Under Article XI, Section 11, of
the Oregon Constitution, the Ux
levy may not exceed six per cent
of the budget raised for the pre
vious year.
Prime Minister Returns Home To Face Playgirl Scandal
LONDON 1 UPI. Prime Min-i chancellor, chief of Britain's judi-i Stephen Ward, was ordered held into the prime minister's office.
ister Harold Macmillan returned l syslem. ha, taker, place only -, w itliout bail for . week. IButler looked grinv '
j twice in Britain since the end of Ward. 30. a society osteopath. Lord Poole, the man called in
from a golfing ho.iday today and,. ... .... ..... I , . ,..,j (;!11rj!I rhrori to IH new vicor tn the falter-
inuiiu "m 11 uucv wiit-n a ao di i , .m .... ----- --
ing party organization, also met
with Macmillan.
Lord Hailsham told newsmen
went into a huddle with his chief! junK)r minister in the Labor gov-'of living olf the earning of pros-
lit , '.v
MEXICO BOUND Determination and hard work paid off for students of Klamath
Union High School Spanish das. who left by chartered Trailwayi bus Monday
morning for a trip to Mexico. Cash for transportation was earned by the Spanish
Club by candy, cooky and baked food sales, rummage sales and a car wash. Students
will Pay their own personal and living expenses on the 10-day trip. They were eccom.
enied by Mrs. Beatrice Tenielian, Spanish teacher and sponsor of the Spanish Club,
and' Mr. and Mm. James Shields. (See story on Page 4.1
cabinet members on the spread- ernment was accused of taking
ing scandal that threatens his, bribes in 1948 ami again in 19"7
government. Uhcn the Exchequer was shaken
Il was learned, meantime, that by unfounded allegations that vital
tilutcs.
Barclv two hours after Macmil
lan returned Irom his vacation in1 after seeing Macmillan: "There's
Scotland, lie was visited by Lordia lot of things I would like to
The connection between tlie res
ignation of Prnftimo last week and
Cuba was disclosed tn an ex
change of Idlers between tlie
Earl of Home, British foreign sec
retary, and the Earl of Arran, a
director ol the London Daily
said he thought Ivanov's maneu
ver w as meant to "drive a wedge"
between London and Washington
and "to test our resolve and to
lay a bait to our vanity ..."
lvanov is a former assistant
naval attache at the Soviet Em-
the lord chancellor for the last financial secrets had been leaked.! Hailsham. the science ministerUay but nothing I am going to
10 davs has been investicaling the 1-ord Dilhorne. tlie lord chan-who carried great weight wnn tne sav
security aspects of the scandal 'eel lor. probably will make his rc
Mail. Tlie letters were publishedibassy here who shared with Pro-
involving former War Minister 'port tnis week, government
i John Profumo alona with a form-1 sources said.
ier Somci Embassy official and redl Disclosure of the rare top-level
'haired playgirl Christine Keeler. I investigation came as one of the
rank-and-file of the Conservative
party, tin resign necatue 01 ine scanoai.
AIout IS minutes later. Hume 'which was said to have starlet)
Secretary Rithaid A. Butler, tlie' when Profumo, 48, began chasing
man most favored to succeed a scantily clad redhead around a
in the Mail today.
A letter from Arran lo Home
dated Oct. 31. 19fi2, showed that
Pressure built up for Macmillan Soviet diplomat Eugene lvanov
An investigation by the lord key ligures in the scandal, Dr.lMacmillan as party leaner, wennmooniii sm..i.i..)s
"akled bv Dr. Stephen Ward, os
tensibly tried to arrange a London
'summit meeting' at tlie height of
the Cuban crisis.
I Home s reply, ol Nov. 7, 1982,
fumo the favors of red-haired
Christine Keeler, a 21-year-old call
girl.
Ward. 50, a society osteopath
w ith numerous well-known clients,
was the man who introduced Prc
fumo to Miss Keeler and was the
key figure in exposing the rela
tionship between the two.