{ title: 'Dan's Papers - The Montauk pioneer. (Montauk, N.Y.) 1960-current, August 24, 1968, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074877/1968-08-24/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074877/1968-08-24/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074877/1968-08-24/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074877/1968-08-24/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Dan Rattiner
2 - THE MONTAUK PIONEER - August 24. 1968 Luxurious Ooean-front Cottages and Hostelry... Combining all the charms of a gracious past with all the comforts of tomorrow. Modified American 'Plan from May 1 st to October 31 st. Remainder of year on the Continental Plan. Restaurant andv8ar Facilities open to non resident guests. LUNCHEON - 12.00 • 3.00 P.AA DINNER- 6 . 0 0 - 10.00 P.M. SUNDAY DINNER - 1.00 - 1 0 .0 0 P.M. COCKTAILS - NOON TO MIDNIGHT Excellent facilities for Weddings, Conferences, Sales Meetings, Seminars, Symposiums from mid- September to mid-June. ROLLie WATERMAN, Director of Sales. DANCING AND ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY PEPPI M0RREALE TRIO and DANNY FELS 10OO Feet private vyhlte sandy beach Color brochure end tariff schedule on request. RESERVATIONS. JOYCE AND NICK MONTE Keepers of the Inn JMONTAUK, LONG ISLAND Yardley and Williams Funeral Homes, Inc, 324 - 0433 725 • 0251 East Hampton Sag Harbor llllllllilllllilllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Restaurant From a Snack to a Gourmet Dinner JACK HENNESEY - JOE DELL Proprietor! BREAKFAST FROM 8 A.M. LUNCH AND DINNER till 9 P. M Mdnt SI., Monl.uk $ •« E5 on mep llllllililili|iliMilililllilili|i|illlill|i|ii;illillll|i|i|ililili|illlilililllillllliM speaker system. It is from Paul O’Dwyer, an avid McCarthy supporter who badly defeated Hum phrey supporter Eugene Nickerson in a State primary. Well, it is not exactly from O’Dwyer, who wants to send his greetings, but it is from his secretary, who is arranging the call, but is unaware that she is loud and clear throughout downtown Montauk. “ Mr. O’Dwyer has stepped outside for a mo ment,” she says over the PA system, “I’ll put you on hold.” Four hundred people are put on hold. Three tourists, cameras in hand, Hawaiian sport shirts over bathing suits, walk over from the Circle Luncheonette. The Montauk Summer Festival? A Native Rite? They buy homemade cookies at a booth marked GOURMET FOODS. An old man, a golfer, walks around with a MCCARTHY FOR PRESIDENT straw boater on his head. He’s got spiked shoes and gets the once over from a teenager in a wet suit. A surfer. They smile at each other. You’re for McCarthy? I’ll be damned. Who says there’s a generation gap- Balloons. Between speeches, a rock band strums out a current peace song, occasionally overloading the system into feedback. C’mon people now., C’mon everybody, Let’s all get together, Gonna love one another right now. There’s a “FLEA MARKET” which, to be kind, is really what everybody found up in their attics that they wouldn’t mind putting out for sale. Includes a complete set o f SHOW magazine. There’s a booth selling MeCARTHY stickers, plastic flower decals for cars and McCarthy LP records for $9 each, cheap. A striking highlight is an exhibit o f nine original posters, one o f a kinds, all proclaiming McCarthy for President, and painted by Julian Levi, Ibram Lassaw, A- dolph Gotleib, Alfonso Ossorio, Robert Gwath- mey, John Little,Balcomb Greeneand Esteban Vicente. The exhibit, a statement o f the con viction o f these nine painters, is for sale as a unit for the first man with three thousand dollars. Parked across the street in front o f White’s Department Store is a grey Chevrolet with the engine running. A sign, US ARMY FOR OFFI CIAL USE ONLY is painted on both sides in black. Two men in crew cuts sit in the front seat and stare coldly out at the Village Green and the proceedings. C’mon people now, C’mon everybody, Let’s all get together, Gonna love one another right now. The flag, swirling around, beads on the Chev- irolet, occasionally forming rivulets that trickle their way down the sides, dripping softly into the asphalt pavement. / HUNTSVILLE, ALABAMA Ik M k<M •* iHmlm W W . L ' llm MW m W M.MiWI/.;, TU u t n f W 1 . M .1 M» m i M l tey !«*♦! «• W l <*• Mmlk cijnkt . likM M c l. r l ' S it M . C m w I, C W « B. M II lw » a »• *<•» la tk# Hal, I W aad/aaaa- lalat a ia W M»ati*llla. Alakama. O-a' all l»W>. I lacba.. II.M M llaal! iall.lactka *aacaa)W. I W ck.ll ac laaaay artear la: Cattea'i lay Aate Matetey Caataf, Haart at HaaHailla tlvtetela! Mall, Haal|.IHa, m POST SCRIPT: By nine o’clock that evening, four hours after the McCarthy rally had folded it’s tent, the fog lifted, and the starry sky formed a brilliant dome over all o f Montauk. A t the tent camp, in Hither Hills, the weekly square dance had begun, a hundred or so dancers, hands joined in a big circle just a barefoot walk from the beach, whooped and hollared their way through the steps. There were three year old kids on father’s shoulders, mothers in sweatshirts reading OSWEGO STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE, teen agers with McCarthy buttons. All around there were McCarthy buttons, McCarthy skimmers, McCarthy stickers. And one could look around P l a t e 8 (N o s . I, 2 a n d 3 ).— C o m m o n E r r o r s . m m &mm\ J.'/U- ’jXVf.XT, - W a j i « i «TTJ ' ^ 'Av' T/v' r /*- - » ■ nK* II • P s - . ' C J ' nilllllllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIHIIIIIinillllllllllllllllllllll P I N G S CHINESE-AMERICAN R E S T A U R A N T FINE CANTONESE CUISINE COCKTAILS Saki Served CATERING & PARTIES A SPECIALTY TAKE OUT ORDERS TOO AIR CONDITIONED In downtown Montauk across from tho Post Office 6 6 8 - 9 7 0 5 AMERICAN BREAKFASTS From 8 e.m. LUNCH AND DINNER