1
THE EAST HAMPTON STAR, EAST HAMPTON, N. Y., MARCH 21, 1968 II—FIVE Point of View * must be done. I am proposing that I take over the command. You’ve S all seen him up there with his ten- i gallon hat. firing off his six-guns p whenever he feels like it. And, I’ve _ *■ lound out he's not taking us to e ship had just put out of Vera because when a great ship cuts Bremerhaven. He's planning to take Cruz and the going was getting through the sea, the waters are al- us all to the Orient.” rough. According to the schedule, ways stirred and troubled. But our The passengersi when they heard Bremerhaven was about three weeks ship !s moving — moving through the fe]low wilh the rabbit ,ceth new waters towards new shores." tell ,hem ,hiSi vowed to trcat their Mahr.e h ° v ^ passengers, a ans 1 “You mean you have never made captain sternly. Everyone straighten- . S . °. ma.,e 1S Wa^ ° this crossing before?” asked the ed in his seat when the captain enter- ge o see e cap in. Maharishi, looking somewhat trou- ed. They were prepared for the worst. The captain was wearing a ten- bled. , Are you sure know the gallon hat and sat cross-legged as wasn i he held the wheel in one hand and . , wearing a ten-gallon hat - just a used the other to pat a beagle on e strength to hold the white robe. And he didn't have any the head course of decency and compassion,” six-gun in his hand — but rather, “The weather islooking bad is replied *he caP<ai». “though there he was holding a nosegay o£ seven it not Captain?” theMaharishi'in- are. som® Passengers who have been tea roses. quired. saying I m not fit to command this He approached his seat, remained "O f course it is, Mr. Maharishi, sh! £ " , „„ . . , standing and said, “My heart is •who are they. inquired the bouncing with bliss. Because I am Maharishi. sure tbat permanent world peace L1QUOR NOTICES “Well, one guy has rabbit teeth can be achieved if global, national •e 7 ST,Ter,f00^ ®iven ^ at k i- and unruly hair and the other is and regional problems can be re- cense No. 7 RL 3834 has been issued a ‘perfesser’ type with a lot of kids duced to the quest for individual to tne undersigned to sell beer, wine running around after him. He must peace " and liquor at retail in a restaurant be some kind of Fagin. I've got both c ... , . ... known as the Crystal Room on the of them removed from my table — . f * south side of Montauk Highway, Irish, you know. Hell's bells, what ^ ^ H Town of East Hampton, County of do they want? I’ve done as much 3 Jyacinth’ the captain talked about Suffolk for on-premises consump- as a captain can do for those people f happy world where frowning will tion j . , , , j j . be missing, tensions will be absent, down in the hold — provided 'em ALBERT & SOPHIA TRAGES with 70 million television sets." “Wars, epidemics, famines, earth- d /b /a Cricket Caterers "Captain," the Maharishi said, “I Quakes are a11 symptoms of tension," 250 Pantigo Road think you and I better have a the captain declared. "Tension is as East Hampton, N. Y. 26-2 talk. .” contagious as any other disease. I Notice is hereby given that License At dinner, one of the passengers know because I almost let the fact No. 7 RL 3655 has been issued to the ousted from the captain's table seized * never could hit an inside curve undersigned to sell beer, wine, and the opportunity before the captain’s sway my judgment, liquor at retail in a restaurant and arrival to address the diners. "I thought you an might rather bar under the Alcoholic Beverage He stood on his chair and said, see the Orient than Europe. Please Control Law at South Emerson Ave. “I am convinced that this ship is forgive me," he said with a beatific and South Edison St., Montauk, on a perilous course and because I smile. Town of East Hampton, County of have such strong feelings about what With this, the diners breathed a Suffolk, for on - premises consump- ^ _________________________ _________ Sergeant Helliger Cited In Vietnam Career Man Sergeant First Class Frank J. Hettiger, a Regular Army man who grew up at 42 Oakview Highway, East Hampton, and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Hettiger of that address, was cited recently in dispatches from Vietnam. His company was ambushed nine miles north of Saigon, and 200 Viet Cong killed 48 Americans and wound ed another 28. All of the officers in Sergeant Hettiger’s company were killed or wounded, and he rallied the survivors and collected wounded. Sergeant Hettiger is serving with the 25th Infantry Division and the company, which would be normally 178 men, was reconnoitering a high way. Sergeant Hettiger's home is now Monterey, Cal. His parents reported this week that he had been recommended for a medal, but had said he would turn it down, because he “wasn’t a hero.’' Guild Hall Bridge Members of the Guild Hall Bridge Club met March 13 for their monthly master-point game. Mrs. B. Edwards and Leonard Jarvis were first. Edward Brennan Jr. and Calvin Smith tied with Mrs. Morgan Bel mont and Miss Eleanor Mulford for second. Seymour Karp and Yoshio Kawachi were third. Wounds Reported Miss Jurate Kazickas, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Kazickas of East Hampton and New Rochelle, suffered minor shrapnel wounds dur ing a shelling of the Marine camp at Khesanh, Vietnam, on March 8, her parents learned last week. She is a freelance correspondent, and is now in a hospital in Vietnam. One day in a bit of conversational ancestor-matching, Arthur Roth, the Amagansett, ex-IRA, ex-Star one. not the banker, confessed to me that his grandfather, I think it was the one who fell off the roof, was named Slater McGurk. I say confessed because I have just finished “The Big Dig," a Mac- Millian’s Cock Robin mystery, $4.50, and the author is Slater McGurk. “The Big Dig” is set in an eastern Long Island resort town, East Wall ing, which bears a more-than-passing resemblance to East Hampton. The hero, T. P. ’Connor, is a sergeant on the East Walling Town Police, and the heroine, Anna Rubin, is spending the summer in a beach house at Pomeroy, three miles to the eastward. Pomeroy has a good deal in common with Amagansett. The villain, Doc Krilly, rents the house next door to Anna; he and his gang intend a “Big Dig” into the vault of the local bank, on Labor Day weekend, when it will presum ably be stuffed with hay made while the sun shone. The tunnel entrance L o n g I s l a n d B O O K S is a Telephone Company manhole in the Village parking lot. . . What bank is that, class? Who is Mrs. Caine, the businesslike head librarian at the East Walling Free Library; who is Mrs. Roth, her as sistant? Who, for that matter, is Slater McGurk? Whoever he is, he has written a lively detective story, one that needs no blood or sadism to liven it up. It is set in East Hampton, without a doubt, and reading it is a pleasant exercise in guessing local models, that is people and places. The action, of course, is fiction; there hasn’t been a bank robbery here within living memory. It might be a good idea, though, for local bank presidents — and police officers — to read “The Big Dig," and stay on their toes next Labor Day week end. If anything happens, they won’t need MacMillan to tell them who Slater McGurk is. I have it doped cut, and will be glad to lead the posse. E. T. R. sigh of relief and the fellow with unruly hair gnashed his teeth. The Star Mailed to You— Anywhere Jack Graves — $5 a Year MARY E. McLAUGHLIN d/b/a Pirate’s Den Montauk, N. Y. 26-2 Notice is hereby given that Li cense No. 7 RL-3687 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer, liquor and wine at retail in a restaurant under the Alcoholic Beverage Control law on West Lake Drive at entrance to Lake Montauk, Montauk, town of East Hampton, County of Suffolk for on-premises consumption. GOSMAN’S RESTAURANT AND BAR, INC. Montauk, N. Y. 26-2 Notice is hereby given that License No. 7SL 1063 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer, wine and liquor in a restaurant on Benson Road, 650 feet east of Caswell Road, Montauk, Town of East Hampton, County of Suffolk, for on premises consumption. SYDNEY A. GODDARD d /b/a Grandview Manor Montauk, N. Y. 26-2 East Hampton Cinema Phone 324-0448 2 Evening Performances Daily 7 and 9 P.M. Matinees Saturday, Sunday & Holidays Only At 2 P.M. THURSDAY - TUESDAY CLINT EASTWOOD MARCH 21 - 26 'THE GOOD, THE BAD AID THE UGLY' in color Suggested For Mature Audiences Evenings at 7 and 9:40 SATURDAY & SUNDAY MARCH 23 & 24 SPECIAL KIDDIE MATINEE 2 PJ4. HUGH O'BRIEN in "AFRICA TEXAS STYLE" A PRUDENTIAL Long Island Thealre CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOPS Conducted by CHANDLER BROSSARD Mr. Chandler Brossard, noted novelist and non-fiction writer, is past editor of Look, Time and New Yorker magazines. He will select twenty students (for each of two summer sessions) by interview for Seminar in creative writing courses being offered this summer at Southampton College of Long Island University. Contemporary forms such as the short - story, novel, visionary, hallucinatory and “underground” fiction will be explored along with techniques on how to best express each. More promising manuscripts will be analyzed and where appropriate, guided toward publication. Visiting writers, editors and noted critics will address the class and enter into discussions with students. Interviews for both the June 24-July 26 and July 29-August 30 sessions will take place in the Ocean View Lounge of Southampton Hall (the College Administration Building) March 29, 4 to 6 p.m., March 30, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.; April 5, 4 to 6 p.m. and April 6, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Individuals unable to appear in person may write to Mr. Brossard, care of Southampton College, enclosing a sample of their work. SOUTHAMPTON COLLEGE LONG ISLAND UNIVERSITY Southampton, N.Y. 11968 • (516) AT 3-4000 Fill!A YARD FOR USS THAN APINNY! Costs LESS than U per square yard of coverage! • Three kinds of nitrogen to green up your lawn fast! Feed 10,000 too* sq.ft. . . . . $8 95 Feed 5,000 5 q. ft. . . »113: M il ' J \[u tr a $495 TURF FOOD nmmmmmmmn ’&mmm ■■■NBBKMHaaH V s ,■ - ' r ! PICK UP A YARD'S WORTH THIS WEEKEND! Free Weed Bomb With Every 10,000 Sq. Ft. Bag <J~Crcn’s <J\nrscrics Montauk Highway 267-3310 East Hampton SAFETY is no accident. TONY MONTANARO—MASTER OF MIME assisted by Michael Henry JOHN DREW THEATER, Guild Hall, East Hampton— Saturday, March 30, 8:30 P.M.— $2.00 (Children’s Show with special material at 3 P .M — $1.00) Be sure to see the great Montanaro, protege of Marcel Marceau who creates exciting drama without saying a word. Utilizing patterns of movement and rhythm he covers a broad range of whimsy and pathos in such sketches as •'The Lion Tamer" and “Rehearsal for a Dictator’’ among others. He has appeared widely in the theatre and on CBS-TV and now has his own series— “Pretendo” on W CAU-TV, Philadelphia. It's a job. And we all have to work at it. Safety involves thought. And action. It requires a consideration of other people. An alertness to potentially dangerous situations. And it’s the kind of thing we can’t leave to others. The elderly, the sick, and the very young simply can’t be expected to do the job as well as we can. So we have to make up for them. A good example of this is the Poison Control Center at Meadow- brook Hospital. It was established to provide you with life-saving information and aid in the event that an unfortunate accident, involv ing the consumption of poison, should occur. Residents of Nassau or Suffolk Counties in need of their help may call IV 9-4000 any hour of the day or night. But remember, nothing worthwhile comes easily. And safety is no exception. So please, work at it. As a public service to school, business and community organizations, LILCO makes available: films, demonstrations, talks, guided tours and exhibits cover ing safety and a variety of other noteworthy subjects. Their titles and how to reserve them are all in LILCO's free booklet “ Films Talks and Tours.” Write: Community Relations Dept, Long Island Lighting Company, 250 Old Country Road. M.neola, N.Y. 11501. Or phone PI 7 1000 ext. 426 or 428. JLCO T LONG fSUMD UGHTIHG n OW tCBtA/ ’f *. twtnf

USS THAN East Hampton Cinema A PINNY!nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030960/1968-03-21/ed-1/seq-13.pdf · L1QUOR NOTICES “Well, one guy has rabbit teeth can be achieved if global,

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Page 1: USS THAN East Hampton Cinema A PINNY!nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn83030960/1968-03-21/ed-1/seq-13.pdf · L1QUOR NOTICES “Well, one guy has rabbit teeth can be achieved if global,

THE EAST HAMPTON STAR, EAST HAMPTON, N. Y., MARCH 21, 1968 II— F IV E

P o in t of V ie w* must be done. I am proposing that

I take over the command. You’ve S all seen him up there with his ten-i gallon hat. firing off his six-gunsp whenever he feels like it. And, I’ve

_ *■ lound out he's not taking us toe ship had just put out of Vera because when a great ship cuts Bremerhaven. He's planning to take

Cruz and the going was getting through the sea, the waters are al- us all to the Orient.” rough. According to the schedule, ways stirred and troubled. But our The passengersi when they heard Bremerhaven was about three weeks ship !s moving — moving through the fe]low wilh the rabbit , ceth

new waters towards new shores." tell , hem , hiSi vowed to trcat theirMahr.e h ° v ^ passengers, a ans 1 “You mean you have never made captain sternly. Everyone straighten-

. S . °. ma.,e 1S Wa^ ° this crossing before?” asked the ed in his seat when the captain enter-ge o see e cap in. Maharishi, looking somewhat trou- ed. They were prepared for the worst.

The captain was wearing a ten- bled. , Are you sure know the gallon hat and sat cross-legged as wasn ihe held the wheel in one hand and “ . , wearing a ten-gallon hat - just aused the other to pat a beagle on e strength to hold the white robe. And he didn't have anythe head course of decency and compassion,” six-gun in his hand — but rather,

“The weather is looking bad is replied *he caP<ai» . “though there he was holding a nosegay o£ sevenit not Captain?” the M aharishi'in- are. som® P assengers who have been tea roses.quired. saying I m not fit to command this He approached his seat, remained

"O f course it is, Mr. Maharishi, sh! £ " , „„ . . , standing and said, “My heart is•who are they. inquired the bouncing with bliss. Because I am

Maharishi. sure tbat permanent world peaceL1QUOR NOTICES “Well, one guy has rabbit teeth can be achieved if global, national

• e 7ST,Ter,f00̂ ®iven ^ at k i- and unruly hair and the other is and regional problems can be re- cense No. 7 RL 3834 has been issued a ‘perfesser’ type with a lot of kids duced to the quest for individual to tne undersigned to sell beer, wine running around after him. He must peace "and liquor at retail in a restaurant be some kind of Fagin. I've got both c „ ... , . . . .known as the Crystal Room on the of them removed from my table — . f *south side of Montauk Highway, Irish, you know. Hell's bells, what ^ ^ HTown of East Hampton, County of do they want? I’ve done as much 3 Jyacinth’ the captain talked about Suffolk for on-premises consump- as a captain can do for those people f happy world where frowning will tion j . , , , ■ j j . be missing, tensions will be absent,down in the hold — provided 'em

ALBERT & SOPHIA TRAGES with 70 million television sets." “Wars, epidemics, famines, earth-d /b /a Cricket Caterers "Captain," the Maharishi said, “I Quakes are a11 symptoms of tension,"250 Pantigo Road think you and I better have a the captain declared. "Tension is asEast Hampton, N. Y . 26-2 talk. .” contagious as any other disease. I

Notice is hereby given that License At dinner, one of the passengers know because I almost let the fact No. 7 RL 3655 has been issued to the ousted from the captain's table seized * never could hit an inside curve undersigned to sell beer, wine, and the opportunity before the captain’s sway my judgment, liquor at retail in a restaurant and arrival to address the diners. " I thought you an might ratherbar under the Alcoholic Beverage He stood on his chair and said, see the Orient than Europe. Please Control Law at South Emerson Ave. “I am convinced that this ship is forgive m e," he said with a beatific and South Edison St., Montauk, on a perilous course and because I smile.Town of East Hampton, County of have such strong feelings about what With this, the diners breathed a Suffolk, for on - premises consump- ^ _________________________ _________

Sergeant Helliger Cited In Vietnam

Career ManSergeant First Class Frank J.

Hettiger, a Regular Army man who grew up at 42 Oakview Highway, East Hampton, and is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Hettiger of that address, was cited recently in dispatches from Vietnam.

His company was ambushed nine miles north of Saigon, and 200 Viet Cong killed 48 Americans and wound­ed another 28. All of the officers in Sergeant Hettiger’s company were

killed or wounded, and he rallied the survivors and collected wounded.

Sergeant Hettiger is serving with the 25th Infantry Division and the company, which would be normally 178 men, was reconnoitering a high­way. Sergeant Hettiger's home is now Monterey, Cal.

His parents reported this week that he had been recommended for a medal, but had said he would turn it down, because he “wasn’t a hero.’'

Guild Hall BridgeMembers of the Guild Hall Bridge

Club met March 13 for their monthly master-point game. Mrs. B. Edwards and Leonard Jarvis were first.

Edward Brennan Jr. and Calvin Smith tied with Mrs. Morgan Bel­mont and Miss Eleanor Mulford for second. Seymour Karp and Yoshio Kawachi were third.

Wounds ReportedMiss Jurate Kazickas, daughter

of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Kazickas of East Hampton and New Rochelle, suffered minor shrapnel wounds dur­ing a shelling of the Marine camp at Khesanh, Vietnam, on March 8, her parents learned last week. She is a freelance correspondent, and is now in a hospital in Vietnam.

One day in a bit of conversational ancestor-matching, Arthur Roth, the Amagansett, ex-IRA, ex-Star one. not the banker, confessed to me that his grandfather, I think it was the one who fell off the roof, was named Slater McGurk.

I say confessed because I have just finished “The Big D ig," a Mac- Millian’s Cock Robin mystery, $4.50, and the author is Slater McGurk. “The Big Dig” is set in an eastern Long Island resort town, East W all­ing, which bears a more-than-passing resemblance to East Hampton.

The hero, T. P. ’Connor, is a sergeant on the East Walling Town Police, and the heroine, Anna Rubin, is spending the summer in a beach house at Pomeroy, three miles to the eastward. Pomeroy has a good deal in common with Amagansett.

The villain, Doc Krilly, rents the house next door to Anna; he and his gang intend a “Big Dig” into the vault of the local bank, on Labor Day weekend, when it will presum­ably be stuffed with hay made while the sun shone. The tunnel entrance

L o n g I s l a n d

B O O K S

is a Telephone Company manhole in the Village parking lot. . .

What bank is that, class? Who is Mrs. Caine, the businesslike head librarian at the East Walling Free Library; who is Mrs. Roth, her as­sistant? Who, for that matter, is Slater McGurk?

Whoever he is, he has written a lively detective story, one that needs no blood or sadism to liven it up. It is set in East Hampton, without a doubt, and reading it is a pleasant exercise in guessing local models, that is people and places.

The action, of course, is fiction; there hasn’t been a bank robbery here within living memory. It might be a good idea, though, for local bank presidents — and police officers — to read “The Big D ig," and stay on their toes next Labor Day week­end.

If anything happens, they won’t need MacMillan to tell them who Slater McGurk is. I have it doped cut, and will be glad to lead theposse.

E. T. R.

sigh of relief and the fellow withunruly hair gnashed his teeth. The Star Mailed to You— Anywhere

Jack Graves — $5 a Year

M A R Y E. McLAUGHLIN d /b /a Pirate’s Den Montauk, N. Y. 26-2

Notice is hereby given that Li­cense No. 7 RL-3687 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer, liquor and wine at retail in a restaurant under the Alcoholic Beverage Control law on W est Lake Drive at entrance to Lake Montauk, Montauk, town of East Hampton, County of Suffolk for on-premises consumption.

G O SM A N ’S RESTAURANT A N D BAR, INC.Montauk, N. Y . 26-2

Notice is hereby given that License No. 7SL 1063 has been issued to the undersigned to sell beer, wine and liquor in a restaurant on Benson Road, 650 feet east of Caswell Road, Montauk, Town of East Hampton, County of Suffolk, for on premises consumption.

SY D N E Y A. GODDARD d /b /a Grandview Manor Montauk, N. Y . 26-2

East Hampton CinemaPhone 324-0448

2 Evening Performances Daily 7 and 9 P.M.Matinees Saturday, Sunday & Holidays Only A t 2 P.M.

THURSDAY - TUESDAYCLINT EASTWOOD

M ARCH 21 - 26

'TH E GOOD, THE BADA I D TH E UGLY'

in colorSuggested For Mature Audiences

Evenings at 7 and 9:40SATU R D AY & SU N D AY M ARCH 23 & 24

S P E C I A L K I D D I E M A T I N E E2 PJ4.

HUGH O'BRIENin

"A F R IC A TE X A S S T Y L E "A PRUDENTIAL Long Island Thealre

CREATIVE WRITING WORKSHOPSConducted by CHANDLER BROSSARDMr. Chandler Brossard, noted novelist and non-fiction writer, is past editor of Look, Time and New Yorker magazines. He will select twenty students (for each of two summer sessions) by interview for Seminar in creative writing courses being offered this summer at Southampton College of Long Island University.Contemporary forms such as the short - story, novel, visionary, hallucinatory and “underground” fiction will be explored along with techniques on how to best express each. More promising manuscripts will be analyzed and where appropriate, guided toward publication. Visiting writers, editors and noted critics will address the class and enter into discussions with students.Interviews for both the June 24-July 26 and July 29-August 30 sessions will take place in the Ocean View Lounge of Southampton Hall (the College Administration Building) March 29, 4 to 6 p.m., March 30, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.; April 5, 4 to 6 p.m. and April 6, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.Individuals unable to appear in person may write to Mr. Brossard, care of Southampton College, enclosing a sample of their work.

SOUTHAMPTON COLLEGELONG ISLA N D U N IV E R S ITYSouthampton, N.Y. 11968 • (516) AT 3-4000

Fill! A YARD FOR USS THAN A PINNY!

• Costs LESS than U per square yard of coverage!

• Three kinds of nitrogen to green up your lawn fast!

Feed 10,000 t o o *sq.ft. . . . . $ 8 9 5

Feed 5,0005 q. ft. . .

»11 3 : M i l

'J \[u tr a

$ 4 9 5

TURF FOODnmmmmmmmn’&mmm■ ■ ■ N B B K M H a a H

V s ,■ - '

r

!P I C K U P A Y A R D ' S W O R T H T H I S W E E K E N D !

Free Weed Bomb With Every 10,000 Sq. Ft. Bag

<J~Crcn’s <J\nrscricsMontauk Highway 267-3310 East Hampton

SAFETY is no

accident.

T O N Y M O N TANARO — MASTER OF MIME

assisted by Michael Henry

JOHN D REW THEATER, Guild Hall, East Hampton— Saturday, March 30, 8:30 P.M.— $2.00

(Children’s Show with special material at 3 P .M — $1.00)

Be sure to see the great Montanaro, protege of Marcel Marceau who creates exciting drama without saying

a word. Utilizing patterns of movement and rhythm he covers a broad range of whimsy and pathos in such sketches as •'The Lion Tam er" and “Rehearsal for a Dictator’’ among others. He has appeared widely in the theatre and on C B S-TV and now has his own series— “Pretendo” on W C A U -T V , Philadelphia.

It's a job. And we all have to work at it. Safety involves thought. And action. It requires a consideration of other people. An alertness to potentially dangerous situations. And i t ’s the kind of thing we can’t leave to others. The elderly, the sick, and the very young simply can’t be expected to do the job as well as we can. So we have to make up for them.

A good example of this is the Poison Control Center at Meadow- brook Hospital. It was established to provide you with life-saving information and aid in the event that an unfortunate accident, involv­ing the consumption of poison, should occur. Residents of Nassau or Suffolk Counties in need of their help may call IV 9-4000 any hour of the day or night.

But remember, nothing worthwhile comes easily. And safety is no exception. So please, work at it.

As a public service to school, business and com m un ity organizations, LILCO m akes available: film s , dem onstrations, ta lks, guided tours and exhib its cover­ing safety and a varie ty o f other no teworthy subjects. Their t it le s and how to reserve them are all in LILCO's free bo o k le t “ Films Talks and Tours.” W rite: C om m unity Relations D e p t, Long Island Ligh ting Company, 250 Old Country Road. M.neola, N.Y. 11501. O r phone PI 7 1000 ext. 42 6 or 428.

JL C OT LONG fSUMD UGHTIHG

n OWtCB tA/’ f *. twtnf