
Chris Koren, Playmate of the Month March 1970, pictured in digital image from her centerfold






Linda Summers, Playmate of the Month August 1972, pictured in Playmate of the Month pictorial, Picture of Health. The text accompanying the photos read:
An elderly woman with a lined face asks where she can find “some nuts without salt in ‘em.” A middle-aged lady wonders about organic beef. “It’s not raised with hormones,” explains the girl at the counter, “like stilbestrol, which is used to fatten up beef for economic reasons and is really a bummer. It throws your body chemistry out of whack and it’s known to cause cancer.” A couple of young kids are waiting to buy some licorice, and one says, “You sound just like my aunt; she used to run a health-food store.” After they leave, the girl remarks that it’s been a slow afternoon: “At least there haven’t been any of the usual daily tragedies. Have you ever tried to clean up after somebody drops a jar of honey?”
If you live in San Diego, the counter girl at the nearest health-food store just might be our August Playmate, a chestnut-haired 21-year-old named Linda Summers. Linda’s stepfather owns a chain of five such establishments, and she has been his full-time employee for almost a year – (wo)manning the counter, cash register and telephone and advising customers with problems; every now and then, she reaches under the counter for her copy of Let’s Get Well to see what Adelle Davis, guru of the natural-food movement, has to say about rutin, bioflavonoids and the like. Sandwiched between a loan company and a beauty shop in the middle of a shopping center, the store we found her in is a weird combination of the exotic and the mundane. On the shelves, between the fluorescents above and the vinyl tile below, are such items as vegeroni, bone meal and soyameat, and a freezer in back contains raw milk, unpasteurized and unhomogenized. In the tea section, you’ll find such offbeat entries as bladder wrack, kelp powder, buchu leaves and anise seed (“The Indians used to use some of these things as remedies,” says Linda. “They’re supposed to cure colds and relieve arthritic pain; and some teas are natural sedatives”).
Health food is more than just a job for Linda. Like her mother, stepfather and father – a dentist who’s also located in the San Diego area – she believes in it. “I was raised on raw liver. Really. Because when you cook anything, you change its chemical composition, and my parents wanted me to have lots of iron.”
Linda grew up – and still lives – on a modest ranch in La Mesa that includes a two-acre avocado grove and lots of fruit trees; the family is large enough – three girls and a boy – to consume all the oranges, limes, figs, strawberries and watercress they produce. Linda, whose concern with health and fitness goes beyond consideration of diet, does a lot of jogging, mostly on the beach, and recently completed a four-month course of swimming, bicycling and working with weights and belts at a local gym. As you can imagine, she doesn’t favor tobacco, alcohol or coffee (“They kill the vitamins in your body and neutralize your power to rebuild tissue”). For R & R, Linda likes to strum the guitar and sing folk songs and, on occasional weekends, to drive her Capri down to Rosarito Beach in Baja California for some motorcycle and dune-buggy riding.
The world she inhabits is small but organic, and she’s satisfied with it. She was surprised when we told her the Republican Party had been considering San Diego as a site for this year’s convention. “I’ve given up on politics,” she says. “It’s just a rat-race. I’m a small-town girl, involved with my own life, trying to make it mean something and to maintain my peace of mind. And that’s a full-time job.”







Janet Quist, Playmate of the Month December 1978, pictured in Playmate of the Month pictorial, Texas Drifter, The text accompanying the photos read:
“Willie Nelson lives out in Dripping Springs. Waylon Jennings and Michael Murphey both play around here. It really is like a little Nashville.”
Austin, Texas, is the town Janet Quist is talking about: where whe was born and the place she calls home. For the present, at least. The flavor of the country is in her voice. There is no doubt she is a Texan.
Of course, she rides; “Mom has about five horses and Dad’s into roping.” In Austin, going to the rodeo is as natural as going to the movies and she takes part in … bulldogging? “Hey, do I look like a bulldogger? Barrel racing, maybe.” A cursory inspection will reveal that Janet looks like anything but a bulldogger. She is a model and an actress. You may have seen her in the movies Semi-Tough, Rolling Thunder, A Small Town in Texas or Outlaw Blues on television. You may also have seen her as one of the models in last year’s Playmate Photo Contest. Fact is, if you stand in one place long enough, Janet will pass by sooner or later. She loves to travel: Mexico, Hawaii, California. Anyplace warm, and anyplace near water. Growing up on Lake Travis, 20 miles outside Austin, Janet developed a close relationship with the water, boats and just about any water sport you can name: skiing, ski sailing and, lately, body surfing. “I tried that in Hawaii a while ago. You can almost reduce that way. Just lie on the curl of the wave and it works your body over. Feels great on your stomach.” Why, you ask, does this girl need to reduce? “I like to eat. I just spent two weeks in Dallas eating lasagna. And at home we have about three acres of really fertile land where I garden. Corn, squash, green beans, black-eyed peas and okra. I love to watch things grow.”
Janet’s been doing some growing herself lately. She more or less fell into modeling and acting. Now the need for commitment is becoming apparent. “I change all the time. Most of my friends seem headed for careers or are already involved in one. I’m getting a little tired of not knowing what I’m going to be doing. I hope I settle down soon.”
California, she thinks, might be a good move. Of course, she’d have to give up Willie and the rodeo and the garden. But it is warm and the water is great.





Chris Koren, Playmate of the Month March 1970, pictured in Playmate of the Month pictorial, Go West, Young Woman. The text accompanying the photos read:
Although Horace Greeley’s famous travel instructions were addressed to young men only, Cleveland-born Christine Koren corrected the editor’s oversight several years ago, when she swapped secretarial chores in her home town for the mind-enlarging excitement of California’s art and couture cultures. Soon after her arrival in Los Angeles, the 22-year-old brunette found jobs that satisfied her aesthetic predilections and has worked at them ever since. On weekends and some evenings, she part-times as Pasadena’s Palace Boutique−where she’s as likely to sell a painting to a famous motion-picture star as to a tourist from Toledo. But Chris sees to it that her fast-paced work week doesn’t confine her to a life without leisure. At home in her kitchen, Chris is something of an artist herself. Her specialty is preparing health-food dishes: “Things like wheat germ, avocado honey and papaya juice beat TV dinners any time. But I admit I’m a nut on the subject.” Chris also takes maximum advantage of the salubrious West Coast climate by going sailing, water-skiing or bicycling at every available opportunity. Though bachelor-girl Chris cites procrastination as her worst fault, she admits she isn’t in too big a hurry to meet the man in her life. “I’m still trying to find out all the things that I am,” she says. “When I do, I’ll know the type of mate I’m suited for−and vice versa.” Chris feels that, for similar reasons, many young people are waiting a little longer to get married these days, but she doesn’t completely agree with all the things they’re doing. “Many kids are trying to find themselves through the drug scene,” she says/ “But I think there are better ways, and lots of people−I’m one of them−have begun to explore these alternatives over the past few years. This fall at UCLA, I intend to study yoga and metaphysics; they have it all over artificial stimulants as a means of self-discovery; they discipline the mind.” Chris has many male admirers who are eager to assist her with her homework, but she insists that she’s just in love with Luv−a mostly Maltese pooch who gladly goes almost everywhere she does. So would we.