washington dossier june 1980

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Washington Dossier was the society magazine for Washington D.C. from 1975-1992. Here is the fifth anniversary edition featuring the best of the first five years. Cover features Elizabeth Taylor, Gerald Ford, Rosylnn Carter, Elizabeth Dole, Adeshir Zahidi, Bevery Sills, Tandy Dickenson, Sally Quinn. Inside see a snap shot of the social history of Washington From 1975-1980. Ronald Reagan was gearing up for his convention, the Iranian hostage crisis was in full mode and the morale of the nation was at a major low.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Washington Dossier June 1980
Page 2: Washington Dossier June 1980
Page 3: Washington Dossier June 1980

Portrait of a

President

This is the story of a 5'2" bundle of energy

-the daughter of a world-famous Plastic

Surgeon -who defied all the rules of the

COSmetics field -with a single creme -

to become the leader of the prestige

Skin-care field throughout the world!

How many 54 yea r old women admi t their ill-{·. lrma Shore ll does! he was 54 yea rs old on April 27 .. . two days bef01 her youngc~t . Stacey, w.1s 14 .

ti ~re are really 2 reasons she doesn't mind admit-ng er age- the fir t i · th reaction ·he gel~ -

bobody believes he r! he is petite , she hru. laughing 1:~n eyes, a pixi face and a beautiful, youthfui­Oth g well-kept compl xion. That compl ' ion is the M er reason Mis Shorell enjoys admitting h rage. of ost WOmen who are 54 years old don't ha\ e the J..; nd

COmplexion she does.

BUT ~ i horell i in the cosm tic bU5iness and h r Etee i her fortun . he i pre~;d nt of he r own multi-million dollar corporation, lnna horell, Inc.

h w-.15 lit rail born in to the world of beauty. He r late fitther, Dr. l. Daniel horell , was one of the pioneers in cosmetic

ofllcial doct plastic surgery. He was not only amon . or for the Ziegfield Follies, but numbered mem~ hiS patients the notables of ~tage, screen, and rs of the Inte rnational and Diplomatic t-

even royalty.

~~ve~~tions about skin changes, kin care and hom edM beauty secrets" were commonplace at h r fum e. any of the world's great beauti s - the camou: and th~ w althy-were peopl l nna horell 'Yeare ~ kno~ 111 he r teens. Uttle did she know that meds

1te r th iS constant expo ure to medical t nns,

~ca people and a fonnulation of he r father' thew, cast her in the role of" kin-Care Champion for

oman over 30."

World·Renowned Skin· Care Authoflly - m 7980

F ~hion coordin.ttion for .th Fifth :\\t'. , :'\c'' York, a theatre ~tint. then rommce and m;lrriage­.md two livel> '>On' ... Tim ;tnd hip-occupied the ne\ t 17 year., hut the thoul-{ht of hrinhring out her father\ beneficial fonnul,u~ mu\t h;l\'e been lying dormant in the l>.tck of her mind.

It becune a re.tli!) "he n lrn1.1 'horell joirwd tll.lt ~'Oup of women in their mid- ' who de'u"'-d to retain th •ir ~outhfi.ol appeamnce. Follo"ing the birth of her )'Ounge't \On, ,he '><.'<.'lrred ;md l>eg•Ul

U'>ing the formulation that her f.tther ~:1\l' p.ttienh po,t-oper;~th ly to help ket•p the contour' firm and aid ";th the t'Oior and torw of the ,kin.

l11e re~ulh were e\cellent! !f er hu.,b,md remarked how ~'()ung-looking. f re,h-looking her ~kin .tppe•u't'<l ... \Oon her fi·iend, notict.od the change. They hewm to <L'k for \Ome of 'her creme'. Wh ·n they e.\1 rienced the !><I me henef tci.tl re.,u)L,, ~he dctennincd to omke her father' fonnula avail-

4 able to the millions who mi~1t he helped h it J.\ ~h was.

" I ,u,ked the 0 •tor countle) que~tion\ about hb fonnula." '>he relate . "What could it do, who could use it, could it he made for general dbtrihution?" 'he purchru.ed all avail.tble night cremes on the mar­ket - much to the clhmay of her hu;,band - .mel finding none as elfecthe-decicled to challenge the giants oft he co~rnetic indu tr)\

She tartcd her mpan in 1961 with 1500-her one creme • 0 R/35" - her ht&­band and hi hu;in • ., a oci.1te 1-larr

teinfi lei - and boundle>'> detennin<~tion .

he W'.!S detennined to create skm<are products that could flll long-eXJsting needs! Each product as natu­ral as a baby' skin -pure of all honnone , ~teroicl ,

trogeru.

he travell d the country vhitinl-{ each ;tore ~lling h r product to show them the re ul~! Her "Look at me if you want to know if it worb" brought her the respect of !>il.l • women <IS well as cu~torner~ . time wen t on he added additional item to her " line of 1 item" -each to fulfill a need, ~u has her FORM LA for LE I G whi h i a I lion bru.ed on her father' urgical scrub with the harsh~ rerno\ed. It i a th a ted b ' .tter. 'There is no ub ·titute for water," Miss horell believe .

Tod. o~. 19 yea!'\ l1ter the. re are only items m the lin · - 0'\olO R/35, FOR~1 L\ lor LEAr\ lNG . . . U, E.' mvE that .tll'>Oiut I) pre' ent burning, .ll1d a rer:n.ui:able

di,t'<>,er~ called DER~IABRa E /35 that help re fine pore , , eliminate 'kin blem1 he uch h),, khe.td~ and "hitehead .

He r l1te t ffurts ha\e been to .tid the plight of stC\\"W ~ "ho e comple\iom are .1ged h) thed~n ofthejetaJrplme. ller pre,enti\e "YO TH 25 ~ loi,turizn~ Creme" >towed fine ~ fonmng .u-ound their e)

mouth- ga' e ll health) n.~tural -~"' " heen to the kin lt\ the

--... .-. nr.t ,;,oi>turizer and treatment in one.

Her :"-.10 1 T RE/35 worh mimcle with dry ,kin ... remarkable action hegins immediately. Not gr ·a'y or oily - univer;all hailed .IS t.he world\ fine't ... it PROTECT • FlR:"-.i • ~ 10 1 'T RIZE !

Incidentally, lnna herself iru;ists that she and l~~ a product for 6 montm before placing it on sale. he fe 1, you ~hould ~ for yourself h bene6cul

her products can be. \ "LSit any on of her I ed. franchised tores- han~ .111 lnna horell kin-Care peciali5t dbcms the e~ , !Teeth ..., ~linut Reg:t­men" pecifically for )'OUI l1le will gi\ e you sample to use .It

·~ home ince lnn.1 borell trul ,972

_1,,. SJ>orel on f feel her great t sal~ men are

Sean•• ,., •• ...,., her remarkable productJ..

• lnna horell' products are in 550 of this countr) ' finest stores like Beigdorf Cooclman, Bonwit Teller, Macy5- .Y, FlahS, LLBerger,McCuni>' ,M. hwartz, Gamnckel', Haddad' , Julius Lewis, Castner Knott, Regen eins, Rackes, Byck', Jordan 1arsh-Fla. , Jeane St ven , Ki hers, Weis Goldring, Don' Codchaux5,The 1aster' , Gus 1ayers-Btr, \ nnser'. Marshall Field, Halle Bro ., McAlpin' , Jaoobsons, Jackson Gmve , DeJong' , Gidcl.ing Jenny, Carol',

im:Ul Marcus, Frost Bro . , l i Jackson', Henry· , Drydens, Parker', R.E. Coxs, Dillard', -Ark-La., Hovland wan~. M.M. Cohn, Hart Albin, 'eusteter1, Robinson$, Joseph fagnin, 1acys-Cal., Uvingstons,

ordstrom and aks Fifth Avenue. For the store neare t )OU wnte. Irma horell, Inc 515 Modi n A•enue, ew York. Y. 1

Page 4: Washington Dossier June 1980

Fine line leather gifts from Christian Dior Two toned browns, handcrafted and finished for the Dod with polish. From our collection of jewelry and small leather goods. Men's Accessories: selected stores

FATHER'S DAY- JUNE 15

f'

Sou and Cor

WOODWARD & LOTH ROP'i y 0 u K N 0 W T Is R G H T ...

Page 5: Washington Dossier June 1980

!_able of Contents Vol. 6 No. 1 J une 1980

Ardeshir Zahedi and Liz T~ylor quickly became great fnends when Liz discovered Washington.

South African Ambassador ~nd Ann Wallick at the

orcoran Ball

FEATURES 18 The First Five Years of Do ier

A human comedy of our times

27 The Anniversary Party By Patty Cavin Celebrating the art of survival

28 Allison LaLand' Party Tip By Dorothy Marks An expen tells how to do it

29 Do ier' .Recommended Party Services A checklist for the party giver

DEPARTMENTS

5 AnnabeU's File

7 Art and Artists By Viola Drath The An of Portrait Photography

10 Design for Uving by Kathleen Bums The Andrew Jackson Somerville's at home

13 Curtain Going Up By Anne Denton Blair A New First for an Ebullient lrnpresario Manin Feinstein takes on new chores for culture

31 Along Party Lines Somalian farewell, White House Preservation, Cary at the Cancer Ball

43 First aas.s Travel by Susan Goldman Going in style by plane, boat, train and limousine

49 The Educated Palate By Bette Taylor Summery collations, cheaper by the dozen

62 Books by Neighbors

66 Real &tate Transactions

68 Social Calendar By Maggie Wimsatt

68 Fashion Calendar

COVER

A sampling of Dossier covers panning five years of publication. The Dossier, which began in June, 1975, was originally published as hown. (Left.) II switched to a full color format in September, 1976 featuring Germaine Ahoua, wife of the Amba sador from the Ivory Coast. Covers shown were hot for Do sier by Fred Ward (Liz Taylor, Pre i­dem Ford, Mrs. Can er, The lirezas, Elizabeth Dole, Zahedi a nd Sill , Tandy Dickinson, the Orfilas, Roger Ste ens): Peter Garfield (Austin Kiplinger and incent Burke) and Diane Walker ( ally Quinn).

The W hi11jton Dossier i pubb hed monthly by Adler I lnternauonaJ Ltd. JJOJ ew Mexico Avenue. W hiogton . D.C. 20016. Controlled corculataon paid at Richmond. Virgmia 23261 and Wa htn ton. D.C. Copyn&ht 1980 e Adler lntemauonal Ltd.

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Do ier/ June 19 0/ J

Page 6: Washington Dossier June 1980

4/June 1980/Dossier

why have your banquet in a hotel

when you can have it in a legend.

For more than half a century, The Mayflower ha helped

Wa hingtonians mark special occasions in the grand manner.

With the only complete gold service in Wa hington. Glittering crystal. And the white gloves and parl<ling silver of French

service. For arrangements plea e ca11347-3000, and ask for our catering director.

Publisher David Adler

Editor Sonia Adler

Assista.nt 10 the Editor Lee Kirstein

General Manager Jean Tolson

Design Consultant Susan R. Eason

Art Director Lianne Uyeda

Chief Photographer John Whitman

Contributing Editors Viola Drath, Beue Taylor. Maggie Wimsall,

Anne Demon Blair, Kathleen Burns, Dorothy Marks

Typography Julia Young, Mar ha Barren

Van Da hner

Advertising Production Bonnie Down

Production Assistants Carol Wydra, Donna Omara

Orculalion Walter Duncan

Advertising ales Director Jon Adler

Account Executives Deanna Gould, Melanie Kickert

Catherine McCabe

ational Account Representatives Arnie Green, Molly Lockwood Martha Moscow, Susan Ludlow

Cataly I Communication 260 Madison Avenue

New York, N.Y. 10016 (212) 578-4 30

an Francisco Representative The Shepherd Co.

218 State Street San Francisco, Calif. 94 114

(415) 864-5005

dvenising and editorial offices located at 3301 ew Mexico Ave., Washington, DC 20016, General

Telephone (202) 362-5894.

For ocial Covernge: Please send all invitations to Social Secretary, The Washington Dossier, 3301 ew Mexico Ave., Washington, DC 20016 (Please send invitations as early as possible to schedule

coverage; only a limited number of events can be covered.)

For Subscriptions: Please send all subscription inquiries, applications and changes of address to

The Washington Dossier Subscription Department, PO Box 948, Farmingdale, NY 11737. Prices are

$12 for I year; $22.50 for 2 years. Overseas $24 per year. Canada $14 per year.

Photographs for commercial and non-commercial use are available for sale.

The Washington Dossier is published monthly by Adler International, Ltd. David Adler. President; Jon Adler. Vice President; Sonia Adler, Secretary-

Treasurer.

To be audited by

}

~

c f

,,,

Page 7: Washington Dossier June 1980

AnnabellS File THE DOSSIER OF WASHINGTON COMMENT

PEEPLING: In a town full of people wh~ also write, the most impressive ProJect in the works is the one being PUrsued by the Library of Congre ~aniel Boorstin. Every morning before

e trips off to the bookstacks, he puts away a few pages on a " History of the World" making him the odds out win­ner of the heavy duty copy stakes . .. ~aughlin Phillips of the Gallery people

ad a brush with a peanut in the Big ~PPI_e. . .had to be rushed to the

0°SP•tal to open up the old air tract. ..

f n a recent N.Y.-D.C. air huttle ride ormer SecTreas Bill Simon tood up

most of the way. Those new airbu ~eats, . especially the center , are too h arn hght anyway ... Liv Biddle getting

onored by Drexel U. in Ph illy, a town ~ell-known for its Biddle ... Frank

arden of the radio duo trimming down at the C.C. Health Club ... real :state scouts for exprez Nixon scour­•~g the Cape Cod area for a summer Pace, maybe even Martha's Vineyard w~ere Washington pundits, orne of 7 om helped bring him down, hold dorth ... Speaking of ironies, Arnaud Ne Borchgrave, whiz correspondent for B ewsweek, who originally hired Ben .. ~dlee f~r that mag got hi new book Wh~e Sp1ke" panned in the Post, is ~~h a lso owns New week. Fair A me folks, but there are limits D SIDEMS: Sen. Robert i ole playing catch- up in his bid to tay bn th~ Senate. . .Sans Souci getting mack •n the celeb swim ... latest capital w Y_stery: Where have all the Duke' \Valte~s gone?. . .big contingent of

1 ashmgtonians will meet unexpected­Y at the Ascot ''Queens Day" thi month · rn m England. The Mandy Ouris-thans, .the Jim Meers, the Ray Howar R e D1ck Kirstein ... all are in the a~Jal Enclosure, natch ... Kitty Kelley b husband Mike renting her Dum­w~~on Str~et pad for a stint in N.Y . Li re he 1s penning her book about to~- · .Sce~t companies getting ready srne~~nch _b•g new campaign on object Wo s, With exotic cents on hanger ,

Od Product , rug , and knickknack

... Herman Wouk finishing hi 12 hour opus on Wind of War which has been sold to TV. The original teleplay writer died and Herman, to protect his work, undertook the ta k. The pro­ducer are ec tatic with the cript. .. Mrs. Wouk, incidentally, ho agents her husband' work i taking on other client a well. . .Bruce and Joy Sundlun' reception for the Trinity Square troupe from his Pro idence home-town doing "Sea Mark ' at the KenCen wa authentically moi t. Guests kept falling into the pool, till covered by an elastic top, which meant getting wet only to the hin . Only?. Pierre Franz Chapou back in D.C ... OTHER THING : Mobil Oil credibility slipped below zero minus with their illy protest on "Death of a Prince ". Is Mobil still an American company? ... That AMTRAK food operation on the Metroliner eems a Mickey Mou e operation . Snack ellers u e passenger eats as a counter and storage space ...

Pollster worried that voter indecision and up urge in political interest making their polltaking matrix inaccurate .. .The Ayatollah is deathly ill de pite occas­sional appearances. His death expected to et off cataclysmic eruptions in Iran making what is happening now a slow waltz. . .Jordan's recently departed Amba ador alah off to Switzerland for new post. . . Friends of popular for mer Mauritanian Ambas ador Amedou Abdallah di tre sed by his ar­re t in hi home country for "political reason ". We hope the authoritie will recon ider. .Max Rabb, former ecretary to Ei enhower cabinet and

father of heila Weidenfeld now im­portant N .Y. figure in Reagan cam­paign enli ting on-in-la\ Ed Weidenfeld in the cau e ... Hermen and Monica Greenberg getting into very big thoroughbred racing with an eye on the country' bigge t pur e com­petition ... Much talk about the Giant supermarket chain elling to foreign in-

e tor . . . Whatever the price, Arab takeover of Financial General till a doubtful pro pect.

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Page 8: Washington Dossier June 1980

Designed exclusively for W&J Sloane by Parisian artisans, this exquisitely ornamented cabinet/bar conceals a television in a manner befitting the grandest of decors. Just part of

Sloane's renowned home furnishings collection and interior design service.

THIRD LEVEL OF WHITE FLINT MALL

770-4710

Page 9: Washington Dossier June 1980

Art &Artists THE ART OF PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY TECHNIC~ SKILL IS NOT ENOUGH

W hen the French painter Louis Jacques Daguerre invented his little black box in 1838,

everyone who ever wanted his portrait done breathed a sigh of relief. At long last there was a sure-fire way to attain an objective likeness. No longer did the sitter have to submit himself to the Vagaries of subj ective impressions and t~e unpredictable brushwork of the ar­tist. The camera obscura put the tradi­tional portrait painter out of work.

When the highly successful American Portraitist Erastus Salisbury Field became acquainted with Daguerre's rev­olutionary invention through a friend Who had returned from Paris, he soon SWitched from portrait painting to big exotic landscapes with biblical connota­tions. He understood that the smaller anct cheaper images would become the future permanent record of society.

Portrait painters who survive in our technological age are precious few. Those ~hat remain are, indeed, exceptional. And It is an open question whether the Titians and Tintorettos, the Rembrandts and Rubens would have blossomed forth the way they did had the magic box been

For Harry Lunn, Etienne Carjat's photo image of the poet Baudelaire exemplifies the perfect psychological aspect of a successful portrait.

invented before their time. The eye of the camera is anything but

objective. It can distort and alter a shape, a line, a face by an infinitesimal tilt and the slightest variation of light. Once more we have come to recognize the human factor; the mastermind be­hind the camera.

Pred Maroon's portrait of Egypt's leading architect, Hassan Fathi,from his book "The Egypt Story" won first prize in the personality class in this year's White House Photographer's contest.

Dossier/June 19 017

Page 10: Washington Dossier June 1980

Grand Opening

What makes Bracley Park one of the most luxurious townhomes in Potomac?

Dramatic spaces: As d ist1nctrve as the all-wood entrance bndges As soaring as he co hedrol ceilings and skylights As expansive as the floor-to-ceiling replaces. Even as proct1col as he custom des1gned greenhouses featured in most kitchens.

A Potomac, Maryland location: EnJOy all the prestigious luxury, the wooded beauty and quiet stability of Potomac in this select 19-unlt town­home community. Located off Bradley Boulevard. with easy access to the Beltway, Bradley Polk offers one of the most convenient 1ocot1ons 1n Potomac. And one of the finest townhome buys 1n the ent1re area

More space to live in: A generous 2.600 sq fl. of living space IS creotrvety apportioned among three spacious levels. Room for three full baths. plus o powder room. and three Iorge bedrooms w1 h oddillonol space foro fourth oro den-a yourophon.

3-LEVEl TOWNHOMES IN POTOMAC, MD. PRICED FROM $166,990 CONVENTIONAl ANANONG AVAilABLE HOURS: Open Daily 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. PHONE: 656-1323

More room to entertain: In addition to Iorge living and dining rooms. Bradley Polk offers a finished living area on the lower level and a Iorge polio deck outside For more inhmate occos1ons. two fireplaces­one upstairs and one down -provide o friendly warmth efficiently conserved by supenor insulation throughout.

Custom design appointments: As abundant as the space at Bradley Polk. And as except1onol as the solid bnck and block construction. From the striking premium Pella wood casement w1ndows to the weathered antique­looking brickwolk outside and exposed bnck inside. Plus cultured-marble van1ty ops, glossy hardwood floors and more luxunous touches that feature the craftsman-like deta11 wolk of custom des1gn But Without o custom design price tog

Directions: Beltway ( 495) to River Rood ex1t 16 east Toke first left onto Burdette Rood. left onto Bradley Blvd to project on right.

A pint venture of Panache Bu1lders Inc and The Berger Berman Group

8/ June 1980/Dossier

What makes a photographic portrait rr an esthetic experience? The man who at has lo?k~d at .• bought and sold more F. por

11traJts to thd1s tdown than anyone else, N

co ector an ealer Harry Lunn, fr answers: "Psychological content.'' w Lunn contends, however, that a striking 01 photographic likeness communicating a ti, certain insight into character can onlY hi emerge if the subject is interesting. "If lo the vessel is empty-there is nothing to th discover.'' tu

Interestingly, the interplay between tiJ the subject and his photographer, is je, cited by most of the renowned portrait a photographers as the chief secret of cc their success. In his effort to capture ca some aspect of his sitters' personality, in

1

Fred Ward gets so wrapped up in con· re; versations with them that his wife and an partner feels like an intruder during those intimate sessions and stays awaY for fear of spoiling his concentration· UJ Ward, who has photographed AmericaJl A presidents and their familjes from JohJl ce Kennedy to Mrs. Carter is outright w1

curious about his subjects. Whether it's an Fidel Castro or Liz Taylor, he studiel ar them from all angles, adjust- th, background, lights and colors to catclt Pe and reveal their strong points. Ph

For George de Vincent, technical sit rn, skill, although essential, is secondarY· In order to bring out the uniqueness of cal his subjects' inner life, he also en· ou courages them in conversation. "I get involved with that individual and aim to rnt get a reaction, theirs and mjne," he ex· Yo· plains. l

A former pajnter, who occasionall) tio exchanges his camera for his brushes, rna Vincent approaches his s u bj ectl rna without any preconceived notions. or

For him the creativity of the photo8' ~t rap her is the key to great photos. "As s he painter approaches his subject with s ~St l personal bias, so does the man with thl es! camera. His own personality enters a' much into his work as the painter's.'' ~~c

"I am a mirror," says Earl Gold· th < stein, owner of the studio that wal

0 e

established by the talented Mada~ h ne Glogau in 1935. "Every new face is ' P a~ challenge." 0

IJ

''The camera room is a make-belie"' ~hi world where the attitude is all impor .?~ tant. I tell the women to dress and act~: t\.t if they are going on a date, it lifts thell a a, spirits." Cte

Goldstein has photographe t '' American Presidents since Eisenhowe' ° C•

and regards photography as much as ~~~ ~ semi-science as art. He uses natur9 'Wiff light and takes his subjects into natur1 ho when possible.

Page 11: Washington Dossier June 1980

"I like to suggest a person's environ­rail fho ment, a symbol of who the individual is

and what he or she does", comments ore F

red Maroon. Starting as an architect, lse, Maroon has photographed everybody ~~: from Richard Nixon to Pablo Cassals

With his cello. He strongly disapproves Jng ~f theatrical lighting and romanticiza-

~;l~ t1on. Using existing light instead of "If highlights, he avoids making "people

look plastic," and robbing them of g to their warmth and emotion. "Such pic-

t~res lack poetry. They are not in­•eetl tlmate." Maroon also makes his sub­·, is jects feel at home by drawing them into :r~~ a conversation that frees them of self-

consciousness. "An approaching ture camera can instill terror in the hearts of lity, industrial giants", he relates. "For that ;on· and reason I try not to get too close and use

an appropriate lens." rin8 .war Gerd Sander of Sander Gallery grew .ion. up with photography. Grandfather icatl August Sander belongs among the ·ohll celebrated classic photographers whose ·igbt Work nowadays fills museum walls here r it'S and abroad. Sander points out that the 1die5 an of photography requires a lot more ust S than craftsmanship. "The magic hap­: atc~ Pens between the personality of the

~hotographer and the personality of the lical Sitter. It takes the right blend to achieve a larY· masterpiece. The photographer has to ss 0[ capture what is beyond the visualle el." , en· "The best portraits reflect our time, I get our concerns. As in literature, a portrait im tO must reveal more about a person than ,e e)(· You already know," Sander says .

. Marvin Sadik, director of the Na­nalll honal Portrait Gallery, has fought shes. many a battle in Congress to start his j ect5 magnificent collection of photo images

of great Americans a few years ago. otog· While the historical dimension plays in • As the museum's extraordinary collection, •ith ~Sthetic criteria are by no means of :h tbl esser importance. !rs a' "The best portrait of Lincoln in exist­'s.'' ence is not a painting, but a compelling Gold ihhotograph in our possession. We have . wa! e Only image of Thoreau, a powerful ~dall' ~ne; otherwise there is just a sketch. We e is a~e a painting of Edwin Booth", Sadik

Pomts out "but it is the daguerreotype elie"' ~hich encapsulates his charisma." Sadik npor .?0 ks for images-whether they are of act a! Mother Jones" or Halsman's famous ; thei: tvlarilyn Monroe-that sum up the char-

acter not just the looks of the subject. phet t ''It takes intelligence and sensitivity howe' 0 come up with such an image. Techni­h as ~~I ski ll is not enough. The camera sees atur9 •fferently. Ultimately, it is the person natur' Who makes the photo."

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Doss1er/June 1980/9

Page 12: Washington Dossier June 1980

Design Far Living THE DREW JACKSON SOMERVILLES BOLQUETS OF QUIET UNDERSTAlEMENT

I. Tucked away in the nearby Maryland suburbs is the French chateau Candy and Jack Somerville call home. Instead of a staid drawing room, Mrs. Somerville likes a living room that measures up to its name. In the foreground is an arrangement of tulips, az.aleas and gerbers, with a painted version captured in an 18th Century still-life of lillies behind her. Amidst her Francophile furnishings, she injects a bit of diversion with a chrome and glass coffee table covered with tiny objects d'art and thick pictorial essays. Filmy and feminine, her red chiffon Holston from Saks­Jandel is set off with diamond drop earrings and bracelet designed by her husband.

2. The allurement of mauve, toned with grey, keynotes the living room with drapes of irridescent silk. The color was picked with the help of Interior Designer, Vada Morrell, to compliment two 18th century chinoiserie paintings on either side of the white marble mantle piece. At the far end of the room is a hand-carvedfruitwood etagere from the south of France, where apoleon mementoes rest along with rare books. In the center are two overstuffed sofas with rounded arms in a silk corded fabric that picks up the hint of pink. The mirror over the mantle is etched Venetian glass. In the foreground, Chinese porcelain antiques are grouped on a Louis XV writing table. Under foot is a rug designed by Mrs. Somerville with a border of pale lavender ribbons and musical instruments, based on historical motifs.

C andy Somerville made the first J major transition of her life at age seven when she switched first

names. And again as a junior in college when she left behind budding career plans, got married and began raising a family of three sons instead. Her third major transition got under way last month as she launched a new business and traded in 20 years of charity work.

Born Julia Elizabeth Crittendon, the Bethesda housewife turned entrepren­eur, was the 11th generation to bear the family name as she grew up along Chicago's suburban Lake Shore . But neither she nor her parents thought the moniker fit, so the name was switched to Candace on her seventh birthday after the family patriarch died.

Raised in the Chicago and New York area, she studied architecture at the University of Virginia before meeting Andrew Jackson (Jack) Somerville, a young swain who promptly proposed. The two were married and Jack was drafted during the Korean War. After his tour of duty, he resumed his studies at night school and took the helm of the family business.

One of the old-line families in the Washington area, Somerville proudly relates how his relatives fled France in 1066 during the Norman conquest and settled in Scotland. His kin came to Baltimore and Washington around 1800,

with his great grandfather starting the family wholesale plumbing business in 1891.

"We were married at a time when it was not fashionable to work," Mrs. Somer ille explains, seated in the French-style home she helped to design and decorate. "I wanted a career in television and I had a wonderful oppor­tunity," says the still-stylishly coiffed ash blond grandmother. But she chose raising a family instead.

Mrs. Somerville radiates with joy

3. Dinner is served in splendor in the French­inspired dining room. Guests sup from golden etched goblets at the fruit wood Regency refec­tory table with chairs in a Louis XV style with~ cane and a grey moire insert on the backs. Her antique commode and corner settee were part a five-piece salon set, with bisque figures of htl favorites, Napoleon and Josephine, resting on top (left side). The antique candlesticks of bront.e and marble with ormolu mounts highlight another of Mrs. Somerville's collectitd passions, tiny cherubs. The tinkling crystal chandelier, along with another in the circular ~ stairwell, were purchased in France. Above tht antique provincial mantle, the Louis XV mirr01

sparkles in the light . ........................................................... ..---. f'Lo.,.

10/ June 1980/Dossier PH01

Page 13: Washington Dossier June 1980

~'Low ER ARRANGEMENTS BY BILL LEGO OF NATURE"S TOUCH

PHOTOGRAPHED BY JOHN WHITMAN

The Somerville's pose in the den near an 18th century French lacquer pedestal desk with chinoiserie motif. The chair is hand-carved 18th century rosewood. The restful room features bleached oak wood paneling, sandy beige moire draperies and neutral plush carpeting. Flowers in the foreground are sun-gold lilies and bold rust red gerbers ore in a woven str_aw pitcher.

5. Bright and airy, the garden room of antique whitewashed Victorian w1cker is m bloom year-round, regardless of what's happening outside. A visually tactile room, it abounds in a variety of surfaces, with a grey slate floor skirted with a woven straw rug and bare brick walls. Pictures on the wall are Haitian and im­pressionistic selections, with an old-fashioned propeller fan ready to whirl overhead. The geranium pillows on the sofa were "finds" at the Valentino showroom in Rome. Floral pieces enhance the springtime feeling embodied by the timeless room.

Dossier/ June 19 0/ J/

Page 14: Washington Dossier June 1980

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when she speaks of her sons. Andy, 27, fl is described as the family's financial ~ wizard and is currently involved in com· mercia! real estate in Washington . Chuck, 24, declares advertising his N vocation and cartooning his avoca· tion-with an eye towards a syndicated A column. Scott, 21, is a student at the University of Maryland this semester.

Like their dad, who first hopped into the championship ring of Madison Square Garden at age five, the Somer· T ville sons all took to the saddle in their ~ youth. "I used to ride with my boys

19.

The Somervilles in their den.

when they were young and it was grea fun," their mother says. "But bof seem to lose interest in horses once the~

discover girls ." Their dad admits the same shift in in

terest, noting that he hasn't been on • horse in 20 years. But his interest still re mains strong. In 1968, he got the bll! for racing horses and started a stabl· which eventually claimed 17 steed Their Buckridge Farm is now a breed in! farm for such horses .

The Somerville home reflects t~ ·

family' s fondness for horses will trophies abundantly displayed in t~·

den, along with various sculptures an• paintings of horses and jockeys prom in ently displayed throughout.

she Wil Sp~

ba~ I

Ce1 ing Yea clai ton den dire

But the filly that still demands pri~ attention is the 12th generation Jub Elizabeth, daughter of son Chuck, w~1

wa born last September. " After th! Continued on Page 1 ......

Page 15: Washington Dossier June 1980

~ Curtain Going Up 0·

lis MAATIN FEINSlEIN :d A NEW FIRST FOR AN EBULLIENT IMPRESMIO he

ltO

on er· w hen the biography of Martin eir Feinstein is written (as it surely )ys must be one day), the year

1979 will stand out as a kind of water­shed for the ebullient impresario. As he Will be the first to tell you, 1979 was spectacular in two ways: spectacularly bad and spectacularly good.

Feinstein began that year as Kennedy ~enter's executive director of perform­Ing ans, the post he had held for eight Years filled with exciting "firsts" and ac­claim for his contributions to Washing­ton's cultural life. In September, sud-d~nly he was demoted to being simply director of opera and ballet. Word was

out that the "executive" post would not be refil1ed for "fiscal" reasons.

There were gasps, sighs and plenty of speculation . While the town buzzed with rumors and counter-rumors, by year 's end, Manin Feinstein had been named general director of the Washington Opera and by mid-January, 1980, he had also been appointed president of the National Symphony Orchestra.

Some say Feinstein couldn't get along with Roger Stevens-that even the enor­mous KenCen complex wasn't roomy enough for two stars of such magnitude. Chairman of the Board Stevens came to Washington in 1961 at the invitation of

Martin Feinstein and his two "bosses" pose in the KenCen's Hall of ations. Austin Kiplinger, Chairman of the Board for NSO and David Lloyd Kreeger, V.P. of the Washington Opera.

Dossier/ Jun e 19 0/IJ

Page 16: Washington Dossier June 1980

It's right below the horse·s hoof. The artist who designed ··The Aying Horse·· during the Han Dynasty (206 & -220 AD) put it there to symbolize the horse·s great speed. Our reproduction is 7-3/4'' high. and comes tn a satin-lined brocade presentation box. $135 includes shipping anywhere in the United States. Also available. one-of-a-kind antique-panel Chtnese tapestries. tncludtng manywtth the " forbidden stitch:· $300. Both. from our Oriental collection.

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14/ June 1980/Dossier

President Kennedy to plan a nationa ~~ cultural center and worked against near _I

PI" ly insuperable odds to make tha ' Camelot dream come true. So it wa un: Stevens who at long last got the Ken ned co1

Center together when the momentu( ~u after the President's assassination swer It~ plans along to achieve the center in hi c <

memory. ~<

Others will tell you that Martin Fei~ ~0

stein's remarkable accomplishments i: In~ bringing such stellar attractions to to~ :~e 1

were merely succes d'estime and n e good box office such as the Berlin an• ~ Y La Scala Operas, the Bolshoi and Stull 0 1

gart Ballets and festivals like Paris: T/i abE Romantic Epoch (which presented nc a c only the Paris Opera and Ballet but th end renowned Comedie Francaise, too, a (~; in one glorious package).

1 '

Feinstein garnered $6 million in sur co 1

port from foreign governments to prl gas~ sent their music, dance and theater, bl'

0 at.

despite SRO signs night after night, t~ r" Kennedy Center's bank account was 1 h the red. an

For whatever reason within that bri: ~e' span of three months, Martin FeinsteJ n uc lost his job at the center and became, i P~g, effect, its most prestigious client. Aftt \V~n all, both the National Symphony 0: th 0

chestra and the Washington Opera hoi 1. e I Ies 1 ong-term contracts to use the center or facilities. ~r

The son of Russian immigrant bu t

Feinstein grew up in the Williamsbuf fr 1 I section of Brooklyn, attended publ rn en1

school there, and after working his ws rn or: through CCNY, went on to achieve a coe MAin music from Wayne Universitlnoun Ever the perfectionist, he studied tt du 1? violin as a teenager, but only until t p ttr realized he had no talent for the instrl tr~ce ment. He absorbed music wherever a~ l~P.t whenever he could, though as a "libr lh llr to boy" at the Met, he revelled in lister ~rn ing to operas, and through an adr 8 e reciprocal agreement with CarneS bchec Hall, the ushers allowed him to atte~ (t~t tl lots of concerts. fo ey

Martin Feinstein's credentials in t lor tt world of performing arts are imp 1; s;s cable. He reached the pinnacle on t 10 e s 1

Own o, I . \Vh' After Army duty, Feinstein return. thelc~

to New York in 1946 and became assr l~ tant director of publicity for Sol Hur• ~1

and rose to become vice president n~llc Hurok concerts, staying with t jllb~st famous impresario until he joined tt~ tla Kennedy Center in 1972. bi~str,

The Feinstein ' rambling two-st O~h as house on a Virginia hillside boast taest.r, creek that runs through the garden abo Y. provides a complete getaway from t asts

Page 17: Washington Dossier June 1980

1na h~rly-burly of their hectic schedules. ~at ~ts wife, Bernice, an accomplished ha Ptanist, has a Ph.D. in music from Col­wa Umbia. She often lectures at the pre­ed: concert talks for the NSO and teaches tur ~usic at George Washington Univers­fer Ity .. The couple discusses repertory hi chotces for upcoming performances

and Martin boasts that Bernice knows 'ein ~ore of the whys but he's better versed s i In ~he whats. The three grown-up Fein­D"· stem children are John, 24, working for n the Washington Post; Mary, 21, taking an· ~Year off from Wesleyan to study in tull ome; and Robert, 18, at Duke. Th Entertaining for the Feinsteins is just nr about impossible since operas, plays

1 tt. anct concerts dot the calendar almost

1, a ~ry ~i~ht of the year. Linda Reynolds artm s secretary ever since he came

sur to the center) says they mostly throw prl cast ~artie , or small, impromptu bt' &athenngs for old friends like "Slava"

.' tt or "Isaac" (no last names needed!). ·~s i h "No, it won't be more difficult to

andle both the orchestra and the bril opera," he predicts . " In fact, it will be

1stei much easier than when I was having to

1e, i negotiate contracts, make contacts , Aftl Plan complicated festivals and import r 0: ~hole opera and ballet companies for hoi t. e Kennedy Center . M y responsibili­

rtter ttes were unbelievably taxing, with a lot Of travelling thrown in!"

·ant b Feinstein will still do some travelling, sbuf f Ut he's relieved it won't be at such a )ubi renetic pace. "There were always early .s w morning and late night planes rushing :ve e :e from city to city, and sometimes !rsitl 0Untry to country, " he notes, "with :d 1t ~ot~ing but dovetailing appointments ttil t Urtng the daytime hours.' ' Now his nstrt P~ce is more leisurely , like last month's er ao t•P.to Tokyo with the orchestra and the Jibre thalln American tour he'll take with Jiste em in mid-summer. adr Feinstein notes tha t the heavier rneg ~Chedule is planned for the orchestra, atter ( Ut they will offer more opera next year

tthey would offer still more if it weren t in tt

1 or the fact tha t the opera pro erbially

imp Bses money on every performance). on ~

1 e's excited about the Terrace Thea ter, ~o.' because it 's the kind of setting for

t urn thhtch smaller opera were written, and e as i ey can be performed a t a smaller cost. Hurl Feinstein predicts he will ma ke the lent fi ational Symph o n y Orche t ra t he th t tj~~~st in the country. "And," he sta tes led t ~ tlantly, "I can promise you that

b.0Stropovich is no t leaving. H e' every o-sto c tt as anxiou as I am to make the or­oastS ~estra truly great , and he wants to len a bay· " " Yo u know, our o rche tra" he om t oasts, " ha a great appeal to a con-

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Page 18: Washington Dossier June 1980

~r maks anp rxca:sim an af!Car to rememkr.

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16/ June 1980/Dossier

ductor because it really is national. DE Where else could you get the exposure you get here? And next season, when Co Slava has to be away, we will have a superb guest conductor-Fruhbeck De sor. Burgos." ing

Music is Feinstein's business, and he 1 frankly admits to boredom when he des doesn't have a part in it. "You know, I her probably have more butterflies on arc opening njght than the performers," he esp says "because I've been involved in the Pur whole production, shared all the aggra· Pal vations and weathered every crisiS· hor That means each success is an enor· out mous satisfaction and thrill."

The important tools for a modern· da} day impresario, according to Feinstein. Th; are imagination, taste, knowledge, and thu experience, in just about that order. tha1 Next, he recommends understanding, F compassion, and direction, a talent ht trar describes as the ability to walk the tight Cat rope between art and box office. Iller

"And, oh yes," he remembers tC the add, "an impresario has to recognizt flor that his own personal dislikes may bt her just what someone else likes best. Takt star me, for example. I just can't listen tr " the Venusberg music, that second act hel~

for instance. But there are plenty ol Vest others who long to hear it. I try to keef "M in mind that we can't be expected tC love please nearly 3000 people every night in tl and that there has to be a balanced s( repertory to balance the budget." in c

But the most important tool of all fol bills an impresario? Without a moment'! Son hesitation, Martin Feinstein has thl sptu answer. "Money." eye

-ANNE DENTON BLAIF anti1

COMING IN JUNE

Ill en COUt title Won sists. ''Yo

Olney Theater's 28th season has opened: to C<

until June 22, A Murder is Announced the t (Agatha Christie, of course) .. . the~ L( Ayckbourn's hilarious Bedroom Farce, lows June 24 - July 13 ... Joseph & Tbf tie b. Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat plaf. Peen through July 13 at Ford's Theater . · VilJe and at the Hartke Theater, CU's Sui11' Partr mer Opera Theater Co: Madame out· ''J terfly, June 25, 27, 29, July 2, 4, 6,. · · futa

1 Lebar's Merry Widow, July 16, 18, zo, hous 23, 25, 27. In the Eisenhower, June 1 neect -July 20, Who's Life is it Anyway? . · &ets , June 30 in the Opera House, 42nd Street· You 1 At Wolf Trap, American DanceTheatet• "C June 16; PDQ Bach with Prof. Peter like Schickele and the NSO, June 20. C tie ~·

notes

Page 19: Washington Dossier June 1980

a!. ue ,en : a De

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rn· :ill· tnd leT· ng. hi

ghl

tC

tiZI bC

akt 1 tC

act ol

eer I tC rghl .ced

for nt! thl

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DESIGN

Continued from Page 12

~ons, we can't believe it!" says a beam-tng grandma Somerville.

Her brick Norman home which she designed took two years to plan, reflects her fascination with French furniture, architecture and historical figures, especially Napoleon. Pinks, taupes, PUrples and luxurious greens are the Palette with which she paints her home-and every inch of it, inside and out, is splashed with flowers.

"I love flowers. On the gloomiest days I will run out and buy anemones . That brightens up life," she says en-thusiastically . It was this special love that motivated her new business venture.

Five years ago she met Bill Lego, a transplanted Ohioan who had rooted in California and bloomed as an environ-mental florist. Mrs . Somerville admired the man's use of natural themes in his ~oral arrangements. Earlier this year, e moved to Washington with plans for

starting his own shop. "H e was looking for an 'angel' to

help him and I was looking for an in-~.estment," Mrs. Somerville recounts .

1 Myhusband said, 'Allyourlifeyou' e

.oved flowers. If you want to back Bill tn this venture, it' s your decision. ' " . So the two launched Nature' s fouch ~~Chevy Chase last month. "My florist stlis Were like the war debt," says Mrs.

Omerville of her previous floral Splurges. Now she s turned her trained eye. to accessorizing the store, buying anttques for it and rustling up custo-lllers . She has no plans to man the ~?Unter from 9 to 5 or for trading in her Hie of traveling wife for working ~oman. Jack still comes first, she in-~~sts, but she loves her new venture. t You'd better believe it' s like going in-t~ combat," she stresses as she tells of

e horrors of starting a store .

1 Lego works with twigs, pussy wil-

1fWs? dried pods, cones and delicate lit-p e btrds that would fool their chirping v~ers . His best showcase is the Somer-P1 le home where the artistry of the two a~~ners merge.

f Jack and I like things bright, cheer-hut and light," says Candy. It is a family ouse, certainly much greater than we

need at this po int in our lives. As one &ets older and the children are grown ~ f ' ~ tnd you are less fo rmal. ' i'k Our home reflects a quietness. We t; e to get away from the bustle and hu -

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Page 20: Washington Dossier June 1980

n retrospect the world seemed almost serene. Jerry Ford was in the White House. Inflation was

descending from double digits. The hangover of the sixties was facling and the last echo of Watergate was clisintegrating into a whimper.

It was June, 1975, and the Washington Dossier had burst on the Washington scene with a ringing manifesto that it was to be "A New Kind of Alternative Mectia."

"Let the other media overindulge itself on misery, gorge on disaster.", the front page editorial read. "Our world is the Washington scene that operates quite independently from the

End of era symbols abound in Washington. This one seemed to

ring down the curtain on the Watergate trauma with Tip O'Neill

embracing Judge John Sirica and House Judiciary Chairman Peter

Rodino.

18/June 1980/Dossier

Shirley Temple Black, barely remembering her days as

America's favorite little girl, was a popular Chief of Pro­

tocol during the Ford ad­ministration.

bureaucratic malaise. Our heroes and heroines are not the power figures of the moment, tomorrow's political ghosts, but the Princes and Princesses of a far more enduring milieu, half fantasy, half reality, but never boring. Above all, never boring."

In a city where doomsayers are as en­demic as air pollution, few gave us more than six· months to live. We passed that milestone, but not without a struggle. Not only that, we survived the decade and it looks as though we could survive the century. So much for pessimists.

We pride ourselves on being the chron­icle of social life in the nation's capital,

a human comedy of our times in picture and text. We see ourselves as reporting a kind of side-bar to history and envision scholars of the future pouring over micro-filmed issues to find out how' people in the Capital really lived whell the world was half-mad.

Indeed, we hadn't expected the Dossier to become a collector's item and are perpetually amazed when people tell u that they have saved every one of our first sixty issues.

We've saved them as well and here· with present a kind of cursory, overvie\1 of what each Washington year was all about in the pages of the Dossier.

Page 21: Washington Dossier June 1980

The relentless march of time is reflected by this trio of nice guys who made a

profound impact on America 's political life. (L ro R) Rogers Morton, elson

Rockefeller and Hubert Humphrey, all of blessed memory.

Washington's social world had its special symbols as well. Tandy Dickinson and Tongsun Park were a high flying duo on the local scene before Tongsun was to make international waves.

Dossier/ June /980119

Page 22: Washington Dossier June 1980

10/ June 19 0/Dossier

Looking every inch the Argentinian gaucho, Alejandro Orfila postures on a horse at Washington's annual Horseshow. The irrepressible Argenti­nian, now married, and Secretary General of the OAS still cuts a wide swath in town.

ancy Collins (left) took on the near im­possible assignment of writing a hard

gossip column for the Washington Post. Here she gets advice from Sally Quinn,

now Mrs. Ben 8radlee. Nancy's with the Star now.

They were the undiSputed her06 of our town's hostage taking of 8 'na1 8 'rith by Hanafi terrorists. (L toR) Egyptian Am­bassador Ashraf Ghorbal, still posted here; Pakistani Yaqub Kahn, back in Pakistan and Iranian Ambassador Ardeshir Zahedi, now in European exile.

Page 23: Washington Dossier June 1980

Washingron always went wild over British rt:Jyalry. Here Queen Elizaberh greets the late Alice Roosevelr Longworth, a kind of Washingron royalty herself ar a receprion line during a Stare dinner at the White House.

A bemedaled John Warner and a bejeweled Lil Taylor became the premier couple of Washington where Lit became a political wife and John became an excellent Senator, I hereby merging rhe rwo branches of rhe ac-

____ _..L:....;!:..._ _______ ...J ling profession.

Ardeshir Zahedi was the undisputed entertainment king of Wa hington. Tong un Park was a clo e second. George AU en was coa h of the Redskins. Alejandro Orfila, then the Argentine Ambassador v as a single social lion. The Mandell Ouri man's were on every hostesses list. They till are. E a Gabor with husband Frank Jamison wa pop­ping in and out of tO\ n and Marion Ja its had temporarily redisco ered Washington. Patrick Daly was shep­herding foreign dignitaries around the country and Shirley Temple Black was Chief of Protocol. Stuan S_ mington, then single, was seen dancing with Chri tina Ford, then married, at the Iranian Emba . Su an Ford " as get­ting poor mark at the Mount emon School. partments at Foxhall were elling for a low a 122,500 and it was till po ible to get a hou e in a great

neighborhood for about 150,000. Henr Ki inger v a getting fat. Peter Malate ta v a op ning Pi e . Warner

Dossier/ June 19 0121

Page 24: Washington Dossier June 1980

Nobody knows what they're really thinking but here three ex-Secretaries of State (Vance

was still in office) share an affably diplomatic chat. (L to R) Vance, Rogers, Kissinger.

The undisputed Peck's bad boy of the

Carter administration, Hamilton Jordan, had

troubles gelling used to wearing a black tie.

Walter Washington, was Mayor during tough times. Here he's shown with Sterl­ing Tucker, who, in­explicably, also wanted the job which, ironically, Marion Barry holds now.

Gov. Marvin Mandel and wife Jean, joined friends at Laurel during hap­pier times. The Governor, convicted of irregularities will be spending the next year or so in stir.

11/June 1980/Dossier

Wolf was appearing in fashion show . A.. Rose Marie Bogley looked smashing. P< She still does. Brooke Farland wa the w; toast of the single set. Steven Martindale W1

was throwing parties. As wa Allison ch LaLand. Howard Devron and hi or- Je chestra were playing at the White Hou e. B< Hubert Humphrey spoke everywhere. H Long Day's Journey was appearing at D1 Arena Stage. Barbara Howar' inside AJ book on Washington was just out in K; paperback. Alex Comfort had published Be "The Joy of Sex". Eugene Cowan wa Ec dancing the Highland Fling in Scotland. at Page Lee Hufty was doing the town. of Jack Kauffmann and Walter Hodge a~

were charming everybody. Nelson and W<

Happy warmed up the Vice Presidential be mansion. Julie and David were just step· SOJ

ping out again. Mike O'Harro opened Wq Tramp . Scooter and Dale Miller were Al1 busy organizing charity events. Esther njc Coopersmith wa raising money for stil pols . Congre sman Goodloe Byron was Ta jogging. Gil and Jane Gude were cycling. Za

Page 25: Washington Dossier June 1980

i· Andy Warhol popped into town for a Everything was still

~· party at Peter Malatesta's. Rog Morton buddy-buddy with the Shah and the 1e was Secretary of Commerce. Ed Brooke President on the le went to a Halloween party as Fu Man- Shah's fast visit.

Ill chu. Larry Pressler was a Congressman. Washington is stiff r- Jennifer Crowley married Ari Molean. reefing from Iran's e. Bob Dole married Elizabeth Hanford. going down the

drain. e. Helen Burns was writing poetry. Paul at DeLisle was still at Sans Souci. Joe de Allbritton bought The Star. The Jack in Kauffmanns went up in a balloon. Pearl ed Bailey was the toast of the White Hou e. as Ed van Kloberg was Dean of Admission d. at AU . Jackie 0 came to town a the date ·n. of Alex Or fila. Kay Shouse was planning :e a great season at Wolf Trap. Ken Crosby The down home nd was everywhere. Woodies began in-store gathering on the ial benefits with a Soviet exhibition. Hand- White House lawn

was the favorite :p· some UAE Ambassador Saeed Ghobash entertainment of the 1ed was the town's new heartthrob. Harry Carters. This ~re Alexander was still a Judge. The Zlot- priceless picture 1er nicks were entertaining. Collins Bird was gives some idea of

For still married to the Georgetown Inn. Liz what a thriff it was for the kids who va Taylor came to town to visit Arde hir mugged it up for rhe

ng. Zahedi. camera.

Dossier/June 1980/l _f

Page 26: Washington Dossier June 1980

Rostropovich, after defection has become the darling of Washington musical society, conduc­

ting the National Symphony and becoming a popular figure in town. Here he is with his cons­

tant companion and inspiration, Pooks.

70~77 John Warner, Bicentennial Adminis­

trator was invited to the British Em­bassy. Liz Taylor was his blind date. The Travelers Aid Ball was held in the newly built Visitor's Center at Union Station. Popular Mauritanian Ambas­sador Ahmedou Abdallah left Wash­ington. Spiro Agnew's novel came out. Preston Jones' "Texas Trilogy" was produced by Arena Stage. Houses in good neighborhoods were edging toward $200,000. Paul McCartney was thinking of buying a house in Great Falls. The Danish Queen and Spanish King came to visit. Robert Mitchum came to dinner at the Cyprus Ambas­sador's residence. Leonard Bernstein and Marta Istomin met at the OAS. Lola Sarnoff showed off her fiber optic sculptures. Queen Elizabeth came to visit. Joe Danzansky declared wife Ethel his favorite tennis singles partner. House Speaker Carl Albert resigned. Dossier ran first color cover in September with Madame Timothee Ahoua featured. La Scala came to Washington . Mrs. Birch Bayh and her Senator husband visited the Iranian Embassy. Sixty Washington diplomats attended the National political conven­tions. Howard de Franceaux talked of

14/June /980/ Dossier

Often misunderstood· sometimes brilliant one

abrasive, and, filled with higl Polish spirit Zbigniew Brzezinsk

is sure to give photographers good example of earth!

playfulness during a night on th1

town

When the Chinese Vice Premier came to town Richard Nixon returned to the White Housefo1

a State Dinner. Winning in­credibly high marks for durabi/1' ty and tenacity, Nixon, after hiS Watergate disgrace, seems to bt making his 2/4th comeback.

Amy has changed schools artd has managed to lead a pleasant/!

norma/life as the nation's Jir5J child. She's growing up now afl

time will tell if she mightleP0 even a more anonymous life 1~

thejuturl

W, up La Sti1 fre (8,

Page 27: Washington Dossier June 1980

With their late husbands undoubtedly raising up a political storm in the great beyond, Lady Bird Johnson and Muriel Humphrey stilt dart back and forth across America with frequent nesting in the Washington area. (Below)

Abe Pol/in holds up the World Champ­ionship Trophy for his beloved Bullets.

By sheer will Abe had created the Capital Centre and retrieved sports for this area.

the glories of his Cuisinart machine. Tongsun Park was being investigated for alJeged bribery of congressmen. Hubert Humphrey was back in tO\ n after a bout with urgery. Shirley Wilson, wife of Congressman Bob, laid the keel of sub "La Jolla". Nixon sold the rights to his book. Dossier picked the ten most eligible bachelors. (Fifty percent are now married.) F.B.I. Direc­tor Clarence KelJey took a new bride. John Warner married Elizabeth Taylor. Diana McLellan took over "Ear" after co-partner Louise Lague left for N.Y. Tandy stuck by Tongsun. Jimm Carter was elected President. A crowd of near­ly 2000 filled the Iranian Embassy for birthday of the Shah. Greer Garson came to town. Joe Sisco was formally sworn in as President of American University. Jerry Ford posed for the cover of Dossier as friends sent notes of farewell. Carter promised no more "Hail to the Chief". Mrs. Mike Blumenthal looked for a house with a tennis court. Larry I rael left Washington Post. Rex Harrison was guest at True Da is' house. Henry Ford threw a party at the F Street club. Nancy Collins began go ip column for the Wa hington Post. Pat Mit hell" a ne'' Panorama ho t. Bloomie opened it first Wa hington area tore. Alex Or fila married hi beautiful Helga. Liv Ullman i ited, met old flame Henry Ki inger, now married to an y.

Doss1er/ June 19 0/15

Page 28: Washington Dossier June 1980

Liz Taylor posed for cover. New Carter faces on Washington scene. They kept to themselves and were rarely seen at social events. Liz Ray went religious. Joan Kennedy bad personal problems. Tongsun Park had left town. Deena Clark interviewed Arthur Burns. Former Ambassador John Jova took over at Meridian House. William Sa fire published Full Disclosure. Victor Lasky wrote ''It Didn't Start with Watergate''. Houses in good neighborhoods were going for well over $200,000. Burt Lance was getting shaky as Budget Director. Ham Jordan wa making waves. Zahedi was rumored to be going back to Iran. The Tra elers Aid Ball was held in the International Monetary Fund BuHding. Princess Anne came to town. The Italian AmbassaJor threw his first parry at newly purcha ed Firenze House. Sen. Hayaka\ a showed his dancing prowess. Esther Cooper­smith threw a party for Steve Bell, ABC Good Morning America man. Henry Kissinger wa still talking to Zbig Brzezinski. The Panama Canal treaty was signed. Ham Jordan struck up beer guzzling friendship with General Torri­jos. Peter Jay was appointed new Brit­ish Ambassador. Egyptian Ambas a­dor Ashraf Ghorbal was making many friends. Sally Quinn was on the cover of Dossier. Kay Shou e and Roger tevens planned more theater space in their respecti e institutions. Claudia Ray­ford was the first black woman to head D.C. wives Auxiliary. John Mitchell wa serving time but applied to get out for hip operation. Jim Bellows left as editor of Star to join Hear t in L.A. Hubert Humphrey was looking weaker. George Allen was fired as Redskin coach. Francois de Laboulaye wa ap­pointed the new French Ambassador. John Brademas married his Mary Ellen. Carter's idea of a down home White House fell by the wayside with fir t elegant party in the executi e manse. Barbara Walter came to town fre­quently with date Alan Greenspan. Am­bassador of icaragua Guillermo Se illa-Saca a, dean of the Diplomatic Corp went to his 300th party of the year.

26/June 1980/ Dossier

Ardeshir Zahedi reported that 7,000 guests were entertained at the Embassy last year, including 2,000 Iranians. Liz Taylor was Chairman of the Wolf Trap

I Gala. Dr. Victoria Schuck became the sixth Pre ident of Mount Vernon Col­lege. Liv Biddle was appointed to head the National Endowment for the Arts. Betty Ford astonished Washington by revealing drug and alcohol problems. Olivia de Havilland came to town. John McGoff held a party on his yacht Global Star on the Potomac. A house in a good Washington neighborhood was now heading past $250,000 and rising fast. Carter vowed to fight inflation. OPEC began new round of price rises. Peter Bourne resigned over false pre­scription. Leo Ryan started planning to visit Jonestown. Gwen Cafritz threw first party in five years. Time Inc. bought the Washington Star. Planning for new Convention Center moved one step closer. Peoples Drug stores moved up under dynamic President Bud Fantle. Moroccan Ambassador Ali Bengelloun started to entertain frequently. Amy Carter's class visited the Spanish Em­bassy. White Flint opened. Carol Chan­ning entertained at I. Magnin. The African Museum showed Art from Zaire. True Davis headed the Horse Show. Carterites finally discovered Dukes. Kitty Kelley's "Jackie 0" book was an instant smash. Myles Ambrose married Joan Fitzpatrick. Department stores threw open their doors for big benefit galas. Da id Chambers took over from Zelda Fichandler at Arena while she took sabbatical. Ben Bradlee married Sally Quinn. Marvella Bayh was failing. Superman flick had a major promo in town. New Irish Ambassador Sean Donlon came to town. Larry Pressler elected Senator. Roots II was pre iewed at the KenCen. Carter was sinking in polls. Congressional wives threw third annual Chili cook-off. Son­ny Werblin bought the Washington Dips.

Houses were running between $300,000 and up, way up, in our town's best neighborhood . Alice Longworth Roosevelt had died ... Jimmy Carter hadn't gotten inflation under control. The prime rate had passed 20% and the real estate business had quieted down, although prices were still high. The ec hostages were taken. Zahedi had long of gone. The Iranian Embassy was in the o hands of arrogant monsters. Tongsun Park had returned to Washington. so Martin Feinstein had resigned a be: KenCen Executive Director for Opera sp and Symphony post. ewton Steer be married Gabriele and will run again for th

1

Congress. A tribute to Walter Hodge Ill( was held at the Ford's Theater. Soviet ste Ambassador Do bryn in replaced Sevilla· ve

1 Sacasa as Dean of the Diplomatic Corps. 111e Henry Kissinger published hi memoir bu and got thinner. Richard Valeriani mar· an ried. The Pope came to visit. Washing-co; ton theater expanded. Cece and Ed Zor·ge in ky were busy on the social scene. ~ New hotels opened in town. The George·th~ town Inn was sold. Ed Williams boughlthe the Baltimore Orioles. Shirley Wilso!l''at launched "La Jolla". Former Iranial1t0 I Embassy official Ali Tabatabai formedget. an anti-Khomeini group. Ted Kennedltion challenged Carter. Reagan was th noct GOP front-runner. Budget cuts ha hat begun to worry arts groups. Jake Javit. 0 announced he would run again. Ford lhe Theater produced the smash hit "Mr Lincoln". Vance quit. Carter movCI out of the Rose Garden.

• • • Too much has happened in thi Ia

half decade for us to ab orb and under stand. It seems, at the moment, that th' optimism of the mid-seventies ha dissolved into a cold creeping pe simism that shakes our faith an dampens our pirit.

But there are peak and valleys in al human endea or , and, we believe ir our hearts that 'This, too, hall pa ,. We at the Dossier refuse to yield t

j gloom and doom, and will continue t

I hold our miling eye on the Wa hingto cene, which, no matter what, bur t

with energy and activity, truly a huma~

comedy. And i rarely boring. L

I

Page 29: Washington Dossier June 1980

en n's rth ter ol. the

~~; Anyone who has survived, with, · g eclat, and a sense of humor, a marriage ~~e of 5 to 15 to 50 years certainly

n DESERVES a celebration. ;u There are no fail -safe formula or et )O· so lution for planning an Anniver ary a

3 bash. The late popular protocol

er Speciali t arolyn Hagner haw, in her :~rr book on Modern Manner publi hed in ~ the 1950's, advise against invnmg

:iel mere acquaintance , and uggests in­lla· stead. including only close family and ·ps. very mtimate friend . he a t o recom­:>ir ~ends ending engraved invitations, tar· Ut. warn again t announcing it's an ng· ann ,ver ary, in case recipient feel . or· 0 rnpelled to end gift ... which i still ' generall y a socia l "no no! ' ·ne. S ' e· haw's Modern Manners also notes r:htt~at. such celebrations are usually on 1

o!l~• e tnformal side ranging from being ~an at home" in the afternoon or evening 11 e~o buffet suppers, or just an evening

~dlt'et-together. Supper dances and recep­th . tons of a more formal sort also get the ha ~oct ... along with the gentle reminder

. , at "it's really up to you." ·rd\n Obviou ly things ha e changed in Mr e 20th Century NOW . Jean Shaw

> e

Ia' der t thl ha pe an

CELEBRATING THEMT

OF SURVIVAL

By Patty Cavin

Murray, " allie' ' daughter and publisher of the 'Green Book" found­ed by her grandmother Helen Ray Hagner, hun corner utting but doe admit that anni er ary partie hould be caled to the celebrant comfort le el. Not painful," he ay , ' but fun."

Don't feel that you have to do it like

the Jone es. she aution . "If you don't have a big hou e or belong to a

club, u e your O\! n urrounding and keep the party mall."

Jean and her husband Tom celebrated their own 25th with a sum­mer cocktail buffet in their Ken ingtan garden put on b their five hildren who handled all detail from preparing the food (Jean remembers lobster alad) to calling the gue t . The bride

and groom atop their anni er ary cake ' a the arne bride and groom from their wedding.

If you ti k to the the old-fashioned formula of family and ju t clo e friend , "The Anni ersary Party" is the ea ie t kind to give. Take for in-tance Scooter and Dale Miller' 25th

Bazoo. LBJ and Ladybird John on' close Te as friend planned a mall in­formal cocktail dinner party to tart in their apartment, ' hich was then at the Mayflower Hotel. The Pre ident and his Lady plu the Miller married daughter Marta (who wa born three year after they aid I do") were among the twel e couple who attend-

Continued on Page 64

Dossier/June /9 0127

Page 30: Washington Dossier June 1980

5 c (

ALLISON LaLAND1S PAR1Y TIPS 5· c A 3;

AN EXPERT TELLS HOW 1D DO IT a 0 54 c< E:a 33 Cc 'ft 42-Co CCI 7~

Co

More parties are given in Washington, D.C. than in any city of its size in the world, says social historian Hope Rid­ings Miller, and most people rarely turn a party down.

This makes it a perfect town for creative hostesses like AlHson LaLand who bas made a career of giving parties.

LaLand was one of Perle Mesta's protegees. She learned her party-giving skills at Mesta's tea table and is just as organized and perfection-oriented. A friend says: "Allison doesn't just give parties. She stages and produces them like plays."

Five years ago LaLand launched her­self on the lecture circuit speaking to small groups of women on the subject "Parties as an Art Form." Today she has graduated to a place on the Town Hall Celebrity Series talking with the Hkes of George PHmpton and Olivia de Havilland to audiences of up to 1,500 persons. She now gives about 20 lec­tures a year on the subject: "The Im­pact of White House Entertaining from the Washingtons to the Carters." She likes to remind listeners that President John Adams, hardly a frivolous man, once remarked: "One dinner is worth a hundred meetings."

Guests still talk about the Georgia­Brought-to-Maryland Hunt Breakfast, Allison staged at Cremona, a Patuxent River plantation she borrowed for a party saluting Chief of Protocol Marion

281 June /9801 Dossier

Smoak and his wife Francie in 1974. Guests were feted with milk punches, garlic cheese grits, pheasant on hominy, scalloped oysters, beaten biscuits with smoked ham and fresh Georgia peach ice cream. All this was long before Carter. Allison, too, is a Georgian.

Others remember fondly the southern­style dinner dance she produced for then Attorney General Griffin Bell and his wife Mary at the City Tavern. Wear­ing a specially designed Scarlett O'Hara -like gown, LaLand Jed her guests to a dining room decorated with salmon­clothed tables, and fan-shaped napkins exuding the sweet scent of gardenia. On the tables five-branch candelabra were circled with massed camellias and green smilax. For placecards, guests names were lettered in gold on real magnolia leaves.

Allison is particularly proud of the parties she has staged in historic homes like Anchorage House in Alexandria or Dumbarton in Georgetown. At the latter, she put together a George-and-Martha­Washington dinner, complete with harp­ist to fete former Attorney General William Saxbe and his wife Dolly before he left to become Ambassador to India.

On another occasion she divided the Federal City Club room into two with a garlanded white trellis for a garden dance. Tubs of shaved ice with ready-

Continued on Page 54

PMTIES ASANMTFORM

My Top Ten How-To's by Allison LaLand

I. Have a creative theme. Develop it with invitations, food, music and decorations.

2. Search out new places for your par· ties-your rec room, garage, swimming pool-or move the party to a restaurant or club.

3. Envision your party as a whole, com· plete work of art with a beginning, mid· die and planned ending. Don't let your party run down to nothingness.

4. Establish a rhythm. Move from room to room, table to table.

5. Plan the timing of each segment of the party so that it ends at its peak. Keep the party moving from one high point to another. 6. Use lighting to create a mood. Use fair· ly bright lights for cocktails and dim them progressively as the evening unfolds.

7. Add to the excitement of the party bY having an exchange of toasts.

8. Plan music even if it's just a record player. Position it where it can be heard.

'fb 546 Co1

Cat 546· Cor

The 347-Con She1 638-: Coni

She• 328-; Cont Rya1 737-1 ConL

Hay 638-2 Cont1

9. Test your menu in advance . Have rehearsals with those serving even if Capli they're your own children. 393-ll

10. Once the party's started, give your Conta guests your full attention. Wash

L_ _____________ ~ 483-3( Conta

Page 31: Washington Dossier June 1980

itll ns. a r­ing ant

m­.id­)Uf

om

the the

tO

y bY

~ord

ard.

-lave :n if

Caterers Ridgewells 652-1515 Contact: Bruce Ellis,

Jeff Ellis Finesse 965-2672 Contact: Marge Guarasci Paris Caterers 530-5402 Contact: Bill Paris Avignone Freres 265-0332 Contact: John Orcino B&B Caterers 829-8640 Contact: Mr. Longley Lucks Caterers 949-5558 Contact: Mrs. Lucks Braun's 559-2400 Contact: W. William Marsh Ill Capitol Hill Caterers 543-2455 Contact: The Smith Family American Cafe 337-3601 Contact: Valerie Gift Dell of Capitol Hill 547-8668 Contact: Charles Solmon Eagle Wine & Cheese 333-6655 Contact: Barbara Day The Elegant Gourmet 424-7910 Contact: Mr. Freed Corniche Gourmet Gallery 764-FOOD Contact: Jeanne Fleming,

Susie Fischer The Broker 546-8300 Contact: Bill Holman

Capitol Hill Wine and Cheese 546-4600 Contact: John Rusnak

Hotels The Mayflower 347-3000 Contact: Virginia Washburn Sheraton Carlton 638-2626 Contact: Michael Farearo Sheraton Park 328-2000 Contact: Gary Budge Hyatt Regency 737-1234 Contact: Lynn Spence Hay Adams 638-2260 Contact: Donna Tyree,

Danielle Mosse Capital Hilton 393-1000

your Contact: Mohammed lhsen Washington Hilton 483-3000 Contact: Paul Limbert

Dossiers Recommended Party Services

A Checl\list for the Party Giver Here you will find a list of those

businesses that provide, in our judgment, the most efficient services available in the area. This does not mean that there aren't others we have missed who provide equal services to those on this recommended list. Our judgments are made on the basis of past experiences and observations and are, ad­mittedly, subjective.

Madison Hotel g62-1600 Contact: Stevan Werlinich Fairfax Hotel 293-2100 Contact: Jackie Godman-Irvine Watergate Hotel 965-2300 Contact: John Attus,

Nancy Hurst Embassy Row 265-1600 Contact: Haleta Ferris Loew's L'Enfant Plaza 484-1000 Contact: Ann Brody

Invitations Copenhaver Inc. 232-1200 Contact: George Ponce Brewood 223-2300 Contact: Chester Richardson Scriptorium 549-2880 Contact: Judy Shavin Garflnckels 628-7730 Contact: Dorethe Whitehead Woodward & Lothrop 347-5300 Contact: Fred Minger Creative Parties 770-1550 Contact : Rita Bloom Communique 299-8222 Contact: Phyliss Sheftell,

Dorothy Schikevitz

Florists Angelo Bonita Custom Florist 232-6232 Contact: Angelo Bonita Floral Arts of Chevy Chase 362-7800 Contact: Barbara Rudoph,

Michael Bonnet

Nature's Touch 362-2782 Contact: Bill Lego Flower Gallery 331-1453 Contact: Tom Powell The Flower Designer Inc. 966-3400 Contact: George Skelton Flowers 298-6363 Contact: David Elsworth,

Terry Smith Friendship Flower Shop 966-4405 Contact: Ken Holden Dove 333-3366 Contact: Bill Dove Blackistone 244-7722 Contact: Bob Smith Mark Turner Flowers Ltd. 965-1960 Contact: Mark Turner

Music Gene Donati - Morgan Baer 667-6316 Contact: Eugene Donati Washington Talent Agency 468-5700 Group: The Sixpence Contact: Jeff Rubin Howard Devron 462-4334 Shoreham Hotel Contact: Howard Devron Discotheque International 573-1309 Contact: Leo Paraskevas Looney Toones Disco, Big Band, Golden Oldies et al. 533-3277 or 225-2513

Bakers Clements Pastry Shop 628-4151 Contact: Elise Bray

Schupp's Bakery 966-7012 Contact: Loretta Espey Watergate Pastry 965-5250 Contact: lnga Schneider,

Gina Bailey

Table Decorations DoUy Kay Design Ltd. 966-0925 Contact: Dolly Kay The Paper Store 770-7110 Contact: Judy Berman Karen's Table Thing 549-6262 Contact: Karen Kraemer

Gifts Sterling GaUery 244-1031 Contact: Leila Lopez W&J Sloane 659-9200 Contact: Lucy King Rainbow Gifts Ltd. 244-3937 Contact: Lynn Segal Martin's 338-6144 Contact: Sharon Langford Camaller & Buckley 347-9500 Contact: Lisa Zimmerman The Madison Shop 862-1739 Contact: Lucie Khachadourian Haymarket 543-5051 Contact: Barbara Thomas Mendelsohn Gallerie: 656-2766 Contact: Laurence Lomax Krupsaw 628-5640 Contact: Stanley Krupsaw Watergate Collection 338-8626 Contact: Carol Bloom Mole Hole 333-3222 Contact: Elizabeth Mize Gift Horse 659-4300 Contact: Bourne Garner The Gazebo 656-8773 Contact: Arlene Esterman Watergate Fine & Fancy 333-0637 Contact: Cherie Blumenthal All Major Department tores

Rentals A-1 Rental Center 941-3520 Contact: Don Berger Taylor Rental Center 938-4807 Contact: Ty Brooke HDO Productions (tents, dance floors) 881-8700 Contact: Susan Garner,

Linda Armsey

Dossier/June 1980129

Page 32: Washington Dossier June 1980

in our tender shirtdress

with a Slveatervest

Evelyn de Jonge's challis sprigged with pink

and lavender flowers on o field of block rayon.

And lavender sweotervested in downy

lombswool-ongoro-nylon. For sizes 4 to 14, 100.00

Lord & Taylor, Washington-Chevy Chose ­

call 362-9600; Falls Church-col/ 536-5000 :

White Flint-col/ 770-9000 . ..

Page 33: Washington Dossier June 1980

)

[.1

s

t

n.

lY )Q

0;

D.

J

Along Party Lines SOCII\L AFFAIRS IN THE WORLD OF WASHINGTON

A CORCORAN ANNIVERSARY

ALL THAT GLITTERS: South Afri­ca had nothing on the Corcoran Gallery on the night of the Twenty Fifth Annual Corcoran Ball sponsored by the Trustees anct the Women's Committee. Every­thing was gold - mylar tablecloths, gold streamers on the marble columns, gold flowers and fans . .. Over 1200 art-loving contributors lOined the Belgian Ambassador and

Mrs. Schoumaker, David Lloyd Kreeger and wife Carmen, and Director Peter Marzio to wine, dine and dance to three orchestras and a string trio.

Armand Hammer flew in by private plane. Rose Marie Bogley, came fresh from Jamaica with the toastiest tan in town. Dottie Kidder on the arm of hus­band Randy, wore a wowey cluster of big gold leaves designed in Paris that totally framed her face. Trustee Gilbert H. Kinney shared a table with fellow Trustee Ray Sherer and Barbara, and Betsy and Michael Rea.

The Elliott Richardsons and the Wy-

nant Vanderpools danced downstairs. Spotted in the golden crush were Mandy and Betty Ourisman, Senator Claiborne Pelt, the Lee Folgers, Ducky and Arnie Block, the George Denbys, George and Nancy Ferris, Stanley and Lolo arnoff, and the Ken Crosbys.

Former Amba sador Jo eph John Jova prowled thru the special Van­tongerloo exhibit with pretty wife Pam, as did blonde Betty Tarr and escort Hal Crowell. Former Amba sador Luciu Battle summed up the gala when he said, "this is always THE BEST party in town! ' -ARAMINTA

~ogo Kiplinger and Rose Marie Bog ley view South African Ambassador Donald Bell Sole The indomitable Gwen Cal ritz arrives on the e action In the great hall. and Ann Wallick swing on the dance floor. arm of Corcoran Director Peter Marzio.

Dossier/June 19 0/J/

Page 34: Washington Dossier June 1980

32/ June /980/Dossier

DESIGNING FOR CHMilY The gala black-tie preview party which

opened the 1980 ASID show house, Box­wood, dazzled guests and left them full of bright new ideas to design.

Created by 35 members of the Potomac chapter of the American Socie­ty of Interior Designers, Boxwood was designed specifically for the family who actually lives in the Chevy Chase home, the Paul Anthonys. The benefit showing was sponsored by the American Cancer Society, Montgomery County Unit. r. -

2. Setting an eclectic and formal mood , Reginald Wolfe and Jo Dee Gonzalez furnished a small breakfast room In chocolate brown, _ with an antique armoire, French chairs, a contem· porary table, balloon shades and white tulips.

3 . ASID Boxwood co­chairman Constance Mercer Is seated in the Georgian style dining room by John Peters Irelan. A mixture of French and English anti· ques, the room was design· ed to accommodate eight to forty people for dinner.

4. Taking advantage of the dormer ceil ing, Milo Hoots and Marty Cathcart created a softly lit futurist ic enter­tainment room in the attic. "I ' ll never come out of this room, once I walk ln . " remarked Paul Anthony.

Despite the differences in specialties, taste and techniques of the participating designers, they worked this year (unlike other showhouses) to keep all areas of house compatible with one another.

Co-chairing the preview gala were Mrs. James Meers, Stephen Jeffery and Mrs. Daniel Melnick, advisor. Executive chairmen were Mrs. Edwin Semans, Jr. and Mrs. Charles Shaffer, Jr., American Cancer Society; and Constance Mercer and G. Daniel Harben, Jr., ASID.

Guests were rewarded with a choice buffet after a 30 room/area tour of Box­wood. -JEANNE RYAN

Page 35: Washington Dossier June 1980

es, ng ke of

!re nd ive Jr. an :er

CMv STARS AT Bf'iL As proper ladies squealed with delight

Upon their first vision of idol Cary Grant, some husbands turned away and shook their heads begrudgingly. Others Were as thrilled as their wives with a handshake, a few words or a simple smile from the legendary movie prince.

"Cary's as cheerful as he is hand­some," remarked designer Howard 8aylin, in spite of the fact that he per­sonally greeted over 1500 guests at this Year's American Cancer Society Ball.

Elephants and monkeys dangled in tnid-air over vendors hawking popcorn and cotton candy to guests. A midnight breakfast followed a lavish evening buf­fet featuring Beef Wellington, mussels ~rovencal, lobster thermidor and

arbecued ribs. This year, the ball netted $200,000,

more than any single event the cancer society has raised anywhere in the country.

Among the elegantly attired guests Were Rep. and Mrs. AI Ullman, the Am­~assador of New Zealand and Mrs. Nor­tJ~h (they were patrons), Mr. and Mrs. ~chard Barry (he's the executive v.p. of

aberge), Mr. and Mrs. Gary Rappa­~~rt, chairmen, Joel Meisel, the Gary

ramsons and Sylvan Gershowitz. )) Tw~rling to the sounds of the Peter R Uchm orchestra were Bob and Marion F: osenthal, the George Adams', the Mel Mtrins, the Herbert Hafts and Dr. and

rs. Cyril Schulman. -JEANNE RYAN

Neil Ramo, Senior Vice President of Lord & Taylor admires his wife, Marilyn, In her Richilene gown.

Bonnie Slotkln and Lynn Barry wore the corn row hairstyle popularized by Bo Derek In " 10".

Dossier/ June 19 0133

Page 36: Washington Dossier June 1980

Claire Dratch cordially invites you to attend a preview showing

of the entire autumn collection by

Geoffrey Beene. We are proud to be able

to bring it to Washington. Mr. Henry Ginsberg will be

with us to assist you.

Thursday, June 5th and Friday, June 6th

AT

34/ June 1980/Dossier

PRESERVING W H11E HOUSE

Antiques, not diamonds took precedence with Carol Channing, when the actress and her husband Charles Lowe zipped into town to helP Rosalynn Carter launch a 25 million dollar fund drive for the White House Preservation Fund. The First LadY founded the Fund last October to refur· bish the White House with permanenl antiques, since much of the current col· lection is on temporary loan.

Channing met the press to announce that San Francisco tycoon Walter Shorenstein, Chairman of the Fund, M had donated $100,000, as had AmbaS· w sador and Mrs. Walter Annenberg, and S1 Mrs. Lamant DuPont Copeland of Greenville, Del. Henry Ford had given fifty thou, she said, while Janet Hooker of New York and PaJm Beach (Waltef Annenberg's sister) had given 25 thou TWICE! Even Averell Harriman's Pam had ante-ed up 10 K, while some 350 others paid $125 (a head) to becorne "Friends" of the Fund and guests at the evening kick-off reception held at the Fund's home-base on Jackson Place.

Come party time Mrs. Carter made the scene while the President stayed home. She circled the sumptuous buffel on the arms of White House Curator Clem Conger and Shorenstein. Then she awarded Carol a plaque for her help and greeted sponsors.

JOYFUL TEA FOR JIHAN

Arne Jihan Sadat greets Helen Strauss, whose R) M husband was Middle East negotiator. En· Hen

1

joying the byplay Is Esther Coopersmith Sad, at a tea given by Senator Johnston 's Sad, wife, Mary. --

Page 37: Washington Dossier June 1980

6E

,ok hen rJes elP lion ,use adY fur· 1ent col·

10ce Jtel md, bas· and 1 of jven !)kef auer :hou Palll

350

ttof

ten er

Among th hose R) Mrs We many guests were this unusual assembly of wives of Supreme Court justices (L to . En· Henry ·Bi arren Burger, Mrs. Lewis Powell, Mrs. Potter Stewart, Mrs. Thurgood Marshall , Mrs. 1ith Sadat

0 ackmun and Mrs. Byron White . A highlight of the event was the presentation to Mrs.

Sadat ]~k~~~lephone In the shape of a pyramid. "I'll be able to call Esther everyday now," Mrs.

___./

Feat~

International Cui ine

All of our meal ar pr pared \\ith the fine, t

ingredJ nts in the old world tradJUon.

Breakfll§t Luueb Dinner

n·cd in th dinlng room from 8:30 am

to :30 pm .

.l.

Sumptuous Brnneb aturdav & umlav

from 8:30 ~ to 4:30-pm

Full Bar Serviee TI1c fin . t selection of Imported

\\ine and splrlts .

Famous Desserts Cakes, wrtcs and pastcrlcs

famous in Wa hington ~!nee 191 Icc cream mad da!lv on ll1c

premises \\ith ll1c hlghcst butterfat content poSblblc .

1777 CoiU.Dlbla Rd .. S.W. Washington, D.C.

265-0332 265-7273

Dossier/June 19 0135

Page 38: Washington Dossier June 1980

36/ June /980/Dossier

JOSEPH AND HIS A L-l()CAL DREAMCOAT

Catholic University's theatrical production spin-offs have been mak­ing theater history for years, and it was no coincidence that Hugh Leonard's "Da" was playing the Ken­nedy Center boards at the same time as «Joseph and His A mazing Technicolor Dreamcoat" was making its debut at Ford's Theater.

Both, in their own way, are CU pro­duction originals. "Da" is just com­pleting its National tour and "Joseph" is, hopefully, just beginning.

What makes the "Joseph" produc­tion unique is that it is almost totally local in its backers, its producers, its players and its director, all of whom are related to the CU gang. After smashing successes in the Hartke Theater and Olney under James War­ing's direction, two young recent graduates of Maryland University, Sue Rose and Gail Berman decided to produce it and go for the big time, debuting at Ford's Theater.

They enlisted the support of Mel

Estrin, a young dynamo with a yen for theatrical production and began the complicated process of putting the show together. Written by Tim Rice and Andrew Weber, who later wrote Jesus Christ Superstar, "Joseph" seemed to Estrin a perfect vehicle for Washington's spring and summer season.

With a strong "spiritual" assist from the incomparable Father Gilbert Har­tke and the marvelous directorial talent of James Waring, "Joseph" is now playing to packed houses at Ford's.

Well-wishers, the cast and friends jammed Pisces on opening night to celebrate the all-local production, along with Broadway Producer Jerry Schlossberg, who is scouting for broadway.

Bill Graham, the talented head of CU's Drama Department, beamed at the crowds: "Who says we're not a theater town?", he commented pro­udly looking into the sea of theater lovers. -SONIA ADLER

-

Eric Pierpoint (above) belts out " One More Angel in Heaven" for Jim Waring and the staff as he auditioned for one of the brothers in " Joseph." He got the part. (Below) Hopefully c Broadway bound, the principals who made " Joseph" possible chat with Broadway pro· F ducer Jerry Shlossberg, co·producers Melvin Estrin, Susan Rose and Director Waring.

Page 39: Washington Dossier June 1980

)f

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or er

m ar­nt )W

ds to n, ·ry or

of at . a ·o­ter ER

RIGHT RED RETURNING Dapper Don Kennedy, former Food

and Drug Commissioner, now Vice Presi­dent and Provost of Stanford (and rumoured to be the next Prez) sailed into town for National Academy of Science meetings which signaled a slew of dining­out among the local Stanford alumni.

The World Bank's retiring J. Burke knapp and wife Iris hosted a buffet din­ner which drew the Columbia Am­bassador and Mrs. Barco (Carolina is the Stanford grad), Andrea and Tom Cor­~ran Jr., the Tom Coughrans (he's the

orld Bank's former U.S. Executive Director), Mount Vernon College Prez Dr. Victoria Schuck (a 3 degree Stanford grad), the Perry Seifferts, Stanford Research Institute's Leon Sloss with wife Ginny, and junior John RoUinses .

The following day Kennedy was toasted again by Ambassador and Mrs. Barco at luncheon at the Columbian Embassy. Among the "old school ties" ~at turned up were former Ambassador

ed Achilles, Anna Chennault (a Stan­~Ord Parent), Betty Battle, Ellen Marcus, fob Sayler of Covington & Burling, and ormer Cabinet Secretary Carla Hill

;ho's back in law practice with husband od, also a Stanford man. .~ennedy commented that the 1980s

wa I be THE decade when Stanford and ~ther Universities will focus on the n?~rgraduate . Harvard's major com­

Pe_tatton for students now is Stanford, he sa.ct, and Stanford does better than Yale or Princeton. Viva the old "Big Red!"

GooDwiLL ~OROCCO u Jackie Bengelloun cooked up her

0~u~ storm for the donors and sponsors ba t e Goodwill Industries Guild Em-

ssy Tour at the Moroccan embassy. am<?uests nibbled goodies fit for a king w· ~dst three wandering minstrels along Gat a string of Washington celebs Hke Mo~on Barnes, Marion Burros, Diana

c ellan and Gail Perkins. D Other honored guests included D or?thy Mickler, reception chairman, ~~~~~d Becker, president of Goodwill, G a McCullum, president of the aJO~dwiU Guild, the Tom Cahills, the La~ ard Conroys, Col. and Mrs. John M

1d, and Col. and Mrs. Edmund

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Page 40: Washington Dossier June 1980

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Co-chairmen Mrs. George Schweitzer and Mrs. Scott Paseltlner (right), take time out In the Mayflower's Ballroom after greeting 200 guests attending the Fountain of Flowers Ball benefitt ing the Florence Crlt· tendon Home. (Above) A smiling trio prepare to enter Philip Robertson's English Country fantasy In the main ballroom (I tor) Mrs. George Hugue­ly, Mrs. John Manfuso and Mrs­Robert Lowe while Mr. and Mrs. Ken· neth Bigelow place their bids for th6 t silent auction. The Home has aided ~

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sraeli nand s wife are greeted by the prime movers of the event to benefit the Weizmann Institute, Israel's MIT. (L toR) John Mason, Co-chairman of the dinner, Stuart Bernstein and Alma Gilden horn, Co-chairman.

Henry Kissinger makes a point Offering a i oast to the resounding success of the dinner to Prof. Michael Sela, President are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ochsman and Mr. and Mrs. LeO of the Institute. Bernstein, longtime supporters of the Institute.

\

fu rn:

Page 41: Washington Dossier June 1980

.zer ht), lr's sts ers :rit· trio

FOUNT,6JN OF FLOWERS

' WiSDOM FOR WEIZMANN

an~h: m~ghty Henry Kissinger lent vigor ann VItah~y to the Weizmann Institute's w Ual dmner in a moving speech on ~ld ~olitics to some 300 guests .

l< he dtnner, held in the atrium of the G~~edy Center, was planned by Alma ch . enhorn and John Mason, co­St <tlrmen of the founders committee and \V~~·t Bernstein, chairman of the

tngton chapter. Wet\mong the dinner' s special guests \V r.e Lord Marcus Sieff, chairman of the noeizmann Institute' s board of gover­M rs and chairman of the board of the st~rks a.nd Spencer chain of department Mi r;s In Great Britain; Professor mac ael Sela, president of the Weiz­lea~f ln~titute and one of the world's ba ng Immunologists and the Am-~ador of Israel and Mr . Evron.

furt~er $1.00,~ was raised as a result to "' er Scientific research done at Weiz­... ann.

tn~t~er special guests included the Nor­the nM: ernstei~ , the Lawrence Brandts, ~ob el Estrms, the Ted Gindes, the the e;: Kogods, the Leonard Melrods, \V· Orton Wilners and the Bruce

•nstons.

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Page 42: Washington Dossier June 1980

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40/June 1980/Dossier

ffiiEUffiDOU

Diplomats by the dozens flocked to bid farewell to the beloved Ambassador of Somalia and Mrs. Addou, leaving after 10 years residence to become Somalia's Minister of Finance.

One of the most memorable of these goodbye gatherings was hosted by Orner Eissa, the Sudanese Ambassador and his wife, Muna, at their Sudanese residence on Woodland Drive.

Any gathering of Africans is filled with lighthearted humor and hospitality and, as a sign of affection, Muna anointed each guest with a dab of San­dalwood, which is apparently the sen­sual national scent of the Sudan. Coin­cidentally, President Carter was enter­taining one of the Sudan's neighbors, Anwar Sadat on the same evening in the White House.

After countless farewell celebrations the Addous threw their own goodbye bash for friends at the Hyatt Regency ballroom.

AN UNSMOKABLE PIPE

The guest of honor, Austrian Ambas­sador Karl Schober, an inveterate pipe smoker, got a glass pipe gift. You don't smoke it. You drink brandy from it.

The gift was just one of the creative aspects of the elegant dinner given by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cerami at the F Street Club.

The foreign affairs editor of Kiplinger Publications and his wife, Lisa brought together a stellar group seldom seen out-

A FLOR~ WELCOME

side the diplomatic circuit; Treasury Secretary Bill Miller and Ariadne, Sen. and Mrs. Charles Percy, Ambassador and Mrs. John Tzounis of Greece, retired Lt. General and Mrs. Wallace Robinson, Bob and Peggy LeBaron, among others.

The Ceramis seated attractive red­head Christina Clark, of Birch Bayh's Alcofuel Commission next to the guest of honor, which piqued everyone's curiosity.

Sen . Frank Church's Idaho senator­ial opponent Rep. Steven Symms and his wife were also among the guests. The congressman was reporting that his campaign was going well with recent polls showing him winning at this point. "We're going to topple him," he said.

Robert LeBaron, who served Presi­dents from Wilson to Eisenhower was gloomy about the current state of af­fairs, although it did not dampen his 89 year old energy and spirit.

In his toast, Cerami was glowing in his praise for the skilled Austrian diplomat, comparing him to another legendary Austrian figure, Metternich. As in most Washington parties these days, the criticism of the President's handling of foreign affairs was not muted.

SAA AND THE SINGLE M~E

It was billed as a party in honor of Alejandro and Helga Orfila, black tie, in Randolph Rouse's remarkable estate which sits incredibly close to Washington on Virginia's Leesburg Pike. Actually, according to Randy, the

David Ellsworth opened his new shop "Flowers" with gourmet food, a swinging band and many friends. (L to R) Ellsworth, Mrs. Peter Jay and Judy Mclennan.

Page 43: Washington Dossier June 1980

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nd ts. (liS :nt (lt. d. :si· ras af· 89

in .an n.er ch. ese 1t'S not

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, the

party was a tongue in cheek tribute for "Alex's keeping to his own territory when he was single." . Once, like Rouse, a popular Wash­mgton bachelor, OAS Secretary Gener­al Orfila was considered among our town's most eligible personalities. Since his marriage to the beautiful Helga that life is a thing of the past.

Nevertheless, the tribute brought out Washington's social establishment Which included the Bill Middendorfs, the Charlie Camaliers, True Davis, Judy Lewis, Diane Norris and Redskins owner, Jack Kent Cook, who, from the looks of his attentions to an attractive blonde lady, appeared to be in the throes of a new romance.

Guests learned that the host is also a sw.ing era buff as he accompanied Glenn ~tiler and Benny Goodman recordings With his saxophone while others danced to . the velvety strains of his fantastic SWtng collection. An ebullient Deena ~lark showed her prowess at the

1-Iula," just as she did when she and Randy were on the USO circuit enter­taining American servicemen.

As the last guest toddled off at a late hour, the strains of Randy's irrepressi­?le saxophone could still be heard long Into the night. -So lA ADLER

Oakley Hunter, head of Fannie Mae smiles approvingly below a portra it of himself painted by Trudy Davis (left) at a Party he gave to unveil his picture.

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Dossier /June 1980141

Page 44: Washington Dossier June 1980

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41/June 1980/Dossier

Georgetown 121 Wtsc Ave 337 3600 ttl 3am Sun - Thur

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...... Diva Judith Belgen looking fresh after her performance chats with her husband Maestro Nicola Rescigno and Mary Neel, new Chairman of the Met's Mid-Atlantic Committee.

Pavarotti, did not appear . .. pleading MET O PENS AT KENC EN fatigue-understandableafterthearia­

Romantic strains of six strolling violins and the haunting scent of a new fragrance, Ciaro, greeted several hun­dred guests (still euphoric from 'L 'Elisir d' Amore- with I~uciano Pavarotti and Judith Belgen) at the after-the-opera party hosted in the Atrium by KenCen Chairman Roger Stevens and Frank Johnson, President of the Revlon Foun­dation. The evening's undisputed star,

TURKISH A<IA FOR CU The exquisite Turkish embassy

(which boasts its own panelled music room!) was the scene of a Gala Musi­cale; a benefit for the Summer Opera Theatre Company whose 2nd season will bring Madam Butterfly in June and The Merry Widow in July to the Har­tke Theater. Ambassador Elekdag and his pretty wife warmly welcomed guests along with the Gala's Chairman, Mrs.

filled opera which had marked the Metropolitan Opera's first appearance at the Center. Petite diva Belgen looked ravishing and completely refreshed as she enjoyed a midnight supper with her husband, who is the concert-master of the Met, and was the conductor for the evening, Maestro Nicola Rescigno. Mary Belin, Mary Neel, Senator Howard Baker, and the John Hechingers, were among the guests.

Rose Marie Spivacke, Elaine R. Walter, the Theatre's Executive Direc­tor, CU President Pelegrino and Fr. Maurice T. Fox.

An hour of some of opera's finer moments was presented for guests by six of the young and very talented singers from the company who will be perform­ing this summer. And-after delectable arias, everyone went into the high­ceilinged dining room for champagne and all manner of Turkish delicacies.

-ANNEBLAJR

After a stellar performance of the Summer Opera Company, guests enjoyed a repast at the Turkish Embassy. (L to R) Singer Myra Merritt, Mrs. Sukru Elekdag and the Ambassador of Turkey, Edith Shubert, Board Chairman, Elaine Walter, Executive Director and Glen Cunningham.

Page 45: Washington Dossier June 1980

ro

lg a· 1e ce ~d

as er of he o. or an

R. ec­rr.

Travel1ime FIRST ClASS TRAVEL WHAT A WAY TO GO!

I ncreasingly, first class on anything that moves from point A to point B is becoming the domain of the

~We-fully RICH . If you still think "get­ting there is half the fun," be prepared to pay up to twice the price . . We recently surveyed first class serv­~ces. of r:nore than 20 domestic and ore1gn a1r carriers . Most airlines main­t~in special check-in counters for first c ass passengers and special in-flight compartments for their luggage. . Many airlines feature private lounges ~~ departure airports offering free liba­Jons, "munchies", telephone, confer­

ence facilities and attendants for the Pte-flight pamper. h After the madding crowds in coach f ave been installed, first classers are led rfom their airport aerie to the primacy

0 the first class cabin where roomier

seats await.

ChWhile the pilot is still perfecting his PI arlt?n Heston voice and before your N~ne IS even out of the city limits , a h '~gara of free spirits is unleashed to e P You fly with or without the benefit

t I

.. , .. I

Reigning Queen of the sea is still the Q.E. II for the first class traveller.

of an airplane. Most airlines commence the first class trip with champagne and hors d'oeuvres which span the taste spectrum from caviar to cold lobster to pate. In a truly noble effort to free itself from dependence on Iranian caviar, TWA serves American caviar.

As you listen to the mournful sounds of people in that other section eating and drinking from plastic thing , the clink, ping and tinkle of solid china, glassware and heavy silver reassures

you that standards are still honored in your part of the world.

Most airlines serve a e en cour e main meal and, especially on Foreign carriers, place a real emphasis on the ceremonial aspects of presentation.

As the elect near the end of the dinner ritual and are washing down a tasty slab of ripe Camembert with delicate sips of port, the underprivileged in aft have long finished their meal from a plastic tray and are fumbling and groping for

The stretch cadillac ~hown here is one of Dav-E/'s most popular models.

Dossier/June /980143

Page 46: Washington Dossier June 1980

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44/ June 1980 Dossier

the correct change to rent a head set . You, on the other hand, have donned • your complimentary sleep mask, slipped your feet into complimentary booties adjusted your roomier seat to a com for· tably recumbent position and are about to drift off to a Beethoven String Quartet transmitted to you via your 2( complimentary head set. 2

For those of you with an unlimited F tolerance for first class treatment and , to the wherewithal to pay for it, travel bY Q cruise ship would seem to be the answer. 11

Royal Viking, Holland America and ab Cunard all offer a Heinz variety of f1 cruises and fly/cruise trips to almost 1

every point on the navigable globe. But aij the trip for those with an infinite capa· an

1

city for being pleasured is the trip that ac1 circumnavigates the world. ing

Royal Viking brings democracy to 1 the seas with it s "World Class'' Po< philosophy. The owners of the line ave~ ~oi that their ships (The Star, The Sky an ''8

1

The Sea) are all first class. While ac· ~it 1 comodations differ in size, location and

~e€ ambience, the most and the least expen· '~'h 1 sive fares share the dining and all oth~rl ~e, facilities. The Royal Viking "Sky" wtl lbo commence its annual 88 day cruise lon around the world in January '81 ef11· l barking from Ft. Lauderdale for Zl Pen

1 ports. ~e

Beside the traditional shipboard ac· Den1

tivities, Royal Viking featu res all ~en enrichment program for passengers Ve

which includes lectures by author ' 'Oor filmmakers, astronauts and painterS· ~ar

The $32,296 per person fare include a suite with twin beds, sitting room and private bath, meals and entertainment· Tipping is extra.

Departing New York on January 10 '81, Holland America's S .S. Rotterdarll will fulfill your wanderlust for 90 daY with visits to 22 port cities including Shanghai and Peking in the PeopleS Republic of China, Bali and Sri Lanka·

In addition to the predictable plea· sure of living afloat, the S.S. Rotterdarll features a daily midnight buffet, sl01

machines, blackjack tables and the ultra posh Ritz Carlton night club. Li~e the friendly competition at Royal Vi~· ing, Holland America does not honor 4, class distinction by sequestering the lti st divinely rich in their own dining roorn · 2s~ A $36,450 per person rate provide an ~st outside double deluxe room featuring S

1

an extra large bedroom with sittillg 0 d~ alcove, sepa rate wardrobe roof11• rr shower, bath and refrigerator. le · ~

Cunard Lines still offers both firS1 ~-class and transatlantic class modes. of r t~ travel. The Q .E. II is 13 stories h1SP

Page 47: Washington Dossier June 1980

~~ , ~ith 900 rooms, 4 restaurant , 12 public ~d 0om , four swimming pools, a golf

d~ving range, a fully equipped hos-:s, p 1r- Ita), a miniature golf course, large ut th_opping arcade and a wine cellar con-

~Jning 20,000 bottles of recent and rare Jg I ur lntage. TheQ.E.ll(depart N.Y. Jan.

~th '81) can travel around the world to ed ~Ports on 6 continents in only 80 day . ad First class pas age admits the passenger bY ' to the private clubby atmosphere of the ~r. ~ueen' s Grille on the signal deck. nd •nose Q. E. II staterooms mo t com par-of able to the be t on Royal Viking and

S4o~olland America cost approximately )5( I

lui ,000 per person for the 80 day trip. It )a· also serve up cerebral entertainment

1at and classes covering everything from ~cupuncture to yoga to memory train­

to lng to p laywriting. ,, Por those with mucho money but

ver Poco time, Cunard offers a two week

1nd ~Oiiday package to London. Called the ac· 'Best of Britain", the tour commences Uld 'ith a Concorde !light to London and a en· eeks stay at the London Ritz Hotel her here a chauffeured limousine and ~ill :neatre tickets await. A first class return Jise ihoard the Q.E. II will get you back :rfl· \orne for a modest $3,499 per person.

21 l'he most extravagant, deluxe and ex-Pensive accomodations on any ship in

ac· ~e world are Q.E. ll's two split-level an Penthouse suites. Each penthouse apart-

~ent has 2 bedrooms including a split ~er J! , Vel bedroom/sitting room, 2 bath-erS· ·Ooms, private outdoor patios, walk-in es 3 ~ardrobes, bar and stereo units. and '-Ocated on the highest level of Q.E. ll ent· 1he signal deck) your penthouse bill at

he end of your 80 day cruise will add up if 1o 0 approximately $225,000. jam Even those first classers with the iaY 1ighest tolerance for pleasure would iiflg ave to admit to a near surfeit after .pie :ruising the waters of the world for 80

lays or more. Perhaps this would be a okll· >lea· 1ne time to get your feet back on the darn !tound-to feel the sway and vibration s)ot hat comes from riding the rails. First the lass train travel via Amtrak and most

Li~e Jther U.S. railroads usually offers a nice Vi~· Jar lor car, more room to spread out, a

nor .Omfy swivel chair and free coffee. But :>tile 's face it, if you're among the financial :>Jll. 1tistocracy who've just forked out . an ~50,000 for a world cruise, free coffee . s·ne Ust won't cut it. ~~:ni So what's a poor millio~aire lik~ you

..., o do? Rent your own pn ate railway 10 1"'

r! According to Amtrak over 150 peo-rrst le own their own railway cars with over 1 of willing to let their cars for hire. Most

e~igll f these private cars ~re one-of-a-kind Contmued on Page 48

oav·EI Umouslnes. The Department of SerVing you In New York/Los AngeleSICn~t·:~on.rRnl

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Dossier/June 19801./5

Page 48: Washington Dossier June 1980

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PERLMUTTER

From Our Old Town Gallery

An exceptional Hepplewhite cherry and bird's eye maple chest of drawers, New England, circa 1780-1790 with bowed front and scalloped skirt terminating in French feet.

215 South Union Street Old Town Alexandria 548-6365

Lawrence Perlmutter, Inc. Period American Furniture and Furnishings

Cross and Cannon Street Chestertown, Maryland

301-778-4352

Iberian Imports

in1port ·fgi It s l1op bath shop

kitcllt n hop p<uty shop

• no\\' four g rea t sh ops in one

225 N. Fairfax r. Old Town. r\1 xandria

54 -10 0

Ou 14K gold JeNelry collecllon holds the g1 she 1S dreomng of Come 1n and

see these mognrflcent and d istlrcllve g1fts she Will always remember

G B

A.$300 B. $190 C. $250

~sscll~ld Jewelers

Crilley Warehouse Mall 218 North Lee Street

Alexandria, Virginia 223 14 • (703)548-3901

Page 49: Washington Dossier June 1980

able hings NAPKINS PlACEfv\ATS TABLE ACCESSORIES

J09-C Cameron Srreer Olde TO'-NneAJexondno Vo 549-6262

lean Bec~r Interiors Fa~rics • Wallpapers

Furmture and Accessories 323 South Washington SLreet

Alexandria, irginia 22314 (703) 683-5700

fCOUTURE~ n FABRICS n U of ALEXANDRIA U n designer fabrics n u f or rhe discriminaring sewer u

105 so. lee stre~t o ld town 548-7709

t<===>Ct< -

:Jraclilionaf

0/o/hing

for

Women

Lancome, Redken & Nexus 423 South Washington Street

Alexandna, Virg inia 836-4242

Page 50: Washington Dossier June 1980

481 June 19801 Dossier

1RA\IEL

Continued from Page 45

models and are used for purposes of business and recreation . Some cars feature drawing rooms, a lounge or of· fice and shower facilities. Others have up to 12 beds.

Although the cost of renting a private car will vary from owner to owner, an approximate figure would be around $800 per day. The charge for its move· menton Amtrak trains, from Washing· ton to Boston, for instance, is estab· lished at 20 one way fares for the Washjngton to Boston run with a $!25 "switching" fee.

If your European vacation plans caii for train trave l, first class is rarelY crowded. The Trans Europe Express, high on the aristocratic Hst as the best train extant, services major cities in Ger· many, Switzerland, France, Austria. Spain, Italy and Holland and carrieS only first class. Expect to pay approx· imately one third more for first class rail travel in Europe.

It's Tuesday and both the 450SL and the Rolls have been avoidedly detained at the repair shop. You can go to your analyst and decry today's lack of stan· dards or you can solve your problem bY renting a limousine.

A number of rental agencies are available in Washington including AJ11" bassador and Watergate Limousine. The most recently arrived limo service i!l Washington is Dav-E! Livery whose fleet of luxury automobiles includes stretcll Lincoln Continentals, traditional Cadillac limousines and the Lincoln Town Car . A mobile phone system, ba! (stocked upon request), stereo syster!l and moon roof are standard on all limoS· Dav-E! chauffeurs receive first class training on every aspect of service fror!l lessons on unobtrusiv~ness to personal grooming. "Think of your driver as your valet" urges Dav-E! president David Klein whose company has offices in S U.S. cities and affiliates in London, Florence, Rome and Paris. Dav-E! cars span the luxury price range from $22 tO

$32 per hour. First class travel, as we said earlier, via

any conveyance that moves from point A to point B is increasingly becoming we domain of the awe-fully rich. Care to join me for a nice walking trip down the Appalachian Trail?

-SUSAN GOLDMArl •

Page 51: Washington Dossier June 1980

, of ;ars of· ~up

call .relY :e s, beSI

:::;er· :ria. rrie roX· ; rail

and ,ined your ;tan· n bY

are Aft1• The

:e iJl fleet retcb anal tcolll ,baf steJl! moS· claSS from ;onal your I avid in 5

.don, car

22 tO

r, via poiJl' 1g the re to ·n the

•MA

The Educated Palate SUMMERY COLLATIONS CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN

S ~mmer festivities mean outdoor Imbibing and larger groups and, therefore, bulk buys.

Buying liquor in bulk needn't be a Problem if you follow the advice of ~our friendly liquor store purveyor.

ne can usually get a discount on bulk Purchases. "April May and June as w II ' ' be as September, October and Novem-er are the big party months in Washing­

ton " th ' ~ays Bruce Bassin from MacAr-thur Ltquors. But summer months, like bl e clothes we wear, mean a lighter ~?d of liquors.

a .summertime means vodka, gin and !( ltttle rum," says Manager Dave r Ushner of Magruders, 5618 Connec­~CUt~ve., N .W. Butsurprise-Bacardi

urn IS outselling Smirnoff Vodka now -though three times as much odka is now sold in the U.S. a Much more wine is being drunk now, . nd less liquor is being sold because of ~: Magruders is now selling as much t lne as liquor . More people are turning 0 red wines as they become more so-

phisticated, Mr. Kushner asserts. He expects the mix of white to red wines to be 65"7o/35% this summer.

For a party, Dave Kushner plans on four to five people per fifth, or 20 people per ga ll on of gin, vodka, scotch whiskey and rum. A wedding party usually includes champagne. Bulk champagnes are not recommended; "They're too sweet for such an impor­tant event, a name brand means more.'' The French choices of Veuve Cliquot, Moet et Chandan, Piper-Heidsieck or Lanson, or less expensive domestic brands like Korbel, Taylor or Great Western are better bets."

For a pool party, the ambience is casual. Jug wines like Inglenook and Souverain are good, and some, including San Martin, are vintage-dated. Italian wines are strong, and Spanish wines are real up-and-comers. White Sangria would be a perky addition to festivities, as well as a beer like Lite or Budweiser, and soft drinks. Magruders specializes in "discount party packages."

D ossier/June 1980149

Page 52: Washington Dossier June 1980

The**** Washington Hilton is more than a luxury hotel. It's also the place for ...

Good music , dancing and entertainment, nightly except Sunday. And cocktails, any day from 11 am to 2 am, in the hand­some Point Lounge, the cozy, convivial Ashby's Bar and intimately chic Ashby's Club.

A soothing session in the sauna. Or on the court . The private membership Racquet Club also has a Pro Shop, jogging course, heated outdoor pool and three Har-Tru tennis courts with night lights. Racquet Club membership infor­mation call the club: 483-3000.

Private Functions, for as few as 10, as many as 4500. This award-winning hotel has 33 of the nation's finest function facilities , including the stunning , newly decorated International Ballroom. Plus a multilingual staff of professionals dedicated to making your event an outstanding success.

Weekends, away from it all , at a beautiful in·town resort hotel ... and at Rainbow Weekend rates that are as pleasing as the luxurious guest rooms and thoughtful , gracious service. Call , write or come by for details about the Rainbow Weekend.

][ The Washington Hilton 1919 Connecticut Avenue Washington, D.C. 20009 Phone: (202) 483·3000

Mobil • • • • Award·Winner

50/ June 1980/Dossier

Watergate Wines and Beverages, 2544 Virginia Avenue, N.W., finds itself in the middle of some very in­teresting parties, and manager, Rip Packman notes that political parties are picking up again. "I always ask if the group is mainly Washington or visi­tors-Washingtonians stick mainly to scotch and vodka." He recommends li­quor in quarts; although the one-half gallon size is cheaper, it is harder to handle.

What the customer likes and wants to spend is Mr. Packman's first priority. He is recommending Hann's Cornell California Champagne ($7 .49) for wed­ding toasts and has had a lot of success with Cavalinho Portugal Rose, espe­cially in the summer-it has nice light body and will go with anything ($3.59 a fifth).

But for a sit-down dinner here is one man who would never serve jug wine, "jug wines are for picnics or everyday drinking-but your guests deserve better."

Ed Tauber, owner of Continental Li­quors, 1100 Vermont Ave., N. W. notes that rum is really picking up, especia1ly as a summer drink. "The rage started with Pina Coladas, but now people drink rum and tonics as well. But vodka is still the number one summer spirit."

For a wedding toast, Mr. Tauber would recommend Codorniu, a Spanish Blanc de Blanc Brut Champagne under $7-a good value, and Korbel, the most popular quality California Champagne.

For summer parties, the German wines are a little sweeter and taste good in the sun, or the California white jug wines-Mondavi or San Martin, are Ed's favorites.

His formula for serving 100 people would be the following two choices for more formal ·or informal gatherings, figuring around two drinks per person:

Well-Stocked Bar Set-Ups

2 cases chiUed white wine I case Perrier (23 oz.) 10 quarts of liquors: 3 vodka,

2 gin, I rum, 2 scotch, I blend (V.O.), I bourbon Club Soda, Tonic, Orange Juice, Bloody Mary Mix, Champagne (opt.), Cam pari, Dubonnet, White LilleL Coke, Tab, Fresca

Informal Beer and Wine Bash

4 cases chilled white wine 7 cases beer: Heineken

Miller Lite Budweiser

Continental gives case discounts.

[7/eftNYI [O c9raciOf18 dimi[j

The Embassy Row Hotel 2016, ffcMsaclm.s-elt.s· , foe. , < \

7/P 26:.5-1000

f:ee rHt!et jwl'ltr/W ' tfiel' 6'Jm

9812 FALLS ROAD POTOMAC • 983-1585

Page 53: Washington Dossier June 1980

"The Finesti;; Rehoboth',. where yesterday's hospitality

is today's reality.

llltilillltt Lodgings - accommodations

with old world charm surrounded by

beautiful gardens

IU !lit It ll Dining in

a delightful atmosphere is a joy to your taste!

You are cordially invited to enjoy this with us -

for a day . a week . or forever.

Open mid-April to October

302-227-2561

MacArthur Beverages, 4877 MacAr­thur Blvd., N.W. supplies a great deal of liquid refreshment around town, either in tandem with the big catering houses, or individually to customers. Bruce Bassin believes in buying from a liquor store that gives you the best serv­ice, or one that will give you liquor on consignment. It's best to be over sup­plied-if you can get a store to take back the excess.

The amount of liquor consumed de­pends on the hours of the party, and the younger the crowd, the more "white" the liquor will be, Bruce says. The more established the group, the more scotch will be consumed. Knowing that Mac­Arthur's will take back the extra, Bruce would recommend as much as eight quarts of scotch, six vodka, and five quarts of bourbon for a party of I 00, as well as other liquors. He notes a lot of theme parties are being given at galleries, and recommends Guasti Chablis ($2.30) as a good white wine. The champagne he'd choose is Jacques Bonat ($3.49) or Moet et Chandan ($17 .99) for a special wedding.

Eagle Wine and Cheese, 3345 "M" St., N.W. touts its house brands as a way to save money. They will take back any liquor or wine that is unopened. The most important thing to consider is your crowd's preference.

Because Manager Barbara Day works closely with the catering division, she offers these hints for accompanying food. Eagle counts on 1/ 4 lb. hors d'oeuvres per person for a two hour party-but not at dinnertime. A predominance of men at your bash will mean more food and drink. Open bars also inspire more hunger than just wine, and if it is a buffet, a careful hostess should count on more than eight ounces of edibles per person.

Barbara sends wines at the rate of2/ 1 white to red wines for the parties upon which she's been consulted, and recom­mends Los Hermanos or Sebastiani

ines. She says your mixers will depend on which liquors you order. For diverse types of parties, she offers the following suggestions: a buffet dinner will inspire different choices, like wines, highballs, cocktails and liqueurs. A cocktail party or an after-dinner party will be more specific . But don't forget the sparkling waters for non-drinkers, she ays . She recommends Charles Donay pink or white champagne ($3.49) for weddings, and notes that a summer punch with champagne, brandy, Sauterne and ice will stretch the pocketbook.

-BETTE TAYLOR

Restaurant & Saloon 1 Dupont Circle, . W.

Wash ington, D.C. 20036 (202) 659-8820

Ditmer Parking Available

Dossier/ June 1980151

Page 54: Washington Dossier June 1980

h~1R.-. ofepo.p{tcl hiU,inc. 325 seventh st. se WAShu.,st"n, de 54b·5110

Mon.-Sat. and late on Thurs. 't ill 7 pm

lffttntk ~n' mnur est.1967

329 Pennsylvania Ave., S.E. on Capitol Hill

543-3300

~~~4

On Capitol Hill

t6) Luncheon/Din ner/Cocktai Is

Continental Cuisine

107 D St. Northeast Washington D.C.

Reservations: 546-4488

Our Twentieth Year On the Hill

-Jf~~ ~~~

On the Hill

~ Complete Dinners

(bojor~ and ojt~r th~ theotr~)

Thefinesr French cuisine at moderate prices

The most pleasam dinner on rhe patio

Open Monday-Saturday I 1:30-12:00pm Sunday Brunch

139 Massachusetts Ave. .E. 546-9154

Serving Capitol Hill for Over a Quarter of a Century !

231 Penn ylvania Ave., Washington D.C.

543-8337

Major Credit Cards

l

Page 55: Washington Dossier June 1980

~EMAN Mf)~EEN li4T

A Saloon? Never. A Bar? Most Assuredly. A Restaurant? Without A Doubt!

Third St. & Massachusetts Ave., N.E. Reservations: 546-5900

DeSIGN IT FIPST TO MAK £ !I-!£. MOST MISEAABL£

YAR D MEMORABLE

Restaurant Delicatessen

lli~ ()~LL~ ~of Capitol Hill

Soup & Salad Bar 332 Pennsylvania Avenue., S.E.

Washington, D.C. 20003 547-8668

Office & Home Catering ~nch & Dinner Monday-Saturday

Developing Capitol Hill 09 Since 1966

Weekend Brunch Saturday & Sunday

I 1:30 a.m. to 3:30p.m. 410 First Street, S.E.

Washington, D.C. 543-5005

.. a refreshingly different America restaurant and bar.

Open for lunch and dinner Mon.-Sat. and Sunday Brunch

515 2nd Street, N.E.• Washington, D.C. 547-4774

Page 56: Washington Dossier June 1980

7)-. ;ptYit:/LauM-

s I L v E R

• •

5

.. • D. Porthault is pleased to announce Dolly Kay

Designs. Ltd. has been named an exclusive

.II •

distributor of its new line of wall coverings in its most popular prints. The wallpaper, made in the U.S. of the finest quality non-shining vinyl,

comes in standard rolls 27" wide and 15' long. and is competitively priced. Our good relationship

assures the public of continuing personal service to those

who appreciate our elegant linen, and. now. our new

wallpaper in the designs and color of greatest demand.

For retail and d II to the trade. 0 ~y

Courtesy Parking KO'f at Jennifer Mall designs I a

.W .. Washington. D.C. 20015 (202) 966-0025

Bonded is Paying Twice as Much This Year As We Old This Time Last Year

BONDED JEWELRY CENTER Baltimore's Oldest and Largest Buyers of Diamonds

and Jewelry From The Public - Since 1920 1501 Reisterstown Road, Pikesville, MD

Baltimore Beltway 695 - Exit 20 South '/• Mile. Safe Place to Your Valuabl Open Daily 'ti l 5 P.M. • Thursday 'tii B P.M.

J E w E L R y

II WE BUY (3U1)H53·9UUU WI: t:SUY II 54/ June 1980/Dossier

ALLISON LALAND

Continued from Page 28

made mint juleps greeted guests enter· ing through the Sheraton Carlton's garden. Guests dined and then moved to the other side of the trellis for cabaret and a Dixieland jazz band. Allison believes in never making guests go to another room to dance.

She has also used the Women's Na· tiona! Democratic Club for a non· alcoholic salute to her longtime Georgia friend, Emily Dolvin (who happens to be Miz' Lillian's youngest sister) and evangelist Ruth Carter Stapleton.

"Parties," says Allison, "chan~e with the changing times." Now she tS giving more serious "round-table discussion" brunches, lunches or din· ners, starring an Ambassador or hiS wife, a Senator or his wife, or an ad· ministration figure. For example, she recently held a round-table brunch for Nebraska Senator Ed Zorinsky and hiS wife Cece at Georgetown's City Tavern Club. Zorinsky heads the Western Hemisphere subcommittee of the Foreign Relations Committee and she had gathered the Ambassadors of the Dominican Republic, Chile, Argentina. Mexico, the John Jovas and Jim Rent· schler of the National Security Council·

Guests cocktailed before a blazin8 fire with soft taped music in the background. She had cut seven srnall maps of the state of Nebraska in half and told the men to find their table part· ner by matching up their map-half. She calls this an "ice-breaker."

Then she led guests next door to the round dining table seating 14. A1

dessert, she asked the men to move tWO seats to the left for a change of table mates, a trick she says she learned frolfl Perle Mesta. After introducing her guests, Allison brought on her star, asked the first question and threw the floor open for more.

It works with the ladies too, says MS· LaLand. She entertained Mrs. Elekda8• wife of the Turkish Ambassador an~ Nouha Alhegelan, wife of the Saudi Arabian Ambassador similarly . Th' ladies batted around the question of draft registration for women. AlthoU8~ less-structured but passionate an serious discussions have always been s part of Washington entertaining wher· ever media heavies or politicians or a~· ministration officials are present, thiS 15

a new departure for Washington's rnosl dedicated and professional hostess .

-DOROTHY MARJ(S

He M

....

Page 57: Washington Dossier June 1980

e c I, ~ .

g e II If t· e

Real Estate Properties MHOEMES FOR SALE IN THE WASHINGTON

TROPOLITAN AREA

ANNAPOLIS WATERFRONT CRAB CREEK

OWNER FINANCING

Exquisite 3 bedroom 3 bath contemporary ... nestled among one acre of towering shade trees ... total privacy ... picturesque swimming pool with balcony and deck .. . cathedral ceil­ing living room and dining room with dual f1replace. (77386) $325,000.

MONTROSE Charles County, Md.

This wooded 265-acre estate with frontage on the Po tomac Rive r is one of the tinesr csrare Properrte on Maryland ' Southern hore. 3 ac res of beautifully landscaped gardens ur­bound the Georgian- ryle mrun residence. Pool,

arn, tenant ho use. 30 minute rom Washing­ton, D .C. 1,500,000. Brochure # WD 17-06.

Annapolis Severna Park 261 ·2626 261-2 11 6 ( 0 1) 263.{)400 (301) 647-6112

Exclusl\'t Repn:senrarrv ... Broker: Addtson uburb.m Re.tlt)

Box 309 . Upper !arlboro , !arrland 208"'0 . Tc::l 10L/ 6 27- l655

Arnold 261 -2477

(301) 974-0410

Sotheby Parke Bernet International Realty 980 Madi o n Avenue, New York 10021, eeL 212/ 2-3 65

OUTHERN ELEGA CE And a gracious lifestyle of another era is recaptured m this magnifi ent GEORGI MANOR HOUSE created on a beautiful natural setting. The interior ex­udes soft spoken elegance. featuring 5 bedroom • master suite including tudy "ith fllepla e, bath " ith jacuzzi and team miSt . Reception hall "'i th marble floor, library " ith custom cabinetry and "et bar, formal living room, dining room with glass doors v.hi h open onto a large terrace. amity room Mth tone fireplace adja cnt to a fully equipped kitchen and breakfaSI room. Recreation room Mth fireplace, bar, parjo. Wine cellar, 3 car garage. Complete security S) tern. For details telephone Bruce Robinson 530- 330.

GOUJBIN & WARWICK INC. 10000 Falls Road

Potomac, Maryland 20854

(301)983-0700

THE RIVER HOUSE

Enjoy a panoramic view of the Potomac from the 69ft. deck of this custom-built Williamsburg colonial on 3 very private acres in a neighborhood of million dollar homes. Asking

$895,000. with owner financing.

(301) 983-0200

The Crossroads Realty,Ltd.

Dossier/ June /980/55

Page 58: Washington Dossier June 1980

ELEGANT AWARD WINNING HOMES IN McLEAN, VIRGINIA

UNIQUE BELOW-MARKET TERMS Ask for details about our creative financing arrangements and enjoy an elegant combination of classic traditional detail and exciting, imaginative design. The 24ft. wide plans offer 60ft.

vistas, 3 story high open foyers, fireplaces, enclosed courtyards, 2-car detached garages. Right in the center of McLean, at Dolley Madison Blvd. and Chain Bridge Rd. Walk to shopping. A few homes are still available in Section Two, for spring and summer occupancy, from $198,000. Model horne open every day, 12-5. From the Beltway take Dolley Madison Blvd. (Rte. 123) north

towards McLean to Madison of McLean entrance on left. Phone 893-7903.

·~ ~ 'MadlSonofMCLea~] ~ I r.!.'8,...!::::P' Developed by Madison-Mclean Associates Q ~ _ J Laughlin, Realtor Brokers Welcome ....,.""""_

MARYLAND'S HISTORIC EASTERN SHORE

~'I

NILY REALTY INC. a name you can trust

56 / June 1980/ Dossier

GOLDSBOROUGH CREEK

27 ACRE WATERFRONT POI T LOCATED BETWEEN EASTON AND OXFORD WITH OVER 2000 FT. OF PROTECTED SHORELINE. MOSTLY OPE LAND WITH WOODED SHORELI E & COUNTRY ROAD FRO TAGE. FOR ADDITIONAL IN­FORMATION CALL MARY HANKS IN OXFORD OFFICE AT 226-5151.

PRICE: $225,000.

ROUTE 50 (P .0. Box 757) EASTON MARYLAND 21601

1-301-822-3290

LOUDOUN COUNTY

NEAR WATERFORD. Smail farm with <;harming, 18th Century fieldstone house under restoration but liveable now; sturdy bank barn with large stalls; 35 acres with Jots of board fencing, stream, good pond site. A very special property at $235,000, with ample financing. More acreage available.

KING and CORNWALL. INC. ' Rea l Est ate ~~

Leesburg, Va. 703-777- 2503 Metro Area 471-5400 (no toll)

( p Ri

rr ~

Ri

bi fll gl

"'

Page 59: Washington Dossier June 1980

Whitman Area

COUNTRY CHARM

combined with in-town elegance, only minutes from Georgetown. Heated ~ool, cul-de-sac lot, 5 bedrooms, 4 Yz aths, paneled den, pecky cypress

Paneled family room and rec. room. l2Yzo/o ASSUMPTION! We have it all! Upper Brackets. Call Mrs. Gould at 320-3855

PAN8RAMA REAL ESTATE

657-8500

Custom-built home in one of Potomac's most sought-after areas. Living room and master bedroom open onto 60ft. deck overlooking trees :n.d pastureland. Large,

nght kitchen, 3 Y2 baths, falll.ily room with sliding glass doors to garden. Very flexible living space.

Cathy Wojciak 530-5468

GJ3EGG Inc. Realtors 657-2760

The Appeal of Washington Mews ....

Is found in the quaint courtyards and the quality designs of this new townhome cluster. The meticulous detail of each finely crafted residence is the hallmark here. Featuring one bedroom ® flats to three bedroom townhouses with amenities like central MANARIN

vacuum, crown moldings, fireplace and garage parking . ~ _ Visit these exceptional Federal reproductions priced from

$93,500 to $189,500.

MANARIN ODLE and RECTOR, Inc. REAL TORS 277 South Washington Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314 549·8200

Something extraordinary is happening at the former Rockefeller Estate at 2500 Foxhall

Road. We are introducing masterpiece homes in the Palladian mode created for the discerning, priced from $415,000. For your personal appointment to view our plans, call Dagmar Hewitt Burton at 342-0096.

@Builder/Developer: Crowell & Baker t='.:-'i Sales: Lewis & ilvennan

FOXHALL CRESCENTS ~

Dossier/June 19 0/5

Page 60: Washington Dossier June 1980

Real Estate Properties

WASH/ GTONIA IN ALEXANDRIA, VA

Behind walls that have heard Washington's best kept secrets are the tangible secrets of a most unusual residence. In breathtaking contrast to a contemporary facade of anistic simplicity is a vinual museum of interior detail drawn from two continents and our arion's Capital: rare black walnut paneling and Oooring from Andrew Mellon's Lafayette Square offJCe, antique brass from Athens and hardware from Truman's White House, a Tiffany light fooure from the Cosmos Oub, 18th cen­tury French tile from a Baltimore church and an exquisite ftreplace wall of carved Elizabethan English oak. Each room of this spacious 5 bedroom home is a masterpiece of ingenuity, including the bathrooms and kitchens which have been featured in major interior design publications. 2 Y, acres of wooded seclusion. S450,<XX>.

Call Ann KeUogg, 549-2434.

GOWBIN & WARWICK INC. 109 South Royal St., Alexandria Va. 22314

FRENCH CHATEAU Quality built custom home

in prestigious area.

Owner financing $260,000.

REAL E S T ATE

A lexandria Office 548-3111

58/June 1980/Dossier

YACHTSMAN'S DREAM HOUSE EXC LUS IVE. Beau tiful contem porarY home high on bluff with magnificent vieW down the Occoquan River. Private dock and water of 15 foot depth, capable of handling largest yachts. House flows into lovelY Japanese garden, covering one acre. Superb entertaining facilities. Two story living room, library, bar, d ining room, billiard room, ul tra-modern kitchen. Five bedrooms and baths. Bomb proof shelter beneath house· Thirty minutes from downtown Washington. Upper brackets. CaJI Eric Rendle for appoint­ment. 965-3530 or 298-5949.

JAMES L. DIXON & COMPANY, REALTORS 331-7200

ew GOORGETeWN

VIlLAGE

m. REALTOR

Finallv With all the cus tom feat ures th t '.J make Bethesda the mo t excl usive

Bethesda place to live. ine superb designs, including 2-story duplexes. W ith fire-

h places, step-down li vi ng roo ms, pr iva te

as a dens, forma l dini ng rooms, ove rsized balconic and te rraces, top of th e line

d • • kitchen applianc s, con OITIInium ga.rage. parking, t~nni I

swtmm1ng. In a pnva te,

to match wooded community, all withi n wa lking d istance o f White Flint • f• and Metro. And all priced

Its mest from $1 18,000 to $166,000. Spoil yourself with a fine

Custom homes custom home in Be thesda, at Old Georgetown

• Vi llage. From th e Beltway

li1 (495) no rth on Old Geo rge town Rd., right on Nicho lson Lane to

Exhibit Center and Sa les ~= RR Office on left.

Phone 770-2644. Developed by

Old Georgetown Associates a member or the Rtchmarr GrO'Up

Sales by Phinney & Assoc.

fOUAI HOt.-. OI'P!IIliHTY

Fr b(J

l'el

s frorn t lhe he Chicre colon I and d1 franc~ E!cono

Page 61: Washington Dossier June 1980

From your ideas, to our drawing board, we'D take care of all of your remodeling and renovation needs -from original designs by Jack Greenspan, to the last construction detan. Call today for a fresh start

at the same address.

$169,500 lrorn ~~~ling on S. Lee with winter view of the river the h 5 charming, private, as new townhouse in Chic reart of Old Town., Walk to a wide selection of COion~s~aurants and boutiques along streets rich In and ~a history. The home features 3 bedrooms Irene~" · 2% baths and a private pat io through econo

1doors off living room. Functional ,

m cal space with owner financing.

2 to 5 acre wooded estates 18 minutes from

Georgetown

Very elegant new homes in the best part of Potomac. Georgian manor

architecture, oak hardwood floors, libraries, magnificently appointed

kitchens, custom-style finishing throughout. ~ Up to 5 bedrooms. Priced from $325,000 1.::.1 """"' with financing available. River Rd. EIIJAIIOJSIIG HOW to Falls Rd. Left on Falls Rd. to OPPIJ!l\JNITY ~-- Brickyard Rd., left to Mazza. (US· HOme ) Phone 983-9050.

Dossier/ June /980159

Page 62: Washington Dossier June 1980

Real Estate Properties

'

October 1980 The Washington

Dossier Features

Fall Real Estate Call 362-5894

GEORGETOWN

VOLTA PLACE Luxury Townhouses

Designed To Perfection Frnancing Available

Louise Sullivan 244-3217

GBEGGinc. REAL !DRS

5101 Wisconsin Ave., NW • Chevy Chase, DC 686·9556

60/ June 1980/Dossier

Prime Bethesda $750,000

The Essence of Elegance

Wear pleased to offer one of Wa hington's mo t distingui hed residences. Appointed in meticulou detail. thi home will delight the mo t di cerning individual with embassy ized rooms perfectly uited for formal entertaining o r private gather­ing . The enchanting patio i he ltc red by p len­did landsca pe plantings a nd fea ture a free form pool and caba na. Other amenitie include a stunning garden room, a una, and staff quarter . For an a ppoin tment call Mr. Stephen Stein, (202) 667-8300 or (301) 469-6261.

!;J INTOWN PROPERTIES, INC.

POTOMAC ESTATE Owner presenting to purchaser

a new Mercedes Diesel 8000KINGSGATE ROAD $395,000

Nestled on almost four acres In the heart of Potomac. A unique woodland setting with flowing stream surrounds this custorTl built home filled with amenities to delight those wishing elegance and privacy com­bined with convenience. Spacious recaP' t lon areas with 10 ' ceilings. Huge countrY kitchen, family room leading to decK overlooking the beautiful landscape. 51~ bedrooms plus customized lower level.

For those Interested, call Mimi Amorosi, 299-9426

W .C and A.N. MILLER

DEVELOPMENT COMPANY 4701 Sangamore Road., Sumner

229-4016

11844 BEEKMAN PLACE POTOMAC, MARYLAND

Unique Contemporary Rambler on one acre Cul-de-sac street for the essence of luxury and privacy. Over 4000 square feet of exciting living space on one

floor, with full walk out basement to be fmished as you desire! From the sensational Foyer you can enter the two story living room or the

fantastic dining room! The dramatic two story stone fireplace highlights the family room, next to the Haute Cuisine kitchen with absolutely everything!

A separate room for the Bar adjoins the family room and Den for the ultimate entertaining.

Four bedrooms and three full baths, plus two half baths are also included. So many more features that this home must be seen to be believed!

Realistically priced at $339,950. Please caiJ for an appointment to view tbis fabulous borne·

Construction Group, Inc. 652-4722

Page 63: Washington Dossier June 1980

ll SORRY!

We are not a mass media. But if you

wish to attract the

tnost affluent WASHING­TON AREA

REAL ESTATE

BUYER, then advertise

within these pages*

Call Jon Adler The Washington

Dossier 362-5894

*Only homes over $150,000 accepted

Previewing Potomac's Next Great Lifestyle!

Come out this weekend and see the most spectacular new homes in all of Montgomery County at ELBERON, a new community of 52 home sites on 52 -gently rolling acres. Not just one style, one builder, one architect . . . but a marvelous variety, including romantic tudors and skyllt contemporaries, sprawling ramblers and majestic colonials.

Our unique site plan, with no thru streets, offer security, privacy and safety, In a prime location just off Falls Rd. on Glen. Half of the 10 homes under construction and almost half of the home sites at Elberon are already sold even though we don't have anything completely finished yet. So drive out today while there is still time to make personal selections. Homes from $329,500. sites from$76,950.

Sales pavilion 424-5391 Open Saturday & Sunday 1 to 5 P.M.

Wednesday 1 to 4 P.M.

For further information or appointment Call Maxine, Donna, or Ray at

SNIDER BROTHERS, INC • 983·1200

DEVELOPED BY CONSTRUCTION GROUP, INC. 652-4722

Dossier /June 1980/61

Page 64: Washington Dossier June 1980

Luxury Office Townhouses Falls Church

t__ - ~

... ~-

The Old Brick House ~as built in the late 1850's and provides a historic basis for the Old Brick House Square. Here, adjacent to the original structure, eleven buildings are under construction and will form a delightful courtyard effect. Construction consists of all brick and masonry exterior walls with concrete and steel floors . Strictly traditional and in keeping with the Old Brick House, the design includes balconies, bay windows, fireplaces, wet bar, showers, and skylights. Unusual attention has been given to land­scaping, with brick planters being used throughout the project. Centrally situated bet­ween two Metro stops, the project offers a superb location, as well as historc flavor with modern comfort. Call for an appointment to discuss sale or lease and why the Old Brick House Square will enhance your professional image as well as being an excellent invest­ment with 2So/o down, II Y2% permanent financing.

FOSTER Call Jack L. Griffin

Long and Foster R.E., Inc. REALTORS®. 79o-199o

I U'atcq;atc i.~illlt'usil1t Strvkc Washington's Only Telephone Equipped Service • Weddings and Social Functions· Diplomatic and Business Functions· (;onv,en~enJ~.J to the Kennedy Cultural Center and other points of interest • Transportation to and from Airports.

Uniformed Chauffeurs for a Short Local Trip or a Long Distance one. [2021399-0983

62/June 1980/Dossier

Books by Neighbors

THE WOMAN'S DAY LOW­CALORIE DESSERT COOKBOOK.

By Carol Cutler. 204 pp. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co.

Cutler has painstakingly put almost 200 favorite recipes through her miraculous wringer to pare out excess fats and sugar. Now instead of 265 calories per serving, ethereal Grand Marnier souffle can be enjoyed for 82. The about-face in calories is accom­plished by clever use of various substitu· tions; no egg yolks are found in the melange, and skim milk, orange juice and cornstarch are included. A serving of her chocolate souffle is only 81 calories! And Cutler doesn't add one speck of anything artificial. Only natural sugars are employed in her creations, no adulterates, no additives. Additionally, all recipes come with calorie counts of every ingredient, as well as the totals of the whole dish.

The recipes span the world. Viennese crescents cozy up to French Clafouti aux Peches, and the Pumpkin Surprise-a seeded whole pumpkin baked with fruits inside and served with its pulp-is truly ingenious.

This kind of imagination makes for a bounty of dessert ideas that one doesn't have to pay for the next day.

-BETTE TAYLOR

COMING IN JUNE

Of Kennedys and Kings: The Sixties. By Harris Wofford. (Farrar, Straus). The Very First Lady. By Steve Dunleavy. (Simon

& Schuster). Playing Politics For Keeps. By Jeff Greenfield.

(Simon & Schuster). Jack: The Struggles of JFK. By Herbert Parmet.

(Dial) .' Assassination on Embassy Row. By Dinges/

Landau . (Pantheon) Words, Words, Words. (A Dictionory for Jour­

nalists). By John Bremner. (Columbia UniversitY Press). This is the FBI. By Andrew Tully. (McGraw-Hill). Palace Politics: The Ford Presidency. By Robert

Hartmann. (McGraw-Hill). Murder in the White House. By Margaret

Truman . (Arbor). 0

Co scr Let key llo

Exq lnv1 &s or" ~ -Eie1 Exc ors.

~

Bot Hac Ver -

-lls far Vic Ch ~

...

Page 65: Washington Dossier June 1980

tost her :ess 265 wd 82. >m· itu· the lice ing 81

me tral no lly, of of

ese tUX

-a tits uly

r a n't

OR

rris

wn

:I d.

tet.

es/

ur· ;ity

II) . •ert

rel 0

· The Gold Page DPHOSSIER'S CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS

ONE 362-5894

---~~--~AN~TI=Q=UE=S~------c Antiques restored in your home.

8 °fl1Piete refinishing services; stains, chips,

lcratches, burns, water & heat spots, etc. k et us find those beveled mirrors, handles,

11eYholes, etc. Pebblebrook Antique Restore­~ Chevy Chase. 951-0646.

o:-- BOOKS b IScover THE BOOK CELLAR for out-of-print

1 °0 ks to read & collect. All subjects &

~nguages. 8227 Woodmont Ave., Bethesda, ~4-1898. Open 7 days, 11 -5.

:---__ CJl.J..LIGRAPHY ~xqulsitely hand-lettered announcements, ;~lations, dinner party menus. Fortune 500

0 tate Dept. Clientele. Prof., reas. 836-1737

r 370-8173.

E- ELEGANCE FOR SJl.J..E Elegant fabrics from designer cutting rooms. xclus ive imports, Ultra-Suede® in 32 col­

~rs1 . FABRICS UNLIMITED 5015 Col. Pike, ~ 22204 671 -0324.

9 Oriental Rugs li ought-Sold-Appraised-Cleaned-Repaired. V &deed Oriental Rug Emporium, 1504 Mt. ~nAve., Alexandria, Va. 549-0991 .

-- ESCAPES COOLFONT'S HEALTH HAPPENINGS:

Bounce into fitness at 1200-acre mountain spa for men and women. Professional in­~ructions with Carol Spilman and Diet

Orkshop instructor, aerobics, dance, hikes, massages, 1200 calorie or regular ~let. Lodging, meals and training as low as M49.50/day. Sessions 3rd Sunday-Friday

arch through November. Coolfont Re +Creation. Berkeley Springs, W.VA ~- Dial direct from D.C. area 424-1232. fortuga l Algarve/Estoril. Luxury villa ren­~y sea, golf, maid . (301)656-4151 Eves.

:---_ HELP WANTED ~a l esperson - Experienced in English and v Uropean antiques. Perm. full -time. Paid ~ hospit. Call 628-5640. ~XPerienced cook wanted. One In-family,

631ve In-Staff. Must be willing to travel. Cali 8-2057.

HOT TUBS Hot tubs and decking by BLOOMIN' ~EWMAN'S. Let us design and build a unique Got tub environment at your home. Cali ~e Newman 972-8500.

-:----. MEDICJl.J.. SERVICES ;svcHOTHERAPY-Individuai group and v~fllily. Licensed clinical social worker. Ser­C~es covered by most health insurance.

65 evy Chase. Betty Ann Weinstein.

2-0282.

PERSONJl.J..IZED ATIIRE Sandy's Shirt Works - transfers , em­broideries, monograms on finest quality tees, sweatshirts, T-dresses, rainwear. SHIRT PARTIES. 299-6444.

REJl.J.. ESTATE BLUE RIDGE SUMMIT

19th Century Southern Mansion situated on 24 acres of beautifully landscaped proper­ty. Former home of two U.S. Generals and a U.S. Ambassador. Four miles from Camp David. Breathtaking view. $215,000. PAT PADDACK · REAL TOR Hagerstown (301) 790-2700. OCEAN FRONT · 110 Seawatch, 115 St. , Ocean City. All rooms open to 90 ' balcony across ocean front. 45 ' Living-Dining-Lanai, 3 baths, custom kitchen. Never been occupied-$125,000 unfurnished. Furniture on order. 986-6550 or 299-8968.

THE JOHN B. SHARKEY COMPANY REAL TORS ON CAPITOL HILL

Call us to discuss your needs and goals with an eye toward tax planning shelter, in­come vs. equity grow, return vs. risk. 202-398-1200.

SERVICES

LINDA LICHTENBERG KAPLAN 20th Century American Fine Art Appraisals

30 1-654-484 7

~ -ANN H. BISSELL

Art Installations and Framing

202-363-2867

DINNER PARTY CATERING Let an Imaginative chef prepare and serve a superb six course dinner party in your own home. Exciting delicious menus by Jonas Allyn . 649-1701 after 6 p.m.

MIKE'S RECONDITION CENTER STOP WAXING YOUR CAR-poiycoat itl We add luxurious gleam to the Interior & ex­terior of fine cars. Professional service. Ap­pointment only 340-6070. Couple from Phillips Collection and Brook­ings lnstit. seek summer house sitting. Ex­per. w/gardens, horses, Avail. lmmed. - Sept. Call (W)797-6020, (H)667-6344. Respon. couple wishes to housesit June­Aug. Refs. Exp. In yard care and home repair. 522-4213.

Limousine Service

Regular Run From Chevy Chase to Ocean City

and return.

A remarkable new luxury Service via limousine, a comfortable no-hassle ride.

Round trip on a regular basis Friday, Saturday and

Sunday.

By Reservation Only. One way $30.

Round Trip $60. Group Discounts Available.

Information and Reservations 530-5402

Yesterday's Books

Bought & Sold

We're always interes ted in acquiring significant, unusual

and fine books in a ll fields.

We invite you to visit our comprehensiv coU c tion of

50,000 reasonably priced used. ra re and out-of-print

paperbacks and hardbacks.

11am- 7pm daily 1pm- 7pm Sundays

(open late Friday and Saturday)

363-0581

In Lwo lo a lion Wisconsin & hesapeakc lr e ls

4702 Wisconsin Avenue 4725 Wisconsin Avenue

Washjn ton. 0

Do ier/ June 1980/63

Page 66: Washington Dossier June 1980

u (/)

• u.. 1232 36th ST .. NW RESERVATIONS: 965-1789

discover

4849 cordell bethesda maryland 656-8773

parl<ing available

64/June 1980/Dossier

THE MT OF SURVIV ,Al

Continued from Page 27

ed. Come toa t time the inimitable Presidential advi or, author and bon vivant Liz Carpenter, ro e to her feet with the tongue-in-cheek comment, "to Scooter and Dale on their 25th and to their 26-year-old daughter Marta. " That toa t brought down the house.

Another memorable 25th was "Jack" and Carey Miller's cocktail dinner dance at their handsome home in Potomac. (He is the lawyer who pro­secuted Jimmy Hoffa .) Guests were asked to wear their wedding clothes, which brought out a variety of vintage couture including Mrs. Harvey Young in her mother-of-the-bride gown. Bazy Miller Tankersly, (former Vice Presi­dent of the now defunct Times-Herald) turned up in her long antique ivory wedding gown, while Mr. and Mrs. Austin Kiplinger (of Newsletter fame) wore their wartime wedding suits. Kip's was a khaki aviator uniform complete with military cap, while Gogo wore a classic wide shouldered Adrian design. One feminine guest whose girth had grown fore and aft, arrived in her wedding nightgown.

The current trend in 25th, 30th, 40th and 50th Anniversaries i a party tag­ed by the couple' children. Old-guard Washingtonian Jack Nevius, a lawyer who was formerly hairman of the D.C. City Council, and hi wife Sally Bet spent three month s planning a Winston-Salem pectacular for her parents, the Wilson Cuningham on their 50th. The cover of their sepia in­vitation, sent to 225 gue ts, bore the pictures of the bride and groom when they were first married, while the inside bid to dinner and dancing at Winston' Old Town lub was done in limerick.

Guests signed in on a huge po ter picture of Libby uningham in wed­ding gown flanked by an accompany­ing blow-up of their wedding story as it appeared in the April 5th i ue of the 1930 Winston-Salem Journal. Jack Nevius was Toa t Master. then all three Neviae led the orchestra and gue t in serenading the Honoree with a Jack and Sally parody of "Old Gray Bon­net" which went:

" Put on your new blue bonnet with the rosey posies on it, and we'll dance 'til break of day. Social Security might drop us, but there's nothin' gonna stop us on our Golden Wedding Day."

Veteran party goer agree with socie-

ly t=============::;] · that

REPRISE Sponsored by

The Jewish Social Service Agency

Consignment and Resale Shop for

Elegant Designer Fashions

Furs, sportswear, dresses, jewelry, accessories, fine

children's clothing, etc.

Merchandise Received Daily

7913 Norfolk Avenue Bethesda, Md.

Monday thru Friday lOAM -5 PM

For further information call:

656-4911

WCILSnllnlit(Cin's only Lebanese restaurant. Join us for

lunch and dinner, In Georgetown 3340 M Street, N.W.

For reservadons call: 342-9090

7J 4 S WISCONSIN AV E: BETHESD A , MD 20014

I lOt) 6S7 1058

bet\ a a he 0 Otve Ann eac ce(e anct .. Deb tiille Dev 1\•ith

• dan TI

an ni the clev this cake dex engr, hos t assist sion \'ork Part)

'fh ioun ~on a tng < hoJiz ltton run .. night list. . She s

M dom &rou niver &redi Up b in ur St ror the h

y

T Tw<

1 Thi

I F'O'

I

Page 67: Washington Dossier June 1980

y

>P

er ns

ty orche tra leader Howard Oevron ' that mu ic makes the big difference

between a good annniver ary party and a GREAT Occa ion. Dev reports that he orchestrates more 25th and 40th an-01Ver arie than any other kind. "The Anniver ary Song" waltz i SOP at each, he says, and the anniver ary Celebrant are traditionally the first and the last on the dance noor.

• '' Anniver ary dance s , lik e Debutante Ball , died out about the 1irne of the Viet Nam war," not es Devron, who feels they both are back 1

'' With a vengeance with the accent on ry, ' danceable big band sound . 'ne t'S (C.

ise ily

ue d.

r for

I

The busy haste faced with a major anniversary party hould and can call the caterer once he's set the date. The clever party-giver will collaborate with this caterer from cocktail to wedding cake finish. With the Cost of Living In­dex rising, which affect not only engraving but food prices, many hos tesses are wary of outside assistance. This i a snare and a delu­sion, as most caterers are happy to Work within the budget earmarked for Party food.

The handsome brunette widow of iournalist Gladstone Williams per­~onally prefers black tie dance beginn-1rtg at 10 p.m. because dancing sym­bolizes anniversaries, "guests look lllore handsome and thu have more fun ... and parking is so much easier at night. 1 have cut cocktail partie off my list. . . to me, they are si mply taboo," She say .

Music is a "mu t" say the in­domitable Helene, plus a mixing of age &roups when planning the ideal an­niversary party. The most valuable in­&redient of all, however, was summed ~p by Sally Neviu ... who feel the be t 1rtsurance for a suces ful event is "a Strong hu band who will back you to lhe hilt. ' 0

Appropriate Gifts for that Special Anniversary

YEARS TRADITIONAL MODERN

One Paper Five Wood Silverware Ten Tin, Aluminium Jewelry

Twenty hina Platinium Twenty-five Silver Silver

Thiny Pearl Diamond Thirty-five Coral Jade

Fony Ruby Ruby Fony-five Sapphire Sapphire

Fifty Gold Gold Sixty Diamond Diamond

tntsso Catering for all occassion

Fine 1531 Wiscon in A cnuc, .W. Wa hington, D 2 7

Mnlltc Cuarnscl 965-2672

famous for fine foods

Do ier/ June /9 0165

Page 68: Washington Dossier June 1980

BRADLEY WOODS

"On The Street of Dogwoods" For the discriminating purchaser - a Custom built 3 bedroom colonial sited on a large professionally landscaped lot. Ideal for family living or enter­taining. Walk to Landon .

For An Appointment to see

Call Welene Goller, 320-5064

MGMB inc. Realtors 362-4480

3408 WISCONSIN AVENUE, N .W. • WASHINGTON, D.C. 20016

We sell investments to live in .

"OUR GOAL IS TO SERVE"

With compassionate love and skill. .. RN's - LPN's - AIDES.

Homes • Hospitals • Nursing homes

A-t .Adventi~t nu,.~in9 Service Serving Washington Metro Area Licensed by the State of Maryland

CALL 593-3373 • Serving 24 hours • 7 days a week

~~H~NNandSONS

PERSIAN RUGS 7 CLEANING REPAIRING

FREE APPRAISALS

DIRECT IMPORTER OF FINE ORIENTAL RUGS Entrepreneurs of fine oriental rugs for four generations.

We invite you to come and visit us and save hundreds of dollars on room size rugs.

'8019 Wisconsin Avenue • Bethesda, MD 200 14 • 657-2 124 • 986-1908

66/June /980/Dossier

Real Estate Transactions A GUIDE TO AREA PROPER1Y EXCHANGES

WASHINGTON Dr

Dr 3114 Dumbarton Street, N.W .. J. Bryant to Mary W. Russell · $269,500.

4439 MacArthur Boulevard, N.W. · D.E· • Di Farmer to Edwin E. Tritch, Sr. · $200,000.

3214 Reservoir Road, N.W. - G.Mc· Coulahan to Edith H. Merrill· $275,000.

4320 Westover Place, N.W. - Kettler Brothers to Milton E. Kettler· $208,800.

3067 Whitehaven Street, N.W. - M.H· Brandon to Joseph W. Henderson . $635,000.

2003 23rd Street, N.W. · J. Field to Christopher H. Wege, Michael C. Dimick & Jeffrey H. Evans - $536,000.

1835 California Street, N.W. - w.D· Calomiris to Walden Development CorP· . $300,000.

3554 Appleton Street, N.W. - J.R. Reider to Galen 0 . Powers - $242,250.

3306 Cleveland Avenue, N.W. - K.W. Ken· dall to Bruce W. Sanford- $215,000.

3501 Davis Street, N.W. - C.K. von Schrader to DavidS. Mundel- $212,000.

4447 Hawthorne Street, N.W.- G.A. Bell to David J. Hensler- $320,000.

4576 Indian Rock Trail, N.W. . CIH Development Corp. to John 0 . Goldsmittl . $315,000.

4822 MacArthur Boulevard, N.W. - G.A· Spencer to Anna V. Weatherly - $233,800.

5401 MacArthur Boulevard, N.W. · p, Bulle to 5401 MacArthur Boulevard co . . $240,000.

2034 0 Street, N.W. · Quadriad Associates to Andrew M. Werth - $300,660-

3043 P Street, N.W. . 3043 P Street Associates to Hazel R. Rollins & John F. O'Leary - $375,000.

1446 Swann Street, N.W. · A.D. Barefoot to Dan J. Bradley- $215,000.

4334 Westover Place, N.W. - Kettler Brothers to David A Bomgaars - $210,000.

1626 44th Street, N.W .. E. B. Gray to Anne Pail le- $240,000.

429 New Jersey Avenue, S.E. . J.F. McGuirl to Janet D. Saxon • $200,000.

Pc

Ct

s~

&.

Sa

to

v ..._

Inc

De ~e

De •$

~a

~a 4308 Forest Lane, N.W .. G.A. Wilkinson

to A.D. Whitaker - $525,000. Yo 2124 Kalorama Road; N.W.- W. Marlowe · $

to Polygon Cp · $200.000.

MARYLAND

28 West Irving Street, Chevy Chase. T.H. , Mullen to Gregory K. Ingram - $210,000. ta,

8115 Split Oak Drive, Bethesda. Cowan & Hodgkin Construction Company, inc. to ~"i r Norman S. Levy · $235,000. f.Ia

13204 Lantern Hollow Drive, Gaithers· burg - C.E. Hilton & Associates to Jerry L. Na Peek - $200,000. ,

7809 Masters Drive, Potomac · A.M. La Parent to John C. Rose, Jr. - $226,600. · :t

11000 Spring House Court, Potomac · J .A. Bitonti to John C. Young · $275,000. de

10909 Roundtable Court, Rockville ·Herl· tage Walk Associates to Roy H. lgershei· 1 ·4.1! _...... ,.

Page 69: Washington Dossier June 1980

- . -ryant

o.E .• oo. ~ . Me-

l. ettler ) . M.H. rson

ld tO ick &

w.o. CorP·

eider

Ken·

von Q. .ell to

. S253,7QQ. H 6b313 Windermere Circle, Rockville . J.C. e erl lg to Angelo H. Magafan · $232,QQQ.

8 7509 Glennon Drive, Bethesda · Berger­~2rman Builders to Joseph E. Murray

. .. 01 ,5QQ.

0 71 000 Greentree Road, Bethesda . Brke

r ve Associates to Tso L. Yeh · $276,5QQ. D r008 Greentree Road, Bethesda · Brke rr Associates to Teng s. Wu . $28Q,5QQ. o· 527 Hampden Lane, Bethesda · P.S.

1Ckson to George W. Vest, Jr. · $239,QQQ. R 6808 Persimmon Tree Road, Bethesda. S.

0rla to Daniel J.W. Wagner. $2QQ,QQO. p 402 Trent Street, Chevy Chase · E.C.

0feroy to Joseph Magyar · $218,QQQ. C 5211 Oak Drive, Damascus . I.H .

hesney to Ja Laur Corp · $262,8QQ. S 24020 Old Hundred Road, Dickerson -G.E. Pates to Robert F. Ellsworth . $235,QQO.

&. ~909 Cleveland Street, Kensington ·Witte

9 ohen, Inc. to John DeConcinl · $239,QQO.

l• 216 Bentridge Avenue, Potomac · C·ll ·~21tchell & Best Company to Allen P. Zweig ... 01 ,969. Pi 9400 Falls Bridge Lane, Potomac . E.F.

egza to DavidS. Ross · $21Q,QQQ. S 9805 Hall Road, Potomac . L. Datlow to

amuel N. Kiewans . $35Q,QQQ. 'N 11008 Homeplace Lane, Potomac · W.W.

Oif to Stanley Schoengold · $27Q,QQQ.

1 6105 Kennedy Drive, Bethesda · M. Hurt o Milton H. Shapiro . $275,QQQ.

CIH ;mutt ViRGINIA G.A·

IQQ. . p.

I Co-

lr iad 1,660-itreel 1n F.

etoot

ettler )QQ. Anne

J.F.

.9800 Spring Ridge Lane, VIenna · A.N. ~rlier Development Company to Duane B . "dams . $21Q,348.

1 109 Tollgate Way, Falls Church. Tollgate,

nc. to Daniel F. Logan . $2Q6,721. 731Q Hooking Road, Mclean · Ridge

~evelopment Corporation to Dale A. Brun­er · $249,8QQ. 7317 Hooking Road, Mclean · Ridge

D$evelopment Corporation to Paul F. Knotter . 253,77Q.

1118921 Colesbury Place, Fairfax· F.L. Fried· an to Frederick C. Turner · $213,75Q. 3901 Bentwood Court, Fairfax · M.

Racoosln to William R. Barton · $230,QOQ. 3910 Bentwood Court, Fairfax . M.

Racoosin to Thomas A. Lallas · $2QQ,8Q2. 'r 1079 Rocky Run Road, McLean. Boehly· oung Partnership to John R. Tuttle

·lowe · $33Q,QQQ. ' S 1306 Timberly Lane, Mclean · Tlmberly

nson

_____. o LP to Thomas M. Dyer · $232,QQQ. B 2781 Quebec Street, N. Arlington · W.W. rackett to Robert C. Clements · $255,QQQ.

1 1529 King Street, Alexandria · J.R. Harris,

nc. to James R. Harris . $43Q,QQQ. _____.

T.H. ). an & :. tO

1ers· ry L.

A.M.

. J.A.

Heri· 1ei·

• 1179 Ballantrae Lane, Mclean· S.S. Mur-ray to Paul W. Paker . $314,QQQ.

1953 Limb Tree Lane, Vienna · Keystone ~lnance & Service Corporation to Donald A. ,ayes . $2Q5,QQO. .., 78Q7 Willowbrook Road, Clifton · A.C. ,all to Joseph R. Magnone · $225,QOO.

l 65Q7 Ursllne Court, Mclean · Machlcote

and Company to Robert G. Taylor "$225,QOQ.

d 8464 Portland Place, Mclean · R.G. Klein·

einst to Guy Cane · $235,QOQ. 1 945 Barton Street, N. Arlington · M.G.

A.iikanlan to E. Bruce Harrison · $425,QOQ.

Last chance to own a contem~ary in Potomac fiJr 10 7/8% * the beautiful wooded setting

II Economical gas heat included. Priced from the $190,000's.

Our final section of fast-selling From the Beltway take 1-270 to contemporaries in the trees is Montrose Rd. West on Montrose now open, with 10}{.% interest- ~to Seven Locks Rd. only financing for three years. Right on Seven Don't miss e Locks. about 1 out on our POJO·•• Aj( ~ block to Polo-prizewinning 1•1n P: = ! :=• mac Springs. designs, with SDD JNGS Open weekends cathedral cei lings, 2-story • ~ 11-7. weekdays rooms, galleries, decks. and an 12-7, closed Thursdays. Phone openness that lets you enjoy 279-7575.

lruenors Ro m ary 0 Netfl

Luwl ss

BAC K RS W l COMl

MLS

··rhe Largest Select jon Of Ltght Bulbs tn The Washtngton Area

rREEI5 33s-7soo -----~~~-~~~~~~~~~

•• :::'~:~:.":.:~.. 1~ LECTRI ~_, , 1611 WISCONSIN AVE., N.W. ;;:-;::;-;;~ ~OMPAN....I...ol WASHINGTON, D.C. 20007

""'"S HI flS Alf' CON~t l RI t I(

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING

• W11mg & Outlets • Re~liiS

• Remcxtclmg • Servtcc Heavy Ups • Thermostnts • Door Bells & Clt,uos • Garde" Ltghtmg

• Cmner W111(1owAif CondtiiOtJCt s

• Flourcsccnt F1xturos R e l)l)trecJ

• le lfiC R eJJlllfS To d Fwnacos

• FtocxiL ,ghjs • Je ,,c Hent

LIGHTING FIXTURE SHOWROOM

• LtQhlnl(J ottures • C llJIId /I(U $

• Cty}.tnl Futtwcs • TllfJily<tt • MaJ.. e.-up l..r(J/11\

• Fl 111 0"Ct•rtt LJQ/11

• c;.,,,iu)e L.mtclll) • Colom.JI Raptodu ItO,, • P1c turfl L1Qilt ~tt

• ,lftU:n ltqhts • Posts & L.Jnlf'trts • P.lrl Fat rtMitut ..-

Dos. ier/ Jrme 1980167

Page 70: Washington Dossier June 1980

Social Calendar THE FORTHCOMING EVENTS OF THE CITY

I f you're planning an event, please call Mrs. Wimsatt at 652-7574 at least six weeks in advance. We regret that not every item can be

published for reasons of space. However, private parties will be placed on a special list that will not appear in this column.

JUNE June 1: Tunisia- National Day. June 2: Italy- Anniversary of the Republic. June 3: Wolf Trap 's Tenth Anniversary Gala

Evening at Wolf Trap Farm for the Performing Arts- by reservation - cockta il s, 6:30- dinner 8:30 - black tie- tickets $235, $160, $50- Chairman, Elizabeth Taylor Warner - Dinner Cha irmen, Mrs . James Benton , Mrs. Francis W . Brown, Mrs. Cornelius B. Kennedy.

June 3: Fifteenth Annual Old Fashioned Barbecue benefit of Children's Speech and Hear­ing Center- Em bas y of Italy residence- 6:30p.m. - by invitat ion- $75 each- casual dress- Honorary Chairman, Mr s. Thoma s P. O'Neill, Jr . - Chairmen, Mrs. William T . Finley, Jr., Mrs. William G . McMurtrie.

June 6: "Un Bal d'Ete" under the patronage of

Fashion Calendar

JUNE 3,4-St. John's knits. Informal modeling. 11-3. 3rdjloor. Garjinckel's. F St. 3,5-lnformal modeling. 12-3 Frankie Welch. 219 Restaurant. Each Tuesday and Thursday of the month. 5-Van Teal Inc. acryUc sculptures. Opening night reception. 7:30-9:30. Gift gallery. I. Magnin. 5-Revillon fur fashion show. Saks Fifth A venue. State of Israel Bonds Women's Division. Home of Mrs. Herbert Haft. 11,12-Agnona informal modeling. 11-3. 3rd floor. Garflnckel's. F St. 14-Rose Williams luncheon and fashion show. Women's Auxiliary for Howard University. 12 noon. Hyatt Regency. 15-17-Trunk showing of Lanvin. Informal modeling. Saks Jande/. 0

I. Sue/len Estrin wore a Jean Louis Scherrer and Randi Meisel wore a Mary McFadden at the Cancer Ball.

2. Mrs. Jim Shepley at the Corcoran Ball.

68/ June 1980/Dossier

the Ambassador of France and Mrs. de Labou­laye- to benefit the Washington Opera - a t the em­bassy of France - 10:30 p.m. - preceded by em­bassy dinners- black tie - by invitation - $160 each -Cha irman , Mrs. Henry A. Kissinger.

June 10: Mental Health Association Gala honoring Rosalynn Carter. Dinner-dance with Peter Duchin' s music. Shoreham Hotel. Recep­t.ion 6:30, Dinner, 7:30pm- black tie optional- br reservation - ticket $250 and $ 150. Honorary Chairperson, Joan Mondale - Chairmen, Gover­nor a nd Mrs. Averell Harrima n.

June 12: Philippines- Independence Day. June 13: Celebration of VISTA's Fifteenth An­

niversary - Award Ceremony at Kennedy Center Concert Hall -8:30p.m.- by reservation - Master of Ceremonies, Sargent Shr iver - Honorary Chairman, Mrs . Rosalynn Carter.

June 13: Performance of " Madame Butterny" at Wolf Tra p Farm for the Performing Arts - benefit of Bryn Mawr College schola rship fund - by invitation - Co-chairmen, Mrs. Betsy Pinck-ney Brown, Mrs. Alfred Friendly, Jr.

June 14: Flag Day. June 15: Fa ther' s Day. June 17: Iceland- Anniversary of the establish­

ment of the Republic.

June 18: "Cruise for a Cause" - benefit of Rosemount Day Care Center - sponsored by the Ladies Board, House of Mercy - on board the " Diplomat" - 8 to 11 p.m. - by invitation - $35 each - cruise wear - Chairman, Mrs. Milo G. Coerper.

June 20: Start of Newport-Bermuda Yacht Races- off Brenton Reef Light, Newport, R. I.

June 21: Summer begins. June 22: Annual Fundraising Garden PartY

benefit of Montgomery County Historical SocietY - Beall-Dawson House, 103 West MontgomerY Ave., Rockville, Md. - 5 to 7 p.m. - proceeds for restoration of Bea ll -Dawson House - by reserva· tion - Chairman, Mrs. Austin H. Kiplinger.

June 23: Luxembourg- National Day. June 26: Democratic Republic of Madagascar

- Independence Day. June 26: "Bal des Rosenkavalier" - Palais

Schwarzenberg, Vienna, Austria- (Formerly Ball of the Silver Rose) - by invitation - Chairman. Mrs. RobertS. Williams, Jr.

June 27: Annual Dinner Dance benefit of Travelers Aid Society of Washington - penthouse of Hubert Humphrey Building- black tie- by in· vitation - Chairmen, Mrs. Harrison Brand III, Mrs. Alfred M. Osgood, Mrs. John E. Pnieger.

3. Lynn Fain in a Holston and Marion Rosen· thai in an Oscar de Ia Renta at the Cancer Ba/1.

4. At the Smithsonian's Portrait Ball were Penni Alison in a Mary McFadden, Val Cook in an Oscar de Ia Renta and Laurie Firestone iff a Chloe.

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sen· 1alf.

lk e in .. Phorogr. phcd ar: a Colony, th bcnuti(u l ben h

nnd t nnb conununity.

~ sea colony

the beautrful b ach 1 nnl community

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The inspiration is elegance.

From Saks-Jandel, two perfect expressions of sheer genius, each from the imagination of the bold designer-Targuin. From The New Chrysler Corporation, an

elegant desi~ that is the match for an estabhshed reputation for engineering excellence, the Chiysler LeBaron Fifth Avenue Limited Edition.