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Publisher David Adler Editor Sonia Adler Associate Editor Susan Ellis Assistant to Editor Lee Kirstein Editorial Associate Dorothy Marks General Manager Jean Tolson Design Consultant Susan R. Eason Art Director Lianne Uyeda Liang Chief Photographer John Whitman Contributing Editors Viola Drath, Bette Taylor, Maggie Wimsatt, Anne Denton Blair, Burke Wilkinson Patty Cavin, DeWitt Smith Copy Editor Diana H. Regenthal Typography Van Dashner Advertising Production Bonnie Down Production Assistant Peter Lincoln Dunnigan arculation Walter Duncan Newsstand Consultant Nancy FandeU Bookkeeper Martha Brekhus Shamsesfandabadi Vice President/ Advertising Jon Adler Local Advertising Director Dick Moessner Account Executives Michael Earle, Donna Korman National Sales Offices: New York Catalyst Communications 260 Madison Avenue, N.Y., NY 10016 (212) 578-4830 The Pattis Group Chicago 4761 West Touhy Avenue Lincolnwood, IL 60646, (312) 679-1100 Los Angeles 1800 North Highland Avenue, Suite 717 Hollywood, CA 90028, (213) 462-2700 7600 Red Road,
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Montreal 475 Sherbrooke St.,W. Montreal, H3A 2L9 Quebec, (514) 842-5223 London d 69 Fleet Street, London EC4Y lEU Englan (01) 3534104 Advertising and editorial offices located.~ 1 6 3301 New Mexico Ave., Washington, DC""' ' General Telephone (202) 362:5894.. 10 For Soda! Coverage: Please send aU mvttauonsNc"' Social Secretary, The Washington Dossier, 330 1 d io· Mexico Ave., Washington, DC 20016 (Please sene) vitations as early as possible to schedule co~er~~ For Subscriptions: Please send aU subscnpu to inquiries, applications and changes of addres~eot, The Washington Dossier Subscription Dep~ are PO Box 948, Farmingdale, NY 11737. Pnc~A per $12 for I year; $22.50 for 2 years. Overseas Svo year. Canada $14 per year· rcial Photographs for commercial and non-<:ornme use are available for sale. bY 1 The Washington Dossier is published mont~Jeot; Adler International, Ltd . David Adler, PreTst eas· Jon Adler, Vice Pres.; Sonia Adler, Secy.- r C Controlled circulation paid at Richmond, VA 23261 and Washington, D ISSN # 0149-7936 d Copyright 1981 © Adler International Lt · To be audited by
~'J¥WJJ.&Q The magazine accepts no responsi~il it Y fo~r unsolicited manuscrip ts, artwork. pacl~es cartoons. They will not be returne ·
4/April 1981/Dossier
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Vol. 6 No. 11 April 1981
~
Jean Webb Smith, Back East Again By Dorothy Marks The Attorney General's Wife in Washington The Second Time Around lS The Washington Land Rush: More Valuable Than Gold Stories on Real Estate by Kenneth Geremia and Don Oldenburg ~ A Square Foot Chart to the City's Wealth 11 Onward and Upward Go Land Values ~ California vs. Washington By Susan Ellis Merits and Demerits by Those Who Have Bought in Both Places The Indispensable Guide to New Homes By Van Dashner Guarding Your Social Standing By Helen Neal Bow to Grin and Bear It at Washington Cocktail Parties lialberstam's Legacy: Securing Your House By Susan Ellis Elite Feet By DeWitt Smith Stepping Out in New Spring Styles
Rufus Lusk, Jr., Page 27
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Annabell's File Art and Artists By Viola Drath From Hans Baldung Grien to Judy Pfaff and Into the Serenity of 19th-Century American Luminist Painting Books by Neighbors Suspense, A Judicial Great and A Choice of Freebies llail to the Chief President Reagan and Mrs. Thatcher's Philosophical Romance Poet's Comer Eugene McCarthy, Katie Louchheim, O.B. Hardison, Jr., and Maxine Kumin l'he Educated Palate By Bette Taylor The Savvy Shoppers' Restaurants
INVESTMENT
43
Along Party Lines Three Heart Affairs, Tallyho for the Fairfax Hunt and the Renwick Waltz 62 Fashion Calendar 92 Social Calendar By Maggie Wimsatt 92 Curtain Going Up By Anne Blair
Jean Webb Smith, petite and stylish wife of the Auorney General, enjoys the dazzling view from the balcony of The Hay-Adam Hotel overlooking the White House and Lafayette Park . She i almost a at home in Washington as she was in California, for she lived here during the late 1950s. At that time, she says, "The people were wonderfully hospitable and the monuments beautiful, but there weren't more than three good restaurants and the shopping was . .. not very interesting." She finds the nation 's capital has made great trides in the last two decades in terms of cuisine and haute couture. And, of course, a unique advantage is being frequently asked to dine with "old friend " at the White House. (Photographed by John Whitman at The Hay-Adams; Mrs. Louis Feraud; her make-up by Susan Hauser.)
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AnnabellS File 1
HE DOSSIER OF WASHINGTON COMMENT
Act: ly savvy Washington cynics icted that the newshens would Nancy Reagan when she moved 1600 Pennsylvania. Not only has it happened, but the First Lady's . is blunting all drawn swords. She the Capital's most sought after lunchguest, especially among those vying hostess numero uno, a thundering . . . Reports from one private graced by the Reagans' visitan, that of Leonard and Elaine tein, indicate that the Presidenpresence is no chore at all. The President carries the con verbal!. vors: survivors surfacing from the of defeat include Anne Wexler, consulting while hubby Joe Dufgets set to vacate the Endowment the Humanities in September. "It's suddenly discovering you've lost dowry," Duffey opines, quoting ncy Hanks, another ex-endow... as for the popular Liv BidWho heads the Arts Endowment, slated to lose his dowry, he's quietr~turned to writing novels. Three novels were critically acclaima few years back. Lots more to tell · · . Also busy word-processing, in to the ex-Prez are Jody Powell, Watson and Mary Hoyt . . . writing a book is Bob Strauss wife, Helen, who once got antsy away from Texas, now can't go . without getting ditto about tngton. Zbig Brzezinski worried t the Carter book, hoping he'll s.omething for Zbig to write ... of Congress Dan Boorstin those called up to Princeton to Carter on how to research his
~ollywood/Washington line is ng to blur what with celebrities
Valerie Harper, Liv Ullman and Jack Klugman flogging causes before Congress and handsome John Gavin on deck for Ambassador to Mexico . And those rumors about Sinatra taking on an Ambassadorship persist . . . Most unusual party ever on Washington scene was hosted in the Metropolitan Club by Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jameson (she's the smashing Eva Gabor). The party for 40 (all heavy hitters including AI Haig, Chuck Percy, the Ambassadors from England, Ireland, Hungary, Jordan and Tunisia featured impromptu speeches from every man in the house and some ladies. No one was at a loss for words ... Jane DeGraff and Jack Sloat at the hitching post. They'll be living in Wesley Heights. Jack, who gave up his house for the Bush's until George moved into the Veep's place, is slated for a job at Commerce ... And why can't the newsies let the Congressmen practice their aberrations without harassment ... kind of takes the fun out of public service. Going the Rounds: NOW group organizing pairs of pretty young female missionaries to spread the ERA word in Salt Lake City . . . Distinguished ex-Senator Hugh Scott, 80 years young, has just joined the law firm of Barnett, Alagia and Carey, headed by the ubiquitous Kentucky flash Barney Barnett . . . Bloomies scheduling big Irish promotion in the fall ... Rose Mary Wood , consulting on her own still talks almost daily to "the boss" . . . Television series concocters descending on Washington for "ideas." Didn't know they had any ... Incognito ... Hodding Carter Ill, went unrecognized at the KenCen. He's finally changed his hairdo .. . The DAR Museum 's exhibit on the Jewish community's contribution to Early America, 1654-1830, after setting attendance record s here, travels to Spoleto Festival in Charleston, SC in May.
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Art &Artists ~ROM GRIEN TO PFAFF AND INTO THE SERENilY QF l9TH-CENTURY AMERICL\N LUMINIST PAINTING.
0
ne does not have to be a fine arts expert or scholar to appreciate the amazing variety and fUality of the exciting exhibitions oferect in the nation's capital these days. ~hile the versatile expressionist of the erman Renaissance, Hans Baldung Grien, the extraordinarily talented PUpil of Durer and contemporary of ~olbein and Cranach, fascinates the eholder with his astonishingly free and ~)(Pressive dramatic compositions, his t Yna~ic counter movements, his poe~t Imagination, psychological anal~81~ and superb linear technique at an Inttmate show of his unique drawings ~nct woodcuts at the National Gallery, he Birshhorn across the Mall has quite another surprise in store. ''Directions 1981," a series devoted 1 so the exploration of the current art icene that was initiated by Howard Fox attempts to convey a sampling 0~ 1979, some of the more interesting modes 0 cf contemporary art coexisting in the h~n~e~t of artistic pluralism. Both ex111.bittons are high spirited and f Irnulating. Both of them proceed tom a scholarly premise. ,, 1'.he 16 participating artists in , btrections 1981 '' were chosen by :urator Miranda McClintic. According :~ t.heir way of seeing and making art, 1: etr works are divided into three fategories: "Artistry," or art for art's •ake . • ''M yth and Metaphor" and "So•Ial Observations." Of course, Hans Baldung Grien had Problems in combining all these 1 ·. ements- and more- into an enigmaIc 13 x 7-inch woodcut "Bewitched ;oom," circa 1544. In this masterful ;krnposition a bearded groom, most ely Baldung whose coat-of-arms ap~ars. in the background, lies ununsctous or dead with pitchfork and hrreycomb dropped from his hands on l~ne floor of a stable. He is watched by lanctold hag or witch with a nasty grin lin a contemptuous looking mare, the Sk~l~rnation of sexual vitality. The lyrn fui. blend of naturalist, surreal, lie bohst and satiric components has Ver ceased to intrigue scholars like
1. St. Christopher, (c.15ll) Woodcut by Hans Baldung Grien. British Museum. 2. Judy Pfaff working on her mixed media installation, Formula Atlantic. 3. James Byrne's Phase, 1980, video installation with four monitors in case, hung from ceiling.
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Dossier/Apri/19811/l
Yale's Alan Shestack who organized this competent Baldung tribute. "Directions 1981" is not nearly as confounding as the rhetoric in the catalog. Unfortunately, the admittedly arbitrary divisions meant to clarify the aesthetic approaches of the artists, tend to obscure them and to frustrate the viewer. Thus, we are told that the works under the heading "Artistry," "serve no practical function," as if any work of art deserving this designation ever was intended to be functional! The purpose of art is art, Kant wisely postulated. To be sure, the fine pastels of the wide open midwestern spaces by William Beckman of Minnesota "satisfy the senses"-a criterion derived from the word aesthetic-as much as the innovative video installation by James Byrne or Judy Pfaff's exuberant room- . sized, mixed media construction "Formula Atlantic," actually an environment suggesting a wondrously fluid underwater scene. The same, alas, cannot be claimed for Ulrich· Ruckriem's stone slabs. "Myth and Metaphor" provides encounters with the elegant installation of rocks, wood and gleaming copper relating to the great outdoors in Lita Albuquerque's installation, ''The horizon is the place that maintains the memory"; Vernon Fisher's witty visual narratives; Thomas Rose's unresolved constructed paintings where illusionary and real compositional elements are played off against each other; Earl Staley's fanciful mythological paintings that often lack proficiency; and the curious low-key canvases of pulverized earth from various archeological sites in Meso-America by Michelle Stuart, which assume a number of unexpected connotations. However, when we read "the belief that essential experiences of life can be translated into art" is "crucial" to the work of these artists, we become confused again. After all, we were taught that all art is derived from life. Has any art from the cave paintings of Lascaux to Picasso's revolutionary "Desmoiselles d' Avignon" to Judy Pfaff's installation ever attempted to accomplish anything else? Rosemarie Castoro's imposing sculpture of 21 tall galvanized sheets of steel, "7 x 3 = 21" which is painted black and resembles crumpled paper standing upright on edge while at the same time attaining an agitated anthropomorphic presence, is among the most compelling entries. Why it is displayed under "Social Observations" is anybody's guess. "They, perhaps, feel like 111April 1981 /Dossier
dancers," observes Castoro about interrelated gestural parts of monumental sculpture. . Nevertheless "Directions 1981" IS riveting experience and is intellectu and emotionally at least as rewarding the three stories .crammed full of temporary art by 115 Americans in Whitney's "1981 Biennial Exhibition Interestingly, the two artists included both shows, Vernon Fisher and 1 Pfaff, are far better represented at Hirshhorn than in New York. Another scholarly exhibition should not be missed, "Washi Collects,'' takes the viewer to the art of American 19th-century I landscape painting. Ted Cooper of Adams Davidson Galleries, a sch and collector with a Ph.D. in history, has culled a fine selection a handful of private collectio~~; Among the gems are Frederic Churc r small but intensive "Twilight nead Mount Ktaadn," circa 1860; San for Gilford's incandescent "Twilight ~~ Hunter Mountain," 1865; and t d serene vistas of peaceful woods rivers by Jasper Cropsey, Alfre ke Bricher and William Hart which ~a ys you homesick for the good old .:0• when man and nature were not ah the ated and the relationship betw~en. ht artist and nature was celebrated ~~ h~he and color. Time is immobilized 10 r American wilderness depicted bY Henmann Herzog and Daniel Hunt~n~t~ i~ The awesome silence of the lurn.ln 1 s~ er echoed in the lyrical moonht n"A· scenes by David Johnson and Ralph Jn· Blakelock. The action-packed paintings of (st dian grandeur by Western ar ~n Charles Marion Russell mark the tr as s1t10n into the 20th century. ThO~er· Eakins' portrait of "Gilbert sun the land" is no less absorbing than bY "Paris Street Scene" and a seasca~~Jde 1 the American impressionist C bY Hassam or the small watercolor er, Maurice Prendergast. Everett Shinn's pastel on p~P as "Night Life-Accident," 1908, 1s air powerful a statement on human deS~h!l as anything conceived since Goya. Jbltle Marin's large watercolors of f)oat mountains that somehow seern to the in space are a sheer delight. BuJ•oeil showstopper here is a trompe ofa painting by Ken Davies (born I 92 5) rdlY wooden mail box. Though it can ~\ael be mistaken for one of Williarn _Nl 1cis in Harnett's masterpieces, it certainlY or· the tradition of his great predeces:A'ftl -VIOLAD
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a! on l'he1 Hillandale at Georgetown is accepting contracts on the thirty-four new residences in our new section called The Chancery. These six new designs in the D istrict's most secure and graceful community offer space to Washingtonians who require a great deal of pace. How large? The twenty-eight foot living room in the Inverness House accommodates this statue of Mr. Lincoln ... with an additional nine feet remaining above his head.
which soars three tories high ...set off by a glass wall two stories high. Above it all, a kylight lets in sunlight and starlight. An elevator will whisk you quickly and smoothly from your underground garage to your library on the third floor. .. where you may enjoy the magnificent viC\v. Outside. homes in The Chancery ri e three and four stories out of rhe hillside, front on the District' most delightful courtyard and, like all ofHillandale. are but a bri k ten minutes' walk from the delights of Georgetown.
Inside, homes in The Chancery have over four thousand square feet and offer three, four and five bedrooms. Dramatic design features in the Inverness House include a twenty-eight foot living room
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Books by Neighbors SUSPENSE, A JUDICI~ GREAT AND ESOTERICA
l'IJE COURT YEARS, 1939-1975: The Autobiography of William 0. Douglas. New York: Random House. 434 pp., 16 Pp. of photos. $16.95
f In The Court Years, Justice Douglas
0
Ully and candidly recounts his lifelong ~truggle to achieve his ideals. His firstand accounts of the great judicial issues in twentieth century America, rejle~e. with knowledge and tempered with nc1s~ve wit, are presented from the best ~oss1ble perspective-that of the Justice d mself, not of a secondhand source ependent on rumor and hearsay. This autobiography is no long, dry encomium to the judicial system or the ~ourt of last appeal. How could it be? or 36 years, Douglas was the center of ~ontroversy, serving as the cutting edge extend the protections of the Bill of Ights to new circumstances, and in the ~ase of bugging, wiretaps and electron; su_rveillance, to the new technology. residents Nixon and Ford tried to im~~ach him. President Johnson reviled i~m . J · Edgar Hoover bugged him. But an a manner of speaking, "he outlived U the ~astards," and quit the bench nder h1s own power and on his own terms. c· In ~he midst of fast-moving and fas/natmg jurisprudence, Douglas takes ~~e out to engage us in his experiences a.t~h t?e fourth estate. That chapter l'h ne IS worth the price of the book. c ere you'll learn how the great radio i o:mentator Walter Winchell got his ~ and how he lost it; how Edward R. a. U~row and Eric Sevareid stood up ,...gainst McCarthyism· how Walter '-ro n k'Ite ' s career was saved ' C in the Mctharthy era; how Paul Harvey exploited ta e fear of that era to his own advana.~e; and when James Reston walked ay from a revealing Vietnam-CIA 81 ory.
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DThe Press chapter is germane, because
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\V~Uglas, ~ong with Justice Hugo Black,
thosu a stnct constructionist who ''. . . \Vh ~ht the First Amendment meant at IS said.'' -DICK GREENWOOD
1
Justice Douglas was a nature lover and conservationist.
THE WAR OF THE ROSES. By Warren Adler. New York: Warner Books. 263 pp. $10.95.
Warren Adler's eighth novel is a tour deforce and a considerable accomplishment. Jonathan and Barbara Rose, with their fine Kalorama area house, their two well-adjusted children, their cat and dog and shared love of antiques, seem so happy that the sudden collapse of their life together has the impact of a series of hammer blows. In the opening chapter, we learn how they first met at a Cape Cod auction competing fo~ a pair of Staffordshire figurines. They are of English boxers, and young Jonathan and Barbara each snag one-splitting the statuettes but starting a relationship. (Later, when they marry, they agree rather touchingly
that the china figures will do all their fighting for them). The main action starts when Jonathan, by now a rising Washington lawyer, has what seems at first to be a severe heart attack. He is in New York on a business trip, and Barbara to his surprise and somewhat to her own, fails to rush to his side. Quickly recovered, he taxes her with the failure and she tells him the truth: his life or death means nothing to her and hasn't for a long time. The pair square off for the inevitable divorce, each with a predatory lawyer as a second . As the aggrieved party, Jonathan refuses to leave the house. So he and Barbara wage hand-to-hand combat for the main part of the book. Ann, the pretty au pair girl, becomes a pawn in the contest, and the children more and more terrified onlookers. Both parents turn into hardened campaigners. Who wins the war will not be revealed here, but two examples of their tactics can speak for many. Barbara, a gourmet cook, decides to throw an intimate little dinner party, complete with ambassadors, to show how splendidly free she is. Jonathan sabotages the dinner in an episode that some will think hilarious and others jarringly unfunny. The key word here is Ex-lax. As one countermeasure, Barbara maneuvers his beloved Ferrari under the electrically controlled garage door and sends the door crashing down on it in pulverizing blows. The mood is increasingly grand guignol but the narrative drive is there, the suspense does build up. No work of fiction just grows untended: every scrap of overheard dialogue, every newspaper entry, every casual insight, adds to the mosaic. So here, as I see it, is some historiography of Warren Adler's story. The title of course, stems directly from The War Between the Tates, a recent novel that also dealt with domestic tensions. The plot is as old as Shakespeare's The Winter's Tale in which the King acquires a sudden, inexplicable aversion to his
Dossier/April 198//15
Queen that results in long rejection. And } ] one of Adler's antecedents is John O'Hara's Appointment in Samarro. I Perhaps you remember how a whole series of darkening events is triggered bY )tV Julian English's performance at ~h~ country club when he throws his dnn into the face of a popular priest. Such forebears do not diminish the present book. It stands on its o~nh There is an old Hollywood jingle whJC goes like this:
Cecil B. De Mille Against his will Couldn't get Moses Into the War of the Roses. Warren Adler's aim is not quite. so giddy. And he has got a lot in, includJO~ Gothic atmosphere and an easy grasP ~e the way things are in Washington. Sot reader will get a lot out. N -BURKE WILKINSO
SOMETHING FOR NOmiNG.
By Matthew Lesko. New York: The Associated Press. 71 pp. $2.95. If you ever wanted to know wher~ you might adopt a horse, have ~0~ own flag flown over the U .S. Caplt I' pick up some Civil War maps or ~~p y for a grant to promote creative wnun8• this is the book for you. • 11 Compiled by Matthew Lesko, f~ll der of a D.C. research firm, Wash/Jn8; ton Researchers, Something r Nothing is a gold mine of resources ~e which we have already paid. As t . 11 author says, "if there is a subject ~e which you are interested, no doubt ~ it government has done a study _aboll st and the information is gathenng ducY on the back shelf of some agen closet.'' The little known nuggets include: ·cu1• • The U.S. Department of Agfl J11 ture lends up to $30,000 to you~h ffr~J11 10 to 21 years of age for certatn a and nonfarm ventures. nd • Certain states will stock your P?115 . without charge with bass and blue~ 5. • You can obtain from the ·tic Department of Energy a free pla~d device to insert in your sh~wer htinS and save up to $40 a year m hea bills. aJce Although this book will ne~er .rn it you rich and is mainly a cuno~JtY~n provides many tidbits of cocktaJI to versation and is well worth the $Z.hillS• obtain it from: Something for Not ecJc, AP Newsfeatures, Box G22, Tean NJ 07666.
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And John
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------The President and Mrs. Thatcher stand for the playing of both nations' national anthems.
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Jun· ,ins· t!sident Reagan escorts Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher across the White House south lawn to
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rostrum where he formally welcomes her on the occasion of her official visit to Washington.
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the ,..,anfare and ceremony were the :t in order of the day on the occasion of . the In British Prime Minister Margaret ~tit ~ atcher's first official visit to dust ashington. Mutual admiration be1 :ncY t een Mrs. Thatcher and President ~~~an for their twin conservative •fhhcai beliefs, was another hallmark icul· ~~e event. Their toasts at the Reagans' rorn tte House dinner to a "union of arrn ~tt~" based on the two nations' comon tdeals underlined this as well as the ,Jtnabout the next evening when Mrs. ~atcher was hostess at a British Emsy dinner for the President. Q};'or Lee Annen berg, Chief of Pro·~ol, it was her first state dinner. Verything's been perfect," she 11 ~ 0 Wed afterward, although her milialee /1Ce to exact precision was shown by r, it •nequent glances at her wristwatch dur:on· &the day-long arrival ritual. 5 tO lerl'he guest list reflected a Reagan in'n8• ~ e~t in corporate executives, news cJc, edta, influential Congressional and
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administration figures and Hollywood personalities. As Jack Wrather, an old movie industry friend, remarked, he'd been to the White House before but this was the first time under "our administration .''
Lee Annen berg's duties as Chief of Prorocol involve keeping on schedule.
The White House guard presents arms before the President and Mrs. Thatcher cifter a 19-gun salute heralds the visiting British head of government.
Dossier I April 1981/17
To the Marine Band's Ruffles and Flourishes, President Reagan, Prime Minister Thatcher, Mrs. Reagan and Mr. Thatcher proceed to the East Room, flanked by the White House Honor Guard.
Sen. John Warner's Liz was opening out of town in a play, but he went solo to meet the P.M., as the First Couple look on.
The Roger Stevens were among the Washington luminaries there. 18/April 1981/Dossier
.
Sculptor LouiSe Neve/son was on the gues compiled by Nancy Reagan weeks earlier.
"After you, you're the celebrity," George Bush seems to be telling Charlton Heston, to Barbara's and Lydia's amusement.
White House regulars Bob and Dolores Hope felt right at horne.
t list
Penthouse No.8 would be grand for Senator va.~. . . . . . .
/iSI
There's a new place in Georgetown ideally suited for aU the YIP's headed for Washington. James Place. A particularly dignified condominium residence on the side of Georgetown nearest Pennsylvania Avenue - and farthest from the congestion. Whjle all 77 residences are unusually large and well-designed, Penthouse No. 8 is uruque in both size and grandeur-from the blazing, double hearth fireplace to the skylight in the living room. It is truly one-of-a-kind, not just at James Place, but in all of Georgetown. Price: $369,500. Visit our decorated models at the Sales Office, on 29th Street, South of M, just below the canal (guest-parking in garage). 1, 2, and 3 bedroom plans available early 1981. Open 11 to 6 every day. Phone 338-0990. Sales by Brenneman Associates, ~ Inc. Developed by a subsidiary of
Watergate Development, Inc.
t:.J
JamesPla'Ce
Pruticular~ti9ÂŁmg~69,5
Poets Corner Ode to a Mature Woman
Lady don't look at the glass if you can see, smell, suffer, you are too old for the mirror. Don 'I fret, don't put on specs, that dousing dark of age turns the wrinkled page of truth. Look far, look out the window, out past the shape of your whim, the wish you cannot control. Trees, older than hope, make a house where love once lived rent free. Forget the empty bed. Burn the old vulnerability. Pro Musics Antiqua
Listen to the music. Listen to the sound of the krummhorn, the rebec, The vielle, the virginal, the viola da gamba, The scraping and twanging celebration of order. It is all in the best possible order. It streams up through the air of your house And it is like summer, A kind of sunlight slanting through the dust Of almost empty air. Throw away the dictionary. Live where you are. If the sackbut palls, Bang on a pianoforte. Limber up drums, Unleash saxophones, let everything run wild. Have voices, too, whole choruses of voices, Doing the Nibelungenlied by ear. This is the way it should be. Your house should be music. Welcome it, hold on to it, sweat, let it pour into you Like an old god making demigods with mortals. Hold on until your every motion is dance. Having received, enlarge. When you let go, you will snore in C major. 0. B. Hardison, Jr. Dr. 0. B. Hardison's poem Pro Musica Antiquo describes e11rly musical instruments and performers, counterparts of whom perform at the Folger Shakespeare Library where he serves as Director.
20/Apri//981/Dossier
Katie Louchheirn Katie Louchheim is a former Democratic party Vice-Chairman and Deputy Assistant Secretary of State who lives in Washington. Her latest volume of poetry is The Seeing Glass.
The Public Man
He walks, even in day light, with arms outstretched. Fish-like he shies at shadows, His own following him, nose to ground, Like a blind blood hound. Gray fish swim through The cavities of his skull He feeds the sterile cows, the steers of no desire, With the mast of the bitter grapes. He closes his eyes to fireflies. And his own light, Which once burned bright Is yellow tallow. His words, twice used Rise like water from the cistern pump. And then go out in a wavering line, Intent on catching rabbits. Like a gull, crying with tired voice He looks back, often into the jog. Each night he holds his head of stone, As his elbows slowly sink through the /(lble top. E. J. McCarthy Former Minnesota Senator Eugene McCarthy has long been known as an accomplished poet in addition to his political achjevements.
The Hermit Wakes to Bird Sounds
He startles awake. His eyes are full of white light. In a minute the sun will ooze into the skY· Meanwhile, all the machines of morning start up. The typewriter bird is at it again. Her style is full of endearing hesitations. The words, when they come, do so in the staccato rush of a deceitfullovelettef· The sewing machine bird returns to the doddering elm. Like Penelope, she rips out ck yesterday's stitches only to glide up and down, front and ba reentering the same needle holes. The bird who presides at the wei/house primes the pump. Two gurgles, a pause, jour squeaks of the handle and lime after time a promise of water can be heard falling back in the pipe's throat. Far off the logging birds saw into heartwood with rusty blades, and the grouse cranks up his eternally unstartable Model T and the oilcan bird comes with his liquid pock pock to attend to the flinty clanks of the disparate parts and as the old bleached sun slips into position . slowly the teasing inept malfunctioning one-of-a-kind machines fall silent. Maxine Kumin
. r prize Maxine Kumin, who won the 1973 Puhtze centiY for poetry for her book Up Coun~ry, r:trY in took office as the 25th Consultant tn Po English to the Library of Congress.
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Finally, a dining guide that snuggles inside evening bags. Slides into tuxedo pockets. And slips out discreetly for perusal between acts at the theatre. It's Dossier's Indispensable Guide to Washington Area Restaurants. Laden with who has the best borscht. Where to find a waiter in a kilt or a gypsy with a violin. And how late it's safe to crave Coquilles St. Jacques on a Thursday night. Simply look for this, the creme de le creme of guides, at your newsstand. It costs a mere seventy-five cents. And it lets you indulge. Intelligently. For Association and Convention bt~lk orders ca/1362-5894. Purse and compact courtesy of Garfinckel's. Lighter courtesy of l.Magnin .
Washington is better the second tim~ 1\'ash: around says CalifOinia born-and-bre Nith c: Jean Webb Smith, wife of our new At· :o fine torney General. depar This soft-spoken, fastidiou I~ reatur groomed, stylishly dressed member 0 admir the Reagan inner circle remember M.agn Washington when it was still a sleePY• Bever southern town. (Ac She lived here during the late t950S Wash when, as she puts it, choosing hef dine f words carefully, "the people were ident wonderfully hospitable and the monu· at the ments beautiful but there weren't mo re t mbc: than three good restaurants and t11e Party shopping wasn't very interesting." . h l\lfre1 Since the Inauguration, Jean Smtt 29th 1 has been commuting for several days~ hard a time between Washington and t ~ both large 12-room-house-with-tennis cour Wi she and her husband own in sa~ dent' Marino. "I am trying to get rid of 11 PerhE years of accumulated stuff so I can renr close: it." And she is worried that he l'he daughter Merry, now married to free~ CabiJ lance writer Gerold Camarillo vu; r ~0U5 and living in Santa Barbara, is toO ar aq from Los Angeles to keep an eye on ?e Seer, 87-year-old mother who is convalesct~~ l'rea! from a broken hip. Her son Bt . the a Vaughan, Jr., his wife and eighteetle On month-old Alexandra Elizabeth h!i~ hasn ' recently moved to Seattle, Washingto ' 20ye and so can't help out either. Jl Oh Yt With other members of the Reagad cope By Dorothy Marks circle, Mrs. Smith and her husba1l \Vith 0 have dined out in at least a half-doze WJ husb died Volunteering is a family affair as Jean Smith here wraps Christmas packages for servicemen overseas with assistance from her mother, Mrs. James Webb and daughter Merry Vaughan Dunn. at Dt betw, our<
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ti!llC W h. bred w路as mgt?n restaurants she thinks rate At路 tt~ any m Los Angeles, and is happy 10 ftnd that the nation's capital now has uslY '1:Par~ment stores and specialty shops of dat~nng .many of the designers she has ~ rs 1 mtr~d m Rodeo Drive shops or in ey iBagnm's and Bullock's-Wilshire in ep ' everly Hills. W(Ac.tually, on her last 8-day stay in 9505 her d' ashmgton, the Smiths were invited to were .~ne four times in the company of Pres1 ent and Nancy Reagan-three times ~~~; ~~the White House, once at the British the mbassy and once at the small dinner 1 ~~rty at the Jockey Club hosted by the rnith 29 fred Blo?mingdales for the Reagans' ys at h th weddtng anniversary. That is a the barct ~ct to follow, Jean Smith admits, 1 0 ;our! ~. 1 ~ terms of cuisine or company.) san d ,tlham French Smith, the Presi,f !6 pen~ s lawyer and longtime advisor, is rent cler aps the Cabinet member with the her l'~sest personal ties to Ronald Reagan. C e. Attorney General was the only ;~~e~ 1-I~~tnet officer included in the White ) far ~ se State dinner for Prime Minister her S argaret Thatcher other than the 1 .,.,ecretaries of State, Defense and 1cing 1 rea Bill th sury who were directly involved in e agenda of the visit. ~:~~ ha~~e thing Jean Smith has found that n t ch.anged for the better in the past :ton, 20 Ye Oh ars ts the real estate situation-and 0 c Yes, the traffic circles-"! couldn't !~d 1\l~Pe With them before and I can't cope tth them now.'' zen h hen she lived here with her first d~sb~nd George William Vaughan (he a~~ tn 1963) who was legislative liaison b efense under President Eisenhower etween 1958 and 1960, "We really had our choice of housing," she recalls. stJ'he Vaughans lived first in the beige 'N~o house at 2412 Tracy Place, ~ ~ 路 ., now the home of World Bank :th:esident Robert McNamara. Later 'It Y moved around the corner to the Sately red-brick Georgian at 1827 24th , ~treet, next door to what is now the lll~assy of Cyprus. 'II Rtght now, Jean Smith thinks she aOUld prefer to rent rather than buy tinct she :vants to be in town. For the ltnllle bemg, the eighth-floor suite lh:nag~r Rose Narva has provided 1 ~ rn Wtth at the Jefferson Hotel suits er fine. ~ It is charmingly furnished in the Che~ch manner, with ecru silk sofas and lan~trs, a small white, working fireplace Pan Pale g~een grasscloth walls, a small b . elect kttchen and a bathroom in i etges and browns with an Early Amer~~~ cherry cabinet encasing the sink. A lte eyelet coverlet and masses of
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different-sized ruffled pillows on the Queen-sized bed give the bedroom anything but a run-of-the-mill hotel look. A large crystal, silver-lidded bowl of jelly beans-"a gift"-sits on a table. Nearby on a delicate secretary-desk li e the White House invitations, menus and seating cards. "I'm saving them for my children," she says. At the moment, the Smiths are in residence at the Jefferson along with the Walter Annenbergs, the Caspar Weinbergers, the Bill Caseys, and Morgan Mason. If Rose Narva can provide them with an additional bedroom and bath next door to their suite, Jean Smith says it might be difficult to get her to move. "When I'm not here, Bill sometimes comes home late from the Justice De-
partment with a briefcase full of papers, has his ritual two vokdas and tonic and just fixes himself a bowl of soup ." An avid tennis player and golfer, he is careful with his diet. The wrench of leaving hi Los Angeles law firm was eased for the senior partner of Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher when he persuaded his secretary Myra and two of the firm's lawyers to join him at the Justice Department. Four Smiths have come to Washington with the new Reagan Admini tration, including the newly-elected Smiths in the 97th Congress. Her Mr. Smith is readily identified by his "French connection," but when she first met him, Jean Smith remembers he was just plain "Bill Smith." Not surprisi ngly, for this particular
The Smiths are ushered into the White House during British Prime Minister Thatcher's visit for the official dinner. She wears a favorite Oscar de Ia Rent a gown.
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Dossier/April 1981123
Industrialist Dr. Armand Hammer, Jean and William French Smith and Mrs. Robert Anderson, wife of ARCO Chairman of the Board, at Capital Centre pre-Inaugural Gala party.
Smith couple the social invitations are pouring in, some of them Mrs. Smith says in some wonderment "from people we have never met." The Smiths are members of that select coterie around Ronald and Nancy Reagan, the press likes to call "the group." They are the old friends who for years have spent New Year's Eve together at the Walter Annenbergs in Palm Springs or gone as houseguests together to Sonora, Mexico to stay with Bill and Betty Wilson. (He is President Reagan's special envoy to the Vatican.) "I knew Betty Wilson at Stanford and she is one of my very best friends. Several of us-Betty, Betsy Bloomingdale, Marion Jorgensen, Bunny Wrather, Lorena Nidorf-like to meet weekly for lunch at the Bistro or the Bistro Garden in Beverly Hills. Nancy Reagan is usually too busy to come to lunch but she usually phones Betty or Marion or Betsy in the mornings." The women members in "the group" are very homogeneous, mostly blondish, mostly well-to-do to very-rich, slender, fashion-conscious, well turned out and as conservative in their tastes and outlook as they are in politics ... and, of course, "of a certain age." Stylewise they are tastemakers rather than trendsetters. No Zandra Rhodes extravaganzas or funky costumes for Jean Smith and "pants just don't go with my figure," she mourns. Her very favorite designer is Louis Feraud, whose suits she particularly 14I April 19811Dossier
favors. "I love him and they're reasonably priced." At the White House dinner for Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, she wore Oscar de Ia Renta's emerald green satin-skirted gown with black velvet bodice. For the British Embassy dinner the following night, a long black lace with patterned purple sequins by Alfred Bosand was her choice . "I am so pleased with this dress, I guess, because I waited until it had been reduced to the point I couldn't resist it any longer." She also has several cocktail dresses by American designer Michael Novarese. Jean Smith explains that the press frequently confuses "the group," just ten or more couples who like to spend their leisure time together and plan excursions together, with the "kitchen cabinet," a much smaller working group of close friends who advised Ronald Reagan en route to and during his two terms as Governor, continuing on in his Presidential campaign. William French Smith was an original member of the kitchen cabinet along with Holmes Tuttle, Cy Rubel, Jack Hume of San Francisco and Henry Salvatori, among others. Governor Reagan appointed Smith to the Board of Regents of the University of California campuses where he was three-times elected President of the Board. As a member of President Nixon's Advisory Commission on Overseas Education and Culture, Smith and his wife made study tours of the Middle
East and Eastern Europe in the mid-1970s. . So how has the cool and very much 10 command of herself Jean Smith responded to criticism of her husband/~ the New York Times' William Sa If for having attended-along with a couple of hundred other persons-a partY for Frank Sinatra. 0 She refused to comment, but later 0 in the interview she asked, with just ~h~ gentlest hint of asperity, "Do you th 111 e we should ask for advance copies of th t guest list when we are invited ou here?" (Actually had Safire not sa;~ aged her husband, Jean Smith says ern· and she would probably have been f 0 pathetic. Like Safire, she is a love~ 8 words, a student of language a~ es demon solver of the New York Tun Double Crostics. A book of crostics ac· companies her wherever she goes.) ·de As for the feminists' broadst. against William French Smith for ~~~ membership in the all-male Bohemia t Grove Club, that doesn't bother her a ~.
~
"He probably spends two weeken k a year there and always comes b~C a refreshed . He's probably hear 8 stimulating lecture or two or bee~ st spear carrier in a performance. I JU can't see women in that milieu." de· Although Bill Smith has been he scribed as rather cool and reser.ved,d iS has a low-key and unexpected w1t an famous for his one-liners. e She refuses to comment, of cour~a; on the widely circulated report t me President Reagan stands ready to na rt his old friend to the Supreme cou when a vacancy occurs there. . ts Two previous Republican Presiden d had tried to get him to Washingt~n ;ne· one had offered him a feder~l JU gss ship, according to California pre reports at the time . . . that If Jean Smith has one regret 1t IS rk she did not immediately go to wo in when she graduated from Stanfor~ an 1940 with a Phi Beta Kappa keY an ar· honors degree in the classics, and 7ter· ried her campus sweetheart soon a you "We just didn't do that then. w started having a family and thre yourself into volunteer work." . b of She had done such a good J0 iof working for the local and state Junted Leagues that by 1958 she was eleCjof National President of the Junwas Leagues of America. Because she hold the first woman from the West to ade the post, the Los Angeles Times morn· her its "Woman of the Year" for c 65)
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:YdKenneth Geremia n Don Oldenburg 'WWh_en speculating on land values in is ashtngton, the obvious starting point A. the 18 acres at 1600 Pennsylvania pVenue. The seat and symbol of power, htestige and politics, virtually nothing t ere-property prices included-is unouched by its influence. r But putting a price tag on a square a00 t of White House property is like l~sessing a square inch of the Mona tsa. It can't be done. r So at the hub of an ongoing residen~al ~nd commercial land rush in ~shmgton is the White House, the ~Utet center of a raging storm . lt is the ll1111lloved mover of land prices in the etropolitan area, a chunk of property tangibly and intangibly valuable tr at, despite appearances to the conary every four years, it is not for sale. h ''L~nd, like gold or diamonds, may ~av~ tntrinsic worth," says Richard "'~etner, a transplanted Californian 'h ose specialty is appraising land ., roughout the metropolitan area. o?ut demand creates its own measure Value." F d or instance, Rheiner says that while in Washington will always 0ellla~d Utstnp the ever-dwindling supply, 0 e~rts ?f L_os Angeles hold a di tinct ge 1n htgh -priced real estate. "I
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recently appraised orne property in Potomac at $700,000," he say . "In Beverly Hills, r would have apprai ed it at $2 million, and the home here would be better built." That's not to suggest that Washington is a hotbed of property bargains, though there was such a time and it wasn't so long ago. Most of us are still kicking ourselves. But in this so-called "economically protected town," where the federal
government employs practically everyone in ight, Will Rogers' axiom about land seem to ring truer than el ewhere: "Buy it! There're not making any more of it." Buying into the residential property market in Wa hington, brokers say, require a sen itivity to neighborhood location. But be forewarned. There are no guarantees of consistency in price from street to street, even hou e to house, in some areas. Location is important, of cour e," says Rheiner. So important that the value of property immediately adjacent to the While Hou e has kyrocketed by over 220 percent in the Ia t fi e year . "But in thi town what i , was, and could be on a piece of property make a big difference in value." For example, Georgetown currently i the highe t price per square foot in Washington. A single quare foot on a typically-sized lot can approach $100. Perhaps the major private land holding there i the exquisite "Evermay" estate on 28th Street. Becau e of it ize amid conge tion, each of it 162,253 quare feet are valued at about $6.28. Three block away is the equally charming "Tudor Place" estate owned by Armi tead Peter III. Almost twice a large as Evermay, each of its quare feet are valued only at a little better Dossier/ April 1981125
than half as much-$3.40. The difference, besides size, is that Tudor Place has a federal easement on part of its land. Neighborhood remains a vital measure of value because it influences demand. With few exceptions, the highest priced square feet in Washington are located in the most prestigious neighborhoods. "That's what makes the 20' x 100' Georgetown lot sell for $150,000,'' says J. Lee Donnelly, Sr., of Donnelly & Sons, acknowledged experts in D.C. land values. "What we're talking about is site value. That property may have a sales price of up to $500,000 simply because there's a structure on it, regardless of its condition or present use." Donnelly says that the same is true, though to a lesser extent, in what he calls the "next two hottest residential territories": Kalorama and Massachusetts Avenue Heights. While a square foot in those neighborhoods may not bring top dollar at the moment, they come close and their rate of appreciation is increasing more rapidly than most other prestigious neighborhoods. Median sales prices in Kalorama, which is beautifully bounded by Embassy Row and Rock Creek Park, jumped almost 140 percent from 1975 to 1979. Land value assessment there increased by 39.3 percent in the last year. Massachusetts Avenue Heights, the home of Washington's turn-of-thecentury mansions, shows similar figures: During the last half of the 70s, median sales increases there were 91.1 percent, with average assessment increases since 1980 at 24 percent. Close behind, says Donnelly, are the neighborhoods of Forest Hills, Spring Valley, Cleveland Park, Foxhall, the Palisades and Wesley Heights-all more than doubling in land value since 1975. Brokers are paying particular attention to the huge homes shaded by tall trees in the Forest Hills section and the large gingerbread houses with wide porches in Cleveland Park. In the last year alone, the average market value of properties in these two areas rose by 20 and 18.6 percent, respectively. Showing almost as much vigor in the market are the adjacent neighborhoods of Kent and Berkley, property developed in the 20s and 30s for modest family incomes that now attracts the careful attention of developers and
(Continued on Page 66) 16/Apri/ 1981/Dossier
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War Washington's top land appraisers stand on the hi;hest priced commercial land in Washington, th:rs Gerstenfeld property at New York Ave. and 14th St. , recently sold to the National Food Process for $530 a square foot. They are William S. Harp, J. Lee Donnelly and Thornton Owen, Jr.
ASQUARE FOOT CHART TO THE CITY'S WEALTH The longstanding truism in real estate, experts agree, is that use and potential use of property determines specific land value as much as does neighborhood location. This city is no exception. For instance, the cost of a typical Georgetown residential lot (around 1,800 square feet) this year is estimated at over $131,000-or at least $74 per square foot. The same total cost, on the other hand, could buy a lot 300 times as large just 12 miles up the Potomac in the sprawling countryside of Great Falls. Residential property there is divided only in acreage, and is destined for minimal use by Georgetown standards. The price per square foot? As low as 411t. So as you might expect, the farther from the heart of town and the larger the lot size, the less cost per square foot. With that in mind, let your speculative spirit guide you through the estimated land prices in some of the metropolitan area's prestigious neighborhoods.
--
Neighborhood Estimated $/SQ· fl·; Georgetown ................. $74 and s~B Kal~rama .. .. ..... ... ............ · · : $ZS Cap1tol Hill. ................... · · · · . $ZS Old Town Alexandna ............ · · · sO 6 Massachusetts Ave. Heights ...... ·· $l SIS Woodley ....................... ··· $! 4 Cleveland Park ................. · · · · $IO Berkley ........................ · · · · SO Wesley Heights ................. · · $9·$9 Arlington ....................... · · · · $9 *Foxhall. ........ .. .. ..... .... ·. · · · · · $9 Palisades ....................... · · 1s Kent . . . : $ .50 8 For~st H1l s ............. . . ... .. · · · $ . s 18 Spnng Valley ... ............... ··· SS "The Gold Coast" (upper 16th St.)····· $5 •McLean .............. .. ...... · · · · · $4 Chevy Chase ......... . ........ · · · ·s·3.so B~thesda ._. .................... · · · $!.50 S1lver Spnng ................... · · · 9()¢ Falls Church .................. ····· 85 ~ *Kenwood .............. . .. ... · · · · · SO¢ *Vienna ...................... ····· 41 ¢ *Great Falls ................... · · · · · 41 ¢ *River Oaks ................... · · · · · 40¢ *Potomac .... . ............... ··· ·· 38 ¢ •Fairfax ........... ... ..... . .. · · · · · e · •Lots from one to six acres. Allother:sreP' (J(JO 12 sent prices on lots from 1,800 to ' d square feet. · niY 011 tFigures are for comparison basiS ~ sted 10 are based on average assessment adJU . . tM estimated fair market land values lfl neighborhoods covered.
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Since the beginning of the 19th Centu.ry, the 68 quare mile that are the Dtstrict of Columbia have burgeoned in ~Urts. New and rapid growth of neigh~rhoods and land prices coincided W ith times of crisis when, for all the ~.0 Untry, the spotlight was on the NaIOn's Capital. w''That trend began during the Civil ar," says Rufus Lusk III, whose real ~tate publishing company, Rufus S. Usk & Son, Inc . has kept tabs on Washington property sales for over 50 Years . ~''The city's population doubled from ,00() to 120,000 in no time as the ~0 Vernment sought to direct the Union ar effort," Lusk explains. 'Once the '~~tr was over, the inflated population 0 federal employees, soldiers, and ~lhers required massive rebuilding of 'li0 rnes, streets, even the sewer and ater systems." \Vith all that activity, the Wa hing1 aon land market wa still in its infancy, snct scandalously cheap by today ' s~andards. For instance, public records the value of a single square foot (} Property on a P Street block in f eorgetown in 1865 was only 30ct-up torn. a dime in 1815. a 'F.ifty years late r, the nation once s!a'~ geared itself for war, says Lusk, elhng Washington's population to 0 Ver 450 000. Ci ''Worid War I caused a serio us sca rnot only of homes in the city, but of ~ces and schools as well," says Lusk. lh he same years ushered in the age of c e automobile, which changed the a00l.Plexion of the District as rapidly as war. Neighborhoods expanded in ~ ery direction. The Mall became a aa~king lot. More land than ever ima~'0ed became paved roadway, gradulh: ~dding to municipal properties in It City. And the P Street square foot? s Value more than doubled to 65<!:. Siol3y the 1930s and the Great Depresa.J n, the value of that property had fornost doubled to $1.15 per square a.cot. Franklin Roosevelt brought in his acternicians and professional New
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Two of the three-generation Rufus S. Lusk family in real estate publishing are Rufus S. Lusk, Jr., and his son, Rufus S. Lusk Ill. Their Jefferson Place office is in the historic Dupont Circle area and they plan to bring out a historical preservation map of the city in mid-April.
Dealers from New York and Boston, ays Lusk. Many were attracted to the colonial rowhouse charm of Georgetown, but economic trauma steadied land prices. The next 20 years saw the ongoing trend of national crisis (World War II) forge Washington into a sop histicated city brimming with a population of more than 650,000. Big governmentwith it wealth, security and powerwas a magnet drawing over 150,000 more resi dents to the city by the 1950s . Square foot value at the P Street addre s: $2.25. Suburb-mania marked the 60s as a
d eca de of igni ficant population decline in the Di trict. But the igorou economy that enabled white-co ll ar Washingtonians to trade to nhou e for yard and pool was also r pon ib1e for the mo t dramatic jump in val ue at $10.20 per quare foot in 1966. en us lis ts the ity's La t year' population at 638,000-with the econd wave of demographic hopsco tch in progre . Now lower income familie are finding a mod erate priced refuge in suburbia while tho e who an afford th e city move in . The P Street quare foot tell the story. It i valued today at - DO 0LDE BURG over $60.
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An 18~ watercolor by surveyor Nicholas King shows the President 's House, in diStance at/eft, and the Patent Office, originally built to be Blodgett 's Hotel at 8th and E Streets, N. W., right. Much of the surrounding terrain was farmland. Dossier/April 1981/2 7
CALIFORNIA VS. WASHINGTON REAL ESTATE: CONTRARY PERSPECTIVES A large number of Californians coming to town are opting for compact townhouses with minimum maintenance instead of trying to duplicate the four acres they own back in Burlingame, notes Washington realtor Jane Coyne. Besides the lure of opposites, she feels that West Coasters are ordering their priorities according to their different lifestyles in the Capital City.
Their hectic daily schedules, crammed with business and social activities in the legislative and government arenas, leave them little time or energy for outdoor living. Convenience is at a premium and they find this in the ease and luxury of townhomes in the Kalorama, Georgetown, Spring Valley and Wesley Heights areas of Washington. Beverly Hills-one California com-
MISCONCEPTIONS BY CALIFORNIANS ABOUT WASHINGTON California
Washington
More outdoor living. Everything much more "open," with huge windows looking out on spacious grounds, although Southern California zoning laws restrict lots to 1 Y2-2 Y2 acres.
Compact townhouses (some Californians disparagingly call them "brick boxes with small fortress windows.") Large windows are impractical in cold weather.
Room for tennis court, swimming pool, hot tub and earthquake early warning system, provided spring mudslides don't transplant them onto your neighbor.
Most residents must trek to the riverside suburbs-McLean, Potomac or Great Falls-for a glimpse of courtside pools.
Gardening is a year-round thing. Gardeners plentiful, although getting expensive ($600/month, part-time).
Gardening is a six-months proposition. Individual gardeners are passe. Gardening services are a must.
Mostly one-story, rambling homes, closed to the street, opening on the pool, patio and backyard. No townhouses in Southern California.
Multi-story dwellings, small backyards and a measure of 18th-century charm remains, with townhouses dominating recent residential development.
Spacious entertainment area. Kitchens inconspicuous, out-of-the-way and mainly unimportant.
Entertainment area generally smaller, with a well-equipped kitchen integrated into the living and entertaining of hosts who often pride themselves on their gourmet skills.
Best-constructed old mansions with most land built in the 1930s and since restored.
Distinctive Washington homes dating from the 1800s, finely restored.
Subdivisions, new developments in California all have beautiful landscaping.
Many new developments here bulldoze trees for subdivisions and don't replace them. The older luxury homes retain their trees, but landscaping often limited to springtime bulbs, azaleas and summer roses.
Although one also pays for "location" in California, that means beautiful, prestigious areas more than proximity to the city.
In Washington, one pays for the location, meaning closeness to downtown, more than for anything.
Prices are higher than in Washington, given comparable house, facilities and location.
Real estate still a bargain for those willing to pay to live in established, comfortable and elite neighborhoods.
28/Apri/1981/Dossier
munity commensurate in desir~ble location and comfort to these Washtng· ton, D.C., neighborhoods- is twice as expensive, the Californians have noticed. "Californians look for the sa~e things in a nice house that people do 10 Georgetown-the right address, the right scale of rooms and a good floW for entertaining," says super-realtor Mimi Styne who specializes in houses selling in the $2 million and up rang~ Owner of her own large firm an? a j filiated with Sotheby's Internatw.na Realty Corporation in BeverlY Hills, she recently negotiated sale of th~ palatial 11-acre Beverly Hills ~state %e producer Dino DeLaurenws, T 5 Knoll, to singer Kenny Rogers for $1~· million-reputed to be the highest pn~e ever paid for a residential propertY 111 the U.S. . The Californian's top prioritY 1 ~ househunting, Styne says, is plentY ~t room to entertain. "Kitchens aren s much-they never see them," she saY of her millionaire clients. She cites . t~! 1.. most sought-after areas to I1ve . around Los Angeles as ''lower ~el A~l Holmby Hills and Beverly Hills, he right next to each other.'' Althou~h the studios are almost all located I? ~le valley, far away from the des1ra ,, triumvirate, "the studio people 011 wouldn't live there, so they "just get the freeway and drive '' Styne saYS· ' res· Lawyers and other prosperous pro he sionals often have offices near trY favored residential areas in centu City and in Beverly Hills. 0. Holm by Hills resident turned te;j.P k rary Washingtonian, Mary Jane JCof wife of Charles z. Wick, Dir.ecto.rons the International CommunJcatl.ng) Agency (ICA), is leasing (and l~~iJe an apartment at Watergate. wa looking for a local pied a terre she sa ,.,.,. · co•"so lot of apartments but "nothmg pares to the extras we have here · · ·erY many amenities and shops. I fe~,1MrS· safe. I do like a secure building, Wick says. ·r of Hi-coastal Jane Weinberger, WI ~e perennial cabinet member, noW er fense Secretary Caspar Wein?er;tial moves with her husband's preside gh appointments between Hiilsbor~:an· ("a countrified suburb of San she cisco") and Washington, where the 0 wants to live "as close as possibl~ sec· action." When "Cap" was I-1~ }Jill retary, they maintained a CapitO1 j}ed home with a pool, which sort of s~~sed them for the house they just pure will on California Street where theY move on May I, she says.
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Mrs. Weinberger has found that one different lifestyle most of the year than &e.ts "less house for the money" in the does Washington's says former Santa District proper and must go further out Barbaran Betty Tarr. A Washingtonian lo find suitable houses at prices comalso in a previous era when her husband oin Par able to their San Francisco served in the Nixon administration, he equivalents. is now divorced and headquarters her the California's climate allows a totally home, real estate and design interests in flo W altor )uses tnge. Pool area of $14.5 million Beverly Hills estate sold to Kenny Rogers by Sotheby International Realty. d afional -I illS · the te of
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McLean. "With banana trees and all the other natural vegetation next to your door in Southern California, the simple t house can be beautiful," Tarr says wistfully. "The hill of California and other dramatic terrain make real estate interesting. A house can flow down the hill with its garden . Here the land i flatter. And in a temperate climate, you can use interesting materials like bleached wood and redwood." In rainy San Francisco and the snowy climes of the high Sierra where she has a lso lived, Tarr finds California tastes for space, light and outdoor living also satisfied. "When we moved to McLean the first time, we had 14-foot ceilings and skylights and all our friends asked 'How on earth did you find a California house here?'" she recalls . By now a true transplant, Betty Tarr finds much to be said for Washington-style living. "The older homes, the distinctive homes of the District, are beautiful, although very different from the California li festyle," she allows. To pinpoint some major differences between California and Washington real estate, we've drawn up a casual chart (on facing page) based on the views of bi-coastals now li vi ng in Washington. Whether the differences can be deemed pros or cons lies in the eye of the beholder. -SUSAN ELLIS
turY Jpo-
THE INDISPENSABLE GUIDE TO NEW HOMES
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St E.ve!l though Commerce Department a atts~Ics and high interest rates indicate d nationwide housing slump, new resiorn· so ~lltial development is prospering in ,erY Ofetr~p?litan Washmgton . While sales c existmg single-family homes still acdrS· e~tUnt for a substantial share of the real fo ate market, the real story-now and b t the future-lies in the growing numcer of multi-family units-townhomes, ao·ops and condominiums-being built h.1lld sold , especially the higher priced cuX~ry homes. Concerns for owner sellti~~ty, escalating energy costs, efficient Ization of available land and econ0 totny of construction are all cited as facby realtor / developers to explain fi cent successes in the multi-family helct. Is the traditional detached family 11 °tne in danger of extinction? We think a~t, si_nce even the highest priced homes e ShU attracting buyers. But recent tW a
r/8
trends do show that convenient location, ease of maintenance, energy efficiency and affordability are today's homebuyer's prime considerations, and will likely make the 1980s a decade of the townhome. We 've prepared a conven ient, armchair guide to some ongoin g residential developments in the area.
WASHINGTON Westover Place Upper Massachusetts Ave., (Ward Circle) Townhomes by Kettler Brothers Price: $222,000 to $257,000 Financing: 800Jo loans at market rate Sales by: Nancy Andrus, Kettler Brothers 4326 Westover Place, N.W. 20016 Phone: (202) 363-7078 Features: Balconies, fireplaces, available elevators, whirlpool baths and hardwood floors. The development is built on the estate of the late C. C. Glover.
Twining Court Dupont Circle Area Townhomes by A & M Inve tments Price: $99,500 to $385,000 Financing: Below market at 12Ya OJo Sales by: Juan Recari, Karen Seay Shannon & Luchs 21 11 0 Street, N.W. 20036 Phone: (202) 223-4550 Features: Front gate security, garages, double sundecks, fireplaces, Jacuzzi and private inner courtyards. Chatsworth Chevy Chase / Rock Creek Park Townhomes by Chat worth Price: $235,500 to $321,500 Financing: 12¥.1 OJo 30-year loans for 75% Sales by: John Engle, Chatsworth 2766 Unicorn Lane, N. W ., 20015 Phone: (202) 537-1100 Features: 12' ceilings, built-in garages, private wooded views
(Continued on Page 68) Dossier/April 1981/29
DING
uiteafeet By Helen Neal
S
orne women, very few to be sure, stand and stride in high heels as if they were born in them. The rest of us aren't that lucky. Our common experience, after standing an hour or so in new high heel shoes at a cocktail party or in a receiving line, is suddenly to become aware of our feet. The soles are burning. Pains shoot up the backs of our legs. A pinched toe throbs for attention. Our smile is congealing. We can't concentrate on what anyone is saying. Shifting weight from one foot to another doesn't help at all. That's the moment, if you follow the advice of Dr. Gerald Gelwick, Washington podiatrist, to make tracks for the ladies' room. There in the privacy of that sanctuary, take off your shoes and s-t-r-e-t-c-h your toes. "Rotating the foot at the ankle also helps relieve pain and foot tension," says Dr. Gelwick. "And before putting your shoes back on, pull the tips of your hose to give the toes more room. Perspiration glues hose to the sole of the foot and, as 301April 1981/Dossier
feet swell, the stocking restricts movement and blood circulation." Dr. Gelwick gives this advice to women patients who want to get their feet into condition for the rigors of Washington's social seasons. Women who start out with feet in poor condition (hammer toes, corns and plantar warts, ingrown toenails, bursitis at the Achilles tendon, painful calluses, pressure sores related to diabetes, tendonitis, arthritic bone spurs, bunions or damaged foot nerves) embark on months of martyrdom. "Most people take better care of their hands than of their feet," says Dr. Gel wick. "Feet take enormous pressure for their size-hundreds of pounds to the square inch-but in other respects they are far more delicate than hands. They have about one fourth the hands' blood supply. That means there are fewer antibodies in the feet to fight infections from open sores, blisters, abrasions and ingrown toenails. Even cutting too much cuticle from around the
toenail endangers the feet by removi.nS a natural protection against invasive foreign particles, such as street dust that works its way into the unprotected area around the nails and can cause infection." Nylon hose that are too short or t~at have a foot size too small in proporuon to the leg length can harm the feet as severely as shoes that are too short. Drd Gelwick advises women to shop aroun and find the brand of hose that best acf commodates the length and breadth 0 their feet. Prolonged standing in shoes tha 1 pinch and squeeze can traumatize the nerves in the feet, sometimes causing a type of nerve tumor that requires sur· gery. Pinched toes are also a common cause of ingrown toenails, not onlY a painful condition, but a source ofinfec· tion. Before going to a party, tune up the feet by rolling an empty coke bo~tl~ with your toes. "At the party," advtse Dr. Gelwick, "keep moving aroundd Don't stand rooted to one spot. An when you get home, take off your shoes, lie on the floor and rest you~ heels on the edge of a chair for about 1 minutes." d Because we are not friendly towa\ our feet, but instead are neglectfU ' even abusive, they get back at ust "When feet hurt, they reflex (bend af an angle in resistance) to every organ~ the body," says Chloe Wadswor~ ' Washington practitioner of the poiantpY system of holistic medicine and of dee muscle therapy. "The intense disco:a~ fort of standing for hours in sho~s t he hurt blocks the energy flow tn t body." ot Mrs. Wadsworth recommends a foe care regimen easily carried out at hornp: A good starter is the spicy foot pick: ~ ~ the cayenne pepper foot bath .. Ft f. basin with hot water to about mtd·C~e Stir into the water one to two ta ur· spoons of cayenne pepper . Wra~ yo he self in a blanket, partially covenn&. t a · tn head and enclosing legs and bastn ner sort of tent. Have a towel handy. A for your feet have been in the foot bathh rn 20 minutes, remove them, wipe t ~th with the towel, then sponge thern WI cold water. IfTo exercise the feet, sit in the ha ot lotus position, grasp the heel of the~~he with your thumb on the inside .0 the foot, fingers to the outside. Holdtn~oot heel firmly, gently rotate the ·on several times. For relief of bu~ith discomfort, hold the joint firmlY torn• thumb and forefinger top and bot
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ing 1hen with the free hand, slowly rotate ~e big toe. Give each toe of each foot ndividual attention. Hold the tip of the toe and pull (not too strenuously!) and 'elease. Repeat this manipulation sev!ral times on each toe. hat Another toe stretching exercise recion °rnmended by Mrs. Wadsworth (a varit as ation of Dr. Gelwick's coke bottle exerpr. tise) is to put a hard ball, slightly und rnaller than a tennis ball, on the floor t ac· and stretch the toes over it. Roll the ball b of W ith the toes several times in an eastWest direction, first with one foot, then the other. Change to a north-south direction and continue rolling the ball With the toes. sur· Men are as much a part of the social non Scene as women, but they suffer much ly a !;ss, due largely to their well shod feet. fee· Men buy shoes for functional reasons," says James Sherrard, salesman at the Florsheim men's shoe shop on ~onnecticut Avenue. "They're apt to ises e more interested than women are in nd· the quality of leather, workmanship Uld ~d. comfort. Men look for shoes that 0 ur tt tn with their life style. A conser0 ur ~ative man wants a conservative lookt 1s Ing shoe. Style is important both to men ard and women but in a slightly different Way. Shoes have a special meaning for ~;: ~omen. When a man gets depressed, e's likely to go to a bar, but when l at '~~omen get depressed, they go to a shoe ' of store." th. But women's attitudes toward shoes ritY are changing . The small-foot fetish, aceeP c0 ,m· Untable for millions of bunions and 0arnmer toes, has no grip on the present hat &eneration of young women. Their feet the ate bigger than their mothers' and they ~re not in the least self-conscious about ':· "Young women don't lie about the Stze of their feet," says Albert Wade, ~~lesman at Garfinckel's shoe salon. lf they wear size nine, they come right 0 Ut and say so . Of course, shoe designers have taken note of the increased size ~f Women's feet in the last few decades. 1 hey are designing more attractive hoes in the larger sizes. And they're Catering to women who want high-style 1 hoes that are comfortable. You see ~!11 '~at combination in this year's styles, ith : e closed pumps and sling backs with 0W heels. They combine fashion and Jf· ~lllfort to a degree we haven't seen ,ot efore in the shoe business." he By giving your feet friendly care and he Consideration and by taking advantage ot on Of the comfort afforded by new th fash ions, you should have no trouble &etting through the coming social seasons. 0
sive ust ted use
Dossier/April 1981131
'SLEGACV:
he attempted burglary e~din~ A with the killing of Dr. Mtchae Mar Halberstam early last December llar crystallized the fears of Washingtonia~s Mar who live west of Rock Creek par · Was These affluent neighborhoods in the.sec; row the ond police district have the dubtOtl distinction of the sharpest rise in ~~r~ Mar glaries of any area in the city, a start: r anct 78 percent, to which the Novern e A drar burglary of my home contributed. . Spurred by the physician's shocktng dep: death near his home on Battery pJac~; enct Northwest residents began hiding thetd bre, lion silverware and buying triple Jocks anr large dogs. As one remarked: "Btl. e· enh: n glary is one thing. Killing is qut 1 another." .fll tral Wer1 No one is more aware of this gfl 11 reality than Halberstam's neighbor? ~ 11 the coct1 the quiet cui de sac near Amenc 11 University, too new to be shown ~·s alar as most city maps. Nine of the streefllS w can 20-odd homes have had alarm syste t installed, report s Howard Gran~ CUit hav owner of Bethesda's Guardian Alar e Sales. Now the company's signatupr h on Spe( the "red eye" of the Dictogra f thC alar system, peers from the fronts ~ of IJ contemporary residences in full vteW re Clue any would-be intruder. If entrance? ~in IUp tampered with or traps triggered wtt rY ftrn the house, the eye will blink a~ an~ilj try flashing red and a penetrating stren i hac sound . A more important featureble Po'-~ that the alarm, as are all reputa fll· are security systems, is wired to the c~on &en pany's own 24-hour central ~~a~fll sht where a professional staff take 10 ~den· feat ing calls, determine if they are ac~t bY . 1 tal or actual alarms and noti fy pohce ltq direct line within seconds .
T
SECURING YOUR HOUSE By Susan Ellis
31/Apri/ 1981/Dossier
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At the Capitol Hill home of the Commandant, General Robert arrow, the central station is the Marine Corps guard. When a circuit \Vas accidentally triggered, Mrs. Bar;~w reports that before she could call in e mistake, an armed contingent of Marine guards arrived in the hall below and aimed sidearms up the stairwell. d Although few false alarms bring such /arnatic results, they are the police epartment's biggest headache and they ~ndanger quick response to genuine /eak-ins. Thus, central surveillance sta10 ns that screen out accidental alarms enhance the industry's credibility. During my visit to Dictograph's cen1 tal station, the two alarms that came in ~ere verified as accidental by a call to e homeowner who gave his name and ~~de number to establish identity. One IV arm had been set off when a window as opened to let in the fresh air. This ~a~ ~e avoided by shutting off one cirhllit_ In order to open the windows, by avmg switches placed 8 to 12 inches up 0 sn ~he window frame or by using arecial window screens that trigger the arrn when they are cut or removed. ct Dictograph's fail-safe features ins Ude ~ey control with coded entry keys ~uPPhed to specific persons. Other 1 1trns offer keys and/or digital code ensystems. Most companies offer a pack-up power supply in the event of aOwer failure, although battery types te less reliable than auxiliary :enerators. The ability to test the fhtem regularly is another fail-safe eature. i l'he Honeywell Protection Service, n business nationwide for more than
~arine
by
"Total security takes in locks, lighting, alarms and the door itself. Cut shrubbery and leave lights on outside. If it's bright, your chances of being hit are lessened. '' Officer Anthony Murray D. C. Crime Prevention Unit 21 years and in the Washington area since 1975, stresses their triple back-up protection. Phil Consuegra of their Washington office says, "If there's a power outage, our central station computers run on a gas-driven generator. In the unlikely case of that failing, we have a battery back-up." Although Honeywell's basic home security philosophy caJis for strong exterior (perimeter) protection backed up by interior (space) measures in case the first line of defense is penetrated, "peace of mind for the family" is the main concern, Consuegra says. "There are price options. If they want a good interior trap instead of having every window protected, we will do it. It can be as simple as an interior door or infrared passive detectors that detect changes of temperature. We can even keep the detector above the 'pet level' if they have pets. We don't want to change the family's habits ." Ronald W. Cain of Cain Security in McLean offers a security consultation and house survey to design a system to fit the homeowner's lifestyle, pets, possible emergency health require-
ments and particular security needs. The heart of Cain's state-of-the-art 800CE system is a computer control console which monitors a variety of op· tiona! sensors-conventional intrusion, breakage, motion or body heat sensors for protection, as well as sensors that will indicate a flood in the basement, furnace failure on a cold winter night or even the ambient air temperature in your aviary. Unique to the 800CE system is a direct voice command function which enables the central station, during emergency situations when one or more alarms have been activated, to audibly monitor the house, verifying a crime in progress or a potential health crisis or accident in the home. The central station is then able to notify the police or call an ambulance or neighbor with definite information about the problem. In selecting from the wide array of home alarm systems, three musts come from Officer Anthony Murray, who conducts home security surveys with the Community Relations Division of the D.C. Crime Unit. I. The system must have a combination local bell, siren or lights as well as a central reporting alarm. Some companies boast "direct lines to the police," but these turn out to be no more than answering services. 2. The company must install its own systems and back up its guarantee with a contract for maintenance and service. This protects against fly-by -nighters who sell their alarms one day and fold up shop the next. 3. The company must provide for tying a smoke detector into the alarm Dossier/April 1981 /JJ
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tilll Double-security is the German police dog in Northwest neighborhood who guards his master's doorway, reinforced by system (center) to provide keY entry on exterior, "panic buttons " inside, to set off alarm in emergency by a push with the palm of the hand. Alarm light on roof, right, signals anY would-be intruders that the home is protected.
system at a later date, if not immediately. Smoke is the primary killer in fire, the police depsrtment reminds us. A hardware perimeter system is generally recommended over a zone system that uses radio waves to protect selected areas of the home. Police say that radio-operated system can be set off by waves in the atmosphere , producing false al a rm s. Th e more expensive perimeter ystems require the installation of electrical wires in the wall s to complete a circuit which sets off an alarm when broken by opening a door
HOME SECURITY CHECKLIST
'8 I B -
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Doll house from museum shop at Dolls' House and Toy Museum. Chain and padlock from Herhinger's.
34/ Apri/ 198//Dossier
or window or by stepping on a pres ure mat. Further considerations are the selection of a key or digital system. Because the push-button type may be used by anyone who has the combination, the losing of your key is not a problem. But if you have teenagers anxious to allow their friends easy entry, this could be a drawback. Another factor is the choice of the instantaneous or timed-delay alarm. A recent case illustrates the deficiencies of timed devices, designed to go off
Prevention, physical security and electronic security are the three areas to heed in burglar-proofing your home. The basic steps are: I. Don't make your home an inviting target. Enlist in Neighborhood Watch and use the police department's Operation Identification to engrave your Social Security number on valuables. Di play both stickers in a visible spot. 2. Make it hard for the thief to get inside your house. Lock up . Light up. 3. Don't give burglars a chance to case your house. Draw your shades after dark. Make your home look as if somebody's there at all times. 4. If you're on vacation, arrange for regular police checks. Have a neighbor park in your driveway,
60- econd after entry or by trigge~ing the "panic button" located at bed 1ded in dealing with potential split-second emergency situations. Senator Edwa~y Kennedy's top aide was awakened the hum of his burglar alarm whe~ someone hurled a rock through hl downstair window. A minute Ia!,er, "his alarm switched to loud piercJ!lg ' nt screeching," and at the same momehe the intruder began pounding on t aide's locked upstairs bedroom doOf路 11 Timed-delay alarms are handy w~)
(Continued on Page
keep your garbage cans in use, take in your papers and mail. 5. A woman living alone should use initial instead of a first name on the mailbox, the door and in the phone book. 6. Be sure you're financially protected by adequate loss insurance, including fine arts coverage for highvalue items. 7. Investigate acquiring an alarm system-their greatest value is as a deterrent, and your insurance rates may be reduced accordingly, upon request to the company. 8. Finally, police in the Washington, D.C., area offer home securitY surveys and recommend measures tailored to your needs at no charge. Call your local police department's community relations office to make arrangements.
Pro fici 1 ly
The Educated Palate ~------------------
--
THE SAVVY SHOPPERS' RESTAURANTS
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veryoneapproachesshoppingdifferently. Some people carefully organize a few hours for many ~rrands.路 Others enjoy languorous rowsing and buying in luxurious ~hops, taking all the time in the world. Ut When hunger strikes, what about 1 v~nch? Department store eateries prot'lde many alternatives: you can take ~llle catching up with friends or do the ~y nr~verbial eat and run, speeding on efy l Ctentty. These restaurants are special~esigned to fill both bills with ering e0 Ptous choices and are surprisingly side, asy on the billfold! cond a Bloomingdale's at Tyson's Corner is ward fin apt example. Ensconced on the top d bY llloor through the furniture depart,vhetl Cent, La Provence and Les Quarantc t hiS /rrottes (Forty Carrots) are side-bylater, lde alternatives with different themes. rcing w~路f>rovence has the clean rustic look of rnent c . Jtewashed walls and dark beamed 1 the ~1 lings, highlighted by antique tapes)Of路 e tes. A dessert cart at the right of the .vhetl rntrance beckons with goodies like care 63) cot Cake and rich pastries. Sophistia~ect light entrees like langostino ~Utche, sliced Nova smoked salmon are ne Order of the day or you can try Pain gagna: tuna, olives, anchovies and on a French roll smeared with 0~~ens lYe oil and vinegar- a salad Nicoise 8 andwich. <I Another novel choice with Mexican 1 ~P:a1 is the quesadilla, a whole wheat chrttlla stuffed with refried beans, <I eese, tomatoes, pepper, guacamole Sind smothered in taco sauce. Dinner at sa'X. Offers entrees like veal sausage p Uteed with apples and onions. Ninety tl~rcent of the diners are women, but !{at hasn't stopped Joe Theismann or NOger Mudd from joining shoppers like ancy Dickerson or Deena Clark. ch~es Quarante Carrottes is basically a onlc health food bar with an emphasis Si .salads and lighter offerings. A y~tlar restaurant was started several in ars ago in the New York City Bloomargdale's with great fanfare. The prices ane moderate and there is no smoking d no liquor. Les Carrottes is located
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in a niche off the main restaurant, La Provence, and the bright carrot-orange decorations contrast wit.h the main room's dark brown and white decor. Melanges like zucchini and cottage cheese casserole or shakes made of soft frozen yogurt, honey, skim milk and fruits are offered as well as a healthoozing sandwich of avocado, tomato, bacon bits and sprouts on pita bread. These restaurants have proven so popular, according to Manager Kenneth Schafer, that the clientele comes to Bloomies just to eat. The Greenbriar restaurant is a cozy white nook on the fifth floor of Garfinckel's downtewn store. Robert Van Uendan, who hails from Amsterdam, has been its chef and owner since 1967. The entrance aisle with a dark buffet on one side leads to a room where neat greenery adorns window box planters and white table linens bespeak gentility. The friendly service speaks for itself. The waitresses are plainly anxious to please, whether for a three-course luncheon or a cup of coffee. Van Liendan remembers with amusement when he introduced bar service in 1967. The older ladies were outraged and temperance groups fought the move with a vengeance. But the restaurant went "wet" and became the forerunner of
- _'v\QODWARD& LOTHROP.-
-------- ----
Woodward & Lothrop's downtown Tea Room.
other store restaurants, most of which now serve cocktails. The bestsellers here are baked stuffed trout, chicken divan and the milk-fed veal specialties. Van Liendan prides himself on the freshness of his food, and his seasonal delicacies of soft-shell crabs and shad. With even the swanshaped cream puffs baked on the premises, it's little wonder that the dining room is filled to capacity at lunchtime. Toni Hatfield and King Hussein have enjoyed the dishes. Then there is that 86-year-old woman who has dined there religiously every day, scolding the chef about the food! This restaurant manages to maintain a white-gloved air even though luncheon gloves disappeared years ago. Woodward and Lothrop has a restaurant to suit every fancy. The English Pub, Tea Room and Saratoga
Dossier/ Apri/198/135
Buffet Company are located on the seventh floor and warm paneling sets the stage for all three, with a maroon quilt-like print setting off curtains and tables. The English Pub has the more hearty entrees like wishbone potpie and crabcakes. The Saratoga's menu is based on a racetrack theme and the restaurant rides on the health food trend with a copious salad bar and unique dressings. Hamburgers and quiche are also available. The Tea Room shares
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some of the entrees but is more dessert· oriented. Manager Connie Klier says these spots haven't gone unnoticed by Wash· ingtonians, politicos and movie star alike. The Orioles' Jim Palmer was there recently, and notables like Bo~ Hope, Eartha Kitt, Larry Brown an. Pat Harris have sampled the fare. Thl April during the "Think Spring" ?ro· motion, a spring souvenir will be given with the "Cruncher's" entree-fresh dewy vegetables and superlative dips. A strawberry festival is planned for the month of May. But don't stop yet. In the North building the Brown Bag Deli accepts telephone orders for pickup on great cold-cut sandwiches. Or eat them there next to the cheery ice cream parlor with Breyer's ice cream cones and sundaes t,o tempt. The cookie kitchen highligh~ s Connie's cookies-chocolate chiP wonders made with Godiva chocolate. There are also specialty food bars on the basement level of the main store, which offers pizza, foot-long or ko~her hot-dogs and yogurt and melon chor~es. It is not exaggerating to say there IS a restaurant for every taste. . d Suburban stores in Columbra an Tyson's Corner don't have all these choices but they do offer their own brand of unique fare in cozy resta~· 1 rants. The Williamsburg at Tyson'~ h an exceptionally tasty eaterY w~td waiters in colonial garb and a vane s menu ranging from top quality cra?~akfy to cocktails which are as appetizing served as they are colorfully named- e 1 Lord & Taylor has transformed t1 old Bird's Cage into the Cafe, an ~p dated stained glass and paneled resprted Red and white menus, placemats an der· napkins spark the decor. Keke An r son, Barbara Bush and NBC' s G_ail r.ek; kins have all enjoyed entree specials 11 r crabcakes and fried chicken . Manage Katherine Small notes that the sh:r~ pers' lunches are especially poP~ • 0 Soup joins half a sandwich, dem' ~ y gurt and beverage. Diners can en~o. lunch from 11 to 4:30, and a lights per on Thursdays from 5 to 7. Etde~e neighbors who live near the store c? JIY in two to three times a week especra is to dine. The same spritely men~ t available at the Cafe in the White F~n&, Falls Church and Leesburg Lor Taylor stores . nts The popularity of these restaur\te proves one thing: shoppers a~preci at having quality and convenrencet to hand. They don't have to miss a beaLOR eat! -BETTE TA y
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In Style By DeWitt Smith
For this spring's fashions, the hot news is shoes. So elite feet, take note and discard the notion that shoes are merely articles to cover the feet. Ditto for pantyhose. They're a virtual cornucopia of colors, textures and heels-such as pastels and pearlized hues-snakeskin, woven leathers and metallics-and the reappearance of the ballerina flat. However, a word to the wise: Don't try to pass off last year's old thickheeled pumps. Clunky is out, and delicate is in. There really is something for everyone this year-flats for the whimsical who choose culottes and the above-theknee hemlines, and a fantastic range of heels and styles for those who choose those brush-the-knee lengths which emphasize the American woman's best asset: her legs. And the spring shoes exude quality, whether it's the piping or the finely stitched soles. The detail is delicate, the accent is soft and the heel is visibly
shapelier. The classic spectator has not only survived but has branched out this year with slingbacks, Chane] toes, open toes and different wingtip designs. Definitely not to be overlooked are pantyhose. The light, pearlized stockings add a touch of shimmer to the leg. "Pearly tints or rosedust tints go with flats or high heels," says Pat Johnson, fashion director at Bloomies White Flint store. With all the colors to choose from, the rule of foot is-match the shoes and stockings. The rainbow starts at the toes and runs all the way up the leg. The trend and the fashion statement are clear-there's absolutely no excuse for dull feet. Washington's elite feet used to go to New York to buy shoes . But no more. Even the venerable Evangeline Bruce admits, "These daY..S I buy a lot of my shoes at a little store in Georgetown." Shoes are moving from clunky to soft and the lower heels are a boon to the
Dossier/Apri/1981/39
Bally tan and white spectator with Chane/ toe, Bloomingdale's, $148. Geoffrey Beene blue suede with walking heel and open sides, Bloomingdale's, $60. Juliane//i leather lavender weave sling, Saks Fifth A venue, $106. B. Magli multi-pastel pearlized leather sling, Woodward & Lothrop, $150. Anne Klein salmon kid open-toe sling, Woodward & Lothrop, $105. Martinique purple lizard open-toe pump, Bloomingdale's, $120. Julianelli black patent leather low-heeled pump with grosgrain bow, I. Magnin, $108.
working woman and the Washington hostess, both of whom spend hours on their feet. A perfect example of both is Chief of Protocol Lenore Annenberg who states flatly, "I'll be wearing medium heels and soft leather comfortable shoes." One of the reasons is that this year's shoes are so comfortable. Richard Good, shoe department Manager for I. Magnin says, "The main emphasis is light and pretty. And the pretty aspect is opening up the pump which is flattering to the foot." One way D.C.'s own First Lady Effi Barry keeps comfortable from morning to night is by wearing open shoes. To make sure of comfort at night, she says, "I wear a pair of shoes around the
40/Apri/1981/Dossier
house to break them in.'' But life can be tough, even for elite feet, especially narrow ones. Jane Ikard says she sticks to plain pumps with medium heels because "a slingback does not stay on my foot." But narrow feet notwithstanding, shoes are definitely high impact this year. As Garfinckel 's designer shoe buyer Larry Garrett says, "Customers are buying everything-from classical navy and white to metallic sandals." "Shoes are the prettiest they've ever been," says April Riccio, Saks Fifth Avenue's Chevy Chase fashion coordinator, "because of the candy and confectionary colors." The color range sounds like a HoJo's ice cream menu-peach, pistachio,
Andrea Pfister aqua sequined sandal, Garjinckel's, $285. Newton Elkin cranberry silk sling with toe ruffle, Lord & Taylor, $94. Halston purple bugle-beaded sling sandal, Lord & Taylor, $130. Delman gold mesh pumps with gold and silver inset, Garfinckel's, $115. Evins black silk pump with rosette, Neiman-Marcus, $115. Charles Jourdan silver sling sandal, Bloomingdale's, $135. Pantyhose from Woodward & Lothrop; Baby chicks from Tree Top Toys; Teenee Beanees from Maillard's, Bethlehem, PA.
boysenberry are the pearlized pastels. Even with the advent of flats, not everyone is going to run out and buy a ballerina shoe, "but it certainly is a fashion statement," says Woodward & Lothrop Vice President Nancy Chistolini . And oh those evening shoes. For a walk on the wild side, there are bugle beads, sequins, gold and silver meshes, even rhinestones on silver mesh. But the classic dancing pumps of satin and silk are certainly holding their own. And there's a whole lot in between. Lord & Taylor's Catherine di Montezemolo, Vice President and director of fashion says, "We're showing stripped and elegant slings with mid heels for evening." One of the classiest shoes arouind is
the Evins black silk pump with a toe rosette worn by First Lady Nancy Reagan at the Inauguration Eve Gala. Both I. Magrun and Neiman-Marcus carry it. According to Press Secretary Sheila Patton, "The First Lady wears a basic pump with a medium heel all the time, for day and formal wear." Two more opera pump buffs are Buffy Cafritz and Nancy Dickerson. "The opera pump is my mainstay," says Cafritz, "and Charles Jourdan is my favorite. When Nancy Dickerson travels, she packs three pairs of identical Geoffrey Beene black patent leather pumps with grosgrain bows. They go with everything." 0
Dossier/Apri/1981141
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BENEATH EVERY MARRIAGE AND EVERY LOVE AFFAIR THERE IS RAGE AND VIOLENCE ••• AND THE POSSIBILITY OF TERROR. We Want You To Meet The Roses. They will soon be the most talked about couple in America. They'll make you laugh. They'll make you cry. They'll make you scream. What The Roses do to each other will touch the nerve of every couple in America. THE WAR OF THE ROSES is hilarious ...and yet it's a horror story. It's part Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf and yet it's part great comedy. THE WAR OF THE ROSES is Warren Adler's bestselling
novel about the dissolution of a modern marriage ... so terrifying you'll never forget it. Soon to be a major motion picture from Richard Zanuck and David Brown, produc· ers of '~aws;' who say, " ... We are not only excited about acquiring the film rights to Warren Adler's THE WAR OF THE ROSES, we are thrilled. This book is a dazzler; the wildest, most outrageous, most macabre comedic book we've read in years."
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Along Party Lines OCIAL AFFAIRS IN THE WORLD OF WASHINGTON
N FAJR OF THE HEART Nearly 1700 Washingtonians with heart-the largest turnout ever- showed up for the pre-Valentine's Day luncheon given by the D.C. Women's Board of the American Heart Association. Board Chairman Anne Camalier noted that Mamie Doud Eisenhower, for whom their scholarship is named, served 30 years on the board. The annual luncheons have helped to raise over $450,000 to fund medical projects. During the luncheon, 26 Garflnckel's models flashed by in 22 minutes, showing one hundred spring fashions. The bevy of top designers ranged from Galanos and Oscar de Ia Ranta to Glvenchy and Halston. At Francie Smoak' s table, Nancy Reynolds crossed her fingers , hoping to win one of the sumptuous door prizes. (She didn't.) Mrs. Philip Steptoe drew the fur jacket and the 10-day Caribbean cruise went to Mrs. Sam R. Watkins. A long weekend at Hilton Head, SC, was won by Nancy Hines. The program read like a Who 's Who In our new administration. Cabinet wives included Mrs. Terrel Bell , Mrs. Caspar Weinberger, Mrs. John Block, Mrs. Richard Schweiker and Mrs. Donald Regan. At day's suc~ cessful end, Helen Linden sighed gratefully and said, " I wouldn't have atJudy McLennan, luncheon Co-chairman Helen Linden , and tempted it without the help of my Co-chairman Kay Diane Bowles and ali the others we worked with. honored guest Barbara Bush at pre-luncheon reception.
I Dossier/Apri/1981143
FrDM THE HEART How often do you have so many exper~~ on the Washington real estate boom , one gathering as the "in the knofor assemblage who recently turned out Ia· the Montgomery County Heart Assoc rn· tion's annual dinner dance at the Colu bia Country Club. " The real estat~ ind~S~Z. is really represented here tonight, . d marked Maggie Shannon, who co-c113~r~ l· the event with Ruth Murray. George \ man , general counsel for the couniY 15 Board of Realtors whose wife Fr.an~le ,5 President of the Heart Assoc1at 10 ~ 5 Women 's Board, glowed that home s~~e have "greatly picked up" under . Reagan administration. His view was 58~ onded by the Foster Shan nons, the Jarnlre R. lnghams, Jr., Henry Nichols an? Cia nn Johnston, Bill Ellis and wife ~1z, Aeal Bridges, and Jean Dressel, all 1nto r estate in a big way. en But Maggie Shannon's perfectly ev ·n suntan, gained from nine straight days ~ 5 Puerto Vallarta 's 90·degree sunshi~e! w IY the dinner table topic. She obllglngee shared her Rx (" Use pre-sun the first thr r days") with all envious comers. Daughtee Linda, there with her fiance, insuran~f broker James William Cassedy tV, toldns the superb photos she got of the R~aga 10 ; with the First Couple' s cooperation, her photo course at Mt. Vernon ColleQ:~s· Modeling furs by Gartenhaus wereN st· band and wife team Hans and Norma . ean ter, Maryland Senator Laurence Le~:at~ Janet Ballas, Bette June Ingham and the Delegate Connie Morella. Dancing to ted youthful Washington Jazz Battalion laS until the wee hours.
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and Redsklns' star kicker Mark MoseteYrneY wife Sharon with Virginia Atto n at General's wife Mrs. Marshall Cotema ' the ball.
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For that special occasion the consummate collection of fashionable gowns. lhe arrival of flaming platters of Baked sible for drumming up patrons for the worthy cause. The silk flower centerpieces were ~Uch to the highly successful No. Virginia the work of the committee headed by Mrs. ~ eart Association Ball to swell the commu路 Lloyd Burk, Jr. 1 The many prominent Virginians attending 1 ty, state and national coffers with funds Or research Into heart dysfunction. Included Rep. and Mrs. Frank Wolf and d ~ Marguerite Hannon cited her many able former Redskin Pat Fischer and wife . 311 y ?lunteers for the eveni ng's success , ln- Others, shown above, were AI Pierce, Lola . ,~1 c Uding her Co-chairman Mrs. C. E. Reid, Jr., Reinsch, who won a door prize of a week's f1, "' J '-1rs. Aus tin Williams, Jr., In charge of the stay In Acapulco for two, Bahrain Ambassa___..-/" , and Mrs. Robert Routler respon - dor Abdulaziz Buall and Joe A. D'Emldlo.
~Iaska with bing cherries was the crowning
ClAIRE
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The cold fact is, it's time to store your furs. And you 路n come to eiman-Marcu . of course. For thermo tatically controlled, uncrowded protection again t moth , tire, theft and drying . We ' ll give the precise summerlong care they de erve, and al o clean and glaze if you wish . Time to remodel them? I f your fur aren't mea uring up to the latest fa 路hion, just bring them to the expem in our Fur Salon. Mazza Gallerie .
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FRANCE INTERNATIONAL CHEVY CHASE 686 9310 Richard Berendzen welcome s Nancy Dick路 erson to the re laxed colon ial affair.
1/81April 1981 /Dossier
HAPPY 249TH ATA.U. American University President Richard and Gall Berendzen ' s George Wash ington 's Birthday party at the handsome AU Presidential residence was orchestrated With precision and flair. Gall Berendzen and her helpers In the klichen had personally prepared the authentic Martha Washington buffet of 8 Poonbread , baked Virgin ia ham and a ~lngerbread birthday cake laced with jelly eans bearing the numbers 249-it being Gh eorge' s 249th birthday , In case you adn't counted . Present were many of the Ambassadors and their wives the Berendzens met when they acted as host and hostess at the PenSion Building Inaugural Ball where Ann Vandevanter had enlisted them to help her. Japanese Ambassador and Mrs. Yoshio ~kawara admired the Japanese screens e Berendzens had picked up in their travels; Spanish Ambassador and Mrs. JRose Llado and Argentina ' s Jorge and Uth Espil talked under the Moroccan ~el~m tenting the bar. Stuart Bernstein , a nrverslty benefactor , chatted with ~harge d' Aft aires Saeed AI·Shamsi of the p nlted Arab Emirates, who is getting his Ph . D .. at American University . Mrs . redenck Douglass Ill an attractive widow and the granddaug'hter of Booker T. w.ashlngton, was In deep conversation ~tth Walter Cronkite ' s mother Helen . •vdchael Deaver and his pretty wife rhepresented the Reagan Admin istration ( e appeared in black tie but went home and changed). hi Judge John Slrica, look ing very fit, and s Wife, the Robert Siegals, the Dale ~illers, the Sylvan Marshalls and the Ken rosby's sang Happy Birthday, George!
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Chairman Robin Jacobsen and Sir Nlcho- Mindy lder and Dr. Dubin were among ballgoers who Gall Lumet and Nina Straight were ,.,e las Henderson waltz to Gene Donati's lr- sipped champagne, waltzed and just enjoyed a quiet contributing members enlivening t tete a tete in the Renwick's grand salon . with their gaiety. resistible three-quarters time. 50/April /981/Dossier
luring strains of Strauss' Beautiful Blue drifted down the orchid-lined stairand scarlet-coated trumpeters, either sounded a brassy welcome to several guests arriving through a February for a Waltz at the Renwick In their honor. Posh Victorian grand salon of the former Gallery was a splendid setting and rman Robin Jacobsen had achieved a acceptable facsimile of a similar event, Years ago, when the Renwick had been ly opened with the President and Mrs. in attendance. British Ambassador and Lady HenderWere standing in for the evening' s princi· hosts, Secretary of the Smithsonian and S. Dillon Ripley, who were in Sri Lanka. Italian Minister and Mrs. Bartolomeo At· and the Charles DIBonas hosted a dinether, and the Huntington Blocks and r Vanocurs also entertained in tandem, d the Anthony Stouts and Maurice and Tobin. Other dinner hosts were Louisa the Gilbert Hahns, the Guy Martins, and Robin Jacobsen and the Henry ons whose guests included Evangeline the Chilean Ambassador and Mrs. Barnator and Mrs. Claiborne Pell and the Marks. Powers (general counsel for the nian) chatted with Livingston and na Biddle and the Bob Amorys. Reannounced budget cuts seemed to be mind. Muffle Brandon (who was tant for museum fundraising projects Joining the White House staff) said 11e arts will get along on their own," was be~ .~uoted ahound the ballroom. "Let' s hope • said Liv Biddle wryly. Apparently Ripley had announced before leav1 on his Asian jaunt that the Smithsonian •erroiS rely more and more on the private sector dl1he years ahead while government subes decrease.
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Dossier/April 1981 I S/
New York City " glamor" was very much on view at the Martha Graham Gala World Premiere of "Acts of Light" and at the pre-dance reception given by Danish Am bassador and Mrs. Borch at their handsome modern Embassy where every room bloomed with masses of tulips personally arranged by the hostess. If Martha Graham herself was the preeminent figure on路 stage at the Kennedy Center (she reminisced for 10 or 15 minutes, sitting down in front of the curtain , to the delight of her fans and the discomfiture of others), Baby Jane Holzer was the cynosure of every eye offstage in her back路 less black lace pants with nude-we mean nude-underlining. Buffie Cafritz was speechless when she confronted Holzer but Catharina Biddle gamely, if tongue in cheek, con路 gratulated her on her outfit while Sophie Englehard and the Corcoran's Dr. Peter Marzio looked on . Philanthropist Evelyn Sharp and Alexander Bacolin helped underwrite the evening. The new Secretary of HUD, Sam Pierce of New York City, shared a box with his daughter, a onetime pupil of Martha Graham's, and Effi Barry.
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Arguably the most important men in the Reagan administration sipped drinks and chatted of summits, ships and sealing wax In the intimate con fines of French Ambassador and Mrs. Francois de Laboulayes' elegant drawing room . The occasion was a pre-dinner cocktail hour to signal the visit of French Foreign Minist er Jean Francols-Poncet. His counterpart, Secretary of State Alexander Haig , Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, and National Security Adviser Richard Allen obligingly took turns moving around in front of the photographers crammed in the doorway. Haig displayed none of his noted tautology (as in " new innovation") as he spoke coolly of a Soviet-U .S. summit "at the appropriate time." Among those seated at round , pink-draped can dlelit tables In the tapestried dining room, were Senators Paul Laxalt , Claiborne Pell, Charles Percy, Sam Nunn and James McClure and wives.
ne Bruce's taffeta gown drew Jean Francois-Poncet expresses confidence for a Mme. de Laboulaye leads Katharine compliments as she (right) and the Giscard victory in upcoming French elections to Graham to dine on Coquilles St. Jacques, Caspar Weinbergers arrived. Alexander Haig. Noix de Veau and Glace Nougatlne.
Food for Thought from Yesterday's Books As Americans,
we enjoy prosperity not as the result of mere pluck and luck, but through hard work, determination and dedication to tdeals that has been characterized by our unquenchable thirst to know. It was this intense passion for learning that kept a young Abe Lincoln far into the night, scratching charcoal ciphers on a shovel back by a dim fire's light or caused a Ben Franklin to loose his kite square into the thunderstorm's fury. It accounts for the simple stroke of luck that Edison enjoyed, trying that thousandth rna/erial for filament when ninety and nine hundred had failed and it shone in the eyes of Jefferson when he worked long and late in a small room on Philadelphia's Walnut Street, preparing what he called "an instnHnent to express man's justifiable need for self-determination." Common and uncommon men have risen to greatness when an era or an idea demanded it. Throughout, this love of knowledge-of reading and of books-has typified what is good and great in our forebears and in our land. The ability to better ourselves through thought, contemplation and reflection is the slender thread of which our civilization and our society is woven. A natural curiosity comPe_lling us to try every square peg in the round holes of the cosmos is the stuff of which scientists and civil servants, merchants and dtplomats, heroes and heroines are made. And when man loses the ability or the desire to pursue intellectual fulfillment-that overwhelming urge to know, absolutely and definitely-then does man cease to be free. Here at Yesterday's Books, we strive to be comprehensivists-in our selection and in our world outlook. Oliver Wendell Holmes once s~id, "When you sell a man a book, you proffer not merely 12 ounces of paper, ink and glue, but the opportunity for a whole new life. "For you see, aiding this universal quest for knowledge is not only our livelihood-our appointed niche on the planet-but what we Perceive to be the hopes and dreams of all mankind. Books are not our product, they're our friends and children, our reachers and triumphs and our escape from the shackles of single mindedness, tedium and ennui. Those who haven't escaped into pages written a hundred days or years ago are poor indeed-poor in spirit and mind-an unneccessary poverty. Trying to provide for the reading and self-enrichment needs of Washingtonians is what we've been doing, and doing well for nearly a decade. If your book buying has been limited to rhe "discount" new bookshops, a word of explanarion is in order. New book shops ~ually offer a few thousand titles, selected on the basis of seasonal popularity and on whar the publishers are promoting at the time. At esrerday's Books, we offer 80,000 hand selected titles, nearly all different and all chosen for their ability to provoke, to inform and to Jce enjo!ed. We categorize them into over 220 areas of interest and you'll recognize that our offerings illusrrate not only what's trendy or sprmg, but what has endured and been proven popular in America throughout the years. ÂŁ:IL
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Dossier/April 198/153
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IN WASHINGTON, 1liERE IS A TRADmON OF PRO<JD NAMES. For over 50 years, Martin's of Georgetown has been a symbol of fine tableware and gifts for the Washington community. The famous craftsmanship of the best names in China, Sterling, and Crystal are on display; Bemardaud, Herend, Buccellati, Baccarat and Tiffany to name a few. Today' s gift, tomorrow's treasure at Martin's, located next to the Georgetown Inn.
BRUNCH
Frankie Welch, with the aid of her invaluable Chinese housekeeper-cook, pulls together a sparkling brunch or dinner in one day, even via tong distance. "I have three menus all set from which to choose," says the Alexandria designer. "l call my cook fro~ New York and say 'Put plan I, 2 or 3 10 motion for dinner guests tonight.' " f A recent Sunday brunch in honor 0 Dr. Walter Heacock, an old friend with Wilmington, Delaware's Hagley Museum, was held in the Welch WatergateSouth apartment. The Peking Room. a peach dining-sitting room done in her own fabrics and furnished with Chinese antiques was the setting . Her ele~ant bedroom is a stunning companion p1ece in peach and purple . . Before the brunch of souffle, VJr· ginia ham and water chestnut and green pea salad, Dominican Ambassador En· riquillo del Rosario engaged Jose~h Sisco in animated conversation on f 1ve points to settle the Salvadoran unrest.f Other guests included a number 0 Heacock's friends, the Arthur Edge· ....... s worths, the David Peacocks, tn 15 1 Mary Alexander, his lawyer Mrs. Caro Nichol, and the Steven Trent manS· Jean Sisco, Strom and Nancy Thu~· 15 mood and the Douglas Roberts (she daughter Genie Welch) whiled awaY th~ pleasant Sunday with good talk an food.
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75 YEARS YOUNG For a business that reputedly was launched on the flip of a coin, Washington real estate giant Shannon & Luchs has lasted a long time-celebrating their 75th birthday recently-now employing a workforce of 1200. The coin flip supposedly decided whether Foster Shannon 's father, then 23, or Ken Luchs' grandfather, 22, would be President of the firm, which Shannons have headed ever since . Both families epitomize the "boundless energy , fighting spirit for numerous causes, and faith in the future of Washington" attributed to Luchs' father in a newspaper editorial.
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Mrs. Ralph B. Dewey, Chairman of the Fountain of Flowers Ball, wearing a Rose Taft Couture gown of taffeta, featuring a double sheath and a carefully hand tucked bodice.
$500.
8300 WISCONSIN AVE BETHESDA, MARYLAND 654-5146 Dossier/ April 1981/55
d8ncl The tradition of handkissing was in lash路 Active Fairfax Hunt members Rep. Margaret Faye Becker and husband Arthur stoP ion for Milou Blinoff and Mitchell New Heckler and scarlet-clad husband John, also just long enough to beam their pleasureDelman. an accomplished steeplechase rider.
56/April 198//Dossier
Although the subject was the Fairfax nt-polo players were as numerous as hunters at the International Hunt Ball at tropically lush OAS recently. Amid the arlet -clad Masters of the Hunt , were rion H. Smoak, John Davis , Donald Armong and Randolph D. Rouse, according to nds, "one of the finest steeplechase ers and foxhunters around, " while anne Masin, President and Chairman of e Bali was being acclaimed for her handof the event for the last two years. General Louis Alexander Traxel, of the Nat ional Cap ital Polo ion , came news of meeting PresindS· :nt Reagan and party at the City Tavern Ub. The President noted the polo insignia the General 's blazer, came over and said 11'1 a member of the polo association , too. en does the season start?" According to lh Marie Traxel , the National Park Service s been giving the Secret Service lessons how to seat their steeds in preparation presidential riding sessions at Mideburg. And who knows? Maybe polo nies on the Mall as well. Back to the foxhunt-the Hon . J. William •ldctendorf, standing head and shoulders ove the crowd-said that too many bones ld been broken in his family through foxntlng for him to take it up. Middendorf's 1 1her was Whip of the Hunt. Tiny blond "lngresswoman Margaret Heckler said she 1t the hunt to husband John, who pursues 11 1'1 Ireland, as well as in Virginia. 1'he OAS' Alex Orfila, even though a nonnter, has offered the use of his facilities r the ball for the past several years. His arming wife Helga, in emerald green , ac·~ainted out-of-town guests with the coloru Pairfax Hunt scene.
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Hand-mad Rugs Tapestrie
MARl I(ESHISHIAN
&
6930 Wisconsin A e Bethesda, Md . 654-4044
Restoration Cleaning
ONS
Setting by The Fairfax. Food by The Jockey Club. (Anything less isn't really a banquet.) Wh n yo u'r pl anning a mallm ling, d inn r or p rl o import nllh l nothing llorl of p i ndid wi ll do, I t u 11 lp. W 'II c to illllal til rvi i imma ul<1t , th food net drinl up · rb, net t11 urrounding qui · tl b auliful. Anyt11 ing I s \ ou ld rl't do . And yo u o uldn't a 1, for an th ing m or . For informGLi o n, all Ja l\i Godman lr in at (202 ) 293-2 100. rcin9 ar _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __..__ _ _ ____. /
~~ Kay Taylor and the Ed Ahlstroms enjoy a ent's repose from the evening 's gaiety.
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Everyone got Into the act when the fiedg路 ling (not qu ite two year-old) and flourishing National Lyric Opera Company held a recent benefit reception at Meridian House. Mrs. Wells (Marina Evdochenko) performed a Viennese waltz with Bill Shelton. AmonQ those drawn to the dance floor were Thomas Gregory with Mary Kennedy Ward, Baron Richard Saito of the National Gallery with hiS partner, lovely Sally Mlnifee of Mlddieburgd and former Congressman Newton Steers an his wife, Gabriella . Foot-tapping on the sidelines were Nlka Nlkltla and John Sergleff, formerly of the Ballet Russe and Anna Pavlova Ballets.
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Come savor our handmade chocolate Easter Eggs and Easter Bunnies!
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The Personalized Confection Specialists!
llry
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We have a garden of floral sweets, fanciful marzipans, chewy carmels, a nd our
Easter specialities Laticed Chocolate Baskets.
1777 Columbia Rd., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20009 265-0332 265-7273
58/April 1981!Dossier
The benefit for the Washington Pertormi~~ Arts Society was given by the " Friends of Nard路 Mouskouri," who must be leg ion. Her reco dS ings break sales records and win a war nd around the world, including the Far East a Eastern Europe. . pat路 "She's tremendous," opined impres~no the rick Hayes, who had presented her earlier 1n evening. . yed All manner of Greek delicacies wer~ enJO she by other "friends," like the Ph ili p Flemings (bys was Chairman of the event), the Ken eros the with her sister, the Countess Romanon~s, rina Al eco, 9-year-old son of the Hermen Roger Mudds and the John Broths. Cat. ahant Greenbergs, meets his Idol whose con路 Biddle was there and cartoonist Pat OIIP dropped by tor the reception . certs he always attends.
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Wr'rv Not }ult Chinc1 A t fh<> Chmil Clnl!.'l'
Luxembourg's Ambassador Adrien \feisch combined his musical and diplomatic skills to fete the Ambassador of Algeria and Mrs. Redha Malek . It was ~fitti ng tribute to the man who acted as Intermediary in the release of our ho !ages from Jran. Meisch teamed with violinist Jody ~atwood and cellist Miron Yampolski In a trio by Franz Schubert. Then Ruth ~nn McDonald joined the Am bas ador tn a four-hand rendition of three Dvorak Slavonic Dances. Following a reception, U.S. government officials who worked on the hostage crisis, and members of Washington society were guest for a lavish buffet. Nouha Alhegelan kept former Ambassador Joe Sisco's attention riveted all evening. Mrs. Arthur Burns and Cyprus Ambassador Andrew Jacovides Practiced classical Greek quotation on each other. Other guests included former TreasUry Secretary G. William Miller and former Assistant Secretary of State liarold Saunders; Irish Ambassador and Mrs. Donlon, Italy's Ambassador to Peking and Mrs. Tamagnini, Dr. Arthur Burns, former Senator and Mrs. Fulbright, Charles and Lisa Cerami, Jacques de Groote, Sidney and Evelyn Zlotnick and Deena Clark. In his toast, Luxembourg's AmbasSador recalled how many times since they first met in Moscow that Redha Malek had been in a key place at just the right moment. He predicted that ~~is latest courageous feat would earn ~m a major place in diplomatic h!Story.
CHINA CLOSET
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liE Y H·\~[ 680; Wi,comrn 41 e 65/H-IriOMon -~at 'I 1(}-bpm. Thu" 9pm. ~tm ll·Spm LOEHMA N'~PLA7A ArlmfW>niJAd 648·'1!J6Mon · <1/ llMpm. WPd ,~ Thurs 9 IOpm. Sun 12-Spm WI UTEFLI T -168·!/IO. Mon-<;,n !().</ IOpm un 1!·5pm HARBORPLACE. BALTIMORE !Oif Pratt I Jl!·l 1'5. Oar/1 /{} IO.Sundar 12-f>
AT1HE
MIDDLEBURG SPRING RACE MEET
SAT. APRIL 18dl Parr TIME 1:00 PM
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SIX EXCITING STEEPLECHASE RACES WITH PURSES SPONSORED BY
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ENJOY THE COUNTRYSIDE AND PICNIC WITH YOUR FRIENDS RESERVED PARKJNG - INCLUDING 4 ADMISSIONS- STARTING AT $40
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Dossier/ April 1981 !59
CHILD~N'S HOUR It was ltzhak Perlman's own " Day," pro; claimed by Mayor Marion Barry to hono the 35-year-old violinist whose virtuositY 1 ~ exceeded only by his generosity towar. 1 handicapped children. He played a benefl concert for them to a packed KenCen con· cert Hall who gave him two standing ova· tions, then cheered a half-hour encore. k ,, " It's not the fingers that do the wor ' ''' t'S explained impresario Patrick Hayes, 1 ,, the bowing that makes all the ditterenc.e.g The benefit continued into the evenln as nine embassies hosted patrons, 9.ivln~ them tastes of nat ive foods and nat1on cultures. Chairman of the Executive Co~: mittee Anna Maria Via reports that t~e ~~d fers of the D.C. Society for CnPP w Children and their co-beneficiary the neut Consumer Health Services would be ab~ 8 $80,000 fuller, thanks to Perlman an 100 dedicated committee of more than Washingtonians.
•
MtfU One Man Show
THROU GH SATURDAY APRIL 11, 1981
The Area's best selection of original works by the 87 year old Master. Shown: PERSONNAGE ROMANTIOUE, an original aquatint exclusively distributed by AJW I Kievit Editions (a division of the Art Fair Galleries).
4400 Jenifer Street. N.W. Washington, D.C. (next to Lord & Taylor's) Tel . (202) 362-7878
601April 1981 /Dossier
THE
ELECTRICA~
DEPARTMENT STORE
Chandeliers • Fixtures • Garden Lights Picture Lights • Fluorescent Fixtures
Track Lights Recessed Lighls • Down Lig
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A Caribbean Carnival to benefit hospitals devastated by hur· ricanes, sponsored by St. Lucia at the OAS, saw Lindsey Lambert and David Broome, Co-chairman, left , HHS Secretary Richard Schwelker, Florentine Vam Tlem and Rep. Larry McDonald, above, enjoying authentic drinks and foods to the beat of Trinidad steel drums.
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Established 1949
1611 Wisconsin Ave. , NW Washington, DC • 338-7521
Dossier/April 1981/ 61
Fashion Calendar A GUIDE TO AREA SHOWS
APRIL Fashion Shows at "219" Restaurant, Alexandria, Tuesdays and Thursdays throughout April, 12 noon - 2 p.m. Fashions by Frankie Welch. Informal Modeling at La Bergerie Restaurant, Alexandria, Thursdays throughout April, 12 noon - 2 p.m. Fashions by Nuevo Mundo. 8-Nat:lonal War College Women's Club, Breakfast and Fashion Show, 9:30a.m., Lord & Taylor, Falls Church. For information, Mrs. Surut 554-6977. 9-Cialre Dratch. Luncheon & Fashion Show, 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m., Normandy Farms. 9-Evan Picone. Fashion Show & Box Luncheon, 12:30 p.m., Garfinckel's F Street. Tickets, $4.00. Reservations required, 628-7730, ext. 620. 9-Bridal Fair. 7 p.m. to 9 p.m., Woodward & Lothrop, Tyson's Corner. tO-Leslie Fay. Fashion Show, 12:30 p .m., Woodward & Lothrop, Tyson's Corner. 11-Bridal Fair. 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., Woodward & Lothrop, Washington. 14-National Council of Jewish Women. Breakfast and Fashion Show, 9:30 a.m., Lord &
~ECL (Com
You e &roce turn 1 des ig1 tnedi; sleepi Taylor, Chevy Chase. For information, Mrs. to do
Diamond, 652-8437. alarn: 14-Frank Masandrea. I. Magnin Fashion Show T0 ' and "Aunt Minnie Luncheon," 11:30 a.m.. Beth Washington Hilton. For information, Arlene P l Friedlander, 299-5232. . 1 ?~eJ 15-Ant:lque Clothing. Informal Mode/mg. 12 dtvtdi p.m. to3p.m., Bloomingdale's, Tyson's Comer. Consi 1 15-Europe Import Fashion Show, 7:30 p.m.. Sourc Bloomingdale's, White Flint. d SYst 16-Petite Fashion Show. 12:30 p.m., Woo . h er ward & Lothrop, Washington. . e sa 2 22-Antique Clothing. Informal Modeltng, 1 IVhat
p.m. to 3 p.m., Bloomingdale's, White Flint .. If To 23-Ciaire Dratch. Luncheon and FashiO tecon Show, 12:30 to 2 p.m., Normandy Farm_s. f estj 0 25-National Secretaries AssociatJOD d tn Bethesda. Rose Williams Fashion Show a~. Pan.y Luncheon, 12:00, Washingtonian Country Clll Bustn For information, Elena Heizer, 654-5146. d& Cornp 25-Spring Fashion Show. 2 p.m., Woodwarr: ir tract< 0 Lothrop, Prince Georges, Landover and ' "'a 1
'' St( 0 aks. . 路 111s St 29-Concord Methodist Church. Rose Wtllt~}O ana Fashion Show and Luncheon, 12:00 p.m., 5. If 1\[ Goldsboro Rd., Bethesda. For informa/IO ' reside Elena Heizer, 654-5146. SYstei
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Favorites at the Ungaro fashion show held at the Chilean Embassy for the benefit of the National Symphony, were a group of white designs. At/eft, Jean Searle of the NSO Board, Chairman for the evening, Betty Luessenhop and hostess Elna Barros. Helene Rubin's glee (seated at the left of Sylvia de Costa-Nora), announces her proud winner of the Ungaro dress.
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62/April 1981 /Dossier
£CURI1Y SYSTEMS (Continued from Page 34)
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You enter your house carrying a load of &roceries and want a few seconds to turn off the alarm, but they should be designed to be switched into an "immediate alarm," particularly during sleeping hours. The danger is forgetting to do so, and therefore instantaneou alarms are sometimes favored. Tom Smith's Security, Inc., in Bethesda incorporates various comPonents into one system to meet individual security needs and budgetary considerations. "We buy from many sources, so I talk about which of 50 systems would fit the client's needs," he says. We design the system around What the customer's needs require." To assure fair value received, Smith recommends that customers get several estimates and check the alarm comPany's reputation with the Better Business Bureau. He also feels that the cornpany should have an electrical contractor's license and that a licensed master electrician should oversee in~tallation work. ADT Security System's newe t total residential security system, the 7525 1 Ystem, is housed in a single control Panel, usually installed near the main entrance of the house. Security sensors lllay include window and door contacts, Pressure-switch floor mats, photoelectric beams, ultrasonic motion detectors and heat and smoke detectors. In single-family homes the unit is Connected to an ADT central station, of ~hich there are more than 150, in the :S., Canada and Europe . In a condo~l nium or other multi-family residence ~e u_nit may be integrated into a central onnoring console with voice com~Unications to security personnel, ex~ ains Robert Schotta, ADT's sales anager in Maryland and Virginia. J\s with most sophisticated alarm ~stems, the interior circuit of ADT's 25 system can be switched on or off 1 ~llow movement in the house when estred, while keeping the exterior pro{!ctect. "A total innovation in home curity, the 7580, including a fully ~lllputerized central station, will be "ailable in early September," Schotta ~Ys . "It has been tested in the ~ ~.ashington metropolitan area for the "" 1 eight months." ~IJ\ key element for which Beltway re arm Services has been nationally qCognized, says Dennis Ri ley, presiCnt of the Beltsville firm, is their eight-
°
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WE'VE MADE YOUR SE 'U RITY OUR BU INE ' FOR OVER A QUA RTER CENTURY
Since 1954. D1ctograph has dedicated 1tself to prov1ding life safety for hundreds of thousands of Am erican families. In the past our b1ggest JOb was convinci ng people they were in danger. But th at's all changed . Wit h break-ins and face-to-face con front ations at an all ·t1m e h1gh and th e threat from fire mounting year after year, today's families know th ey need protection . The best protec lion comes from a company that won 't cu t corners and won't gamble with your life ... a company that places your personal security first. while plannmg sens1ble protectiOn for your valuable property as welL
DICTOGRAPH ... Because you already know you can't afford anything less.
GUARDIAN ALARM SALES., INC. 4850 Rugby Avenue • BethPsda, Maryland
652-19(\'
If You're Reading This Magazine,
we Know You Have something To Protect. Everyone has the right to feel secure In the knowledge that their family and possessions are protected when they can't be there. Even when you are at home, our revolutionary computerized alarm system can give you the peace of mind your family deserves. we will protect your family with the ultimate in security systems providing you the best protection possible against fire or burglary theft.
Beltway Alarm
services, Inc. washington Metro Area:
937-8880 5600 sunnyside Avenue Beltsville, Maryland 20705 Voted the Number One Alarm Company In 1980 by SDM.
Dossier/April /981163
l~j1!!!!!~~~~~~ t~·s~goo;d~to~fe;el
safe when you come to the front door of your house, w1th the sense of secunty you used to knew ADT 1s there Our h1gh level res1dent1al secunty system Softer han mdlrect light, qu1eter than central a1r Yet, always wa ch1ng for secunty problems Relax and enjOy your fam1ly
THE SECURITY COMPANY SINCE 1874
823·1533
OUR ANNUAL ROYAL VIKING LINE CRUISE FEATURING "ROYAL VIKING SKY" VISITING NEW ENGLAND and CANADA JUNE 26 to JULY 10, 1981 (over July 4th) New York - Halifax - Prince Edward Island - Montreal Quebec - Bar Harbor - Boston - Newport - New York
For descriptive brochure phone (301) 656-1700
AMBASSADOR TRAVEL SERVICE, INC. Membert of American Society of Travel Agents
35 WISCONSIN CIRCLE, CHEVY CHASE, MARYLAND 20015
64/Apri/ 1981/Dossier
zone system which identifies exactlY where trouble lies when part of the home security system malfunctions. For example, if an open window makes it impossible to arm the system, the circuit which regulates that area will indicate that part of the house. Besides making it easier to service, this feature permits the homeowner to shut off the offending circuit leaving the rest of the premises protected and to leave for the beach rather than await a service call. Riley says. Riley points out that if two or three of the circuits go out, usually it's not accidental. "Because the police respond more quickly to that type of signal, the apprehension rate on our system eight is double that of the conventional system with only one circuit," he reports. Potential buyers who always wanted to know everything (but were afraid to ask) about home security systems, should get hold of Wells Fargo's Guide Book on Security. This glossy publication covers the field from the historY of the company's Pony Express days to a thorough rundown on all the detection and protection devices on the market. There are photos and charts to helP select a system on the basis of Underwriters' Laboratories' ratings of alarms and suitability of placement in th~ home, extent of protection, police an . n guard response, listed central stat1° and a number of other factors. . tS Wells Fargo's Robert Duvall polO out that the company's Pony Express Residential Security service offers sen; try digital dialer alarm systems th~ come close to the comprehensive haf wired residential systems protecting ~he millionaires' homes. A major selhng point is that the transmitter uses orl dinary phone lines at no additiona monthly charge to provide alarm cornl munication to Wells Fargo's centra stations. . 11 Besides installation costs whtC range from $1,300 to $14,000 or rnore. en· most companies charge a monthlY c a tral station fee, roughly equivalent to phone bill. 0 If you're in the market, here are tW. st· facts to consider. One Great Falls r~ d dent who had an alarm system instal .e f was Bernard C. Welch, alleged th•.~t and accused murderer of card~olot•at Halberstam . He admitted to pohce t b· in his thousands of successful roto beries, only once did he attemPt la! burgle a house equipped with a bur!as alarm. Apparently, that once Cl enough.
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(Continued from Page 24)
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tnunity service. Today, she sits on a business board, the Beneficial Standard Corporation, a diversified financial and insurance company. She works with Wallis Annenberg, daughter of Walter Annenberg, as a fellow board member of the southern California community TV station KCET, where she is on the pro&ram review committee. After her first husband died of a heart attack in 1963, Jean Smith worked briefly in public relations for the Mark liopkins Hotel in San Francisco. "Bill Smith strolled into my office Shortly after I got the job and said we had a mutual acquaintance. He was in San Francisco representing the Cali fornia Brewers Association. The brewers Went on strike and Bill was in town on and off for six weeks. That's when he courted me. We were married 14 lllonths later." Named by President Nixon to the ~oard of the National Voluntary SerVtce Advisory Council, she soon became Vice Chairman with the assigntnent of evaluating ACTION and federal volunteer programs. When the Carter Administration moved in, Mrs. Smith went on the board of the National Center for VolUntary Action, a private group (now called VOLUNTEER) founded by for~er Michigan Governor George l\Omney. She is on several other boards-ineluding the southern California branch Of the National Conference of Christ~ans and Jews, the Board of CounCtlJors of the University of Southern California School for the Performing A.tts and the Board and Executive ~ommittee of the Hospital of the Good Camaritan, not to mention the Red toss and the Salvation Army. Are any of her friends in "the &roup" working with her? "Most of ~em live in Bel Air while I live in San . ar~n.o and we have different local 0anties but many of us do work for Q lue Ribbon, the fundraising unit ; hich raises money for Buffie Chanler's music center in downtown Los \ngeles." Just last year, Jean Smith ~as made a President of Blue Ribbon. , Will she transfer her dedication and :~ergy to good works in Washington? really going to try to take it very ' owly and try to learn to say "no," she
trn
was [J ~}'s.
D
ABOUD DWECK PORTRAITS. THE FOXHALL TUDIO 363-9898
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By Appointment Dossier/Apri/1981165
WASHINGTON LAND RUSH
00 _ r\kri<
(Continued from Page 26)
For People With the Taste
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66/Apri/1981/Dossier
S OF 2000
0
c · - 1'1"':11..111,. ~
... Class of 2000 announces the opening of It's washington salon. A full service salon catering to men and women who deserve the best in hair design and skin care. our professional staff looks forward to serving you at our new washington location. Appointments preferred but not necessary. call 842-3488/9.
1776 C Street, NW
wasn oc 20006 842-3488 / 9
rehabilitators . Both neighborhood sported at least a 15 percent jumP in property values in the last year. Then there is Capitol Hill and Old Town Alexandria. Both are world un· to themselves, one imbedded in poli· tics, the other in history. Propert Y values in both have more than doubled on the better streets in the last five year and each maintains a top spot in price per square foot rankings. Brokers rec· ognize the Hill and Old Town as neigh· borhoods still offering the best rehabili· tation possibilities among the prestige zones . Any look at Washington's better neighborhoods must include those elbow-roomy areas once considered suburban but now accepted as countrY club extensions of the Nation' Capital. In Montgomery County, Chevy Chase and Bethesda still attract younger families who want to be closer-in than the plush hinterlands of Potomac. In Virginia, it's McLean and ArlingtonThese neighborhoods close to the District line maintain square foot land values at about half of their counter· parts in-town. The farther out, general· ly peaking, the less costly the land per square foot. The catch is that you have to buy more in the luxury countrY neighborhoods such as Great Falls, po· tomac and River Oaks. Occasional small lots in those areas command high prices: a lot 6,250 square feet in River Oaks, for instance, recently was valued at $18 per square foot. Washington's commercial land rnar· ket is no less a tempest these daYS· Thornton Owen, Jr., Chairman of the Board of Thomas J. Owen & Sons, the oldest and largest appraisal firm in t~e 10 District, say " ... it's going bonkers the downtown area." In October, for instance, The ~a tiona I Food Processors A ociat1°~ paid $530 a square foot for a half bloC of downtown land at New York Avenue and 14th Street, walking distance froJll the White House. The total price of $9.5 million _p_ro~ 0 duced a profit of more than $8 m1lh for the previous owners who bought the property in 1977 for $1.2 million. w "That made it a whole neur· ballgame," says Owen. "That P re chase is the benchmark for all futU transactions in the city." .e The highest previously known pr~~e for a piece of downtown propertY 15
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00 per quare foot that the John "-kridge Co. paid last year for the YWCA building at 17th and K Streets. Say Owen: "The value of a piece of commercial property depend on what You can do with it and how badly orneone needs it.'' William S. Harp, President of the American Institute of Real E tate ApPraisers agrees, adding that even in commercial treasure hunting, location helps determine value. Mo t brokers agree that the hoHestand most expensive-commercial land Value today are located in the area west of 16th Street, N.W. to Washington Circle, and north of Pennsylvania Avenue to M Street, N. W. "The closer you are to a desirable Spot, the higher the cost,'' Harp say , Pointing to the downtown area boundect by 7th and K Streets, N. W. on one Side and 8th and H Street on the other. ''That location was designated in 1977 to be the site for Wa hington's propo ed convention center. Since then, the adjoining land values have tripled." That area, says Owen, is part of the secondary commercial district, between 6th and 15th Streets from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts Avenues, where there are more buildable and available sites that are more affordable, at lea t for now. "Supply and demand tell the Story," ay Owen. "Primary district are at a premium now. The secondary lllarket won't Ia t long." There are indications of a huge influx Of investors joining the Wa hington commercial land rush. Institutional inVestors, such a insurance companies and owner /occupants such as law firms ~nd trade associations have been shelltng out top dollar for downtown land. ~nd lately, what real e tate broker call deep pockets"-the foreign and dolllestic megabucks folks who can afford Prime market values as investments-have been moving into town. On the whole, District commercial 1 ~nd values jumped over 25 percent in . e last year. While tight money, high tnhtere t rates and runaway inflation s ?uld slow the market this year, sales jrtce are expected to e calate by at bat 15 percent per year through 1985, rokers agree. Donnelly conclude , "The District' ~conomy is more stable than elsewhere ;n the nation. So long as that's the a e, ~ere'~l be an intense interest in prime d as~mgton land , commercial and re ienttal. It's ju t not likely to end anytime soon." 0
1
~Cl-1 OF OUR
IS CUT FROM A DELICIOUSLY DIFFERENT CLDfl-1. Loews custom designs intimate celebrations for up to 500 guests. With the high quality food you'd expect in a fine re~taurant. Call ~icholas Lim, our lo~S L'ENFANT D~rector of Catenng, at 484-1000. HOTEL
PLAZA
480 L'Enfant Plaza, S.W, Washington, D.C. 20024
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
~---....... J. NORMAN LAWRENCE. Lo~wren r e
Ltd .
of London
DOAS
NANCY DOES STORE YOUR OLD FUR IN A NEW SILK RAINCOAT OR OTHER FABRIC OF YOUR CHOICE
7913 Norfolk Avenue Bethesda, Md. Monday thru Friday 10 AM- 5 PM
For further information call:
656-4911 Dossier/April 1981167
GUIDE TO NEW HOMES
"They're the secret source that most designers won't share!'
(Continued from Page 29)
Most interior designers who thrill their clients with selections from Micki Chester's unique and complete coUection of Oriental antiques and reproductions .. . and accessories that include unusual Kilim rugs and Oriental-rugpillows from Pearl Siegel's "Post Scripts" ... try to keep Micki and Pearl a secret from their competition for as long as possible. Considering aU of the advantages, can you blame them? t!Je "secret source" Oil f)' ami/able to J'Ottt!Jroug!J your interim路 designe1:
Design Imports (202) 966-2310 or (301) 279-7166
One of the most exclusive showrooms in the United States featuring handcrafted furniture from the finest artisans who supply Harrods of London and . . other exclusive showrooms .-in Europe.
~.~~~ Mon. , Thur. & Fri. 10:00 A.M. to 9:00P.M . Tue., Wed. & Sat. 10:00 A.M. to 6 :0 0P.M.
THIRD LEVEL, MAZZA GALLERIE 5300 Wisconsin Avenue, Washington, D.C 20015 202/ 363-5881
68/April 1981/Dossier
The Flour Mill Georgetown Condominiums by Weissberg Development Price: $195,000 to $545,000 Financing: $175,000 loans at market rate with National Permanent Savings & Loan Sales by: Martha Clarke, Shannon & Luchs 1015 33rd Street, N.W., 20007 Phone: (202) 333-5788 Features: A.l.A. Award for Achievement of Excellence in Historic Preservation and Architectural Design; overlooks the Potomac and the historic C&O Canal. Wadsworth House Georgetown Condominiums by The Richman Group Price: $99,000 to $399,000 Sales by: Maxine Calamos, Phinney Associates 1045 31st Street, N.W. 20007 Phone: (202) 965-6370 Features: Skylighted atriums, fireplaces, 2-story penthouses. Tudor Walk Georgetown Homes by Lawrence N. Brandt Price: $550,000 to $600,000 Taxes: $7500.00/ year (approx.) Financing: Conventional Sales by: Lawrence N. Brandt, Inc. 3201 New Mexico Ave., N.W. 20016 Phone: (202) 363-1100 Features: Single detached homes in Georgetown with extra large rooms, op路 posite the historical Tudor Place estate. Hillandale at Georgetown Georgetown / Burleith Townhomes by Hillandale Development Price: $285,000 to $525,000 Financing: lower of 13Y. or market Sales by: Robert T. Poynter Tecon Realty Group 3905 Reservoir Road, N. W. 20007 Phone: (202) 333-6600 Features: Wooded parkland setting, cathedral ceilings, marble foyers, fireplaces, garages and patio courtyards in luxury townhomes built on the former Archbold estate. Foxhall Terrace Foxhall Road area Homes by Robert T. Foley Price: $550,000 to $700,000 Sales by: Randy O'Donoghue Robert T. Foley Co. 4339 Montgomery Ave., Bethesda, MD Phone: (202) 654-0891 Features: Large, spacious Georgian style homes with elevators, pools in a hilltoP setting with a beautiful view . McLean Gardens CO路 Wisconsi.n Ave ., (at Porter Street) Condommiums by Arthur Rubloff & Price: $100,000 to $200,000 Financing: !2Y,07o loans
tent
~~
nd
Sales by: Donald Epner Arthur Rubloff & Co. 3450 38th Street, N. W. 20016 Phone: (202) 244-8300 F:atures: 4 bedroom duplexes available, Winding streets, a tranquil neighborhood close to schools James Place at Georgetown Georgetown Condominiums P:ice: To $369,500 Ftnancing: Market rate Sales by: Charles Martin Brennemen Associates, Inc. 1077 30th St., N. W. 20007 Phone: (202) 338-0990 Features: Within building parking, security illonitoring system, brass hardware, firePlaces in penthouses, microwaves, self cleaning ovens and 22 cu. ft. refrigerators 2Sot M Street Washington Circle area Condominiums Price: $106 500 to $207 000 F:路 '13llz o/o loans' s'nancing: ales by: Agnes Johns Burr, Morris & Pardoe, Inc. 2501 M Street, N.W. Phone: (202) 293-6488 F"eatures: High speed elevators, spacious rooms, desirable location Palisades ~acArthur Blvd., (at Arizona Ave.) p0 :Wnhomes by Barrett M. Linde s'lce: $222,000 to $299,000 ales by: Charles Miller ;hone: (202) 652-4570 rneatures: Marble entry foyers, ultra Odern kitchens
OLD TOWN ._ANTIQUES ..t &;:?LOVEY ~state
jewelry of matchless appeal and affordability
\\.10~~~
222 S. Washington Street Alexandria, Virginia 22314
(703) 548-0743 Tues-Sat 1-4 by appointment
Exceptionally fine Queen Anne tea table, made in New England, circa 1740. Ref: Wallace Nutting, fig . 1102 and Antiques Magazine, March / 81, p. 642
Spr'Jng Valley Townhouses M
1' assachusetts Ave., (Spring Valley)
p0 :Wnhomes by W.C. & A.N. Miller
s''ce: $249,000 to $259,000 ales by: Michael Seay I 48 W.c. & A.N. Miller Ph60 Massachusetts Ave., N.W. 20016 F: one: (202) 229-4016 r eatures: Libraries, walk-out basements, eserved parking
~Oxhall Crescents
8?xhall Road area
~ngle family homes
F::tce: $457,000 to $622,000 s'~ancing: 75% loans at market rate
2~rZ by: Dagmar Burton
p Foxhall Rd., N.W. 20007 F:hone: (202) 342-0096 Jl~~tur~s: Grand homes in the Georgian ~a adm style with conservatories, terrazs and solariums Wash路 ()n mgton, D.C. property taxes are based evaliO~% of assessment. $1.54/$100.00 iu Uat10n for townhomes and condominfaItt~, $1.22/$100.00 evaluation for single ltttly homes.
[th ridge ltd. 703-548-7722 202-332-0761 Hours II :00 til 5:00 Tuesday thru Saturday
FINE ANTIQUES INTERIOR DESIGN
John Ethridge Morris 220 So. Washington St. Alexandria, Va 22314
MARYLAND bethesda :radley Oaks radley Blvd. and Hillmead Road Dossier/April 1981169
OLf
Cuisine
548-0088 724 King Street Alexandria, Virginia
~~ nuevo
~mundo
3 13 camero n street old town alexandria 549 -0040 major cre dit cards open sun ., 1-5
neo-chicepu re white linen scu lpted In to the newest shapesjacket. $42. pants, $40. from a dash ing collect ion of lmen separat es.
CriUeywareJtouse eMall
We cordially inuite you to visit us, Ten Specialty Shops and Two Superb French Restaurants, in the Heart of Old Town Alexandria
Convenient parking across the street
218 North Lee Street â&#x20AC;˘ Alexandria, Virginia 22314
OLD TOWN ALEXANDRIA Custom Picture Framing Museum qualtty restoration of old Otl patnllngs and frames
We have one of the largest selections of old and new prints in the Washington metropolitan area
ravem Square 411 King St. Alex .. VA 22314 549路4322
Seven Corners Shopping Center 6201 Arrington Blvd. Falls Church , VA 23044 538路4322
These graceful oil lamps of hand blown glass are a p 1 nled design by Joh Wollard Filled with a quality lamp oil, the lamps are odorless and will burn for hours. Available In tour sizes and Individually priced. They m ko Ideal gifts.
lm agma t1ve Sophisticated Fre e Expert Designer Adv1ce
SMALL MALL 118 King Street , Alexandria Wash ington 836-1434 Annapolis 659-4300 (301)263-3737
HISTORIC FREDERICK
8'1' APPOINTMENT 47 EAST ALL SAINTS STR EET FREDERICK, MAR'I'LAND 21701
OLD TOWN ALEXANDRIA
IN CRILLEY WAREHOUSE 2 18 N ORTH LEE STR EET ALEXAN DRIA , V IRGIN IA 22314 S'I'LV IA DA NFORD (703) 548-2150
19TH CENTURY FURNISHINGS ARCHITECTURAL ANTIQUES PRIMITIVES
\var~house
'!1'\.nttques
222 N Lee
Old Town 548 ~ 5509
Homes by Group Realty Price: $350,000 to $360,000 Taxes: $4200.00/year (approx.) Financing: 14 0 • loans for 30 years Sales by: Jay Rosenkranz 7101 Wisconsin Avenue 20014 Phone: (301) 657-3220 Features: Gourmet kitchens, huge decks, skylights and clerestory windows in contemporary homes on a cui de sac
Own a Condominium on the French Riviera!
THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFUL MARINA Marina Biae des Anges is an architectural masterpiece located on the Cote D'Azur between Nice and Cannes. Four breathtaking condominium buildings are set in the midst of a full service marina with a promenade of restaurants, shops, and nightclubs surrounded by twenty acres of beautiful gardens . Sports facilities include tennis courts, a lagoon swimming pool, a private beach on the Mediter-
ranean , an aquatic club and sailing school. Each condominium is fitted with the finest materials throughout with floors and bath of Italian marble. Golf courses, skiing facilities, and the clubs of Monte Carlo are only a short drive away. Condominiums of all sizes are available .
For further Information
Call: 463-6363
Vo1d where proh1b1ted b y law.
Let us find the perfect vacatron home for you ... anywhere in the world Representmg propert•es th roug hout the world.
The Al ps • The Riviera • Th e Caribbean
~ RESORf
~
PROPERITES INTERNATIONAL,
INC .
UNIQUE GIFTS Located in the new Prospect Place (Just West of Wisconsin Avenue)
3222 N Street • 333-3222
Tall Oaks Tuckerman and Whisperwood Lanes Homes by Devin LP Price: $272,000 to $273,500 Taxes: $4222.00/year Financing: 13 3/. OJo loans for 30 years Sales by: Jay Rosenkranz 7101 Wisconsin Ave., 20014 Phone: (301) 657-3220 Features: Spacious custom homes on . wooded one acre lots, ideal for entertatn· ing, with gas heat and Central Vac. Rosehill of Bethesda 7604 Barnum Road Homes by Devin LP Price: $225,000 Taxes: $2096.00/year Financing: 13 3/.% loans for 30 years Sales by: Jay Rosenkranz 7101 Wisconsin Ave., 20014 Phone: (301) 657-3220 Features: Central Vac, microwaves, gas alf heat in custom homes on wooded one-h acre lots on a cui de sac Greentree Bradley Blvd. and Greentree Rd. Homes by Berger /Berman Builders Price: $298,900 to $308,900 Taxes: $4000.00/year (approx.) Financing: 13 3/.% loans Sales by: Jay Rosenkranz 7101 Wisconsin Ave., 20014 Phone: (301) 657-3220 Features: Custom-built colonials on one· half acre lots with finished basements, gourmet kitchens and custom features. Cloisters of Bethesda ane Old Georgetown Rd. and Tuckerman L Homes by Berger /Berman Builders Price: $239,900 to $263,000 Taxes: $3500.00/year (approx.) Financing: Conventional Sales by: Patricia Henderson Berger /Berman Group Phone: (301) 770-2280 1 Features: Beautiful treed lots, cathedra flying decks and dramatic designs Promenade off Rockville Pike (near I-495) Cooperative Apartments Price: $110,000 and up ) Taxes: $280.00- $640.00/year (appr~"·e) Financing: 14Vz% ceiling (adj. by pnrn Sales by: Rose Mary Pearson 5225 Pooks Hill Rd. Phone: (301) 897-9666 Features: Private wooded grounds, ivate olympic-sized pool, parquet floors, pr gatehouse
72/April 198l/Dossier
Burning Tree
s,
Heathwood Court and Burdette Road Homes by Dennis Rourke Corporation Price: $400,000 raxes: $4500.00/year (approx.) /linancing: 75o/o loans at market rate Sates by: Lois Robins, Lewis & Silverman Phone: (30 I) 299-2000 Features: Unique custom homes buill in lhe tradition of Dennis Rourke
longwood ~rmat Drive
~Omes by Dennis Rourke Corporation
IPrice: r~es:
$450,000 to $500,000 $5000.00/ year (approx .) Ftnancing: 75% loans at market rate ~les by: Lois Robins, Lewis & Silverman hone: (301) 299-2000 Features: Unique custom homes in the ltactition of Dennis Rourke
~arnestown
8Prlng Meadows
~ring Meadows Drive
p~rnes by W.C. & A.N. Miller
rtce: $215,000 to $300,000 ;,axes: $2800.00/ year (approx.)
~nancing: 80% loans at market rate
Hunter
Country Floors
Old Tyme
Ceiling
handmade
Fans
Tiles
This is the original ceiling fan. the one exported to India and Africa around the tum of the century. Yearround energy savers. they keep you cooler in summer and warmer in winter. The largest display and stock in the Washington area. Commercial accounts Invited.
The finest artisans of Portugal. Spain. France. Holland. Mexico. Finland and Peru send us their best. A visit to our dramatic new showroom will be an inspiration ... over 4.000 square feet of design ideas. Nothing else like it in the Washington area.
les by: Michael Seay
W.c.
& A.N. Miller
:,hone: (301) 229-4016 eatures: 2 acre wooded lots, swim & alf
;acquet club, bridal trails and patios in ""o-story and ranch styles.
HAYMARKET路 ADEMAS On capitol Hills Barracks Row
721 8th STREET. S.E. 546-6400 I 547-5100
~otomac
~ver's Edge
~ver Road (north of Potomac Village) p~rnes by Rocky Gorge Communities
{tee: $248,500 to $257,000 F',~xes: $4000.00/year (approx.) tnancing: 12Y,% loans
~es by: Marcia
Marnell, Panorama " one: (301) 299-6700 heatures: English and classic American ~0 1l1es on 2 acres or more. ~?lomac Gate
ne
liiVer Road and Accord Court p ~Illes by Group Realty of Washington { 1Ce: $264,000 to $269,500 r;:?Xes: $3600.00/year (approx.) 'Stnancing: Below market 1 7 0es by: Jay Rosenkranz ph 1 Wisconsin Ave., Bethesda P. one: (301) 657-3220 6eatures: Security systems, large decks, ~ Ve homes on a quiet cui de sac
f
pOtomac Hamlet
e
~Otornac Village p~Illes by Long & Foster {'ce: $270,000 to $295,000 p~es: $3000.00/year (approx.) ~nancing: 13 V4 % loans g :es by: Pat Wadleigh, Long & Foster 8 p 2 Falls Road "hone: (30 I) 983-0060 Qeatures: Custom-detailed colonial homes Qannockburn West ~lltdette Road in Potomac p~rnes by Berger /Berman Builders 1'. tee: $221 ,900 and up OXes: $3300.00/year (approx.)
Have You Heard of Audrey DeYoung? ~ If you haven't heard, there is a service for estate and moving sales. Our 10 years in the business rates us as foremost in the area. If we can be of assistance, please con tact us.
~ey
Secondhand Rose
Resale Shop for Women
Designer Fashions. Furs and Accessories Consignments Accepted Doily
fJJeYcnmg
10 am- 4 pm
Agent For The Sale Of Home Furnishings 234-7681
1516 Wisconsin Ave. In Georgetown (b etween P & Q)
337-3378
Dossier/Apri/1981173
YOU'RE INVITED TO
EVERYONE'S THERE.
Financing: Conventional Sales by: Nancy Clinard Berger /Berman Group Phone: (301) 365-2030 . Features: Sprawling two-story homes wtth two-car garages on choice lots. Windermere Old Georgetown Rd. and Tuckerman Ln. Homes by Snider Brother Price: $244,900 and up Taxes: $3600.00/year (approx.) Financing: Conventional Sales by: Maxine Schwartzman Snider Brothers Phone: (301) 983-1200 or 983-0010 Features: Minutes from White Flint, ceramic floored foyers, master suites with sitting rooms, haute cuisine kitchens. Potomac Hills South Glen Road Homes by Dennis Rourke Corporation Price: $400,000 to $425,000 Taxes: $5200.00/year (approx.) Financing: 75o/o loans at market rate Sales by: Lois Robins, Lewis & Silverman Phone: (301) 299-2000 Features: Unique custom home built in the tradition of Dennis Rourke
VIRGINIA 5530 Wisconsin Ave. Chevy Chase MD. 20015 (301 )652-9470
Owned by one family since 1943
'Fanwu$
Black Horse
\..
lavern
\ G 1,
We know Luigi's is still the best pizza in town. Luigi's also knows 230 ways to make pasta!
u c:,
AE, CB, D, V,MC
LUNCH DINNER • DANCING VALET PARKING 1236 20TH ST., N.W. RE SERVATIONS 659-2007
74/ Apri/1981/Dossier
1132- 19th Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. Tel. 331 -7574 4919 Fairmont Avenue Bethesda, Maryland Tel. 656-5882 6723 Richmond Highway Alexandria, Virginia Tel . 765-5900
•
CHAUCERS Washington's Superb New Restaurant EnJOy fine di"'ng at ChaU<.'trS, Wa•hington\ superb grill rtstauranl. A touch of class on 'N' !reel offConneciiCUI Avent..,, Serving lunch and din ner. Re;ervmions: 39J.J(XX). 1733 'N 'S ~reet . N W. ash mgton. D C 200.16
ijom
Price
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Alexandria Watergate of Alexandria Old Town Condominiums Price: $119,500 to $189,500 Taxes: $1.39/$100 (eval.) Financing: Conventional Sales by: India Benoit 1009 Pitt Street Phone: (703) 836-5200 Features: Hardwood floors, storm windows, fireplaces, mews setting, garage space, 2 year guarantees. Canal Way Old Town Townhomes by Development Resources Price: $195,000 to $235,000 Taxes: $1 .39/$100 (eval.) Financing: 80% conventional Sales by: Jack Clark Manarin, Odie & Rector 1104 N. Pitt Street 22314 Phone: (703) 549-6464 dFeatures: Finely crafted homes with har Ff· stained oak floors, multiple fireplaces, 0 street parking and deluxe custom featureS·
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Arlington Towne Pershing Route 50 and George Mason Drive Townhomes by Townside Partners Price: $207,000 to $210,000 Taxes: $1.12/$100 (eva!.) Financing: II!!,% rs Sales by: Jim Hughes, Townside Partne 8001 Forbes Place, Springfield Phone: (703) 978-0900 ·ais, Features: Spacious Williamsburg cotonl courtyards, winding open stairwells. The Ridge Aurora Hills
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~omes by Port City Builders Price: $246,900 to $256,900 raxes: $1.12/$100 (eval.) Financing: Graduated payment plan Sates by: Betty Gorman, Routh Robbins 400 N. Washington St., Alexandria Phone: (703) 836-6200 Features: Country kitchens with fireplaces, custom design, 6" exterior walls, 3 piece mouldings, 5 min. from Washington Bet Alton Condominium Rosslyn Condominiums by Wills & Albrittain Price: $171,750 to $196,950 1'axes: $1.05/$100 (eva!.) Financing: 13 V2 "lo /30 years Sates by: Carol Reiter, Diana Beery Merrill Lynch/Chris Coile 18!8 N. 21st St., 22209 Phone: (703) 524-9510 Features: Hardwood floors; marble, slate or hardwood foyers; fireplaces, sundecks and balconies; garages; wet bars and elegance throughout. llorizon House Penthouses 1300 Army-Navy Drive Penthouse Condominiums Price: $255,000 to $275,000 ~~es: $1.12/$1 00 (eva!.) lnancing: Conventional Sates by: Libby Ross, Panorama Phone: (703) 536-5250 ~earures: 9' ceilings, marble entrance oyers, whirlpool baths ()ouglas Hills ~Ock Spring Rd. and Vermont Ave. p ~mes by Long & Foster rtce: $350,000 to $550,000 ;~es: $1.12/$1 00 (eval.) Stnancing: Conventional pales by: Ann Hitchcock, Long & Foster F.hone: (703) 821-2722 eatures: Dramatic views, fireplaces, embassy-sized rooms, servants quarters, &ourmet kitchens. 'the Weslie ~401 North Oak Street p0 _ndominiums by Weissberg Development rtce: $189,000 to $335,000 r~xes: $1.12/$1 00 (eva!.) Stnancing: Nat. Perm. S&L, to $175,000 Pahles by: Shelly Kalmus, Shannon & Luchs F. one: (703) 522-8448 ~atures: Garage parking, unique view of C: all and monuments. C:tystal Gateway C:tystal City P0_ndominiums by Chas. E. Smith Co. 1 { ce: $180,000 to $450,000 F.~Xes: $1.12/$100 (eval .) Stnancing: Conventional p~es by: Enid B. Weaver, Crystal Realty one: (703) 920-6800 12 F. 35 Jefferson Davis Highway t eatures: Italian marble master baths with & oman tubs, West German cabinetry, arage parking, all-electric kitchens Clifton
~~ar Knolls of Clifton a1rfax
A smallandexclusive continental-style building ofonly 32elegant apartment homes. 1045 31st Street in Georgetown.
~D$WORlH WousE Small in scale, grand in luxury, Wadsworth House has only 32 condominium apartments, yet there are 14 different floor plans. Remarkable features include skylighted atriums, fireplaces, 2-story penthouses, brick paved courtyards and terraces, a squash court, and garage parking, of course. The finest accommodations in Georgetown, from $121 ,000 to $399,000. Phone ~
ftichftlaRR ~~
965-6370.
Developed by Georgetown-Jefferson Associates A member of the Richmarr Group Sales by Phmney & Associates Brokers lnv1ted
''SOMEONE STILL CARES ABOUT QUALITY"
WATERGATE OPTICIANS, INC. Under New Ownership
Offering EXCLUSIVE EYEWEAR and PROMPT EMERGENCY SERVICE 2558 Virginia Avenue, NW Washington, DC (Watergate Mall)
965-4686 Major Credit Cards Accepted
Dossier/April 1981175
BOYNE FALLS LOG HOMES ALL LOG HOMES ARE NOT CREATED EQUAL The quiet luxury of this home begins with a very special building material. .. Northern White Cedar. Traders' cabins built with it 250 years ago are still standing. It's fire-resistant, maintenance-free and a natural insulator of superior quality. When you add the meticulous way we build each home (every log is hand-peeled twice, every difficult angle is pre-cut perfectly) you can see why a custom-made Boyne Falls Log Home is unique. MODEL OPEN WEEKENDS 1-5 or ANY OTHER TIME BY APPOINTMENT SEND $5 for OUR COLORFUL DESIGN PORTFOLIO OF HOMES
BOYNEFALISOFVIRGINIA-DEPf. WD P.O. BOX 189 • NEW MARKET, VA 22844
703-740-3189
:Jhe :lop~
n/ f<e~afe
Shop~
Priscilla Doyle\
ENCORE Top D es igner Fa shion s • ADOLFO • CACRAREL • RALSTON
• JULIO • LAUREN • NIPON • ST. LAURENT
Con~i5nme.nh
c:llcc£phd :l:Ja if!J
J715 Maco m b St. , N.W. (off Wi,consin Ave .) Washing to n, D.C.
966-8122 761April 198/ /Dossier
Homes by Town & Country Price: $300,000 Taxes: $1.54 / $100 (eval.) Financing: Conventional Sales by: Nancy Spinks, Town & CountrY 502 W. Maple, Vienna Phone: (703) 938-5800 Features: 3-car garages, fenced 5 acre Great Falls Leigh Mill Commons White Chimney Lane Homes by Long & Foster Price: $220,000 Taxes: $1.54/ $100 (eval.) Financing: Owner accepting 2nd trust Sales by: Vicky North Great Falls Center Phone: (703) 759-9492 Features: Natural cedar homes, 3 fireplaces, private parkland, tennis courts
1'axt F'ina Sale:
Pho1
F'eat bath
Mel Bath lion Pric1
raxt Fin a Sale:
E,
Pho,
Feat desil Cedi 1077 1-ton Pric1
McLean ra.x~ Fin a Treeline of Langley Sale: Broad Branch Ct. near Douglas St. PhoJ Homes by Douglass Construction Co. Feut Price: $257,950 to $285,000 bectr Taxes: $1.54/$100 (eval.) l(irn· Financing: Conventional Sales by: Marge Kremidas, Long & Foster l-Ion Pr;c1 1311 Dolley Madison Blvd ra.xf Phone: (703) 790-1990 Features: Quality construction, 9' ceilings, Fin a Sale~ gourmet kitchens, excellent schools. 8318 Merrywood-on-the-Potomac Pho1 Near Rte. 123 & G.W. Parkway Feat Townhomes by Gussin-Nida Cera 1 Price: $330,000 to $395,000 Taxes: $3800.00/year (approx.) ~ou Financing: Conventional ~ou Sales by: Rusty Stewart, Long & Foster 9316 1009 Pitt Street lion Phone: (703) 243-7600 or 765-2809 Pric1 Features: Some semi-detached, 12' ceil- 5 J"a.xE ings, view of Potomac, cathedral windoW ' F'ina butler's pantry, 3 fireplaces 1Sa1e1 Merrywood-on-the-Potomac Pho1 F'eat Near Rte. 123 & G.W. Parkway actja Townhomes by Robert Groves Priv; Price: $340,000 to $395,000 Taxes: unassessed as yet ~len Financing: Conventional c 550 .\bb, Sales by: Nancy Williams, PropertY A · \1ea, Phone: (703) 734-3990 lion Features: Large (5-6000 sq . ft.) elegant Pr;cl master crafted townhomes with circular J"a.xE staircases, marble foyers, river views in a F'ina secluded secure location. So!eJ Langley Oaks Pho1 811 Ridge Drive l:'ea(J Homes by Centex Homes I ac1 Price: $205,000 to $230,000 ~un Taxes: $2400.00/ year (approx.) \Valt Financing: Conventional lion Sales by: Carol Whalen Prict Phone: (703) 821-3933 . 1'axe Features: 3-sided brick homes, cerarniC F';na, foyers and kitchens, one-half acre lots. 'Safe, Swinks Mill lpho; Georgetown Pike and Swinks Mill RdCO· F'eat Homes by Swinks Mill Development lots, ' Price: $325,000 to $332,000
Taxes: $1.54/ $100 (eval.) Financing: Case-by-case Sates by: Martha Parmelee Phone: (703) 821 -1979 or 356-1323 Features: Librarie , sitting room , 2
ry
er !S,
NS,
>C路
bathroom in master suite, 3 fireplace . McLean tation Bans Hill Road liome by Edw. R. Carr Associates Price: $284,300 to $335,000 Taxes: $1.54 / $100 (eval.) Financing: 12Y. o/o & 13Y. % Sates by: Betty Franklin Edw. R. Carr Associates Phone: (703) 821 -1825 or 451-2710 Features: The ultimate in contemporary designs overlooking the Potomac River Cedars of McLean 1077 Springhill Road liomes by Long & Foster Price: $274,500 to $300,000 Taxes: $1.54 / $100 (eval. ) Financing: Conventional Sates by: Anise Snyder, Long & Foster Phone: (703) 821 -3813 or 241 -5666 Feutures: Traditional 2-story colonials, 4 bedrooms, libraries, rec rooms. l{iJnberty n South liornes by Town & Country Price: $264,000 to $285,000 'faxes: $2500.00/ year (approx .) lCinancing: Conventional Sates by: Bob Kerlin, Town & Country 83(8 Arlington Blvd ., Fairfax Phone: (703) 698-8300 ~='eatures: Gas heat, 3 fireplaces, large Ceramic tiled entrance foyers . ~ount Vernon
9~ount Vernon on the Potomac 316 Mount Vernon Circle 22309 liornes by County Federal Savings Price: $229,900 to $241 , 900 k~Xes: $1.39 / $100 (eval.) tnancing: II% loans for 30 years lSates by: Caryl Dawson, Long & Foster ~hone: (703) 765-3160 ' eatures: Waterfront community located adjacent to Mount Vernon featurin g a Private marina with slips available.
Vienna -'bbey Glen '>ieadowlark Road flornes by West Homes ~ice: $220,000 to $230,000 f::~es: $1.54/ $100 (eval.) ~~nancing: Conventional >ales by: Brett Kramer :,hone: (703) 471-7800 or 281-7289 1eatures: Split-level and two-story homes, acre lots on a cui de sac ~Uilters Valley North 1-{ alter Thompson Dr. and Saw Dust Rd . Omes by West Homes Price: $255,000 to $455,000 ~~Xes: $1.54/$1 00 (eval.) t'ancing: Conventional ales by: Monty West ~hone: (703) 471 -7800 or 471-1880 1eatures: Custom-built homes on I acre Ots, horseriding club -VAN DASHNER
I
Furniture lea. inf;
for the discri mi r1f1 ti ng.
ANTIQUE <1b CONTEMPORARY LEASING ~ INC.
3401 K Street. N w - Rear Entra nce (Under th e Whitehurst Freeway) Washmgton D C 20007 2 02 路338~ 3 1 2
Hours g路OQ-5:30 Monday-Fnday 10:00-2:00 Saturday
Dossier/ April 1981177
THEMOSf R SUCCESSFUL CONDOMINIUM P COMMUNilY IN THE MEfROPOLITAN AREA.
. I ArtJ?s
ConceP~
.;'
The TowersPhone in Westchester Park 345-9400 From $40,100 to $102,900 Driving Directions: Beltway Exit 23; follow Kenilworth Ave. south to Westchester Park Drive and turn into the park.
Broker co-operation invited
'(!) :s1NG fiW~ruNITY
~lEstate
rropertu:s
ANNAPOLIS HISTORIC DISTRICT
An untouched gem in the Hi toric District. . . Spacious, bright rooms, leaded glass windows, pine floors . .. Eight fireplaces . . . Library and solarium ... A charming and graciou home with view of St. John's campus. $250,000 (88318) D.C. Line - 261-2626 or (301) 263-0400.
MAGNIFICENT CONTEMPORARY
SWIMMING POOL. 2 STORY IMPORTED CERAMIC ATIRIUM. SPAC IOUS LIVL GROOM . ATH ORAL CElLI 0. LO ATED ON ~ ACRE I T ilE BAN OCKBURN EST. OF BETHESDA . $330,000.
An napoli~
261 -2626 (30 Il 263-0400
St>• rma Park 261-2116 rJO I ) 647-0112
Arnold
261 -2477 ( 01) 974-{)410
MOUSSA
MOAADEL~
Inc. Realtors
f
.9!11!-t~
365-2626
Berryland Farms Colonials
•
from $179,685
Phone: 620-2010
LEESBURG
•The Contemporaries at Berryland Farms from $155,990
Phone: 620-5887
rARR
Edw. R. Carr & Associates Building a name since 1925
•12Ya% RRM (13Ya% APR) 01
MLS Code 6 · Financing by Weaver Bros .. Inc. • 10-Year Buyer Protection Plan •
MADE TO ORDER FINANCING
$485,000
Magnificent Williamsburg Colonial finely detailed and perfectly sited on 7 of Mt. Gilead's choicest acres -within one hour of Washington- 30 minutes from Dulles Airport. Sweeping, panoramic views of the Virginia countryside (rom the 70' brick terrace. Unsurpassed construction and amenities including indoor olympic pool and 3 bedroom gue t house. Truly, a one-of-a-kind property for tho e who can afford the very be t in country e taLe .
~~
VA Financing
RECTi0NS: Thke Beltway (495) toRt. 66 west to Vienna exit Rt. 123 (Maple Ave.). Lefton Hunter Mill Rd. 1.5 mi. to a IPft on Vale Rd .. 1.5 mi. to models on left
"Three Generations of Quality Brokerage"
(703) 356-0100 • McLean, Virginia
Homebuyers are demandifl8···. .
... and haiti to please. uncompromts~
McLEAN
$340,000
MINUTES FROM THE WHITE HOUSE
Nestled in woods a stunning contemporary for family living and formal entertaining. A 3-story foyer, 4-5 bedrms, 4% baths, Family room with stone fireplace overlooking unique Solarium, breathtaking master suite bath. For appointment or information call Elsa Brodin 827-0851.
0o is Dennis~urke. As President of Rourke Corporation, builders of custom-crafted homes, Dennis demands the finest quality available-both in materials and workmanship. He is uncompromising in his standards of design and detail, and hard to please because he recognizes that only through such consistent quality control can the Rourke Corporation assure today's discriminating buyer a home of enduring elegance and value. Discover how easy it is to work with a builder that's hard to please. Call Dennis Rourke Corporation at 881-6664.
COLDWeLL BANI(eRm ROUTH ROBBINS-REAL TORS
"PROSPECT HILL"
c. 1854
McLEAN This fine old home, now carefully restored, is a modern tribute to times long past. The property includes a lighted tennis court, the original log smoke house and 3 acres of gently rolling land. In a highly desirable location, these comforts of country living are within easy commuting distance of Washington. Offered at $485,000. The adjoining 4 acres are also available for $195,000.
pROpERTY ASSOCiATES hd. 1408 CHAIN BRIDGE RD.. McLEAN . VA. 22 101
(703) 734-3990 801April 19811Dossier
SECLUDED ACRE NEAR CHAIN BRIDGE . r 1 Custom crafted Contemporary with supe~ ~ 1 amenities, well proportioned rooms, exce ~\' design for formal entertaining or informa 1 ~ 0 ing. This fine property is perfect for those w ill demand quality, desire privacy, need a clos~n location, appreciate excellence and seek a c ~~~~=~~~;.1~~~:::::::::1~ temporary environment.
TYSONS CORNER 8150 LEESBURG PIKE TYSONS CORNEA, VIRGINIA 22180
821-1227
I] ..... 1(....
Op~~A~~t tication and flair are attracting discerning Washingtonians to Falcon Ridge and Mclean Station: The Carr organization's modern day manor houses on the Potomac
Potomac
CHARM AND LIVABILITY!
in Mclean, Virginia. Highly individual communities of distinctive homes set in two of Northern Virginia's most prestigious locations.
MADE TO ORDER FINANCING
McLEAN STATION
Thi very special home, on a quiet, wooded, cui-de- ac, offers an excellent floor plan with paciou rooms to provide the ideal setting for entertaining. In addition to it 5 bedroom , 3 Y2 baths and maid's quarters, there is a spectacular party room on the daylight lower level, opening to a flagstone terrace and screened porch set in the privacy of trees. DO CALL TO VISIT!
from $284,300 Dil'ldlons: From 495lake Georgetown Pike (Route 193) wes1 10 Grear Fals Tum nghl on Walker Rd 2 fillies 10 a lett on Beacl1 M1l Ad Go "' m1le 10 a nghl on Falcon Ridge Roaa 10 Sales offiCI! on lett PI10ne 759-47J(l
Jill:,.-•
IUIRR
Directions: Take Tysons Beltway Exll 11 eas1. Dolley Madrson Blvd • 10 a left on lew11\Svdle Ad and a nghl on Balls H1l Ad Go aboul "' m1le 10 Mclean S1a1Jon on left. PllOne Bll-1825
The Crossroads
APR)
Elizabeth CAdeU, 8rol<er
*I.:.! •'~ RRM (13w
U',
Edw. R. Carr & Associates/ Building a name since 1925. 10-Year Buyer ProtP.ction Plan • Financing by Weaver Bros., Inc. • Code 6
Realty,Ltd. 102001'11wrl'l""d """""''" Md.
(301) 983- 0200
@ Q
BETHESDA
BOGLEY, INC. -Realtors-
Having served Montgomery County and the District of Columbia for over 40 years we take pride in our stable, professional brokerage and management activities. We offer competence in residential and commercial sales and leasing as well as efficient property management. Our offices are strategically lo ated to afford convenient coverage of established and emerging real estate interests.
$285,000
Superbly located in Whitman School District, this 6 bedroom, 4% bath classic colonial is the perfect home for entertaining. Spacious rooms, 3 fireplaces, finished lower level with rec. room & maid's room. Beautiful grounds with a swimming pool. Eves.: Carol Netchvolodoff: 229·8197
We have opportunities for licensed agents in each of our offices. Training programs and competent, continuing supervision and support are in place to assist you in reaching your highest potential while you retain that prized individuality so long a hallmark of our industry. Our newly revised commission schedule is unique and generous. -Contact a Manager for additional information-
Chevy Chase -
656·2500
Kensington - 949-1300 John "P. Aravanls
Herbert V. Juul or rill
Gaithersburg -
948-5400
Peter D. Lebling
Property Management James M. Wilson
656-5355
tv10
ill (I•
----INc.----·__.. REALTORS
llosenkl'an~ INC.
Members: Montgomery County & Washington, D.C. Boards of Realtors and Multiple Listing Services
REALTORS
657-3220 Dossier/April 1981/81
This. distinguished residence includes a music room, den, family room and maid's room along with large living and dining room all on the first floor. Five bedrooms and 3 baths complete with the most desirable McLean address make this A MOST ATTRACTIVE OFFERING. $375,000. PAM BAKER and CAROLINE ROCCO
CALL 790-5100
Better Homes Realty, Inc 6645 Elm St., Suite 100, Mclean, VA 22101
.
Crowell &Baker Construction Co., Inc./770·3360/"Quality is the true measure of value classic federal colonial on one acre
CHEVY CHASE PASSIVE SOLAR FEATURES in lavishly luxurious home on wooded \13 acre lot on D.C. line, 4 BR + Library + Hobby rm., fam. rm., 4\12 ba., stunning kitchen, wine cellar, dumb waiter, and more. Whrlpl. tub/steam sauna. $399,000.
An incomparable home, designed for both formal and informal living, with every detail handcrafted for the discriminating buyer . . . from the 'grand entrance ' foyer . . . to the Projection Room ... to th e panoramic gro unds that cover one choice in-town acre. Spacious fo rmal areas include first floor liv ing and dining rooms along with a lovely library that featu res built-in bookcases and access to a large balcony overlooking the pool area . The attached 2-story structure with separate entrance features recording studio, projection room , fantastic office suite plus ent{-{ F - r Own taining rooms . An exceptional estate ... uneq ualled in grace, quality and elegance. $635, 000 (JUnfr)' " ~ By Appointment only Telep hone: 356-1323 ....- . . """'
An exclusive and private c?rll~ munity of elegant new homes 1 ~ 1 setting of knolls and woods. 5 brick, cedar shake roofs, gaal ~"..,..... heat 4 F Ps 4% baths. Re9 1 ' • ' • 1 oo master suite W/F.P. Wh1r Pk bath. Screened porch and dec · Call Elsa Brodin 827·085 1 or 3564079
$324,000
McLEAN
MEADOW RUN 81/Apri/198//Dossier
356-7000
,,
POTOMAC
$299,900 POTOMAC
~--------------------~--~
Brick Colonial on Over 2 Acres Master builder about to construct spacious 5 + bedroom home. Perfect opportunity for serious buyer to be able to choose personal architectural features. Continuous on-the-job supervision limits builder to 3 houses a year - this is the 2nd! It could be yours! Unusual market costs (4,500 finished sq. ft.). Come see the space + value + design. Builder willing to assist with financing.
$266,400 UP
Country Living in Potomac Choose from 7 different designs with 4-6 bedrooms, multiple fireplaces, country kitchens, greenhouses and spacious rooms. Two acre sites near Canal and National Parkland. 12 7/ 8f1Jo Financing. Guaranteed sales program.
PAN8RAMA R E A L
uue"
E S T
A T E
7001 ARMAT DRIVE in Bethesda Featured in Architect/Ira/ Digest, this magnificent 19-room residence is an exemplar of commitment to Georgian balance and elegance, yet displays a contemporary concern for fam ily comfort and ease of maintenance. The interiors are meticulously deta iled and cu tom-carpeted. 20 minutes tO Washington, D.C. $900,000 Brochure# WD 17- 13.
Sotheby's International Realty
10220 RIVER ROAD POTOMAC, MARYLAND
2903 M STREET, N.W WASHINGTON, D.C. 20007
299-6700
TELEPHONE (202) 298-84 05
McLEAN
$875,000
ON THE POTOMAC
Old Town
or
Watergate of Alexandria
STILL A CHOICE
But not for long! These traditional condominium townhouses offer the best of privacy, convenience and affordable space in a formal garden setting. Five models from which to choose ranging in price from $119,500 to $189,500, garage parking included. Energy efficient with heat pumps and storm windows as standard features, hardwood floors, top of line cabinetry. Minutes from National Airport and Washington, DC.
I.!\PIA BEJ{OIT, IJ{C. REALTOR 301 North Pitt Street Alexandria, Virginia 22314 (703) 836路5601 or 836-5200
Truly "America The Beautiful" Cllffhurst Is a spectacular 5 acre estate with a panoramic view of the Potomac River from every room and a shoreline frontage of over 300 feet. The contemporary Mclean home offers spacious elegance for entertaining as well as many family areas for comfort and privacy. The park-like set路 ling secludes the residence and separate pool facilities at the end of a private road . Located approximately 20 minutes from the White House or Dulles International, Cllffhurst Is unquestionably one of America's prize properties. For appointment call Gay Reich 536-4287 or 356-7000.
COLDWeu. BANI(C!RID ROUTH ROBIIINs-fiEAl TOllS
356-7000 Dossier/April 1981183
Old Town Slalion
PICK A PENTHOUSE One is 2 stories, 1 bedroom. The other is on one floor with 2 bedrooms. Towering 17 ft. windows overlook downtown Alexandria and miles of the Potomac River from the 22nd floor. These 2 Alexandria homes offer a surrounding balcony, even a waterfall. Offered at $295,000 and $195,000. For appointment to tour, call Esther Valkenburg at 549-8700 or 280-4232
t}AOUJV.T CVERJX9!(
I
~ALTY INC .
Old Town Station's deluxe brick townhomes have it all!
... ...
E,
es'
• • • • • • • • • • •
Spacious Top brick construction 2 bedroom, 2 Vz bath floorplans Deluxe kitchen Heat pump systems Private parking Firplace Hardwood floors Patios Full basements Convenience
If you're shopping for a new home, you can't afford to miss the exceptional value that is Old Town Station! Prices begin at $118,000. Decorated models are open daily, 12-5, except Wednesday. Brokers are welcorne.
549-8200
l
683-1206
$385,000
Quality and Location
This stately Georgian is situated on '",~ . .d. g pnva ' beauuful wooded acres prov1 1n . ..-~<de and location in desirable WDV""'~n Estates. The home features custom wn terior decorati ng, exquisit e ~:iiY moulding, and marble foyer. A drY room with stone fireplace and Jaun eJ(· room are both on the main level. Theain· cellent floor plan provides easY ente~ rge 4 ing for all seasons. Included are ,:rse bedrooms, 3 Vz baths, library, and acourt recreation room. (Space for tenn•s onlY· and pool). Shown by appointment
Harper & Company,
REALToRs
(703) 821-1777 Even ings: Contact Spence Rivett at (703) 256-7240
THE
''TREWORGEY''
CASTLES? COLONIALS? CONTEMPORARIES? COMMERCIAL? TO SEE ANY HOME ADVERTISED lN THIS ISSUE OR ELSEWHERE, ONE CALL IS ALL YOU NEED . CALL
~orrn- Jfiee ~n\lett Snider Bros, Inc. Realtors 84/April/981/Dossier
Truly a unique find . Both the house and the sur; rounding acreage are outstanding for their charactes and quality craftsmanship. The house comb!0 e5 original log, brick and frame st ructures. The graclc:: interior includes 8 fireplaces, 5 bedrooms, 3 \h bat ~ a tavern room and a drawing room that featur outstanding original marbleized paint. d 0 Terraced gardens, giant oak trees and lovelY ~e boxwood dominate this 5 acre property. A sto d smoke house, a stone spring house, a paddock ~y stream complete the setting of this early 19th centU0 _ home. Located near Middleburg this exceptional pr perty is offered at $520,000.00.
ARMFIELD PROPERTIES, INC-
301-565-2323
Circa 1810
at
ales by Manarin Odie and Rector, RealtorS
McLEAN
~b£n Qlo11£riion
w' dt
Directions: From D. C.: South on G. W. ParkwaY 10 righl on Duke Streel. lo lefl on Henry Streel 10 righl on Wilkes S!reel 10 models.
277 South Washington Street Alexandria, Virginia 22314
549-8700
va ro ki
2 North Liberty Street 395 Middleburg, Virginia 22117 • (703)687-6
LOUDOUN COUNTY
McLEAN
"BLUEMONT AREA" Exceptionally well-maintained small estate on 32 acres with 40 mile view of Valley below. Stone house with slate roof offers 6 bedrooms, 6 baths, 2 kitchens, 3 fireplaces. Tenant house With central heat and fireplace. Stone hobby shop with fireplace. Many other dependencies. All paved interior roads and parking areas. An excellent value at $390,000, with good terms to qualified buyer. Brochure available.
Elegant residence designed for formal entertaining and family privacy. Huge indoor pool opening onto oversized deck. This home has 5 bedrooms, 5 full baths, 4 fireplaces, and second floor library. The location is ideal - only ten minutes from the White House in the beautiful Virginia countryside. $450,000. Assumable $250,000 8¥2% loan. Jhr Annir 1/.uulrr <llorporution. ll••"•" •
'
For Professional Real Estate Service in Northern Virginia
KING AND CORNWALL, INC.
Leesburg, Va.
Realtors
703-777-2503
Metro Area 471-5400 (no toll)
1421 Dolley Madison Boulevard _ _ McLean. V~rg•n•a 22101 _ Call 703-821-2555
N~,I~~~~!~E sERvicE
.r.::-.,
1[91. •· ~
•u L:.l
• ,,..- - - -
McLean ( KALORAMA1
A multi-faceted gracious home easily adaptable to the most formal or the most relaxed lifestyle.
!So
·es
"BRIAR WOOD" Enter this majestic estate through iron gates that lead to sweeping circular driveway - Perfectly sited on very private grounds with outstanding Potomac River views, this magnificent Georgian colonial offers Italian marble foyer, formal reception room , elegant drawing room with 12 foot ceilings, Paladian window, sparkling crystal chandelier, ornamental 19th Century Southern plantation mantel, priceless 12 foot pier mirrors original!~ owned by George Washington's nephew. For informality, an expansive ~Irst floor family room with massive stone fireplace and rosewood panelled hbrary. Price $750,000
Offered at $695,000. Brochure available upon request.
Roy Wheeler Realty co.
Hugh T Peck Properties, Inc~ Rec1ltors of VIRGINIA McLEAN OFFICE 356-8300
Lovely 4-story georgian colonial with swimming pool, LR, DR, sun porch, study I office, breakfast rm., pantry and kitchen. 4 fireplaces. Large laundry, playroom with outside entrance to pool and patio. 8 bedrooms, 4 baths, studio/ dormitory_
246 Lee Highway Warrenton, VIrginia 22186
lOUAlltOUIIJtC
Of''OATUHITf
Metro 471-4308 VIrginia <7031 347·7171 TWX 5105875408
Dossier/April 1981185
LET THE SELLER BE AWARE
APARTMENT SHOPPERS GUIDE, The 20 year old, Premiere marketing tool for Apartments, will Publish a quarterly sister Quide for Houses, Condos, and Co-ops starting in April, 1981. F=or $2,100 per year you can advertise your community and receive quality circulation throughout the Washington Metropolitan area and the United States.
An affordable price and excellent results. Call or write:
HOUSE & CONDO SHOPPERS GUIDE 3301 New Mexico Avenue, NW Suite 310 Washington, D.C. 20016 (202) 363-8016
--------------------------~
Dossier/April 1981187
The Gold Page DOSSIER'S CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS PHONE 362-5894
ANTIQUES
ELEGANCE FOR SAlE
REAl ESTATE
Sue Okun, Antique Consultant. Consultations in buying, selling antiques, auction buying. Personal shopping service. Specializing in 18th & 19th century American and English furniture, accessories and glass. 202-363-7845. Antiques can be restored In your home. Refinishing services available: repairs, touch ups, caning, gold leafing and paintings. IM· MEDIATE SERVICE - Moving Cos., int. decorators & embassies. Pebblebrook Anti· que Restoration of Chevy Chase. Mon-Fri 9-7 593-1165. Christ Child Opportunity Shop Fine China, sliver, jewelry, paintings, prints. 1427 Wisconsin Avenue, Georgetown, D.C. 333-6635 Consignments Welcome Donate your antiques (furniture, silverware, art, jewelry, etc., to respected non-profit assoc. A written tax-deduct. receipt can be as financially rewarding as a sale. Anyone In 50% bracket & up can benefit! Will visit your home for estimate. Call Raleigh Amyx in Fairfax. 938-1956 or 476-6861.
Beautiful fabrics at sensible prices. Basics, notions for dressmaking. Thread needle Street, Potomac Promenade. (inside mall) 9812 Falls Rd. Potomac. 299-3370
NANTUCKET IDYLL
ENTERTAINMENT CASINO Monte Carlo Events-great fund raisers, company parties or private parties. Profes· sionai Croupiers. (See Washington Dossier - Jan. issue, p.48; Feb. issue, p.41). Call Steve Phillip, Show-Biz Productions, 723-4215. PIANIST available for spring parties. '75 Princeton Grad., Senior thesis: The Piano Style of Erroll Garner 484-1780.
ESCAPES Hilton Head Island-Sea Pines Plantation. Brand new - 4 bedroom, 4 bath home. Luxurlously decorated, nestled in Palm Trees, 350 feet from the Island's most beautiful beach. Short walk to beach, golf, tennis. Now taking reservations for 1981 season. Call (301) 424-0770.
ART GAlLERIES GREENWOOD GALLERY Watch for our mailed announcement offering the finest in craft art. 2014 P Street, N.W., (off Dupont Circle). 463-4888.
Discover the Yachting World of Greece Our fifth season in the service of discriminating travelers to Greece & TRADING, INC.
104 E. 40th St.
682·2575
PRIVATE AIR TRAVEL CLUB of DC area residents owns 90 passenger aircraft and flies members to over 30 fun-filled destinations each year. We invite you to join this unique group of people who enjoy travelling. Call or write: The SHILLELAGHS/152 Hillwood Ave/Falls Church, VA 22046/(703) 241-8270.
FITNESS Physical fitness counseling and instruction in your home or office with Yolanda. Exclusive service for ladles only. 785-0225/340-0900.
INTERIORS
Discover THE BOOK CELLAR for out-of-print books to read & collect. All subjects & languages. 8227 Woodmont Ave., Bethesda, Md. 654-1898. Open 7 days, 11-5.
CAlLIGRAPHY Exquisitely hand-lettered announcements, Invitations, dinner party menus. Fortune 500 & State Dept. Clientele. Prof., reas. 370-8173.
88/ Apr il 1981/ D ossier
Charming and lovingly restored 1750 cottage in Nantucket town. Minutes from beaches. Perfect for that special family vacation. Evenings 291-8573. Luxury Waterfront Annapolis condo. Furnls~~· pool, tennis, 27' Sailboat at doorstep. $I · 202-488-0996.
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SERVICES
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ESTATE & HOUSEHOLD SALES Martin Chadwick Licensed agents 892-0856 -----:-:-; BARTENDERS/COCKTAIL WAITRESSE5 ~. private parties. Contact Executive Bar at 5 vices at 823-3477 for trained professional ----{s reasonable prices. MEET EDUCATED, INTERESTING StNG~our - on a one to one basis. We will m.atch ant requirements with those of other ,mportone singles. Share your free t ime with s.om~nna· you are going to like. Send for free 1n~ 1, tion. QUEEN OF HEARTS, P.O. BoX Bethesda, MD (301) 983-1028 after~
5
88
THE LANDSCAPE GROUP
~ PONTOS SHIPPING
J.
---
JULY RENTAL
INTERIOR BY AUGUST Residential Mr. August-544-2999 SOUND INVESTMENTS Interior Stereo Design 321 -4015
ORIENTAl RUGS Will pay cash for your old rugs. Appraisals, cleaning & repairing. Hadeed Oriental Rug Emporium. 1504 Mt. Vernon Ave., Alexandria, Va. 549-0991 .
~· A Design/ Build CompanY
~~
1979-1980 Awards Residential Development 1 Steven L. Mackler 2 70-6 72
~
TASTEFUL CATERING
Creative elegance to please the palate. 483-9176 David Hagedorn
urdays -:, ook§
Bought & Sold 363-0581 4 702 Wisconsin Avenue 4725 Wisconsin Avenue Washington, DC
681
_ _ _ _ viRGINIA
-
NOW IN McLEAN
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MGMB, inc. Realtors FOXHALL SQUARE 3301 New Mexico Ave ., N.W. • Washington, D.C. 20016
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#1 PARTY SUPPLIER One Call Rents It All Tents • Canopies • Marquees • Dance Floors • Bridal Arches • Platforms • Candelabras • Tables • Chairs • Linens • Skirting • China • Glassware • Silverware • Coffee Urns • Chafing Dishes • Punch Bowls • Champagne Founta ins
A-1 RENTAL CENTER established 1968
Annandale, Va. 941-3520 901April 1981/Dossier
Vienna, Va. 281-0883
3420 Dent Place, N.W .. J.T. Malatesta to Gloria Hidalgo · $235,000. 10 4636 Hawthorne Lane, N.W.. L.B. Macka 11 John T. Malatesta · $300,000. 'th to 1654 Mlntwood Place, N.W .. C.W. Sml Steve R. Pieczenik · $210,000. Isbill 2022 R Street, N.W. · B.P. Noble to John Na · $324,500. ·sA· 2474 Tracy Place, N.W.. L.R. Ditzen to Lel'll Rivlin & Dianne M. Farrington · $425,000. s to 2101 Yorktown Road, N.W.. T.l. Parson Neville A. Powers · $235,000. philiP 4406 29th Street, N.W .. C.W. Bateman to tor L. Galley · $220,000. 1526 31st Street, N.W .. C. Tyler, Adm inlstra to Paul H. Nettesheim· $275,000. hn 4526 36th Street, N.W. · C.H. McEnerneY to Jo E. Williams · $235,000. 3111 36th Street, N.W.. R.M. Restak to Peter Kl inger · $210,000. to 2640 Arizona Terrace, N.W. · A.P. Ostr~ Vi jay K. Chaudhry & Dan iel J. Wlatr · $224,0Jr · to 6236 33rd Street, N.W. · F.W. Berens, ooO Eward A. Herscher & Brigitte Weeks · $205o'han.D· 3600 52nd Street, N.W. · E.J. Johnson to Singh · $245,000. ff tO 3117 Birch Street, N.W. . D.S. Maili OO Leonard L. & Laurana G. McCants · $215,00~n 10 3607 Fordham Road, N.W.. P.C. Kiern Giova11n i Lovato· $315,000. t RaY' 1701 Kalorama Road, N.W. · M.E. Brewer b~rl e. mond J. ·Briscuso, Robert Holtzman & Ro Woodbridge · $400,000. Helen 2520 Que Street, N.W .. K.W. Peterson to paul E. Sherwood · $275,000. 2200-2210 Hunter Place, S.E .. J.l. Weisz to T. Miyamoto · $285,000. n to 3526 Edmunds Street, N.W . . P. Zuckerma John G. Guffey, Jr.· $276,000. avis 10 3250 Fessenden Street, N.W .. E.L. oerz F ntz to W. Donald Dresser · $235,000. 2934 Glover Driveway, N.W.. E.S. ra Susan H. and Gerald L. Parsky · $300,000- errnot1 4323 Hawthorne Street, N.W . . R.H. Me 0 to Bradley R. Schiller· $267,000. fngiY 10 5266 Loughboro Road, N.W.. P.A. Mat 1 Anna & Hans M. Fajerson · $205,000. M Linde tO 5314 MacArthur Soulevard, N.W. ·B. · 5 000· Jacob A. Bouknight & Deborah Harman · $ 2 4292 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. · Brothers to Renata Ernst · $246,000. p·erce to 5.7 Observatory Circle, N.W. · W.W. 1 Henry H. Bowers · $265,000. harles 2612 Olive Street, N.W .. P.W. Jones to C Kurtz, Sr.· $214,775. garel 2624 P Street, N.W.. B. Enzel to Mar . da ~ & Men kart · $250,000. 3263 P Street, N.W .. Betsy Renes ls to Lin ed Michael M Pfeifle · $275,000. to Fr 1724 Que Street, N.W . . J.F. Dienelt < Wegner · $310,000. John o· 5307 Sherrler Place, N.W.. B.M. Linde to Ott · $200,500. 1sra81 2764 Unicorn Lane, N.W. . J.M . Hatch to Heller · $206,000. evelYn 1417 27th Street, N.W.. R.G . Harber to Net· $210,000. n 10 1410 29th Street, N.W. . D. JackSO Marguerite L. Johnstone · $300,000. k to JerrY C· 1215 33rd Street, N.W. • B.M . Van Wy r Straus · $205,650. N ~ 1118 1 4206 46th Place, N.W.. w.c. & A. ·o ·Neil Development Company to Patricia A. . $263,433.
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·~ARYLAND to 1R06 Hesketh Street, Chevy Cheee · K.D. Thorup
lchard E. Schwartz · $215,000. Jo10201 Lloyd Rosd, Potomac · P.C. Pipher to Seph E. Oren . $212,000. Fo10S25 MscArthur Boulevard, Potomac · S.F. & N. Uiadl to Ronald B. Shepard . $200 000. M17041 Bam Ridge Drive, Silver Spring . G.W. urf.hy to Gerard C. Maltrejean · $238,500. ~8 1 University Boulevard, E., Silver Spring · J.G. astasl to Hlun U. Kim· $245,000. a14100 Blackthorn Street, Chevy Cheee . M.W. ommer to Martin G. Galvin· $210,000.
•a8223 Kennedy Drive, Chevy Cheee • G.A. Ed· rds to Theodore M. Johnson · $415,000.
'ova Bennington Drive, Silver Spring· J.W. Stone
· rederlck Bonnett · $228 000. Brookside Drive, Chevy Cheee • U.A.R. n elsplel to Otto M. Re id· $315,000. S113 Cape Cod Court, Chevy Chase · Douglas 0 ~ve Joint Venture to James H. Moshovltis
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l 99R 20 Carter Road, Bethesda· J.P. Sager to John ~mer· $210,000.
o65145 Searl Terrace, Bethesda · G.S. Patton to n sM. Nel li · $315,000. o64907 Bsltan Road, Sumner. W.C. & A.N. Miller
. ,~;lopment Company to Eugene J. Wingerter 3,431 . NiS p., lo~flOo Glencrest Lane, Kensington· E.T. Simpson oger A. Hess . $210,000. ns to ~~a1 1005 Balantre Lane, Potomac · L. Freedman to nneth Peltz . $625,000. philiP Ed~OO& Bronson Drive, Potomac • A.S. Novlns to ard R. Kolvereld · $279,500. .uator ic Hunting Ridge Court, Potomac· L.A. Jahn ark L. Schaffer · $214,000. ' John 1.1~315 Duvall Drive, Bethesds • D.O. Coffin to red M. Anderson . $222,500. ter '~'· ~ ~27 River Road, Bethesda · S. Conger to Frank anderson . $261,000. )VI tO Jr ~5 Rockmere Drive, Bethesda· R.T. Aaronson , oo. · o Jeremy Rubenstein · $365,000. Jr. to ~ 80oO Split Oak Drive, Bethesda · Cowan & )00· tLOdgkln Construction Company, Inc. to Steven W. ,anD· "'l()lh . $279 000 1o 01 Glen Road, Gaithersburg . R.N. Morauer 1lllam 0 . Johnston . $555,000. )!f tO 1tsbltt
ANNOUNCING A NEW RESTAURANT THAT SUPERBLY PRESENTS THE REGIONAL CUISINES OF AMERICA. Americus. a glittering new restaurant dedicated to the finest expression of traditional and contemporary American cuisine. Luncheon and dinner dally. Piano music for your enjoyment nightly. For reservations. please call 328-2000. Valet parking available.
u804
® Sheraton Washington Hotel •
SHERATON HOTELS & INNS, WORLDWIDE 2660 WOODLEY ROAD AT CONNECTICUT AVENUE N W WASHINGTON, D C 20008 2021328-2000
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~~~~SO Old Lee Highway, Falrfex. G.C. Hummel to onse J. Audet . $378,800. ~ ~~2~ Live Oek Drive, Mclean · Classic Homes 1 o Robert D. Edison · $465,000.
tan to !0}74 Huntover Court, Mclean · S.S. Craven to ng K. Shin . $225,000. ,viS tO lo~29 Edgewood Terrace, Alexandria· R.L. Soper 2 rthur B. Culvahouse, Jr .. $215,000. 1tt tO 1 0 ~3 Lewton Street, Falls Church · W.H. McCray onatd S. Rice . $296,000. ,rrTlotl •01~417 Purple Beach Drive, Reston· I.E. Lockyer avid H. Fram. $315,000. giY tO ~81 3 Lawton Street, Mclean . Chattan 8 ~lates to Robert J. Hellen· $334,000. ,de to ark 8 Snowplne Way, Mclesn · W.W. Taylor to 5000· 1 A. Skousen · $210,000. ;~titer '~m ~ Cola Drive, Mclean · L.L. Cochran to at Ghaemi . $230,000. ·ce to 12 ~2 Meyer Court, Mclean • R.L. Nolting, Sr. to 6S:O M. Badeeb · $330,000. 1 arteS ~tl S Madison-Mclean Drive, Mcleen · Madlsonl27~an Assoc iates to Eleanore A. Noone rgaret 860.400. 1 4tl 1 Medlson-Mclean Drive, Mcleen · Madison1a1<1& 12<~an Assoc iates to Sebastian J. DeMegllo 88 .ooo. Fred · l 37 Medlson-Mclean Drive, Mclean· Madlson9•~~n Associates to John E. Kirkman· $202,000. ,hnE· ·~e~ Old Mt. Vernon Road, Alexandrle · W.A. a enburg to Manfred Munters · $225,000. Israel '1arn44 3 Mt. Vernon Circle, Alexandrle · Cullinane &oes to Lawrence M. Weeks · $250,000. :ve1Y0 OJot1 Chesterbrook Roed, Mclean· N.M. Watts 13Q n C. McNerney· $230,000. tO oMa 1 Tulip Poplar Lane, VIenna · Brownell , Inc. , 1o rshall B. Miller· $201 ,200. lrrYC· ~~ 1 :01 Conejo Lane, Oakton· F.A. Babson, Jr. to , r M. Marshall . $325,000. Miller n1904 Shedy Mill Lena, Herndon · T.A. Burch & >'Nelli 123\ Butlders, Inc. to Will iam G. Toland Ill ec0,0oo. ole 2 Lekevlew Drive, Fells Church · C.D. Turner onard A. Bracken · $235,000.
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" The '89 is a jewel " Dresden. Washington Post Val et Parki ng 1226 36th Stree t, N.W. 965-1789
& Son, Inc Publish ers
Dossier/April/981191
Social Calendar THE FORTHCOMING EVENTS OF THE CllY
I
f you're planning an event, please call Maggie Wimsatt at 652-7574 well in advance of publication. 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.
APRIL April 4: ARCS Foundation, Inc . Annual Charity Gala- dinner dance- proceeds to scholarship fund - Mayflower Hotel -silent and live auction - black tie - by invitation - $100 each - 7:00 p.m . - ChairY.man, Mrs. George L . Hesse. April4: End World Hunger Benefit Dinner- 7:30 p.m. - black tie - by invitation - $75 each - National Building Museum - Co-chairmen, Claire Stuart Rosenberg, Patricia Nathanson Kogod. April 5: "Cocktail Concert" by the McLean Chamber Orchest ra- at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Amann - 3 p.m. - by reservation - $30 each - Chairman, Mrs. Linwood Holton. April tO: Twentieth Annual "Fountain of Flowers Ball- dinner dance benefit of The Florence Crittenton Home - The Mayflower Hotel - sponsored by the Winifred McKee Somerville Circles- black tie - by invitation - Chairman, Mrs. Ralph B. Dewey. April 11: Eighth Annual Chevy Chase Village House Tour and Tea- 6 houses- historical exhibit at Village Hall - noon to 5 p.m. - tickets: $7 in adva nce, $8 day of tour - benefit of Citizens Coordinating Committee of Friendship Heights -Chairman, Mrs. Robert H. Elliott. April II: Thirtieth Anniversary Ball of the Capital Speakers Club of Washington, D.C. - dinner dance at Columbia Country Club- members and guests- by invitation- Ball Chairman, Mrs. Jose Miguel Barros. April14: Annual "Aunt Minnie" Spring Luncheon- "Afternoon in the Park" benefit of Hebrew Home of Greater Washington -Washi ngton Hilton Hotel - II a.m. - with I. Magnin showing the collection of Frank Masandrea- by invitation -$36 each- Chairman, Mrs. Stephen Friedlander. Aprill4: Dinner preceding Twenty-fifth Anni versary Concert - for the Anniversary Committee and "special friends" of American University - 6:30 p.m.- Mary Graydon Center, AU- by invitation - hosts, President of American University, Dr. Richard E. Berendzen and Mrs. Berendzen . April 14: Twenty-fifth Anniversary Cello Recital by Mstislav Rostropovich ded icated to Patrick Hayes - Lisner Auditorium - sponsored by The American University, National Symphony Orchestra and Washington Performing Arts Society -by invitation- A.U. President, Dr. Richard E. Berendzen; NSO Chairman, Leonard L. Silverstein; WPAS President, Mrs. Jean H. Sisco; Anniversary Committee Chairman, Mrs . Pat Munroe. April 15: Women's Committee for the National Symphony Orchestra tea in honor of Howard Mit-
91/Apri/1981/Dossier
chell - at Muriel Threlfall's - 3 p.m. - members -Tea Chairmen, Mrs. Thomas D. Bowie, Mrs. Nicholas Orem, Women s Committee Chairman, Mrs. Charles W. Hoppe. April 18: Sixtieth Running of the Middleburg Steeplechase Race Meet - Glenwood Park, Middleburg, VA- post time, I p.m . April 19: Easter Day. April 19: Passover. April 21: Benefit for Episcopal Center for Children- "Children of a Lesser God"- National Theatre - 8 p.m. - by reservation - $30 each - Honorary Chairmen, The Honorable and Mrs. L. Bruce Laingen - Co-chairmen, Mrs. Thomas M. Davis, Mr. James DeValse Mann, Mrs. John T. Sapienza. April 23: Annual Spring Luncheon Women's Guild for Crippled Children, Montgomery County - Kenwood Golf and Country Club -12:30 p.m. -by invitation - fashions by Rizik Brothers -Honorary Chairman, Mrs. Robert E. Moran -Chairmen, Mrs. Felthan Watson, Mrs. Virgil J . Gist. April 24: Twenty-sixth Annual Corcoran Ball - dinner dance sponsored by the Trustees and the Women's Committee of the Corcoran Gallery of Art- to benefit the Gallery and the School of Art - Opening for Adolph Gottleib : Retrospective -7:30p.m.- black tie- by invitation- Chairman, Mrs. Raymond J. Rasenberger- Women's Committee Chairman, Mrs. George C. Denby. April 24- 26: Champagne Preview Party, Montgomery County Hi storical Society First Antiques Show and Sale - Preview, Fri., 8 to 10 p.m., by reservation, $10, Chairman, Mrs . Gilbert Gude. Show and Sale, Sat., noon to 9 p.m.; Sun., noon to 5 p.m. , admission $2.50, Sale Chairman, Mrs. Frank Reynolds- Rockville Civic Center Mansion, Baltimore and Edmonston Dr., Rockville- Society President, Miss Genevieve B. Wimsatt. April25: "A Night of Capitol Punishment"- Art Buchwald Roast sponsored by the Northern Virginia Chapter, American Heart Association - Shoreham Hotel - by invitation - Head Executioners, Frank Harden & Jackson Weaver- Executioners, Jack Valenti, George Stevens, Philip Geyelin, John Corcoran, Joseph Califano, Irving Lazar - Chairman, Dr. Walter R. Wenk, Jr. April 25: Maryland Hunt Cup Steeplechase Race - Glyndon, MD. April 25: Fifty-fourth Annual Garden Tour -Benefit of Georgetown Children's House - 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m . tickets $7 in advance, $8 day of tour - Chairman, Mrs. Christopher Keller. April 26: Fifth Annual Cleveland Park House Tour - 7 houses and National Child Research Center- Benefit of NCRC- 1 to 5 p.m . tickets $7 in advance, $8 day of tour- Chairmen, Mrs. Rose Ain, Mrs. Robert Neuman. April 27: D.C. League of Republican Women Spring Luncheon - Regency Room, Shoreham Hotel- Frankie Welch Fashion Show- noon- by subscription - Guest of Honor, Mrs. George Bush -Chairman, Mrs. Ralph E. Becker- D.C. League President, Mrs. Loren K. Olson.
MAY ------
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May 1 - 3: Twenty-eighth Annual Landon AZ8 '1. Garden Festival- Benefit of Landon School Sct~o arship and Endowmen t Fund- Landon SchoOM a.m . to 5 p.m.- no admission- Chairman. r · George B. Mickum, Ill. . t~e May I - 3: Third Annual "Weekend wtth e Arts" - Williamsburg Hospitalit y Housn· 8 Williamsburg, VA - by invitation - Chairrl1 ' Mrs. Thomas Broyhill.
April Showers us with cultural events. Here a;e ~ few highlight s. In the Concert Hall, IU ~ri Frubeck de Burgos conducts the NSO with yot ), 8 Evorov at the piano, March 31, Aprill,2,3(rl1 (~ll and with the Univ. of Maryland Chorus g~ Brahms program) April 7,8,9(7 p.m.),JO. HUn h ve • Wolff conducts Bartok / Berlioz / Beet 0 ro April 14 , 15 ,16,17(mat.). Rostropovich ret~J( with cellist Hugh Fournier, April 21,22: uP p.m .),24. Conductor Kiril Kondrashin ptck~aY the NSO baton April 28,29,30(7 p.m .) and . 00 . !(mat.) with soloist Andre Watt at the P~·fll' Meanwhile WPAS presents the Boston J.JO phony (Colin David, conductor) April 3 at. sat 1 p.m. The Stuttgart Chamber Orchestra, A.pn van 5:30 p.m. and mezzo soprano Fredenca nter Stade, April II at 8:30p.m. The Lincoln till Chamber Orchestra's last appearance~ use. 0 season is April25, 8:30p.m. In the Opera eaf Baryshnikov's American Ballet Theater aP~,r~ until April 13 . Hal Holbrook's one-man oli· Twain Tonight plays Aprill4-18. The MetroPand tan Opera's annual block-buster: 6 operas tile Verdi' s Requiem, April 20 - May 2. 111 and Eisenhower until April 25, Elizabeth Taylo~ tile Tom Aldridge star in The Little Foxes an (iciiP Terrace Theater welcomes back the Alfle. 1 1 College Theater Festival, March 30 - APfl inll' and a special free children's attraction. )Jilllg lion Celebration (mime, music, dance •. et call April 20 - May 3, for tickets / informauon1111er 254-7190. Elsewhere around town- Yul ~~~pril stars in The King and I at the Warner untt doe· 0 12. Mark Medorf' s Children of a Lesser ~ f'iar· cupies the National, March 31- May 9. CU sril zi tke Theater hosts its annual musical AP Jt.fl• -May 3, how Me Where the Good Times agin' based on Moliere's satirical "Le Maiade 1 ~ J(elln aire". Arena Stage offers Jean Paul Sartre s or· 3 (American premiere) until April 26 while. 5 til' ousel of New Plays (repertory) occ~P'~ 0 ve's Kreeger. All month long, Shakespeare 5 J..,isner Labour' Lost is at the Folger, an~ at sprinS Auditorium, Washington Ballet 's ftna l el f(e · series program brings new ballets by Mtch:oo san sler and Jan Van Dyke and Lament by CE Bt.Al~ Goh, April24-5 and May 1-2. -ANN
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