Play Meter

Issue: 1977 September - Vol 3 Num 17 (cover 13)

Your articles in Play Meter for
February and March on building
the logic comparator were very
informative.
Philip Barney
Russell-Hall, Inc.
Holyoke, Massachusetts
Here's an idea for added
jukebox play. What if you had a
location that needed a little extra
promotion? Could someone come
up with a unit that would have a
plug-in card option? It would be a
timing circuit that would have a
jumper plug that, by moving it at
the operator's discretion, could
be changed from 15 to 45
minutes.
Bruce M. Michaud
Upstate Vending Service
Lake Placid, New York
[Sorry, but it's already been tried
and scrapped. That's the word
from WiUiam D. FindULy, service
manager for Rock-OI.a. He said
that some manufacturers tried
that many years ago but found
that it was very unprofitable-
Editor's Note.]
I enjoy reading Robin Min-
near's articles in Play Meter very
much.
I feel he gives us
down-to-earth information, not
jazzed up with a lot of B.S. His
seminars are also excellent.
Keep up the good work.
Frank Gallo
C&L Amusements Co.
VVilton,Connecticut
Your magazine is one of the
best in our industry. It would be
great if there were a blue sheet
for operators to sell games back
and forth to each other at a fair
value.
Robert M. Hawking
Fun Factory
Reno, Nevada
[That is one of the many
advantages of being a paid
subscriber to Play Meter. In our
Update issue, we publish our paid
subscribers' classified ads free of
charge. There's no better, and
cheaper, way for operators like
yourself to buy or seU used
games-Editor's Note.]
~
VENGUARD

VENGUARD IS NOW A
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e
FOR MUSIC, GAME AND BILLIARD SUPPLIES
LOW
Call or Wri te Today for your Free Catalogs
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Accessory -Supply Department
10500 Barkley
Overland Park, KS 66212
800 -255-4368
Toll Free Except Kansas
PLA Y METER September 1977

I am new in the pinball game
business; and, though I have 20
years experience in electronics
with the FAA, I can't make heads
or tails of the schematics of pin
games. Help! I am servicing the
games now mostly by visual
inspection. What I need is some
good literature on how to service
and conduct preventive mainte-
nance.
Leon B. VViltsey, Jr.
Stick & Stein Pinball Palace
Key VV est, Florida
[We recommend that you keep on
the lookout for the next AMOA
regional mechanical school. One
of the things you learn there is
schematic reading which seems
to be your problem - Editor's
Note.]
Just a little curious about that
picture of Bally's Evel Knievel
on page 20 of the June issue. If
it's only made in solid state, how
come no digital score in the
picture?
R. Schiffer
Ocean Amusements
Pt. Pleasant, New Jersey
PRICES
PLUS fREE fREIGHT
Member
AMOA
I must take exception to Mr.
Nathan Bush's comments on
manufacturer seminars (J uly
1977, page 10).
Perhaps Mr. Bush, or even
better Play Meter, should talk to
the 2000 or 3000 operators that
have attended various Atari
seminars during t he past two
years. You will find that not only
are we able to teach pinball
mechanics to repair P .C. boards,
but more important, the majority
are able, willing, and eager to
learn. In defense of the operators
and mechanics, Mr. Bush's state-
ments are apparently not based
on personal experience.
Fred McCord
Field Service
Atari, Inc.
Member
NAMA
[You've got a sharp eye. Ac-
cording to Tom Niemann at BaUy,
the picture in Play Meter was a
prototype of the Evel Knievel
An extremely smaU
game.
number of electro-mechanical
prototypes were produced for
testing reasons before BaUy went
into production with its solid
state model-Editor's Note.]
7
COINMAN OF THE MONTH
MORRIS
NAHUM
This month's Coinman is a weU-known name in
the industry. The president and founder of Amico
Marketing International Corp., an exporting
company based in New York City, Morris Nahum
has always been interested in international
relations.
Born in Smyrne, Turkey in 1930, he came to the
United States-as he puts it- "totally out of
coincidence. .. He was attached to the Turkish
Corps as a reserve officer during the Korean War.
For services rendered, he was allowed to come to
the States in 1952.
It seems from his earliest days, Mr. Nahum was
into the business of international dealings. He
r~presented several foreign trade magazines in
New York and sold space in them for American
countries interested in doing export marketing.
Subsequently, he was approached by several people
doing export business with Cuba, and he got
involved doing that until Castro took over and he
lost everything.
8
Then in 1961, Dick Haim ?f Belam Export Corp.
offered ~r.. Nahu~ the Job of organizing the
company s tnternattonal marketing for coin-oper-
ated ma,chines .. He workedfor Be lam for ten years
~ an mte.rnattonal marketing expert before he
ftnaUy d~ctded to start his own company, Amico
Internattonal Marketing Corp. t'n 1971.
His wife of t1 "~ nty-one years, Mary, a girl from
the old. country, serves as his secretary. They have
two chtldren-a boy, 19, and a gir~ 18. His son, Mr.
Nahum tells us, is very much interested in
economics and international business and wiU
proba~ly go to la'Ll! ~chool afte~ finishing college.
And hts dau:;hter tS mterested m a medical career.
A gr~uate of St. Josep'h's CoUege (A Jesuit
college m Turkey), Mr. Nahum is fluent in five
languages. After being promised that he wouldn't
stray fr.om our 'n!ltive English tongue, we launched
boldly mto the tnterview, anxious to find out how
t~e exporter fits into the overall coin industry
ptcture.
September, 19n,PLAY METER

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