Play Meter

Issue: 1978 August 15 - Vol 4 Num 15

immediate area. In addition, do
you have any information on how
to locate a mechanics for my
business?
Mailbox
• • • •
Italia Amusements
Paramus, New Jersey
[Ed - One school you might try is
the electro-mechanical school
conducted by Don Miller. This
schoo~ which was started by the
A.M. O.A., focuses in on reading
schematics but does not touch on
solid state. We understand there
About time
wiU soon be offered a foUow-up
school which covers solid state
equipment. For further details,
contact Fred Granger at 312-
726-2810. You should also talk
with your distributors to see if
they wiU be holding any manu-
facturer-sponsored schools in the
near future. As for your second
request, you might try ad-
vertising in PLAY METER's
Update Edition. As a paid
subscriber, you can advertise in
PLAY METER's Update free of
charge. ]
END OF SUMlVIER SPEaALS
Thought it was about time to
commend you and your staff for
the great reporting you are doing
for the coin industry.
We at Syracuse look forward to
receiving both the main edition
and the Update edition and the
information they avail us to pass
on to our accounts.
Keep the presses rolling.
Best personal regards.
John H. Shawcross
N.Y.S. Manager
Bally Northeast Distributing
Syracuse, New York
Bravo!
Bravo!
"Wooden Pegs and Wooden
Heads" (PM, July, p. 65) merits a
standing ovation from our whole
industry. Just to see such prolific
prose in print warms the heart.
Now, if only some sophist "news
investigator" of the New York
TImes could deign from an
inflated, muckraked ego and
reprint your article ... WeU may-
be ... someday anyway.
Thanks.
Merrill Millman
Aladdin' s Castle
Information
I'm an operator in New
J er ey, and I would greatly
appreciate information on a
chool for mechanics in my
PLAY METER, August, 1978
Make plans now to at-
tend large auction to be
held for Advance Dlst.
Co., Sept 13, 1978. For
For Information contact
Empire & Assoc.
817-332-4401
ARCADE & VIDEO
AMERICOIN Junk Yard ... t696
ATARI Jat Rghter ......... 596
AT ARI Outlaw ............. 496
AT ARI Quack ............. 460
ATARI Sprint 8
(like new) ................ 4800
AT ARI Steeple Chase ...... 896
EXIDY Alley Rally .......... 996
EXITV Car Polo ........... 1996
EXITV Death Race ........ 1196
EXIDYScore .............. 996
EXIDY Ole Time Jlasketball .596
FUN GAMES BIPlane ...... 546
FUN GAMES Race ......... 496
FUN GAMES Tankers ...... 496
GREMLIN Blockade ........ 896
GREMLIN Hustle .......... 925
GREMLIN Comotlon I & II .. 896
U.S. BILLARDS Shark ...... 460
MEADOWS Drop Zone 4 ... 496
MEADOWS
Lazer Command •.......... 796
MEADOWS Cobra Gunshlp.896
MEADOWS Bombs Away .. 560
MICRONETICS
Night Racer .............. 1096
MIDWA YWlnner •.......... 335
MIDWAY Gunflght ........ 896
MIDWAY 280 Zap ......... 1196
MIDWAY Racer ........... 896
MIDWAY Sea Wolf ....... 1196
P.S.E. Bazooka ........... 1096
RAMTEK Hit Me ........... 925
RAMTEK Trivia ............ 596
SEGA Road Race .......... 596
SEGA Fonz ...•............ 596
SEGA Tracer .............. 896
COCKTAIL TABI FS
u.s. BILLARDS Survlal ..... 396
BAILEY Fun 4 .............. 64&
FUN GAMES Take 5 ........ 496
MIRC021 ................. 996
MICRO Super Stud ........ 996
MICRO Strikes & Spares .. 1096
MEADOWS Rim Flam ...... 496
MEADOWS Trax ........... 496
GREMLIN Comotlon I & II .. 896
ATARI Tank II ............. 796
MIDWAY Gunfight .. • ..... 996
ELCON Basaball ........... 896
ELCON Blockbuster N4 .... 1196
DIGITAL Knockout ........ 396
ROWE TI-1 ................ 946
NSM Century 21-0 ........ 1096
NSM Prestlege 180-0 ...... 1096
WURLITZER Atlantic II ..... 996
Super Special
Wurlltzer 1050's
Excellent Condition
PleasaCal1
ADVANCE DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, INC.
2820 North Grand Boulevard • St. Louis, Missouri 83107
314-652-1800
~--------------------
______________________
~5
OPERATING
Marathon duel draws national aHention
No one planned it that way , but it
turned out to be one of the best , most
spontaneous pinball promotions yet
devised . J .D. Beltram of San
Marcos , Texas and Edward Laydon
of Springfield , Massachusetts both
set out to break the same world's
record , for consecutive hours of
playing pinball , and they were only
forty hours apart when they started.
Neither of them knew about the
other or about the national attention
they would get as they competed in
their head-to-head duel.
The "old" record (if it can be called
that , since it had been set only three
weeks earlier) of 140 hours and 32
minutes was held by Mandy Manter
of Hollywood , California . But before
the Beltram-Laydon duel would play
itself out, that record would look very
much outdated .
It started with Charles Ross, who
operates Magic Coin Arcade in San
Marcos, Texas . On July 21 at 3
p .m., he held his second annual
pinball marathon (his first marathon
did not produce a world's record).
Three pin bailers put up their ten
dollars each and entered the contest ,
but two of those players dropped out
very qUickly . Beltram , the third
player , however , continued on and
on and on and on .
According to the Guiness Book of
World Records , players are allowed
five minute rest periods for every
hour of play . They may accumulate
these rest periods and take longer
naps if they so desire . Also , they are
allowed to sit during play
The effort by Beltram began to
attract statewide attention. And
when Beltram broke the world's
record on Williams' Big Ben , every
newspaper , television station , and
several radio stations in the area were
on hand to record the proceedings.
Beltram was the record holder and
the word went out. But the word
came back that Laydon was hot on
his tail. Only forty hours behind , the
Springfield, Massachusetts yout~
seemed to have a lot of pinball left in
him too . A duel was shaping up .
So Beltram had to keep on going ,
hoping to discourage his competitor.
But Laydon , by now beginning to
attract media attention himself , hung
on.
CBS radio finally caught wind of
the development and got a three-
way telephone hookup between
6
Beltram , Laydon , and a CBS
interviewer which was broadcast
nationwide .
Finally after 165 hours and 30
minutes , Beltram ended his streak.
Laydon now had only forty hours to
go to break the record . And that he
did . On July 30 , he passed Beltram's
mark and became the new record
holder . His final mark was 170
hours.
For his effort , Beltram won first
prize in Magic Coin's pinball mara-
thon promotion . He was awarded a
bonanza of steak dinners , ham -
burgers, movie passes , T-shirts,
records , and other prizes from local
merchants.
But Laydon , the record holder ,
was not part of any planned
promotion . He had approached Bob
Kubicki of the Dream Machine in
Springfield , Massachusetts for a
chance to break the world 's record .
To him the record was enough . Still ,
he may soon be getting a prize ,
compliments of the Dream Machine .
Said Kubicki , "We might give him
something like a pinball machine ."
What the event seems to indicate
once again is the press's acceptance
of pinball today . What it might also
suggest to the industry is that a
coordinated effort of this sort next
year, and possibly on an annual
basis, may be a great way to attract
favorable publicity to the industry.
For its part , PLAY METER stands
ready to coordinate such an event
and add to a prize package .
Operators, manufacturers, and other
industry personnel who would also
be interested in a coordinated effort
of this sort , where pin bailers across
the country all start after the
marathon record within a specified
time span, should send their com-
ments and suggestions to PLAY
METER on the attached Feedback
Card .
As Charles Ross of Magic Coin
said after Beltram's effort , "I think we
have bettered the image of pinball
with this promotion . And that's
something everybody in the industry
has a responsibility to do . We've got
to upgrade th e image of this game ."
Marathoner J .D. Beltram held the
world's record for only 40 hours .
Ohio operators meet
The Ohio Music and Amusement
Association recently conducted its
annual exhibit and trade show which
was held in June at the Hilton Inn in
Columbus , Ohio . Over 200 regist-
rants , including operators from Ohio ,
West Virginia , Pennsylvania , Illinois ,
Indiana , Minnesota , Michigan , and
Kentucky , and sixteen major exhibi-
tors attended the show .
The two-day program began with
an exhibitors' luncheon during which
Vern Riffe , Speaker of the Ohio
House of Representatives , discussed
the legislative process. The luncheon
was followed by the election of
officers and the discussion of the
recent Progress Vending court case
against the Ohio Department of
liquor Control over free play (PLAY
METER , May , p . 19) . Columbus ,
attorney James DeLeone led the
discussion .
Following Saturday's seminar ses-
sions, A.M.O .A. President Don Van
Brackel, gave the A.M.O .A. audio-
visual presentation during th e presi-
dent's luncheon .
The officers elected at the two-day
meting are as follows : Dennis
Hilligan , president : James Hayes
and Melvin Pearlman , vice presi-
dents : Clarence Neargarder , treasur-
er; Lawrence Van Brackel , secretary ;
and Maynard Hopkins , board chair-
man .
PLAY METER, August, 1978

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