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SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

SEIJI OZ/WA MUSIC DIRECTOR

109TH SEASON 1989-90 / mm

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Imported English Gin, 473% Alc/Vol (94.6°), 100% Grain Neutral Spirits. © 1988 Schieffelin & Somerset Co., New York, N.Y. Seiji Ozawa, Music Director Carl St. Clair and Pascal Verrot, Assistant Conductors One Hundred and Ninth Season, 1989-90

Trustees of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc.

Nelson J. Darling, Jr., Chairman Emeritus

J. P. Barger, Chairman George H. Kidder, President Mrs. Lewis S. Dabney, Vice-Chairman Archie C. Epps, Vice-Chairman Mrs. John H. Fitzpatrick, Vice-Chairman William J. Poorvu, Vice-Chairman and Treasurer

David B. Arnold, Jr. Mrs. Eugene B. Doggett Mrs. August R. Meyer Peter A. Brooke Avram J. Goldberg Mrs. Robert B. Newman James F. Cleary Mrs. John L. Grandin Peter C. Read John F. Cogan, Jr. Francis W. Hatch, Jr. Richard A. Smith Julian Cohen Mrs. Bela T. Kalman Ray Stata William M. Crozier, Jr. Mrs. George I. Kaplan William F. Thompson Mrs. Michael H. Davis Harvey Chet Krentzman Nicholas T. Zervas

Trustees Emeriti Vernon R. Alden Mrs. Harris Fahnestock Mrs. George R. Rowland Philip K. Allen E. Morton Jennings, Jr. Mrs. George Lee Sargent Allen G. Barry Edward M. Kennedy Sidney Stoneman Leo L. Beranek Albert L. Nickerson John Hoyt Stookey Mrs. John M. Bradley Thomas D. Perry, Jr. John L. Thorndike Abram T. Collier Irving W. Rabb

Other Officers of the Corporation John Ex Rodgers, Assistant Treasurer Michael G. McDonough, Assistant Treasurer Daniel R. Gustin, Clerk Administration Kenneth Haas, Managing Director Daniel R. Gustin, Assistant Managing Director and Manager of Tanglewood

Michael G. McDonough, Director of Finance and Business Affairs Evans Mirageas, Artistic Administrator Anne H. Parsons, Orchestra Manager Caroline Smedvig, Director of Public Relations and Marketing Josiah Stevenson, Director of Development

Robert Bell, Data Processing Manager Michelle R. Leonard, Media and Production Madelyne Codola Cuddeback, Director Manager, Boston Symphony Orchestra of Corporate Development Marc Mandel, Publications Coordinator Patricia F. Halligan, Personnel Administrator John C. Marksbury, Director of Sarah J. Harrington, Budget Manager Foundation and Government Support Margaret A. Hillyard, Director of Volunteers Julie-Anne Miner, Supervisor of Russell M. Hodsdon, Manager of Box Office Fund Accounting Craig R. Kaplan, Controller Richard Ortner, Administrator of Nancy A. Kay, Director of Sales & Tanglewood Music Center Marketing Manager Scott Schillin, Assistant Manager, John M. Keenum, Director of Pops and Youth Activities Tanglewood Music Center Development Joyce M. Serwitz, Director of Major Gifts/ Patricia Krol, Coordinator of Youth Activities Assistant Director of Development Steven Ledbetter, Musicologist & Cheryl L. Silvia, Function Manager Program Annotator Susan E. Tomlin, Director ofAnnual Giving

Programs copyright ©1990 Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc. Cover by Jaycole Advertising, Inc./Cover photo by Steve J. Sherman Board of Overseers of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc.

John F. Cogan, Jr., Chairman R. Willis Leith, Jr., Vice-Chairman Mrs. Ray A. Goldberg, Vice-Chairman Mrs. R. Douglas Hall III, Secretary

Mrs. David Bakalar Haskell R. Gordon E. James Morton Bruce A. Beal Steven Grossman David G. Mugar Mrs. Leo L. Beranek Joe M. Henson David Nelson Lynda Schubert Bodman Susan M. Hilles Robert P. O'Block Donald C. Bowersock, Jr. Glen H. Hiner Walter H. Palmer William M. Bulger Mrs. Marilyn Brachman Hoffman Andrall E. Pearson Mrs. Levin H. Campbell Ronald A. Homer John A Perkins Earle M. Chiles Julian T. Daphne Brooks Prout Mrs. C. Thomas Clagett, Jr. Lola Jaffe Millard H. Pryor, Jr. James P. Geary Anna Faith Jones Robert E. Remis William H. Congleton H. Eugene Jones John Ex Rodgers William F. Connell Susan B. Kaplan Mrs. William H. Ryan Walter J. Connolly, Jr. Mrs. S. Charles Kasdon Keizo Saji Albert C. Cornelio Richard L. Kaye Roger A. Saunders Mrs. Eugene B. Doggett Robert D. King Mrs. Raymond H. Schneider Phyllis Dohanian Mrs. Gordon F. Kingsley Mark L. Selkowitz Hugh Downs Mrs. Carl Koch Mrs. Donald B. Sinclair Goetz B. Eaton Robert K. Kraft W. Davies Sohier, Jr. Harriett M. Eckstein George Krupp Ralph Z. Sorenson Edward Eskandarian Mrs. Hart D. Leavitt Ira Stepanian

Katherine Fanning Stephen R. Levy Mrs. Arthur I. Strang John A. Fibiger Frederick H. Lovejoy, Jr. Mark Tishler, Jr. Peter M. Flanigan Mrs. Charles P. Lyman Luise Vosgerchian Henry L. Foster C. Charles Marran Roger D. Wellington Dean Freed Nathan R. Miller Robert A. Wells Peter H.B. Frelinghuysen Hanae Mori Mrs. Thomas H.P. Whitney Mrs. James Garivaltis Mrs. Thomas S. Morse Mrs. John J. Wilson Jordan L. Golding Richard P. Morse Brunetta R. Wolfman Mark R. Goldweitz

Overseers Emeriti

Mrs. Weston W. Adams Mrs. Louis I. Kane Mrs. Peter van S. Rice Mrs. Frank G. Allen Leonard Kaplan Mrs. Jerome Rosenfeld Mrs. Richard Bennink Benjamin H. Lacy Mrs. William C. Rousseau Mary Louise Cabot Mrs. James F. Lawrence Francis P. Sears, Jr. Johns Congdon Mrs. Stephen V.C. Morris Mrs. Richard H. Thompson Mrs. Thomas J. Galligan Stephen Paine, Sr. Mrs. Donald B. Wilson Mrs. Richard D. Hill David R. Pokross

Symphony Hall Operations

Robert L. Gleason, Facilities Manager James E. Whitaker, House Manager

Cleveland Morrison, Stage Manager Franklin Smith, Supervisor of House Crew Wilmoth A. Griffiths, Assistant Supervisor of House Crew William D. McDonnell, Chief Steward H.R. Costa, Lighting Officers of the Boston Symphony Association of Volunteers

Nina Doggett, President Thelma Goldberg, Executive Vice-President Pat Jensen, Secretary Goetz B. Eaton, Treasurer Florence T. Whitney, Nominating Chairman

Vice-Presidents

Mary Bates, Hall Services Denise Mujica, Membership Charles Jack, Adult Education Susan Robinson, Fundraising Projects Marilyn Larkin, Tanglewood Carol Scheifele-Holmes, Public Relations Kathy Massimiano, Tanglewood Preston Wilson, Development Services Molly Millman, Regions Pat Woolley, Youth Activities

Chairmen of Regions

Krista Kamborian Baldini Kathleen G. Keith Patti Newton Joan Erhard Helen Lahage Pamela S. Nugent Bettina Harrison Janet Landry Beverly J. Pieper Betty Hosage Elaine Miller Patricia L. Tambone

Business and Professional Leadership Association Board of Directors

Harvey Chet Krentzman, Chairman James F. Cleary, BPLA President Members

J.P. Barger Thelma Goldberg Malcolm L. Sherman Leo Beranek Joe Henson Ray Stata William F. Connell George H. Kidder Stephen J. Sweeney Walter J. Connolly Vincent M. O'Reilly Roger Wellington Nelson J. Darling

For their continued support of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, special thanks to the

Massachusetts Council on the andthe *i0)) National * x arts and Endowment humanities for the Arts also serving science museums and environmental institutions References furnished on request

Armenta Adams Aaron Copland Santiago Rodriguez American Ballet John Corigliano Abbott Ruskin Theater Phyllis Curtin Kathryn Selby Michael Barrett Rian de Waal George Shearing Leonard Bernstein Michael Feinstein Bright Sheng William Bolcom Lukas Foss Leonard Shure Jorge Bolet Philip Glass Abbey Simon Boston Pops Orchestra Karl Haas Stephen Sondheim Boston Symphony David Korevaar Herbert Stessin Chamber Players Fernando Laires Tanglewood Music Center

Boston Symphony Garah Landes Virgil Thomson Orchestra Marian McPartland Nelita True Boston University John Nauman Craig Urquhart School of Music Seiji Ozawa Earl Wild Joanne Brackeen Luciano Pavarotti John Williams Bradshaw and Buono Alexander Peskanov Yehudi Wyner Dave Brubeck Andre Previn and 200 others Baldwin TODAY'S STANDARD OF MUSICAL EXCELLENCE. BSO ably in the past, and in part to express appre- ciation for the personal pleasure that this great orchestra has brought them and mem- Joseph Silverstein to Perform bers of their family throughout the years, Benefit Recital for Project STEP Marge and Bill Congleton endowed the Marga- Project STEP (String Training and Educa- ret Andersen Congleton Chair, currently held tional Program for minority students) is spon- by BSO horn player Richard Sebring, in 1987. soring a benefit recital featuring former Boston Symphony Orchestra concertmaster Joseph Calling All "Silver Subscribers" Silverstein and pianist Sandra Rivers on Mon- day, April 2, at 7:30 p.m. in Sanders Theater, The Boston Symphony Orchestra is planning Cambridge. Project STEP student Vali Phil- to honor those subscribers who have been lips will also participate. The program will attending BSO concerts for twenty-five to include music of Bach, Chopin, Leclair, Schu- forty-nine years with a celebration during the bert, Strauss, and Wieniawski. Tickets are 1990-91 season. In order to receive an invita- $50, $25, and $15 ($10 students). A collabora- tion to this sterling event, please send your tive undertaking of the Boston Symphony name, address, and the year of your first sub- Orchestra, Boston University, the New scription to Mary Ford Kingsley, Overseer, England Conservatory of Music, and the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Symphony Hall, Greater Boston Youth Symphony Orchestras, Boston, MA 02115, or call Megan Goldman in Project STEP provides comprehensive music the BSO Development Office at (617) 266-1492, education for talented minority students, with ext. 206. the goal of increasing the number of minority string players in the classical music profession. BSO Guests on WGBH-FM-89.7 For tickets or further information, please call the Project STEP office at (617) 267-5777. In the upcoming weeks, Morning pro Musica with Robert J. Lurtsema will feature live per- formances and interviews with BSO members: Symphony Spotlight an ensemble that includes principal bass Edwin This is one in a series of biographical sketches Barker, violinists Tatiana Dimitriades and that focus on some of the generous individuals Jennie Shames, and violist Roberto Diaz will who have endowed chairs in the Boston Sym- perform on Friday, April 6, at 11 a.m. Princi- phony Orchestra. Their backgrounds are varied, pal flute Doriot Anthony Dwyer will appear on but each felt a special commitment to the Bos- Wednesday, April 11, at 11 a.m. ton Symphony Orchestra.

Margaret Andersen Congleton Chair Art Exhibits in the Cabot-Cahners Room

William and Margaret Congleton have been For the sixteenth year, a variety of Boston active supporters of the BSO for many years. area galleries, museums, schools, and non- Bill Congleton co-founded Palmer Partners, profit artists' organizations are exhibiting their which provides investment capital and supple- work in the Cabot-Cahners Room on the first- mentary business counsel to new and young balcony level of Symphony Hall. On display business enterprises throughout the nation. He through March 12 are works by members of is active on several boards of high technology the Cambridge Art Association (February 12- enterprises. He is also an enthusiastic Overseer March 12), to be followed by works from the of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Priscilla Hartley Gallery (March 12 -April 16) New England Conservatory, both of which nur- and works from Depot Square (April 16- ture his great interest in music. May 14). These exhibits are sponsored by the Marge Congleton shares similar cultural Boston Symphony Association of Volunteers, interests and participates as a volunteer in a and a portion of each sale benefits the orches- spectrum of community organizations, includ- tra. Please contact the Volunteer Office at ing the BSO. In part to help sustain the artis- (617) 266-1492, ext. 177, for further tic excellence that the BSO has exemplified so information. Our SO* , 18& jewelers since + Classical Harmonies: i us III Edition. i /%

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E.B. HORN • 429 WASHINGTON ST. • BOSTON, MA H ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED BUDGET TERMS MAIL OR PHONE ORDERS 542-3902 OPEN MON. AND THURS., TILL 7 Suppers at Symphony Hall String Quartet, and Schoenberg's Quartet No. 2 with soprano Karol Bennett on Friday, The Boston Symphony Association of Volun- March 9, at 8 p.m. in the Chapel Gallery of teers is pleased to continue its sponsorship of the Second Church in Newton, 60 Highland the BSO's evening series of pre-concert events. Street, West Newton. Besides Mr. Miller, the "Supper Talks" combine a buffet supper at ensemble includes violinists Jerome Rosen and 6:30 p.m. in the Cabot-Cahners Room with an Tatiana Dimitriades, violist Roberto Diaz, informative talk by a BSO player or other dis- and cellist Jonathan Miller. Tickets are $9 ($7 tinguished member of the music community. students and seniors); for reservations, call "Supper Concerts" offer a chamber music per- 527-8662. formance given by members of the Boston Max Hobart leads the Civic Symphony Symphony Orchestra in the Cabot-Cahners Orchestra in Britten's Canadian Carnival, Room at 6 p.m., followed by a buffet supper. Beethoven's Concerto No. 4 with soloist Doors open for all Suppers at 5:30 p.m. for a Anthony DiBonaventura, and the Brahms la carte cocktails and conversation. Please note First Symphony on Sunday, March 11, at 3 that during the Cohen Wing renovation, the p.m. at Jordan Hall. Tickets are $12 and $8; Suppers take place entirely in the Cabot- for further information call 437-0231. Cahners Room on the first-balcony level of The John Oliver Chorale performs Beetho- Symphony Hall. These events are offered on an ven's Missa Solemnis on Saturday, March 17, individual basis, even to those who are not at 8 p.m. at Jordan Hall, with soloists Domi- attending that evening's BSO concert. Speak- nique Labelle, Alison Swenson, Mark Evans, ers for upcoming Supper Talks include BSO and James Kleyla. Tickets are $20, $16, and Artistic Administrator Evans Mirageas (Tues- $10. For further information call 965-0906. day, March 13), principal second violinist The New England Trombone Choir at New Marylou Speaker Churchill (Thursday, April 5), England Conservatory, directed by BSO bass and violist Mark Ludwig (Thursday, April 19). trombonist Douglas Yeo, will present a concert Upcoming Supper Concerts will feature music entitled "Original and Stolen Stuff" on Mon- of Beethoven and Dvorak (March 22 and 24), day, March 26, at 8 p.m. at Jordan Hall. The music of Beethoven (March 27 and April 21), program will include original music of Vaclav and music of Damase and Brahms (March 29 Nelhybel, Eric C. Culver, Tiburtio Massaino, and April 3). The suppers are priced at $21 and John Davison; the Boston premiere of per person for an individual event, $58 for any Bone Moan by David P. Jones; and transcrip- three, or $112 for any six. Single reservations tions of works by Elgar, Wagner, David are available only as space permits and are Wikander, Rachmaninoff, and Gershwin. accepted until two business days prior to the Admission is free; for more information call event. For further information and reserva- 262-1120. tions, please call the Volunteer Office at (617) 266-1492, ext. 177. In Appreciation

The BSO expresses its gratitude to the follow- BSO Members in Concert ing communities that, through providing bus BSO principal bass Edwin Barker is soloist in transportation to Symphony Hall on Friday Bottesini's Concerto No. 2 for double bass and afternoons, have made a substantial contribu- orchestra with Harry Ellis Dickson and the tion to the Annual Fund. During the 1988-89 Boston Classical Orchestra on Wednesday, season, these communities generously donated March 7, and Friday, March 9, at 8 p.m. at $9,600 to the orchestra: Andover, Cape Cod, Faneuil Hall. Also on the program are the Concord, Dedham, Marblehead, Newton/Welles- overture to Mozart's Marriage of Figaro, Men- ley, and North Shore in Massachusetts; delssohn's Symphony No. 1, and Haydn's Sym- Concord, New Hampshire; and Rhode Island. phony No. 85, La Reine. Tickets are $18 and The area buses are a project of the Boston $12 ($8 students and seniors); for further Symphony Association of Volunteers. If you information call 426-2387. would like further information about bus Founded by BSO cellist Jonathan Miller, transportation to Friday-afternoon concerts, the Boston Artists' Ensemble performs please contact the BSO Volunteer Office at Mozart's B-flat string quartet, K.589, Ravel's (617) 266-1492. ^ Sometimes, the more successful you become, the more

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Seiji Ozawa was named music director of the Boston Sym- phony Orchestra in 1973 following a year as the orchestra's music adviser; he is now in his seventeenth year as the BSO's music director. With the Boston Symphony Orches- tra he has led concerts in Europe, , and throughout the United States; in March 1979 he and the orchestra made an historic visit to for a significant musical exchange entailing coaching, study, and discussion sessions with Chinese musicians, as well as concert performances, becoming the first American performing ensemble to visit China since the establishment of diplomatic relations. Ear-

lier this season Mr. Ozawa and the orchestra traveled to Japan for the fourth time, on a tour that also included the orchestra's first concerts in Hong Kong.

Mr. Ozawa pursues an active international career, appearing regularly with the Berlin Philharmonic, the Orchestre de Paris, the French National Orchestra, the Vienna Philharmonic, the Philharmonia of London, and the New Japan Philharmonic. Recent appearances conducting opera have included La Scala, the Vienna Staatsoper, and the Paris Opera; he has also conducted at and Covent Garden. In 1983, at the Paris Opera, he conducted the world premiere of Olivier Messiaen's St. Francis ofAssisi.

Mr. Ozawa has a distinguished list of recorded performances to his credit, with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, the Berlin Philharmonic, the London Philharmonic, the Philharmonia of London, the Orchestre National, the Orchestre de Paris, the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony, and the Toronto Symphony Orchestra, among others. His recordings appear on the CBS, Deutsche Grammophon, EMI/Angel, Erato, Hyperion, New World, Philips, RCA, and Telarc labels.

Born in 1935 in Shenyang, China, to Japanese parents, Seiji Ozawa studied West- ern music as a child and later graduated with first prizes in composition and conduct- ing from Tokyo's Toho School of Music, where he was a student of Hideo Saito. In 1959 he won first prize at the International Competition of Orchestra Conductors held in Besancon, , and was invited to Tanglewood by Charles Munch, then music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and a judge at the competition. In 1960 he won the Tanglewood Music Center's highest honor, the Koussevitzky Prize for outstanding student conductor.

While a student of Herbert von Karajan in West Berlin, Mr. Ozawa came to the attention of Leonard Bernstein. He accompanied Mr. Bernstein on the New York Philharmonic's 1961 tour of Japan and was made an assistant conductor of that orchestra for the 1961-62 season. In January 1962 he made his first professional concert appearance in North America, with the San Francisco Symphony. Mr. Ozawa was music director of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra's Ravinia Festival for five summers beginning in 1964, music director of the Toronto Symphony Orchestra from 1965 to 1969, and music director of the San Francisco Symphony from 1970 to 1976, followed by a year as that orchestra's music adviser. In 1970 he was named an artistic director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra's Tanglewood Festival.

Seiji Ozawa has won an Emmy for the Boston Symphony Orchestra's "Evening at Symphony" PBS television series. He holds honorary doctor of music degrees from the University of Massachusetts, the New England Conservatory of Music, and Wheaton College in Norton, Massachusetts. Leo Panasevich Carolyn and Oeorge Rowland chair Sheldon Rotenberg Muriel C. Kasdon and Marjorie C. Paley chair Alfred Schneider Raymond Sird Ikuko Mizuno Amnon Levy

Second Violins Music Directorship endowed by Marylou Speaker Churchill John Moors Cabot Fahnestock chair Vyacheslav Uritsky BOSTON SYMPHONY Charlotte and Irving W. Rabb chair ORCHESTRA Ronald Knudsen Edgar and Shirley Grossman chair 1989-90 Joseph McGauley Leonard Moss First Violins * Malcolm Lowe Harvey Seigel Concertmaster *Jerome Rosen Charles Munch chair * Sheila Fiekowsky Tamara Smirnova-Sajfar Ronan Lefkowitz Associate Concertmaster * Bracken Helen Horner Mclntyre chair Nancy Max Hobart * Jennie Shames Assistant Concertmaster *Aza Raykhtsaum Robert L. Beal, and *Valeria Vilker Kuchment Enid L. and Bruce A. Beal chair * Bonnie Bewick Lucia Lin Assistant Concertmaster *Tatiana Dimitriades Edward and Bertha C Rose chair *James Cooke Bo Youp Hwang *Si-Jing Huang John and Dorothy Wilson chair, fully funded in perpetuity Max Winder Violas Forrest Foster Collier chair Burton Fine Predy Ostrovsky Charles S. Dana chair Dorothy Q. and David B. Arnold, Jr., Patricia McCarty chair, fully funded in perpetuity Anne Stoneman chair, Gottfried Wilfinger fully funded in perpetuity Ronald Wilkison Robert Barnes * Participating in a system of rotated seating within each string section %On sabbatical leave ^Substituting, 1989-90 Jerome Lipson Oboes Trombones Joseph Pietropaolo Alfred Genovese Ronald Barron Michael Zaretsky Acting Principal Oboe J. P. and Mary B. Barger chair, Mildred B. Remis chair fully funded in perpetuity Marc Jeanneret Wayne Rapier Norman Bolter Betty Benthin *Mark Ludwig English Horn Bass Trombone *Roberto Diaz Laurence Thorstenberg Douglas Yeo * Rachel Fagerburg Beranek chair, fully funded in perpetuity Tuba Cellos ^Chester Schmitz Jules Eskin Clarinets Margaret and William C. Philip R. Alien chair Harold Wright Rousseau chair Ann S.M. Banks chair Martha Babcock §Gary Ofenloch Vernon and Marion Alden chair Thomas Martin Sato Knudsen Peter Hadcock Esther S. and Joseph M. Shapiro chair E-flat Clarinet Timpani Joel Moerschel Everett Firth Bass Clarinet Sandra and David Bakalar chair Sylvia Shippen Wells chair * Robert Ripley Craig Nordstrom Luis Leguia Farla and Harvey Chet Percussion Krentzman chair Robert Bradford Newman chair Charles Smith Carol Procter Peter and Anne Brooke chair Lillian and Nathan R. Miller chair Bassoons tArthur Press * Ronald Feldman Richard Svoboda Assistant Timpanist *Jerome Patterson Edward A. Taft chair Peter Andrew Lurie chair * Jonathan Miller Roland Small Thomas Gauger Richard Ranti Frank Epstein Basses Edwin Barker Contrabassoon Harp Harold D. Hodgkinson chair Lawrence Wolfe Richard Plaster Ann Hobson Pilot Maria Nistazos Stata chair, Willona Henderson Sinclair chair fully funded in perpetuity Horns Joseph Hearne Charles Kavalovski Bela Wurtzler Helen Sagoff Slosberg chair John Salkowski Richard Sebring * Robert Olson Margaret Andersen Congleton chair *James Orleans Daniel Katzen *Todd Seeber Jay Wadenpfuhl Personnel Managers *John Stovall Richard Mackey Lynn Larsen Jonathan Menkis Harry Shapiro Flutes Doriot Anthony Dwyer Trumpets Librarians Walter Piston chair Fenwick Smith Charles Schlueter Marshall Burlingame Myra and Robert Kraft chair Roger Louis Voisin chair William Shisler Leone Buyse Peter Chapman James Harper Marian Gray Lewis chair Ford H. Cooper chair Timothy Morrison Piccolo Stage Manager Steven Emery Position endowed by Lois Schaefer Angelica Lloyd Clagett Evelyn and C. Charles Marran chair Alfred Robison

11 Deutsche Grammophon welcomes AnriE-sortiiE MUTTER to her 1990 U.S. Tour!

ANNE-SOPHIE MUTTER Plays the Great Violin Concertos

1990 DG/PolyGram Records

12 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

BOSTON Seiji Ozawa, Music Director SYMPHONY Carl St. Clair and Pascal Verrot, ORCHESTRA Assistant Conductors One Hundred and Ninth Season, 1989-90

Thursday, March 8, at 8 Friday, March 9, at 2 Saturday, March 10, at 8

NEEME JARVI conducting

PART Symphony No. 3

(in three movements)

MOZART Violin Concerto No. 3 in G, K.216 Allegro Adagio Rondeau: Allegro ANNE-SOPHIE MUTTER

INTERMISSION

SIBELIUS Symphony No. 5 in E-flat, Opus 82 Tempo molto moderato— Allegro moderato (ma poco a poco stretto) Andante mosso, quasi allegretto Allegro molto — Misterioso — Largamente assai

The evening concerts will end about 10 and the afternoon concert about 4. RCA, Deutsche Grammophon, Philips, Telarc, CBS, EMI/Angel, New World, Erato, and Hyperion records Baldwin piano

Please be sure the electronic signal on your watch or pager is switched off during the concert.

The program books for the Friday series are given in loving memory of Mrs. Hugh Bancroft by her daughters Mrs. A. Werk Cook and the late Mrs. William C. Cox.

13 Week 18 ongratulations to the Boston Symphony. May your 109th season be one of many high notes.

Living the good life, iordan marsh

EST. 1851

MASSACHUSETTS CONNECTICUT • RHODE ISLAND • NEW HAMPSHIRE • MAINE • NEW YORK

14 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Seiji Ozawa, Music Director

Carl St. Clair and Pascal Verrot, Assistant Conductors One Hundred and Ninth Season, 1989-90

Tuesday, March 13, at 8

NEEME JARVI conducting

RIMSKY-KORSAKOV Suite from Le Coq oVor

King Dodon in his Palace King Dodon on the Battlefield King Dodon at the Tent of Queen Shemakha The Wedding (Wedding March) and the Lamentable End of King Dodon

MOZART Violin Concerto No. 3 in G, K.216 Allegro Adagio Rondeau: Allegro ANNE-SOPHIE MUTTER

INTERMISSION

SIBELIUS Symphony No. 5 in E-flat, Opus 82 Tempo molto moderate — Allegro moderato (ma poco a poco stretto) Andante mosso, quasi allegretto Allegro molto — Misterioso — Largamente assai

Tonight's concert will end about 10:05.

RCA, Deutsche Grammophon, Philips, Telarc, CBS, EMI/Angel, New World, Erato, and Hyperion records Baldwin piano

Please be sure the electronic signal on your watch or pager is switched off during the concert.

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16 Arvo Part Symphony No. 3 (1971)

Arvo Part was born in Paide, Estonia, on Septem- ber 11, 1935, and lives in Berlin. His Symphony No. 3 was first performed in Tallinn, Estonia, in 1977; these are the first performances by the Boston Symphony Orchestra, which has played only one other work by Part — the "Collage on the Theme B-A-C-H" — also under the direction of Neeme Jarvi, at Tanglewood in August 1986. The Sym- phony No. 3 is scored for flute, piccolo, three oboes, three clarinets and bass clarinet, two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, four trumpets, four trom- bones, tuba, timpani, celesta, bells, marimba, tam- tam, and strings. The work is dedicated to Neeme Jarvi and lasts approximately twenty-one minutes.

In 1968 Arvo Part stopped writing music. During the next eight years, Part angrily turned away from the powerful and dramatic twelve- tone music for which he was well-known — and sometimes severely criticized — in his native Estonia and began an intense study of medieval music. This self-imposed silence brought about one of the most remarkable stylistic changes a composer can undergo. Only twice during his withdrawal did Part break his silence: his Third Symphony appeared in 1971, foDowed the next year by a cantata, Lied an die Geliebte.

When Part finally ended his silence for good in 1976, it was with a tiny, surpris- ingly spare piano piece, Fiir Alina, a quiet and breathtaking music of extreme high and low notes, like distant bells. The music that has followed, too, is meditative, sim- ple, even austere, and it has a magical stillness and a quiet strength that set it apart not only from Part's earlier work, but from virtually any music ever written. Because he uses so few notes and so much repetition in a largely tonal context, Part has occa- sionally been labeled a minimalist. But neither the creative impulses nor the deeply emotional, expressive voice of his music has anything else in common with minimal- ism. "Am I really a minimalist?" Part recently asked. "It's not something that con- cerns me."

u v Instead, Part has picked the word tintinnabuli, from the Latin for "bells," to describe this new phase in his work. Some of Part's recent music has become extremely popular — in particular the haunting Fratres (in two versions, for eight cel- los, or violin and piano) and Tabula rasa, a long, hypnotic dialogue for two violins over prepared piano — making this serious, reclusive composer something of a cult figure. He lives quietly in Berlin, his days spent in the lonely company of his music, far removed from the hubbub of the music world where his work is now fashionable.

Part's Symphony No. 3, the first and more important work to pierce his eight-year exile, marks the turning point in his search for a new style. It is the only work of its kind in his output, still filled with the intensity and toughness of the preceding music — though it is not a twelve-tone piece at all — and already touched by the stillness and repose of the new tintinnabuli works. Part has called it a "joyous piece of music," but not yet "the end of my despair and my search." Not the end, indeed, but an eloquent record of the quest for a new purity of expression, and the struggle to break from the cold doctrines of serialism.

Part's fascination with dancing medieval melodies, the serene flow of Gregorian chant, and the pure, bracing harmonies of Notre Dame organum are apparent in the

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N°5 / CHANEL PARFUM opening of the Third Symphony. The first major cadence in the music, loudly declaimed by the brass over the clang of a bell, is not the familiar chord progression that ends every piece by Bach or Mozart, but the pungent modal cadence of the four- teenth and fifteenth centuries:

And the sound of those chords saturates this music, giving it an ancient quality that is, miraculously, fresh and new. In his later music — the works that have come in rela- tively great profusion since 1976 — Part has walked the line between old and new with increasing skill. Summa, written in 1978, might have come down to us from the thir- teenth century except for the bristling tone cluster on the word "Scriptus." Passio, an unearthly work of monastic purity and repose, takes our breath away when, sixty- some minutes into the work, it breaks forth in ringing triadic harmonies and bristling dissonances for the final "Amen."

Part's Third Symphony is the first of his works to explore the medieval sound world, the earliest glimpse of the unexpected road ahead. Part had looked back before: his Second Symphony (1966) ends with a disarming quotation from Tchai- kovsky's Children's Album, a voice from another world after the twelve-tone pages that come before. The Cello Concerto from the same year begins with a brilliant, sus- tained D major chord followed by a twelve-tone cluster, and uses as its entire second movement a single D minor Baroque cadence. But the Third Symphony neither quotes nor refers in passing to earlier music; it is as if Part is a man from another time who has come to write music in our century.

The first movement is rich, ceremonial music, beginning with plain, unaccompanied melodies and moving on to brilliant climaxes sounded by the brass, over bells and drums. The second movement begins with a thread of solemn, chantlike melody that weaves a serene polyphony; the music builds toward a climax, but instead we find quiet, ethereal chords and solo melodies for the celesta and trumpet. At the very end, there is a sudden surge of sound and then the violent pounding of the timpani. The last movement begins with antiphonal choirs of string chorales and dancing winds. It builds slowly to a shattering outburst, dissolves into the merest fragments of music, and then flares up once again at the end.

— Phillip Huscher

Phillip Huscher is program annotator of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. His program note on Arvo Part's Symphony No. 3 is reprinted by permission.

19 Week 18 In his own words — Comments by Arvo Part

I have discovered that it is enough when a single note is beautifully played.

Everyone who writes serial music thinks that the more complex the structure, the

stronger and better it is. But that's not right: it's the other way around. Why is Webern's music so highly regarded by contemporary composers? Because it's so sim- ple; disciplined and rigorous, but simple. (That isn't to say that there aren't also very complex things in his music.) Unfortunately, however, composers often think that because they think a lot they have something to say. They don't realize that they have almost nothing to say. Underneath all this complexity there is only a lack of wisdom

and no truth. The truth is very simple; earnest people understand that to be so.

Those who are not in earnest, or who are utterly mistaken, don't understand it and thev translate their mistakes into their music.

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20 One never knows what music lies behind those notes. That's always how it is. Then suddenly an interpreter comes along, who plays something out of this empty space in such a way that you feel within yourself that this is really no longer your music. In

fact it isn't my music. The music is simply a bridge between us, and what the inter- preter does is very beautiful.

The necessity for composing has many layers. They are like bridges, put on top of each other. And you never know which one you are just passing. Some are dangerous and you fall. Most important for me: that I cannot say in a thousand sentences what I can sav in a few notes.

Intepretation must live, it must breathe and convince us. Only that has a value and importance. Anything else is to my mind mere theory. To listen to different perform- ances of my works is like an open wound. It always aches when you touch it. On the other hand, let me give you an example. Neeme Jarvi, who is an excellent conductor and who has done from early on all my works, has conducted my Cantus in memory

of Benjamin Britten quite a few times, each time differently. Tempo . . . articula- tion—everything. He can't do a composition twice sounding identical. He lives and changes and so does his interpretation. And every time I think: Oh this is pretty, and this here is just gorgeous. I have learned that each performance is a unique version in which every bit has its own place. Great artists work at one stroke. Picasso puts a

stroke onto the paper and he won't erase it. Another stroke is another painting.

More about Arvo Part . . .

The first of the above comments is taken from the liner notes to an ECM recording of Part's music, the second and third from "An Interview with Arvo Part" by Jamie McCarthy in the March 1989 issue of The Musical Times, and the last two from "An Interview with Arvo Part" by Martin Elste in the March/April 1988 issue of Fanfare Magazine. Also of interest is the article "Arvo Part: Composer in Exile" by Andrew Stiller, which appeared in the February 1988 issue of Opus Magazine. The composer's Symphony No. 3 has been recorded by Neeme Jarvi and the Bamberg Symphony Orchestra, as part of a single Bis disc that also includes the First and Third sympho- nies, and the Concerto for Cello and Orchestra, Pro et contra, with soloist Frans Ilelmerson. Of the other works mentioned in the program note, Tabula rasa and both versions of Fratres are available on a single ECM disc; the Passio Domini nostri Jesu Christi secundum Joannem fills another ECM disc; and the Cantus in memory of Ben- jamin Britten has been recorded by Neeme Jarvi for the Chandos label, on a disc entitled "Music from Estonia, Vol. 2." -P.H./M.M.

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Nikolai Andreyevich Rimsky-Korsakov was born in Tikhvin, Novgorod government, , on March 18, 1844, and died in Lyubensk, St. Petersburg govern- ment, on June 21, 1908. He composed his last opera, Le Coq d'or (The Golden Cockerel), after Pushkin, in 1906 and 1907; the first performance

took place in Moscow on October 7, 1909. Pierre Monteux gave the first BSO performances of music from Le Coq d'or, leading the "Introduction and March" in April 1920; later BSO performances of this sequence were given by Serge Koussevitzky and Richard Burgin numerous times between 1928 and

1944, though Koussevitzky also played the first, third, and fourth movements of the present suite in November 1929. Sir Thomas Beecham introduced the present four-movement suite to Boston Symphony audiences in January 1952, later performing it on subscription concerts and on tour during the 1963-64 season, and then again at Tanglewood in August 1967. Leinsdorf also gave the orches- tra's most recent performance of music from Le Coq d'or, when he led the Introduction and Wedding March on a Tanglewood concert in July 1969. The score of the suite calls for two flutes and piccolo, two oboes and English horn, two clarinets and bass clarinet, two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, two trumpets, three trombones, tuba, tim- pani, cymbals, triangle, bells, tambourine, bass drum, side drum, celesta, two harps, and strings.

By training, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov was a sailor. Like others of the Russian "Big Five" composers (Balakirev, Mussorgsky, Borodin, and Cui), his musical career developed as an avocation. During his years as a naval officer, his ship dropped anchor in New York (his autobiography includes a lively account of a visit to Niagara Falls in the autumn of 1863). After his days as a seaman were over, Rimsky- Korsakov was appointed inspector of the Russian Naval bands, until that position was abolished in 1884. Listening to military orchestras, he developed a keen ear for wood- wind and brass sounds, which he exploited not only in his colorful operas and orches- tral scores but expounded in his treatise, Principles of Orchestration (1896-1908).

In 1871 he had been named professor of composition and orchestration at the Con- servatory in St. Petersburg, remaining on the faculty until his death. But his teaching career was nearly terminated before then, when he championed the cause of the stu- dents against the Imperial Russian Musical Society in 1905. He was annoyed at the bungling Tsarist administration (though he himself was hardly a political radical) and its stringent police supervision of the music students. When he publicly advocated autonomy for the Conservatory he was promptly dismissed from his position. Public opinion, however, rallied to his cause; he was reinstated, and the Conservatory was freed from the bureaucratic stranglehold of the Imperial Society. He described this fiasco in his memoirs, My Musical Life, observing that "if one were to have believed the conservatives among the professors and the Directorate of the St. Petersburg Branch, I myself was possibly the very head of the revolutionary movement among the student youth." This incident from music history suggests the kind of pent-up indignation brewing against the regime in the last decade of the Tsars.

But Rimsky-Korsakov was not entirely spared government vengeance. The authori- ties demanded that he change certain lines in his last opera, Le Coq d'or; when he

refused to compromise, its production was banned. Only after his death was it finally

23 Week 18 %-/4^-^ /fAW/f^a^^-

© i staged— with the censor's changes; after the revolution of 1917 the text was finally restored as the composer had intended it.

The story is drawn from a fairy tale of Pushkin. Donald Ferguson tells the gist of the story: "The astrologer at the court of King Dodon has caught a golden cockerel

and has enchanted it so that it may win for him the Daughter of the Air. The King, burdened by cares of state, seeks the advice of his boyards, and is recommended by one to pursue a carefree life, and by another to crush his enemies in war before he takes his ease. As the courtiers argue, the astrologer brings the King his cockerel, now trained to crow loudly whenever danger threatens the kingdom. Promising, as a reward, to fulfill the astrologer's first desire, the King dines heavily and sleeps. As he dreams of a beautiful houri, the cockerel crows. He sends his sons to war and sleeps once more; but again the cockerel crows, and he himself now leaves for the front.

"He finds his sons dead. They have stabbed each other. He is stricken, but is dis- tracted from his grief by a strange tent that rises from the ground. The Daughter of the Air comes from the tent, charms the King, and he takes her back to his kingdom. When they arrive, the astrologer, reminding him of his promise, demands the young Queen. The King, angry, beats the astrologer to death, but the cockerel flies down from the spire and pecks the King's skull until he dies. The Queen laughs and van- ishes. The astrologer, immortal, reappears and warns all men against such dishonesty as the King has practiced."

The suite from Le Coq d'or includes four musical tableaux. King Dodon in his Palace is based on the beginning of the opera; he dreams that he is safe from his enemies. With the alarm sounded by the cockerel, the King's sons depart for battle. King Dodon on the Battlefield derives from the second act. Donald Ferguson describes it: "The army of the two princes is lying in a wild pass. The moon shines thinly on the bodies of the slain. Dodon's warriors fearfully enter the pass. The King discovers his two sons among the corpses. The vision of Queen Shemakha's tent con- cludes this excerpt." King Dodon at the Tent of Queen Shemakha is so enthralled by her beauty that he forgets the tragic demise of his sons. Shaking a tambourine, she begins a seductive dance and invites the corpulent monarch to join her. "He obeys, without realizing that he is the butt of a joke. At last he invites the Queen to return with him as his bride; they proceed to the capital in a gilt chariot." The Wed- ding and the Lamentable End of King Dodon brings a wedding march and the death of the King by the cockerel's golden beak, culminating in the conclusion of the opera. — Mary Ann Feldman

Mary Ann Feldman is program annotator and editor for the Minnesota Orchestra. Her program note on the suite from Rimsky-Korsakov's Le Coq d'or is reprinted by permission.

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smmnoFF silui THE REIGItlllC D Wolfgang Amade Mozart Violin Concerto No. 3 in G, K.216

, -r*r -^-y Johannes Chrysostomus Wolfgang Gottlieb Mozart, who began calling himself Wolfgang Amadeo about 1 770 and Wolfgang Amade in 1 777, was born in Salzburg, , on January 27, 1756, and died

in Vienna on December 5, 1791. He composed th£ five violin concertos, K.207, 211, 216, 218, and 219, between April and December 1775; K.216 was com- pleted on September 12 and probably had its pre- miere in Salzburg not long afterward. The first Bos- ton Symphony performances took place in February 1952, with Ernest Ansermet conducting and Arthur Grumiaux as soloist. Later, Isaac Stern and Alfred Krips performed the concerto under the direction of Charles Munch, Joseph Silverstein performed it under the direction of Colin Davis (the most recent Tanglewood performance, in August 1973), and Malcolm Lowe under the direction of Seiji Ozawa (the most recent subscription performances, in April 1986). In addition to the solo instrument, the score calls for two each of oboes and horns plus orchestral strings.

Wolfgang's father Leopold was himself a musician of some note, a violinist and composer, whose great contribution was a violin method, Versuch einer grilndlichen Violinschule, published in the very year of Wolfgang's birth and for a long time the standard work of its type. Needless to say, when Wolfgang's musical talent became apparent, the father undertook to devote himself wholeheartedly to his training and exhibition both as a moral obligation and a financial investment. (Alfred Einstein has justly remarked, "The proportions of obligation and investment are not easy to deter- mine.") The training included instruction on both the violin and the harpsichord, with the result that Wolfgang was able to make professional use of his skill on both instruments.

It appears that his devotion to the violin dwindled after he moved permanently to Vienna and left his father's sphere of influence. Certainly in his maturity he preferred

the keyboard as the principal vehicle of virtuosity, and it was for the keyboard that he composed his most profound concertos, whether for himself, for his students, or for

other virtuosos. But during the earlier years, when he was still concertmaster in the court orchestra of the Archbishop Hieronymus Colloredo of Salzburg, playing the vio- lin was one of his duties — one that he fulfilled with some distaste. His father contin- ued to encourage his violin playing. In a letter of October 18, 1777, Leopold wrote, "You have no idea how well you play the violin, if you would only do yourself justice and play with boldness, spirit, and fire, as if you were the first violinist in Europe." Perhaps it was the constant paternal pressure that caused Wolfgang ultimately to drop the violin as a solo instrument. In Vienna he preferred to play the viola even in chamber music sessions, and his concert appearances were as a pianist.

In any case, the five violin concertos were all composed during a single year, 1775, while Wolfgang was still concertmaster in Salzburg. It is not clear whether he wrote them for himself or for Gaetano Brunetti, an Italian violinist also in the Archbishop's orchestra. There is some evidence to suggest the latter possibility: a few years later, when Mozart wrote a new slow movement (Adagio in E major, K.261) to replace the middle movement of the Fifth Violin Concerto (K.219), Leopold referred to K.261 in a letter of October 9, 1777, as having been written for Brunetti "because he found

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28 the other one too studied." But that is certainly not solid proof that the original con- certo, much less all five of them, was composed for the Italian instrumentalist.

All five of the violin concertos of 1775 — when Mozart was but nineteen years old — date from a period when the composer was still consolidating his concerto style and before he had developed the range and dramatic power of his mature piano concertos.

They still resemble the Baroque concerto, with its ritornello for the whole orchestra recurring like the pillars of a bridge to anchor the arching spans of the solo sections. Mozart gradually developed ways of using the tutti-solo opposition of the Baroque concerto in a unique fusion with the dramatic tonal tensions of sonata form, but the real breakthrough in his new concerto treatment did not come until the composition of the E-flat piano concerto, K.271, in January 1777. Thus all of the five violin concer- tos precede the "mature" Mozart concerto, which is not at all the same thing as say- ing that they are "immature" pieces.

Even within the space of the nine months during which they were composed, Mozart's concerto technique underwent substantial development, and the last three of

the five concertos have long been a regular part of the repertory. Whatever it was that happened during the three months between the composition of the Second and the

Third violin concertos, it had the effect of greatly deepening Mozart's art, of allowing him to move beyond the pure decoration of the galant style to a more sinewy and spa- cious kind of melody. The second theme of the orchestral ritornello has a striking shape that Mozart withholds from re-use until the end of the recapitulation. The development section begins in the dominant minor and moves with purposeful strides through a series of closely related keys back to the tonic and the recapitulation, in which the soloist dominates.

The Adagio is wonderfully dreamy, with muted upper strings in triplets and pizzi- cato cello and bass imparting some of the same expressive qualities as the slow move- ment of the much later piano concerto in C, K.467. The oboes take part in the dia- logue with their little interjections in pairs. The Rondeau is a sprightly 3/8 dance in Allegro tempo. At the opening the wind instruments appear only for occasional punc- tuation, but they play a progressively more important role throughout. The biggest surprise comes with a change of meter (2/2) and the appearance of a totally new idea in G minor, a graceful dance step for the solo violin over pizzicato strings. This runs directly into a livelier tune of folklike character in G major. This two-section minor/ major tune has recently been identified as a Hungarian melody known as the "Stras- bourger"; hence the present concerto is the one that should bear the nickname "the Strasbourger" not the Fourth Violin Concerto, to which the name is sometimes applied. The wind instruments, having played a more vital role in the G major sec- tion, withdraw from prominence for a time after the beginning of the recapitulation, but they return in the whimsical coda to bring the concerto to a surprising and witty ending without any of the stringed instruments. -S.L.

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30 Jean Sibelius Symphony No. 5 in E-flat, Opus 82

Jean (Johan) Julius Christian Sibelius was born at Hameenlinna (Tavestehus in Swedish), Finland, on

December 8, 1865, and died at Jarvenpaa, near Helsingfors (Helsinki), on September 20, 1957. He took the gallicized form of his first name in emula- tion of an uncle. Sibelius composed the first version of his Fifth Symphony late in 1914, introducing it on his fiftieth birthday, December 8, 1915, at Hel- singfors. He conducted a revised version of th£ sym- phony a year later, also at Helsingfors, on Decem- ber 14, 1916. Still dissatisfied with the work, he withdrew it for the second time, leading the pre- miere of the final version only on November 24, 1919 (see below). Leopold Stokowski and the Phila- delphia Orchestra gave the first American perform- ance on October 21, 1921. The first Boston Symphony performances were given by Pierre Monteux in April 1922. The symphony has also been conducted at BSO concerts by Serge Koussevitzky, Richard Burgin, Leonard Bernstein, Eugene Ormandy, Erich Leinsdorf, Georges Pretre, Colin Davis, Simon Rattle, who led the most recent subscrip- tion performances in November 1983, Esa-Pekka Salonen, and Leonard Bernstein, who led the most recent Tanglewood performance in August 1987. The Sibelius Fifth is scored for two each offlutes, oboes, clarinets, and bassoons, four horns, three trumpets, three trombones, timpani, and strings.

Sibelius celebrated his fiftieth birthday on December 8, 1915, with the first per- formance of his Fifth Symphony. Born in a quiet town in the interior of Finland, the son of a regimental doctor, he had begun writing music on a regular basis when he was nine. His earliest piece, for violin and cello pizzicato, was called Waterdrops, already displaying the fascination with and love of nature that forever remained a part of his life: as a young violin student, he would improvise on the instrument while wandering in the woods or by the lake near his home, and during the years that sur- rounded work on the Fifth Symphony he would make daily diary entries testifying to the beauties of the land near his country home at Jarvenpaa and which helped dis- tract him from the atrocities of the war raging round him.

As a teenager, Sibelius began playing violin in his school orchestra, also making chamber music with his brother Christian and his sister Linda, who played cello and piano, respectively. A career in music was considered out of the question, and in May 1885 Sibelius enrolled in a law course at the University of Helsingfors, at the same time continuing his musical studies with Martin Wegelius at the Music Institute. He gave up law, leaving Finland for the first time in autumn 1889 for Berlin, spending a year there and then a year in Vienna, studying counterpoint, writing music, frequent- ing music circles. Meanwhile his music was being performed in Finland with increas- ing success. In the spring of 1889, in his last days as a student at the Conservatory, he had been hailed by the influential Finnish critic Karl Flodin as "foremost amongst those who have been entrusted with bearing the banner of Finnish music." On April 28, 1892, the first performance of the twenty-six-year-old composer's eighty-minute- long symphonic poem Kullervo for soloists, male chorus, and orchestra proved some- thing of a national event. Soon after this came the symphonic poem En Saga, written for Robert Kajanus, conductor of the Finnish National Orchestra, and, shortly after, the music of the Karelia Suite, written for an historical pageant at the University of Helsingfors.

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32 Kajanus (1856-1933) was a champion of Finnish music and of his friend Sibelius in particular. Founder of the first permanent orchestra in Helsinki, and also one of Finland's most important composers, Kajanus afforded Sibelius many opportunities to conduct; in 1900, on its first European tour, the Finnish orchestra under Kajanus and Sibelius performed in Paris, Stockholm, Goteborg, Malmo, Oslo, Copenhagen, Liibeck, Hamburg, Berlin, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague, and Brussels. In the years following, Sibelius was invited regularly to conduct in and elsewhere, both on the continent and in England. The First Symphony was completed in 1899, Finlandia in 1900; the Violin Concerto — the spelling-out of Sibelius's never-realized hopes of becoming a concert virtuoso — was composed 1903 and revised 1905. In 1904 Sibelius bought the land at Jarvenpaa, about twenty miles from Helsinki, where he built the villa in which he would live the rest of his life; the villa was called "Ainola" after his wife Aino, whom he had married in June 1892. The Third and Fourth sym- phonies were composed 1907 and 1911, respectively. During these years, Sibelius's life was shadowed by the threat of cancer: he underwent fourteen major operations before a tumor was finally located and removed from his throat, and his doctor ordered him to give up the wine and cigars he loved so much.

Professionally Sibelius was secure, with international recognition constantly grow- ing and even reaching across the ocean: he received an honorary doctorate from Yale University in 1914, the same year of his only visit to America, and he conducted his newly composed tone poem, The Oceanides, in Norfolk, Connecticut. He was offered the directorship of the Eastman School of Music after the war, but he never returned to America, despite his popularity there.* At the same time, however, his financial situation was and would for a while longer remain precarious, even with the establish-

*It was aboard the S.S. President Grant on his return voyage from America that Sibelius learned of the Archduke Francis Ferdinand's assassination at Sarajevo.

Robert Kajanus

33 Week 18 ment already in 1897 of the state pension for life that was meant to free him from teaching and from churning out, simply to pay the bills, small-scale compositions which he resented as distractions from his concentration on larger works (though, with the outbreak of war, work on these smaller pieces also helped him turn his mind from the turmoil of current events). In any event, Sibelius's fiftieth birthday found him, in Harold Johnson's words, "unchallenged as his country's greatest composer." The date was celebrated as a national holiday, and he was lauded as "one of the rich- est spirits that were ever born in this country and the greatest creative power now living among us."

In addition to the Fifth Symphony, the gala concert included The Oceanides and the two Serenades for violin and orchestra, Opus 69, with Richard Burgin as soloist; the program was repeated three times for the general public. With royalty income from his German printer suspended due to the war, Sibelius was pressed to finish the sym- phony: "My relations with Breitkopf & Hartel are finished, and I have now composed minor pieces (about forty!) for Nordic publishers. This has disturbed my work on the new piece for the 8th of December. I hope that I will be able to finish it in time." He made last-minute changes during the final rehearsal. Though the public responded favorably to the new symphony, Sibelius was dissatisfied and withdrew it, introducing a second, much-revised version a year later, on December 14, 1916. Still dissatisfied

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34 with what he had hoped would be its "definitive form," he withdrew it yet again. At this point, the composition of the Fifth Symphony becomes intertwined with that of the Sixth and Seventh symphonies, Sibelius observing in a letter of May 20, 1918, that "it looks as if I may come out with all three symphonies at the same time." Actually, the Sixth appeared in 1923, the Seventh a year later; but the composer continues:

The Fifth Symphony in a new form — practically composed anew — I work at it daily. Movement I entirely new, movement II reminiscent of the old, movement III reminiscent of the end of the first movement of the old. Movement IV the old motifs, but stronger in revision. The whole, if I may say so, a vital climax to the end. Triumphal.

In its three-movement form (the stages leading up to the final version are not clearly documented), the symphony had to wait for its premiere until after the brutal civil war that kept Finland from political stability until the spring of 1919.* It was given on November 24, 1919, and Sibelius must finally have been deeply satisfied, especially if he recalled the words he had entered into his notebook five years earlier, in late September 1914: "In a deep dell again. But I already begin to see dimly the mountain that I shall certainly ascend . . . God opens His door for a moment and His orchestra plays the Fifth Symphony."

The symphony begins with music bearing out Cecil Gray's report, following an interview with the composer, that for Sibelius

orchestration as a thing in itself does not exist; the idea that a musical thought might occur to him in the abstract for which he had then to seek a suitable orchestration, or, conversely, that he might conceive a colour-scheme and then seek for musical material in which to embody it— both are alike unthinkable to him in connexion with his own work. In other words, the melodic, harmonic, and

rhythmic material of his composition is intimately bound up, from the very out- set, with the instrumental medium employed.

So, at the beginning of the Sibelius Fifth, the ear recognizes the various contributions to the orchestral texture without at first consciously thinking to isolate the individual sounds. Events proceed naturally and logically, as always with Sibelius, each instru- ment adding to the total effect: over the tonic-chord backdrop of drumroll and two horns, a melody emerges in the other two horns, followed by an echo in flutes, oboes, and clarinets against the added background color of bassoons. The melody, its rhyth- mically-charged echo, and its various extensions provide the movement's principal materials:

r_,T Horns Woodwind "echo"

* Sibelius was sympathetic to the Whites, the German-supported right-wing Civil Guard; he even provided the music — printed on his birthday in 1918, though not bearing his name — to the Jae- ger March, the Jaegers being a Prussian battalion made up largely of young Finns who had gone to Germany between 1914 and 1916. Of the Russian-supported leftist Reds, Sibelius com- mented, "I must be especially hateful to them as a composer of patriotic music." Indeed, the Sibelius family was so jeopardized by the presence of Russian soldiers in the vicinity of Jarvenpaa that, with the help of the composer's brother Christian, then a senior psy- chiatrist at a mental hospital near Helsingfors and who had the entire family diagnosed as bor- derline psychotic, and with a special pass somehow bearing the necessary signature of a Red commandant, they were moved with Kajanus's assistance to the Lapinlahti (Lappviken) Central Asylum where Christian was on the staff. Sibelius lost forty pounds in the ensuing weeks as a result of wartime rationing. This was in February 1918.

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36 The strings remain silent for the first few pages, woodwind undulations and further drumrolls building expectation to prepare their first entrance. The atmosphere becomes increasingly ionized once the strings have entered, and they join with the winds in another rhythmically-activated idea:

Violins, flutes, oboes, clarinets

The music expands into and through a varied statement of the opening materials, after which the texture thins out for a mysterious, fugue-like string passage. Over this, a solo bassoon, sounding "lugubre" and "patetico," paves the way for a develop- ment-like section with a climax of its own, but which then turns into something rather unexpected: an Allegro moderato whose dancelike character stands in sharp contrast to what has gone before, even though its thematic materials are clearly derived from what we have already heard.

In the original form, in its revised version of 1916, and even as late as May 1918, the date of the composer's letter quoted earlier, this symphony had four separate movements. Robert Layton writes that there was a short break indicated between the first two movements of the original score but that in the 1916 version they were played without pause. It is unclear just when Sibelius decided to combine the original two movements into the single movement we know today, but what happens in the music now is that a scherzo-like dance movement short-circuits the sonata-form scheme one might have expected and moves through several faster tempos to a final climax serving as recapitulation for the whole. In other words, Sibelius has taken his original two movements and reworked them, presumably with considerable alteration

to the material of the first ("Movement I entirely new . . ."), into a single structure whose thematic content is now organically related.

Of the Andante, Tovey writes that this "little middle movement . . . produces the

effect of a primitive set of variations. . . . But it produces this effect in a paradoxical

way, inasmuch as it is not a theme preserving its identity . . . through variations, but

Sibelius in rehearsal with orchestra in 1915

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The finale begins with a rush of violins and violas to which woodwinds soon add their chatter; once this subsides, a bell-like tolling figure emerges in the horns (or, to quote Donald Francis Tovey one last time: "The bustling introduction . . . provides a rushing wind, through which Thor can enjoy swinging his hammer."). As the move- ment proceeds, these materials are shared by the other members of the orchestra. Following the Misterioso repetition of the agitated opening material, the tolling figure now heard in tremolo violas and cellos, a woodwind phrase from very near the begin- ning blossoms into the most overtly emotional material of the entire score. Trumpets take up the tolling motif. The texture thickens, filled with dissonance and accents placed at odds with each other. The final resolution — four chords and two unisons introduced after a sudden silence — is startling in its simplicity and spareness: "trium- phal," perhaps, but at the same time demanding an acceptance of forces not always within our control. - Marc Mandel

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39 .

More . . .

Stanley Sadie's fine Mozart article in The New Grove has been published separately by Norton (available in paperback); Sadie is also the author of Mozart (Grossman, also paperback), a convenient brief life-and-works survey with nice pictures. Alfred

Einstein's classic Mozart: The Man, the Music is still worth knowing (Oxford paper- baek). Wolfgang Ilildesheimer's Mozart (Farrar Strauss Giroux, available also as a

Vintage paperbaek), though sometimes frustrating to read sinee it is built up out of many short sections dealing primarily with Mozart's character, personality, and genius, provides a stimulating point of view for readers who have not followed the recent specialist literature on the composer. A. Hyatt King's Mozart Wind and String Concertos, in the BBC Music Guides series, contains a fairly extensive discussion of the Third Violin Concerto (University of Washington paperback). Any serious consid- eration of Mozart's music must include Charles Rosen's splendid study TTie Classical Style (Viking; also Norton paperback). Anne-Sophie Mutter has recorded Mozart's Violin Concerto No. 3 with Herbert von Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic

(Deutsche Grammophon, on a single disc with the Violin Concerto No. 5, or in a four-

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40 disc set also including the Beethoven, Brahms, and Mendelssohn concertos, and the Bruch G minor concerto). I can also recommend the performances by Itzhak Perlman with James Levine and the Vienna Philharmonic (DG, with the Violin Concerto No.

5), Arthur Grumiaux with Colin Davis and the London Symphony (Philips, also with the Concerto No. 5), and Cho-Liang Lin with Raymond Leppard and the English Chamber Orchestra (CBS, with the Concerto No. 5 and the Adagio in E for violin and orchestra, K.261).

There are no current full-scale biographies of Rimsky-Korsakov in English, most of the serious studies being available only in Russian (except for a few articles, and a 1945 biography by Gerald Abraham, who also contributed the entry to The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians). But the composer's autobiography, My Musical Life, is full of interesting details; it is currently available in a very pricey reprint edition (Vienna House). Neeme Jarvi has recorded the suite from Le Coq d'or with the Scottish National Orchestra for the Chandos label (part of a three-disc set that also includes suites from five other Rimsky-Korsakov operas: Christmas Eve, Leg- end of the Invisible City of Kitezh, Mlada, The Snow Maiden, and Tsar Saltan). It may also be found on a single disc by David Zinman and the Rotterdam Philharmonic (Philips, with the suite from Tsar Saltan). -S.L.

Robert Layton's Sibelius in the Master Musicians series is a useful life-and-works study (Littlefield paperback); Layton is also the author of the Sibelius entry in The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. The major multi-volume biography in Finnish is by Erik Tawastsjerna; two volumes of the anticipated three-volume English version have appeared so far (University of California). The Music of Sibelius, a sym- posium of mixed quality edited by Gerald Abraham and dating from about forty years ago, has been reissued by Da Capo. Harold Truscott's chapter on Sibelius in Volume II of The Symphony, edited by Robert Simpson, is of interest (Pelican paperback). Lionel Pike's collection of essays, Beethoven, Sibelius, and "the Profound Logic," comes highly recommended to readers with a strong technical knowledge of music (Athlone Press, London). Neemi Jarvi has recorded all seven Sibelius symphonies with the Goteborg Orchestra of Swr eden for the Bis label; the Fifth is on a single disc with Sibelius's Andante festivo and Karelia Overture. Sir Colin Davis and the Boston Symphony Orchestra have recorded the Sibelius Fifth as part of their award-winning cycle of Sibelius symphonies and tone poems for Philips, currently available only as a four-CD set. Among other singly available recordings of the Fifth, I can also recom- mend Paavo Berglund's with the Bournemouth Symphony (EMI, with the Symphony No. 3) and Simon Rattle's with the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra (also EMI, with the Violin Concerto, with Nigel Kennedy as soloist). Finally, for the histor- ically minded: Sibelius's friend, contemporary, and champion, the composer-conductor Robert Kajanus, recorded the Fifth Symphony with the London Symphony Orchestra in June 1932, a performance at one time available in a two-LP World import set also including the Third Symphony, Karelia Suite, and Pohjola's Daughter likewise con- ducted by Kajanus, the Seventh Symphony in a "live" Koussevitzky-led performance with the BBC Orchestra from May 1933, and the Sixth Symphony with Georg Schneevoigt and the Finnish National Orchestra recorded June 1934. -M.M.

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Neeme Jarvi is principal conductor of the Goteborg Orches- tra of Sweden and, beginning in September 1990, music director of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. Born in Tallinn, Estonia, in 1937, he graduated from the Tallinn Music School with degrees in percussion and choral conduct- ing; he later completed his studies in opera and symphonic conducting at the Leningrad State Conservatory with the distinguished professors Rabinovich and Mravinski. Mr. Jarvi made his conducting debut when he was eighteen with a concert performance of Johann Strauss 's operetta A Night in Venice and made his operatic debut with Carmen at the Kirov Theater. In 1963 he became director of the Estonian Radio and Television Orchestra and also began a thirteen-year tenure as chief conductor at the Tallinn Opera. In 1971 Mr. Jarvi won first prize in the Conductors Competition at the Acca- demia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia in Rome, leading to invitations to conduct major orchestras and opera companies throughout Eastern Europe, Great Britain, Germany, Sweden, Japan, and South America. He made his North American debut with Eugene Onegin during the 1978-79 season at the and has also conducted at the Royal Opera in Stockholm. In the he became chief conductor and artistic director of the Estonian State Symphony and led the Soviet premiere perform- ances of Der Rosenkavalier, Porgy and Bess, and R turco in Italia. In January 1980 Mr. Jarvi and his family emigrated to the United States; the following month he made his American orchestral debut with the New York Philharmonic. Since then he has conducted most of the major North American orchestras and has appeared regu- larly with the orchestras of Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Detroit. As a guest conductor in Europe, he appears regularly with the Philharmonia, the London Symphony, and the London Philharmonic, and now appears for two subscription weeks each season with the Amsterdam Concertgebouw. From 1981 to 1988 he was music director of the Scottish National Orchestra, with which he continues to conduct and record; he was principal guest conductor of the City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra for three seasons. This season Mr. Jarvi records Prokofiev's Fiery Angel with the Goteborg Symphony for Deutsche Grammophon and the Carl Nielsen opera Saul and David for Chandos, for which he has recorded extensively. Current projects include the Dvorak symphonies, Shostakovich and Strauss cycles with the Scottish National Orchestra, a Rachmaninoff series with the London Symphony, a Bartok cycle with the Philharmonia, and the complete Prokofiev piano concertos with the Concertgebouw and pianists Boris Berman and Horacio Gutierrez. He has recorded all the Prokofiev symphonies with the Scottish National Orchestra for Chandos; he has also recorded a Grieg series for Deutsche Grammophon and an award-winning Sibelius symphony cycle for the Bis label. In recent seasons, Mr. Jarvi has toured throughout the world with the Goteborg Symphony and the Scottish National Orches- tra. This season he is guest conductor with the Chicago Symphony, the Detroit Sym- phony, the Philadelphia Orchestra, the Toronto Symphony, the Montreal Symphony, the London Symphony, the Philharmonia, the Scottish National Orchestra, the Con-

7 certgebouw , and the Danish Radio Orchestra; he also makes his debut with the Berlin Philharmonic. Mr. Jarvi made his Boston Symphony Orchestra debut with subscrip- tion concerts in January 1981; he has also conducted the orchestra at Tanglewrood, in August 1986.

43 Only you can help the pieces fall into place.

The BSO started the 19894990 season thereby weakening the Orchestras long- with a $10 million difference between what term financial foundation. we will earn— and what we must spend to Your generous gift will help us fund make our music. What is more, our annual outreach, educational and youth programs, grant support from the Massachusetts and attract the worlds finest musicians and

Council on the Arts and Humanities has guest artists. been severely reduced due to state budget Become a Friend of the Boston cuts. Unless these funds are found else- Symphony Orchestra today. This year, where, continuing all current programs will more than ever, only you can help the result in reductions in our endowment, pieces fall into place. r "I Yes, I want to help keep great music alive. I'd like to become a Friend of the BSO for the 1989-1990 season.

(Friends' benefits begin at $50. ) Enclosed is my check for $ payable to the Boston Symphony Annual Fund.

Name Phone-

Address.

City State. Zip.

Please send your contribution to: Susan E. Tomlin, Director of Annual Giving, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Symphony Hall, Boston, MA 02115. (617) 266-1492. KEEP GREAT MUSIC ALIVE L J Anne-Sophie Mutter

In 1976, Anne-Sophie Mutter's appearance at the Interna- tional Music Festival in Lucerne led to an invitation to play for Herbert von Karajan in Berlin; her 1977 international debut with Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic at the Salzburg Easter Festival launched a musical collaboration leading to regular performances at the Salzburg Festival, the Vienna Festival, in Berlin, and elsewhere on tours throughout the world. Since then, Ms. Mutter has appeared

*' A in recital, as soloist with leading orchestras and conductors, and in chamber music engagements throughout Europe, B North America, , Japan, and the Soviet Union; she is now recognized as one of the world's preeminent violinists. Ms. Mutter returned to North America in February 1990 to celebrate the tenth anniversary of her North American debut in four concerts with the New York Philharmonic and , the orchestra and conductor with whom she gave that first performance. Besides this month's Boston Symphony appearances in Boston and at Carnegie Hall, other orches- tral engagements include the Los Angeles Philharmonic, the San Francisco Symphony, and the New World Symphony. In April and May she makes a recital tour of North and South America; she made her triumphant debut recital tour in 1988. Other highlights of her current season included performances in Hong Kong, Kyoto, and Tokyo with the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and solo recitals in Osaka and Tokyo; both concerto and recital programs were taped for NHK-TV. Ms. Mutter tours Scandinavia and England, including a gala concert in the presence of the Prin- cess of , and performs orchestral engagements with the Israel Philharmonic, the Munich Philharmonic, and the Wurttembergisches Kammerorchester in a tour of Ger- many. Her recent recordings include the Tchaikovsky Concerto with the Vienna Phil- harmonic and Herbert von Karajan, Beethoven's complete string trios with Bruno Giuranna and , and the Glazunov Concerto and Prokofiev Sec- ond Concerto with the National Symphony and Mstislav Rostropovich. She was awarded a 1989 Grand Prix International du Disque and the 1989 Ovation Concerto of the Year Award for her recording of the Stravinsky Violin Concerto with the Phil- harmonia Orchestra under Paul Sachar and Lutosjawski's Chain 2 and Partita with the BBC Symphony conducted by the composer. She recently received Gold Record awards in Europe for her four-CD set of "Great Violin Concerti" and Vivaldi's Four Seasons, all recorded with Karajan and the Berlin Philharmonic. A strong advocate of contemporary composers, Ms. Mutter presented the world pre- mieres of Lutos/awski's Chain 2 with Paul Sacher in Zurich, the orchestrated version of Partita in London with the composer conducting, and Norbert-Eloi Moret's En Reve at the Locarno Festival in Switzerland. In the future she will premiere a con- certo currently being wTitten for her by Krzysztof Penderecki. Also an accomplished chamber musician, Ms. Mutter has been featured in numerous major American publi- cations and has been the subject of features on network television. An Honorary Fel- low of the Royal Academy of Music and the first holder of the International Chair of Violin Studies, she has received such awards as the 1979 Deutscher Schallplatten- preis, two Grammy nominations, the Premio Internazionale Accademia Musicale Chi- giana, and the most prestigious and popularly acclaimed German award, the classical music "Bambi." In March 1990 she appears on PBS Television in "Mozart in Salzburg," a gala program taped last July with the Vienna Philharmonic and James Levine, Jessye Norman, and Murray Perahia. Anne-Sophie Mutter made her Boston Symphony Orchestra debut in February 1983 and returned for subscription concerts in 1985, 1988, and 1989; she has performed music of Bruch, Lalo, Beethoven, and Stravinskv with the orchestra.

45 Business/Professional Leadership Program

BUSINESS

The Boston Symphony Orchestra wishes to acknowledge this distinguished group of corporations and professional organizations for their outstanding and exemplary response in support of the orchestra's needs during the past or current fiscal year.

Corporate Underwriters ($25,000 and above)

Bank of Boston Country Curtains and The Red Lion Inn General Electric Plastics Business Group BSO Single Concert Sponsors

Bank of New England Corporation Opening Night at Symphony

BayBanks, Inc. Opening Night at Pops

NYNEX Corporation, WCVB-TV, Channel 5 Boston and WCRB 102.5 FM Salute to Symphony 1989

NEC Corporation and NEC Deutschland GmbH Boston Symphony Orchestra European Tour Boston Symphony Orchestra Asian Tour MCI Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra National Tour

Digital Equipment Corporation Boston Pops Orchestra Public Television Broadcasts

Pepsi-Cola Bottlers of New England Boston Pops Esplanade Orchestra, Esplanade Concerts

TDK Electronics Corporation Tanglewood Tickets for Children

Suntory Limited BSO recording of Elektra

For information on these and other corporate funding opportunities, contact Madelyne Cuddeback, BSO Director of Corporate Development, Symphony Hall, Boston, MA 02115, (617) 266-1492.

46 1989-90 Business Honor Roll ($10,000 and Above)

Advanced Management Associates The Gillette Company Harvey Chet Krentzman Colman M. Mockler, Jr.

Analog Devices, Inc. Grafacon, Inc. Ray Stata H. Wayman Rogers, Jr.

AT&T GTE Products Corporation Robert Babbitt Dean T. Langford

Bank of Boston Hill, Holliday, Connors, Cosmopulos, Inc. Ira Stepanian Jack Connors, Jr.

Bank of New England Corporation The Henley Group Walter J. Connolly Paul M. Montrone BayBanks, Inc. Hewlett Packard Company William M. Crozier, Jr. Ben L. Holmes Bolt Beranek & Newman Houghton Mifflin Company Stephen R. Levy Harold T. Miller The Boston Company IBM Corporation George W. Phillips Paul J. Palmer The Boston Consulting Group John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Company Jonathan L. Isaacs E. James Morton Boston Edison Company Jordan Marsh Company Stephen J. Sweeney Richard F. Van Pelt The Boston Globe William O. Taylor The Lafayette Hotel Liam Madden Boston Herald Patrick J. Purcell Liberty Mutual Insurance Group Gary L. Countryman Bull, Worldwide Information Systems Roland Pampel Loomis-Sayles & Company, Inc. Peter G. Harwood Connell Limited Partnership William F. Connell MCI Nathan Kantor Coopers & Lybrand Vincent M. O'Reilly McKinsey & Company Robert P. O'Block Country Curtains Jane P. Fitzpatrick Morse Shoe, Inc.

Creative Gourmets, Ltd. Manuel Rosenberg Stephen E. Elmont NEC Corporation Deloitte, Haskins & Sells Atsuyoshi Ouchi Mario Umana NEC Deutschland GmbH Digital Equipment Corporation Masao Takahashi Kenneth H. Olsen The New England Dynatech Corporation Edward E. Phillips J. P. Barger New England Telephone Company Eastern Enterprises Paul C. O'Brien Robert W. Weinig Northern Telecom, Inc. Ernst & Whinney John Craig Thomas M. Lankford Nynex Corporation Fidelity Investments/ Delbert C. Staley Fidelity Foundation PaineWebber, Inc. General Cinema Corporation James F. Cleary Richard A. Smith Peat Marwick Main & Co. General Electric Plastics Robert D. Happ Glen H. Hiner 1989-90 Business Honor Roll (continued)

Pepsi-Cola Bottlers of New England The Stop & Shop Companies, Inc. Pepsi Cola — East Avram J. Goldberg Michael K. Lorelli Suntory Limited

Prudential-Bache Securities Keizo Saji David F. Remington TDK Electronics Corporation R&D Electrical Company, Inc. Takashi Tsujii Richard D. Pedone USTrust Raytheon Company James V. Sidell Thomas L. Phillips WCRB-102.5 FM The Red Lion Inn Richard L. Kaye John H. Fitzpatrick WCVB-TV, Channel 5 Boston Shawmut Bank, N.A. S. James Coppersmith John P. Hamill

State Street Bank & Trust Company William S. Edgerly

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48 The Boston Symphony Orchestra gratefully acknowledges these Business and Professional Leadership Program members for their generous and valuable support totaling $1,250 and above during the past fiscal year. Names which are both capitalized and underscored in the Business Leaders listing comprise the Business Honor Roll denoting support of $10,000 and above. Capitalization denotes support of $5,000-$9,999, and an asterisk indicates support of $2,500-$4,999. Business Leaders ($1,250 and above)

Accountants J.N. Phillips Glass Company, Inc. Lee Kennedy Co., Inc. Norman S. Rosenfield Lee M. Kennedy AETHUK ANDERSEN & CO. William F. Meagher Banking *National Lumber Company ARTHUR YOUNG & COMPANY BANK OF BOSTON Louis L. Kaitz Thomas P. McDermott Ira Stepanian PERINI CORPORATION David B. Perini * Charles E. DiPesa & Company BANK OF NEW ENGLAND CORPORATION William F. DiPesa Consumer Goods/Distributors Walter J. Connolly COOPERS & LYBRAND *Barter Connections BAYBANKS, INC. Vincent M. O'Reilly Kenneth C. Barron William M. Crozier, Jr. DELOITTE, HASKINS & SELLS FAIRWINDS GOURMET COFFEE Mario Umana THE BOSTON COMPANY COMPANY George W. Phillips ERNST & WHINNEY Michael J. Sullivan Cambridge Trust Company Thomas M. Lankford John Gilbert Jr. Co. Lewis H. Clark PEAT MARWICK Michael Facendola MAIN & CO. Chase Manhattan Bank PEPSI-COLA BOTTLERS Robert D. Happ John McCullough OF NEW ENGLAND PRICE WATERHOUSE CITICORP/CITIBANK PEPSI COLA -EAST Kenton J. Sicchitano Walter E. Mercer Michael K. Lorelli

*Theodore S. Samet & Company *First Mutual of Boston SUNTORY LIMITED Theodore S. Samet Keith G. Willoughby Keizo Saji

Tofias, Fleishman, First National Bank of Chicago Education Robert E. Gallery Shapiro & Co., P.C. BENTLEY COLLEGE Allan Tofias *GE Capital Corporate Finance Group Gregory Adamian Richard A. Goglia Advertising/Publ ic Relations Electrical/HVAC *Rockland Trust Company *Cabot Advertising John F. Spence, Jr. L. Rudolph Electrical Company, Inc. William H. Monaghan Louis Rudolph DELLA FEMINA, MCNAMEE SHAWMUT BANK, N.A. John P. Hamill "p.h. mechanical Corporation WCRS. INC. Paul A. Hayes Michael H. Reingold STATE STREET BANK & TRUST COMPANY R&D ELECTRICAL COMPANY, INC. HILL, HOLLIDAY, CONNORS, William S. Edgerly Richard D. Pedone COSMOPULOS, INC. The Reflex Lighting Jack Connors, Jr. USTRUST Group James V. Sidell Paul D. Mustone Aerospace Wainwright Bank & Trust Company Electronics *Xorthrop Corporation John M. Plukas Alden Electronics, Inc. Thomas V. Jones Workingmens Co-operative Bank John M. Alden Antiques/Coin Dealers John E. McDonald "Analytical Systems The Great American Coin Company Building/Contracting Engineering Corporation Michael B. Rukin Bertram M. Cohen *A.J. Lane & Company Andrew J. Lane Lucas Epsco, Inc. Architects Wayne P. Coffin Bond Bros., Inc. ADD INC. ARCHITECTS Edward A. Bond, Jr. "The Mitre Corporation Philip M. Briggs Charles A. Zraket Chain Construction Corporation *LEA Group Howard J. Mintz PARLEX CORPORATION Eugene R. Eisenberg Herbert W. Pollack * Harvey Industries, Inc. Autom oti ve/Service Frederick Bigony Energy GAXS TIRE COMPANY, INC. Mass. Electric Construction Company CABOT CORPORATION David Gans Francis Angino Samuel W. Bodman

49 Engineering The Rockport Corporation DIGITAL EQUIPMENT Anthony Tiberii CORPORATION jroldberg-Zoino & Associates, Inc. Kenneth H. Olsen Donald T. Goldberg THE STRIDE RITE CORPORATION Arnold S. Hiatt Stone & Webster Engineering DYNATECH CORPORATION Corporation Furnishings/Housewares J. P. Barger Philip Garfinkel ARLEY MERCHANDISE EG&G, INC. The Thompson & Lichtner CORPORATION Dean W. Freed Company, Inc. David I. Riemer *General Eastern Instruments Co. John D. Stelling Barton Brass Associates Pieter R. Wiederhold Barton Brass HELLX TECHNOLOGY Entertainment/Media BBF Corporation CORPORATION GENERAL CINEMA Boruch B. Frusztajer Robert J. Lepofsky CORPORATION Corona Curtain THE HENLEY GROUP Richard A. Smith Manufacturing Co., Inc. Paul M. Montrone National Amusements, Inc. Paul Sheiber HEWLETT-PACKARD COMPANY Sumner M. Redstone COUNTRY CURTAINS Ben L. Holmes Jane P. Fitzpatrick IBM CORPORATION Finance/Venture Capital Jofran Sales, Inc. Paul J. Palmer Robert D. Roy 3i Corporation Instron Corporation Ivan N. Momtchiloff Graphic Design Harold Hindman

Carson Limited Partnership *Clark/Linsky Design *Intermetrics Inc. Herbert Carver Robert H. Linsky Joseph A. Saponaro FARRELL, HEALER & LABEL ART IONICS, INC. COMPANY, INC. Thomas Cobery Arthur L. Goldstein Richard A. Farrell, Jr. High Technology/Electronics Loral Hycor, Inc. THE FIRST BOSTON Joseph Hyman CORPORATION Alden Products Company Betsy Alden *M/A-Com, Inc. Malcolm MacColl Thomas F. Burke ANALOG DEVICES, INC. Ray Stata MASSCOMP Food Service/Industry Richard A. Phillips *Apollo Computer, Inc. "Boston Showcase Company Thomas A. Vanderslice MILLIPORE CORPORATION Jason E. Starr John A. Gil martin *Aritech Corp. "The Catered Affair James A. Synk NEC CORPORATION Holly P. Safford Atsuyoshi Ouchi AUGAT, INC. Cordel Associates, Inc. Marcel P. Joseph NEC DEUTSCHLAND GmbH James B. Hangstefer Masao Takahashi Automatic Data Processing Cookies Cookin Arthur S. Kranseler *Orion Research, Inc. Glen Bornstein Alexander Jenkins III *Bachman Information Systems CREATIVE GOURMETS, LTD. Arnold Kraft PRIME COMPUTER, INC. Stephen E. Elmont BOLT BERANEK AND Russell Planitzer daka, Inc. NEWMAN, INC. RAYTHEON COMPANY Allen R. Maxwell Stephen R. Levy Thomas L. Phillips Gourmet Caterers BULL, WORLDWIDE SofTech, Inc. Robert A. Wiggins INFORMATION SYSTEMS Justus Lowe, Jr. Roland Pampel *TASC Footwear *Cerberus Technologies, Inc. Arthur Gelb Converse, Inc. George J. Grabowski TDK ELECTRONICS Gilbert Ford Computer Power Group CORPORATION J. Baker, Inc. of America Takashi Tsujii Sherman N. Baker L. David Chapman TERADYNE INC. JONES & VINING, INC. Costar Corporation Alexander V. d'Arbeloff Sven A. Vaule, Jr. Otto Morningstar THERMO ELECTRON MORSE SHOE, INC. CSC PARTNERS, INC. CORPORATION Manuel Rosenberg Paul J. Crowley George N. Hatsopoulos

50 Hotels/Restaurants FRANK B. HALL & CO. OF MORGAN STANLEY & COMPANY, MASSACHUSETTS, INC. INC. 57 Park Plaza Hotel William F. Newell John Lazlo Nicholas L. Vinios Fred S. James & Company of PAINEWEBBER, INC. Back Bay Hilton New England, Inc. James F. Cleary William Morton P. Joseph McCarthy SALOMON BROTHERS, INC. The Bostonian Hotel International Insurance Group Sherif A. Nada Timothy P. Kirwan John Perkins State Street Development Company Boston Copley Marriott Hotel The J. Peter Lyons Company John R. Gallagher III Jurgen Giesbert J. Peter Lyons TUCKER ANTHONY, INC. Cafe Amain JOHN HANCOCK MUTUAL John Goldsmith Patricia Nee LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY WOODSTOCK CORPORATION Christo's Restaurant E. James Morton Nelson J. Darling, Jr. Christopher Tsaganis Johnson & Higgins of Fynn's Massachusetts, Inc. Dunn James Robert A. Cameron Legal HOTEL THE LAFAYETTE Keystone Provident Life BINGHAM, DANA & GOULD Madden Liam Insurance Company Everett H. Parker RED LION INN Robert G. Sharp THE Choate, Hall & Stewart John H. Fitzpatrick LDBERTY MUTUAL INSURANCE Allen M. Bornheimer *The Ritz-Carlton, Boston GROUP Robert S. Frank, Jr. Sigi Brauer Gary L. Countryman Dickerman Law Offices Sheraton Boston Hotel & Towers THE NEW ENGLAND Lola Dickerman Edward E. Phillips Steve Foster FISH & RICHARDSON Sonesta International Robert D. Gordon Adjusters, Inc. Robert E. Hillman Robert D. Gordon Hotels Corporation Gadsby & Hannah Paul Sonnabend SAFETY INSURANCE COMPANY Jeffrey P. Somers St. Botolph's Restaurant Richard B. Simches GOLDSTEIN & MANELLO John Harris Sullivan Risk Management Group Richard J. Snyder John H. Sullivan GOODWIN, PROCTER AND HOAR Industrial Distributors Sun Life Assurance Company Robert B. Fraser Admiral Metals Servicenter of Canada Hubbard & Ferris Company Marcelle W. Farrington Charles A. Hubbard Maxwell Burstein ALLES CORPORATION Joyce & Joyce Investments Thomas J. Joyce Stephen S. Berman AMDURA NATIONAL Baring America Asset Management Lynch, Brewer, Hoffman & Sands DISTRIBUTION COMPANY Company, Inc. Owen B. Lynch Stephen D. Cutler Brian MacKenzie Melick & Porter Baring International Investment, Ltd. Richard P. Melick Brush Fibers, Inc. John F. McNamara Ian P. Moss Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky & Popeo, P.C. Eastern Refractories Company BEAR STEARNS & COMPANY, INC. Francis X. Meaney David S. Feinzig Keith H. Kretschmer Nissenbaum Law Offices Millard Metal Service Center FIDELITY Gerald L. Nissenbaum Donald Millard, Jr. INVESTMENTS/ FIDELITY FOUNDATION Nutter, McClennen & Fish Insurance Goldman, Sachs & Company John K. P. Stone III Peter D. Kiernan Arkwright PALMER & DODGE Frederick J. Bumpus KAUFMAN & COMPANY Robert E. Sullivan Sumner Kaufman CAMERON & COLBY CO., INC. Sarrouf, Tarricone & Flemming Lawrence S. Doyle THE KENSINGTON Camille F. Sarrouf INVESTMENT COMPANY Charles H. Watkins & Company Sherburne, Powers & Needham Alan E. Lewis Paul D. Bertrand Daniel Needham, Jr. Kidder, Peabody & Company Chubb Group International Weiss, Angoff, Coltin, Koski & John G. Higgins John Gillespie Wolf, P.C. LOOMIS-SAYLES & COMPANY, Dudley A. Weiss Consolidated Group, Inc. INC. Woolsey S. Conover Mark W. Hollands Munagement/Fi nunc ml/Consulting The Biltrite Corporation •Textron, Inc. ADVAXC 'ED management Stanley J. Bernstein B.F. Dolan ASSOCIATES Boston Acoustics, Inc. Wire Belt Company of America Harvey ( 'het Krentzman Frank Reel F. Wade (Jreer

ARTHUR D. LITTLE, INC. Boston Sand & G ravel Company John P. Magee Dean M. Boylan Media THE BOSTON GLOBE •Bain ft Company, Inc. •C.R. Bard, Inc. William 0. Taylor William W. Bain Robert II. McCaffrey THE BOSTON CONSULTING CENTURY MANUFACTURING BOSTON HERALD GROUP COMPANT Patrick J. Parcel] Jonathan L. Isaacs Joseph Tiberio WCRB- 102.5 FM Richard L. •Corporate Decisions •Chelsea Industries, Inc. Kaye David J. Morrison Ronald G. Casty WCYB-TV, CILVNNEL 5 BOSTON The Forum Corporation CONXELL LIMITED S. James Coppersmith John W. Humphrey PARTNERSHIP William F. Connell Personnel •Haynes Management, Inc. G. Arnold Haynes Dennison Manufacturing Company TAD TECHNICAL SERVICES Nelson G. Gifford CORPORATION Irma Mann Strategic Marketing David J. McGrath, Jr. Irma Mann Stearns •Erving Paper Mills Charles B. Housen Jason M. Cortell & Associates, Printing Inc. •FLEXcon Company, Inc. •Bradford & Bigelow, Inc. Jason M. Cortell Mark R. Ungerer John D. Galligan KAZMAIER ASSOCIATES, INC. GENERAL ELECTRIC PLASTICS Courier Corporation Richard W. Kazmaier, Jr. Glen H. Hiner Alden French, Jr. Lochridge & Company, Inc. General Latex and Chemical Corp. CPS Richard K. Lochridge Robert W. MacPherson Phineas E. Gay III MCKINSEY & COMPANY •Georgia-Pacific Corporation Customforms, Inc. Robert P. O'Block Maurice W. Kring David A. Granoff PRUDENTIAL-BACHE THE GILLETTE COMPANY SECURITIES Colman M. Mockler, Jr. DANIELS PRINTING COMPANY Lee S. Daniels David F. Remington GTE PRODUCTS CORPORATION Dean T. Langford *Espo Litho Co., Inc. •Rath & Strong David M. Fromer Dan Ciampa HARVARD FOLDING BOX COMPANY, INC. George H. Dean Company •Towers Perriii Melvin A. Ross Earle Michaud J. Russell Southworth H.K. Webster Company, Inc. GRAFACON, INC. •William M. Mercer Meidinger H. Rogers, Jr. Hansen Dean K. Webster Wayman Chester D. Clark HMK Group Companies, Ltd. Publishing •The Wyatt Company Joan L. Karol Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, Michael H. Davis Hudson Lock, Inc. Inc. Stavisky Yankelovich Clancy Norman Shulman Warren R. Stone Kevin Clancy •Kendall Company CAHNERS PUBLISHING COMPANY J. Dale Sherratt Manufacturer's Representatives Ron Segel LEACH & GARNER COMPANY MIFFLrN COMPANY BEN-MAC ENTERPRISES, INC. Philip F. Leach HOUGHTON Lawrence G. Benhardt Harold T. Miller Leggett & Piatt, Inc. Little, Brown Company KITCHEN, & KUTCHIN, INC. Alexander M. Levine & Melvin Kutchin Kevin L. Dolan NEW ENGLAND BUSINESS PAUL R. CAHN ASSOCIATES, SERVICE, INC. Real Estate/Development INC. Richard H. Rhoads Paul R. Cahn THE BEACON COMPANIES •New England Door Corporation Norman Leventhal Manufacturing/Industry Robert C. Frank Benjamin Schore Company •Pierce Aluminum Advanced Pollution Control Corp. Benjamin Schore Michael F. Flaherty, Jr. Robert W. Pierce •Boston Capital Partners •Avedis Zildjian Superior Brands, Inc. Company Christopher W. Collins Richard J. Phelps Armand Zildjian Herbert F. Collins •Barry Wright Corporation •Termiflex Corporation Richard J. DeAgazio Ralph Z. Sorenson William E. Fletcher John P. Manning The Chiofaro Company NEIMAN MARCUS Shaughnessy & Ahem Co. Donald Chiofaro William D. Roddy John J. Shaughnessy Combined Properties, Inc. * Purity Supreme Supermarkets Software/Information Services Stanton L. Black Frank P. Giacomazzi CULLINET SOFTWARE, INC. Demeter Realty Trust *Saks Fifth Avenue John J. Cullinane Alison Strieder Mayher George P. Demeter ""International Data Group FIRST WTNTHROP CORPORATION SEARS, ROEBUCK & Patrick J. McGovern Arthur J. Halleran, Jr. COMPANY *LOTUS DEVELOPMENT S. David Whipkey The Flatley Company CORPORATION Thomas J. Flatley Stop & Shop Foundation Jim P. Manzi Avram J. Goldberg, Trustee *The Fryer Group, Inc. *Phoenix Technologies Foundation Malcolm F. Fryer, Jr. Stop & Shop Company Neil Colvin Lewis Schaeneman, Chairman Heafitz Development Company Lewis Heafitz Suzanne Travel/Transportation Suzanne Seitz Hilon Development Corporation * Crimson Travel Service Haim S. Eliachar Tiffany & Co. David Paresky William Chaney "John M. Corcoran & Company Garber Travel John M. Corcoran THE TJX COMPANIES, INC. Bernard Garber Sumner Feldberg Nordblom Company The Hallamore Companies Roger P. Nordblom Science/Medical Dennis Barry, Sr.

Northland Investment Corporation Baldpate Hospital, Inc. *Heritage Travel, Inc. Robert A. Danziger Lucille M. Batal Donald R. Sohn

*Trammell Crow Company Blake & Blake Genealogists Arthur DeMartino Richard A. Blake, Jr. Telecommunications Urban Investment & Development CHARLES RD7ER AT&T Rudy K. Umscheid LABORATORIES, INC. Robert Babbitt Henry L. Foster MCI * Portsmouth Regional Hospital Nathan Kantor Retail William J. Schuler NEW ENGLAND TELEPHONE Beverly Hills Flowers of Boston *CompuChem Corporation COMPANY Anthony DePari Gerard Kees Verkerk Paul C. O'Brien

Child World, Inc. DAMON CORPORATION NORTHERN TELECOM, INC.

Dennis H. Barron David I. Kosowsky John Craig

DEMOULAS FOUNDATION J.A. Webster, Inc. NYNEX CORPORATION T.A. Demoulas John A. Webster Delbert C. Staley

FILENE'S Lectro-Med Health Screening David P. Mullen Services, Inc. Utilities Allan Kaye * Hills Department Stores BOSTON EDISON COMPANY Stephen A. Goldberger Services Stephen J. Sweeney

JORDAN MARSH COMPANY *Asquith Corporation EASTERN ENTERPRISES Richard F. Van Pelt Lawrence L. Asquith Robert W. Weinig

Karten's Jewelers *Giltspur Exhibits/Boston New England Electric System Joel Karten Thomas E. Knott Joan T. Bok

53 colla EROS AND OTHER COMPLICATIONS new music April 2, 1990,8:00 pm Longy School of Music, Cambridge, MA

Conducted by John Harbison Edith Diggery, mezzo-soprano

Jonathan D. Kramer Atlanta Licks John Harbison November 19, 1828* George Edwards Suave Man Magno* Fred Lerdahl Eros

*Boston Premiere

Tickets :$ 10.00 general admission; $5.00 students & senior citizens. Available in advance at all BOSTIX/Ticketron locations or by calling Teletron (1-800-382-8080). For information, call (617) 776-3166.

SARGENT ESTATE

BROOKLINE . . . Built in 1948 on 6.25 secluded acres in the exceptional Sargent Estate, this elegant residence features a recep- tion hall with antique mahogany paneling, a for- mal dining room (26' x 18') with random marble floor, an ultra modern designer kitchen with granite countertops, and a spacious family room with PLEASE CALL: a beamed cathedral ceiling and a fireplace. There is Aileen B. Cabitt John M. Riley garage parking for five cars, (617) 969-2447 Office (617) 731-2447 Office tennis courts, and the pos- (617) 731-2497 Residence (617) 489-5469 Residence sibility of additional build- Marketed By: able lots on the grounds. Better HUNNEMAN #ft . . . $5,600,000 & COMPANY • REALTORS I ^^M HOITieS,,, ™™ A -*- and Gardens® Thirty-three offices throughout New England

54 The Boston Symphony Orchestra is grateful to those contributors who so generously responded our fundraising programs during the past sea- Boston to son. Membership in the Higginson Society is Symphony awarded to those individuals whose gifts to the Annual Boston Symphony Annual Fund together with Fund their actual gifts to the general endowment funds

of the Orchestra, total $1,250 or more. This list

KEEP GREAT MUSIC ALIVE reflects gifts received between September 1, 1988 and August 31, 1989.

The Higginson Society

Patrons

Mr. and Mrs. Vernon R. Alden Mrs. Marion Dubbs Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Lyman Mr. and Mrs. Stephen H. Anthony Mrs. Harris Fahnestock Mr. and Mrs. William D. Manice Mr. and Mrs. David B. Arnold Hon. and Mrs. John H. Fitzpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Marks Mr. and Mrs. J.P. Barger Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Fraser Charlotte N. May Mr. and Mrs. John Barnard, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dean W. Freed Mrs. August R. Meyer Dr. and Mrs. Leo L. Beranek Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Germeshausen Mr. and Mrs. Nathan R. Miller

Dr. and Mrs. Edward F. Bland Carol R. and Avram J. Goldberg Mrs. Robert B. Newman Mrs. Henry M. Bliss Mr. and Mrs. John B. Goodwin Stephen Paine, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel W. Bodman III Haskell and Ina Gordon Mrs. James H. Perkins Mr. and Mrs. John M. Bradley Mrs. Rosamond Gowen Miss Pauline Perry Mrs. Ralph Bradley Mr. and Mrs. John L. Grandin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Poorvu Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Brooke Barbara and Steven Grossman Mr. and Mrs. Irving W. Rabb Mrs. Helene R. Cahners-Kaplan Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Hatch Mr. and Mrs. Daniel E. Rothenberg Earle M. Chiles Ms. Susan Morse Hilles Mrs. George R. Rowland Mr. and Mrs. C. Thomas Clagett, Jr. Mrs. Ellen O. Jennings Mrs. George Lee Sargent Mr. and Mrs. James F. Cleary Mr. and Mrs. Bela T. Kalman Mr. and Mrs. Roger A. Saunders Mrs. George HA. Clowes Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Kaye Dr. and Mrs. Raymond H. Schneider Mr. and Mrs. John F. Cogan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George H. Kidder Mr. and Mrs. George G. Schwenk Julian and Eunice Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Allen Kluchman Richard and Susan Smith Foundation Mrs. Nat Cole Mr. and Mrs. Carl Koch Dr. and Mrs. W. Davies Sohier Mr. and Mrs. Abram T. Collier Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Chet Krentzman Mr. and Mrs. Ray Stata Mr. and Mrs. William F. Connell Mr. and Mrs. George Krupp Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Stoneman Mrs. A. Werk Cook Dr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Land Miss Elizabeth B. Storer

Mr. and Mrs. Lewis S. Dabney Mr. and Mrs. R. Willis Leith, Jr. William F. and Juliana W. Thompson

Mr. and Mrs. Nelson J. Darling, Jr. Mrs. Ellis Little John and Samantha Williams

Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Caleb Loring, Jr. Mrs. John J. Wilson Mrs. Pierre De Beaumont Mrs. Frederick H. Lovejoy, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius A. Wood, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Charles C. Dickinson Dr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Lovejoy, Jr.

Sponsors

Mr. and Mrs. Harlan E. Anderson Prof, and Mrs. Ray A. Goldberg Mr. and Mrs. Gordon F. Kingsley Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood E. Bain Mr. and Mrs. Jordan L. Golding Philip Krupp Mr. and Mrs. David Bakalar Mrs. Henry M. Greenleaf Dr. Harry Levinson Mr. and Mrs. Bruce A. Beal Mr. and Mrs. James H. Grew Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Morse

Roger and Florence Chesterton-Norris Frank J. Hagney, Maj (Ret.) Mr. and Mrs. William B. Moses, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Eugene H. Clapp II Rosamond Eleanor Hagney (d) Ms. Carolyn G. Mugar Mrs. Walter Connor Mr. and Mrs. Bayard Henry Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. O'Block Mr. and Mrs. Alex V. dArbeloff Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Hubbard Mrs. Andrew Palmer Ms. Phyllis Dohanian Mr. and Mrs. Christopher W. Hurd Nancy Edgehill Perry Mrs. Charles Freedom Eaton, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. S. Charles Kasdon Mrs. Daphne Brooks Prout

Mrs. Beverly Brooks Floe Robert J. Kaufman Mr. and Mrs. David I. Riemer Mrs. Anne Dudley Gill Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. King Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Rosse Mr. and Mrs. Michael B. Salke Mrs. Patricia Hansen Strang Charles M. Werly Miss Sylvia Sandeen Mr. and Mrs. John L. Thorndike Miss Christine White

Mr. arid Mrs. Francis P. Sears Mrs. Irving Usen Mrs. Margaret Williams-DeCelles Mrs. Donald B. Sinclair Dr. and Mrs. Charles W. Mr. and Mrs. Erwin N. Ziner Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Stearns von Rosenberg, Jr. Anonymous (4)

Fellows

Mrs. Weston W. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Galligan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bertram R. Paley

Mrs. Julius II. Appleton John Gamble Mrs. Leo N. Panesevich Mrs. Richard E. Bennink Mrs. Morton R. Godine Mrs. Paul Pigors James K. Beranek Mrs. Charles L. Hibbard, Jr. Mrs. Harry Remis W. Walter Boyd Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Hill Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Remis Mr. and Mrs. William L. Brown Mr. and Mrs. George F. Hodder Mr. and Mrs. William C. Rousseau xMr. and Mrs. Eric T. Clarke Mr. and Mrs. Amos B. Hostetter, Jr. Robert Segel Dr. and Mrs. Stewart H. Clifford Mrs. Dewitt John Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm L. Sherman Mr. and Mrs. William H. Congleton Ms. Susan B. Kaplan and Mr. Ami Trauber Dr. and Mrs. Fredrick J. Stare

Walter J. Connolly, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Kucharski Stephen Tilton Mr. and Mrs. John L. Cooper Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Levy Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H.P. Whitney Mr. and Mrs. Eugene B. Doggett Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Millar Anonymous (6) Mr. and Mrs. Goetz B. Eaton Robert M. Morse Mrs. Robert G. Fuller Mr. and Mrs. E. James Morton

Members

Mr. and Mrs. William F. Achtmeyer Mr. and Mrs. Stanford Calderwood Mr. and Mrs. Bradford M. Endicott Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Adams Mrs. Elizabeth Paine Card Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fain Mrs. John M. Alden Mr. and Mrs. Harold Caro Peter Feith Mrs. Frank G. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Carr Mrs. Sewall H. Fessenden Mrs. Charles Almy Ms. Virgina L. Carroll Mr. and Mrs. Murray W. Finard

Mr. and Mrs. James B. Ames Mrs. Barbara S. Chase Miss Anna E. Finnerty Mr. and Mrs. Walter Amory Charles Christenson Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Ford Mr. and Mrs. David L. Anderson James Russell Clarke, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Henry L. Foster Prof, and Mrs. Rae D. Anderson Ms. Mary Hart Cogan Mr. and Mrs. Robert L.V. French

Mrs. Elsie J. Apthorp Mr. and Mrs. I.W. Colburn Dr. and Mrs. Orrie M. Friedman Mr. and Mrs. Harry Axelrod Mr. and Mrs. Aaron H. Cole Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Gable Mr. and Mrs. Hazen H. Ayer Mr. and Mrs. Marvin A. Collier Mr. and Mrs. William H. Ganick Mr. and Mrs. Donald P. Babson Harold G. Colt Thomas Gardiner Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Bailey Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Cooper III Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Gerrity Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Bajakian Mrs. Patricia E. Crandall Dr. and Mrs. Donald B. Giddon

Dr. and Mrs. William H. Baker Mrs. John Crocker Mr. and Mrs. Bert J. Gilbert Mrs. Norman V. Ballou Mr. and Mrs. William M. Crozier, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Giuffrida Kenneth C. Barron Mr. and Mrs. Ronald C. Curhan The Goldberg Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Y. Barrow Mr. and Mrs. Eric Cutler Mrs. Robert F. Goldhammer

Mr. and Mrs. Clifford B. Barrus, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Davis II Mr. and Mrs. Mark R. Goldweitz Mr. and Mrs. Allen G. Barry Mr. and Mrs. Stanton W. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Saul Goldweitz Mr. and Mrs. Robert B.M. Barton Miss Amy Davol Mrs. Sylvan A. Goodman Mr. and Mrs. John E. Beard Mrs. F. Stanton Deland, Jr. Mrs. Harry N. Gorin Mr. and Mrs. George W. Berry Nathaniel T. Dexter Mrs. Stephen W. Grant Mr. and Mrs. Jordan Birger Mr. and Mrs. Allen F. Dickerman Mr. and Mrs. E. Brainard Graves

Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Bowersock, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Dickison Mr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Gregory Mrs. Alexander H. Bright Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Downing Mr. and Mrs. Harold K. Gross Mr. and Mrs. Allan T. Buros Dr. Richard W. Dwight Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Guild, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Paul A. Buttenweiser Mrs. Otto Eckstein Mr. and Mrs. Graham Gund Mrs. Mary Louise Cabot Mr. and Mrs. William Elfers Mrs. Elisabeth F. Hale

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Cabot Mrs. Alexander Ellis, Jr. Mrs. Henry S. Hall, Jr.

Milton Cades Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Emmet Mr. and Mrs. R. Douglas Hall III

56 Hallowell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Wells Morss Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Spaulding jlrs. N. Penrose B. Hangstefer David G. Mugar Mr. and Mrs. Ira Stepanian Mr. and Mrs. James Hannah Mr. and Mrs. Raymond F. Murphy, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert B. Stern Mr. and Mrs. Paul P. Hauser Makito Nagashima Mr. and Mrs. Ezra F. Stevens Mr. and Mrs. Ham- R. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin B. Nessel Mrs. Edward S. Stimpson Daniel P. Hays Miss Alice B. Newell Mr. and Mrs. Harris E. Stone Mr. and Mrs. Joe M. Henson Mr. and Mrs. Rodger P. Nordblom Mr. and Mrs. Henry S. Stone Mr and Mrs. Noah T. Herndon Hiatt Mrs. Richard P. Nyquist Mr. and Mrs. James W. Storey Mr. and Mrs. Arnold S. Miss Mary-Catherine O'Neill Ms. Barbara P. Swaebe Mrs. Richard R. Higgins Mrs. Andrew Oliver Dr. and Mrs. Nathan B. Talbot Mrs. Waldo H. Holcombe Miss Grace Marshall Otis Mr. and Mrs. John F. Taplin Mr. and Mrs. D. Brainerd Holmes Mr. Mrs. Stephen Davies Paine Mrs. Charles H. Taylor Carleton A. Holstrom and Mrs. Robert W. Palm Mr. and Mrs. William 0. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Ronald A. Homer Mrs. Walter H. Palmer Mr. and Mrs. Theodore H. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen P. Hopkins Mr. and Harrison D. Horblit Gary M. Palter Teplow Dr. and Mrs. Richard H. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel A. Hosage Mrs. Brackett Parsons Thompson Mr. and Mrs. William White Howells Dr. and Mrs. Oglesby Paul Mr. and Mrs. Richard K. Ms. Charmienne Hughes Mr. and Mrs. George W. Pearce Thorndike

Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hunnewell Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Phillips Mr. and Mrs. W. Nicholas Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hyman Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Phillips Thorndike

Mrs. James Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Phippen Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Tichnor C.H. Jenkins, Jr. Sandra B. and William LaC. Phippen Mr. and Mrs. John Tillinghast

E. Morton Jennings Mr. and Mrs. John R. Pingree Dr. and Mrs. Eugene J. Tillman

Mr. and Mrs. Stanley H. Kaplan Mrs. Hollis Plimpton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen G. Traynor

Mrs. Louise Shonk Kelly Mr. and Mrs. David R. Pokross Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Trippe, Jr. Mason J.O. Klinek Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pratt Mrs. Richard F. Treadway

Mr. and Mrs. William Kopans Mr. and Mrs. Richard Preston Mrs. George C. Underwood

Dr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Kravitz Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Read Mr. and Mrs. John H. Valentine

Edward J. Kutlowski Mr. and Mrs. David F. Remington Mr. and Mrs. Roger L. Voisin

Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin II. Lacy Mrs. Charles A. Rheault, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James N.

Mr. and Mrs. Allen Latham, -]v. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene J. Rihakoff Von Germeten

Mrs. James F. Lawrence Mr. and Mrs. David Rockefeller, Jr. Mrs. Roland von Weber

Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Lawrence Mr and Mrs. John Ex Rodgers Mrs. H. St. John Webb Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Lazarus Mr. and Mrs. Warren M. Rohsenow Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Weber Dr. and Mrs. Brian W.A. Leeming Jerry Rosen Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Weinstein Dr. and Mrs. Clinton X. Levin Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Rosenfeld Mr. and Mrs. Matthew C. Weisman Barbara and Irving Lew Dr. Jordan S. Rubov Mrs. Barrett Wendell, Jr.

Mr and Mrs Edward II. Linde Mr. and Mrs. Robert Saltonstall Miss Barbara West

Mrs. Man- Ann Harris Livens Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Sandler Stetson Whitcher

Ms. Isabelle Lloyd A. Herbert Sandwen Dr. and Mrs. Harold J. White Mrs. John Lloyd Mr. and Mrs. John G. Schmid Robert W. White Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Lombard Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Schmid Mrs. Florence T. Whitney Mr. and Mrs. John P. Magee Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Scott Richard T. Whitney Mr. and Mrs. Amos ('. Mathews Mr. and Mrs. Michael S. Scott Morton Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Williams

Dr. Clinton P. Miller and Alan II. Scovell Mr. and Mrs. Keith G. Willoughby Ms. Adele Wick Mr. and Mrs. Charles X. Shane Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Wilson Mrs. Dudley L. Millikin Ms. Barbara sidell Robert Windsor Mr. and Mrs. Adolf P. Monosson Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Sinclair Sherman M. Wolf Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Mont rone Mrs. Lawrence W. Snell Miss Elizabeth Woolley Mrs OlneyS. Morrill Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey P. Somers Anonymous (14)

57 GUILD, MONRAD & OATES, INC. Family Investment Advisers

50 Congress Street Boston, Massachusetts 02109 Telephone: (617) 523-1320

For Those Who Want Specialized Individual Attention and Care in the Management of Investments and Tax and Estate Planning

Henry R. Guild, Jr. Ernest E. Monrad William A. Oates, Jr. Robert B. Minturn, Jr.

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Friends

$600 - $1,249

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Abeles Mr. and Mrs. Morton S. Grossman Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm D. Perkins Miss Barbara Adams Mr. and Mrs. Ralph L. Gustin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Pierce Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Aldrieh Mrs. Carl W. Haffenreffer Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Pitts Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Barnes Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Hammer Russell E. Planitzer Mr. and Mrs. W. Bentinck-Smith Mr. and Mrs. Milan A. Heath, Jr. Mr. Anthony Piatt and Ms. Nancy Goodwin Mrs. Arthur W. Bingham Mr. and Mrs. Edwin W. Hiam Mrs. Fairfield E. Raymond Mr. and Mrs. Walter W. Birge HI Gordon Holmes Ms. Patricia B. Rice Peter M. Black Mrs. Louise P. Hook Dr. and Mrs. Karl Riemer Mrs. Lenore Boehm Mrs. David H. Howie Mr. and Mrs. Frederic A. Sharf Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bremner Miss Sidney Hudig Mr. and Mrs. George A. Shaps Bartol Brinkler Mr. and Mrs. James F. Hunnewell Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shenton

Mrs. Adrian J. Broggini Shigenori Imaizumi Mrs. Gordon Smith Dr. Nancy L. R. Bucher Miss Elizabeth B. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Snyder Mrs. Berta M. Cammarano Mr. and Mrs. Paul Jameson Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Z. Sorenson Dr. and Mrs. Bradford Cannon Mr. and Mrs. Howard W. Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Lamar Soutter Mr. and Mrs. James W. Carter Sen. Edward M. Kennedy Mr. and Mrs. Samuel R. Spiker George A. Chamberlain IH Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keohanne Mr. and Mrs. John K. Spring, Sr. David Cheever HI William Kermond Dr. and Mrs. Walter St. Goar Mrs. William Claflin HI Mr. and Mrs. David Knight Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Stagg Mrs. William 0. Clark Mrs. F. Danby Lackey Mrs. Robert Stearns Mr. and Mrs. Loring W. Coleman James R. Lajoie Mr. and Mrs. Maximilian Steinmann Mr. and Mrs. Michael 0. Craig Mr. and Mrs. David L. Landay Mrs. Anson P. Stokes

Mr. and Mrs. Alexander T. Daignault Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Lazarus Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Sweeney Mr. and Mrs. Morris Darling Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Leavitt, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony A. Tambone

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Devens Mrs. George C. Lee Mrs. John I. Taylor Mrs. Franklin Dexter Mrs. Emily Saltonstall Lewis Robert Tello Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Dober Graham Atwell Long G. Robert Tod Paul Doguereau Ms. Anne Lovett Mr. and Mrs. George R. Walker Ms. Ella Dolan Mrs. Carlton R. Mabley Mr. and Mrs. John P. Weitzel Elbert Drazy Mr. and Mrs. John P. Madden John M. Wells

Mr. and Mrs. William R. Driver, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Satoru Masamune Julien Vose Weston

Mr. and Mrs. Archie Epps Mrs. David S. McLellan Mr. and Mrs. John W. White

Ms. Martha A. Erickson Mrs. Roy R. Merchant, Jr. Mrs. M. L. Wilding-White

Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis Farley Dr. and Mrs. Gordon S. Myers Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Williams Paul H. Farris Mrs. Justin O'Brien Sally and Dudley Willis

Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Fisher Mr. and Mrs. William J. O'Connor Mr. and Mrs. Leslie J. Wilson

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Antony Fisher Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. O'Rourke Mr. and Mrs. David J. Winstanley Stefan M. Freudenberger Mr. and Mrs. George A. Ott Ms. Katharine Winthrop

Miss Eleanor Garfield Christopher A. Pantaleoni Mr. and Mrs. John M. Woolsey, Jr. Robert P. Giddings Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Paresky Mr. and Mrs. Edward Younis

Nelson and Amy Gore Dr. and Mrs. Jack S. Parker Anonymous (10) Mrs. Charles D. Gowing Mr. and Mrs. John A. Perkins

Friends

$300 - $599

Mrs. Herbert Abrams Mr. and Mrs. Raymond P. Atwood Rev. and Mrs. Frank J. Bauer Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Adams Mrs. Richard Baer Ms. Martha Bean Frank Adams Dr. and Mrs. George P. Baker, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Martin D. Becker

Ms. Shirley Adams Joseph S. Banks Mr. and Mrs. Gerald A. Berlin Mr. and Mrs. Jack Adelson Yonathon Bard Mrs. Paul Bernat

Mr. and Mrs. Alex F. Althausen B. Devereux Barker, Jr. William I. Bernell Mr. and Mrs. Oliver F. Ames Dr. and Mrs. W. B. Barker Mrs. Charles S. Bird m Mrs. L. Hathaway Amsbary Miss Anahid Barmakian Mr. and Mrs. John B. Bishop Mr. and Mrs. John E. Andrews II Mr. and Mrs. Brewster Barnard Mr. and Mrs. George Blagden

Richard D. Angel Rev. Robert E. Barrett Mr. and Mrs. William C. Blanker

Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Applegate Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Barrett Mr. and Mrs. Constantin R. Boden

Ms. Sarah Webb Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Barstow Judge Charles S. Bolster

Mr. and Mrs. John Aspinwall Mr. and Mrs. Michael E. Barton Miss Rhoda C. Bonville Mrs. Vincent V. K. Booth Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Fishburn Miss Carol F. Ishimoto Mrs. James L. Boyd Miss Elaine Foster Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Jack Mr. and Mrs. Henry K. Bramhall, Jr. John A. Fox Martin L. Jack

Mr. and Mrs William M. Breed Mrs. Edward L. Francis Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jackson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John D. Brewer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Frank Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. E. Burton Brown Mr. and Mrs Maynard Freedman Mrs. Paul M. Jacobs

Mi- and Mrs. Jacob B. Brown, Jr. Mrs. Charles Mack Ganson William R. and Pamela Johnson

Jeffrey and Nancy Budge Mrs. Robert H. Gardiner Mr. and Mrs. Howland B. Jones, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Cabot Mrs. Joseph Gaziano Dr. and Mrs. Nissim Joseph Miss Hannah C. Campbell Rabbi and Mrs. Everett E. Gendler Jacqueline M. Jung Mr and Mrs. Philip E. Campbell Robert J. Gerardi Dr. and Mrs. Charles F. Kane

Leon M. Cangiano, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Gerry Francis Kane Mrs. Ephron Catlin Mr. and Mrs. John R. Ghublikian Ms. Sarah Kantor

Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Cavaretta Steven Gilbert Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Kaplan Ms. Starr Chambers and Alan R. Goff Ms. Dorothy Karg

Mr. Thomas Deegan Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Goldberg Ms. Paula C. Keenan Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Chapin Malcolm H. Goodman Mr. and Mrs. Raymond L. Kelly

Ms. Suzanne Chapman Mr. and Mrs. William Goodman Mrs. F. Corning Kenly, Jr.

William F. Chase II Ms. Lesli Gordon Mrs. Prescott L. Kettell

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel S. Cheever Mr. and Mrs. William H. Gorham Dr. Samuel H. Kim

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Y. Chittick, Jr. Hon. Willis D. Gradison Mr. and Mrs. James E. Kimball II Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Chrane Dr. and Mrs. Paul E. Gray Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Kimball Mr. and Mrs. Putnam Cillley Mr. and Mrs. Alan Green Mr. and Mrs. Allen Kluchman Mrs. Miles Nelson Clair George L. Greenfield Mr. and Mrs. David C. Knapp

Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C. Clark, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Grimes Mr. and Mrs. Russell W. Knight Lincoln Clark Ms. Mona Gross Ms. Eunice M. Kohler Robert Clemence Mrs. Julius Grossman Dr. and Mrs. William Kornfeld

Mrs. S. H. M. Clinton Kenneth G. Haas Mr. and Mrs. George S. Kouri F. Douglas Cochrane Dr. and Mrs. Edgar Haber Mr. and Mrs. James N. Krebs Ms. Lois Coit Mr. and Mrs. Arthur T. Hadley Mr. and Mrs. Selwyn A. Kudisch Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Colby IH Mrs. John M. Haffenreffer Mr. and Mrs. Peter Lacaillade Mrs. Gilman W. Conant Mr. and Mrs. George A. Hall Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Ladd Johns H. Congdon Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Hamburger Miss Rosamond Lamb Mr. and Mrs. John Cook Mrs. Robert T. Hamlin Dr. and Mrs. John H. Lamont Mrs. William Corbett Lincoln Hansel Mr. and Mrs. Gene Landy Mr. and Mrs. David Baer Cotton Mrs. Arthur W. Harris Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Lang

Dr. and Mrs. Nathan P. Couch Neal J. Harte Dr. Catherine Coolidge Lastavica Marc H. Cramer Mr. and Mrs. Baron M. Hartley Miss Elizabeth Lathrop Mr. and Mrs. Frederic Crane, Jr. Mrs. Murray C. Harvey Dr. and Mrs. William B. Latta Mr. and Mrs. Julian Crocker Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hayden Frederick M. Lawton

Mr. and Mrs. David C. Crockett Mrs. James J. Hayes Mrs. Paul B. Le Baron

Dr. and Mrs. Perry J. Culver Mr. and Mrs. Thomas B. Haynes Phillip F. Leach

Ms. Carol M. Cunningham Mrs. Harold L. Hazen Mr. and Mrs. David S. Lee

Mrs. Ernest B. Dane, Jr. Ms. Mary Ann Head Dr. and Mrs. Merle A. Legg Mrs. Clarence A. Dauber Mrs. Donald C. Heath Richard Leventhal Ms. Elizabeth Davis Mrs. David P. Heilner Laurence W. Levine Dr. and Mrs. Roman W. DeSanctis Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Henderson Mrs. Jo Levinson

Mr. and Mrs. Taul A. Deal, Jr. Dr. Philip D. Herrick Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Lichman

Mrs. Brenton H. Dickson III Mrs. Caroline Lee Herter Dr. and Mrs. Elia Lipton

Ms. Victoria J. Dodd Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Hickey John M. Loder Miss Sally Dodge Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hicks Mr. and Mrs. Victor A. Lutnicki Mr. and Mrs. Armen Dohanian Richard A. Hicks Christopher Lydon Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Don Mr. and Mrs. Denny High Mrs. George H. Lyman, Jr. Mrs. Malcolm Donald Mrs. Emmy D. Hilsinger Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lyman, Jr. Alfred B. Downes Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Hinkle Mrs. Richard W. Lyman

Richard R. Downey Mr. and Mrs. Karl J. Hirshman Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Lynch, Jr. Mrs. Carl Durei Mrs. Lowell M. Hollingsworth Ms. Karen MacDougall

Ms. Marjorie C. Dyer Mrs. Harry P. Hood, Jr. Peter MacDougall

Rev. and Mrs. William S. Eaton Ms. Priscilla L. Hook Douglas N. MacPherson Mrs. Eleanor B. Edwards Miss Isabel B. Hooker Mr. and Mrs. David MacNeill Mrs. Philip Eiseman Dr. and Mrs. Terry Howard Dr. and Mrs. Hywel Madoc-Jones

Mr. and Mrs. William V. Ellis Mrs. David E. Howe Charles Francis Mahoney Mrs. A. Bradlee Emmons Roger H. Howland John Mahoney Felix Ermanis Mr. and Mrs. Franklin K. Hoyt Mr. and Mrs. Gael Mahony

Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Fadem Mr. and Mrs. Henry S. Hoyt Mr. and Mrs. William S. Malcom

Mette and Julius Feinleib Dr. Richard F. Hoyt, Jr. Ms. Therese A. Maloney

Martin P. Feldman Mrs. Henry S. Huber Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Manzelli Dr. Harvey V. Fineberg and Dr. and Mrs. Roger L. Hybels Mr. and Mrs. William M. Marcus Dr. Mary E. Wilson Mark Hyman, Jr. Dr. Judith Marquis Mrs. Gerald M. Mayer, Jr. James and Melinda Rabb Dr. and Mrs. Somers II . Sturgis Ms. Joanne M. McCarthy Mr. and Mrs. Norman S. Rabb Miss Faith Thayer Sulloway Dr. Kathryn A. McCarthy Dr. Robert M. Rawen Mr. and Mrs. Elliot M. Surkin

Mrs. Maurice J. McCarthy Mr. and Mrs. John Re Mrs. Omur Tasar Dr. and Mrs. William M. McDermott Mr. and Mrs. Henry S. Reeder, Jr. Timothy G. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. McDonnell Mr. and Mrs. Bernard N. Reynolds Mr. and Mrs. Everett A. Ten Brook Mr. and Mrs. Raymond W. McKittrick Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Richards Mrs. Alfred Thomas Mrs. Patricia Mcleod Mr. and Mrs. Frederick V. Richardson, Jr. Mrs. Charlotte Thompson Mrs. Eugene Merkert Mr. and Mrs. Harold Righter Mr. and Mrs. Mark Tishler Mr. and Mrs. Leon D. Michelove Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Riley III Miss Alice Tully

Mr. and Mrs. Francis S. Moulton Mr. and Mrs. James Ring C. Robert Tully Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Moulton Dr. and Mrs. Richard M. Robb Ms. Carol E. Tully

Ms. Martha S. Mugar Mr. and Mrs. Owen W. Robbins Mr. and Mrs. Victor M. Tyler

Ms. Marilyn S. Murphy Mrs. David G. Robinson Dr. and Mrs. Howard Ulfelder Stewart Myers Mr. and Mrs. Hugo D. Rockett Mr. and Mrs. W. Alan Vandenburgh Mr. and Mrs. Andrew L. Nichols Dr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Gordon F. Vawter Mrs. Louville Niles Dr. and Mrs. A. Daniel Rubenstein Mr. and Mrs. Jack H. Vernon Ms. Mariko Noda Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence G. Rubin Dr. and Mrs. Ingvars J. Vittands Rev. Joseph James O'Hare III Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Russell Mrs. Charles F. Walcott Ms. Betty Luther Ogle William T. Salisbury, Esq. Mr. and Mrs. William G. Walker Mrs. George Olmsted Mrs. Wilbert R. Sanger Mrs. Dorothy Wallace

Miss Esther E. Osgood Mr. and Mrs. Ernest J. Sargeant Mr. and Mrs. Howland S. Warren

Ms. Helen R. Pall Ms. Suzanne Satterfield Mrs. Sue S. Watson

Ms. Katharine F. Pantzer Mr. and Mrs. Gary L. Saunders Mr. and Mrs. Walter Watson II

Mrs. Richard J. Pape John H. Saxe Mr. and Mrs. Paul R. Weaver Ms. Man' B. Parent Mrs. Frances W. Schaefer Ms. Susan Weber Mr. and Mrs. William Park Robert W. Schlundt Mr. and Mrs. David Zach Webster Franklin E. Parker Ms. Carole M. Schnizer Adam Weisblatt Miss Harriet F. Parker Dr. and Mrs. Leslie R. Schroeder Paul F. Weiss Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Parry Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H. Sears Mrs. Francis C. Welch Mrs. Helen W. Parsons Dr. and Mrs. Howard Shapiro Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wellington

Mrs. Martha S. Patrick Dr. and Mrs. Jerome H. Shapiro Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wengren Dr. and Mrs. James T. Patten Mrs. Francis G. Shaw Mrs. Mark R. Werman Robert and Jean Pelletier Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Siegfried Ms. Carrie Weyerhauser

Mr. and Mrs. Martin Peretz Mrs. Jeannette S. Simon Mrs. Betty Wheeler David B. Perini Mr. and Mrs. Edgar A. Smith Mrs. George Macy Wheeler

Miss Sylvia Perkins Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Smith John Hazen White

Mr. and Mrs. E. Lee Perry Ms. Peggy Snow Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Whitehead H. Angus Perry Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Solomon Mr. and Mrs. Amos N. Wilder Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Peters Mrs. Josiah A. Spaulding John P. Wilkins Mr. and Mrs. Vincent F. Petroni Mrs. Hester D. Sperduto Mrs. Shepard F. Williams

Ms. Barbara W. Phinney Capt. and Mrs. Roy M. Springer, Jr. Mrs. Margaret W. Winslow Maureen Philips and Douglas Horst, MD Mr. and Mrs. James R. Squire Dr. Brunetta R. Wolfman (' Man-in Pickett, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Staats Ms. Mary Wolfson Anthony M. Pisani Dr. and Mrs. David G. Stahl Dr. and Mrs. Edward F. Woods Mr. and Mrs. Leo M. Pistorino Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Stampler Mrs. Frederic P. Worthen

Mr. and Mrs. David E. Place Mr. and Mrs. Glenn D. Steele, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William R. Wright Mr. and Mrs. Alvar W. Polk, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joel Stein Dr. and Mrs. Haney Zarren George J. Power Norman Stein Hans P. Ziegler Mr. and Mrs. Richard Prouty Mr. and Mrs. Josiah Stevenson IV Mrs. Vincent C. Ziegler

Richard Quinn Mr. and Mrs. Galen L. Stone Anonymous (30)

Friends

$100 - $299 David Allen Dr. Gerald Aaronson Dr. and Mrs. Thomas W. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Howard D. Allen Mrs William Abbot Edward Addison Mrs. Stephen G. Allen Mrs Linda Abegglen Ralf A. Adolfsson Mr. and Mrs. John R. Allison Mr. and Mrs. John Abele Mrs. Seth M. Agnew Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Alperin Mrs Milton G. Abramson Dr. and Mrs. Barry J. Agranat Edward Alterman

Ms. Elizabeth Accorsi Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Aibel Ms. Anita A. Amadei Robert Ackart Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Alberty Hajime Amano Mrs. John A. Adair Ms. Elizabeth Alden Richard Amato Ms. Denise R. Adams Ms. Marcia S. Alevizos Joseph M. Ambrose Mrs. John Q. Adams Ms. Carol Alexander Mrs. Theodore Ames Ms. Pamela D. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Alvin B. Allen Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Anastos Mrs. Thomas H. Adams, Jr. Mrs. Ann Allen Edward G. Andelman

61 David and Melinda Anderson Dr Benjamin A. Barnes Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Berkowitz Mrs. E. Ross Anderson Ms. Beth Barnes Miss Bessie A. Berman Ms. Elaine Zeitz Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Barnes Mr. and Mrs. Edward Berman Mr. and Mrs. Jay Anderson Paul Barresi Mrs Estelle Berman Mr. and Mrs. John A. Anderson, Jr. Dr. Beatriea H. Barrett Dr. and Mrs. Harris A. Berman Ms Susan Anderson Douglas M. Barrett Carol and Harvey Berman Mrs. F. William Andres Edmund E. Barrett Mrs. David W. Bernstein

James R. Andrew Dr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Barrie Mr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Bernstein

H. J. Andrews Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Barrow Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Berry

Leonard J. Andrews Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Barry Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Bertrand

Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Anthony II Ms. Joan B. Barry Richard L. Berube Dr. and Mrs. Mortimer Appley Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Bartlett Miss Barbara Betts Mr. and Mrs. William T. Appleyard Dr. and Mrs. Marshall K. Bartlett Gus Bevona Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Armknecht, Jr. Mrs. Randolph P. Barton Mr. and Mrs. Philip W. Bianchi Mrs. Horace L. Arnold Peter A. Barzidines Frederic Bick Mr. and Mrs. John Arnold Mrs. Georgia K. Basbanes Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin E. Bierbaum

Ms. Irene Aronin Mr. and Mrs. Harris I. Baseman Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Bigelow Mr. and Mrs. Martin L. Aronson Ms. Margaret E. Bass Mrs. V. Stoddard Bigelow

Myrna and Martin Aronson Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Bastille Ms. Dorothea S. Birch

Richard S. Aronson Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth J. Bate Mrs. Anna Child Bird Ms. Susan Ary Prof, and Mrs. George E. Bates Desmond H. Birkett

G. Michael Ashmore Ms. Marion C. Bates Mr. and Mrs. John P. Birmingham, Jr. Mrs. Frederick W. Atherton Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel B. Bates Mrs. D. Scott Birney Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Aucoin Dr. and Mrs. George E. Battit Donald Bishop Mr. and Mrs. David Auerbach Boyden C. Batty Mrs. Eva F. Bitsberger

Mrs. W. Gerald Austen Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Bauerband, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert E. Bixler

Mr. and Mrs. Dalton J. Avery Mrs. William Baumrucker Mr. and Mrs. Angus C. Black, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Paul F. Avery, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David Bayer Roland Blackburn, Jr.

Miss Grazia Avitabile Mrs. James C. Bayley Mr. and Mrs. Don C. Blacklaw Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Axelrod Mr. and Mrs. John H. Beale Jim Blades

Dr. Lloyd Axelrod Mrs. Philip C. Beals Graham Blaine

Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Axten Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Beatley Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin S. Blake Mr. and Mrs. William E. Aydelott Miss Anne Beauchemin Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Blakelock James C. Ayer Joseph Beaudoin Fred Blanchard Mrs. Neil R. Ayer Mr. and Mrs. Warren R. Beaulieu Mr. and Mrs. John A. Blanchard Dr. and Mrs. Henry H. Babcock Dr. Robert Beazley Mr. Robert L. and Mrs. Philip H. Babcock Dr. James Becker and Miss Ida Marjorie Blanchard

Ms. Eleanor Babikian Dr. Mary Amanda Dew Mrs. Shirley I. Blaneke

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur C. Babson Mr. and Mrs. Ronald I. Becker Ms. Judith Blatchley Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Baccari Mrs. Elizabeth G. Beckett Frederick W. Blatz Ms. Marta K. Bach Mr. and Mrs. Sherman C. Bedford Miss Margaret Blethen Mr. and Mrs. W. Benjamin Bacon Mrs. Diane Bedrosian Charles F. Blevins Mr. and Mrs. Bruce M. Bailey Mrs. Marcus G. Beebe Dr. Pengwynne P. Blevins

Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Bailey Mr. and Mrs. Martin Begien Mrs. Edith B. Bliss Mr. and Mrs. Leon Bailey Mrs. George D. Behrakis Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Bliss Ms. Beverly Baker Dr. and Mrs. Glenn Behringer Mr. and Mrs. Zenas W. Bliss

Ms. Elizabeth A. Baker Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Bejcek Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Bloch Mrs. Hope Lincoln Baker Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Belcher John W. Block Mrs. Mary Amory Baker Mr. and Mrs. David M. Beldotti Timothy and Rebecca Blodgett

Mr. and Mrs. Spencer H. Baker Mr. and Mrs. G. D'Andelot Belin Mr. and Mrs. John C. Bloom Steven Baker Mr. and Mrs. L. William Bell Mrs. Maxwell V. Blum Robert H. Baldi Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Bell John R. Blutt Robert F. R. Ballard Ms. Barbara Belmer Mrs. George K. Boday, Jr. Mrs. John Ballou Mr. and Mrs. F. Gregg Bemis Mr. and Mrs. John Bodenmann Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bamel A. E. Benfield Ms. Arlene L. Bodge Mr. and Mrs. John P. Banjak Mr. and Mrs. Richard Benka Dr. Carol F. Boerner Dr. and Mrs. Henry H. Banks Mr. and Mrs. Harrison L. Bennett Raymond A. Boffa

Mrs. Nancy Banus Mr. and Mrs. John T. Bennett, Jr. Colonel Ernestine H. Bolduc Carlos M. Baranano Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Bennett Kenyon C. Bolton IH Ms. Sally N. Barbarossa Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Benotti Mr. and Mrs. Eugene L. Bondy, Jr. Louis B. Barber Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Baker Bent Mr. and Mrs. Albert Bonfatti, Jr.

Dr. and Mrs. A. Clifford Barger Lawrence I. Berenson Allen Boorstein Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Bargardo Mrs. Mary Jane Bergantino Mr. and Mrs. Milton Bordwin Ms. Beth Barker Marshall K. Berger John Borek Steven G. Barkus Richard M. Berger Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Borenstein Mr. A. Dilek and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Berger Morris B. Bornstein

Ms. Joeth S. Barlas Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Berger Ronald Boscow Carmen A. Barletta Ms. Carol G. Bergler Mr. and Mrs. Tyrone R. Bourguignon Mr. and Mrs. John M. Barnaby Ms. Sylvia Berkman Mr. and Mrs. Bruce A. Bouton Sen. Walter J. Boverini Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Bunn Ms. Jean Chandler

Mrs. J. Bradley Bowen Mrs. Ann Burack Dr. Verne Chaney Peter H. Bower Mrs. Karl Burack Dr. and Mrs. David S. Chapin Mr. and Mrs. Allan Bowermaster Mrs. Sylvia K. Burack Miss Nancy Chapin Mrs. Jane M. Bowland Mrs. William Burchard Robert Ross Chapin Dr. and Mrs. Edward L. Bowles Edward N. Burchell Richard Chapman

Arthur J. Bowman Brian L. Burgess John C. Chappell Raymond Bowman Frank Burgess Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Charles, Jr. Ms. Martha A. Bowser Michael L. Burkard Mr. and Mrs. L. Robert Charles Mrs. Elias Boyce Joseph C. Burley Mr. and Mrs. Irving H. Chase Mrs. John W. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Burley Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Chatfield Mr. and Mrs. W. Lincoln Boyden Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Burlingame Mr. and Mrs. Jose A. Chaves Leo V. Boyle Mrs. Marilyn Burnes Dr. F. Sargent Cheever Mrs. Barbara G. Bradley Mr. and Mrs. Carleton Burr Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Cheever Mrs. James W. Bradley Mr. and Mrs. Francis H. Burr Ms. Ta-ko Chen

Lee C. Bradley HI Mrs. Walter Swan Burrage Mrs. Aaron P. Cheskis Morton Bradley Ms. Catherine L. Burroughs M and Mrs. Thomas Chin Richard and Mary Bradley Gilbert T. Busch Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Chiumenti Mrs. Lawrence D. Bragg, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John Bushby Mrs. Frank S. Christian Jonathan and Renee Brant Mr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Busk, Jr. Mrs. Edward D. Churchill Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Braude Rev. William L. Butler Prof, and Mrs. Vincent Cioffari Mrs. W. P. Braves, Jr. Mrs. Paul Butterworth Roger E. Clapp David M. Bray John E. Butzel Mr. and Mrs. Chester D. Clark Mrs. Edward P. Breau Dr. Sheldon Buzney and Ms. Jane Manin Miss Margaret G. Clark

Mrs. J. Dante Brebbia Buzney Dr. Richard Clark

Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Brech Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Byard Mrs. Ronald C. Clark

Donald D. Breed Mrs. Joan J. Byrd Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Clarke Mrs. William C. Brengle Mrs. John Moors Cabot Mr. and Mrs. Don P. Clausing

Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Brennan Mr. and Mrs. Gordon E. Cadwgan Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Clayton Mr. and Mrs. Richard Brennan Francis H. Cahill Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Cleary

John J. Bresnahan Dr. and Mrs. George F. Cahill, Jr. Barbara and Samuel Clement Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Brewster Mrs. Robert H. Cain Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Clemson

Ms. Elise C. Brewster Mrs. Peter Cameron Dr. and Mrs. Richard J. Cleveland

Mrs. K. Peabody Brewster Dr. Charlotte C. Campbell James J. Clifford Mr. and Mrs. Karl L. Briel Richard P. Campbell Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Clyde

Mr. and Mrs. James Brilliant Gabriel Campos Russell S. Clymer Miss Eleanor Broadhead Mr. and Mrs. David Cane Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Cobb

Mr. and Mrs. Irving Brodsky Mr. and Mrs. James H. Cannon Robert J. Cobuzzi

Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Brody Mr. and Mrs. David Caplan Mrs. G. Jean Cochrun

Dr. and Mrs. David C. Brooks Dr. and Mrs. Hubert I. Caplan Samuel B. Coco, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Brooks Dr. and Mrs. Robert J. Capone Miss Elizabeth Coe Henry G. Brooks James Carangelo Mrs. John W. Coffey Ms. Phyllis Brooks David Carder Willard Coffin

Mr. and Mrs. Richard 0. Brooks Ms. Patricia I. Carella Mr. and Mrs. Abraham B. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. August D. Brown Mr. and Mrs. David H. Carls David Cohen

Mr. and Mrs. David W. Brown Milton Carmen Ms. Deborah J. Cohen Ms. Deborah B. Brown Ray F. Carmichael Mr. and Mrs. Martin E. Cohen Douglas Brown Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Carmichael Ms. Minnie Cohen Mrs. Fletcher Brown Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Carmichael Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Cohen

Mr. and Mrs. Jacob F. Brown Ms. Martha M. Carpenter Mr. Daniel C. Cohn and Ms. Judith Brown Mrs. Martha V. Carr Ms. Donna L. Tesiero Hon. and Mrs. Matthew Brown Mr. and Mrs. Daniel W. Carroll Mr. and Mrs. Haskell Cohn

Mr. and Mrs. Michael R. Brown Mrs. J. Laurence Carroll Albert L. Colburn Mr. and Mrs. Robert Vance Brown Ronald H. Caruso Dr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Cole Dr. William J. Brown Dorothy & Herbert Carver Wallace A. Cole

Willis Brown Mr. and Mrs. John J. Casey William A. Coles Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bruck Lawrence and Mary Casey Robert E. Collings

John Brusger Dr. Aldo R. Castaneda Mrs. Edward C. Collins Mrs. Marcus K. Bryan Nicole Godin Castro, MD Ms. Margery C. Collins and Ms. Maureen Bryk John Caswell Dr. Joel Mumford

Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Bucher Alan Catalano Douglas P. Colpitts Rev. Thomas W. Buckley John A. Cataldo Mr. and Mrs. David G. Colt David J. Buczkowski Mrs. Henry F. Cate, Jr. Mrs. Nicholas Comey Ms. Beatrice A. Budron Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Cauehon Mrs. Donald W. Comstock Mrs. George P. Buell Dr. Mary C. Cavallaro Mrs. Donald B. Conant Mrs. Virginia H. Buending Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence G. Cetrulo Edward W. Conard Thomas H. Buffington HI Mr. and Mrs. Mark Challant Ms. Nancy Concannon

Bruce and Maria Krokidas Bullen Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Chamberlain Mr. and Mrs. George C. Condon Miss Miriam Hawthorne Bunker Miss Stephanie Chamberlain Mrs. William T. Conlan the 9th Annual PRESIDENTS

The BSO Salutes Business

June 6, 1990

As the leader of your company, you can give your management team, your customers or clients, your vendors, or possibly your other business friends a very special summer treat — and at the same time show your support of the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

Presidents at Pops 1990 is available to 110 businesses and professional organizations on a first-come, first-served basis. For $6,000 your company will receive 20 tickets to this event, which includes pre-concert cocktails and hors d'oeuvres, a gourmet picnic supper, and a special Boston Pops concert designed to delight the corporate guests on this evening. The President or CEO of each sponsor

company is also invited to attend a very special black-tie dinner dance on May 14 on the floor of Symphony Hall — a unique and elegant experience.

If you would like more information about Presidents at Pops, June 6, 1990, call James F. Cleary, Managing Director, PaineWebber, Inc. (439-8000) Harvey Chet Krentzman, President, Advanced Management Associates (332-3141) Sarah Coldwell, BSO Corporate Development (266-1492, ext. 207)

64 Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Connolly Ms. Mary C. Curran William R. Dewey HI Ms. Patricia Connolly Ms. Phyllis Smith Curtin Joseph Ernest Di Franco Thomas E. Connolly Mr. and Mrs. James T. Curtis Ms. Emily DiMatgio Woolsey Conover John W. Curtis Ms. Lynn R. DiMatteo Mr. and Mrs. Frank P. Conrad Ms. Margaret M. Curtis Ms. Margaret M. DiNanno Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Conrads Michael and Robin Curtis Tom DiPietro I Dr. and Mrs. John Constable William D. Curtis Dr. and Mrs. Norman H. Diamond H. Peter Converse Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Cusack Mr. Thomas R. Diaz and

John J. Conway Mr. and Mrs. Gardner Cushman Ms. Mary Diaz-Przbyl Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Conway Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cushman Alan Diefenbach Mrs. Edith Temple Cook Arnold R. Cutler Mrs. Hammond Diggle Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Cook Mrs. Donald F. Cutler Ms. Carolyn A. Dilts Mr. and Mrs. James Cooke Mr. and Mrs. Tarrant Cutler Mrs. Dominic P. Dimaggio Ms. Dorothy Grace Cooley Robert W. Cutts Dr. Milton Dines Dr. and Mrs. John C. Coolidge Mr. and Mrs. Alfred D'Alessandro Ms. Anita M. Diorio

Mrs. Nathaniel S. Coolidge Mrs. Norma D'Orazio Ms. Janneke R. Disbrow Dr. Charles L. Cooney and Mr. and Mrs. Stanley E. Dale Edward J. Doctoroff Ms. Peggy Reiser Alexander S. Daley Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Dodge Dr. Amiel Cooper Mr. and Mrs. Dale R. Dallon Mr. and Mrs. William Doggett, Jr. Mrs. Janet R. Cooper John L. Daly Ms. Eliz Dohanian

Mr. and Mrs. Saul J. Copellman Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Daly Mrs. Yoshiko Doi James E. and Lucy A. Coppola Mr. and Mrs. David Dana Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Dolan Mr. and Mrs. Allan M. Cormack Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Dana Mr. and Mrs. William P. Dole Mr. and Mrs. Frederic G. Corneel Mrs. Victoria L. Danberg and Dennis Donahue Miss Dorothy A. Cornish Dr. John P. Ficcarelli Ms. Virginia M. Donahue Ms. Susan Cornu Arnold Daniels Mrs. Donald P. Donaldson

Mr. and Mrs. Jason M. Cortell Mrs. Bruce G. Daniels Mr. and Mrs. John J. Donelan Mrs. Robert W. Costello Mr. and Mrs. Grover B. Daniels Mr. and Mrs. James Donohue Ms. Joanne Cotellesso Mrs. Douglas Danner Mrs. Alfred F. Donovan, Sr.

Dr. Ramzi S. Cotran Ms. Barbara A. Darling Miss Catharine-Mary Donovan

Dr. and Mrs. J. Holland Cotter Mrs. Elizabeth K. Darlington Mr. and Mrs. John T. Donovan Robert F. Cotter Mrs. George H. Darrell Mrs. Arthur C. Doran

Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Cotton Harold Davidson Mr. and Mrs. Julius Dorfman Ms. Nancy Couch Ms. G. Ashley Davis Dr. and Mrs. Barry C. Dorn Mr. and Mrs. John C. Coughlin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Holbrook R. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Dorn

Mr. and Mrs. Jesse X. Cousins Ms. Marianne Davis Mr. and Mrs. Melbourne S. Don- Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Cowden HI Rev. Russell H. Davis Mrs. Zelma Dorson Mr. and Mrs. James Cowderoy Stanley and Barbara Davis William M. Dougherty Dr. and Mrs. Henry R. Cowell Wayne C. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. M. Douglas

Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. Cox Mrs. Freeman I. Davison, Jr. Charles H. Douglass, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Crabill Mr. and Mrs. George Davol Mr. and Mrs. Jeremy F. Douglass Dr. and Mrs. John M. Craig Ms. Ann B. Day Mr. and Mrs. Walter Downey

Mr. and Mrs. Merwin H. Craig Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. De Agazio Mr. and Mrs. Mason L. Downing

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Craig Mr. and Mrs. C. Russell De Burlo, Jr. Ms. Pauline Downing Ms. Pamela A. Crandall Mr. and Mrs. Hubert De Lacvrvier Mrs. Phyllis G. Downing Mrs. Stephen H. Crandall Mrs. Francis De Marnaffe Mr. and Mrs. Orrin L. Doxer Miss Ellen M. Crane Ms. Susan DeColaines Mrs. Margaret E. Doyle Mr. and Mrs. William Creelman Ms. Karen DeCourcey Dr. and Mrs. Emerson H. Drake Mr. and Mrs. Albert M. Creighton, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Ronald A. DeLellis Ms. Theodora Drapos

Ms. Margo Crist Mr. and Mrs. Casimir de Rham, Jr. John C. Dreier Paul A. Croce Ms. Elisabeth F. DeRoetth Mr. and Mrs. John Otis Drew Mrs. U. Haskell Crocker Mr. and Mrs. Thomas DeSwarte David Driscoll

Mrs. Phyllis J. Crolius Dr. James Bond Dealy, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Driscoll, Jr. Ms. Judith Cronin Mr. and Mrs. Philip Dean Ms. Susan F. Drogin Miss Lianne M. Cronin Mrs. Storer G. Decatur Mr. and Mrs. Howard T. Du Bois Dr Mary Jean Crooks Mrs. Philip Deehert Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan B. Dubitzky Mr. and Mrs. Gorham L. Cross Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Dehmel Mr. and Mrs. Philip Mason Dubois Ms. Ann Crotty Joseph Deignan Ronald Dudak Paul M. Crowe Ms. June Dellipriscoli Peter F. and Celeste P. Duffy Mr. and Mrs. William F. Crowley Dr. Ilham Deloomy Stephen Dufuria Dr. and Mrs. Robert Cserr Mrs. William T. Demmler Ms. Gayle E. Dugas

Mr. and Mrs. John F. Cullen Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Denning Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Duggan

Ms. Sally A. Culler Mr. and Mrs. James T. Dennison Mrs. Panos S. Dukakis

Thomas and Donna Cullinane Pierre L. Dersin Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Dumaine Ms. Dolores A. Cummings Ms. Dianne C. Dervis Ms. Karen A. Dumbaugh Mrs Donald B. Cummings John M. Deutch Ms. Barbara Dumont Mrs. R. T. Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. Robert Devorin Henry Dunbar Robert L. Cunningham Ms. Etehl Dewey Keller Duncan Bruce Curran Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Dewey Miss Marjorie H. Dunham Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. Dunn, Jr. Mrs M. Eliot Fay Mr. and Mrs. Sumner J. Foster Stephen R. Dunn Ms. Barbara Fearing Ms. Carol E. Fountain William D. Dunn Mrs. Olga Fedorovsky Franklin H. Fox

Mrs. Ann G. Durant Edward J. Fee Mr. and Mrs. John B. Fox, Jr. Wesley H. Durant Ira D. Feinberg Mrs. Marie H. Fox Ms. Maria Durham Mrs. Samuel B. Feinberg Mrs. Miriam D. Fox

Mr. and Mrs. William D. Duryea II Mr. and Mrs. Steven S. Feinberg Walter S. Fox, Jr. Ms. June Dussault Mrs. Walter C. Feinberg Charles T. Francis

Mr. and Mrs. C. Dean Dusseault Joseph Feinstein Mrs. Lorraine T. Frankel Frank A. Duston Mrs. Hortense F. Feldblum Benjamin Franklin John Dwinell Mr. and Mrs. Carl Feldman Mr. James R. Franklin and

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Dziekan Dr. Merrill I. Feldman Mrs. Brenda J. Swithenbank Ms. Mary C. Easterlin Mrs. Robert Feldman Dr. and Mrs. William Franklin Mrs. Charles C. Eaton, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Robert G. Feldman Mrs. Elizabeth Von T. Frawley

Mr. and Mrs. Louis F. Eaton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fenlon Gerald R. Frazee Betty and Warren Eberhart Ms. Carol A. Fenniman Mr. and Mrs. Harry Freedman Ms. Takao Echikawa Mr. and Mrs. George M. Fenollosa Mrs. Jerome Freedman Edwin E. Eckl Mr. and Mrs. Allan R. Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. Howard G. Freeman

Mr. and Mrs. George Eddy Neal T. Fernald Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Freeman

Mr. and Mrs. George P. Edmonds, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin G. Ferris, Jr. Mrs. Ralph Freeman Mr. and Mrs. Walter D. Edmonds Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fey Mr. and Mrs. William C. Freeman Dr. and Mrs. Richard H. Egdahl Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Fidler Dr. and Mrs. David N. French Barbara Eggers Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Field Miss Hannah D. French Mrs. Gladys A. Eggiman Mr. and Mrs. Alan Fields Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. French Dr. and Mrs. Leon Eisenberg Mr. and Mrs. Weston P. Figgins Mr. and Mrs. Bernard French-Fuller Dr. and Mrs. John P. Eliopoulos Mr. and Mrs. Alan R. Finberg W. Kenneth Freund

Miss Mary C. Eliot Dr. and Mrs. Albert J. Finck Mrs. George R. Frick

Mrs. Phyllis S. Eliot Miss Elio Ruth Fine Barry L. Friedman Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Ellin Mr. and Mrs. Daniel E. Finger Prof, and Mrs. Benjamin M. Friedman Joseph H. Ellinwood Paul W. Finnegan Mr. and Mrs. Ephraim Friedman

Prof, and Mrs. John F. Elliott John G. Finneran Dr. Joyce Friedman

Miss Beverly R. Ellis Robert A. Fischer Dr. and Mrs. Joseph R. Frothingham

Charles H. Ellis, Jr. David and Nancy Fisher Ms. Naomi K. Fukagawa and

Ms. Winifred Ellis Miss Janet P. Fitch Mr. Alan C. Homans Mrs. William P. Ellison Dr. and Mrs. James E. Fitzgerald Dr. and Mrs. Stuart Fuld Mrs. H. Bigelow Emerson Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Fitzgerald Mrs. Faith Kidder Fuller

Mrs. Gardner G. Emmons Mr. and Mrs. James F. Flagg Mr. and Mrs. George C. Fuller Mr. and Mrs. George Engdahl John D. Flaherty Mrs. Joan D. Fuller Ms. Therese M. Engstrom Mrs. Carlyle G. Flake Mrs. John Furman Mrs. Kurt Enoch Mr. and Mrs. Evan B. Flamer Albert Fusco Mr. and Mrs. Ferd B. Ensinger Mrs. James E. Flanagan Dr. and Mrs. Edward A. Gaensler Dr. and Mrs. Gary R. Epler Mr. and Mrs. Niles Flanders Paul Gagnon Mr. and Mrs. John W. Erhard Rev. Brian M. Flatley Louis M. Galante

Dr. and Mrs. Manfred Ernesti Rev. and Mrs. G. Peter Fleck Mr. and Mrs. James S. Galbraith Dr. and Mrs. Alan N. Ertel Mr. and Mrs. Gustav Fleischmann EH Mrs. Charles T. Gallagher Ms. Laura A. Ervin Ms. Marcia G. Fleishman Mrs. John F. Gallagher

Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Estes Edward J. Fleming III Ms. Julie Gallagher Dr. and Mrs. Eli Etscovitz Mr. and Mrs. Brent P. Fletcher Richard Gallant

Mr. and Mrs. Donald J. Evans Mr. and Mrs. Richard Flewelling Paul Gallegher Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Evans Mrs. Richard T. Flood Mrs. William Albert Gallup Mrs. Romeyn Everdell John C. Floros Mr. and Mrs. John T. Galvin Mr. and Mrs. Bayard Ewing Mr. and Mrs. James T. Flynn Joseph M. Galvin Ms. Bessie R. Ezekiel Jay W. Flynn Mrs. C. H. Gamage Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Fagelman Joseph M. Flynn Barbara Ganem, MD Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Fager William Flynn Ms. Carolyn M. Gannon Ms. Lucille Fairfield Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Fogg Ms. Janet E. Gannon

Mrs. Howard L. Fales Mrs. Henry E. Foley Mr. and Mrs. Stanley S. Ganz Mr. and Mrs. Peter G. Fallon Mr. Barry James Folsom and Mr. and Mrs. Gabor Garai

Ms. Priscilla Alley Falls Tacey Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Garb

Frank C. Fancieullo John Forbush, Jr. Martin Garbus

Ms. Jeanne C. Farinella Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Forbes Donald E. Garcia

Mr. and Mrs. John S. Farlow, Jr. F. Murray Forbes, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hale Gardner Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey Farnum Lee and Judith Forker Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Gardner

Ms. Cynthia M. Farrar Mrs. Joanne S. Forkner Mr. and Mrs. Vincent F. Gardner

G. Farrell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Orville W. Forte, Jr. William E. Garfield Miss Ruth M. Farrisey Mrs. Judith A. Fortin Robert M. Gargill Francis Faulkner Mr. and Mrs. Alden T. Foster Dr. and Mrs. Donald M. Garland

Anthony Faunce Dr. and Mrs. Gerald S. Foster Mrs. James S. Garrett

Ms. Winnifred Faust Mr. and Mrs. John S. Foster Mr. and Mrs. Ed Gartner At last, a retirement community that acres in Westwood and will open in the offers the benefits of homeownership! Summer of 1990. Fox Hill Village combines the security of Discover why over 350 people have continuing care with the many benefits decided that Fox Hill Village is more of ownership through our unique than just a retirement community, cooperative plan. it is a sound investment. Designed for comfort and con- Call (617) 329-4433 for more venience, Fox Hill Village is now information, or make an appoint- under construction on 80 wooded ment to visit our model unit. A TRADITION OF FINANCIALCOUNSEL OLDER THAN THE U.S. DOLLAR. State Street has been providing quality financial service since 1792. That's two years longer than the dollar has been the official currency of the United States. During that time, we have managed the assets of some of New England's wealthiest families. And provided investment advice and performance tailored to each client's individual goals and needs. Today our Personal Trust Division can extend that service to you. We've been helping people manage their money for almost 200 years. And you can only stay in business that long by offering advice of the

highest quality. Let us help you get the highest performance from your assets. To enjoy today and to pass on to future generations. For more information contact Peter Talbot at 617-654-3227. State Street. Known for quality?

State Street Bank and Trust Company, wholly-owned subsidiary of State Street Boston Corporation, 225 Franklin Street, Boston, MA 02101. Offices in Boston, New York, Los Angeles, London, Munich, Brussels, Tokyo, Sydney, Hong Kong. Member FDIC. Copyright State Street Boston Corporation, 1989. A Special Life-style Carleton-Willard Village is an exceptional continuing care retirement community. Gracious independent living accommodations and fully licensed, long-term health care facilities exist in a traditional New England environment. CARLETON-WILLARD VILLAGE 100 Old Billerica Rd. l T 1 Bedford, MA 01730 (617) 275-8700

Owned and operated by Carleton-Willard *»*m to ^ Homes, Inc., a non-profit corporation TFG Back Bay Properties is honored to present an array of residential restorations in Boston's most coveted neighborhood, Back Bay. Property offerings at various market levels, each with The Finch Group signature of quality and value. From $125,000 to $2,200,000.

Please call to arrange a personal tour.

31-33 &. 109-111 Commonwealth Avenue 339-341-343 Beacon Street 416 Marlborough Street 184 Marlborough Street

THE FINCH OROUP, IMC.

Construction Financing Provided by 1st American Bank for Savings (617) 439-3000. Richard D. Gass Mr. and Mrs. Clyde B. Gordon Mr. and Mrs. Albert Haimes Mrs. John P. Gately Ms. Gail Gordon Barbara Anne Hajjar, MD Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Gaudette Mrs. Jack Gordon Ms. Susan M. Halby Gary Gaumer Ralph Gordon Judge Allan M. Hale Norman Gautreau Ms. Linda Gorham Mrs. Edward E. Hale Mr. and Mrs. Spyros Gavris Mrs. L. Vladimir Goriansky Mrs. Samuel W. Hale, Jr. Mrs. Robert R. Gay, Jr. Vincent J. Gorman Ms. Frances Sloan Hall Albert Gayzagian Mrs. Joel T. Gormley Mrs. Garrison K. Hall Malcolm Gefter Ms. Lucinda Gormley Mrs. Henry M. Halvorson Warren and Barbara Geissinger Mr. and Mrs. C. Lane Goss Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Hamann A Carter George Mr. and Mrs. C. Peter R. Gossels Benjamin F. Hamblin Ms. Susan Gerhardt Sanehisa Goto Edith and Jacob Hamburger

James J. Gerow Dr. and Mrs. Leonard S. Gottlieb David and Patricia Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gesmer Martin Gottlieb Mrs. George Hamilton Ms. Ann K. Ghublikian Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Gottwald Mr. and Mrs. George H. Hamilton Ms. Barbara Gibb Dr. Robert A. Gough, Jr. Ms. Joanne Hamilton Miss Alice F. Gibbons Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gourdeau Mr. and Mrs. Roy A. Hammer Ms. Tracy Gibbons Mr. and Mrs. Clark H. Gowen Michael Hammerschmidt Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. C. Giffin Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Goyette Mr. and Mrs. Edmund M. Hanauer Mrs. George E. Gifford, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Graetz Drs. Evelyn and Eugene Handler Nelson Gifford Ekkehard Gramp Mr. and Mrs. Francis Haney Miss Rosamond Gifford Mr. and Mrs. Frederick B. Grant Mr. and Mrs. W. Kelley Hannan

Ms. Mary Gilbert Ms. Margaret Grant Edward R. and Eunice I. Hansen Mr. and Mrs. Paul B. Gilbert Ms. Linda M. Grasso Mr. and Mrs. Harley L. Hansen

Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Gill, Jr. Frank C. Graves Warren T. Hansen

Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Gill Mr. and Mrs. John B. Gray Ms. Shevawn Hardesty

Mrs. Howard F. Gillette Mrs. Morris Gray Donald Harding

Ms. Nancy P. Gillis Dr. Barbara Green Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Hardt Leonard Gilman Mr. and Mrs. David H. Green Richard and Susan Hardy Mr. and Mrs. John Gilmartin Mr. and Mrs. Milton G. Green Mr. and Mrs. Gary E. Haroian

Susan and Curtis Gilmore Dr. and Mrs. Mortimer S. Greenberg Mr. and Mrs. G. Neil Harper Mr. and Mrs. James M. GUreath Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Greenberg Mr. and Mrs. John B. Harriman Steven Ginsberg Mr. and Mrs. Robert Greenberg Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Harrington Rabbi Albert Ginsburgh Mrs. Harding U. Greene Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Harrington

Norman J. Ginstling Ms. Joy Greenleaf Richard G. H. Harris Bernard Giroux Chandler Gregg Robert L. Harris

John J. Giuliani, Jr. Mrs. Hugh Gregg Dr. Bettina H. Harrison Richard B. Gladstone Arthur W. Gregory HI Miss Caroline Harrison

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Glasser John H. Griffin Jeffrey C. Harrison Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Glassman Dr. and Mrs. C. T. Griffiths Robert L. Harrow

Ms. Susan D. GledhUl Zvi Griliches Mrs. Howard S. Hart Mr. and Mrs. Richard R. Glendon Mrs. James W. Griswold Stanley Hart Daniel E. Glynn Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Grogan Mr. and Mrs. Steven Harth

Allen J. Goff Mr. and Mrs. Norman J. Groh Dr. John Warren Harthorne Mrs. Harold Gold Stephen H. Gross Dr. and Mrs. Frederick B. Hartman Mrs. Harvey B. Gold Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Grossman Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Hartshorne Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Goldberg Miss Constance Grosvenor Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harvey Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Goldberg John Grover Mrs. Paul T. Haskell

Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Goldin Dr. and Mrs. John H. Growdon Mr. and Mrs. William C. Haskins

Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Goldman R. J. Guglielmino Nikolaos J. Hatzis Hon. Morris Goldman John G. Guillemont Ms. Marianne Haug Ms Karen Goldmeer Edward N. Gulesarian Mr. and Mrs. John B. Hawes Ms. Barbara J. Goldsmith Mr. and Mrs. Barkev Gulezian Ms. Ellen Hawkes Dr. and Mrs. Philip L. Goldsmith Dr. and Mrs. John G. Gunderson Ms. Mary Q. Hawkes Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Goldstein Mrs. Marie C. Gunderson Mr. and Mrs. Gordon T. Hay Ms. Dorothy Goldstein Ms. Yvonne M. Gunderson Ms. Marie L. Hayden

Frederick Goldstein Ian Gunn Mr. and Mrs. Sherman S. Hayden

Mrs. Mary T. Goldthwaite Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Gurin Mrs. Joseph S. Hayes

Joan R. Golub, MD Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gutterman Mrs. Richard C. Hayes Mr. and Mrs. Albert Goodhue DH Mrs. Lyman P. Gutterson Mr. and Mrs. Ronald F. E. Hayes

Robert M. Goodhue Rutty A. Guzdar Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hayes, Jr. William W. and June K. Goodman Mrs. Peter J. Gwyn William Hardy Hayes Mrs. Russell J. Goodnow, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Haas Mr. and Mrs. William E. Haynes Mr. and Mrs. John W. Goodrich Seiji Haba Mr. and Mrs. Gordon T. Heald

William A. Goodwin Dr. Herbert A. Haesler Dr. and Mrs. Frank H. Healey, Jr.

Mrs. Austin Goodyear Mrs. Frederick W. Haffenreffer Mrs. Harry R. Healey, Jr. William K. Goolishian John Haggerty Joseph Hearne

Arthur and Use Gorbach Mr. and Mrs. John Hahn Mrs. Clyde J. Heath Mrs. John D. Gordan, Jr. William E. Haible Mr. and Mrs. Gregory B. Heath William F. Heavy, Jr. Ross G. Honig Heyward Parker James Mrs. Robert M. Heberton Ms. Emily C. Hood Paul A. Jamgotchian Mr. and Mrs. David Heckler Roger Hood, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. John Jao

Miss Marie E. Hedin Mrs. Robert C. Hood Richard F. Jarrell Dr. and Mrs. Sam Hedrick Alfred Hoose Mr. and Mrs. Floyd H. Jayson

Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Helman Mr. and Mrs. Edward I. Hope Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Jedrey

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond E. Hender Mrs. Hester R. Hopkins Mr. and Mrs. David Jeffries Mrs. Gregory Henderson Mrs. Robert H. Hopkins Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Jenkins

Dr. and Mrs. Milton E. Henderson Dr. and Mrs. Robert P. Hopkins Mrs. Stella Jenkins

Mrs. Robert G. Henderson Ms. S. Antoinette Hopkins Mr. and Mrs. James T. Jensen

Gardner Hendrie Ms. Suzanne Hoppenstedt Mr. and Mrs. T. Edson Jewell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Henn Mrs. Frederic G. Hoppin, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Pierre Johannet Mr. and Mrs. William W. Hennig Ms. Elizabeth B. Hough Dr. and Mrs. Richard R. John

Rodman R. Henry Mr. and Mrs. Louis H. Hough Bradford J. Johnson

Mrs. William J. Hentschel Ms. Gertrude D. Houghton Dean C. Johnson

Mr. and Mrs. E. Alfred Herberich Albert S. Hovannesian Mr. and Mrs. Douglas W. Johnson Avrom Herbster Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fox Hovey Frederick Johnson Mrs. Raymond A. Heron Mrs. Joseph Howe Mrs. H. Alden Johnson, Jr.

Ms. Myra L. Herrick Ms. Nancy G. Howe John W. Johnson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Dudley R. Herschbach Mr. and Mrs. Raymond H. Howe Ms. Judith A. Johnson

Dr. Arthur T. Hertig Mr. and Mrs. Bradley P. Howes, Jr. Keith R. Johnson

Mr. and Mrs. Jerome S. Hertz Mr. and Mrs. Guerard H. Howkins, Jr. Ms. Priscilla Johnson Ms. Helen Hess Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Hubbard Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. T. P. Heuchling Mr. and Mrs. Eliot Hubbard HI William B. Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Howard H. Hiatt Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Hudson Mrs. John R. Johnston Ms. Virginia Hickey Frank Hudson Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Jones Ms. Janis L. Higgins Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hudson Ms. Nancy Piatt Jones

Mrs. Adams S. Hill Frederick Hughes Peter Jones Ms. Joan E. Hill Mr. and Mrs. Keith L. Hughes Robert C. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Howard Hillman Mr. and Mrs. John Hull Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Jones Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Hills Lawrence and Phyllis Huller Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Jones

Lawrence Hilonowitz R. S. Humphrey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Jones

Mr. and Mrs. Winston R. Hindle, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Humphrey Mr. and Mrs. C. Peter Jorgensen Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Hinman Walter C. Humstone Paul Joskow

Mrs. Walter Hinriehsen Mrs. Robert I. Hunneman Betty and Dana Jost

Mrs. David M. Hirsch Mrs. Hollis Hunnewell Mrs. Albert S. Kahn Herbert Hirsch Mrs. Alice W. Hunsaker Dr. Arthur E. Kahn Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Hirsch Albert B. Hunt Liesel and Werner Kaim

Ms. Evelyn J. Hiscox Mr. and Mrs. Roger B. Hunt Mr. and Mrs. John H. Kallis Mr. and Mrs. Calvin W. Hitchcock Mr. and Mrs. Windsor H. Hunter Ms. Krista Kamborian-Baldini

Rev. and Mrs. Robert I. Hoaglund Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Huntoon Mr. and Mrs. Irving Joel Kane

John W. P. Hobbs, Jr. Hon. and Mrs. George N. Hurd, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Kaneb Mr. and Mrs. James B. Hobson Charles and Shirley Hurwitz Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kann

Mr. and Mrs. Sidney R. Hodes Constantine Hutchins, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Kaplan

Raymond S. Hodgdon, Jr. Mrs. Jamie Hutchinson Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Kappler

Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Hodge William D. Hyde Mr. and Mrs. Leo Karas

Carl T. Hoefel Mrs. Frank K. Idell Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Karger

Mr. and Mrs. Leonard J. Hoffman Dr. Kenji Ikeuchi Mrs. David Kasdon Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Hoffman Joseph Incandela Ms. Madeline Kasdon Thomas Hogan Dr. and Mrs. Robert A. Indeglia Mrs. Charles Kassel Mr. and Mrs. William Hogan Mrs. Jerome M. Ingalls Mr. and Mrs. Jerome P. Kassirer Ms. Linda M. Holbrook Mr. and Mrs. R. Blake Ireland Mr. and Mrs. Gerald M. Katz Mrs. Raymond Holdsworth Drs. David and Mira Irons Mr. and Mrs. Stanley W. Katz Mr. and Mrs. H. Brian Holland Mr. and Mrs. WUliam A. Irvine Mr. and Mrs. Sydney L. Katz

Paul Holland Ms. Elizabeth C. Irwin Mr. and Mrs. Christopher P. Kauders

Sam and Mary Holland, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Isaacs Mr. and Mrs. Erick Kauders Mrs. Mark Hollingsworth Mr. and Mrs. Howard Israel Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Kauders Mr. and Mrs. James Hollis IH Dr. Betty Iu Dean Kauffman Ms. Charlotte Hollister Mr. and Mrs. David O. Ives Mr. and Mrs. David L. Kaufman Miss Marjorie B. Holman Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Jack Sumner Kaufman

Ms. Elizabeth P. Holmes Dr. and Mrs. David M. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Kaufmann Mrs. Gerald Holmes Dr. and Mrs. Robert F. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. William W. Kaufmann John A. Holmes Walter L. and Jeanine B. Jackson Mr. and Mrs. William C. Keach, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael D. Holmes David Jacobs Edward W. Keane

Ronald O. Holmes Kenneth Jaeobson Ms. Vanessa S. Keany Mrs. Stanley A. Holmes Robert E. Jaeobson Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Keene William F. Hoist Mrs. David D. Jacobus Drs. John and Katherine Keenum Frank G. Holt 3rd Jack Jacobvitz John F. Kellaher

Ms. Barbara Holtz Mrs. Ernest Jacoby Mrs. Hubert J. Kelley Manley S. Kelley Mr. and Mrs. Michael Kreisler Mr. and Mrs. Bardin Levavy Ms. Phyllis Kelley Mr. and Mrs. Richard Krieger Mr. and Mrs. Paul Levenson Edward B. Kellogg Phillip Krupp Mrs. Robert Leventhal Mr and Mrs. Bartow Kelly Mr. and Mrs. George W. Kuehn Mrs. George Levin Mrs. Laura Rice Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Frederick C. Kulow Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Levin Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Kelly Dr. Ruth B. Kundsin Mr. and Mrs. Alan R. Levine William E. Kelly Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence J. Kunz Mr. and Mrs. Allan L. Levine Miss Janet Kelsay Miss Helen G. Kurtz Mrs. Carlisle N. Levine Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Kelsey, Jr. Mrs. Hyman R. Kurtzman Mr. and Mrs. Harold Levine

Alexander S. Kelso, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Eugene F. Kusekoski Mrs. Leona Levine Ms. Dorothy H. Kelso Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Kuskin Mr. and Mrs. Morey Levine Mrs. R. C. Kemp Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Kutchin Benjamin B. Levy

Henry S. Kendall Jonathan Kutchins Ms. Janice Lewin Mr. and Mrs. Edmund H. Kendrick Mr. and Mrs. Philip E. La Bonte Dr. Audrey A. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Kenerson EI Dennis J. LaCroix David and Eleanor Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. P. Kennard Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. LaFoley Mrs. Frank Lewis

Mr. and Mrs. J. Wade Kennedy Ms. Mary E. LaPierre Mr. and Mrs. Leonard P. Lewis John Christopher Kennedy Ms. Cecilia Lacey-Anzuoni Mrs. Sachiko Liebergesell Mr. and Mrs. Lowell D. Kennedy Mr. and Mrs. Arno Lamm Mr. and Mrs. Jack R. Lifsitz Richard L. Kenney Mrs. David Landau Ms. Sylvia Lilienthal Mrs. Walter Keogh Richard and Ann Landau Mr. and Mrs. Murray H. Lilly Mr. and Mrs. Donald Kerr Mr. and Mrs. Roger Landay Y. Lin Otho E. Kerr HI Ms. Michele Landes Mr. and Mrs. A. James Lincoln

Ms Man- Kevill Mrs. Stanley M. Lane Mrs. Ann M. Linehan Mrs. Herman Kiaer Harold Langell Edward C. Lingel II Masayuki Kichikawa Mrs. William L. Langer Mr. and Mrs. Morton A. Lipman Mrs. John Kiernan Richard Langerman Mr. and Mrs. Steven B. Lipner Hyung Goo Kim Carol Langford, MD Southard Lippincott Mr. and Mrs. David C. King Ms. Barbara J. Langley Mark H. Lippolt Mr and Mrs. Frank H. King Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Langlois Dr. Charles S. Lipson Mr. and Mrs. John F. King Dr. Rudolph L. Lantelme Dr. Stanley E. Listernick

Ms. Patricia King Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Large Kevin M. Liston

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. King Ms. Daloris Larocque Mr. and Mrs. David B. Little Mrs William F. King Ray Larson Mrs. Elbert P. Little Mrs Henry E. Kingman Albert L. Lash IH John D. C. Little

Mrs. Mary S. Kingsbery Ron and Carolyn Latanision Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Little Mrs Howard T. Kingsbury Joseph A. Laurion Mr. and Mrs. W. Torrey Little

Dr and Mrs. Richard A. Kingsbury Mr. and Mrs. Richard Laursen Mr. and Mrs. Paul Damon Littlefield Ms Fujiko Kirigaya Ms. Irma Lauter Mrs. W. Andrew Locke John Kirk Robert Laux Mrs. Dunbay Lockwood, Jr. Mrs. Marjorie V. Kittredge Mr. and Mrs. Edward L. Lavine Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Loeffler

Mr. and Mrs Richard J. Kitz Mrs. Robert M. Lavine Frank A. Logan Mr. and Mrs Seth A. Klarman Mrs. Edward W. Lawrence Stephen E. Loher Leonard F. Klein Mrs. James Lawrence Ms. Esther Loitherstein Ms Virginia Kleinrock Paul Lazare Mrs. Laurence M. Lombard David W Klinke Jeanne and Michael Z. Lazor, MD Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Long Mr and Mrs. Henry E. Kloss Ms. Susan M. Le Tourneau Miss Mary A. Long Ms. Marilyn Bone Kloss Mrs. Virginia F. Leach Mr. and Mrs. John P. Longwell Mark W Kluge Burke and Barbara Leahey George G. Loring, Jr. John D. Klump Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Leahy Mrs. Robert P. Loring Mr. Gerhart J Kneissel Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth V. Leard Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lotstein Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kniffin Mrs. Hart D. Leavitt Ms. Cynthia Gail Lovell Mrs. Carleton Knight, Jr Robert E. Leavitt Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Lovell Robert Knowlton Ms. Paula Leckinger Fred Lowell Mr and Mrs. Clarence F. Knudson Mr. and Mrs. Eddington Lee Mr. and Mrs. John Lowell

Ms. Virginia M. Koallack Mr. and Mrs. Ging S. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Douglas T. Lowerre Kevin Koch Mr and Mrs. Henry Lee Hans Lowey Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Koffler Ms. Alice E. Lehmann Ralph W. Lowry Thomas Kohn Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lehr Mr. and Mrs. David Lubrano Mr. and Mrs. Jiro Kokuryo Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Leibowitz Mr. and Mrs. Aldo F. Luca William A. Koshland Mrs. Edmund F. Leland HI Dr. John M. Ludden Mr and Mrs. Norman Koss Mrs. Tudor Leland Ms. K Ramsey Ludlow Mr and Mrs. P. Robert Kotiuga Richard Van S. Lenk Nelson Luria

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kotsaftis Arthur S. Leonard Mr. and Mrs. Robert I. Lurie

Dr Robert J. Krane Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Lepofsky Dirk K. Lust

Cynthia and Stephen Krane Ms. Martha L. Lepow Ms. Susan J. Luth

Peter Edwin Krasinski Mr. and Mrs. John A. Lepper Mr. and Mrs. S. Vanvliet Lyman Ivan M Krasner Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Lesser Dr. George D. Lynch Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Kravetz Miss Elizabeth M. Letson Ms. Susan Lynch 1990-91 BSO Schedule

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70 Mrs. Patricia Lyons Harrington Thomas J. May George Michaels

William 0. Lytle, Jr. Ms. Kristine A. Mayer Mr. and Mrs. Robert Midland Mr. and Mrs. William H. Mac Crellish Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Mayer Eiji Miki

Hon. and Mrs. John S. Mac Dougall, Jr Mrs. Frederic B. Mayo Alvin H. Miller- Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. MacGowan Andrew J. Mazzella, Jr. Ms. Catharine H. Miller AJan Maclnnis Ms. Ann McCaleb Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Miller Marge and Biff MaeLean Bruce and Mary McCarthy John T. Miller-

Mr. and Mrs. Alan J. Mac Leod Dorothy E. McCarthy Ms. Judith Ann Miller Jeffrey F. MaeMann Mrs. Joyce G. McCarthy Ms. Lisa Miller John Macauley Mr. and Mrs. Kevin J. McCarthy Dr. M. E. Miller Miss Ann E. Maedonald Dr. and Mrs. Richard E. McCarthy Samuel J. T. Miller Mrs. Myles L. Mace Ms. Marguerite T. McCauley Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Dennis H. Mack Dr. Sally Ann McColgan Ms. Carolyn Millett Mr. and Mrs. David D. Mackintosh Edward J. McCormack, Jr. Mrs. B. A. Milligan Mrs. Norman E. Macneil Ms. Patsy McCormack Mr. and Mrs. Michael B. Millis

Mrs. Kathleen J. Madden Ms. Marie C. McCormick Mrs. Jeffrey Millman Mr. and Mrs. Peter E. Madsen Mrs. Gail F. McCoy Ms. Carol Mills Joseph C. Magnus Mr. and Mrs. C. Chesney McCracken Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mills Roger Magoun Jeremiah P. McDonald Yasuki Mineshima Mrs. Calvert Magruder Mr. and Mrs. Leland McDonough Robert B. Minturn, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. L. Burns Magruder, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert McDonough Mr. and Mrs. Allen Mintz

Mrs. Robert S. Magruder Ms. Winifred McDonough Claude Miquelle Charles Maling Harvey McFeators Mrs. Harry L. Mirick

Dr. and Mrs. Saul Malkiel Professor F. J. McGarry Dr. and Mrs. Robert F. Misiewicz Mr. and Mrs. Edwin A. Malloy Dr. and Mrs. David E. McGaw Stefan Missbrenner John F. Malloy Robert L. McGeehan William P. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. 0. Maloney John P. McGonagle William R. Mitchell

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Malpass, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. John S. McGovern Mrs. Clifford Mitman Mrs. Edward Maltzman Mrs. Evelyn H. McGowan Ms. Anne Mercier Mohn Donald A. Mandell Mrs. Thomas W. McGrath Ms. Constance Mohr

Miss Ellen J. Mandigo Mr. and Mrs. Stephen D. McGreevy Mrs. Tia D. Moir

Mr. and Mrs. Herbert L. Manevich Mr. and Mrs. James S. McGuire Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Moncreiff

Mrs. Anne Sawyer Manners Ms. Katherine S. McHugh Mr. and Mrs. Leonard A. Moniz

James A. Manninen Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mcllraith Donald J. Moore, Jr.

Ms. Christine Manns Ms. Elizabeth McKay Elbert E. Moore, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. James E. Marble, Jr. Jon McKee Peter S. Moore James A. Marchese Ms. Patricia M. McKee Mrs. Ellen G. Moot Mr. and Mrs. Farley Marcus Mr. and Mrs. Sidney F. McKenna Ms. Janet E. Morehouse and Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell J. Marcus Mr. and Mrs. ME. McKibben, Jr. Mr. Brian Handspicker

Mr. and Mrs. (J. Herbert Marcy Mr. and Mrs. Gordon P. McKinnon Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Morgan

Mrs Keith A. Marden Mrs. Donald H. McLean, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John Morgan Virginia and Nicholas Marinakis Dr. Theresa McLoud Robert A. Morgan

Richard Marius Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. McMorrow, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic R. Morgenthaler

Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Markley Arthur R. McMurrich Mr. and Mrs. Elting E. Morison Paul and Elaine Marks Kevin McQuaid Mr. and Mrs. Ernest B. Morris

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Marks, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James McWilliams Ms. Marcia C. Morris

Ms Gloria S. Marron Dr. and Mrs. Isaac 0. Mehrez Mr. and Mrs. Paul S. Morris Dr. Pamela Marron Mrs. Annabelle M. Melville Richard B. Morron

Mr. and Mrs. Franklin J. Marryott Armand Menconi Mrs. Alan R. Morse, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Alan C. Marshall Michael V. Merola Mrs. Garlan Morse

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Marsilli Joseph C. Merriam, Jr. Ms. Priscilla A. Morse

Ms. Jane Martin Ms. Carol Jennings Merrill Mrs. Richard S. Morse Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Martin Nathaniel S. Merrill Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Morse William J. Masek Robert C. Merrill Mr. and Mrs. Tim Morse William J. Masellinas G. Merser John M. Morss Ham- W. Mason Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Meserve Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Morss

Edward I. Masterman Mr. and Mrs. James Messing Ms. Patricia A. Morten

John H Masters Mrs. Albion E. Metcalf Mr. and Mrs. David S. Mortensen Ronald Mastrocola H. P. Metcalf, Jr. David Morton Prof, and Mrs. Koichi Masubuchi Miss Karen Metcalf Ms. Margaret Morton Miss Torniko Masui Mrs. Robert F. Metcalf, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Perry W. Morton

Gerald A. Mata Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Metcalf, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick S. Moseley IH Mr. and Mrs. John H. Matsinger Mr. and Mrs. Bernard F. Meyer Mrs. Hardwick Moseley Mr arid Mrs. Leo D. Matteosian Ms. Carolyn B. Meyer Ms. Judith Moss Feingold

Alvin T. Matthew Mr. and Mrs. Henry H. Meyer, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. James L. Moss III Peter D. Matthews John B. Meyer Mr. and Mrs. Edward Motley Nathan M. Matz Ms. Fern King Meyers Geoffrey P. Mott

Mrs Frank Mauran Mr. and Mrs. Walter V. Miceli Ms. Angelina P. Mottola Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. May Dr. and Mrs. Alan S. Michaels Mrs. James T. Mountz Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Moynihan, Jr. Mr and Mrs. Fred O'Connor Mrs. Leopold Peavy, Jr. Richard Mozger John F. O'Connor Mr. and Mrs. John Pierce Ms Christine A. Mudgett Ms. Eleanor R. O'Keef'e Mrs. Marion L. Peirson Dr. and Mrs. H. Peter Mueller Robert F. O'Malley Mr and Mrs. John B. Pepper Mr. and Mrs. Dan (' Miicsscl Ms Eileen O'Meara and Ms. Elsbeth M. Percy

Mrs. Judith Palmer Muggia Ms. Ann O'Meara Mr. and Mrs. Guido R. Perera, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hugo A. Mujica Mr. and Mrs. John P. O'Neil Ms. Marian Perkins

Mrs. Laverne Mullen Richard J. O'Neil Mrs. Paul F. Perkins, Jr.

Ms. Brigid P. Mullins Mrs. Stella Z. O'Neill Frank Perrin

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mulroy J. P. O'Toole Mrs. Marjorie Marsh Perry

Jeffrey II. Munger Mr. and Mrs. Eric Oddleifson Mr. and Mrs. Marvin D. Perry

Mr. and Mrs. John H. Munier, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert W. Oedel Miss Theodora Perry Mrs. Paul Murdock Mrs. John D. Ogilby Mr. and Mrs. Lorens Persson

Mrs. Barn- Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Ara J. Ohanian Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Peters

Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Bruce S. Old Mrs. Douglas Peters

Mr. and Mrs. Glenn E. Murphy, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Olmstead Mr. and Mrs. Lovett C. Peters

John J. Murphy Mr. and Mrs. Peter B. Olney Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Peters Paul P. Murphy Thomas L. Olsen Richard W. Peters Dr. Joseph E. and Ms. Virginia L. Murray Mr. and Mrs. Peter Onanian Robert E. Peters

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Murray Dr. and Mrs. Martin S. Oppenheim Dr. and Mrs. Robert A. Petersen Steven P. Murray Derek O. Oram Miss Nancy Peterson Ms. Margaret Musculus Ms. Eleanor T. Orloff Stephen Peterson Mr. and Mrs. Allen Myers Mr. and Mrs. William Orme-Johnson Raoul Pettai Ms. Mary H. Myers Mrs. Josef A. Orosz Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Petterson Ms. Ellen Dana Nagler Mrs. Herman A. Osgood Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pfund Ms. Alice Naidich Mrs. Robert L. Osgood Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Phelps Robert Nardella Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Ossoff Mr. and Mrs. Otis Philbrich Mr. and Mrs. John Nardi Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Ossoff Drs. James and Beverly Philip Ms. Lynn Nathanson Mr. and Mrs. Michael Ossoff Ms. Grace P. Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Norris L. Nathanson Samuel Otis Ms. Kathy Phillips

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Needham, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John Avery Ould Mrs. Overton A. Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Neff Ken Ozaki Mr. and Mrs. William E. Phillips

Mr. and Mrs. Harold L. Nelson Raymond J. Paczkowski Ms. Sharon N. Pickett

Mr. and Mrs. Stuart K. Nelson Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Paglicca, Jr. George E. Pichette Mr. and Mrs. Richard Nemrow Mr. and Mrs. John F. Palmer Mr. and Mrs. Jay B. Pieper

Dr. and Mrs. Paul Nesbeda Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Palmer Dr. E. C. Pierce, Jr.

Mrs. John S. Nesbit John J. Pankosky, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Elisha G. Pierce 3rd Mrs. Roy Neuberger Mr. and Mrs. Gerard A. Paquette Mr. and Mrs. Laurence A. Pierce Ms. Sylvia Neumann Alfred Paranay Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Pierce

Mr. and Mrs. Richard 0. Neville Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Paris Mr. and Mrs. Harlan T. Pierpont, Jr. Mrs. Henry H. Newell Charles G. Parker Dr. Ely E. Pilchik

Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm C. Newell Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Parker William W. Pinney

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Newman H Mr. and Mrs. J. Harry Parker Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Pitcher, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. G. William Newton Richard Parker Mr. and Mrs. Albert R. Pitcoff Mr. and Mrs. H. Gilman Nichols Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Parker III Andrew R. Piwcio

Mr. and Mrs. Horace S. Nichols Dr. Stephen Parker Ms. Penelope G. Place

Joseph J. Nicholson Mr. and Mrs. W. James Parker Dr. and Mrs. Irving H. Plotkin W. Sayles Nicholson Thomas Parks Mrs. William B. Plumer

Mr. and Mrs. Albert L. Nickerson Mrs. Charles C. Parlin, Sr. Dr. Peter E. Pochi Mr. and Mrs. John P. Nixon Mr. and Mrs. Jack W. Parmley Mr. and Mrs. Orville F.

Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Noble Miss Barbara S. Partridge Rodney F. Poland, Jr. Lynn and Carolyn Noble Miss Elizabeth H. Partridge Mrs. Toby Polayes Robert W. Noel Mr. and Mrs. Harvey L. Pastan Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Poling Kevin T. Nolan John Pastore Mr. and Mrs. Howard D. Ponty

Ms. Sharon Nolan Mr. and Mrs. James J. Pastoriza Mrs. Sumner Poorvu

Richard A. Norman Mrs. C. Campbell Patterson Dr. and Mrs. Alfred Pope Hubert C. Normile, Jr. Mrs. Robert E. Patterson Mrs. David Pope Dr. and Mrs. Lawrence A. Norton Mrs. Theodore G. Patterson Ms. Margery Pope Ms. Miriam A. Nowlin Mr. and Mrs. Peter Pattison Mr. and Mrs. Mark A. Popovsky

Dr. Samuel Nun Dr. and Mrs. Anthony S. Patton Dr. Philip J. Porter Mr. and Mrs. Geoffrey Nunes Edward L. Pattullo Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Posner

Dr. Aaron J. Nurick and Ms. Diane M. Dr. and Mrs. G. Richard Paul Peter B. Post

Austin Saul Paulder Mr. and Mrs. Herbert I. Potter

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Nye Mrs. William T. Payne Mrs. Sophie Poulos Ms. Genevieve A. O'Brien Mr. and Mrs. Samuel R. Payson Mrs. David George Powell Ms. Margaret A. O'Brien Mr. and Mrs. Francis W. Peabody Mr. and Mrs. Dennis M. Powers Mrs. Margaret M. O'Brien Mr. and Mrs. George Peacock Mr. and Mrs. Donald Powers

Ms. Rita A. O'Brien Ms. Dorothy S. Pearlstein Mr. and Mrs. Franklin H. Powers Dennis O'Connor Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Pearlstein Gerald Powers Mrs. H. Burton Powers Dr. and Mrs. F. Howard Rexroad David T. Rubin William Powers Miss Lucille Rexroad Eugene and Arlene Rubin Mr. and Mrs. Melvin M. Prague Ms. Mary B. Reynolds Mrs. Howard Rubin Mrs. Albert E. Pratley Ms. Mary Bartlett Reynolds Mr. and Mrs. Manuel Rubin Mr. and Mrs. James D. Pratt Ms. Laura Rhodes Ruth and Milton Rubin Warren Preece Ms. Elizabeth S. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Rubinovitz Mrs. Roger Preston Dr. and Mrs. George S. Richardson Laurence Rubinstein Dr. Gail Price Mrs. Margaret Richardson Alford Paul Rudnick Ms. Gilbert A. Price Ralph S. Richter Kenneth D. Rudnick Mrs. John H. Privitera Mrs. Robert Rideout Mrs. Ralph P. Rudnick Mrs. Samuel H. Proger Mr. and Mrs. Bernard A. Riemer Mr. and Mrs. William W. Rudolph Mr. and Mrs. Edward O. Provost, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Christopher M. Riley Ms. Miriam W. Ruopp Robert W. Puffer HI Mr. and Mrs. John R. Riley Mrs. Cecilia H. Russell Nathaniel Pulsifer Miss Mary K. Riley Mr. and Mrs. Henry S. Russell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Putnam Wayne P. Rindone Mr. and Mrs. Philip H. Russell, Jr.

Dr. Michael C. J. Putnam S. Melvin Rines Robert J. Russell Ms. Joan E. Quagenti Leslie and Marilyn Riseberg Ms. Zabelle D. Russian Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey D. Queen Ms. Judy Rist Ms. Elizabeth R. Russo Robert Quick Mr. and Mrs. John A. Ritsher William Russo Miss Kathleen Quill and Manuel Rivera Mrs. Beverly B. Rutstein Miss Barbara Quill Mr. and Mrs. Elie Rivollier, Jr. Ms. Agnes G. Ryan Mrs. Hannah A. Quint Dr. and Mrs. George L. Robb William J. Ryter Mrs. William H. Radebaugh Douglas M. Robbe David D. Ryus Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Rafferty Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Robbins Mr. and Mrs. Theodore S. Saad Dr. Dave Rafkin Dr. and Mrs. Peter Robbins Joseph M. Saba R. M. Raja Norman Robertson Dr. and Mrs. Ben Sachs

John J. Rallis Christopher J. Robinson Prof, and Mrs. Albert M. Sacks Robert D. Ramsdell Mr. and Mrs. Dwight P. Robinson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Sadowsky Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Ramsdell Mr. and Mrs. G. Elliott Robinson John K. Sakell

Miss Elizabeth S. Ramseyer Mr. and Mrs. Leif Robinson Ms. Ilonka M. Salisbury

Philip F. Randall Mr. and Mrs. W. Calvin Robinson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Salisbury Mrs. Walter M. Rankin Ms. Louise A. Roche Mr. and Mrs. James A. Saltonstall Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Rapp Allan G. Rodgers Mr. and Mrs. William L. Saltonstall Ms. Nancy Winship Rathborne Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rodgers Professor Sharon C. Salveter Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Raube-Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Sumner Rodman David Salzman

Mrs. J. C. Rauscher Bruce A. Rogal Miss Esther Engel Salzman George Raymond Dr. and Mrs. Paul. B. Rogal Miss Idah L. Salzman

Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Raymond Dr. and Mrs. Malcolm P. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Samsel

Ralph Raynard Mrs. Samuel S. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. Mats A. Samuelsson

Harold Raynolds, Jr. Mrs. John E. Rogerson Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Sandberg

Bradford C. Read Mr. and Mrs. Gordon J. Rollert Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Sandstrom

John B. Read, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Allan Romanow Stephen Santis

Ms. Cecilia Reardon Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Ropp Mr. and Mrs. Carl M. Sapers Mrs. Louise A. Reardon Mr. and Mrs. M. Rosebrooks Dr. and Mrs. Nelson R. Saphir Mrs. Eugene E. Record Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Rosen Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Sargent Mr. and Mrs. John Reddy Mark Rosen Eiji Satani Mrs. Virginia H. Redmond Ms. Vera Rosen Neal A. Satran

Robert and Susan Reece Mr. and Mrs. I. Jerome Rosenberg David Saul Kurtis Reed Dr. and Mrs. Isadore H. Rosenberg Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Saunders

Dr. William P. Reed, Jr. and Martine B. Dr. Malcolm L. Rosenblatt Ralph L. Sautter

Reed, Esq. Dr. and Mrs. David S. Rosenthal Mr. and Mrs. F. Henry Savage Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Reenstierna Robert Rosenthal Mr. and Mrs. James P. Savas John R. and Laura Eby Regier Dr. and Mrs. Robert K. Rosenthal Mrs. Arthur B. Savel

Mrs. Cary Reich Mr. and Mrs. Herbert G. Roskind, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Martin Savitz Miss Florence M. Reid Dr. and Mrs. N. Paul Rosman Richard and Diane Savrann Ms. Ursula Reidel-Schrewe Ms. Fran V. Ross Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Sawyer Mr. and Mrs. John B. Reilly Ms. C. Pamela Rossi Mrs. Georgianna Sawyer

William J. Reilly, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Rotenberg Dr. Anthony P. Scappicchio

Arthur S. Reinherz Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Roth Dr. and Mrs. Robert T. Sceery Dr. and Mrs. Jerald L. Reisman Mr. and Mrs. Terry Rothermel Mr. and Mrs. Bob Schaefer

Dr. and Mrs. Arnold S. Relman Mr. and Mrs. Stephen S. Rothschild Ms. Helene G. Schaefer

Mr. and Mrs. Peter Remis Ms. Anne Rothwell Dr. Charles D. Schaeffer, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. John F. Reno David J. Rowan Dr. Susan F. Schaeffer

Miss Jeanette W. Renshaw Mr. and Mrs. B. Allen Rowland Mrs. William J. Scharffenberger Dr. and Mrs. George B. Reservitz Mrs. Benjamin Rowland Carol and Phil Schatten

Robert C. Resker Ms. Jane S. Rowse Mr. and Mrs. James L. Schaye Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Resniek Richard Roy Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Scheide Ms. Rose Marie Resniek Ms. Eleanor Rozomofsky Ms. Carol Scheifele-Holmes

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74 Mr. and Mrs. Leonard L. Schley Enid and Mel Shapiro Miss Kathleen E. Smith Henry L. P. Schmelzer Mrs. Irene Shea Newlin R. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Schmidt Mr. Richard Shea and Ms. Joanne Mr. and Mrs. Peter Smith Dr. and Mrs. Arthur J. Schneider Donahue Mr. and Mrs. Philip J. Smith Mrs. Nancy H. Schneider John P. Sheehy Robert D. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schneider Timothy W. Sheen Ms. Roberta E. Smith Mr. and Mrs. W. Alexander Schocken Ms. Sandra Sheiber Dr. Sidney B. Smith Gerald Schoeb Mr. and Mrs. John E. Sheldon Mrs. Constance A. Smithwood Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Schoenly Mrs. William F. Shelley Mr. and Mrs. Paul Snider Peter Schofield Mr. and Mrs. Alfred J. Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Snow Ms. Jean Scholtens Mr. and Mrs. James E. Shepherd Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Snow Mrs. Janos Scholz Dr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Sherer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Allen L. Snyder III Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Schon Mr. and Mrs. Ralph S. Sheridan Mr. and Mrs. Rolf E. Soderstrom Mr. and Mrs. Marvin G. Schorr Peter Sherin Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sofield Mr. and Mrs. William Schrader Mrs. Edward D. Sherman Arthur & Joan Solomon Mr. and Mrs. Craig A Schreck, Sr. Mrs. George Sherman Dr. Norman Solomon Mr. and Mrs. Donald F. Schrock Ms. Heidi L. Sherman Rabbi Rifat Sonsino Mr. and Mrs. Kent Schubert Richard Sherman Mrs. Hrisafie M. Sophocles

Dr. and Mrs. Milford D. Schulz Ronald E. Sherman Dr. and Mrs. Karl Sorger Ms. Paula Schumann William T. Sherry Mrs. Horace H. Soule Peter Schuntermann Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Shirley Dr. and Mrs. Arthur S. Spangler, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Schwann Mr. and Mrs. Jack Shirman Mr. William Speen and Ms. Maraline Rane Mrs. Eleanor N. Schwartz Stanley Scmishkiss Dr. Dennis Speliotis Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. Murray Shocket John V. Spencer

Irving Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. Seabury T. Short, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel H. Sperber Ms. Pamela Goldberg Schwartz Dr. Greg Shoukimas Robert L. Spiers Drs. Robert and Janine Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. Joel P. Shriberg Mrs. Richard Spindler Ms. Roslyn Schwartz Mrs. Helen N. Shulman John B. Spinney Mrs. Henry F. Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Shuwall Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Spound

Ms. Barbara A. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Sibelian Dr. and Mrs. Christopher R. Sprague Mr. and Mrs. Guy R. Scott Ms. Jane Sibley Mrs. George R. Sprague

Robert L. Scott Mrs. Lawrence M. Sibley Mrs. J. H. Sprague Warren C. Scott Mr. and Mrs. A. Gary Sigai Mrs. James C. Sprague Mrs. Linwood D. Scriven Mrs. Mildred Silberblatt Mr. and Mrs. David Squire

Mr. and Mrs. David W. Scudder Mr. and Mrs. Alex Silberstein Dr. Homer J. Squires

Mr. and Mrs. John C. Scully Kevin Silk John W. Stack

Dr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Scully Dr. Alene Silver Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Stagg HI Mr. and Mrs. Donald Seamans Mrs. Seymour Silver Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin R. Stahl Mr. and Mrs. Campbell L. Searle Mr. and Mrs. Hyman Silverman Ms. Brenda Stall

Dr. and Mrs. John B. Sears Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Silverstein Dr. and Mrs. John B. Standbury

Robert Seeger Ms. Linda Silvio Mr. and Mrs. James F. Stanton

Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Seeley David W. Simard David C. Starkweather Mr. and Mrs. Ralph G. Seferian Joyce and Edward Simches Mrs. John C. Starr Ms. Deborah Webber Segal Ms. Betsy A. Simmons Mrs. Edith B. Staton

Mr. and Mrs. Steven F. Segal Mr.and Mrs. Frederick J. Simmons Ms. Sonya Stazdes Maurice and Sarah Segall Mrs. George Henry Simonds Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence E. Steadman Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Segel Ms. Deborah Simone Miss Anna B. Stearns Mr. and Mrs. Peter Segel Mr. and Mrs. Penfield Sinclair Mrs. Irma Mann Stearns and Dr. Norman Naohiko Seki Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Sinclair Stearns Mr. and Mrs. Frank H. Sellman Mr.and Mrs. John B. Singleton Mr. and Mrs. John Stebbins Priscilla Sellman, MD Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Sisson Allen C. Steere

Gordon H. Sellon Howard Sitzer Dr. Harold J. Stein and Ms. Kay Stein Mr. and Mrs. George E. Senkler Miss Mabel L. Skillings Norman Stein Stephen D. Senturia Ms. Eleanor P. Skinner Alan Steinert

Miss J. Eleanor Serafini Mrs. Harold Slate Mrs. Robert S. Steinert Mrs. Nancy P. Sevcenko Mr. and Mrs. John O. Slavinsky Mr. and Mrs. Jay Stempel

Frank A. Sewell Joshua J. Slavitt Mrs. Edith 0. Stephenson

George C. Seybolt John L. Slocum Benjamin J. Stern Mr. and Mrs. Norman J. Schachoy Ms. Caroline Smedvig Mrs. Elinor Stetson

Alan Shactman Ms. Barbara A. Smith Mrs. Brooks Stevens, Jr.

Ms. Eunice L. Shaer Donald J. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Edward B. Stevens Milton Shaer Douglas R. Smith Robert M. Stevens

Samuel Shaer Mrs. Ernest Smith HI Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L. Stevenson, Jr. Thomas Shake Garrett K. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Steward Mrs. George M. Shannon Miss Geraldine D. Smith Dr. and Mrs. Goodwill M. Stewart

Walter Shannon Mr. and Mrs. Howard P. Smith Mrs. Jean S. Stewart Arnold H. Shapiro Jeffrey W. Smith Dr. and Mrs. Samuel K. Stewart Dan Shapiro John Butler Smith Ms. Ruth E. Stickney Mrs Freema Shapiro Julian and Anita Smith Mr. and Mrs. John W. Stimpson Mrs. Edward T. Stacker Timothy A. Taylor Arthur Ullian Dr. B. David Stollar Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Tedeschi Ms. Sandra Uyterhoeven

Robert S. Stoller Mr. and Mrs. John W. Teele Richard J. Valcourt Dr. and Mrs. Gene H. Stollerman Mrs. Wesley Teich Dr. Robert O. Valerio Mrs. Ellery W. Stone Warren Teixeira Mrs. L. Van Valkenburg Mr. and Mrs. James F. Stone Mrs. Joan Terkelson Ms. Joan Valle

Ms. Paola M. Stone Richard J. Testa Mrs. Francis R. Van Buren Mrs Robert G. Stone Mr. and Mrs. John B. Tew Dirk Van Der Kaay Mr. and Mrs. John R. Stopfel Mr. and Mrs. John C. Thalheimer, Jr. Ms. Mary Jo van der Kaay

Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Stott Mrs. Richard S. Thayer Peter W. Van Etten Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Strachan Mr. and Mrs. Philip Thibodeau Allan Van Gestel Dr. Kristine E. Strand Dr. and Mrs. James N. Thiel David L. VanDerMeid

Arthur I. Strang Nicholas H. and Marian A. Thisse Albert R. Vanderbilt Mr. and Mrs. Norris Strawbridge Thomas G. Thomas Henry Vandermark Mr. and Mrs. Vcevold O. Strekalovsky Miss Anne C. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. William L. Vanderwiel

Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Stringer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John Larkin Thompson Rev. George D. Vartzelis

Peter Stropparo Ms. Leila Fern Thompson Mrs. Lillian B. Vash

Mr. and Mrs. Burton B. Stuart Mr. and Mrs. Lewis B. Thompson, Jr. Mrs. John Vasilchuk

Ms. Rilda M. Stuart Mr. and Mrs. Rollin S. Thompson and Prof. Mario Vecchiarelli Dr. Joanne Stubbe Mr. Richard Thompson Joe Vecchio

Mr. and Mrs. George P. Sturgis Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Thompson, Jr. George and Lois Vernet Ms. Dianne Sturiale Mrs. R. Amory Thorndike Mr. and Mrs. Daniel R. Vershbow

David Sudder Mr. and Mrs. Michael Thornton Elliot Vestner Ms. Carol M. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Thornton Robert A. Vieira Edward T. Sullivan Mrs. Chelia M. Thorpe Normand P. Viens

Miss Elizabeth M. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. John F. Tierney, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Salvatore J. Vbiciguerra

Ms. Helen V. Sullivan Miss E. Katharine Tilton Prof, and Mrs. Evon Z. Vogt

Joseph A. Sullivan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jeffry A. Timmons Robert A. Vogt Mary Kane Sullivan Kenneth E. Tingley Bradford W. Voigt Mr. and Mrs. Paul D. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Michael Tinkham Ms. E. Joan Marraffa vonSternberg Mr. and Mrs. Paul M. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. Warren E. Titus Miss Eleanor F. Voorhies

Mr and Mrs. M. Greeley Summers Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Tobey J. Richard Vyce Mrs. Ching-Mi Sun Ms. Laurie Tobin Mr. and Mrs. Jeptha H. Wade Mrs. Janet Surrett Mr. and Mrs. Peter H. Tolman James Wagstaff Mrs. Heslip E. Sutherland Mrs. Stirling Tomkins Mrs. Harold Wald Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan D. Sutton Mr. and Mrs. William Tomlinson Miss Carol Anne Waldron

Mr. and Mrs. Nobuo Suzui Mr. and Mrs. James K. Tonrey, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Michael D. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Suzuki Ingvar E. Tornberg Ms. Pauline E. Walker

Anthony Swain Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Tosteson Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Walker

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond L. Swain William R. Tower, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William N. Walker Mr. and Mrs. Richard Swain Dr. and Mrs. Philip Trackman Llewellyn E. Wall Mr. and Mrs. Carl V. Swanson Mr. and Mrs. William W. Tracy Mr. and Mrs. Gerald R. Wallace Ms. Elizabeth Swartley Charles E. Trafton H Mrs. Helen B. Gring Wallace Cecilia and Paul Swartz Mr. and Mrs. William Tragakis Ms. Martha Redfield Wallace Leo Thomas Swed Mrs. Harris L. Traiger Allen D. Waller

Mrs. Allen N. Sweeny Mrs. Foster M. Trainer David I. Walsh Ms. Tirzah Sweet Ms. Edna Travis William K. Walters

Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Sweitzer, Jr. John Travis Dr. and Mrs. Stephen L. Wanger Mrs. William A. Swett Mr. and Mrs. Robert Travis Ms. Joyce A. Warchol Ms. Kate Swinson Jonathan B. Treat Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Ware

Mr. and Mrs. K. W. Switzer Mr. and Mrs. John F. Trefethen, Jr. Helen and Elizabeth Ware Miss Jean Syer Mr. and Mrs. D. Thomas Trigg Mrs. John Ware, Jr. Mrs. Lawrence A. Sykes Mr. and Mrs. Donald Trott Mrs. Louise P. Waring

Mrs. James J. Sylligardos George S. Troupe Mr. and Mrs. Louis M. Warlick Dr. David M. Systrom Mr. and Mrs. Philip W. Trumbull Mrs. Richard Warren Ms. Kiyom Taima Koichi Tsuzaki Mr. and Mrs. Milton C. Wasby Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Takvorian Mr. and Mrs. Ed Tucker Mr. and Mrs. Winthrop M. Wassenar Ms. Eleanor Talbot John T. Tucker Earl E. Watson III Dr. Rogert H. Tancrell Ms. Judith R. Tucker Mrs. Estelle Watters

Mr. and Mrs. David S. Tappan Miss Ruth Tucker Catherine Weary-Steets Mr. and Mrs. Merton Tarlow Dr. Patricia Tudbury Mrs. M. Elizabeth Weaver

Ms. Evelyn J. Tate and Ms. Frances Turley Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Webb III Mr. Randall B. Enger Mr. and Mrs. H. Dixon Turner Ms. Bryna Webber and C. Richard Taylor Ms. Margo Turrentine Dr. Richard Tompkins Mrs. Charles L. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Tuthill Mr. and Mrs. David L. Weber

David A. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Renwick S. Tweedy Mrs. Eric T. Weber Lee E. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. David C. Twichell Ms. Josephine Webster Ms. Mary Ellen Taylor Mr. and Mrs. John Twiname Mrs. Mina M. Webster Dr. Raymond L. Taylor Mark Uhrich Stuart Wecker Whiteside Mrs. Arnold N. Weeks Mrs. Charles B. Dr. Elaine Woo Mr. and Mrs. Sinclair Weeks, Jr. Mrs. Howard S. Whiteside Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Wood Mr. and Mrs. William D. Weeks Mrs. John K. Whiting, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Wood

Mrs. Rosemary Weich Mr. and Mrs. Robert Whitman Mr. and Mrs. Rawsori Lyman Wood Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey M. Weiesen Leonard Whitmore R. Robert Woodburn, Jr. Richard L. Weil, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Whitney Mr. and Mrs. John Woodman Louis B. Weinberger Edward T. Whitney, Jr. Mrs. Marilyn Woodworth Marvin Weiner Mrs. Ross E. Whittenburg Mr. and Mrs. Victor H. Woolley Ms. Florence Weingart Mrs. Nathaniel Whittier Robert W. Wormstead, Jr. Lewis H. Weinstein Mrs. Chester E. Whittle Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Worthen

Mrs. David Weisberger Mr. and Mrs. Peter A. Wick Mr. and Mrs. Paul I. Wren Steven Weisman Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Wiedemann Ms. Janice E. Wright and Mr. Rober Cayer Dudley A. Weiss Mrs. Morrill Wiggin Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth A. Wright Howard P. Weiss Mrs. David Wilder Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Wright Kathy L. Weiss Mr. and Mrs. H. Seymour Wiley Ms. Suzanne Wright

Dr. and Mrs. Claude E. Welch Hon. and Mrs. Herbert P. Wilkins Mrs. Whitney Wright Mr. and Mrs. Christopher M. Weld Dr. and Mrs. Harold A. Wilkinson Mrs. Frederick W. Wrightson III

Mrs. Philip S. Weld Mrs. D. Forbes Will Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wrigley

Mrs. A. Turner Wells Chester W. Williams Mr. and Mrs. John H. Wylde

Mr. and Mrs. F. David Wells Roger N. Williams Mrs. Joan Wylie

Mrs. Ralph Werman Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Willis Mr. and Mrs. Donald Wyman, Jr.

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wernick Richard Wills Jeffries Wyman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. West Roy A. And Nancy R. Wilsker Mr. and Mrs. Justin L. Wyner

Mrs. Thomas H. West, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Albert 0. Wilson, Jr. Mrs. Kazer Yahnian John H. Westerbeke, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Alexander M. Wilson Arthur Yama Mrs. Winthrop Wetherbee Mr. and Mrs. David R. Wilson Susumu Yamaguchi Mr. and Mrs. Jerrold A. Wexler Mrs. Ethel Wilson Mr. and Mrs. David Yarosh

Mrs. Henry F. G. Wey HI Howard Wilson Takashi Yoshimura

Irving Wharton Mr. and Mrs. J. Thomas Wilson Jeffrey Young Thomas Wharton, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Norman L. Wilson Ms. Joyce L. Young

David Wheeler Richard D. Wilson Nathaniel J. Young, Jr.

Mrs. Henry Wheeler Dr. and Mrs. Richard E. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Raymond H. Young Ms. Joan Wheeler Robert G. Wilson Ms. Ruth E. Young

Mr. and Mrs. Mark C. Wheeler Paul S. Winalski Arnold and Norma Zack

Mrs. Richard P. Wheeler Mr. and Mrs. Richard Winneg Ms. Suzanne Zaff

Joseph F. Whinery, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. David E. Winograd Mrs. Zenon S. Zannetos

Mrs. John S. Whipple Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Winslow Dr. and Mrs. Marvin Zelen

Mrs. Robert J. Whipple Mrs. Henry D. Winslow William Zellen William M. Whipple Ms. Nancy Winterbottom Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Zeller

Clark and Nancy Whitcomb Mrs. John Wise, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Zeller

Ms. Ann M. White Daniel Wistran Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Ziering, Jr. Mrs. Benjamin W. White G. N. Wogan Dr. and Mrs. Maurice L. Zigmond Miss Christine White Mrs. Roger Wolcott Ms. Helen Zimbler Mrs. Constance V.R. White Mrs. Charlotte Wolf Mr. and Mrs. Barry Zimman Frank M. White Daniel and Beverly Wolf Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Zimmerman Mrs. Henry K. White Mr. and Mrs. Allan Wolfe Roger Zimmerman John R. White Mr. and Mrs. George M. Wolfe Mr. and Mrs. David Zussman Mrs. Ogden White, Jr. Stephen W. Wolfe Anonymous (172)

Richardson White Mr. and Mrs. Laurence S. Wolk Mrs. Robert E. White Suzanne & Allen Wolozin

77 THE NEXT HOROWITZ NEEDS Dinner at 6. YOUR PIANO Symphony at 8. $ Why not consider a tax Parking at 5. deductible gift to New Make dinner at Boodle's part of England Conservatory? your night out at the Symphony. When you do, you'll not only enjoy an award winning dining experi- ence from Boston's authentic grill, For further you'll also get special parking information please privileges at the Back Bay Hilton's call (617) 262-1120, private garage. ext. 426. Just show us your tickets at dinner on the night of the performance and park your car for just $5. And with a deal like that, a night at the Symphony never sounded better.

BOODLE'S

OF • BOSTON An Authentic Grill Lunch and dinner daily. In Boston's Back Bay Hilton. Phone (617) BOODLES.

1412 B Beacon StreefWbdkline, Massachusetts 02146 ^17)738-5700 • 1-800-343-8535 • FAX (617) 738-1512

78 Contributions were made to the Boston Symphony Orchestra during the 1989

fiscal year in honor of the following individuals:

Sandy and David Bakalar Ms. Dorothy Karg Mrs. L. S. Pilcher Mrs. Robert F. Bradford and Dr. Leo Berman Mr. and Mrs. David R. Pokross N. Brooks Mrs. Robert M. P. Kennard Cecilia Reardon Helene R. Cahners-Kaplan Harvey Chet Krentzman Arthur S. Reinherz and George Kaplan Alexandra Leith David Rogovin John G. Coe Dr. and Mrs. William M. Adrienne and Herbert Rubin Harry Ellis Dickson McDermott Christopher and Linda Sprague Charles T. Francis Virginia Morse

Contributions were made to the Boston Symphony Orchestra during the 1989 fiscal year in memory of the following individuals:

Isadore M. Alpher Julie Harrison Dr. Gene Nelson Sol M. Alpher F. R. Hersey George Ott Florence Barry Richard R. Higgins Donald Outerbridge Frank Berry Stanwood Hooper Mrs. Stephen Paine L. Bohr Boris A. Jackson Wendy Patrick Adelaide R. Browne Mrs. E. Morton Jennings, Jr. Esther Rabb Duke Castanha T. Edson Jewell, Jr. Ben Rowe Richard P. Chapman Rachel Kohn Stanley A. Swaebe Dr. George H. A. Clowes, Jr. Mrs. Stella A. Kulig Kaliopi Sylligardos Isabelle Crocker Clement R. Lamson Roland Tapley Katharine E. Driscoll Edmands P. Lingham Mrs. Abbott Payson Usher Thomas B. Frost Roderick MacDougall W. Burgess Warren Frieda Goldberg Thomas N. Metcalf Roger Whittemore Susan Gordon Katherine Mushkin

The Boston Symphony Orchestra is particularly grateful to those individuals who chose to remember the BSO through a bequest.

Margaret Arnold Jane P. Guild Robert C. Orr Louise V. Blake Charlotte C. Hartley Louise H. Parsons Arthur P. Contas Edith M. Henderson Lucy B. Putnam Albert R. Demers Adeline H. Leary Helen Secrist Frances H. Dwight Betty B. McAndrew Violet Sieder Edith F. Eustis Angela McDermott Julius Steiner Frances M. Fee Edith Mclntire John E. Stevens Charles Fleischer Ruch Munro Grace Hall Thacher Helen Graustein Frances B. Nalle Richmond G. Wight William C. Gray John Northcott

79 Next Program . . .

Thursday, March 22, at 8 Friday, March 23, at 2 Saturday, March 24, at 8 Tuesday, March 27, at 8

BERNARD HAITINK conducting

COPLAND Appalachian Spring, Ballet for Martha

BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No. 4 in G, Opus 58 Allegro moderato Andante con moto Rondo: Vivace MAURIZIO POLLINI

INTERMISSION

STRAVINSKY Petrushka (original version, 1911) The Shrove-Tide Fair Petrushka' s Room The Moor's Room The Shrove-Tide Fair (toward evening)

Supper Concerts at Symphony Hall . . .

Supper Concerts feature members of the Boston Symphony Orchestra performing chamber music in Symphony Hall's Cabot-Cahners Room at 6 p.m. followed by a buffet supper. For ticket information or reservations, please call the Volunteer Office at (617) 266-1492, ext. 177.

Thursday, March 22, and Saturday, March 24, at 6 p.m. IKUKO MIZUNO, violin MARK LUDWIG, viola LUCIA LIN, violin RONALD FELDMAN, cello

BEETHOVEN String Quartet No. 1 in F, Opus 18, No. 1 DVOMK Terzetto in C, Opus 74

Tuesday, March 27, and Saturday, April 21, at 6 p.m. PETER HADCOCK, clarinet ROBERTO DIAZ, viola RICHARD MACKEY, horn JOEL MOERSCHEL, cello ROLAND SMALL, bassoon JOHN STOVALL, double bass BONNIE BEWICK, violin

BEETHOVEN Septet in E-flat for winds and strings, Opus 20

80 Coming Concerts .

Wednesday, March 21, at 7:30 Thursday 'C- March 29, 8-10 Open Rehearsal Friday 'B'- March 30, 2-4 Steven Ledbetter will discuss the program Saturday 'B'- March 31, 8-10 at 6:30 in Symphony Hall. Tuesday 'B'- April 3, 8-10 Thursday 'A' -March 22, 8-10:05 BERNARD HAITINK conducting Friday 'A' -March 23, 2-4:05 WOMEN OF THE NEW ENGLAND Saturday 'A' -March 24, 8-10:05 CONSERVATORY CHORUS, Tuesday 'C- March 27, 8-10:05 TAMARA BROOKS, director BERNARD HAITINK conducting STRAVINSKY Symphonies of MAURIZIO POLLINI, piano Wind Instruments COPLAND Appalachian Spring DEBUSSY Trois Nocturnes BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No. 4 BRAHMS Symphony No. 2 STRAVINSKY Petrushka (original version, 1911) Thursday 'A' -April 5, 8-10

Friday 'A' -April 6, 2-4

Saturday 'A' -April 7, 8-10 Tuesday 'C- April 10, 8-10 conducting BOSTON'S only gallery YURI BASHMET, viola dedicated exclusively to Eskimo art. JOHN ALER, tenor TANGLEWOOD FESTD7AL CHORUS, JOHN OLD7ER, conductor SCHNITTKE Viola Concerto INUIT (United States premiere) IMAGES BERLIOZ Te Deum

The finest in Thursday 'D' -April 12, 8-10:05 sculpture, rare prints, books, Friday Evening — April 13, 8-10:05 and wall hangings Saturday 'B' -April 14, 8-10:05 Tuesday 'B'- April 17, 8-10:05 SOLD • BOUGHT • APPRAISED CHARLES DUTOIT conducting Call or write: P.O. Box 2501, Quincy, MA 02269 EMANUEL AX, piano (617) 471-2626, Mon.-Fri, 9:00-5:00 MOZART Symphony No. 36, Linz 471-1706 eve's (617) & weekends SHOSTAKOVICH Piano Concerto No. 1 ELGAR Enigma Variations

W Thursday 'B' -April 19, 8-10 '^£k Saturday 'B' -April 21, 8-10 SEIJI OZAWA conducting For rates and BOSTON ALFRED BRENDEL, piano information on i SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA TANGLEWOOD FESTIVAL CHORUS,

advertising in the \ SEIJI OZAWA >^> JOHN OLIVER, conductor Boston Symphony, %|j^ STRAVINSKY Chorale Variations on Boston Pops, Vom Himmel hoch MAHLER Adagio from Symphony and No. 10 Tanglewood program books BEETHOVEN Piano Concerto No. 1 please contact: Programs and artists subject to change. STEVE GANAK AD REPS

(617)-542-6913

81 PERFORMANCE YOU'LL APPRECIATE.

ilk PULSIFER & ASSOCIATES Investments managed with integrity.

Pulsifer & Associates Trustee and Investment Managers 27 North Main Street • P.O. Box 170 • Ipswich, MA 01938-0170 508-356-3530 In Boston: 617-227-7904

eet your own high M expectations. Quality performance and personal excellence have been the expectation at The Williston Northampton School for 150 years.

THF Please send me a catalog and videotape. WILLISTON NORTHAMPTON SCHOOL Name

19PaysonAve. Box 300 Street Easthampton, MA 01027 413/527-1520 FAX: 413/527-9494 City State Zip

82 i

Symphony Hall Information

FOR SYMPHONY HALL CONCERT IN CONSIDERATION of our patrons and AND TICKET INFORMATION, call (617) artists, children under four years of age will 266-1492. For Boston Symphony concert not be admitted to Boston Symphony program information, call "C-O-N-C-E-R-T" Orchestra concerts. (266-2378). THE SYMPHONY SHOP is located in the SYMPHONY performs ten THE BOSTON Huntington Avenue stairwell near the Cohen months a year, in Symphony Hall and at Wing and is open from one hour before each Tanglewood. For information about any of concert through intermission. The shop car- the orchestra's activities, please call Sym- ries BSO and musical-motif merchandise phony Hall, or write the Boston Symphony and gift items such as calendars, clothing, Orchestra, Symphony Hall, Boston, MA appointment books, drinking glasses, holiday 02115. ornaments, children's books, and BSO and THE EUNICE S. AND JULIAN COHEN Pops recordings. All proceeds benefit the WING, adjacent to Symphony Hall on Boston Symphony Orchestra. For merchan- Huntington Avenue, is currently undergoing dise information, please call (617) 267-2692. renovations. TICKET RESALE: If for some reason you FOR SYMPHONY HALL RENTAL are unable to attend a Boston Symphony INFORMATION, call (617) 266-1492, or concert for which you hold a ticket, you may write the Function Manager, Symphony make your ticket available for resale by call- Hall, Boston, MA 02115. ing the switchboard. This helps bring needed THE BOX OFFICE is open from 10 a.m. revenue to the orchestra and makes your until 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday; on seat available to someone who wants to concert evenings it remains open through attend the concert. A mailed receipt will intermission for BSO events or just past acknowledge your tax-deductible starting-time for other events. In addition, contribution. the box office opens Sunday at 1 p.m. when there is a concert that afternoon or evening. RUSH SEATS: There are a limited number Single tickets for all Boston Symphony sub- of Rush Tickets available for the Friday- scription concerts are available at the box afternoon, Tuesday-evening, and Saturday- office. For outside events at Symphony Hall, evening Boston Symphony concerts (sub- tickets are available three weeks before the scription concerts only). The continued low concert. No phone orders will be accepted price of the Saturday tickets is assured for these events. through the generosity of two anonymous donors. The Rush Tickets are sold at $6 TO PURCHASE BSO TICKETS: American each, one to a customer, on Fridays as of Express, MasterCard, Visa, a personal 9 a.m. and Saturdays and Tuesdays as of check, and cash are accepted at the box 5 p.m. office. To charge tickets instantly on a major credit card, or to make a reservation PARKING: The Prudential Center Garage and then send payment by check, call offers a discount to any BSO patron with a "Symphony-Charge" at (617) 266-1200, ticket stub for that evening's performance. Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. There are also two paid parking garages on until 6 p.m. There is a handling fee of $1.75 Westland Avenue near Symphony Hall. for each ticket ordered by phone. Limited street parking is available. As a GROUP SALES: Groups may take advan- special benefit, guaranteed pre-paid parking tage of advance ticket sales. For BSO con- near Symphony Hall is available to subscrib- certs at Symphony Hall, groups of twenty or ers who attend evening concerts on Tuesday, more may reserve tickets by telephone. To Thursday, Friday, or Saturday. For more place an order, or for more information, call information, call the Subscription Office at Group Sales at (617) 266-1492. (617) 266-7575.

83 LATECOMERS will be seated by the ushers Cabot-Cahners Room on the first-balcony during the first convenient pause in the pro- level serve drinks starting one hour before gram. Those who wish to leave before the each performance. For the Friday-afternoon end of the concert are asked to do so concerts, both rooms open at 12:15, with between program pieces in order not to dis- sandwiches available until concert time. turb other patrons. BOSTON SYMPHONY BROADCASTS: SMOKING IS NOT PERMITTED in any Concerts of the Boston Symphony Orchestra part of the Symphony Hall auditorium or in are heard by delayed broadcast in many the surrounding corridors. It is permitted parts of the United States and Canada, as only in the Cabot-Cahners and Hatch well as internationally, through the Boston rooms, and in the main lobby on Massachu- Symphony Transcription Trust. In addition, setts Avenue. Friday-afternoon concerts are broadcast live CAMERA AND RECORDING EQUIP- by WGBH-FM (Boston 89.7); Saturday- evening concerts are broadcast live by both MENT may not be brought into Symphony WGBH-FM and WCRB-FM (Boston Hall during concerts. 102.5). Live broadcasts may also be heard FIRST AID FACILITIES for both men on several other public radio stations and women are available. On-call physicians throughout New England and New York. attending concerts should leave their names BSO FRIENDS: The Friends are annual and seat locations at the switchboard near donors to the Boston Symphony Orchestra. the Massachusetts Avenue entrance. Friends receive BSO, the orchestra's news- WHEELCHAIR ACCESS: During the reno- letter, as well as priority ticket information vation of the Cohen Wing, there will be a and other benefits depending on their level temporary handicap ramp at the Huntington of giving. For information, please call the Avenue entrance. Restroom facilities and Development Office at Symphony Hall week- elevators are available. days between 9 and 5, (617) 266-1492. If

AN ELEVATOR is located outside the you are already a Friend and you have Hatch and Cabot-Cahners rooms on the changed your address, please send your new Massachusetts Avenue side of the building. address with your newsletter label to the Development Office, Symphony Hall, Bos- LADIES' ROOMS are located on the ton, MA 02115. Including the mailing label orchestra level, audience-left, at the stage will assure a quick and accurate change of end of the hall, and on the first-balcony address in our files. level, audience-right, outside the Cabot- Cahners Room near the elevator. BUSINESS FOR BSO: The BSO's Busi- ness & Professional Leadership program MEN'S ROOMS are located on the orches- makes it possible for businesses to partici- tra level, audience-right, outside the Hatch pate in the life of the Boston Symphony Room near the elevator, and on the first- Orchestra through a variety of original and balcony level, audience-left, outside the exciting programs, among them "Presidents Cabot-Cahners Room near the coatroom. at Pops," "A Company Christmas at Pops," COATROOMS are located on the orchestra and special-event underwriting. Benefits and first-balcony levels, audience-left, out- include corporate recognition in the BSO side the Hatch and Cabot-Cahners rooms. program book, access to the Higginson The BSO is not responsible for personal Room reception lounge, and priority ticket apparel or other property of patrons. service. For further information, please call the BSO Corporate Development Office at LOUNGES AND BAR SERVICE: There (617) 266-1492. are two lounges in Symphony Hall. The Hatch Room on the orchestra level and the

84 In Rare CasesWoodDo ^Conduct Electricity.

i hank you Boston Symphony Orchestra for music that shines brighter every year.

Bank of New England rasteii? ITALIAN PEELE?^

fOIIATOE*P ^[y WITH BASIL LEAF ^ A TSoUND PEELED^

pasteiiJ TOMATOE$

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QUALITY * falMATOR KT WEIGHT 35 OZS. (2 LBS. 3 0^)992 nnwn6 0Z.(UB.)-453GRM*S