! AtlantaTHE MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF THE ATLANTA MEMORIALArts ARTSCENTER JANUARY 1977 \6uCanTell AGood Ol’ Boy By What Keeps Him Company Used to be you could spot one a country mile away. Getting tougher all the time though. Because the good ol' boys ain't who they used to be. Exactly. Now you're just as likely to find 'em moving and shaking in the city as hunting and fishing in the country. They7re run­ Brebel ning fast and working hard, trying to ^YELL$ change the South. But still, beneath all that "WallStreet" outside, you'll find a little Main Street inside. Maybe that's why this New South everybody's talking about is turning out to be the real South. Because a good ol' boy has the sense to keep what's good, change what's not and the wisdom to know the difference. You can even see it in his whiskey. Rebel Yell, made and sold only below the Mason-Dixon line. Rebel Yell's whisper of wheat im­ parts a smooth, luxurious flavor tailored especially for the good ol' boy in each of us. Keep company with the Host Bourbon of the South. Ask for Rebel Yell. And if you don't recognize any good ol' boys in the room, don't , worry. They'll recognize you. I1 RebelYell The Good OF Boys Bourbon.

REBEL YELL DISTILLERY • LOUISVILLE KENTUCKY • 90 PROOF • KENTUCKY STRAIGHT BOURBON WHISKEY Of Special Interest

AT THE CENTER ffl______

ALLIANCE THEATRE

This Season At the Alliance

Our “biggest names in show business” span five centuries and three countries: Europe, , and the United States. This season provides offerings of every dramatic mode and mood—from comedy to tragedy, from farce to nostalgia, from history to high melodrama. One might say that there is something for everyone, but we prefer to think that it is all for everyone, that every playgoer will laugh all the way through Scapino, shudder with ambivalence toward Hedda Gabler, delight in the witty perfection of Shaw, and be moved by the spectacle of Henry IVand the warmth of To Kill A Mockingbird. The theatre is the place we come to know to come to our collections life beyond our own experience. It is for this reason that Producing Director David of fashion for the Bishop and Artistic Director Fred Chappell attempt to include in the Alliance entire family, the home, Theatre’s season a variety of plays—not to please everyone—but to offer our gifts and antiques too. audiences a wide range of dramatic Do stay for luncheon experiences throughout the season. Opening with Scapino, the season or tea at our Bird Cage continues with Ibsen’s Hedda Gabler, a new play Come Back to the 5 and Dime, restaurant, open every Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean by Ed Graczyk; shopping day. Lord & Taylor, George Bernard Shaw’s Misalliance', Harper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird', Phipps Plaza, Peachtree Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Part I; and closes with Edward Albee’s modern masterpiece, Road between Wieuca Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolfl Scapino! A Long Way offfrom Moliere and Lenox Roads. 266-0600 —our first production— by Frank Dunlop Monday through and is a hilarious update of Moliere’s classic comedy written in 1691, Saturday 10:00 a.m. to and originally entitled Les Fourberies de Scapin (The Rascalities of Scapin). The 6:00 p.m., Monday and contemporary version is truly “a long way from Moliere.” Frank Dunlop and Jim Thursday evenings until Dale transport Moliere’s wily servant from 9:00 p.m. ______the seventeenth century to the twentieth, 3 ffl______from France to Naples—and not a single laugh is lost along the way. Moliere had Sears actually borrowed Scapin from Italy and the Italian commedia dell ’arte, and it was the idea of English director Frank Dunlop to return the scamp to Italy as Scapino, a contemporary rogue and servant in a So many ways to waterfront cafe in Naples. The plot Shop at Sears remains the same, and it has never been funnier. There are two sets of lovers and and SAVE! two fathers. The lovers want to get married, and the fathers—as fathers 8 BIG STORES IN ATLANTA always are in comedy—are against it. open every night and Sunday afternoons Scapino is on the side of the lovers, naturally, but his first allegiance is to the 17 ApplianceCatalog Stores side of fun, and that is what everyone has in all around the Atlanta area this play. We hope you enjoy Scapino! as much as we have enjoyed preparing it for 24 Hour Catalog Shopping you. Comedy originated as the mythos of by phone from home, call 892-4242 spring because life returns then and laughter is rejuvenating. It is even more Surplus and Bargain Stores rejuvenating in the middle of winter. If you with closeouts from catalog and stores leave the theatre complaining that you’ve laughed till your sides hurt, Scapino! will PLEASE SEE YOUR have succeeded. TELEPHONE DIRECTORY FOR MORE SPECIAL SERVICES INCLUDING ■ ■. Hedda Gabler, our second production, offers one of the stage’s most demanding SEARS CARPET CLEANING and coveted roles. Throughout this call 351-4082 century the passion and boredom mixed in the character of Hedda Gabler has SEARS DRAIN & SEWER SERVICE challenged the great actresses of Europe call 892-6565 and the United States. To recreate Ibsen’s enigmatic heroine, Alliance Theatre SEARS DRIVING SCHOOL presents Dana Ivey, an actress well- call 352-3400 remembered by Atlanta audiences for her FLOWERS BY SEARS moving portrayal last season of Annie call 325-0337 (Atlanta) Sullivan in The Miracle Worker. or 422-0656 (Marietta) Last year we presented a new play, The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White SEARS MEAT & FROZEN FOOD Magnolia, and it was a huge success. This call 325-5359 season we have another premiere, Ed SEARS RENT-A-CAR Graczyk’s Come Back to the 5 and Dime, call 261-6700 (Buckhead) Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean. The five and or 659-5010 (Downtown) dime is in McCarthy, Texas, not far from where James Dean’s last movie Giant was SEARS TERMITE & PEST CONTROL filmed. A group of women for whom the call 351-4082 memory of Jimmy Dean has become a life­ long obsession meets twenty years after the star’s death to perform their ritual of adoration in the H. L. Kressmont, a decaying dime store. Even with its somewhat gothic theme, Come Back to the 5 and Dime, Jimmy Dean. Jimmy Dean is 5 The Boehm Panda Cub is now available for private ownership. The first “Giant Panda Cub with Bamboo Shoots” by the Edward Marshall Boehm studios was presented by Mrs. Boehm to the Chinese Porcelain Factories of the People’s Republic of China, during her recent visit there. The charmingly lifelike porcelain sculpture is now available for possession by a few homes and museums in the United States. $400. To Love Is to Give.® Charge Accounts Invited Bailey Banks & Biddle World Renowned Jewelers Since 1832 181 Peachtree Street, N. E. • Atlanta Greenbriar Center • South DeKalb Mall Perimeter Mall • Northlake Mall Lenox Square mi______a very funny play. Stories set in the South—no matter how serious the theme—seldom take place j.p Allen without humor. The central episode of To Kill a Mockingbird, Tom Robinson’s trial, is anguishing. No one who read the novel, saw the film, or experiences the play can Atlonto fail to be enraged at the injustice of the Women s and children’s fashions, verdict rendered against Tom Robinson cosmetics and gilts. and its tragic aftermath. And yet, what lingers with us after our anger has subsided is not that biting sense of man’s inhumanity to man, but the simple comic spirit of innocence which rises up and promises to renew the battle against prejudice, intolerance, and cruelty. It is not the chill of the sound of GUILTY! echoing through the Maycomb County Courthouse that we carry away from To Kill a Mockingbird, but an altogether different kind of chill that we feel when Scout Finch walks across her front porch to the shy figure huddled in the night shadows and says, “Hey, Boo.” So that’s a sampling of the season ahead. But it is only a sampling. This year our season is extended to seven plays, each one of which we think offers the finest in professional theatre. It is not too late to take advantage of our subscription rate saving and be sure of a seat for every play. If you bought a single ticket for Scapino!you can easily convert it to a season subscription and enjoy all seven great plays for the price of six. Just take your ticket stub to the box office during intermission, or save it and call 892-2414 tomorrow and say you have a single ticket to Scapino! and would like to convert it to the subscription package. We think we have an exciting season Ours exclusively, ahead. We hope you will be here for every I LOVE ATLANTA play. Truly a conversation piece! We can't ATLANTA CHILDREN'S THEATRE think of a nicer way for you to say, Atlanta Children’s Theatre presents the "I love Atlanta", in 14 kt. gold with rousing, riotous, slapstick musical comedy Punch and Judy January 5 through 15" chain. Designed exclusively for February 17. J. P. Allen. 60.00. ACT performed the world premiere of FASHION JEWELRY. this Aurand Harris play in 1970. The play is based on the puppet characters Punch DOWNTOWN LENOX SQUARE. GREENBRIAR NORTHLAKE. CUMBERLAND MALL (continued on page 20) Illi

7 Here is an uncommonly classic condominium resi­ dence. priced from $53,000 to $236,000. Here is a place of incredible luxury, with a setting and view that will catch your breath. And your spirit. There are ten different models. All ready for im­ mediate occupancy. Located at 3530 Piedmont Road, N.E. Or call 262-2643.

8 THE ALLIANCE THEATRE COMPANY DAVID BISHOP, Producing Director FRED CHAPPELL, Artistic Director

presents Scapino!

a long way off from Moliere

by FRANK DUNLOP & JIM DALE Directed by FRED CHAPPELL

with

CHRISTOPHER ALLPORT SUSAN LARKIN TOM ARCURAGI GIB MANEGOLD HARRIET BASS john McCorkle DAVID BRAUCHER JOHN MILLIGAN HOWARD BRUNNER ALBERT SANDERS MARIANNE HAMMOCK MORGAN WILLIAMS CLAYTON LANDEY JIM WORD

Sets & Lights Designed By Costumes Designed By MICHAEL STAUFFER MARTHA KELLY Production Stage Manager Technical Director ALLEN WRIGHT ERIK MAGNUSON Production Manager DAN B. SEDGWICK

9 Nathalie Dupree is cooking up something wonderful!

A whole new season of cooking classes and demonstrations ... all in Rich’s Cooking School, Downtown. In the classes, you do the cooking. In the demonstrations, you watch and taste. Classes are available in basic and advanced levels. For prices, schedules and details, call 586-2525. SCAPINO - A long way off from Moliere

THE CAST

Ottavio...... Tom Arcuragi Sylvestro ...... Howard Brunner Scapino ...... Christopher Allport Giacinta...... Marianne Hammock Argante ...... Albert Sanders Geronte ...... John Milligan Leandro...... Morgan Williams Carlo...... David Braucher Zerbinetta ...... Harriet Bass Nurse ...... John McCorkle Headwaiter ...... Jim Word Waiter #1...... Gib Manegold Waiter #2...... Clayton Landey One Waitress...... Susan Larkin

TIME: The present

PLACE: The seaport of Naples, Italy. A cafe bar at the side of a dock.

There will be one 15 minute intermission

The Alliance Theatre would like to express sincere appreciation to the following individuals and institutions for their assistance in our operations:

The Coca-Cola Bottling Co. Kelly’s on Peachtree Seeburg Music Systems South Atlantic Distributing Company Sol-Cohen Bicycle Tom Foolery, A Magic Bar Don Tucker

The use of recording devices or cameras during the performance is strictly prohibited.

11 ALLIANCE THEATRE PRESENTS TNE BGGE5T NAMES IN SHCW BUSINESS Ibsen, Shakespeare, Moliere, Shaw, Albee

SEASON OPENS JANUARY 13 7 SPECTACULAR PRODUCTIONS ONLY $27 Season Ticket Information Available at Box Office or Call 892-2797 CHRISTOPHER ALLPORT created the role of‘Tom” in Joseph Papp's production of Kid Champion by Tom Babe at the New York Shakespeare Festival’s Public Theater. He also played “Ariel” in the Festival’s production at the Mitzi E. Newhouse Theatre at Lincoln Center. A student of the famed , he performed in the National Company of his production Story Theatre. He played “Laertes” to Jon Voight’s “Hamlet" and had a featured role in the Frank Perry film Man on a Swing. On television Christopher Allport has played the continuing role of “Tim McGowan” on NBC’s Another World, and has guest starred on M.A.S.H.. Harry O., and Medical Story. He currently studies with Allan Miller.

TOM ARCLJRAGI will be making his third appearance on the Alliance Theatre stage. In 1975 he played “Puck" in A Midsummer Night's Dream, and last year he played “Henry” in The Skin of Our Teeth. Among his other credits are Don Tucker’s Merry Go Round, Stop the World. Hello Dolly, and Marat / Sade. He has also appeared in Man of La Mancha at the Midnight Sun Dinner Theatre and in the films UFO: Target Earth. Grizzly, and Smokey and the Bandit.

HARRIET BASS played “Lady ” and “Hippolyta” in the Colorado Shakespeare Festival. Also in Colorado, she was a member of the Grasslands Theatre Touring Company. In 1975 she was a member of the Academy Theatre’s State Tour Team and in productions of Rhinocerous and The Scarecrow. In 1976 she performed in Onstage Atlanta’s production of Guys N’ Dolls. She has toured with the City of Atlanta Bureau of Cultural and International Affairs street theatre, and is currently teaching in the Speech and Drama department at Georgia State University.

DAVID BRAUCH ER comes to Scapino!after two seasons with the Academy Theatre and its State Tour Team. He appeared Off-Off Broadway in Gene Frankel’s production of Othello. Atlanta Audiences have recently enjoyed him as “Jimmy Porter” in the Trinity Players’ production of Look Back in Anger.

HOWARD BRUNNER has appeared in numerous productions with the Alliance Theatre over the past few seasons. He is perhaps best remembered as “John Procter” in the critically acclaimed production of The Crucible. His other favorite roles locally include Arthur, Stereoptican, and Streetcar Named Desire. On television he has been featured in Kojak, Police Story, Joe Forrester, and Harry O. He can currently be seen in the Charles Bronson film From Noon Til Three.

MARIANNE HAMMOCK received her dramatic training at the Drama Center in London, where she studied under John Blatchley, Yat Malmgren, and Christopher Fettes. Her roles in the professional theatre have been primarily classical, from “Kate” in Taming of the Shrew to “Juliet” in Romeo and Juliet. Miss Hammock was last seen at the Alliance in The Tempest and was part of the ATC Touring Company this past fall. 13 JOHN CARRADINE IN TENNESSEE WILLIAMS' PULITZER PRIZEWINNING PLAY "CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF" SPECIAL GUEST STAR MERCEDES McCAMBRIDGE Evening performances Tuesday, Wednesday Thursday and Sunday, $16.00, plus tax. Friday and Saturday, $17.75, plus tax. Wednesday and Sunday matinees, $11.50, plus tax. Free parking at the Peachtree Cain Garage. American Express and other major credit cards accepted.

THE MIDNIGHT SUN DINNER THEATRE PEACHTREE CENTER ATOP THE SHOPPING GALLERY FOR RESERVATIONS CALL: 577-7074

14 CLAYTON LANDEY’S New York credits include The Night Before Thinking, Measure for Measure, and Obituary of Dreams. In Houston he appeared in Comedy of Errors and Oklahoma. He is known to Atlanta audiences for his performances at the Atlanta Children's Theatre in Treasure Island and as “Jolley” in Holley and the .Jolley Gorilla, and at the Academy Theatre in Rhinocerous and Something in a Box. He has studied mime under John Simons and Jacques LeCoq and is presently Managing Director and performer with Sometime Partners in Mime Company in Atlanta. On television he has appeared in Wide World of Sports, The Tamiko Jones Show, and may soon be seen in PBS’s The Boston Massacre Trial.

SUSAN LARKIN last appeared with the ACT in The Hot L Baltimore. She was with the Theatre Atlanta Repertory Company for three years and appeared with that group on Broadway in Red, White and Maddox. She has also worked with Theatre of the Stars Winter Play Season, appearing in Country Girl with Jack Klugman and the successful Streetcar Named Desire with Rosemary Harris. She was seen as “Maid Marian” in the Atlanta Children’s Theatre production of Robin Hood. Ms. Larkin is also a professional makeup artist for commercials and films here in Georgia.

GIB MANEGOLD has recently appeared in the song and dance revue “Showboat Jublilee" at Six Flags Over Georgia and in Anything Goes with the Sarasota Players. In Atlanta he performed in musical revues at Angelo’s Cabaret and a Reader’s Theatre production of Dandelion Wine. This past summer he performed in musicals at Cortland Repertory Theatre in Cortland, New York.

JOHN McCORKLE, a member of the 1973 Studio Company, appeared in its main stage shows, Jabberwock and Comedy of Errors. He is also familiar to Atlanta audiences for his performances in Loot and Small Craft Warnings with Theatre Atlanta Off Peachtree, and Taming of the Shrew with Drama Tech.

JOHN MILLIGAN’S numerous Broadway credits include Portrait of a Queen, The Devils, Man and Boy, and Lock Up Your Daughters. He has also appeared in the Broadway productions of Love and Libel. The First Gentleman, and The Matchmaker, directed by the late Sir Tyrone Guthrie. In addition, he has had extensive repertory experience in this country and in Canada, appearing at the Arena Stage in Washington, D. C., the Barter Theatre in Abingdon. Virginia, the American Shakespeare Festival in Stratford, Connecticut, and in Stratford. Ontario. Most recently he directed Much Ado About Nothing at the Champlain Shakespeare Festival in Burlington, Vermont, and appeared as “Prospero” in The Tempest, “Polonious” in Hamlet, and “Cymbelene”’ in Cymbelene.

ALBERT SANDERS has just completed filming the motion picture Fire Sale starring . Before that he was seen in the National Tour of Murray Schisgal’s All Over Town directed by Dustin Hoffman. His Broadway credits include “Linus” in the Off- Broadway musical hit You’re a Good Man Charlie Brown. Mr. Sanders toured in the National Company of Neil Simon’s Plaza Suite with Forrest Tucker and Betty Garrett. He has played roles ranging from “Thersites” in Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida to “Norman Cornell” in Neil Simon’s Star Spangled Girl. Mr. Sanders won the New Jersey Drama Critics’ Award for both best actor and best supporting actor for his portrayals of “Jonathan” in Oh Dad, Poor Dad, and “Touchstone” in Shakespeare’s As You Like It. 15 1 THE FASHIONS AND ONE OF BEAUTY CONCEPTS ATLANTA WOMEN LOVE ATLANTA’S 5* AT BIGGEST ATTRACTIONS Regenstem’s IS HERE DOWNTOWN, BUCKHEAD. NORTH DEKALB. PERIMETER MALL 5 NIGHTS A WEEK.

THE SHERATON-BILTMORE EMPIRE SUITE DINNER SHOWCASE presents THE WITS END PLAYERS. A wild, whxnsical. musical review that will titdate your tunny bone into a frenzy Dinner Show Tuesday through Saturday $12 per person (A spectacular ALL YOU CAN EAT BUFFET) 7PM Saturday Late Show $3 50 per person 11 15PM Tuesday Buffet Luncheon $4 95 per person 12 Noon For group rates and other information call 892-2227 or Ext 116 on the Sheraton housephone

* The other four attractions are UNDERGROUND ATLANTA, the CYCLORAMA, SIX FLAGS OVER GEORGIA, and STONE MOUNTAIN.

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Measures 21/2"x 1 Vs" %"• $100. Engraving additional. & Co. ATLANTA PHIPPS PLAZA • (404) 261-0075 16 Tiffany MORGAN WILLIAMS recently appeared in The Farce of Scapin. an adaptation of Moliere’s play by Paul Weidner, at the Monomoy Summer Theatre in Chatham, Massachusetts. He has toured with the Gaslight Dinner Theatre as “Hero” in A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, as well as touring Scandinavia with a USO production of Anything Goes. He has also appeared as “Philip" in The Lion in Winter at the Oklahoma Theatre Center and as “Slim” in Of Mice and Men at the Hope Summer Repertory Theatre in Holland. Michigan. His first association with the Alliance Theatre was last September in the touring production of The Lover and the Poet.

JIM WORD was a member of the 1975 Studio Company and has appeared on the ATC stage as “Pepe” in 77te Bor Friend, as “Francis Flute” in A Midsummer Night’s Dream, the "Broadcast Official” in The Skin of Our Teeth, and as “Trinculo” in The Tempest. He appeared with the Cortland Repertory Theatre for three seasons in such roles as “The Emcee” in Cabaret. “Mr. Bumble” in Oliver, and “Billy Jester" in Little Mary Sunshine. Mr. Word’s other credits include Godspell, Hadrian VH, My Fair Lady, Sweet Charity, Boys in the Band, and appearances with Vagabond Marionettes, of which he is currently associate director.

MAR THA KELLY comes to the Alliance as costume designer from New York City. Her draping credits include several Broadway shows, the Joffrey Ballet, productions at the Juilliard School and the San Francisco Opera. Regional theatre has taken her as far as Canada, where she worked in Halifax. Ottawa and Winnipeg. In the U.S.. Ms. Kelly has designed for the Barter Theatre, Circle Rep, McCarter Theatre, Wayside Theatre, Hayloft Dinner Theatre, Coachlight Dinner Theatre and several touring companies.

MICHAEL STAUFFER returns to Atlanta as set designer for his fourth season with the Alliance. He has designed sets, costumes or lighting for seventeen productions at the Alliance including The Crucible, The Miracle Worker and The Tempest. Mr. Stauffer has served as design co-ordinator for the Guthrie Theatre, production designer for the Barter Theatre, Washington Theatre Club, Cortland Repertory Theatre, and guest designer for the Folger Theatre Group, PAF Playhouse, and The Alabama Shakespeare Festival. Mr. Stauffer has designed for a number of summer stock and dinner theatres, lectured on design in colleges and consulted on theatre spaces. He is a graduate of Carnegie-Mellon University.

FRED CHAPPELL was named ATC’s artistic director last season. For three years prior to this appointment he was resident director of the theatre and during this period directed such productions as Tobacco Road, Jacques Brel. A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Boyfriend, The Crucible, Romeo and Juliet, The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia. The Tempest, and The Miracle Worker. He was also the original director of the Alliance’s Studio Company and has appeared as an actor in numerous ATC productions. Outside of Atlanta, he served for three years as artistic director of the Cortland Repertory Theatre in Cortland, New York, and has guest directed at numerous theatres throughout the country. Last fall he directed Don Tucker’s Same Painted Pony at PAF Playhouse. 17 MAN SHALL NOT Life Insurance is LIVE BY HOMEMADE the most personal product you'll BREAD ALONE. ever buy ... make sure your agent is a professional who cares about you. Tom Flournoy,lll,CLU 2 Peachtree St. Atlanta

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18 ALLIANCE THEATRE COMPANY DAVID BISHOP Producing Director FRED CHAPPELL — Artistic Director

DAVID COKER, President MRS. JOHN HARDMAN, President Board of Sponsors Alliance Theatre Guild

Administrative Staff Administrative Director...... Victoria Mooney Director of Public Relations / Advertising...... Sandra Johnson Administrative Associate...... Baxter Joy Public Relations Assistant ...... Jan Cribbs Volunteer Co-ordinator & Liaison ...... Virginia Beattie Box Office Manager...... Chip Murray House Manager ...... Steve Cucich Photographer ...... Charles Rafshoon |5, ...... Ken Ragan

Production Staff Production Manager...... Dan B. Sedgwick Production Stage Manager ...... Allen Wright Assistant Stage Managers . Dickson Lane, Trey Altemose Production Designer...... Michael Stauffer Associate Designer...... Phillip Jung Costume Designer ...... Martha. Kelly Technical Director...... Erik Magnuson Propertv Master...... Michael Berkman Lighting Technician...... Cassandra Henning Master Carpenter...... Stanley Konczynski Scenic Technicians...... Lynn Van Horne, Randolph Thrower

TECHNICAL APPRENTICES Lorraine Crane Liz Lee Jeffery Glaze Lisa Miller Jeroy Hannah William Palmer

18a BUY A BOOK FROM GEORGIA TULLIE’S RECEIPTS ATLANTA COOKS FOR Nineteenth Century COMPANY proceeds benefit Plantation Plain Style 888 the Atlanta Music Club Southern Cooking and scholarship fund and other ATLANTA music education. In its Living — proceeds benefit 3CK Sr XK3.SY the Tullie Smith House seventh printing with more than 100,000 copies. Restoration of the Atlanta $5.00 Historical Society. osa $5.00

MARY BETH’S SAMPLER WINNING HIS HEART IN THE A GEORGIA COOKBOOK, KITCHEN Recipes for any compiled by Mrs. George woman to win her man! Tested Busbee, Georgia’s first lady. and proven favorites. May the Proceeds benefit the best cook win! By Diana Darr. American Cancer Society­ $5.50 recipes of political dignitaries. A best seller. $4.00

GEORGIA RECIPES FOR FAMILY, FUN & FOOD by A GLIMPSE OF THE PAST Bulloch Hill the Women’s Auxiliary to the THE HISTORY OF Medical Association of Atlanta BULLOCK HALL AND A compilation of recipes from ROSWELL GEORGIA by medical wives throughout Clarece Martin Restored Georgia. Proceeds benefit classic home built in 1840 by their scholarship fund. slave labor. $5.50 $1.00

FURNITURE OF THE

GEORGIA PIEDMONT ROSWELL HISTORIC HOMES AND LANDMARKS iXi BEFORE 1830 by Henry D. Green. This beautifully A collection of drawings by illustrated catalogue is a Ernest E. DeVane with text by Clarece Martin. Published bicentennial project of the High Museum of Art. by the Roswell Historical * Society, Inc. IIbII $7.95 $10.00

HISTORIC CLAYTON FROCKED IN GOLD THE COUNTY HOME OF GONE STORY OF FRANK MACK WITH THE WIND by Terry AND HIS WORK by Elizabeth Bakken. A charming history aw Russell Mack. Including 24 of Jonesboro and Clayton full color and 20 black & County published by white reproductions by this Historical Jonesboro, Inc. famous Atlanta artist. $9.95 $15.00

SKETCHING AND ETCHING FIND YOUR OWN WAY IN GEORGIA FIFTY ETCHINGS DOWNTOWN ATLANTA by AND DRAWINGS by Ledlie Karl & Linda Woodworth. A William Conger with text by walking tour and street-level Ruth Dunlop Conger. A guide to interesting and history of antebellum homes exciting facts about old and and landmarks of Georgia. new Atlanta. $30.00 $2.50

GEORGIA WOMEN — A CELEBRATION by the GEORGIA Complete book publishing service WOMEN American Assn, of University for authors & organizations since 1910. Women. A book about Georgia women from Cousaponakeesa to our THE CONGER PRINTING AND PUBLISHING COMPANY twentieth century scientists 1619 Chattahoochee Avenue. N.W., Atlanta, Georgia 30318 Telephone (404) 352-1910 Dr. Evangeline Papageorge and Dr. Jane Russell Wilhelmi. $3.95 CONTRIBUTORS TO THE 1975-76 ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA INDIVIDUAL GIFTS CAMPAIGN This listing includes only those contributors who qualified for membership in the Orchestra League by giving twenty-five dollars or more during the 1975-1976 season. The League is also grateful to the more than two thousand Friends of the Orchestra for their smaller gifts.

PATRON

Mrs. May P. Abreu Mr. and Mrs. John R. Guy Mrs. Theophile Raphael Mr. Peter M. Abreu Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F Haas Walter and Marjory M. Rich Memorial Amilsco Charitable and Educational Eugene and Amelie Harrington Foundation Foundation, Inc. Foundation Mr. and Mrs. James B. Riley The Atlanta Foundation Dr. J. Rhodes Haverty Dr. Shirley L. Rivers Mr. James E. Barnett, Jr. Mrs. Sue F. Hood Dr. William E. Schatten Dr. and Mrs. Dan Burge Mr. and Mrs. John S. Hunsinger Mr. and Mrs. Simon S. Selig, Jr. Chatham Valley Foundation, Inc. Joseph B. and Lena B. Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. Shouky A. Shaheen Mr Richard W. Courts Foundation, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Siegel Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Croft, Jr. Dr. James A. Kaufmann Mr. and Mrs. Grant G. Simmons, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James J. Doherty Mrs. J. W Kercher Mrs. Ralph K. Uhry Mr. Herbert R Elsas Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Kunian Mr. and Mrs. John A. Wallace Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Everett Mrs. Everett McDonnell Mr. and Mrs. L. Neil Williams Mr. Washington Falk, III Mr. Arthur L. Montgomery Mr. Milton Weinstein Mr. and Mrs. David Goldwasser Mrs. Louis H. Moss Gulf Oil Corporation Mrs. Lilia Gray Mallard Parker

DONOR

Mrs. Calvin Allen Mrs. Paul C. Crowell Mr. Daniel B. Hodgson Atlanta Federation of Musicians— Mrs. Catherine W. Dukehart Mrs. Bernard N. Neal, Sr. Local 148-462 Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Ebbs, Jr. Mrs. Frederick W Patterson Mr. and Mrs. James E. Bennett, Jr. Mr and Mrs. Robert G. Edge Dr. and Mrs. Marvin B. Perry Mrs. William H. Bentley Mr. Edward E. Elson Dr. Paul H. Robinson Mr. Leonard Berger Mr. and Mrs. DeJongh Franklin Mr. C. B. Rogers Mr. Tom M. Brumby Mr. William H. Frey Mr.and Mrs. Marthame E. Sanders, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Bunnen Mr. and Mrs. Drew R. Fuller Mr. and Mrs. H. Hamilton Smith Mr. Jack Clifford Mrs. Lon Grove Dr. and Mrs. M. Dale Smith Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Clifton Mr. and Mrs. Elliot L. Haas Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Tate, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. B. W. Cobbs. Jr. Dr. Charles H. Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Louis J. Taratoot Mr. and Mrs. Herbert B. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Joseph K. Heyman Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Watkins, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. M. H. Cole, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Julian T. Hightower

SPONSORING MEMBER

Mrs. Jack P. Ashmore, Jr. Mrs. Hugh Hodgson Mr. and Mrs. J. Harold Newton Dr. Ivan A. Backerman Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hudgins Mr. and Mrs. W. Nichols Mr. and Mrs. William Breman Dr. Thomas B. Janter Mrs. Lucien E. Oliver Mr. Hugh D. Carter, Jr. Dr. Herbert R. Karp Mr. and Mrs. Allen Post Mr. and Mrs. William F. Clark Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Knox Mrs. Augustine Sams Mr. I. T. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Harry V. Lamon Dr. Grace B. Smith Dr. John W. Cooledge Michael and Carolina Lane Mrs. Howard C. Smith Mr. and Mrs. John A. Conant Dr. Noah Langdale Mrs. W B. Smith, Sr. Mrs. William C. Cram, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William Leide Mr. and Mrs. George F. Sowers Bradley Currey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. P. Harvey Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Jules J. Stine Mr. Robert P. Forrestal Mr. and Mrs. J. Erskine Love Mr. and Mrs. John S. Talmadge Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Friedman Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Luck Mr. and Mrs. W. Rhett Tanner Mr. Cecil Garvin Michael McDowell Mr. and Mrs. Francis A. Tarkenton Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Gellerstedt Lawrence McEvoy, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Hugh W. Gibert Mr. and Mrs. Tom M. McLain Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Taylor Mr. Banks O. Godfrey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George K. McPherson Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Thompson, Jr. Mrs. Hix H. Green Mr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Miller, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Robert Wells Dr. and Mrs. John M. Griffin Mr. and Mrs. Stephens Mitchell Mr Robert M. Wood Mr. and Mrs. John R. Hall Mr. and Mrs. Louis Montag Mr and Mrs. William B. Wylly Mr. and Mrs. Byron P. Harris Dr. and Mrs. Marvous E. Mostellar Mr. Charles R. Yates Mr. and Mrs. Lee H. Henkel Mr. N. Barnard Murphy

SUSTAINING MEMBER

Mrs. Henry Aaron Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. C. Scott Akers The Hon. and Mrs. Ivan Allen, Jr. Dr. Grover J. Andrews Mr. and Mrs. Cecil A. Alexander Mrs. Ivan Allen, III Apex Supply Company Mrs. W. D Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. Anderson John M. Arnold SUSTAINING MEMBER (continued)

Mr. and Mrs. David S. Baker Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Howell Mr. and Mrs. David A. Reinach G. B. Bardi J. Winston Huff Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Rhodes Mr. and Mrs. W. Daniel Barker Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Hughes Mr. Lee Richardson Mr. Emmett L. Barlow. Jr. Mrs. Robert C. Hunt Mr. and Mrs. J. Mack Robinson Dr. and Mrs. J. G. Barrow Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hutchison Mr. Clyde Rodbell Mr. and Mrs. Sturgis Bates Mr. and Mrs. Guy W. Hutchison Mr. and Mrs. Leonard B. Rodbell Mr. and Mrs. N. William Bath Dr. Sidney Isenberg Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Rogers Harry S. Baxter Mrs. Bunnie Jackson Dr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Roughton Mrs. Joseph H. Boland Charles H. Jagels Mr. and Mrs. Richard P. Rubenoff Dr. and Mrs. Jack S. Boozer Mr. and Mrs. William H. Jewell Mr. and Mrs. Sidney H. Ruskin Mrs. Margery R. Borom Mrs. Lyons Joel Herman J. Russell Co. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. Bowles, Jr. Mrs. Travis Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Lewis R. Sams Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Bows Mr. Gary L. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Marthame Sanders, Jr. Mrs. Verdery R. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. William L. Jorden Dr. and Mrs. Roy P. Sandidge Mr. and Mrs. Harllee Branch, Jr. Mr. Richard L. Kattel Mr. and Mrs. Nat Sandler Mr. and Mrs. L. Travis Brannon, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James G. Kenan Mrs. Homer R. Sanford Mrs. James Briggs Thornton Kennedy Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Saunders Mr. E. M Britt Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Killingsworth Mr. and Mrs. Martin Sauser Mr. and Mrs. H. Brockey Dr. Chyung M. Kim Lawrence S. Schatzman Mr. and Mrs. Derrick M. Brown Dr. and Mrs. Jong-ln Kim Mrs. T. Erwin Schneider Dr. H. Eugene Brown Mr. George L. King Mr. and Mrs. Emory Schwall Dr. Howard S. Brown Mr. and Mrs. William L. Kinzer Dr. and Mrs. James F. Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Brown Mrs. Frank Lamons Ms. Jane Searcy Dr. Lester Alexander Brown L. H. Larson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Sheffield, Jr. Mary Brown Fund of Atlanta Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Lehrer Sherrilynn, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Bryan Lenox Square, Inc. Mrs. Elice Shlesinger Mr. and Mrs. J. Gregg Buckalew Dr. and Mrs. John Leonardy John A. Sibley Mr. and Mrs. John A. Butler Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Leslie Mr. and Mrs. John M. Siegel Mr. and Mrs. A. Paul Cadenhead Dr. and Mrs. Charles T. Lester Mrs. R. A. Siegel Mr. Frank Carlson Mr. and Mrs. Nelson T. Levings William H. Sills Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Carnes Mr. C. K. Liller Mrs. Leon F. Silver Mr. J. N. Carothers Dr. and Mrs. Mark M. Lindsey Mr. and Mrs. Alex W. Smith, Jr. Mrs. John O. Chiles Dr. Price Lineberger Dr. and Mrs. Bernard A. Smith Mr. D. H. Clement, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Lomason Mrs. Edward D. Smith Mrs. Emory Cocke Mrs. Albert Love Mr. G. Maynard Smith Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Collins Dr. and Mrs. Mason Lowance Mr. Hugh R. Smith Mr. Daniel B. Coltrane Mrs. Arthur Lucas Mr. and Mrs. J. Lucian Smith Dr. and Mrs. Robert M. Conner Mr. and Mrs. Phillip E. Lundquist Mr. and Mrs. John B. Smith and Family Coopers and Lybrand Mr. Paul A. Lutz Orville N. Smith Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Courtney Mr. Larry Gill Lynch S. Dion Smith, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Glenn Crawford Mr. and Mrs. John O. McCoy Mr. and Mrs. James Smulian Mrs. James M. Crawford, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas H. McDill Southern Regional Office of Educational Mrs. George Daigh Mrs. Lawrence J. McEvoy, Sr. Testing Service Mr. and Mrs. Mayo Davis Dr. and Mrs. Dean G. McKee Mr. and Mrs. William E. Speaks Mrs. Ovid R. Davis Mrs. Harold C. McKenzie Mrs. G. Bonner Spearman Dr. and Mrs. R. Carter Davis, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William J. McKenzie Mr. Dante S. Stephensen Mr. and Mrs. John M. DeBorde, III Mrs. Floyd W. McRae Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Stevens Mr. and Mrs. L. Glenn Dewberry, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Leo M. Mack, Jr. Miss Dixie Stevens Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Dinos Dr. and Mrs. Dan M. Mackey Rear Adm. and Mrs. Carl F. Stillman Mr. and Mrs. Phillip H. Dohn, Jr. Mrs. Edwin M. Malcolm Storer Broadcasting Co. Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Dorough Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Manchester, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Storza Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Dorsey, Jr. Mr. Allen D. Martin Mr. Stuart B. Sutphin, III Jasper N. Dorsey Mr. Kenneth W. Martin Mr. and Mrs. G. Kimbrough Taylor, Jr. Marion S. Dressier Dr. and Mrs. Frank Matthews Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Beverly M. DuBose, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Mattingly Texaco, Inc. Dr. E. B. Dunlap Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Maurer Mr. and Mrs. William B. Thatcher W. O. Duvall Mrs. Edward H. Mayer Mr. and Mrs. Herman M. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Alden D. Eddy Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Milledge Mrs. Isabel D. Thomson Mr. and Mrs. J M. Efron Mr. Henry J. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Randolph W. Thrower Mr. and Mrs. William W. Epstein Mr. and Mrs. John W. H. Miller Mr. and Mrs. George A. Titlow Mr. and Mrs. Clayton H. Farnham Mr. and Mrs. Samuel A. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Torras Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Faulk Stuart T. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Towers Dr. Susan Fellner Mr. Robert L. Mills H. Burton Trimble, Jr. Mr. Mark Fine Mr. Sidney Mizell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Tucker Lindsay A. Fleck Mr. and Mrs. John H. Mobley, II Mr. John R. Tufts Mrs. Forest L. Fowler The Modernaires, Inc. Mr. Pollard Turman Ms. Shirley Franklin Mr. Bill Moody Dr. and Mrs. Augustus B. Turnbull, III Mrs. Carlyle Fraser Mr. and Mrs. John L. Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Ullman Mr. and Mrs. J. Lester Fraser Mr. and Mrs. Brannon Morris John L. Underwood Company. Inc. Mr. Alex P. Gaines Dr. and Mrs. Chester W. Morse Mrs. K. Van Huyck Mrs. Henry Geigerman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Barry Mundt Mr. Ray B. Vaughters Georgia Federation of Music Clubs Richard C. Munroe Dr. and Mrs. Paul F. Walter Mr. and Mrs. William H. Glenn, Jr. Mr. Joseph A. Myers Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Walthall, III Mr. Raymond A. Gold Mr. H. Burke Nicholson, Jr. Mrs. Green Dodd Warren Mr. and Mrs. Joel Goldberg Mr. and Mrs. Otis P. Norcross Mr. and Mrs. John B. Warren, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Martin I. Goldstein Ms. Lois Norman Dr. William C. Warren Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Goldwasser Mr. and Mrs. Hiram M. Nowlan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Waterman Mr. and Mrs. Claude Griffen, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Onofrio Mrs. William E. Waters Mr. Claude Grizzard, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oppenlander Mr. and Mrs. Wayne M. Watson Pat and Jaap Groen Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Ormsby Mrs. J. Prince Webster Mrs. James P. Groton Mrs. A. Bingham Owens Dr. and Mrs. James O. Wells Guernsey Petroleum Corporation Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Palay Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. White Stanley K. Gumble Mr. and Mrs. William A. Parker, Jr. Mrs. Robert H. White Mrs. Leonard Haas Mr. and Mrs. I. Benjamin Parrill Dr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Wilhelmi Mrs. Bradley Hale Mr. and Mrs. William R. Patterson Mrs. Charles A. Williams Mr. Frederick Halperin Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Perry Mr. and Mrs. D. Ellis Williams Mr. and Mrs. James P. Hamilton, Jr. Mrs. D. R. Peteet, Sr. Ms. Betty Williford Mrs. Granger Hansell Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Pettit Mr. and Mrs. John C. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Harvey Arthur Pew Construction Company Mrs. Elin Winn Mrs. Clarence Haverty Mr. Jonathan Phelps Mrs. Alex Wishnew Mr. and Mrs. I. C. Hemmings Mrs. Vernon Powell Mr. and Mrs. Edwin D. Wolf Mrs. H. L. Heniot Mr. and Mrs. William L. Power Mrs. Walter Wolf Mr. Norris B. Herndon Mrs. Richard H. Pretz Mrs. Ida Shellnut Wylly Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hill Gerald Rafshoon Advertising, Inc. Dr. John Yarborough Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hill Dr. and Mrs. Morgan Raiford Mr. and Mrs. D. K. Young, Jr. Mr.and Mrs. Lewis Hirsch Dr. Joseph L. Rankin Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Younts Mrs. Morris Hirsch Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Rast Mr. Erwin Zaban Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hollander Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ratka Mr. and Mrs. John B. Zellars Mr. and Mrs. Luther P. House, Jr. Paul Raymon Mr. Harvey Howalt Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Redfearn Mr. Larry Howard Mr. and Mrs. Louis Regenstein SUPPORTING MEMBER

Mr. and Mrs. John H. Adams Miss Jane E. Foley Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Matthews Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Adamson Dr. Conrad Freeman, Jr. Dr. Benjamin E Mays Miss Katharine Akin Miss Nola Frink Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Metze Mr. and Mrs. Steve E. Alexander Mr. J. Rex Fuqua Dr. and Mrs. Preston R. Miller Mr. Richard A Allison, III Dr. and Mrs. James H. Gailey Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Moore Mr. and Mrs. John E. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. David H. Gambrell Mr. and Mrs. H. Clay Moore. Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Anderson, Jr. Mr. E. Symthe Gambrell Dr. Christian Moorehead Anthony's Restaurant Mr. William L. Gatlin Mr. and Mrs. Simon Moughamian, Jr. Mr. Michele Aquino Ms. Ruth H. Gershon Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Munsche Mr Joseph F Asher Mr. and Mrs. Samuel P. Getzen, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Murphy, Jr. Atlanta Solvents and Chemical Company Mr. J. William Gibson Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Muske Mr. and Mrs. H. I. Avery Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Glenn Dr. and Mrs. F. Levering Neely Dr. and Mrs. William G Avery Mr. and Mrs. Claiborne Glover. Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Paul W Neff. Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Baird. Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Howard C. Glover, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George L. Newberry Mr. and Mrs. John D. Bansley, Jr. Dr and Mrs. John T. Godwin Mr. and Mrs. Russell E. Newton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Emil W. Baran Mr. David S. Golden Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Nunnally Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Loeb Barnard, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Goldstucker Mr. Henry R. Oliver, Jr. Miss Verita Barnett Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Gore Dr. and Mrs. Paul W. O’Shields Mr. Ray Barron Mr and Mrs. Henry W. Grady Mr. and Mrs. Daniel E. Pace Mrs. Jean F. Batemen Mr. and Mrs. William M. Graves Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Parham Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bauman Mr. and Mrs. Hix H. Green, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Patterson Mr. and Mrs. W. Roane Beard Mr. and Mrs. Gene Griffen Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Pepe Mr. and Mrs. George W. Beiswanger Mr. and Mrs. George M. Gross Dr. and Mrs. John H. Per-Lee Captain Ernest Bennett Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Grubbs Mr. Fred S. Perrin Mr. James M Bergen Mr. Horace H. Guerrant Mr. and Mrs. Erie Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Karl A. Bevins Dr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Guffin Mr. G. E. Plunkett, III Mr. and Mrs. Francis M Bird, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Ransom H. Gurganus Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Y. Pounds Mrs. Ralph Peters Black Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Guthman Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Pratt Mrs. A. W. Blackwood Mr. and Mrs. John F. Hanley, Jr Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Price, Sr. Mr. W M. Boice Dr. and Mrs. Robert Hansen Rev and Mrs. Harold B. Prince Edward G. Bowen, M.D. Dr. John A. Harrel, Jr. Paul R. Ray & Company, Inc. Mrs. Angus B. Bower Mr. and Mrs. George W. Hart Nelson H. Rector John W. Bradley, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. L. S. Hartzog Miss Joyce Reedy Mr. and Mrs. John M. Bragg Guenther H. Hecht Mrs. Delbert O. Reichardt Dr. Carl A Bramlette, Jr. Mrs. A. H. Henderson The Research Group Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Branch Mr. and Mrs. N. Van Meter Hendricks, III Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Rice Mr. and Mrs. Ben W. Brannon Mr. Paul D. Hensler Mrs. Harris Robinson Ernest K. Brantley Mrs. Herman Heyman Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Robitscher Major General and Mrs. L. Render Braswell Mr. A. L. Hibbard Mrs. George W. Rowbotham Mr. and Mrs. James H. Bratton, Jr. Mr. W. T. Hicks Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Royalty Mr. and Mrs. R. J Broadwater Mr. and Mrs. George B. Hightower Sandy Springs Women’s Club Mr and Mrs. Gordon B. Brooke Mr. D. Sims Hinds, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Schneider Dr. and Mrs. Louis C. Brown Dr. and Mrs. James E. Hinkle Wilbert H. Schwotzer Tom Watson Brown Ms. T. L. Hodges, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Burton A. Scott, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James S. Budd Mrs. George R. Home Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shelley Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Bunzl Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey Hopkins, Jr. Mr. Henry I. Sherry Miss Jessie L. Butler Mr and Mrs. Oze E. Horton Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Shorter Dr. Kathleen Byers Mr. Larry Howard Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Shortridge Dr. and Mrs. William F. Byrnes Mr and Mrs. Harry C. Howard Mr. John A. Sibley, III Dr. and Mrs. F. Phinizy Calhoun Mr. and Mrs. G. Jackson Howorth Mr. and Mrs. Stanley B. Siegel Dr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Callahan Mrs. J. Gibson Hull Mr. and Mrs. King Sims Miss Carolyn Campbell Dr. and Mrs. James M. Hund Mr. A. J. Singletary, Jr. Mr. Ralph V. Campbell Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Hunecke Mr. Jim Skagas Dr. and Mrs. James Harvey Cann Mrs. Ruby Haynes Hunter Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Smith Mr. Floyd E. Carithers Ms. Lucy Hutton Mr. P. L. Bealy Smith Mrs. Julian S. Carr, Sr. Thomas B Hyman, Jr. Dr. Richard A. Smith President and Mrs. Jimmy Carter Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Inman Southeast Wholesale Furniture Company Mrs. John B. Chapman Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan Jackson Mr. & Mrs. Hughes Spalding, Jr. Mrs. M. Sturgis Clark Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan Jackson Dr. John E. Steinhaus Mr. Thomas Henry Clarke, IV Dr. and Mrs. Julian Jacobs Dr and Mrs. Robert Hilton Stephenson Dr. and Mrs. G. S. Clinkscales Mrs. Julian S. Jacobs Miss Sue Brown Sterne Mrs. James O. Cobb Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Jacobson Dr. and Mrs. Walter D. Stinson Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Cohen Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Q. Janus Laura Ann Stubbs Dr. and Mrs. Sheldon B. Cohen Dr. Charles Joel, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Summers Mrs. Allen M. Collinsworth Mr and Mrs. Aaron J. Johnson, Jr. The Nelson Talbott Foundation Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Comstock, Jr. Mrs. Ralph B. Johnson Judge and Mrs. Jeptha C. Tanksley Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Cooper Mrs. Linda M. Johnston Miss Ann Tarrant Mr. and Mrs. Philip B. Cordes Mr Robert A. W. Jones, Jr. Ms. Katherine Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Cousins Dr. and Mrs. Maurice J. Jurkiewicz Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Teichert Mr. J. Felton Covington, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Kahn, Jr. Thorndike, Doran, Paine & Lewis Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Craver Fleming Keefe Mr. and Mrs. C. Eric Tiller Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Crawford Alfred Kennedy, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Curtis Tooms, Amisano & Wells Mr. Donald R. Keough Miss Mary F. Trembath Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. Danner, Jr. Mr. Charles M. Kidd Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas E. Davies Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. Tucker. Jr. Alex C. King, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward K. VanWinkle Miss Frances L. Dawes Mr. and Mrs. Francis J. Klapp Dr. Peter G. Dayton Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Vaughn, Jr. Miss Florence Kopleff Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Vowels Mr. and Mrs. Bob W. Dean The Rev. C. W. Landiss Mr. and Mrs. P. A. De Caux Mr. and Mrs. Lyndon Wade Linda Lane Harrison T. Wadsworth Mrs. Teresa DeRepa Mr. and Mrs. M. Ross Lane Dr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Dimon, III Mrs. William C. Lester Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Waldron Dr. and Mrs. Allan Dinnerstein Mr. and Mrs. John N. Wall, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand K. Levy Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Walling Mr. and Mrs. John R. Donnell, Jr. John D. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. James M. Earhart Dr and Mrs. Stewart Long Mr and Mrs. Cullen M. Ward Mrs. Jean Echols Dr. and Mrs. David C. Lowance Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Wardlaw Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Egan, Jr. Mr. Sam F. Lowe, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. H. Hall Ware, III Miss Kathleen Eidson Mr. and Mrs. P. K. McCash Mr. and Mrs. William Weaver Mr. Lynn E. Eller Mr. David W. McGahee Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Weinberg, Jr. Dr. and Mrs Louis J. Elsas. II Dr. and Mrs. Alexander S. McKinney Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Welch Mrs. Homer L. Entrican Mrs. J. J. McLendon, Jr. Miss Catherine G. White Dr. and Mrs. Jacob Epstein Mr. and Mrs. James W. McRae Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Wilgus Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Eubanks James F. Maclean Dr. and Mrs. W. Talbert Williams The Exchange Club of Stone Mountain Mr. and Mrs. F. Leroy Maddox, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Osgood P. Willis Mrs. Andrew M. Fairlie Mr. and Mrs. John R. Maddox Mrs. Stuart Witham Mrs. John B. Felder Mrs. Christina A. Maloof Mr. and Mrs. Roel Wolfson Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Fell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice N. Maloof Mr. Thomas H. Wood Mr. and Mrs. Jule W. Felton, Jr. Mr. Carl Marshall Mr. and Mrs. John P. Woodall Dr. and Mrs. Arnoldo Fiedotin Dr. and Mrs. Donald F. Marshall Mrs. LeRoy A. Woodward Mrs. G. Lewis Flatt Elizabeth C. Martin Mr and Mrs. Charles E. Young Dr. and Mrs. Andrew R. Foder Mrs. Charles Massell Dr. and Mrs. Ernest Fokes Mr. and Mrs. Arthur B. Matthews CONTRIBUTING MEMBER

John and Caroline Abbey Mr. and Mrs. Robert Biccum Mr. Pierce A. Cassedy Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. Abbott Ralph and Ginger Birdsey Mr. George R. Castleberry Dr. and Mrs. Osler A. Abbott Mr. Ralph H. Birdsong Mr and Mrs. Alvin B. Cates, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Andrew H. Abernathy, III Mr. Arthur W. Bishop Goodwyn Cates Dr. and Mrs. Marshall S. Abes Dr. and Mrs. Linton H. Bishop, Jr. Joseph C. Cavallo, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Charles L. Abney R. Dwain Blackston, M.D. Miss Mary E Cavenaugh Mr. and Mrs. Davis Abrams Mrs. L. M. Blair Mr. and Mrs. A. Clyde Cawthon Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Abrams Dr. J. T. Blasingame, Jr. Dr and Mrs. Rives Chalmers Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Abrams Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Block, Jr. Mr. Michael H. Chanin Mr W. Dent Acree Dr. and Mrs. Donald Block Dr. Arney Chappell Mrs. Leah T. Adams Ms. Cordelia J. Blount Mr. and Mrs. Frank Chew Mr. and Mrs. William Addams Dr. Richard W. Blumberg Kazuo Chiba Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Agnor Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Blumenthal Mr. and Mrs. Richard Childs Dr. John Thomas Akin Mr. Walter Boden, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Jacob Christ Mr. and Mrs. Edward Y. Albert Mr. and Mrs. Larry I. Bogart Mr. and Mrs. Richard Churchill Dr. and Mrs. Harold Alexander Dr. and Mrs. D. L. Boger Mr. Edwin G. Clark, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John A. Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Boldt Mrs. Frances Clark Mrs. John M. Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Boozer Dr. and Mrs. James E. Clark Ms. Eleanor P. Alford Mr. Fred W Boring, III Mrs. James D. Clements Dorothy S. Allain Mr. and Mrs. Harris Bostic Mr. and Mrs. C. Bron Cleveland Mr. Francis J. P. Allegret Mr. and Mrs. Henry L Bowden Dr. and Mrs. Ben H. Clifton Mrs. Robert J. Allen Mrs. Ralph T. Bowden. Jr. Mrs. T. E. Clyatt, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Roger W. Allen Dr. and Mrs Hilliard A. Bowen Mr. Colburn Coe Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Allen Mrs. Harold J. Bowerfind Mrs. George L. Cohen Dr. and Mrs. Pierce Allgood Lawson and Anne Bowling Mr. and Mrs Edward E. Coleman Mrs. Robert W. Allison Mrs. J. L. R. Boyd Dr. and Mrs. Cleo Phillip Coles, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bond Almand, Jr. Mr. Theodore C Boyden College Park Music Club Mrs. Jose E. Almeida Mr. and Mrs. James E Bradley Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Collett Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Alperin Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Branan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John S. Collier Mr. James L. Alston Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Branch • Dr. Dellwood C. Collins Mr. and Mrs. James N. Alston Miss Adeline L Branham Dr. and Mrs. William C. Collins Mr. and Mrs. George Alterman Dr. and Mrs. Marvin A. Brantley Dr. David B. Comer, III Dr. and Mrs. Samuel S. Ambrose Mr. and Mrs. Spencer S. Brewer Mr. Brian Grey Conboy Mrs. Albert Anderson Dr. Ed Bridges A Friend Dr. and Mrs. Albert S. Anderson Miss Josephine Bridgman Mr. and Mrs. David R. Conklin Dr. Gloria Anderson Miss Julie Briggs Mr. Robert B. Conrad Mr. William W. Anderson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Brin Mr. and Mrs. Richard Conrad Mrs. Bonneau Ansley Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Brink Mr. and Mrs. Platon Constantinides Mr. and Mrs. Shepard B. Ansley Dr. and Mrs. Robert H. Brisbane Mr. and Mrs. Roxy C. Cooke Mr. and Mrs. Morris Arnovitz Britches of Georgetowne Mr. and Mrs. William H. Cool Dr. and Mrs. Gerson H. Aronovitz Mr. and Mrs. R. Bruce Broadhurst, Jr. Miss Jane M. Cooley Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Asher Mr. Bonhuer Broadnax Mr. James W Couch Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Ashman Miss Barbara Bronson Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds Couch Mrs. Laura Askren Mr. and Mrs. Russell J. Brooke Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Covington, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William B. Astrop Miss Ann M. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Cowan Dr. and Mrs. Sam O. Atkins Mr. and Mrs. James F. Brooks Mr. and Mrs. W. John Cox Miss Mary Louise Atkinson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Brooks, Jr Mr. and Mrs. H. Spalding Craft Mr. and Mrs. R. Byron Attridge Mrs. Lovic A. Brooks, Jr. Manville Crafts Mrs. John S. Atwater Rep. and Mrs. Benjamin Brown Mr. and Mrs. Louie V. Craig Mr. and Mrs. J. Arch Avary, Jr. Commissioner Charlie Brown Mr. and Mrs William A. Craig Mrs. Stephens Archer Avary Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Brown Mr. and Mrs. Milton Crane Mrs. Donald Avil Mr. and Mrs. Gene Bowden Brown Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Cranford Mr. and Mrs. Howard G. Axelberg Mr. and Mrs. John L. Brown Mrs. B. R. Crigler Mr. and Mrs. Ben J. Aycock Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Brown Dr. and Mrs. Alonzo Crim Mr. and Mrs. John L. Baden Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Brudno Dr. and Mrs. Roy H. Crispin Mr. Tommy Bagwell Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Brumby Miss Willie May Cromer Mr. James M. Bahin Mr. and Mrs. Robert E Brusch Mr. and Mrs.Stuart Culpepper Mrs. John E. Bailey Mr. and Mrs. George W. Bryan, Jr. Mrs. Mabel C. Cunningham Mrs. Milus K. Bailey Mr. and Mrs. James E. Bryan Mr. and Mrs. Warner Currie Dr. and Mrs. James A Bain John and Ann Bryan Mr. and Mrs. Daniel B. Curtis Mr. and Mrs. Ralphe Boyd Baker Mr. Raleigh G. Bryans Mrs. Lawrence Custer Dr. Larry T. Ball Mr. Peter J. Bryg Mr. and Mrs. Frank K. Dalrymple, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Turner Ball, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William B. Bullock Dr. and Mrs. F. Thomas Daly, Jr. Colonel C. E. Balthis Mrs. Nancy S. Burke Mr. and Mrs. Tillman S. Dandridge Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Banks Mr. and Mrs. William C. Burnett Mrs. Edward F. Danforth Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barber Mr. James F. Bush Mrs. Wallace Daniel Mrs. Herbert Barfield Mrs. Marvin L. Butts Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Daniels Mr. and Mrs. J. Clifton Barlow Mr. David Byar Mr. and Mrs. Leo Davenport Mrs. Miriam C. Barlow Mrs. Orrie C. Byrd Mr. John H. David, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ben S. Barnes, Jr. Mr. Kyle R Cade Mr. and Mrs. Russell L. Davidson Dr. and Mrs. Crawford F. Barnett. Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. Malcolm Cade Miss Aurelia Davis Mr. and Mrs. Sydney W. Barnett Miss A. Lucille Cain Miss Betty Davis Mr. and Mrs. Harold T. Barrett Mr and Mrs Ernest M. Cain Mr. and Mrs Burton K. Davis Mrs. Carter T. Barron Dean Judith A. Caldwell Dr. and Mrs. M. Bedford Davis, Jr. Mrs. Cora D. Barron Mr. and Mrs. C. Merrell Calhoun Oscar G. Davis Mr. and Mrs. Fred J. Barry Dr. and Mrs George Callaway Mr. and Mrs. Stephen J. Davis Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Barry Mrs. Robert A. Callaway Dr. and Mrs. T. Albert Davis Dr. and Mrs. Philip R. Bartholomew Mrs. William S. Callaway, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. William S. Davis James Y. Bartlett Professor and Mrs. Rondo Cameron Mrs. James M. Dawson Mrs. Louis A. Bassion Mr. John S. Candler, II Mrs. R. Hal Dean Lt. Col. and Mrs. Al B Battiste Mrs. Peter Candler Delta Omicron — Eta Epsilon Chapter Mr. and Mrs. Erwin G. Baumer Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Candler Dr. and Mrs. James Densler Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth L Bazzle Mr. James D. Cannon Ms. Terrie Denson Dr. and Mrs. William R Beach, III Dr. and Mrs. W. Jerry Capps Designer Products, Ltd. Mr. and Mrs. William R. Beak Mrs. Daniel Carithers, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harry D. Dewar Mrs. Leslie Beall Mr. and Mrs. William R. Carlyon Dr. Ludwig R. Dewitz Mrs. A. W. Beasley Mr. W. L Carmichael Mr. and Mrs. William B. Dickerson Dr. H. V. Bell, Jr. Rev. and Mrs. C. W. Carpenter Mrs. James F. Dickson Mr. and Mrs. Hunter S. Bell Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Carpenter Dickey-Mangham Company Mr. Keith P. Bell Mr. James C. Carr Mr. and Mrs. H. W. DiCristina, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Bell Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Carr Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Dillingham Mr. and Mrs. Roberts O. Bennett Mrs. W. Wayne Carr Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Di Paola Dr William H. Bennett Mr. and Mrs. Gordon S. Carrigan, Jr. Mrs. Sara S. Divine Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bentley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter T. Carry Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Dobbs Mrs. L. D. V. Benton Mr. and Mrs. James B. Carson, Jr. Mrs. R. O. Dodd Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Berghel Dr. and Mrs. James A. Carter Mr. and Mrs. Sergio S. Dolfi Mrs. Jerome D. Berman Dr. and Mrs. Loren J. Carter Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Doolittle Dr. and Mrs. Harry Beverly Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Carter Doran, Stein, Grey Mr. and Mrs. E. Milton Bevington Mrs. Stewart F. Carver James W. Dorsey Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Bevis Mr. Bill Case Mr. George A. Doss Thomas C. Bianco Mr. Eugene R. Cashman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Dotson CONTRIBUTING MEMBER (continued)

Mrs. George T. Douglas Dr. and Mrs. Miguel Gomez Mrs. Jack Holland Dr. Pearlie C. Dove Dr. Tony Gonzales Dr. and Mrs. George Holloway, Jr. Mrs. James C. Downing Cantor and Mrs. Isaac Goodfriend Mr. Daniel H. Hollums Mrs. Tom Downing Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Goodwin Mr. and Mrs. William J. Holmes Col. C. B. Drennon, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert I. Gordy Charles Holt Enterprises, Inc. Lt. Col. and Mrs. Charles W. Dryden Mr. and Mrs. William L. Gordy Mr. Robert A. Holzer Mr. and Mrs. W. C. DuBro Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Gowen Mr. and Mrs. John D. Hopkins Dr. H. Bruce Dull Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Grace Mr. Marvin Housworth, Jr. Dean & Mrs. James E. Dull Mr. Henry W. Grady, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James W. Howard Dr. and Mrs. M. P. Dulock Mr. Donald Grant Mr. and Mrs. Barry Hubbard Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Dunstan Dr. and Mrs. R. Peery Grant Miss Mamie Lowe Hubbard Mr. and Mrs. J. Frazier Durrett, Jr. Grant-Walker Properties Mr. David H. Hubert Mrs. Mary Kate Duskin Mr. and Mrs. W. King Grant, Sr. Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Hubert Mrs. Hubert L. Dyar Mr. and Mrs Anthony J. Greco Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Huckaby Mr. and Mrs. Eugene T. Dykes Miss Evelyn L. Green Mrs. Sarah P. Hudging Dr. and Mrs. S. Boyd Eaton Mr. and Mrs. Holcombe T. Green. Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Gerry G. Hull Commissioner A. Reginald Eaves Miss Tracy Greenbaum Dr. and Mrs. John L. Humphreys, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Charles A. Eberhart Mr. and Mrs. William A. Greenbaum M. J. Hunnicutt Mr. E. Wendell Echols Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Greenberg Miss Frances L. Hunt Mr. and Mrs. W. Wray Eckl Mr. and Mrs. William J. Greene, Jr. Mrs. Sara M. Hunt Mrs. A. Hollis Edens Mr. and Mrs. W. Dan Greer Mr. and Mrs. J. Paul Hunter Mr. and Mrs. Mack P. Efland, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Gregoroff Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Hunter, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Elarbee, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Cleburne E. Gregory, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Rodney J. Hunter Mr. and Mrs. Robert Eldridge Mr. and Mrs. Claude Grenet Mrs. Herschel Hurwitz Mr. and Mrs. William S. Elias Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Grimsley Mr. and Mrs. J. Patton Hyman, III Mr. and Mrs. A. James Elliott Mrs. William C. Griscom Marian R. Ifland Mr. and Mrs. Marlin W. Elliott Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Gross Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Imig Dr. and Mrs. James B. Ellison Mr. J. David Grow Mr. and Mrs. Paul E. Isringhauser Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Elrod, Jr Mrs. P. H. Gunnells Mrs. Frances Northcutt Ivey Mr. and Mrs. H. Alan Elsas Mr. and Mrs. Guy W. Gupton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. DeForest Jackson Mr. and Mrs. John E. Elvin Dr. and Mrs. C. C. Gurley Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Jackson Ted English Mr. and Mrs. Sig Guthman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank D. Jackson Dr. Antonio M. Erfe Mr. and Mrs. George Habersetzer Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Erickson Mr. Isaac N. Habif Mrs. Marvin Jacobs Etheridge and Grubbs Pipe Organ Service Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Haile Mr. and Mrs. Ernest K. Jamison Sister Mary Eucharia Mr. and Mrs. George B. Haley Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Jamison Miss Elizabeth Evans Mr. Edward T. Hall, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William Bruce Janek Mrs. J. K. Fancher Mr. Elmer C. Hall Mr. and Mrs. C. Gail Jarvis Miss Sara F. Farr Harry P. and Jacquelyn J. Hall Rev. and Mrs. Lewis Jay Mr. Milton G. Farris Mrs. John Hall Miss Jeanne Jenkins Anne Fauver Margaret Hallman Mrs. Ashley S. Johnson, Jr. Mrs. Dorothy Felton Mrs. Joseph L. Hammond, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin L. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Claude Feninger Dr. and Mrs. W. Lee Hand Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Johnson, III Mrs. Edward W. Ferguson Mrs. McCarthy Hanger Dr. and Mrs. Charles G. Johnson Mrs. Dorothy K. Fierst Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hanger Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Fight Mr. and Mrs. Virgil C. Hanks Dr. Douglas Johnson Joseph J. Fine Miss Courtney Wynelle Hannon Mrs. E. Raymond Johnson Mr. I Walter Fisher Mr. and Mrs. E. Lewis Hansen Dr. James M. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Rayburn J. Fisher Mrs. D. P. Harbin Dr. James P. Wylie Dr. and Mrs. Ralph Fleck, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. W. R. Hardcastle Mr. and Mrs. Johnny C. Johnson Mrs. Lucille Fleisher Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Harden Dr. and Mrs. Richard H. Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Florence Mr. Ira H. Hardin Mrs. C. Ray Jones Robert L. Foreman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin L. Harling, Jr. Dr. Cleve R. Jones Mr. and Mrs. E. C. A. Forsberg Julia R. Harnsberger Mrs. Daryl D. Jones Dr. and Mrs. Douglas H. Forsyth Mr. and Mrs. John J. Harper Mr. and Mrs. E. Sam Jones Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fortson, Jr. Harper’s Flowers Miss Frances E. Jones Miss Kate Foster Miss Emily Harris George W. Jones, Jr., M.D., P.A. Mr. and Mrs. J. Richard Fowler Mrs. Francis Harris Mr. and Mrs. John R. Jones Mrs. A. P. Francis Mrs. Joel C. Harris Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jones Mr. and Mrs. Larry Frank Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Harris, Jr. Mr. R. O. Jones Miss Adele Frankenau Mr. Thomas C. Harris Mrs. Seaborn P. Jones Mr. and Mrs. James N. Frazer Mr. and Mrs. C. Lash Harrison W. L. Jordon and Co., Inc. Miss Lurelia Freeman Dr. and Mrs. John R. Harrison Mr. and Mrs. William R. Jordon, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Olen I. Freeman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. Harrower Mrs. Marjorie Judson Mrs. S. H. Freeman Mrs. Samuel W. Hart Mrs. Bess B. Kane Mrs. Sue F. Freeman Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hartje Mr. Edward R. Kane Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence R. Freund Mrs. William B. Hartsfield Kappa Kappa Psi-lota Chapter Dr. Thomas E. Fulmer Mr. Gary W. Hatch Mr. and Mrs. John Bell Keeble, III Mrs. John Funke Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Hatcher Dr. and Mrs. Ellis B. Keener Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Furr Mr. and Mrs. Henry M. Hatcher, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. John L. Keller Miss Opal Futch Mr. and Mrs. Milford B. Hatcher, Jr. Stiles A. Kellett Mr. and Mrs. Carl I. Gable, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Michael Hattwick Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Kelley Mr. and Mrs. Homer E. Gaines Dr. and Mrs. A. Eugene Hauck Mr. Thomas B. Kendrick Dr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Galler Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hawie Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kennamer Margaret E. Gann Mr. Barrett K. Hawks Mr. and Mrs. John L. Kennedy Mrs. C. A. Gardner Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Haynes Marie R. Kennedy Beatrice T. Garner Mrs. Rosalyn L. Heard Mr. and Mrs. William P. Key Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Garnett Miss Susan B. Hecker Mrs. Ann C. Kieffer Mrs. Walter M. Garrard Dr. and Mrs. David E. Hein Bill Kiely Dr. and Mrs. Bruce R. Geer Mr. John Heise Mr. James H. Kiersky Mrs. Walter A. George, III Mrs. Taylor Helbig Mrs. Virginia Ware Killorin Georgia Lighting Supply Company Mr. and Mrs. John A. Helms Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Kimble Mrs. Harry M. Gershon Mr. and Mrs. James R. Henderson, Sr. Miss Hedy King Dr. Nathan Gershon Mrs. Frank J. Henry Janis Vivian King Mr. and Mrs. John Gerson Mr. and Mrs. William C. Henry Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie King Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Gerson Mr. and Mrs. Jennings M. Hertz Dr. and Mrs. Spencer B. King, III Mr. James Edwin Giblin Miss Katherine Hertzka Mr. and Mrs. William R. King Mr. and Mrs. James S. Gillespie Miss Ruth Hertzka Mrs. Fred L. Kinser Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Gillham Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hester Mr. and Mrs. Boyden Kinsey. Ill Mr. Ken Gillian Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Hickman Mr. Charles H. Kirbo Mr. and Mrs. George H. Gillon Janie R. Hicks Mrs. Ralph Kirkley Dr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Girardeau Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Hile Dr. and Mrs. William H. Kiser Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Glazier Dr. and Mrs. Benjamin A. Hill Dr. and Mrs. Richard M. Klaus Col. and Mrs. Frank A. Gleason Mr. and Mrs. Dudley S. Hinds, Sr. Mrs. Thomas M. Knight Dr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Gloster Mr. and Mrs. Samuel M. Hirsch Dr. and Mrs. Ronald H. Koenig Mrs. Frank Glover Mr. Alex M. Hitz, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. J. R. Koransky Mrs. Emanuel Gluck Mr. G. Allen Hodges, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas F. Kraft Mr. and Mrs. John William Goddard Dr. Philip C. Hoffman Dr. and Mrs. Melvin Kranzberg Mr. and Mrs. J. Bryan Godwin Mr. and Mrs. Clark Hogan Mr. Frederick W. Kubelka Dr. and Mrs. Irving H. Goldstein Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Holland Mr. and Mrs. George Kunzel Mrs. H. M. Goldsworthy Mrs. J. Kurt Holland Mr. and Mrs. John L. Kunzelmann CONTRIBUTING MEMBER (continued)

Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Lagerquist, Jr. Mrs. Charles Marks Mrs. Stanley H. Orowski, Sr. Mr and Mrs. E. Cody Laird. Jr. Mrs. Chester E Martin Mr. Philip Osborne James D. Landauer Associates, Inc. Miss June T. Martin Drs. Ann and A. M. Oshlag Mr. and Mrs. James Landers Robert E. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Robert Otto Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Landers Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Martin, Jr. Mr. J. A. Ouzts, Jr. Mr. James H. Landon Mr. and Mrs. Albert Marx Mrs. James Bronson Overbey Mr. William A. Lane Mrs. David Marx, Jr. Phillip M. Owens Dr. and Mrs. James T. Laney Miss Elizabeth Mason Dr. and Mrs. Tommy L. Owens Mrs. Ray C. Lang Dr. William A. Mason Dr. and Mrs. James D Palmer Miss Mary Louise Lanier Mr. and Mrs. D. Lurton Massee, Jr Mr. Syd C. Parham Mr. and Mrs. David S. Lashner Mr. and Mrs. Sam Massed Mrs. Garrett S. Parker Mr. and Mrs. Robert Latta Mr. and Mrs. Kent B. Massie Mr. Terrill A. Parker Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Laub Steven E. Masterson Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Parker Mr. Edward R. Laughlin, Jr. Mr. John M. Matthews Mr. and Mrs. W. Ennis Parker, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. F Law. Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Earle B. May, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Parks Mrs. Lucille P. Lawrence Dr. Noah D. Meadows, Jr. Mrs. E. T. Parramore Ms. Florence D. Lawton Ms. Isla Mease Ms. Beatrice A. Pask Mr. and Mrs. John C. Layton Dr. and Mrs. Donald E. Mees, Jr. Wallace D. Pate Mrs. Joseph M. Lee Mrs. Charles Meriwether Mr. and Mrs. William M. Pate Mr. and Mrs. Robert Earl Lee Mrs. G. C. Merrill Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Patterson Mr. and Mrs. Wallace L. Lee Mr. Lanier Merritt Mrs. Ray Patterson Dr. and Mrs. Joseph S. Leech Mr. and Mrs. Harvey B. Merrill Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Patton Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Lehman Dr and Mrs. Michael H. Mescon Mr. and Mrs. E. Earl Patton. Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Ted F. Leigh Mr. Earl H. Metzger, Jr. Rev. John H. Patton Mr. Sidney H. Lenington Dr. Lore Metzger Mrs. Carl Paul Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Levy Mrs. William E. Meyer Mr. and Mrs. James R. Paulk, Jr. Mrs. Louis K. Levy Elizabeth Middleton & Associates, Inc. Dr. and Mrs. William L Paullin, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. M. Y. Levy Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Miller, Jr. Mrs. Laurie L. Payne Dr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Lewis Dr. and Mrs. David A Miller Mrs. Joyce G. Payne Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Lingenfelser Mr. and Mrs. Harmon B. Miller, III Mr. William Peck, Jr. Dr. Bernard S. Lipman Mr. Herbert Miller Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose Pendergrast Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Lipshutz Mr. and Mrs. Howard Miller Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Pendergrast Dr. Laszlo Little Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Miller Dr. and Mrs. W. J Pendergrast Mr. and Mrs. V. K. Little Mrs. Elizabeth Milligan Miss Helen F. Penhale Dr. and Mrs. Oliver M. Littlejohn Mr. Chris Milner Andreas Penninger Mr. and Mrs. C. Burt Livezey Miss Sara E. Milner Mrs. Mabel R. Perkins Dr. Anna Beata Lobel Dr. and Mrs. Donald Minor Ms. Mary Ellen Perkins Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Locey Dr. James B. Minor Dr. Neil G. Perkinson Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Lockwood Mrs. John O. Mitchell Dr. and Mrs. David S. Perling Mr. and Mrs. James H. Loftis Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Mitchell Mr. and Mrs. J. Woodward Perry Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Lokey Mrs. P. W. Moeller Miss Pat Perry Mr. and Mrs. David D. Long, Jr. Mrs. Adrian W. Monk Dr. and Mrs. Samuel W. Perry Mary W. Lona Mr. and Mrs. William E. Monroe Dr. and Mrs. John J Pershing Dr. and Mrs. W. Newton Long Dr. and Mrs. William Mooradian Mr. and Mrs. Oscar N. Persons Dr. and Mrs. William B. Long Mr. and Mrs. Arnold C. Moore Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Pfiffner Dr. and Mrs. Max Lorenz Mrs. Geraldine Moore Miss Elise T. Phillips Mrs. Herbert F. Loring Mrs. Georgia O. Moore Mr. and Mrs. Eugene L Phillips Mrs. J. M. Lowe Mr. and Mrs. O. Ray Moore Mrs. James Carlisle Phillips Mr. Richard H. Lowe Mr. and Mrs. Virlyn B. Moore, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Tom M. Lowe Mr. William H. Moore Mr. and Mrs. Barry E. Pickett Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lower Dr. and Mrs. David L Morgan Mr. Gaines Pickett Mr. and Mrs. Robert C Lower Dr. and Mrs. James W. Morgan Mr. and Mrs. George A. Pindar Mr. and Mrs. M. Roscoe Lowery Dr. and Mrs. A. P. Morley, Jr. Mrs. Little Pitts Mr. David Alan Lusty Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Morris Dr. and Mrs. William Plauth Ms. Wanda Lynn Mrs. H. G. Morris Mrs. William L. Plummer Mr. John B. McAllister Mrs. Virginia R. Morris Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Plunkett Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. McCanich Mr. and Mrs. William Mosier Dr. and Mrs. Booker Poe Mr. and Mrs. S. H. McCalla Mr. Carl T. Mottek Mrs. Claude H. Poindexter Mrs. Harold McCart Dr. and Mrs. George H. Moulton Mr. and Mrs. George J. Polatty Mr. and Mrs. John M. McCarter Mr. and Mrs. James B Mowry, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Ponder Mrs. John McCarty Miss Gretel Mueller Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Postier Mr. and Mrs. Marvin R. McClatchey Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick L. Muller Miss Clarissa H. Poteat Mr. and Mrs. Emory McClinton Mr. and Mrs. John S. Mullins Mr. J. William Powell Mr. and Mrs. Walter P. McConaughy Mrs. Dillard Munford Mr. W. Dean Power, Jr. Dr. and Mrs Joseph B. McCormick Mr. and Mrs. William W. Murphy Mrs. W. R. Prendergast Mr. and Mrs. James R. McCrory Mrs. Norbury C. Murray Mrs. Albert S. Propper Dr. Marion M. McCroskey Miss Frances M. Muse Mr. and Mrs. Victor C. Pruitt Mrs. Samuel C. McCutchen Miss Ora M. Muse Mrs. Ozzie B. Quarterman Mr. and Mrs. William McDaniel Mr. and Mrs. Clark E. Myers Mrs. Langdon C. Quin Mr. and Mrs. John McElhannon Dr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Myers Dr. and Mrs. Tom D. Raaen Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. McGahan Mr. and Mrs. Robert Myers Mr. and Mrs. Ralph L. Ramsey Mrs. M. A. McGee Mr. and Mrs. David L. Myford Mrs. McClellan Ratchford Nancy K. McGee Mrs. Gene Nardin Mr. and Mrs. Paul P. Raulet Mrs. Brumby McGehee Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Nash Dr. and Mrs. Albert A. Rayle, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Nelson McGhee Mrs. H. R. Neathery Dr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Read Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. McGuire, III Mr. and Mrs. Edgar A. Neely. Ill Mrs. J. H. Reece Mr. and Mrs. James F. McGuire Mrs. Edward Rex Neely Mrs. Barbara S. Reed Mr. and Mrs. Minuard McGuire Miss Aline M. Nelson Mr. Fred C. Reed, Jr. John E. McIntyre Ms. Barbara E. Nelson Mr. Thomas W. Reese, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Julius A. McKanders, II Dr. and Mrs. John C. Nelson Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Reeves Mrs. Alice F. McKenney Mr. Steve Neufield Gay E. Reid Mr. and Mrs. John M. McKenney Mrs. James Edward Newton Dr. and Mrs. J. Peter Reitt Mr. David W. McLaughlin Mrs. Joseph A. Nichols Mr. John W. Remington Dr. and Mrs. Wallace N. McLeod David C. Nicholson Mr. William G. Revere Mr. and Mrs. John F. McMullan Mrs. Florence Nix Mrs. A. Warren Rhodes Mrs. R. F. Mabon Mr. E. E. Noble Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Rhodes Miss Ossi Mabry Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Nolan Dr. and Mrs. Hobson Rice Mrs. M. D. Machado Mrs. Patick Nolan Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Richardson Dr. and Mrs. Allen G. Macris Mrs. Robert J. Noland Brian and Marsha Richardson Mr. and Mrs. R. Gregg Magruder Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Norman, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Harry V. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Maguire, III Mr. Robert Norwood, Jr Mr. and Mrs. Merlyn E. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Alex Malaspina Dr. Godfrey Oakley Mr. and Mrs. Garland C. Richmond Mrs. A. A. Maliza Mr. Donald Oberdorfer Mr. James W. Ricks, Jr. Bill and Gatra Mallard Mr. and Mrs. Arthur O’Connell Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Riddle Miss Cynthia Mallory Dr. and Mrs. W. R. O’Connell, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Charles C. Rife Mr. and Mrs. Cecil C. Malone, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George O’Day Mr. and Mrs. E. Victor Roberts Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Manton, Jr. Miss M. Winnifred O'Dell Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Roberts Mrs. L. E. Mansfield Mrs. Lee G. Offen Mr and Mrs. W. Thomas Roberts Rev. and Mrs. Meeler Markham Mr. and Mrs. Kevin F. O’Gara Col. and Mrs. Otis H. Rodgers Dr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Markette Dr. and Mrs. S. Olansky Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Rodgers Mark Fabrics & Carpet Center Mr. and Mrs. Rupert H. Old, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John C Roesel CONTRIBUTING MEMBER (continued)

Mr. and Mrs. Allen B. Roff Mr. Robert W. Spears Mrs. Robert Wardle, Jr. Mrs. A. C. Rogers Dr. and Mrs. W. M. Spicer Mr. and Mrs. Harold Warner D. Karen Rogers Col. and Mrs. R. H. Sprayberry Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wasser Mr. and Mrs. Ferguson E. Rood Mrs. Sarah C. Stallings Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wasserman Dr and Mrs. Donald W. Rooker Mr. Daniel D. Stanley Mrs. Allan Watkins Mrs. F. H. Root Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Stapleford Ms. Marilen Watkins Miss Elizabeth Roper Mr. Howard S. Starks Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Wattles Mrs. Charles A. Rose Miss Chloe Steel Mrs. John A. Wayt, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Rosenberry Mrs. Andrew Steiner Mr. and Mrs. John Wesley Weekes Dr. and Mrs. Marvin Rothenberg Mr. Steven J. Steindel In Memory of Mr. J. D. Weill Dr. Thomas S. Rowe Dr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Stelson Dr. Daniel Weiner Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rubin Mr. and Mrs. C. Preston Stephens Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Weiner Mr. Isadore Ruden Mrs. Delores B. Stephens Dr. and Mrs. Evan Weisman Mr. and Mrs. Edwin W. Rumrill, Jr. Mrs. C. P. Stephenson Mr. Emil Weiss Mr. and Mrs. Theodore H. Runyon Mr. and Mrs. Mason Stephenson Mrs. J. Bruce Welch Mr. and Mrs. Dale O. Rupp Phil and Betsy Sterner Mrs. J. E. Wells Mrs. Harold L. Russell Mrs. Parks C. Stewart Dr. and Mrs. Julius Wenger Mrs. James M. Russell Dr. and Mrs. Walter E. Stewart, Jr. Dr. Jacqueline H. Werner Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Sacks David Crawford Stills Miss Helen West Mr. and Mrs. Harold M. Sader Fred Stillwell, Inc. Dr. and Mrs. Herbert West Mr. and Mrs. Joe Salem Miss Elise M. Stokes Dr. Wendell P. Whalum Mr. and Mrs. Clinton L. Sanders Rear Admiral and Mrs. Phillip G. Stokes Whatley’s Upholsterers Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Sanderson Mr. Howell Stokes Mrs. Walter M. Wheeler Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sanford Dr. and Mrs. Charles F. Stone, Jr. Wheels and Brakes, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. William B. Sanford Dr. and Mrs. John H. Stone Mrs. Robert L. Whipple, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Saporta Mrs. Ernest Straubel Mrs. Colie B. Whitaker Mrs. H. C. Sauls Mr. Frank B. Strickland Mr. and Mrs. Joe J. White Mrs. Janet C. Scales Dr. and Mrs. Cyrus W. Strickler, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Perry M. White Mrs. Robert H. Schellman Ms. Sara Strong Mr. and Mrs. W. Tate Whitman Mr. John Schneider Miss Carolyn Strozier Dr. and Mrs. Douglass G. Whitney Mrs. Edward Schoen, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Edward F. Sugarman Mr. and Mrs. William R. Whittle Mrs. G. Lloyd Schoen, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Roy M. Sullivan Mr. Sheldon R. Whittner Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Schorr Mr. and Mrs. Jack Summers Dr. H. Jordan Whyte Mr. and Mrs. Richard N. Schwab Dr. and Mrs. Julian W. Swann Mr. and Mrs John F. Wieland Mr. and Mrs. Michael Schwarz Mr. and Mrs. Albert H. Swett Mr. Stewart Wight Thomas L. Schwartz Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Sykes Dr. Joseph A. Wilber Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Schwartz, Jr. Mrs. Robert S. Talmadge Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Wildes Mrs. R. Schweitzer Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Hayden F. Wiley, Jr. Mrs. David W. Scott Dr. and Mrs. William J. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wilhelm Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Ernest S. Tharpe Mr. John B. Wilkerson Mr. and Mrs. John R. Scott Mr. and Mrs. Mickey F. Thaxton Mr. and Mrs. William H. Wilkerson Mr. and Mrs. James R. Scott Captain and Mrs. Charles M. Thomas Mrs. Clyde Wilkins, Jr. Mr. Gordon M. Sears Robert F. Thomas, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Sam A. Wilkins, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Sellers, Jr. Dr. W. Kevin Thomas Mr. and Mrs. James R. Wilkinson Mr. and Mrs. John O. Selvage Wailes Thomas Ms. Marilyn M. Willeford Mrs. P. G. Sessions Mr. and Mrs. Augustus Thompson Mr. and Mrs. David O. Williams Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Severinghaus, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hagan Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Howard Williams Mr. and Mrs. Morris L. Shadburn, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Thompson Com. and Mrs. Pelham C. Williams W. Griggs Shaefer, Jr. Mr. Robert D. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shatto Mr. and Mrs. Price S. Williams, Jr. Mrs. Albert E. Thornton Mrs. Thomas Williams Mrs. M. L. Shatzen, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Topol Ms. Mary V. Shaw Mr. and Mrs. William A. Williams Dr. and Mrs. C. B. Torrance Mrs. P Edmund Willingham, Jr. Mrs. Walter Sheffield, Jr. Mrs. Harrison Townsend Thomas C. Shelton Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Willingham Mr. and Mrs. John K. Train Dr. and Mrs. Isaac Willis Dr. and Mrs. James H. Sherard Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Traina Miss Pauline Shields Dr. and Mrs. Frank L. Wilson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George G. Trask Mr. and Mrs. George F. Wilson C. A. Shillinglaw Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Travis Dr. and Mrs. Steven Shore Mr. and Mrs. H. Grady Wilson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Travis Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Winborne, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. W. Henry Shuford Mrs. H. B. Trimble Sigma Alpha lota Mr. and Mrs. William L. Wingate, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Trotter Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Wingfield, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Sikes Mr. and Mrs. Shinya Tsukamoto Mrs. Joseph B. Silverstein Mr. Alfred Wolf Mr. and Mrs. Rutledge Tufts Mrs. D. Lawrence Wollner Mr. A. Boyd Simpson Dr. and Mrs. Maurice R. Turcotte Mrs. Lamar Sizemore Dr. and Mrs. R. Hugh Wood R. C. Turk Co. Mr. and Mrs. Ray G. Woodall, Jr. Mrs. J. N. Skeen Mr. and Mrs. Jack P. Turner Mrs. Searcy B. Slack, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Woodsides Mr. and Mrs. Kyle H. Turner Gail Word Dr. John D. Slade Mr. Raymond Turpin, Sr. Mr. Charles D. Slinkard Dr. and Mrs. A. P. Worley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Tuve Mr. and Mrs. Owen R. Worley Mr. and Mrs. Warren H. Small, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Carl W. Tyler Mr. and Mrs. Ray W. Smathers Bettye Sue Wright Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Tyson Katherine E. Wright Dr. and Mrs. Carter Smith, Jr. Dr. E. R. Uehling Mr. and Mrs. Raymond M. Wright Mrs. Clifford R. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Utterback Mrs. Doris Smith Mrs. J. L. Yaden Mr. A. G. Valentine Mr. and Mrs. Tomohiro Yamashita Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Smith Dr. and Mrs. Henry S. Valk Mr. and Mrs. Albert D. Yannella Mr. and Mrs. G. Mike Smith Mr. and Mrs. Edward Vaught Mr. and Mrs. H. Frank Smith Mrs. H. B. 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Ziegler Dr. and Mrs. Warren A. Somerlot Dr. John W. Wallace Mr. and Mrs. Raymond S. Zimmerman, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. G. J. Soracco Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Wallace Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Spann, Jr. Eli A. Zubay Mrs. James H. Walsh Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Zuckerman Mr. William B. Spann, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert V. Waltemeyer Mrs. Matthew W. Spearman Mr. Joseph E. Walthall

PLEASE NOTE Current year INDIVIDUAL GIFTS CAMPAIGN donors to date will be listed in the February program. Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

ROBERT SHAW Music Director and Conductor MICHAEL PALMER Associate Conductor and EXXON/Arts Endowment Conductor John Head Assistant Conductor John Naskiewicz Conducting Fellow

The Mr. & Mrs. Howard R. Peevy Concertmaster Chair is endowed by the Tommie & Howard Peevy Foundation

VIOLIN* FRENCH HORN Kathleen Kee William Steck Bruce Klingbeil John Henigbaum Concertmaster Larry LeMaster Principal Martin Sauser Nan Maddox Brice Andrus Co-Concertmaster Bonita Potts Assistant Principal Robert Harrison Paul Warner Thomas Witte Associate Concertmaster Christopher Scheufler Willard Shull BASS* TRUMPET Assistant Concertmaster Dale Schmidt David Arenz Principal John Head Principal Second Violin Jane Little Principal Oscar Pereira Associate Principal Joseph Walthall Assistant Principal Ralph Jones Assistant Principal Second Violin Assistant Principal Prin. Second Trumpet John Adams Harvey Kaufman Larry Black Jaqueline Anderson Michael Kenady TROMBONE Frances Arm . Thomas Thoreson Shalom Ben-Uri Randolph Ujcich Harry Maddox Sharon Berenson Wiley Weaver Principal Piotr Haase Richard Hansbery Martha Reaves Head FLUTE Donald Wells Warren Little Stephen Horvath BASS TROMBONE Ruth Little Principal Karen Matthews Paul Brittan Donald Wells David Myford Assistant Principal TUBA Thomas O'Donnell Prin, Second Flute Michael Moore Alice Oglesby Angela Allen Lorentz Ottzen TIMPANI PICCOLO Benjamin Picone Paul Yancich Susan Pitard Angela Allen Principal Carol Ramirez William Wilder Juan Ramirez OBOE Assistant Principal Ronda Respess Elaine Douvas Richard Robinson Principal PERCUSSION Patricio Salvatierra Elizabeth Camus Jack Bell Edward Scruggs Assistant Principal Principal Ann Pinney Steck Prin. Second Oboe Eugene Rehm Patricia Vas Dias Patrick McFarland William Wilder Frank Walton ENGLISH HORN HARP VIOLA* Patrick McFarland Judy Beattie Robert Jones Principal CLARINET KEYBOARD Peter Bertolino Norman Baker Alice Oglesby Assistant Principal Acting Principal PERSONNEL MANAGER Ardath Cohen William Rappaport John Detrino Douglas Smith Martin Sauser Manuel Diaz PERSONNEL MGR. EMERITUS Enid Jones BASS CLARINET Marion Kent Douglas Smith Harry Robkin Haskell Marrinson LIBRARIAN Heidi Moss Nitchie BASSOON David Hinshaw Robert Parcells Carl Nitchie Principal Stephen Horvath, Ass't. CELLO* Charles Nussbaum STAGE MANAGER Robert Marsh Assistant Principal Michael Destazio Principal Prin. Second Bassoon Patrick Noon, Ass't. Edmond Basson Daniel Dowdakin Assistant Principal Jere Flint CONTRA BASSOON Kay Gardner Daniel Dowdakin 'Players Listed Alphabetically

ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF FRANK RATKA. General Manager RICHARD W THOMPSON. Assistant Manager

WILLIAM W BROWN, Director of Public Relations PETER J. STELLING, Director of Development MRS IRENE MOORE, Asst. Dir. of Public Relations MS. DEE-DEE WALTERS, Director of Season Tickets MISS PAT PERRY, Fund Raising Coordinator ROBERT A. HOLZER. Symphony Hall Manager MS. MARY WALTON, Secretary MISS NOLA FRINK, Choral Secretary MISS HILDA EVANS, Secretary MRS. MARILYN HAASE, Secretary, Women s Assn MRS. DONNIS COLLINS, Receptionist/Secretary Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Robert Shaw, Music Director and Conductor

Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 8:30, January 20, 21, 22, 1977 Sunday, 2:30, January 23, 1977 LOUIS LANE Conducting EDITH PEINEMANN, Violin

PROGRAM DELIUS *Prelude to Irmelin” (1932)

SCHUMANN Symphony No. 4 in D minor (1841 as No. 2; revised 1851 as No. 4) Ziemlich langsam; Lebhaft Ziemlich langsam Lebhaft Langsam; Lebhaft

BACH *Concerto No. 2 in E major for Violin and Orchestra (1717-1723) Allegro Adagio Allegro assai

INTERMISSION MOUSSORGSKY/ Pictures at an Exhibition (1874) RAVEL Promenade The Gnomes Old Castle Tuileries Bydlo — Polish Oxcart Ballet of the Chicks in their Shell Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuyle Limoges; The Market Place Catacombs The Hut of Fowl’s Legs The Great Gate of Kiev * First performance by the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra This concert will be broadcast on a delayed basis by Atlanta Public Radio, WABE-FM, 90.1, Tuesday evening at 8:30. The use of cameras or recording devices during concerts is strictly prohibited.

18c PROGRAM NOTES by David Hinshaw

Prelude to lrmelin Frederick Delius he wrote his mother, “I have ... arrived at (1862-1934) the conviction that with work, patience, Like so many composers of the and a good master, I shall be able within nineteenth century, Delius was to have six years to challenge any pianist. . . . pursued a career other than music. As a Besides this, I also possess imagination, child he was allowed to take up the study of and perhaps aptitude, for individual the violin and piano, but it was in the wool creative work.” Reluctantly, Frau business that he was supposed to make his Schumann gave her consent. career. In early manhood he was sent to The Fourth Symphony was originally Germany to study first hand the wool the Second. Written in 1841 before the C industry. He heard a performance of major and E-flat major, Schumann was Wagner’s Die Meistersinger instead, and unhappy with the final product and put it then realized that music was to be his aside numbering the C major career. Symphony, Number Two. Ten years later, Back home in England he half-heartedly in 1851, he reorchestrated it and called it worked in his father’s business for the next Symphony Number Four. two years. He then persuaded his father to The following analysis by Milton Cross underwrite a trip to Florida and purchase serves as a good introduction to this work. an orange plantation. From 1884 to 1886 Delius lived among the people of Florida, It is a more unified work than the other three. Each movement passes so fluidly dividing his time between teaching piano into the next that the work almost seems and violin and listening to the music of the to be in a single movement with varied Black Americans. sections. Important thematic ideas recur Due to the financial failure of the orange throughout the work, while an arpeggio plantation Delius was forced to return to figure (with which the symphony opens) England. After Edvard Grieg convinced is used as a motto theme. Delius’ father of his son’s talents, There is a slow introduction to the Delius was allowed to leave the first movement. The melancholy theme of this introduction (heard in violas and business world and with his father’s second violins) becomes a subsidiary financial blessings to take up composing in theme in the second movement. The earnest. main body of the first movement is Living in the Latin Quarters of Paris, introduced by an ascending figure in the Delius set about writing his first opera, first violins, flutes and oboes, which, lrmelin. This first of six operas was never extended, becomes the forceful first staged during his lifetime. The Prelude theme. A second lyric theme appears in was dictated by Delius to a young the first violins. The second movement is Yorkshire musician, Eric Fenby, in 1929 as a romanza, beginning with an elegiac the aging composer had lost his sight and melody in oboes and cellos against plucked strings, and continuing with a become partially paralyzed. repetition of the melancholy theme first heard in the first movement introduction. The scherzo movement Symphony No. 4 in D Minor Robert has a strongly rhythmic theme, while its Schumann (1810-1856) trio is, by contrast, diaphanous in Besides showing a remarkable gift for texture and graceful in style. A slow music at an early age, Robert Schumann, transition, which hints at phrases heard the fifth and youngest son of a book in previous movements and which publisher and author, made his interest in emphasizes the brass, leads to the finale. It begins with a powerful marchlike literature known by editing at age thirteen subject, which is the main theme of the an anthology of album-verse and poems. first movement in a major key. There is a By age fifteen he had already formed a frolicsome second theme. A free fantasia literary society. Even though his interests section follows. The coda, with which had become so apparent at such an early the symphony comes to a joyous and age his mother insisted that he follow a exciting conclusion, is made up of fresh career in law which he did until 1830 when material. 18d NOTES (continued)

Concerto No. 2 in E Major For Violin begged his father for financial assistance. and Orchestra His father told him he had not brought him J- S. Bach (1685-1750) up to be a musician. So for the remainder Bach’s musical life has been divided into of his short forty-one year life three major divisions. The first is called the Moussorgsky was forced to work at Weimar period, the second Cothen, and clerical jobs and live in abject poverty. the last Leipzig. As Weimar is Picture At An Exhibition was written in distinguished by the composition of his 1874 for piano solo. It was inspired by an organ works, and Leipzig by that of the exhibition of the architectural drawings, oratorios, Passions, masses, and cantatas, stage designs, and watercolors of his friend the Cothen period is marked by the Victor Hartmann, who died in 1873. production of chamber music. Again we turn to Milton Cross for an It was in this middle period (1717-1723) eloquent description of the work. that Bach wrote his two violin concerti (the first is in A minor). His sole responsibility The various sections are tonal at the Cothen court was to provide music representations of different Hartmann paintings as seen through the eyes of the for Prince Leopold, himself a member of composer. The work begins with the Bach’s eighteen member orchestra. Among Promenade, showing Moussorgsky his other output for this time was the walking through the halls of an Brandenburg Concerti, the Suites, and exhibition. The Promenade is a broad various sonatas. Russian melody—for the brass in the The Second Violin Concerto follows the Ravel transcription. The strings join in , form of a typical concerto grosso. Albert at which moment the composer stops at Schweitzer in his biography J. S. Bach the first picture: Gnomes. The deformed comments, “The concertos for violin and little creature (it is said this picture was orchestra that have survived are among the intended by the artist as a decorative design for a toy nutcracker) is recreated works of Bach to which it is useless to in hesitant rhythms. The Promenade employ the method of analysis; we must theme returns briefly, slower and more put them in the category of which Forkel subdued. The composer pauses before briefly and eloquently observes: ‘One can The Old Castle. A beautiful melody never say enough of their beauty.’ Modern appears first in the bassoon, then in the audiences are enthralled by the two adagio saxophone, against strings; it evokes a movements, in which the violin moves picture of a medieval castle. Once again about over a basso ostinato. We the Promenade theme is heard, bringing involuntarily associate them with the idea the visitor to a picture of the Tuileries, the famous gardens of Paris; music of of Fate. The beauty of the A minor light texture, with gay rhythms, concerto is severe, that of the E major full describes the children at their play and of an unconquerable joy of life, that sings possibly their nurses in gossip. We its song of truimph in the first and last progress immediately to the next picture movements.” Bydlo, a Polish oxcart. The robust but halting rhythm for solo tuba suggests the awkward movement of the cart. The Promenade in a minor key brings on the Ballet of the Unhatched Chickens. This Pictures at an Exhibition capricious design for a stage setting Modest Moussorgsky (1839-1881) inspired Moussorgsky to produce some orchestrated by Maurice Ravel of his most realistic and witty writing, as (1875-1937) the chirping and the moving of the little The life of Modest Moussorgsky was chickens in their shells are recreated one of riches to rags. The son of a wealthy with brilliant effects. Samuel Goldenberg and Schmuvle is a portrait land owner Modest was trained for a of two Polish Jews (without anti- career in the military. He gave up his Semitic malice), one rich and powerful, commission to pursue a life in music. After the other poor. Goldenberg appears in a a very short and unsuccessful attempt he pompous progression in the basses; 19

Low price time and Judy which originated during the time clock helps small of the Roman Empire when the Atellan companies meet farce, a bawdy comedy, was popular. Later they were stock characters of the Italian strict requirements commedia dell’arte during the of wage-hour law Renaissance. Punch and Judy became the hero and heroine of the traditional English puppet play, and in 1770 these characters, performed by roving puppeteers in portable puppet theatres, came to Colonial America. Mark Young, a baritone who trained in the University of Tennessee Professional Program under Anthony Quayle and Joshua Logan, will head the cast as Punch. Young has performed in many musicals including Hello Dolly, South Pacific, Music Man and Oliver. He also is a LATHEM TIME RECORDER COMPANY nightclub entertainer in Atlanta. 200 Selig Dr., S.W., Atlanta, Ga. 30336 Telephone 404/691-0400 Judy will be performed by pretty Nancy Jane Clay. Miss Clay studied drama at the TIME RECORDERS University of North Carolina in PROGRAM TIMERS TIME STAMPS Greensboro and has extensive training in WATCHMAN CLOCKS voice, modern dance, and ballet. She served as a production assistant with the Greensboro Children’s Theatre before coming to Atlanta to perform in a cabaret act. She has appeared in numerous dinner theatre productions and summer stock. Toby, Punch and Judy’s lovable dog, will be played by Ray Stephens, a well- known Atlanta performer. Stephens has extensive professional experience in stage productions, summer stock, television and radio, performing in such musicals as See Saw, Brigadoon, Applause and Funny Girl. Thomas E. Price, John Dance, Rob each new Zapple and William Colquitt return to the ACT stage having appeared this fall in year bring more Atlanta and on tour throughout the state warmth joy and in ACT’S Legend of the Silver Arrow. Price happiness than portrays Hector, a comical dancing horse. Before joining ACT Price toured the one before. nationally with the Agnes deMille American Heritage Dance Theatre. Dance is a veteran ACT performer whose recent credits include Treasure Island, PRESTO! A Magical Spectacular, Mark Twain’s Tom Sawyer and the narrator in Legend of the Silver Arrow. In Davison’s this production he will sing and perform the role of the Doctor. 20 NOTES (continued)

Schmuyle in an abrupt subject for climax in the concluding portrait. The muted trumpets. The themes are Great Gate at Kiev, (a monument combined as the two men enter upon a Hartmann had planned in the city of heated discussion. Realism returns in A Kiev). With luxuriant orchestration, Hui on Fowl's Legs, with ideas strongly punctuated by the tolling of bells, a suggesting Russian folk songs. The sonorous and majestic ending is music reaches toward a grandiose promulgated.

GUEST ARTISTS

LOUIS LANE Not only do the number of concerts in Louis Lane is which Maestro Lane has performed, both currently co­ in the U.S. and abroad, bespeak the poetic principal con­ brilliance which he has achieved, but so do ductor of the the praises of the music critics. Dallas Sym­ The Chicago Sun-Times stated. “Lane phony, and mu­ has a sure ear, a good baton technique, and sic director of the personal authority to lead the men the Akron Sym­ imaginatively in a variety of styles." The phony Orch­ New York Post said, “He earned his estra; but for many years he was the tribute. He and the orchestra were greeted associate and resident conductor of the at the conclusion of the work by a Cleveland Orchestra. He is much in prolonged ovation.” demand as a guest conductor, and his Critics around the world have lauded the engagements across the continent have conducting skills of Maestro Lane. After included subscription and touring concerts his performance in Russia, the Soviet Life with the Chicago Symphony, numerous announced him as “Poetic, decisive, and concerts with the Detroit Symphony, and brilliant.” The Star of Johannesburg appearances with the orchestras of wrote, “Louis Lane achieved what he Indianapolis, St. Louis, Denver, Seattle, wanted to do with a minimum of fuss. His Houston, San Diego and Rochester, direction was precise, but never among others. The 1976-77 season finds automatic—broad melodic passages were him in concert with the Atlanta fitted precisely into an unfolding scene of Symphony, the Oklahoma Symphony, the great beauty. A fine interpretation.” New Jersey Symphony, with the Bach Aria Louis Lane has received several awards Group in New York’s Tully Hall, and in his for his outstanding works, including the second series of concerts with the National Distinguished Services Award from Kent Orchestra of the South African State University, the Mahler Medal of Broadcasting Company. Honor, and the Ditson Award of He is a familiar figure with many other Columbia University. audiences outside the U.S.--under the auspices of the Cultural Exchange Program of the U.S. State Departmer Maestro Lane conducted six concerts EDITH the Cleveland Orchestra in the Soviet PEINEMANN Union, one in Vienna, and nine others in “Today, Edith various European countries. Under the Peinemann is same auspices he appeared in six countries princess of the with the SODRE Orchestra of violin kingdom; Montevideo, Uraguay. Maestro Lane has tomorrow she also led the Helsinki Philharmonic will rule it as Orchestra and has conducted and recorded queen.” This is with the Polish Radio Orchestra at the the prediction Warsaw International Festival. made by the 21 Cotton States PRIZED IOSSESSION is for people. JEWELRY, ANTIQUES AND OBJECTS d'ART

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22 GUEST ARTIST (continued)

music critic of the Cincinnati Enquirer contributed largely to her artistry, Miss some fifteen years ago in 1962, when Miss Peinemann’s present respected status was Peinemann made her debut in the United arrived at only through years of devoted States. This critic’s forecast of Miss study. Relatives on her father’s side of the Peinemann’s future was as clairvoyant as it family have been musicians for was precise. generations. Her father, Robert Since her debut Miss Peinemann has Peinemann, is concertmaster of the achieved the heights of musicianship. She Symphony Orchestra of Mainz, where maintains stellar prominence among Miss Peinemann was born. With deep today’s major violinists. interest under her father’s tutelage, she Miss Peinemann has performed with studied until she was fourteen years old; many of the major U.S. orchestras. Her after which she studied for two years with impressive list includes the orchestras of the German violinist Heinz Stanske. A Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland. scholarship provided tuition and living Detroit, Honolulu, Los Angeles, expenses to study in London with Max Minnesota, New York, San Francisco and Rostal with whom she studied from 1953 Washington D. C. Her major 1976-77 tour until 1956. in America includes her sixth engagement The results of her devotion are clearly with the Atlanta Symphony, her seventh indicated in the praises which she has performance with the San Diego earned from music critics around the Symphony, as well as several recitals at world. The Christian Science Monitor University’s across the country. states that, “Handsome is as handsome did In Europe the artist has performed with, where Edith Peinemann was concerned.” and in many cases returned to, such The Atlanta Journal summed up her prestigious ensembles as the Bavarian talents and career in this manner, “She is Symphony of Munich, the Berlin likely to take her place in history as one of Philharmonic, the Budapest Phil­ the foremost women violinists of all time. harmonic, the Hague Philharmonic, the Both her intonation and rhythmic drive London Philharmonic, the Vienna were as sure as her tone and the very Symphony, etc. satisfying result was a feeling of being in Although family background direct contact with Beethoven himself.”

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ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA LEAGUE

President Robert G. Edge Lawrence J. McEvoy, Jr. LIFE SPONSORS David Goldwasser Herbert R. Elsas Tom M. McLain, Jr. Mrs. Frank L. Burns Vice Presidents Mrs. Edward E. Elson George K. McPherson. Jr Mrs. Murdock Equen Dr. Dan Burge Richard C. Everett Paul E. Manners Mrs. Lon Grove Bradley Currey. Jr. Washington Falk, III N. Barnard Murphy Mrs. Granger Hansell Mrs. Charles E. Watkins. Jr. Arthur G. Foster F. W Nichols Byron Harris Mrs. L. Neil Williams Ms. Shirley Franklin H. Burke Nicholson, Jr. Mrs. Julian Hightower Secretary Mrs. Henry Geigerman, Jr. Dr Marvin B. Perry. Jr. Mrs. Lewis Hirsch Paul A. Ebbs, Jr. L. L. Gellerstedt. Jr. Mrs. Theophile Raphael * Charles Jagels Treasurer Mrs. John R. Guy Mrs. David A. Reinach C. K. Liller Mrs. Drew R. Fuller Joseph F. Haas Mrs. William E. Schatten Mrs. Mason Lowance Mrs. John R. Hall Shouky A. Shaheen Michael McDowell BOARD OF SPONSORS Dr. J. Rhodes Haverty Grant G. Simmons, Jr. Mrs. Lawrence J. McEvoy Peter Abreu Mrs. J. Rhodes Haverty Dr. Grace B. Smith Mrs. Louis Moss A. Leigh Baier Lee H. Henkel, Jr. H. Hamilton Smith Mrs. Bernard Neal James E. Barnett Mrs. Jesse Hill. Jr. W. Rhett Tanner Mrs. T. Erwin Schneider John M. Bragg Samuel E. Hudgins Mrs. Ralph K. Uhry G. Maynard Smith Tom M. Brumby Mrs. Bunnie Jackson John A. Wallace Mrs. Howard C. Smith Mrs. Robert W. Chambers Dr. Herbert Karp L. Neil Williams * Charles L. Towers William F. Clark Louis Kunian Murray D. Wood * Charles R. Yates Dr. B. Woodfin Cobbs, Jr. Dr. Noah Langdale, Jr. Robert M. Wood Eugene Young Dr. John W. Cooledge Mrs. Elizabeth Lochridge Mrs. William B. Wylly Edward S. Croft. Jr. Frank Ratka. General Manager *Past Presidents

23 nn______

Zapple is cast as the Policeman. He is a graduate of the University of Virginia and the Television Production Interne program of the Westinghouse Broadcasting Company in Boston. The Hangman will be played by six foot four William Colquitt who also appeared in ACTs Treasure Island and this past summer was Jonathan Brewer in the bicentennial outdoor drama A Cry of Eagles. Director Charles L. Doughty will be assisted by Choreographer Charlie Helms, Production Designer Ruth Ann Maddux, Costumer Renee Wolfe, Assistant Costumer Barabara Hawes, Production Stage Manager David Hughes, and Lighting Designer William Duncan. Technical Director is Reid Pierce. Special Saturday matinees are scheduled for 2:30 p.m. January 15 and February 5. Tickets are $2.25 and can be reserved by calling the box office, 892- 2414. For information on group rates call 892- 7607.

ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Symphony Fund Drive "Kicks-Off" With the New Year January marks the beginning of the Atlanta Symphony Women’s Associa­ tion’s Fund Drive—the Residential Gifts Campaign. This year they have resolved to collect $ 115,000 by the end of February for the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and its programs. A special “kick-off’ concert to honor all volunteers and members of the Atlanta A ROMANTIC RESTAURANT Symphony Orchestra League highlights the beginning of the campaign on January 25th; and on Wednesday, January 26, the solicitation starts. From this day until the end of the campaign, between 8,000 and Container 10,000 possible prospects for pledges will GOURMET FOOD • SPIRITS • GIFTS be contacted. This year’s Residential Gifts chairman, LENOX SQUARE behind Davison's at E. Paces Ferry Mrs. William Izlar, Jr., feels that it will Sun.-Thurs Fri. & Sat. require all of the Women’s Association’s 11 a.m.—11 p.m. 11 a.m.—1 am. best efforts to reach their goal, but she is 262-7872 (continued on page

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Atlanta Federal can show you how. If you have participated in CHANGING a retirement plan in your former job, it may be possible to move JOBS OR those dollars with you and keep them tax-sheltered in an Atlanta Federal Individual Retirement RETIRING Account. We will be happy to discuss its possible uses with EARLY? you. Call 577-4151, or mail the coupon below! MOVE YOUR i ffTUHTfl FEDERAL SAVINGS I A DIVISION OF GEORGIA FEDERAL SAVINGS ' RETIREMENT ! Special Services Department —MO J I P.O. Box 1723, Atlanta, Georgia 30301 I Please send me more information on I the IRA Rollover Plan. DOLLARS I I I Name I | I WITH YOU! I Tel. No. J | Address ! City [ 1 I I State Zip

25 ' 1975 Commonwealth of Puerto Rico

In tonight’s martini the part of gin and vodka will be played by white rum.

White rum from Puerto Rico in a nationwide test. That's because will finally play the role its distinctive all white rum from Puerto Rico is clarity and smoothness have so well aged for at least a year—by law. prepared it for. White rum is ready to take a In fact, white rum has already leading role in the martini. proven itself in rehearsal. It beat gin Like any new star, all it and vodka on taste and smoothness needs is a chance. PUCRTO RICRR RUmS ffli______Guffey’s k confident that they will fulfill their pledge of Atlanta to the symphony for 1977. Atlanta’s Finest “Grass-roots” and “person-to-person Clothing contact” best describe the mechanics of for Men § the fund drive. Atlanta is divided into ten DOWNTOWN: N PEACHTREE CENTER residential sections. These sections are (BEHIND THE SCULPTURE) then redivided among area chairmen, and UPTOWN: TOWER PLACE £ these chairmen separate their areas into (AT PIEDMONT ENTRANCE) N neighborhoods. At this point, the neighborhoods are assigned to workers, r and each worker is given a list of possible donors within that area. Care is taken to make sure that the workers live within the neighborhood that they have been given to FAVORITES FROM THE PAST contact. The fund drive is a collage of many specializing in volunteers’ efforts, but they all blend DOLLHOUSES and MINIATURES together to create support for one of Atlanta’s outstanding cultural CLASSES achievements—the Atlanta Symphony. HOURS: TUES. - SAT. If you care to make the Atlanta 10-4 Symphony Women’s Association’s goal a ILLUSTRATED CATALOG $1.00 2951 HARRIS ST., KENNESAW, GA. 30144 part of your New Year’s resolution, phone 427-3921 Pat Perry in the Symphony’s office at 892- 3600.

Music Appreciation Course Offered by Women's Association The Women’s Association’s services to the Atlanta Symphony go far beyond just PINKERTON & LA financial support. BUILDS THINGS. Their most recent offering is another Music Appreciation Course. The classes REMEMB for this course will be based upon the THE PINKERTON & LAWS COMPANY Atlanta Symphony’s programs during the Member Associated General Contractors of America period of January 27th through March 2700 Cumberland Parkway, N.W. 17th. Atlanta 30339 / 432-0171 It will be taught by Dr. Don Gingrich of Georgia State University, and the classes will be held in the Members’ Room of the tkuiti's Memorial Arts Center. The fee will be $40 for a couple, $25 for an individual, or $4.00 for a single class. The studies will include the following: Variation Forms — Dallapiccola, Variations for Orchestra; Hindemith, The Four Temperaments. Symphonies— Fondues Brahms, Symphony No. 1 (one movement); Shostakovich Symphony No. Atlanta's finest JAZZ 5; Hindemith, Symphonic Metamorphosis UNDERGROUND ATLANTA on Themes of Weber. Concerti— RESERVATIONS 577-1800 Beethoven, Concerto No. 4 for Piano (one 27 movement); Brahms, Concerto No. 2 for “Looking For A Warehouse?" Piano (one movement); Walton, Violin Concerto; LaMontaine, Piano Concerto. Ballet Suite—Stravinsky, Le Sacre du John Hunsinger printemps. Choral Work—Vaughn & Company „ Williams, Dona Nobis Pacem. And the Tone Poem—Ishii, Jo. To attend the class send your check to Commercial and Industrial Real Estate 1819 Peachtree Road, Northeast Women’s Association, Mrs. Dan Burge, 404.351*6813 Chairman Adult Education, Atlanta Chicago, Denver, San Francisco, Dallas, Tokyo, Paris Symphony Orchestra, 1280 Peachtree St. N.E., Atlanta, Ga. 30309

Farewells to Michael Palmer This month also marks the last time that -/ranklin Atlanta’s audiences will have the pleasure of watching Mr. Palmer conducting the PERIMETER _ • Atlanta Symphony Orchestra as their Cumberland! jrwT associate conductor. Beginning the 1977- LENOX I II I 78 season Mr. Palmer will be the music I I |W^ IV director and conductor of the Wichita (Kansas) Symphony. The world's finest record. Concerning Mr. Palmer’s new stereo and music dealer appointment, Maestro Shaw said, “Mr. Palmer is surely one of the most gifted, experienced and accomplished of young American conductors. In addition, he’s a stable and principled human being. He’ll bring both creative energy and mature judgement to his new position. Wichita is in for some fine music making and solid growth. Our best wishes go with him, and assurances of a friendly welcome upon his return visits.” Harper’s Flowers Mr. David Goldwasser, president of the 1201 West Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta Symphony Orchestra League, best 876-5766 expressed the sentiments of all the We accept all major credit cards. Symphony’s supporters when he said, “... the Wichita Symphony is fortunate to acquire his services. The Atlanta DINE AND DANCE Symphony will miss him. But, his many AMONG THE STARS® admirers here join in wishing for him the great success he is destined to attain.”

Don't Forget The Atlanta Symphony Women’s Association reminds everyone of the open rehearsal which will be held on Wednesday, February 2, in Symphony 590 WEST Hall. It is $1.00 admission for the public, atopxjfou^eri ATLANTA HOTEL but all Atlanta Symphony Orchestra 590 West Peachtree Street League members are admitted free. 28 Another of the Meet-the-Artists comprehensive display of the college Luncheon will be held on Thursday, program. Many of the works will be for January 20, at 12:30 p.m. in the Members’ sale. Room of the Memorial Arts Center. For only $3.75 the public is invited to enjoy Gallery 413 lunch, and the company of conductor Steve Klema, graduating senior, will Louis Lane and violinist Edith Peinemann. exhibit bamboo and stretched muslin For reservations call Mrs. William Nash at constructions in Gallery 413 on the “A” 252-6507. level of the Arts Center, January 10-21. And finally, the Atlanta Symphony The work, although totally three- Orchestra and all its staff would like to dimensional in nature, combines also extend wishes for the happiest of New many of the formal considerations relative Years. to painting and illusion. Gallery 413 is open to the public daily from 10 a.m. to 5 ATLANTA COLLEGE OF ART p.m.

Spring Extension Visiting Artist Program Program Announced William Larson, internationally known The Adult Extension Program classes of photographer will give a slide talk in Room the Atlanta College of Art will start 438, on January 27th at 10:30 A.M. as part January 10 and continue through May 6. of our Visiting Artist Program. Mr. Several new courses are being offered this Larson is included in many permanent spring in response to student interest, in collections including the Museum of addition to the established classes in Modern Art in New York and the painting, drawing, printmaking, Philadelphia Museum of Art. He has given photography and color theory. Appearing numerous lectures and workshops across on the extension schedule for the first time the country and is included in countless are calligraphy, three-dimensional design, publications including The Great Themes, drawing in color, figure modeling (in clay) Time-Life Library of Photography and and large format camera. All evening Fire Flies, a group of 33 images generated extension classes at the college are offered on the Graphic Sciences Teleprinter and for college credit. A call to the Atlanta reproduced in three-hundred line offset, College of Art office at 892-3600, published by Gravity Press of Ext. 231 will put you on the mailing list Philadelphia. The public is invited. The for the Adult Extension Program brochure. Visiting Artist program is funded in part through a grant from the National ACA Students Exhibit Endowment for the Arts. The recent ACA Student Show and Sale in the galleria was a great success. Part of HIGH MUSEUM OF ART the proceeds will fund a summer

scholarship for a student who will be Two Centuries of Black American Art Exhibition chosen by the student body next semester. Opens at High Museum Plans for another student show in the galleria, to be held February 7-25 are January 8 already underway. Unlike the recent This exhibition is the first major Student Show and Sale, which was historical contribution to the arts of totally a student project with work selected America and includes more than 200 and installed by students, this next show works by black artists ranging from will have a somewhat different look and anonymous slaves to recognized artists of focus. Faculty members will select the the mid-20th century. Organized by the works, which will include examples from Los Angeles County Museum of Art and each of the areas of instruction offered at guest curator David Driskell, the the College, resulting in a more exhibition shows works by sixty-three 29 SINCE 1948 artists, including paintings, sculpture, Dine drawings, prints, crafts and decorative Nearby arts. Also featured will be works by black before the women artists such as Edmonia Lewis, 0 show Lois M. Jones, Selma Burke, Alma at Thomas, Clementine Hunter, and Minnie Evans. J CROSSROADS Two Centuries of Black American Art is restaurant and lounge sponsored by Philip Morris Incorporated 1556 peachtree st. and is supported by grants from the open every day — 875-6375 National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the City of Atlanta. An illustrated catalogue, published by Alfred A. Knopf, is available for sale in the Museum lobby Tours and Cruises ... and Museum Gift Shop. by Air and Steamship Lecture on Two Centuries of Black American Art Exhibition David C. Driskell, guest curator for the exhibition, Two Centuries of Black ATLANTA TRAVEL AGENCY American Art, will speak on the current exhibition in the New Galleries. Mr. I 235 Peachtree St., N.E. — Suite 1817 Driskell is a native of Georgia and is a Atlanta, Georgia 30303 — Alex Hitz, Jr. resident of Nashville, Tennessee, where he has been the chairman of the Department, of Art at Fisk University since 1966. He is well-known in the United States, Africa, and Europe as a scholar and artist and is responsible for organizing the current exhibition and for writing the exhibition catalogue. The lecture will be presented on Sunday, January 9 at 2 p.m. in the Walter Hill Auditorium. Museum Membership Campaign To Kick Off in January! 1000 new members by the end of February! That’s the goal of the High Museum’s Membership Campaign being launched in mid-January, spearheaded by museum volunteers Joan Dobbs Wooster and John S. Allen along with a volunteer committee. Prizes will be awarded to the member soliciting the most new memberships and to the member bringing in the most revenue from new memberships. Any current Museum member interested in participating in the campaign should call Membership Secretary Jean Pool at 892-3600, ext. 302 Atlanta, Georgia 30305 for details. ini 30 cfhe Spotlight isonthe cBrotherscIwo

ACA: Atlanta College HMA High Museum of too! of Art Art ACT: Atlanta Children's MR: Member’s Room Theatre PR: Paneled Room AT: Alliance Theatre RH: Rehearsal Hall ...and our new ATC: Alliance Theatre SH: Symphony Hall Company ST: Studio Theatre ASO: Atlanta Symphony WHA Walter Hill after theatre menu Orchestra Auditorium GAL: Galleria For ticket information, call the box office at ds5 free 892-2414. For other information, call 892-3600. underground parking in Concerts ColonySquare.

THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY JANUARY 6, 7 & 8 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30 p.m. SH. Otto- Werner Mueller conducting; Leon Bates, Piano, All-Tchaikovsky Program: Marche Slave, Piano Concerto No, 1, Symphony No. 6.______SUNDAY, JANUARY 9 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 2:30, SH. Same program. THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY __ JANUARY 20, 21, 22______Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30 p.m. SH. Louis Lane, conducting; Edith Peinemann, Violin, Delius: Prelude to lrmelin; Schumann: Symphony No. 4; Bach: Violin Concerto No. 2 Moussorgsky- Ravel: Pictures at an Exhibition. SUNDAY, JANUARY 23 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 2:30, SH, Same program.

Special Events

Atlanta Symphony Chamber Players. For information call the Symphony Offices at 892- 3600 Ext. 255.

Exhibitions cBrothers(rEvo High Museum hours: 10:00 to 5:00 Mon. through Sat., 12:00 to 5:00 Sun., closed evenings. Art Shop Restaurant and Rub hours: open during regular High Museum hours. THE CITY and Jr. Art Shop hours: 3:00 to 4:45 Open til 2 a.m. Mon. through Fri., 12:00 to 4:45 Sat. and Sun. 100 Colony Square Bldg, Donation: 25C Children, 50C Adults, Museum Members free. THE CITY is reserved at other (red level) hours during the week for scheduled school tours 14th & Peachtree by prior arrangement only. Atlanta Gallery 413: open weekdays from 10:00 am to 5:00 892-1975 pm. The Gallery is located in the Atlanta College of Art, Level “A". 31 Industrial, Office, Retail or Residential, we know real estate.. .from the ground up.

Arthur Rubloff & Co . OF GEORGIA (Formerly Allan-Grayson Realty Co.)

400 Colony Square • Atlanta. Georgia 30361 • (404) 892-7400

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the museum shop Support THE HIGH MUSEUM OF ART Your Symphony MEMBER’S The Magic Pan Creperies urge BOOK you to join them in giving The Atlanta Symphony full support. SALE STARTING JANUARY 19th AND CONTINUING FOR TWO WEEKS ONLY ALL BOOKS ON SALE creperie... PATRON Open daily for luncheon MEMBERS...... 33% OFF dinner and late supper REGULAR MEMBERS...... 25% OFF Lenox Square Cumberland Mall 266-8424 432-3115 the museum shop Master Charge Diners Club THE HIGH MUSEUM OF ART BankAmericard American Express

32 ' OPENING JANUARY 8______SATURDAY, JANUARY 22 Two Centuries of Black American Art, HMA, New Marx Brothers Films, HMA, WHA, $1 Museum Galleries, third floor. A loan exhibition of more Members with cards, $1.50 Students with ID’s, $2 than 200 works by black artists ranging from General Public. See time listings below: anonymous slaves to recognized artists of the Duck Soup: 2:00, 6:00, 10:00 p.m. mid-20th century. On view through February 20. Horsefeathers: 3:15, 7:15 p.m. CONTINUING THROUGH JANUARY~16 Cocoanuts: 4:25, 8:25 p.m. Selections from the Robert P. Coggins Collection ~ SUNDAY? JANUARY 23 of American Paintings, HMA, North Gallery, first Marx Brothers Films, HMA, WHA, $1 Museum floor. A loan exhibition from the important Members with cards. $1.50 Students with ID’s, $2 collection of Dr. Robert P. Coggins of Marietta, General Public. See time listings below: Ga. which spans American art between 1756 and Cocoanuts: TOO p.m. post-World War I. Horsefeathers: 2:35 p.m. JANUARYJOTHROUGH 21 Duck Soup: 3:45 p.m. Senior Exhibit, Gallery 413. Steve Klema will FRIDAY, JANUARY 28 exhibit bamboo and stretched muslin Murder, She Said and Murder Ahoy, Miss Marple constructions. Film Series, 8:00, WHA. $1 Museum Members with CONTINUING EXHIBITIONS cards, $1.50 Students with ID's, $2 General Public. The City, HMA, Junior Gallery. Discover the city SATURDAY, JANUARY29 as a place made up of color, line, space, shapes Murder Most Foul and Murder at the Gallop, Miss and texture—the elements of design. Award­ Marple Film Series. HMA, 8:00, WHA. $1 Museum winning exhibition designed by Heery & Heery, Members with cards, $1.50 Students with ID's, $2 Architects and Engineers. Admission fee to non­ General Public. Members.

The William and Robert Arnett Collection of Antique Chinese Jades. HMA. McBurney Galleries, third floor. Continuing on extended Lectures & Classes loan.

American Painting in the High Museum of Art, HMA, Central Galleries, second floor. A selection SUNDAY, JANUARY 9 of major American works in the Museum’s HMA Lecture on the exhibition, Two Centuries of permanent collection. Illustrated catalogue Black American Art by David Driskell, guest available. lecturer. WHA, 2:00, Free.______European Ceramics Galleries, HMA, McBurney WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 19 Gallery, third floor. A special installation of more HMA Re-Viewing the Masters Lecture Series, than 350 pieces from the collections of Mr. and 10:00 and 8:00, WHA. Catherine Evans, lecturer. Mrs. G. Ryland Scott and their families, Mr. and Subject: “Ingres and Delacroix: Classicism vs. Mrs. Emory L. Cocke, and the Museum's Romanticism." $1.50 HMA Members with cards, permanent collection. Sponsors: Mr. and Mrs. $1.75 Students with ID’s, $2 General Public. Lindsey Hopkins, Jr. and the Atlanta Arts Alliance. Designer: Roy P. Frangiamore, A.I.A. Ceramics WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26 Consultant: John Austin, Colonial Williamsburg. HMA Re-Viewing the Masters Lecture Series, Photography: Kathryn Eros Green. 10:00 and 8:00, WHA. Catherine Evans, lecturer. Subject: "Constable: Streams, Spires, and the 'Ugly' Greens." $1.50 HMA Members with cards, $1.75 Students with ID’s, $2 General Public. Food & Beverage JANUARY 10 THROUGH MAY 6 ACA Adult Extension Program. Classes offered in painting, drawing, printmaking, photography, and THURSDAY, JANUARY 20 color theory. New extension classes include calligraphy, three-dimensional design, drawing in ASO Meet-the-Artlst Luncheon, 12:30, Members' color, figure modeling (in clay), and large formal Room, $3.75. Meet conductor Louis Lane and camera. Call 892-3600, 321 for brochure. violinist Edith Peinemann. For reservations call 252-6507. SUNDAyTjANUARY 30 HMA Lecture by Gordon Hendricks, guest lecturer. Subject: "The Photography of Eadweard Muybridge." 2:00, WHA. Free. Films JANUARY 27 THROUGH MARCH 17 ASO Music Appreciation-Course, Members’ SUNDAY, JANUARY 9______Room. Taught by Dr. Don Gingrich of Georgia Film on Black American Art, HMA, 4:00, WHA. State University, the study will include variation Free.______forms, symphonies, concerti, piano concerto, choral work and tone poem. Call 892-3600, Ext. FRIDAY & SATURDAY 252 for information.______JANUARY 14 8 15______JANUARY 27 ~ Black Orpheus, HMA, 8:00, WHA. $1. Museum Members with cards. $1.50 Students with ID's, $2 ACA Visiting Artist-Program, Room 438, 10:30 General Public. a.m. Guest lecturer: William Larson, internationally known photographer. ______SUNDAY, JANUARY 16______SUNDAY. JANUARY 30 Film on Black American Art, HMA, 1:30, WHA. Free. HMA Lecture by Gordon Hendricks, guest Video Program, HMA, 3:00, location to be lecturer. Subject: “The Photography of Eadweard announced. Free. Muybridge." 2:00, WHA. Free. 33 Theatre

THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY JANUARY 13, 14 & 15 Illi Atlanta Arts Scapino!, Alliance Theatre. 8:00 p.m., AT. This Monthly magazine of the opening production is a hilarious update by Frank Atlanta Memorial Arts Center Dunlop and Jim Dale of Moliere’s classic comedy 1280 Peachtree Street, N.E. Atlanta Georgia 30309 written in 1691. David Bishop, producing director; Fred Chappell, artistic director. JANUARY, 1977 VOL. XII ISSUE 5 SUNDAY. JANUARY 16 THE ATLANTA ARTS ALLIANCE Scapino!, Alliance Theatre, 2:30, AT. ______Charles R. Yates TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY President James K. Grille th FRIDAY & SATURDAY Controller ___ JANUARY 18, 19, 20, 21 & 22 William Shippen Scapino!, Alliance Theatre, 8:00, AT. Facilities Manager SUNDAY, JANUARY 23 ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Frank Ratka Scapino!, Alliance Theatre, 2:30, AT. General Manager Richard W. Thompson TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY Assistant Manager FRIDAY S SATURDAY JANUARY 25, 26, 27, 28 & 29 ____ THE HIGH MUSEUM OF ART Gudmund Vlgtel Scapino!, Alliance Theatre, 8:00, AT. Director Ms. Paula Hancock Curator of Education THE ATLANTA COLLEGE OF ART William Voos President Anthony Greco Academic Dean Children Mrs. Guthrie Foster Dean of Students THE ALLIANCE THEATRE COMPANY David Bishop Producing Director THE CITY exhibition—for Children and Adults— Fred Chappell in the High Museum of Art. Open daily 3:00-4:45 Artistic Director p.m. and weekdays 12:00-4:45. Admission: 25® THE ATLANTA CHILDREN’S THEATRE Children, 50® Adults, Free HMA Members. Charles L. Doughty WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY Director ______JANUARY 5, 6, 7______PARKING FACILITIES: Center Parking garage with Punch and Judy, Atlanta Children's Theatre, a covered parking directly adjacent to Center, entrances on riotous musical comedy based on the puppet Peachtree and Lombardy Way; also commercial parking characters but performed by live actors. Charles across from Peachtree entrance to Center, and north of L. Doughty, director. AT. 10 a.m. and 12:00. First Presbyterian Church. SATURDAY, JANUARY 8 BOX OFFICE: (404) 892-2414. Hours: Mon. through Fri. 10-6 pm (or until curtain); Sat. noon-4:00 (or until curtain); Disney Cartoon Festival and Winnie the Pooh and Sun. noon-3:00. The Memorial the Blustery Day, HMA Movies for Kids Series, Arts Center Box Office handles tickets for the Atlanta 10:30 and 1:30, WHA. 50® children 16 and under, Symphony, Atlanta Children’s Theatre, Alliance Theatre $1 HMA Adult Members, $2 General Public. Company, Dance Atlanta, Theatre Atlanta Off Peachtree; Vagabond Marionettes; Travelogue Film Series; also on WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY & FRIDAY night of performance, all tickets for any event scheduled in JANUARY 12, 13 & 14_ the Arts Center.

Punch and Judy, Atlanta Children's Theatre. AT. TOURS: For information on regular weekday tours or 10 a.m., 12:00.______group tour arrangements, call (404) 892-3600.

______SATURDAY, JANUARY 15______RESTROOMS: Located off the Galleria Balcony across Punch and Judy, Atlanta Children's Theatre. AT. from both Symphony Hall and the Alliance Theatre. Also 2:30 p.m. located adjacent to the balcony lobbies inside Symphony Hall. MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY THURSDAY & FRIDAY JANUARY 17, 18, 19, 20 & 21 OUR COVER: ALLIANCE THEATRE PRESENTS THE BIGGEST NAMES IN SHOW BUSINESS; Shaw, Albee, Punch and Judy, Atlanta Children's Theatre, AT Ibsen, Shakespeare, Moliere. Cover design by Ken Ragan. 10 a.m., 12:00.______MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, ATLANTA ARTS Magazine is published for the Atlanta THURSDAY & FRIDAY Memorial Arts Center, by The Conger Printing Co., Inc. in Atlanta, Georgia. All rights to Atlanta Arts are reserved by __ JANUARY 24, 25, 26, 27 & 28 the Atlanta Memorial Arts Center. Reproduction from the Punch and Judy, Atlanta Children’s Theatre, AT magazine in whole or in part without permission is 10 a.m. and 12:00.______prohibited. Editorial Office, 1619 Chattahoochee Ave., N.W., Atlanta 30318. Phone (404) 352-1910. __ Saturday' January 29 ~~ L. W. CONGER, JR. SANDRA HAISTEN The Phantom Tollbooth, HMA Movies for Kids Publisher Editor Series, 10:30 and 1:30, WHA. 50® children 16 and COCO CONGER ERNEST DeVANE under, $1 HMAAdult Members, $2 General Public. Advertising Director Art Director 34 Why smoke Now?

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