THEAtlanta MONTHLY MAGAZINE OF THE MEMORIALArts ARTS CENTER JANUARY 1976

Of Special Interest AT THE CENTER

ALLIANCE THEATRE COMPANY Alliance Theatre Kicks Off Season with 'The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia' On January 15, the Alliance Theatre begins its 1976 season at the Atlanta Memorial Arts Center with a fantastically funny and completely new work—The Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia. The production is made possible through the American Play­ wrights Theatre, an organization that promotes the production of new plays by regional member theatres before the rights become tied up for years on Broadway. The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia has been scheduled to open on Broadway this spring and will be presented in at least fifteen theatres across the country this year. It has already played to Dallas audiences in addition to a tremendously acclaimed run at Washing­ ton D. C.’s Arena Stage. In White Magnolia, Preston Jones, a significant new voice in the American theatre, and the play’s author, looks at the raucous, discombobulated meeting of a fraternal lodge and its remaining seven members. The play, part of a trilogy about life and mores in a small Texas town, deals with these seven deadbeats as they try ineffectually to carry on a faded tradition of white sheets and blazing crosses (they found the KKK too liberal). Devoted to domino playing, drinking and reminiscing the “good ol’ times” during their meetings, the fiction of a brotherhood is frittered I'/ottr ie.d if re away—the eventual break-up of the group is a moving experience. The characters are is a so well developed that one can imagine their lives extending beyond their shabby if/i^any- diamond. meeting room. Things may have been mis­ guided and silly in the lodge hall but that was better than empty, leaving a group of small people to face their small lives. The playwright has not created characters, but authentic people, laughable for all their ATLANTA faults and rich in their idiosyscrycies—the Tiffany&Co. 18TH CENTURY STYLE DOUBLE BONNET SECRETARY faithfully reproduced by Henredon, where pride in one's work will never be a thing of the past. $1165. playgoer will find himself completely involved in their plight. Preston Jones is being heralded by critics as an important new spokesman in We bid you American theatre. What William Inge did for Kansas, and Thornton Wilder did for New Hampshire, Jones is doing for small­ town Texas. The meanness of the big city WELCOME! or the sweet-scented decadence of the Deep South have yet to infect Preston Jones’ We're so happy you've rural landscapes. In his early years, Jones kicked around the Lone Star State as a come to our collections worker for the highway department and a of beautiful clothes for the scale operator at cattle auctions before he joined the Dallas Theatre Center in 1962 as entire family, home fashions, an actor. Two seasons ago, when he was gifts and antiques too. put in charge of programming the Theatre Do luncheon or tea Center’s experimental house, the play- stay for wrighting urge struck. Mr. Jones says of at our Bird Cage restaurant, himself, “Well, I’ve always had a lot of open every shopping day stories in may head, but never much time to put them down. I finally siad, ‘Gosh, I Lord & Taylor, Phipps Plaza might as well try my hand at a West Texas Peachtree Road belween play’ ”—the result of which is the trilogy from which White Magnolia is taken. Wieuca and Lenox Roads The play will be directed by Fred 266-0600 Chappell, Artistic Director of the Alliance Theatre’s 1976 season, and will run Monday through Saturday through January 31. 1000 a.m. to 600 p.m. In past seasons at the Alliance Theatre, Monday and Thursday Fred Chappell has directed such outstand­ ing productions as A Midsummer Night’s evenings until 900 p.m. . Dream, The Crucible, The Boyfriend, Romeo and Juliet, Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Oh, Coward!, Jacques Brel, and Tobacco Road. Mr. Chappell returns to the Alliance Theatre after opening Don Tucker’s new musical Same Painted Pony in New York. He recently completed his second highly successful summer season as Artistic Director of the Cortland Repertory Theatre in Cortland, New York. In addi­ tion to his work as director of various off- Broadway productions and other major theatre productions around the country, Mr. Chappell is an accomplished actor as well. He appeared on Broadway in Theatre Atlanta’s production of Red, White and Maddox; with Vincent Price in Oliver: with Ann Miller in Maine; and Bob Cummings and Mamie Van Doren in How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying. Mr. Chappell will direct the majority of the season with guest directors 18th Century '‘Regency chair with faux bamboo turnings from our '[Baker furniture collection.

Suo volume 400 page Baker 'Book. $15.00. 430 eSKerchandise eftCart, Chicago 60654- ‘Distinguished manufacturer and distributor through your interior designer or furniture retailer. Showrooms in c/ltlanta, Chicago, Cleveland, ‘Dallas, Qrand ‘Bap ids, ‘fftigh ‘Point, Houston, Los ciAngeles, efrCiami, TVew york, ‘Philadelphia, San ‘tfrancisco. to be announced. The Miracle Worker, the life story of Helen Keller, playing from Sears February 5 to February 21 will follow The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia. Other plays to be presented are To Be Young, Gifted and Black; The Skin So many ways to of Our Teeth; The Time of Your Life; and Shop at Sears The Tempest. Season subscriptions will be available at the Art Center Box Office and and SAVE! the Alliance Theatre business offices at 15 16th-Street. 7 BIG DEPT. STORES Subscription tickets will also be availabe open every night and Sunday afternoons on January 2 at various shopping malls throughout the city, as well as Peachtree 19 Appliance Catalog Stores Center, Central City Park, Underground all around the Atlanta area Atlanta, , the new Buck­ head Park, and other locations in the 24 Hour Catalog Shopping Atlanta area. Theatre and motel marquees by phone from home, call 892-4242 in the city will be proclaiming this day as Alliance Theatre Day, and women Surplus, Bargain Stores representing the Theatre Guild will be with closeouts from catalog and stores manning information booths to aid Atlanta theatregoers and promote the Special Services Alliance Theatre bicentennial season of SEARS CARPET CLEANING plays. The Honorable Mayor Maynard call 351-4082 Jackson has officially declared January 2, 1976, Alliance Theatre Day in recognition SEARS DRAIN & SEWER SERVICE of the service theTheatre has rendered to call 875-6601 the city in past years. He hopes that support of the South’s leading quality thea­ SEARS DRIVING SCHOOL tre will grow still further in the future. To call 352-3400 top off January 2 as Alliance Theatre Day, a telethon will be held at FLOWERS BY SEARS call 325-0337 (Atlanta) with booths and displays to better acquaint or 422-0656 (Marietta) the Atlanta public with the 1976 Alliance Theatre’s Salute to America Season. Sea­ SEARS MEAT & FROZEN FOOD son ticket information will be available at call 325-5359 Lenox Square and elsewhere in the city on that date in addition to the Arts Center SEARS RENT-A-CAR Box Office and the Theatre itself. Call call 261-6700 () 892-2797 for information. or 659-5010 (Downtown) ATLANTA CHILDREN'S THEATRE SEARS TERMITE & PEST CONTROL call 351-4082 Androcles and the Lion, a bright fast- PLEASE SEE YOUR TELEPHONE DIRECTORY paced musical for the young, is the current FOR MANY MORE production of the Atlanta Children’s Theatre, running January 6 through February 18 on the Alliance Theatre stage of the Memorial Arts Center. Adapted by Aurand Harris, the play is based on an Italian tale written in the style of Commedia dell’arte. This form of drama was born in Italy in the middle of FROM THE PRES HGi: PACESETTER.

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i Atlanta Symphony Orchestra Robert Shaw, Music Director and Conductor

Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings, 8:30, January 8, 9, 10, 1976 Sunday afternoon, 2:30, January 11, 1976 DANIEL LEWIS Conducting ARKADII SEVIDOV, Piano

PROGRAM

WAGNER “Dawn” and “Rhine Journey” from Gotterdammerung (1869—1872)

IVES *Symphony No. 2 (1897-1901) Andante moderato Allegro Adagio cantabile Lento maestoso Allegro molto vivace

INTERMISSION

BEETHOVEN Concerto No. 3 in C minor for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 37 (1800) Allegro con brio Largo Allegro

*First performance at these concerts

This concert will be broadcast on a delayed basis by Atlanta Public Radio, WABE-FM, 90.1, Tuesday evening at 8:30 p.m.

The use of recording devices or cameras during concerts is strictly prohibited. IN 1907, JACK DANIEL’S NEPHEW said, “All Goods Worth Price Charged.” We’re still saying it in times like these. Mr. Lem Motlow put this slogan on jugs and crocks of his uncle’s whiskey. You see, he knew that no other whiskey was made with pure, iron-free water. And that no other distiller mellowed his product through hard maple CHARCOAL MELLOWED charcoal before aging. Mr. Motlow 6 knew value when he saw it. DROP And still today, though Jack Daniel’s 6 is priced above most whiskeys, a BY DROP sip will prove its worth.

Tennessee Whiskey* 90 Proof • Distilled and Bottled by Jack Daniel Distillery • Lem Motlow, Prop., Inc., Lynchburg (Pop. 361), Tenn. 37352 Placed in the National Register of Historic Places by the United States Government. PROGRAM NOTES by Paul Affelder and Leonard Burkat

Dawn and Siegfried’s Rhine Journey from of all American composers, but he was Gotterdammerung (“Twilight of the certainly one of them, and whatever his Gods") Richard Wagner limitations may have been, there is at least (1813-1883) one superlative that he deserves without Die Gotterdammerung, the last of question: he was our most original Wagner’s operas in the Nibelung’s Ring, composer. In a way, he is a product of the begins with an elaborate prologue from peculiarly American condition that could which the Dawn and Rhine Journey are make Thomas Jefferson president, taken. architect, inventor, and musician, too. Dawn begins, following the three Norns, Ives had a conventional formal educa­ recounting the fate of Wotan’s sacrifice of tion at Yale that included instruction in his eye and bringing the news that with his musical composition by a German-trained broken spear in hand he has seated himself professor. He learned his craft there, but he in the great hall solemnly waiting for the never agreed to its externally imposed end. disciplines and limitations. While a George Bernard Shaw in his book The student, he played organ in a church, Perfect Wagnerite, gives us an account of ragtime in a theater, and varsity baseball what follows. “Siegfried and Brynhild on the college field. come, and have another duet. He gives her The music he wrote—and had started to his ring; and she gives him her horse. Away write even before he entered college—was then he goes in search of more adventures. and continued to be his own. He exercised The curtain falls, but we can still hear the his powers of invention for his own trolling of his horn and the merry clatter of purposes, with his own ideas, and never his horse’s shoes trotting gaily down the said a conventional thing, in music, in a valley. The sound is lost in the grander conventional way. rhythm of the Rhine as he reaches its He loved music, loved America, and banks. We hear again an echo of the lament loved his father; and told all this in his of the Rhine maidens for the ravished gold; work. His father, who had been a Union and then, finally, a new strain, which does bandmaster in the Civil War, was his first not surge like the mighty flood of the river, and most influential teacher. He but has an unmistakable tramp of hardy encouraged experimentation and men and a strong land flavor about it.” invention, and forbade formula and empty Engelbert Humperdinck, German tradition a place in his teaching. Ives composer and admirer of Wagner, learned to describe, in sound, the life and arranged Dawn and Rhine Journey by ideas around him; sometimes literally, with reducing the orchestration and omitting quotations, sometimes imaginatively, much of the Dawn music. For tonight’s impressionistically or symbolically. We performance Mr. Lewis has chosen to must always remember, when we wonder restore much of the original Dawn music about the source of some image or event in while still using Humperdinck’s smaller the music of Charles Ives, that he was a orchestra. great artist who heard sounds that others David Hinshaw did not. Ives took particular pride in his Second Symphony No. 2 Charles Ives Symphony and longed to hear it played, (1874-1954) but he had to wait fifty years, until Leonard The Ives centennial and the bicentennial Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic of the United States are great American gave it its first complete performance, on occasions. They have focused our attention Washington’s Birthday, 1951. The ailing, on the uniqueness of our history and of one aging composr could not bring himself to of our most remarkable artists. attend the concert, but when the Ives was a libertarian thinker, a Symphony was broadcast by the successful businessman, a composer and a Philharmonic, he listened to it at home on musician. Perhaps he was not the greatest a small radio, and his pleasure in the work Their Broadway. Versus Our Peachtree.

There’s nothing like the thrill of it. Except may­ Now, there’s really nothing like the thrill of it. be the price. Consider $8.00 for parking—with luck. At the Midnight Sun Dinner Theatre. Enjoy a night Twelve to fifteen dollars for the show—per person. of dining on the town and a Broadway nit—all for And if you came to go out to dine after the produc­ only $17. Feast yourself from a classic Danish smor­ tion, it’s about $20 a head. (Not to mention the $5.00 gasbord as an elegant Broadway production is per­ to $8.00 tip for your waiter.) Take your calculator. formed before your very table. The thrill of it all may be getting back to your The only dull part of the evening may come car and home. Safely. when you return to your car. Parked in a covered- garage. Absolutely free. And leave for home. Safely. The Midnight Sun Dinner Theatre. Group rates. American Express and all major credit cards accepted. Call 577-7074 for reservations

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The Store For The New Atlanta Woman PROGRAM NOTES far exceeded even his greatest creative period. There is still much Mozart expectations. to be heard in it, but also much of the Ives’s Second Symphony was written mature Beethoven. bet wen 1897 and 1901, and parts of the There is not a great deal of difference work in progress were tried out by the Yale between the first concerti and the Orchestra in New Haven, in 1899. The third. All have assertive opening composer later said that the music movements in the best classical tradition, expressed his feeling about the expessive slow movements and spirited Connecticut countryside around Danbury final rondos. In the Third Concerto, the and Redding in the 1890’s. writing is bolder, more dramatic. The The Second Symphony is in five handling of solo instrument and the movements, the first an Andante moderato orchestra, and their interrelationship that Ives derived from his Organ Sonata, explores new paths. Even the timpani have which he had played in church during his a chance, in the first movement, to play a student days at Yale. This is followed by an bit of the principal theme. Allegro with a folklike or popular flavor. The first performance took place at a The third movement, Adagio cantabile, concert Beethoven gave in Vienna on April was originally written around 1896 as an 5, 1803. The program also included his organ prelude that the composer called a oratoria Christ on the Mount of Olives and “take-off, a reflection of the organ and the first two symphonies. All but the First choir music in The Long Green Organ Symphony were being heard for the first Book of the [eighteen-] sixties, seventies time. and eighties.” The fourth movement, On the eve of the concert, Beethoven still Lento maestoso, is an introduction to the had not finished copying out the parts for final Allegro molto vivace, which is an the concerto or the oratorio. When his expansion of an overture entitled The pupil, Ferdinand Ries, arrived at dawn to American Woods - Brookfield (the prepare for the rehearsal which was to Connecticut town north of Danbury), begin at eight, he found Beethoven written in 1889, when Ives was only fifteen. propped up in bed, still busy scribbling the Ives chose to use many quotes from both parts. symphonic repertoire and poplar tunes. The rehearsal lasted more than six hours Among these are Beethoven’s String and placed great strains on the nerves of Quartet, Opus 18, no. 1, Brahms First and the musicians and the composer too. Third Symphonies, Beethoven’s Fifth Beethoven conducted the entire program Symphony, Turkey In the Straw, and also played the solo piano part in the Camptown Races, and Joy to the World. concerto. Tempers flared, and the entire Ives scored his Second Symphony for orchestra was ready to walk out, but piccolo, two flutes, two oboes, two Beethoven’s patron Prince Lichnowsky clarinets, two bassoons, contrabassoon, sent out for huge baskets of food and wine, four horns, two trumpets, three and the rehearsal was resumed. trombones, tuba, timpani, percussion and Beethoven had been so busy copying out strings. parts for the orchestra that he all but (Copyrighted) neglected to write one for himself. The composer asked Ignaz von Seyfried, one of Concerto for Piano and Orchestra No. 3, in his friends among the Viennese nobility, to C Minor, Op. 37 Ludwig van Beethoven turn pages for him during the concerto. (1770-1827) Although most of them were totally blank, Beethoven composed his Third Piano or had just a few scribbled notes on them, Concerto in 1800, when he was thirty years Beethoven, who relied mostly on his old. though his sketchbooks show that he memory, gave his noble friend a nod had been gathering ideas for it since 1797. whenever he wanted the page turned, and For many, it is the work that marks the poor Seyfried’s anxiety gave the composer beginning of the composer’s second no end of amusement. fashion pace since 1 908 DOWNTOWN, PEACHTREE & CAIN LENOX SQUARE, NORTHLAKE, GREENBRIAR, CUMBERLAND

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The concert netted Beethoven a nice Supporting the solo piano in the C profit. The public turned out in large Minor Concerto is an orchestra of two numbers, even though he tripled the flutes, two oboes, two clarinetts, two customary admission charges, but it also bassoons, two horns, two trumpets, heard about three times as much music as timpani and strings. was, or is, usual on an evening’s program. (Copyrighted)

The broadcast of tonight’s concert, which can be heard on Atlanta Public Radio, WABE-FM, 90.1, at 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday evening, is made possible by the special permission of the Atlanta Federation of Musicians, Local 148-462, the Atlanta Symphony Players’ Association, and with the support of the Council for the Arts and the National Endowment for the Arts.

GUEST ARTISTS

DANIEL LEWIS 1970, the Ramo Award and Critic Citation Daniel Lewis is pre­ for Excellence in Teaching and sently musical director Performance (1973), and was the recipient of the Pasadena Sym­ of a Howard Foundation Grant and phony Orchestra in Fulbright Award in 1960. California. He is also Mr. Lewis made his successful Los head of the Conducting Angeles Philharmonic debut in January, Studies Department at 1974, substituting for Josef Krips. He was at the University of subsequently invited back to conduct last Southern California. summer in the Hollywood Bowl, and is His former positions include the scheduled for two weeks of concerts this directorship of the Symphony Orchestra of season. Orange, the Sherwood Hail Orchestra of ARKADII SEVIDOV La Jolla, the Idyllwild Festival Orchestra, Arkadii Sevidov is all in California; and collaboration with one of the most brilliant Robert Shaw during the Alaska Musical young pianists now Festivals from 1958 to 1965. He was also before the public. On associate conductor of the San Diego his first tour of the Sympony from 1956-59. United States during Guest conducting appearance during the the fall of 1974, he past two seasons have taken place in the captivated audiences United States, Austria and Switzerland. and critics with his Mr. Lewis was for many years first combination of technical mastery and violinist of the Modern Arts Quartet which sensitive temperament. The Christian gave numerous appearances on the West Science Monitor wrote of his performance Coast from 1953 to 1967. in Boston that Sevidov had, “Inter­ His musical studies were completed at pretative intensity coupled with the Claremont Graduate School in spectacular kayboard prowess.” Of his California, the Munich Hochschule fur performance in Chicago, Robert C. Marsh Musik, and included a fellowship from of the Chicago Sun-Times reported: Brown University with the Bavarian Radio “Sevidov is a virtuoso in the tradition of Orchestra under the directorship of Gilels and Richter.” The Philadelphia Eugene Jochum. He has been awarded the Inquirer raved: “He kept his listeners Distinguished Teaching Award presented enthralled with a difficult program by the California State Universities in brilliantly performed.” Sunday Brunch at the Rib Room. An elegant alternative to Instant Coffee and Dick Tracy.

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LATHEM TIME RECORDER COMPANY Lenox Square Cumberland Mall 200 Selig Dr., S.W., Atlanta, Ga. 30336 266-8424 432-3115 Telephone 404/691-0400 open Sundays open Sundays til midnight til 9 p.m. TIME RECORDERS PROGRAM TIMERS Master Charge TIME STAMPS BankAmericard • American Express WATCHMAN CLOCKS This season finds Mr. Sevidov returning of musicians-performers. He captivated to America, making his New York debut at the jury with his warm, lyrical performance Carnegie Hall, performing again in of “Autumn Song” by Tchaikovsky, and a Chicago, as guest soloist with the Dallas special prize for best performance of a Symphony and giving recitals in West work by a great Russian composer was Palm Beach and Pasadena. awarded to him, in addition to his first Born in 1948, his musical abilities were prize. discovered at an early age and he became a Again in 1971, Sevidov attracted great pupil of a Children’s Musical School in the attention at the Tchaikovsky International ancient Russian city of Elets. At the age of Contest. During the first round, his twelve, he transferred to the sixth grade of interpretation of works by Tchaikovsky, the Central Musical School, which is Prokofiev, Shchedrin and especially the closely associated with the Moscow Liszt “Sonata in B-Minor” caused a great Conservatory. stir. He was awarded a prize and the title of His talent proved so great that Sevidov Laureate of the Tchaikovsky Contest. soon went to the Moscow Conservatory to This competition marked the beginning study with the legendary professor, Lev of a career which has taken Arkadii Oborin. The guidance of his famous Sevidov from one corner of the U.S.S.R. to teacher gave the young Sevidov a polish the other. He has toured widely that enabled him to capture attention throughout Hungary, Switzerland, outside the Conservatroy, and throughout Bulgaria and East Germany. In Russia, his Russia. recording of Mussorgsky’s “Pictures at an In 1969, still a student in his second year, Exhibition” and Scriabin’s “Minatures” is Sevidov was awarded first prize and the a bestseller. title of Laureate at the All-Union Contest

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ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA LEAGUE OFFICERS Dr. B. Woodfin Cobbs, Jr. Dr. Noah Langdale, Jr. Robert M. Wood Edward S. Croft, Jr. John B. Lawhorn David Goldwasser Bradley Currey, Jr. Mrs. Nathan I. Lipson LIFE SPONSORS President Paul A. Ebbs, Jr. Mrs. Edwin Lochridge, Jr. Mrs. Murdock Equen J. J. Doherty, Jr. Herbert R. Elsas Mrs. Mason Lowance Mrs. Lon Grove Vice President Mrs. Edward E. Elson Lawrence J. McEvoy, Jr. Mrs. Granger Hansell Robert G. Edge Richard C. Everett Tom M. McLain, Jr. Byron Harris Vice President Robert P. Forrestal George K. McPherson, Jr. Mrs. Julian Hightower John A. Wallace Ms. Shirley Franklin N. Barnard Murphy Mrs. Lewis Hirsch Vice President Mrs. Henry Geigerman, Jr. F. W. Nichols Charles Jagels Mrs. William B. Wylly L. L. Gellerstedt, Jr. Dr. Marvin B. Perry, Jr. J. W. Kercher Vice President Stanley K. Gumble Mrs. David A. Reinach C. K. Liller Washington Falk, III Mrs. John R. Guy Mrs. William E. Schatten Michael McDowell Secretary Joseph F. Haas Shouky A. Shaheen Mrs. Lawrence J. McEvoy Mrs. Drew R. Fuller Mrs. John R. Hall Grant G. Simmons, Jr. Mrs. Louis Moss Treasurer Dr. J. Rhodes Haverty Dr. Grace B. Smith Mrs. Bernard Neal Mrs. J. Rhodes Haverty H. Hamilton Smith Mrs. Howard R. Peevy BOARD OF SPONSORS Lee H. Henkel, Jr. G. Maynard Smith Mrs. T. Erwin Schneider Peter Abreu Mrs. Jesse Hill, Jr. W. Rhett Tanner Mrs. Howard C. Smith A. Leigh Baier Mrs. W. Stell Huie Mrs. Ralph K. Uhry •Charles L. Towers Tom M. Brumby Mrs. Maynard Jackson Mrs. Charles E. Watkins, Jr.'Charles R. Yates Dr. Dan Burge Dr. Herbert Karp Mrs. Robert Wells Eugene Young Jack Clifford Louis Kunian L. Neil Williams Frank Ratka, General Manager Past Presidents ■■ All season ticket holders are members of the Orchestra League Montag & Caldwell incorporated / Investment Counsel

2901 FIRST NATIONAL BANK TOWER ATLANTA. GEORGIA / 404 658-1190 I stand for quality always have, always will and I am here 26 hours a day to prove it. If I don't wander by your table ask for me. ---- \ Guffey’s of Atlanta Atlanta’s Finest Reservations urged. Clothing 8 Fondues for Men A better mixed drink . DOWNTOWN: N employees who give a damn and an atmosphere both (BEHIND THE SCULPTURE) 6 genuine and relaxed UPTOWN: TOWER PLACE (OPENING FEBRUARY 76) UNDERGROUND ATLANTA RESERVATIONS 577-1800

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Fulton Federal Savings and Loan Association of Atlanta P.O. Box 1077 • Atlanta, Georgia 30301 XI tor 404-586-7283 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra

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

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

*VIOLIN Kathleen Kee Bruce Klingbeil FRENCH HORN William Steck Larry LeMaster John Henigbaum Concert master Nan Maddox Principal Martin Sauser Bonita Potts Brice Andrus Co-Concertmaster Donovan Schumacher 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 Jaqueline Anderson Harvey Kaufman Larry Black Shalom Ben-Uri Michael Kenady TROMBONE Sharon Berenson Thomas Thoreson Anita Cahoon Randolph Ujcich Harry Maddox Piotr Haase Wiley Weaver Principal Martha Reaves Head Richard Hansbery Stephen Horvath FLUTE Donald Wells Ruth Little Warren Little BASS TROMBONE Karen Matthews Principal David Myford Paul Brittan Donald Wells Thomas O'Donnell Assistant Principal TUBA Alice Oglesby Prin. Second Flute Lorentz Ottzen Michael Moore Benjamin Picone OBOE TIMPANI Susan Pitard Elaine Douvas Paul Yancich Carol Ramirez Principal Principal Juan Ramirez Elizabeth Camus William Wilder Ronda Respess Assistant Principal Assistant Principal Richard Robinson Prin. Second Oboe Patricio Salvatierra Patrick McFarland PERCUSSION Edward Scruggs ENGLISH HORN Jack Bell Ann Pinney Steck Principal Patricia Vas Dias Patrick McFarland Eugene Rehm Frank Walton CLARINET William Wilder VIOLA* Norman Baker HARP Robert Jones Acting Principal Judy Beattie Principal William Rappaport Peter Bertolino Douglas Smith KEYBOARD Ardath Cohen Alice Oglesby John Detrino BASS CLARINET Manuel Diaz Douglas Smith PERSONNEL MANAGER Enid Jones Martin Sauser Marion Kent BASSOON Haskell Marrinson Carl Nitchie PERSONNEL MGR. EMERITUS Heidi Moss Nitchie Principal Harry Robkin Robert Parcells Charles Nussbaum Assistant Principal LIBRARIAN CELLO* Prin. Second Bassoon David Hinshaw Robert Marsh Daniel Dowdakin Stephen Horvath, Ass't. Principal Edmond Basson CONTRA BASSOON STAGE MANAGER Assistant Principal Daniel Dowdakin Michael Destazio Jere Flint Patrick Noon, Ass't. Kay Gardner *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 JAMES Y. BARTLETT, Asst. Dir. of Public Relations MRS. NANCY BURKE, Director of Season Tickets MISS PAT PERRY, Fund Raising Coordinator MISS NOLA FRINK. Choral Secretary MISS BETTY DAVENPORT, Secretary MRS. JULIA CRAWFORD, Secretary STEVE CUCICH, Symphony Hall House Manager MRS. KAY CROMARTIE, Receptionist ROBERT A. HOLZER, Administrative Assistant MISS HILDA EVANS, Secretary, Women’s Assn. nn______the sixteenth century and depended entirely on the skill and inventiveness of TICKU the actors who had only a brief outline of a play and improvised their parts. When the play opens, a troupe of stroll­ YOUR ing players introduces each character and each is given a musical theme. The per­ formers are Androcles, a slave dressed in FANCY! the traditional bright patches of Arlequin; At the funniest show in Atlanta! See The Lelio and Isabella, the romantic, forever Wits’ End Players in the hilarious new young lovers; Pantalone, the comic old revue at Empire Dinner Showcase. And miser who is always counting his money; enjoy all you can eat at our fabulous Buffet Dinner—7 p.m. Only $10.50 per the Captain, a bragging, strutting soldier; person, plus tax. Dinner show Tuesday and of course, the Lion. through Saturday. Late show Fridays. The theme of the play is about Andro­ Saturdays 11:15 pm—$3.50 per person entertainment charge. Free parking. cles, a Roman slave who runs away from For reservations, call 892-2227. his master and hides in a cave. There he Special Group Rates Available. /T-4X comes face to face with a lion. Just when the animal decides to pounce, it suddenly Sheraton- steps on a thorn and weeps in pain. Biltmore Hotel Androcles can’t decide whether to run for 817 West Peachtree Street, N.E. Sheraton Hotels and Motor Inns Worldwide his life, or to help the poor suffering Lion. Finally, he chooses to risk his life and remove the thorn. The lion is most grateful. Later, Pantalone finds Androcles and takes him to the Roman arena to fight a lion as punishment for running away. The fierce lion turns out to be the one Andro­ cles befriended, and the two refuse to fight. There is a happy ending, plus the moral that men can overcome their fears and suspicions of each other with the realiza­ tion that we all need each other. Charles L. Doughty is director of the show and N. Michael Swofford is assistant director and choreographer. Performances are at 10:00 a.m. and 12:00 noon Monday through Friday and at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, February 7 and 14. Tickets are $1.90 and can be reserved by calling 892-2414.

ATLANTA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Individual Gifts Campaign Sets $110,000 Goal Setting the goal at $110,000 for the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, the Women’s Association of the ASO begins work this month on the 1975-76 Individual Gifts Campaign. The Individual Gifts Campaign, which seeks donations from individuals through- CONTRIBUTORS TO THE 1974-75 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 1974—75 season. The League is grateful to the more than two thousand Friends of the Orchestra for their smaller gifts.

PATRON May P. Abreu Gulf Oil Corporation Mrs. Louis H. Moss Mr. Peter M. Abreu Mr. and Mrs. John R. Guy Mrs. Theophile Raphael Amilsco Charitable and Educational Found. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph F. Haas Mr. and Mrs. James B. Riley Mr. Richard W. Courts Mr. E. Reginald Hancock Dr. Shirley L. Rivers Mr. and Mrs. Hampton L. Daughtry Dr. and Mrs. J. Rhodes Haverty Mr. and Mrs. Simon S. Selig, Jr. Mr. J. J. Doherty Joseph B. and Lena B. Jacobs Found., Mr. and Mrs. Shouky A. Shaheen Mr. and Mrs. Herbert R. Elsas Dr. James A. Kaufmann Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Siegel Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Everett Mr. and Mrs. John W. Kercher Smith, Currie & Hancock Washington Falk, III Mr. and Mrs. I. L. Kunian Mr. John A. Wallace Lawrence Fox Foundation Mr. and Mrs. Nathan I. Lipson Mr. and Mrs. L. Neil Williams Mr. and Mrs. David Goldwasser Mrs. Everett McDonnell Mr. Robert M. Wood Bob P. Gordon

DONOR Mr. A. Leigh Baier Mrs. C. W. Dukehart Mr. and Mrs. Daniel B. Hodgson Mr. and Mrs. James E. Bennett, Jr. Mr. W. O. Duvall Mr. and Mrs. Clark Howell, Jr. Mrs. William H. Bentley Mr. and Mrs. Paul A. Ebbs, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John S. Hunsinger Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Bunnen Mr. and Mrs. Robert Glenn Edge Mr. Alfred Kennedy, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Dan Burge Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Elson Mrs. Frederick W. Patterson Mr. Jack C. Clifford Mr. and Mrs. Dejongh Franklin Dr. and Mrs. William E. Schatten Walter Clifton Foundation, Inc. Mr. Elliot Haas Mr. H. Hamilton Smith Mr. and Mrs. Herbert B. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. John Harland Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Tate, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Croft, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph K. Heyman Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Towers Mrs. Paul C. Crowell Mr. Julian T. Hightower

SPONSORING MEMBER Mr. and Mrs. Cecil A. Alexander Henkel & Lamon, P.C. Mr. and Mrs. J. Harold Newton Mr. and Mrs. Jack P. Ashmore, Jr. Mrs. Jesse McKee Hodgson Mr. F. W. Nichols Dr. Ivan A. Backerman Mr. D. Scott Hudgens Dr. and Mrs. Marvin B. Perry Mr. and Mrs. Leonard G. Berger Dr. Thomas B. Janter Mr. Erie Phillips Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Bows Mr. Martin Kilpatrick Mr. and Mrs. Allen Post Mr. and Mrs. William Breman Mrs. Evelyn Kolar Mr. and Mrs. J. Leonard Reinsch C&S National Bank Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Lagerquist, Jr. Mr. C. B. Rogers, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Clifton Dr. Noah Langdale Dr. Grace B. Smith Dr. and Mrs. M. H. Cole, Jr Mr. and Mrs. William Leide Mrs. Howard C. Smith Dr. John W. Cooledge Michael McDowell, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Talmadge Mrs. William C. Cram, Jr. Lawrence J. McEvoy, Jr. Mrs. Herbert Taylor Mr. Bradley Currey, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Tom M. McLain Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Watkins, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Drew R. Fuller Mr. Ernest L. Miller, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne M. Watson Cecil Garvin Mr. and Mrs. Stephens Mitchell Dr. and Mrs. Robert E. Wells Mr. Banks O. Godfrey, Jr. Jane and Louis Montag Mrs. Ray C. Werner Mr. and Mrs. John R. Hall Arthur L. Montgomery Mr. and Mrs. William B. Wylly Dr. Charles H. Hamilton Mr. and Mrs. Louis Montag Mr. Charles R. Yates Mr. and Mrs. Byron P. Harris Mrs. Bernard N. Neal, Sr.

SUSTAINING MEMBER Mr. Charles S. Ackerman Mr. Wilfred Cambre Mrs. Carlyle Fraser Mr. and Mrs. C. Scott Akers Mr. W. B. Carnes Mrs. Jake Friedman Mrs. W. D. Alexander Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Carothers Mr. and Mrs. Samuel G. Friedman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Alexander Mr. Beauchamp Carr Dr. Thomas W. Gable Mrs. Ivan Allen, Jr. Dr. Gordon C. Carson ill Mr. David C. Garrett, Jr. Arthur Andersen and Company Dr. and Mrs. Neal Chandler Mrs. Henry Geigerman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Anderson Mrs. John O. Chiles Mr. Larry Gellerstedt Dr. Grover J. Andrews William F. Clark Mr. and Mrs. Hugh W. Gibert Apex Supply Company Mr. Richard Cline Mr. Locke E. Glenn Mr. John M. Arnold Dr. and Mrs. B. Woodfin Cobbs, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Glenn Mrs. Hal J. Aronson Mrs. Emory Cocke Mr. Raymond A. Gold Dr. W. J. Ashendorf, Jr. Carl H. Cofer Dr. and Mrs. Irving H. Goldstein Dr. and Mrs. Sanford Atwood Mr. I. T. Cohen Dr. and Mrs. Martin I. Goldstein Mr. and Mrs. David S. Baker Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Collins Mr. and Mrs. J. Goldwasser Mr. G. B. Bardi Mr. Dennis M. Conley Mrs. Hix H. Green W. Daniel Barker Mrs. James M. Cox, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Griffin, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. N. William Bath Mrs. James M. Crawford, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. John M. Griffin Mr. Harry S. Baxter Mr. and Mrs. John M. DeBorde, III Mr. Jaap Groen Dr. and Mrs. J. Norman Berry Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dewar Mr. and Mrs. James P. Groton Mrs. Wm. Troy Bivings, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony E. Dinos Guernsey Petroleum Corporation Mrs. Joseph H. Boland Mr. and Mrs. Phillip H. Dohn, Jr. Mr. Stanley K. Gumble Dr. and Mrs. Jack S. Boozer Mr. and Mrs. Donald E. Dorough Mrs. Leonard Haas Mrs. Margery R. Borom Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Dorsey Mr. Frederick Halperin Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Bowden Mr. James W. Dorsey Mr. and Mrs. James P. Hamilton, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thompas P. Bowles, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jasper N. Dorsey Mrs. Granger Hansell Mrs. Verdery R. Boyd Mrs. Beverly M. DuBose, Jr. Mrs. William B. Hartsfield Mr. and Mrs. Harllee Branch, Jr. Mr. Charles W. Duncan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Harvey Mr. and Mrs. L. Travis Brannon, Jr. Dr. E. B. Dunlap, Jr. Mrs. Clarence Haverty Mrs. James S. Briggs Mr. and Mrs. Alden D. Eddy Mrs. H. L. Heniot Mr. Harold D. Brockey Katharina Efron Mr. and Mrs. James W. Hess Mr. and Mrs. Derrick M. Brown Ellsworth M. Ehni Mrs. Ruth Akin Hightower Dr. H. Eugene Brown Mr. and Mrs. William W. Epstein Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Hill Dr. Howard S. Brown Erickson Products, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis I. Hirsch Dr. Lester Alexander Brown Dr. and Mrs. W. L. Eubanks Mrs. Morris Hirsch Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Bryan Dr. Susan K. Fellner Mr. and Mrs. Morton Hodgson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Bunzl Lindsay A. Fleck Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Howell Mr. and Mrs. John A. Butler Mrs. R. R. Fleisher Mr. J. Winston Huff Mr. and Mrs. A. Paul Cadenhead Mr. Robert Forrestal Mr. and Mrs. Thomas D. Hughes Mr. Lawson P. Calhoun Mr. and Mrs. David M. Franklin Mr. and Mrs. W. Stell Huie “Looking For A Warehouse?” out the metropolitan Atlanta area, has as its theme: “Giving for Greatness—A Great City Deserves A Great Symphony.” •Jh John Hunsinger & Company

Commercial and Industrial Real Estate 1819 Peachtree Road, Northeast 404 * 351-6813 Chicago, Denver, San Francisco, Dallas, Tokyo, Paris

Dine Nearby before the More than 700 volunteer workers will be t) show personally calling on more than 7,000 at Atlanta residents, asking for their financial support of the Atlanta Symphony. They CROSSROADS will stress the fact that the Atlanta Sym­ restaurant and lounge phony does much more than perform 1556 peachtree st. concerts in Symphony Hall almost every open every day — 875-6375 week. The Atlanta Symphony brings education and culture to thousands of people in Atlanta and the Southeast through such services as Young People’s Concerts, Tiny Tots Concerts, tours of cities in Georgia and Florida, free family DUNCAN PEEK INC. concerts for Fulton and DeKalb counties 1132 W. PEACHTREE ST., N.W. and the City of Atlanta, the Atlanta Sym­ ATLANTA, GA. 30309 phony Youth Orchestra, in-school PHONE: 404 -873-1092 concerts and the Atlanta Symphony Choruses. According to the co-chairmen of the Presidential Section of the Individual INSURANCE Gifts Campaign, Mrs. William H. Izlarand FINANCIAL SERVICES Mrs. Dan M. Mackey, the Campaign is absolutely critical to help maintain a balanced budget for the Atlanta Sym­ phony. The Symphony’s annual budget is in excess of $ 2 million, and ticket sales account for only 48 per cent of that figure. The balance is made up through public and private support—of which the Individual Gifts Campaign is a vital part. The goal of $100,000 represents an in­ crease of 13.4 per cent over last year’s cam­ paign. Individual donations of $25 or more entitles the contributor to become a member of the Atlanta Symphony Orches­ tra League. SUSTAINING MEMBER (Continued)

Mrs. J. Gibson Hull Mr. and Mrs. Brannon Morris Mr. and Mrs. Alex W. Smith, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Guy W. Hutchison Dr. and Mrs. Chester W. Morse Mr. and Mrs. Edward D. Smith Dr. Sidney Isenberg Dr. and Mrs. Marvous E. Mostellar Mr. G. Maynard Smith Mr. and Mrs. William H. Izlar, Jr. Richard C. Munroe Mr. Harold E. Smith, Jr. Charles H. Jagels Mr. and Mrs. N. Barnard Murphy Mr. Hugh R. Smith Mr. and Mrs. William H. Jewell Mr. Joseph Myers Mr. and Mrs. J. Lucian Smith Mrs. Dorothy S. Joel Mr. and Mrs. Edgar A. Neely, III S. Dion Smith, M.D. Dr. and Mrs. Tom Johnson Mr. H. Burke Nicholson, Jr Mr. and Mrs. James Smulian Mrs. Travis Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Otis P. Norcross Southeast Wholesale Furniture Co. Gary Jones Associates, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Hiram M. Nowlan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George F. Sowers Mr. and Mrs. William L. Jorden Mrs. Lucien E. Oliver Mrs. G. Bonner Spearman Junior League of Atlanta, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Onofrio Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Starr Richard L. Kattel Mr. and Mrs. R. Oppenlander Mr. Dante S. Stephensen Mr. and Mrs. James G. Kenan Mrs. A. Bingham Owens Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Stevens Thornton Kennedy Dr. and Mrs. Bernard H. Palay Miss Dixie Stevens Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Killingsworth Palisades North Apartments Mrs. Alice Clary Stevenson Dr. Jong-ln Kim Mrs. Lilia Gray Mallard Parker Rear Adm. and Mrs. Carl F. Stillman Dr. Luella Klein Mr. and Mrs. I. Benjamin Parrill Mr. Jules J. Stine Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Knox Mr. and Mrs. William R. Patterson Mr. and Mrs. Francis Storza The Rev. C. W. Landiss Mr. and Mrs. Thomas S. Perry Mr. and Mrs. W. Rhett Tanner Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Landreth Mrs. D. R. Peteet, Sr. Mr. G. Kimbrough Taylor Michael and Carolina Lane Mr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Pettit Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Taylor Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Lane Arthur Pew Construction Company Texaco,Inc. L. H. Larson, Jr. Putnam Porter Mr. and Mrs. William B. Thatcher Mr. Jae Lee Mrs. Vernon E Powell Mr. and Mrs. Herman M. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Lehrer Mr. and Mrs. William L. Power Mrs. Isabel D. Thomson Dr. and Mrs. John Leonardy Mrs. Richard H. Pretz Mr. and Mrs. Randolph W. Thrower Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Leslie Dr. and Mrs. Morgan B. Raiford Mr. and Mrs. George A. Titlow Dr. and Mrs. Charles T. Lester Dr. Joseph L. Rankin Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Torras Mr. and Mrs. Nelson T. Levings Mr. L. E. Rast Mr. Kiliaen V. R. Townsend Mr. C. K. killer Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ratka Mr. J. W. Travis Dr. and Mrs. Mark M. Lindsey Paul Raymon H. Burton Trimble, Jr. Mr. W. K. Lomason Robert W. Redd Mr. & Mrs. Harry K. Tucker Beverly and Maurice Long Redfearn Foods Corporation Mr. and Mrs. John R. Tufts Mrs. Albert Love Mr. and Mrs. Louis Regenstein, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Pollard Turman Dr. and Mrs. Mason Lowance Mr. and Mrs. David Reinach Dr. and Mrs. Augustus B. Turnbull, III Mrs. Arthur Lucas Mr. Richard Rich Mr. and Mrs. John L. Underwood, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Lundquist Mr. Lee Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Edward K. Van Winkle Mr. Paul A. Lutz Mr. and Mrs. J. Mack Robinson Drs. Paul F. and Jonne Barney Walter Mr. and Mrs. Deveraux F. McClatchey, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Rogers Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Walthall, III Mr. and Mrs. John 0. McCoy Bob Rohrer Mrs. Green D. Warren Dr. and Mrs. Thomas H. McDill Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Rosser Mr. and Mrs. John B. Warren, Jr. Mrs. Lawrence J. McEvoy, Sr. Dr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Roughton Dr. William C. Warren Mrs. Ralph E. McGill, Sr. Herman J. Russell and Co. Mrs. William E. Waters Dr. and Mrs. Dean G. McKee Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Ryan Dr. and Mrs. James O. Wells, Jr. Mrs. Harold C. McKenzie Mrs. Augustine Sams Mr. and Mrs. Charles B. West Mrs. Floyd W. McRae The Hon. and Mrs. Carl Sanders Mr. and Mrs. Norman E. White Dr. and Mrs. Dan M. Mackey Mr. and Mrs. Marthame Sanders, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Wiggins, Sr. Mrs. Edwin M. Malcolm Mr. and Mrs. Marthame E. Sanders, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Alfred E. Wilhelmi Dr. and Mrs. P. Thomas Manchester, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Roy P. Sandidge Mr. and Mrs. William H. Wilkerson Mr. Allen D. Martin Mr. and Mrs. Nat Sandler Mrs. Charles A. Williams Dr. and Mrs. Frank Matthews Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Saunders Mr. and Mrs. D. Ellis Williams Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Mattingly Mr. and Mrs. Martin Sauser Dr. and Mrs. W. Talbert Williams Mr. and Mrs. Richard S. Maurer Mrs. T. Edwin Schneider Betty Williford Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hart Mayer Mr. and Mrs. Emory Schwall Mr. and Mrs. Edwin D. Wolf Mr. Henry J. Miller Dr. and Mrs. James F. Schwartz Mr. Bruce F. Woodruff, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John.W. H. Miller Dr. Charles Scott, Jr. Mrs. LeRoy A. Woodward Mr. S. T. Miller Dr. and Mrs. Herbert Shessel Dr. John Yarborough Mr. and Mrs. James T. Mills Mrs. I. M. Shlesinger Mrs. J. S. Youngblood Mr. Robert L. Mills Mr. and Mrs. John M. Siegel Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Younts Mr. and Mrs. John H. Mobley, II Mrs. R. A. Siegel Mr. Erwin Zaban Mr. and Mrs. John L. Moore, Jr. Mr. William H. Sills

SUPPORTING MEMBER

Dr. and Mrs. Osler A. Abbott Mr. and Mrs. Walter H. Bunzl Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Egan, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Adams Miss Jessie L. Butler Miss Kathleen Eidson Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. G. Aff Dr. and Mrs. William F. Byrnes Mr. Lynn E. Eller Dr. Herbert S. Alden Dr. and Mrs. F. Phinizy Calhoun, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Ewing Anderson-McGriff Company Mr. Ralph V. Campbell Mrs. Andrew M. Fairlie Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. Anderson Mr. Floyd E. Carithers Mr. and Mrs. Clayton H. Farnham Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Anderson, Jr. Governor and Mrs. Jimmy Carter Mr. Robert M. Faulk Mr. Joseph F. Asher Mrs. John B. Chapman Dr. and Mrs. Wilson J. Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. Herbert I. Avery, Jr. Mr. Thomas Henry Clarke, IV Mr and Mrs. Lloyd C. Flatt Dr. and Mrs. William G. Avery Dr. and Mrs. G. S. Clinkscales Dr. and Mrs. Andrew R. Fodor Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Baird Mrs. James O. Cobb Miss Jane E. Foley Mr. and Mrs. John D. Bansley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Joseph Cohen Dr. Conrad Freeman, Jr. Mrs. Emil W. Baran Dr. and Mrs. Sheldon B. Cohen Dr. and Mrs. James H. Gailey Mr. and Mrs. Harmon L. Barnard, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Comstock, Jr. E. Smythe Gambrell Mr. and Mrs. Sydney W. Barnett Mr. and Mrs. John A. Conant Mr. and Mrs. John Georgas Miss Verita Barnett Dr. and Mrs. Robert M. Conner Ruth Gershon Mr. Ed L. Barnum Walter G. Cook Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Gloster Dr. and Mrs. J. G. Barrow Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Cooper Dr. and Mrs. Howard C. Glover, Jr. Mrs. J. F. Bateman Mr. and Mrs. Philip B. Cordes Dr. and Mrs. John T. Godwin Mr. and Mrs. W. Roane Beard Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Cousins Mrs. Sam A. Goldberg Mr. and Mrs. George W. Beiswanger Mr. Hewitt H. Covington Mr. David S. Golden Capt. Ernest Bennett Dr. and Mrs. Glenn D. Crawford Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Goldstucker Dr. William H. Bennett Miss Willie May Cromer Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Gore Mr. and Mrs. Karl A. Bevins Mr. and Mrs. Frank K. Dalrymple, Jr Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Graves Mr. and Mrs. Francis M. Bird, Sr. Dr. and Mrs. F. Thomas Daly, Jr. Mrs. Duncan S. Gray, Jr. Mrs. Ralph Peters Black Dr. and Mrs. Nicholas E. Davies Mr. and Mrs. James H. Grubbs Mr. W. M. Boice Mrs. Ovid R. Davis Dr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Guffin Dr. and Mrs. Edward Bowen Miss Frances L. Dawes Mr. and Mrs. W. Bradley Hale Mr. John W. Bradley, Jr. Dr. Peter G. Dayton Dr. and Mrs. Robert F. Hansen Mr. and Mrs. Ben W. Brannon Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Dean Mrs. B. H. Hazlehurst Maj. Gen. and Mrs. L. Render Braswell Dr. and Mrs. David B. Dennison Dr. and Mrs. Vivian W. Henderson Mr. and Mrs. James H. Bratton, Jr. Mrs. Teresa DeRepa Miss Fleda B. Hensley Mr. and Mrs. Gordon B. Brooke Designer Products, Ltd. Mrs. Herman Heyman Mr. Tom Watson Brown Dr. and Mrs. Allan Dinnerstein Mr. and Mrs. George B. Hightower Mr. and Mrs. J. Gregg Buckalew Mrs. Jean Echols Dr. and Mrs. Bernard Holland mi______The Individual Gifts Campaign will begin with an Appreciation Concert con­ ducted by Robert Shaw on January 27 and will continue through the month of February. The vice-chairmen of the various Residential Divisions for the Individual Gifts Campaign are Mrs. Sturgis G. Bates III, East; Mrs. William F. Brynes, South; Mrs. Lee H. Henkel, Jr., Northwest; Mrs. rTjApAtltSt RtSTAURAnr 1 Ferdinand K. Levy, Central; Mrs. Hiram W 1893 Piedmont Rd. at Cheshire Bridge M. Nowlan, Jr., North Central; Mrs. Robert Powell, West; Mrs. Robert Lee Smith, Northeast; Mrs. C. Eric Tiller, North; and Mrs. Charles E. Watkins, Jr., Chairman’s. Special Concerts to Preview New York, Washington Tour Music director and conductor Robert Shaw will conduct the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Chorus in four concerts, pro­ viding Atlanta audiences with a preview of of the programs the Symphony will perform when it goes on tour to the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., and New York’s Carnegie Hall in May. On Thursday and Saturday evenings at 8:30 p.m., February 12 and 14, the Atlanta Symphony and Chorus will perform Beethoven’s “Missa Solemnis” in D Major, Op. 123. On Friday and Sunday evenings at 8:30 p.m., February 13 and 15, the pro­ gram will include Beethoven’s Overture to “Egmont” and the monumental Symphony No. 9 in D minor with final chorus on Schiller’s “Ode to Joy.” Tickets for these special preview con­ certs are sure to be hard to obtain, so call the Memorial Arts Center box office now at 892-2414 and order your tickets. Adult Art Classes PINKERTON i LA Start January 1 2 BUILDS THINGS. The Atlanta College of Arts invites the REMEMBER THAT. community to take part in its extension program of visual art classes, beginning THE PINKERTON & LAWS COMPANY the week of January 12. Registration will Member Associated General Contractors of America continue through January 23. 2700 Cumberland Parkway, N.W. Atlanta 30339 / 432-0171 The college, located on the top floor of of the Memorial Arts Center, offers college SUPPORTING MEMBER (Continued)

Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth Hollander Mr. Paul E. Manners Mr. and Mrs. W. King Sims Mrs. George R. Home Miss Elizabeth C. Martin Mr. A. J. Singletary, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Lindsey Hopkins, Jr. Mr. Kenneth W. Martin Mr. John B. Smith and Family Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Talmadge Horton Mrs. Charles Massell Orville N. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Oze E. Horton Richard F. Maxwell Mr. P. L. Bealy Smith Mr. Harvey Howalt Benjamin E. Mays Mr. and Mrs. John H. Soper, II Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Howard Dr. F. Michael Melewicz Mr. and Mrs. Hughes Spalding, Jr. Mr. Larry Howard Mr. and Mrs. Stanley P. Meyerson Dr. and Mrs. Allen C. Steere Mr. and Mrs. G. Jackson Howorth Mr. Chris and Ms. Ward Milner Dr. John E. Steinhaus Dr. and Mrs. James M. Hund Mr. Joseph W. Mirabile Mrs. Peter J. Stelling Mrs. Robert C. Hunt Mr. and Mrs. H. Clay Moore, Jr. Dr. R. H. Stephenson Mr. and Mrs. Townsend Hunter Dr. Christian Moorehead Miss Sue Brown Sterne Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan Jackson Mrs. George E. Motz Dr. and Mrs. Dan Stinson Dr. and Mrs. Julian Jacobs Dr. and Mrs. Ralph A. Murphy, Jr. Mrs. J. Clarence Strother Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Jacobson Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Murray, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Summers Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Jamison Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Muske Dr. G. Douglas Talbott Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Q. Janus Dr. and Mrs. F. Levering Neely Judge and Mrs. Jeptha C. Tanksley Dr. and Mrs. Charles Joel, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Russell E. Newton, Jr. Miss Anne Tarrant Mr. and Mrs. Ralph B. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Ridley T. Nichol Katherine Taylor Mrs. Linda M. Johnston Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Norman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Teichert Mr. Allen O. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lamar Oglesby Mr. and Mrs. C. Eric Tiller Dr. and Mrs. Maurice J. Jurkiewicz Mr. and Mrs. Henry R. Oliver, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Tucker Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Kahn, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Paul W. O'Shields Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Tyson Dr. Herbert R. Karp Mr. Clifford Oxford Mr. and Mrs. John J. Ullman Mr. and Mrs. Donald R. Keough Mr. and Mrs. Charles V. Parham Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Vaughn, Jr. Dr. Cyung M. Kim Mr. and Mrs. E. Ralph Paris, Jr. Mr. W. Edward Vaught Mr. and Mrs. Alex C. King, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William A. Parker, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Vowels Mrs. Martin Luther King, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Pepe Mr. and Mrs. Lyndon A. Wade Mrs. Knox Kinlaw Mr. G. E. Plunkett, III Mr. Harrison T. Wadsworth Mr. Larry Kitchen Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Y. Pounds Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Walling Dr. and Mrs. Dixon A. Lackey Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Pratt Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waltemeyer Mrs. Frank Lamons Mr. Nelson H. Rector Mrs. Varney S. Ward Miss Linda H. Lane Miss Joyce Reedy Mr. William Weaver Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Ross Lane Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Reichardt Mrs. J. Prince Webster Ms. Elizabeth L. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Philip A. Rhodes Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel Welch Dr. and Mrs. M. Y. Levy Arthur Ricks, Jr. Weltin Advertising Agency John D. Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Bruce L. Robertson Mr. John Ross West Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Lichtman Mr. Don C. Robinson Miss Catherine G. White Dr. Price Lineberger Mrs. Harris Robinson Mrs. Robert H. White, Sr. Mrs. Edwin Lochridge, Jr. Mr. James T. Robinson Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Wilgus Mr. and Mrs. Allen Lockermann Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Robitscher Mrs. Elin Winn Mr. Sam F. Lowe, Jr. Mr. Max E. Robkin Mrs. Alex Wishnew Mr. and Mrs. P. K. McCash Mrs. George W. Rowbotham Mrs. Stuart Witham Mr. John E. McIntyre Mr. Robert M. Royalty Dr. Alfred Wolf Dr. and Mrs. Alexander S. McKinney Mrs. Sidney H. Ruskin Mrs. Walter Wolf Mrs. J. J. McLendon, Jr. Sandy Springs Women's Club Mr. and Mrs. Roel Wolfson Mr. and Mrs. J. Scott McLinn Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sanford Mr. Thomas H. Wood Mr. and Mrs. Howard M. McMahon Mr. and Mrs. Burton A. Scott, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Woodall Mr. and Mrs. James W. McCrae Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Shelley Mr. and Mrs. Charles Young Mr. James F. Maclean Mr. Henry I. Sherry Mr. and Mrs. Knowles Youngblood Mr. and Mrs. F. LeRoy Maddox, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward S. Shorter Mr. and Mrs. Marvin H. Zion Mr. and Mrs. John R. Maddox Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Shortridge Miss Cynthia Mallory John A. Sibley

CONTRIBUTING MEMBER

Mr. and Mrs. Gerald E. Abbott Ms. Mary H. Axtell Dr. Richard W. Blumberg Dr. and Mrs. Andrew H. Abernathy, III Mr. and Mrs. John L. Baden Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Blumenthal Mrs. John E. Bailey Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Abrams Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Boldt Mr. W. Dent Acree Dr. and Mrs. James A. Bain Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Boozer Mrs. Leah T. Adams Mr. and Mrs. Henry G. Baker Mr. Fred W. Boring, III Mr. and Mrs. Robert F. Adamson Mr. and Mrs. Ralphe B. Baker Mrs. Ralph T. Bowden, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. William Addams Mrs. Helen M. Ball Mr. and Mrs. Harrold P. Bowden Dr. John Thomas Akin Colonel C. E. Balthis Dr. and Mrs. Hilliard A. Bowden Miss Katherine Akin Dr. and Mrs. Louis H. Bangert Mr. and Mrs. Eugene H. Bowens, Sr. Dr. and Mrs. Harold Alexander Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Banks Mr. and Mrs. Angus B. Bower Mr. and Mrs. John A. Alexander Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barber Lawson H. and Anne Bowling Mrs. John M. Alexander Mrs. Herbert Barfield Mrs. J. L. R. Boyd Mr. and Mrs. Steve E. Alexander Dr. and Mrs. Hampton Barker Mr. Theodore C. Boyden Terry S. Barkin Ms. Eleanor P. Alford Mr. and Mrs. Talmadge H. Boynton Ms. Cora D. Barron Dorothy S. Allain Mr. and Mrs. James E. Bradley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Allen Miss Ruth Barron Mr. and Mrs. John M. Bragg Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Barry Dr. Carl A. Bramlette, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald W. Allen Dr. and Mrs. Philip R. Bartholomew Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Brannan, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Pierce Allgood Mrs. Sturgis G. Bates, III Mrs. Eugene Branch Mr. and Mrs. Bond Almand, Jr. Mrs. William N. Batey Miss Adeline L. Brahnam Mrs. Jose E. Almeida Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bauman Dr. and Mrs. Marvin A. Brantley Ms. Genevieve Alpert Mrs. A. W. Beasley Mrs. J. N. Brawner Mr. James L. Alston Mr. and Mrs. W. Parker Bedingfield Mr. A. J. Braxton Mr. and Mrs. George Alterman Dr. H. V. Bell, Jr. Mr. Terry Brejla Mrs. Albert Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Hunter S. Bell Mr. and Mrs. Spencer S. Brewer Dr. and Mrs. Albert S. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. Hunter Bell, Jr. Miss Julie Briggs Dr. Gloria Anderson Mr. Keith P. Bell, CPA Mr. and Mrs. Leon Brin Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Anderson Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bentley, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh O. Brock, III Mr. William W. Anderson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Berghel Miss Barbara Bronson Mr. Bonneau Ansley Mrs. Jerome D. Berman Dr. Oswald P. Bronson Mr. and Mrs. Shepard B. Ansley Dr. and Mrs. Maxwell Berry Mr. and Mrs. Russell J. Brooke Mr. Michele Aquino, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. E. Milton Bevington Miss Ann Brooks Dr. Charles L. Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Bevis Mr. and Mrs. James F. Brooks Mr. William K. Armstrong Mr. and Mrs. Robert Biccum Mr. and Mrs. Joseph P. Brooks, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Arnovitz Mr. and Mrs. Ralph T. Birdsey Mrs. Lovic A. Brooks, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Asher Mr. Ralph H. Birdsong Ms. Carol D..Brown Mr. and Mrs. Stanley B. Ashley Mr. Arthur W. Bishop Dr. and Mrs. Charles E. Brown Mrs. Laura Asken Dr. and Mrs. Linton H. Bishop, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John L. Brown Dr. and Mrs. Sam Atkins Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Blackburn Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Brown Dr. and Mrs. T. Mayo Atkins Mrs. A. W. Blackwood Dr. and Mrs. Louis C. Brown Miss Mary L. Atkinson Mrs. L. M. Blair Mary Brown Fund of Atlanta Mr. and Mrs. R. Byron Attridge Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Block, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. Brown Mr. and Mrs. J. Arch Avary, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Donald Block Mr. William J. Brown Mrs. Donald Avil Dr. and Mrs. Walter L. Bloom Mr. Lincoln Brudno Mr. Howard G. Axelberg Ms. Cordelia J. Blount Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Brumby credit for individual evening classes in drawing, painting, printmaking, photo­ graphy and graphic design, in addition to its regular degree program. Beginning through advanced levels of instruction are available, with each class meeting once a week for the 16 week semester. High school students may participate in the Saturday Morning Workshop, which offers the student broad exposure to the areas of drawing, painting, and design. Special projects often include include additional media, such as photo­ graphy or silkscreen. No credit is given for this course. All classes are taught by practicing artists: Ben Smith and Bruce Hafley, whose works are included in the ’s collection, will be teaching drawing and painting courses; color theory and watercolor painting will taught by Fred Gregory and Keith Rasmussen, instructors in the college’s degree program; and Howard Kjeldsen, a professional designer, will instruct a graphic design course. Photography courses cover all phases of the medium, from exposure and shooting to darkroom techniques. Also available is a class in non-silver processes, 1' such as blueprinting, brownprinting, and “The Harlequin proves a delight... i gum bichromate printing. !

1 the food is supberb, service faultless, 4 For further information and a brochure

AWJIb ambience is authentic and elegant.” •• containing a shedule and registration form, Barbara Thomas, Atlanta Journal '< s please call 892-3600, ext. 233.

I'.U A F T ITO •COMPANY* ■ HIGH MUSEUM OF ART au.-m JAN 23 — FEB 29 Museum Membership Drive to •GUYS & DOLLS* ? Kick-Off in January •CABARET* •SECRET SERVICE* > •110 IN THE SHADE* ‘

FOR TICKETS ‘ AND INFORMATION f **262-1552 Piedmont-Peachtree Crossing Center i j 3330 Piedmont Rd., N.E., j Each new member will receive a gift print, in full color, of the Fourth of July Parade by Alfred Atlanta, Georgia 30305 Cornelius Howland (American, 1838-1909). CONTRIBUTING MEMBER (Continued)

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brusche Miss Aurelia Davis Mrs. Harry M. Gershon Mr. James E. Bryan Dr. and Mrs. Bedford Davis, Jr. Dr. Nathan Gershon Mr. Raleigh G. Bryans Mr. and Mrs. Burton K. Davis Mr. and Mrs. John Gerson Mr. Peter J. Bryg Ms. C. Elizabeth Davis Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Gerson Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Bullock Dr. and Mrs. John L. Davis, III Mrs. J. I. Giddings Mrs. Lucien Burdett Mr. and Mrs. Oscar G. Davis Georgia Lighting Supply Co., Inc. Mrs. Nancy S. Burke Dr. and Mrs. William S. Davis Mrs. James R. Gillette, Jr Mr. and Mrs. William C. Burnett Mrs. James M. Dawson Mr. Ken Gillian Dr. Napier Burson Dr. and Mrs. Robert L. De Haan Mr. and Mrs. George H. Gillon Mr. James F. Bush Mr. and Mrs. H. W. DiCristina, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Girardeau Judith Keith Bussey Mr. and Mrs. George P. Dillard Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Glazier Mr. James S. Calhoun Mr. and Mrs. Paul L. Dillingham Col. & Mrs. Frank A. Gleason Dr. and Mrs. George M. Callaway, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Dimon, III Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Glenn Mrs. Robert A. Callaway Mr. and Mrs. Anthony DiPaola Mrs. Frank Glover Miss Carolyn Campbell Miss Mattiwilda Dobbs Mrs. Emmanuel E. Gluck Mr. John S. Candler, II Dr. and Mrs. William L. Dobes, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John William Goddard Mrs. Peter Candler Dr. and Mrs. John S. Dodd, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Bryan Godwin Dr. and Mrs. Robert W. Candler Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Dodd Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Goettinger Mrs. Howard Canfield Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Doolittle Mrs. H. M. Goldsworthy Mrs. Jerry Capps Dr. Pearlie C. Dove Cantor and Mrs. Isaac Goodfriend Mrs. Daniel Carithers, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. F. William Dowda Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Goodwin Dr. Nathan H. Carliner Mrs. James C. Downing Mr. and Mrs. Herbert I. Gordy Mr. W. L. Carmichael Mr. and Mrs. Tom Downing Mr. and Mrs. William L. Gordy Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Carr Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Dubro Mr. and Mrs. Alan H. Gould Mrs. W. Wayne Carr Dr. H. Bruce Dull Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Gowen Mr. and Mrs. Gordon S. Carrigan, Jr. Mrs. Robert H. Dunlap Lawton Grant Mr. and Mrs. James B. Carson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Bill G. Dunn Grant-Walker Properties Mr. and Mrs. Loren J. Carter Dr. and Mrs. E. M. Dunstan Mr. and Mrs. W. King Grant, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. James J. Case Mr. and Mrs. J. Frazer Durrett Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. Greco Mr. and Mrs. Eugene R. Cashman, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Frazier Durrett, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hix H. Green, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Pierce A. Cassedy Mrs. Mary Kate Duskin Mr. and Mrs. Lowell H. Green Dr. and Mrs. R. F. Castle Burtt D. Dutcher Mr. and Mrs. William J. Greene, Jr. Mr. George R. Castleberry Mrs. Hubert L. Dyar Mr. and Mrs. William A. Greenebaum Ms. Delores Cato Mr. and Mrs. Eugene T. Dykes James J. Griffin Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Cauthorn Mr. James M. Earhart Mr. and Mrs. R. Page Griffin Miss Mary E. Cavenaugh Commissioner A. Reginald Eaves Mrs. William C. Griscom Dr. and Mrs. Rives Chalmers Dr. and Mrs. Charles A. Eberhart J. David Grow Dr. and Mrs. C. L. Chandler Mr. W. Wray Eckl Mr. Horace H. Guerrant Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Chanin Mrs. A. H. Edens Mr. and Mrs. Ransom H. Gurganus Mr. and Mrs. James P. Chapman Mrs. George A. Edmund Dr. and Mrs. C. C. Gurley Dr. A. Chappell Mr. and Mrs. Mack P. Efland, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Guthman Ms. Jennifer Cheatham Mr. Fred W. Elarbee, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. George Habersetzer Mr. and Mrs. J. David Chesnut Mr. and Mrs. A. James Elliott Isaac N. Habif Mr. and Mrs. Richard Childs Mrs. Marlin W. EJliott Mr. and Mrs. Ralph F. Haile Mr. and Mrs. Richard Churchill Mr. Edward P. Ellis Mr. and Mrs. George B. Haley Mrs. Frances Clark Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Ellison Edward T. Hall, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. James E. Clark Dr. and Mrs. Louis J. Elsas, II Margaret Hallman Mrs. Margaret Sturgis Clark Mr. and Mrs. John E. Elvin Dr. and Mrs. Alton V. Hallum Mr. and Mrs. Charles P. Clayton Teddy A. English, Jr. Mrs. Joseph L. Hammond, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. D. Hayes Clement, Jr. Mrs. Homer L. Entrican Rev. Oliver Haney, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Ben H. Clifton Dr. Jacob Epstein Mrs. McCarthy Hanger Mrs. T. E. Clyatt, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Edward A. Erbesfield Mr. and Mrs. William A. Hanger Mr. Colburn Coe Ethridge and Grubbs Pipe Organ Service Mr. and Mrs. Virgil C. Hanks Mr. and Mrs. George L. Cohen Mrs. Alice C. Evans Mr. and Mrs. John F. Hanley, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Max J. Cohen Orinda Dale Evans Mr. and Mrs. E. Lewis Hansen Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Cohen Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Evans Mrs. W. R. Hardcastle Mr. and Mrs. David L. Coker Mr. Larry B. Faigin Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Harden Mr. and Mrs. John L. Cole Mrs. J. Kenneth Fancher Mr. Ira H. Hardin Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey L. Coleman, Jr. Mrs. Sara F. Farr Miss Julia R. Harnsberger Dr. and Mrs. Cleo Phillip Coles, Jr. Ms. Anne Fauver Mrs. Muriel S. Harper College Park Music Club Mrs. John B. Felder Miss Emily Harris Mr. and Mrs. John S. Collier Mr. and Mrs. Harvey L. Fell, Jr. Miss Florence C. Harris Dr. D. C. Collins Mr. and Mrs. J. Jerome Felton Mrs. Frances Harris Dr. and Mrs. William C. Collins Mrs. Edward W. Ferguson Mr. and Mrs. G. Calvin Harris Mrs. Allen M. Collinsworth Dr. and Mrs. Abbott L. Ferriss Mr. Thomas C. Harris Mr. Daniel B. Coltrane Dr. and Mrs. Arnoldo Fiedotin Dr. and Mrs. John R. Harrison Mr. Brian Grey Conboy Mrs. Dorothy K. Fierst Miss Frances L. Harrold Mr. and Mrs. David R. Conklin Sister Dorothy Finn Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. Harrower Mr. and Mrs. Richard Conrad Mr. I Walter Fisher Mr. and Mrs. George W. Hart Mr. and Mrs. P. P. Constantinides Mr. and Mrs. Rayburn J. Fisher Mrs. Samuel W. Hart Mrs. Jane M. Cooley Mr. and Mrs. James D. Fitzgerald Dr. and Mrs. L. S. Hartzog Mrs. A. Burnham Cooper Dr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Florence Mr. and Mrs. Albert S. Hatcher Mr. John B. Coppedge, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Floyd Mr. and Mrs. Peyton S. Hawes, Jr. Mrs. John S. Correll Dr. and Mrs. Donald C. Ford Mr. Edward J. Hawie Mrs. Louis A. Cottle Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Foreman Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Haynes Mr. and Mrs. Reynold Couch Robert L. Foreman, Jr. Mrs. Rosalyn L. Heard Mr. and Mrs. William S. Coury Dr. and Mrs. Douglas H. Forsyth Miss Susan B. Hecker Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Covington, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Fortson, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. James A. Hefner Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Cowan Mrs. A. P. Francis Mr. and Mrs. John A. Helms Hughes Spalding Craft Miss Adele Frankenau Mrs. A. H. Henderson Mr. and Mrs. Louie V. Craig, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Fraser Mr. and Mrs. George Henderson Mr. and Mrs. Milton Crane Dr. John E. Frazier, II Mr. and Mrs. James R. Henderson Dr. and Mrs. Joseph M. Craver Miss Laurelia Freeman Mr. and Mrs. Nathan V. Hendricks, III Mrs. Herschel C. Crawford Dr. Helen and Dr. Olen I. Freeman, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Vernon Hendrix Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Crawford Mrs. Robert J. Freeman Mrs. Frank J. Henry Mrs. E. R. Crigler Mrs. S. H. Freeman Mr. and Mrs. John M. Henson, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Roy H. Crispin Dr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Freschi Mr. Jennings M. Hertz Miss Willie May Cromer Nola Frink Miss Katherine Hertzka Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Culpepper Mrs. I Owen Funderburg Miss Ruth Hertzka Mr. and Mrs. John Culver Mrs. John Funke Mr. A. L. Hibbard Mrs. Mabel C. Cunningham Mr. J. Rex Fuqua Mr. and Mrs. Patrick T. Hickey Mr. Winston Cunningham Mr. and Mrs. Lamar Furr Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Hickman Mr. Warner S. Curry Miss Opal Futch Dr. and Mrs. Eugene A. Hill Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Custer Miss Margaret E. Gann Mrs. William H. Hitch Mr. and Mrs. Tillman S. Dandridge Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Gardner Mr. Alex M. Hitz, Jr. Mrs. Edward F. Danforth Mr. and Mrs. Sam N. Gardner Mr. Allen Hodges, Jr. Mr. James D. Daniel Mrs. Walter Garrard Dr. Thomas L. Hodges, Jr. Mrs. J. W. Daniel, III William L. Gatlin Mrs. J. Kurt Holland Mr. and Mrs. Howard H. E. Danner, Jr. Ms. Winifred Gault Mrs. Jack K. Holland Mr. and Mrs. John H. David, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Claude C. George, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. George Holloway Mr. and Mrs. Russell L. Davidson Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. George, III Mr. Daniel H. Hollums Award winning 1,000 new members before the end of Restaurant since 1962 February—and 1776 new members before i— the end of’76. That’s the goal of the High Museum’s Membership Campaign being launched in early January. Each new member will receive a gift print, in full color, of the Fourth of July Parade by Alfred Cornelius Howland (American, 1838-1909). For further information, call Coach 8c Six Restaurant Membership Secretary Jean Pool at 892- 1776 Peachtree St., N.W. 872-6666 3600, extension 302. Major American Works in the High Museum of Art As one of its major Bicentennial projects the High Museum will mount an exhibi­ tion and publish simultaneously an extensive and profusely-illustrated catalogue entitled American Paintings in Southwick The High Museum of Art, scheduled to open on Saturday, January 17. The a tradition among gentlemen. catalogue and exhibition are supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Mary E. Haverty H. STOCKTON - ATLANTA INC. Foundation, Inc. Forsyth Street. Lenox Square 80 N.W. Bruce W. Chambers, Assistant Pro­ fessor of the History of Art at and a specialist in American art, CHERIBACH has prepared the catalogue essay, outlining the major directions of American art from the 18th century to our time, dealing with the artists in the Museum’s collection as well as with other important figures. Gourmet Cookware Essays on each work will provide pertinent information on the artists, statements about their impact on the times, and PACES CROSSING discussions on each work. The exhibition 1449 CUMBERLAND MALL ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30339 will remain on view through Summer, 404/436-6229 1976.

Albert Bierstadt (American, 1830-1902), Pioneer of the Woods, California, oil on canvas, ca. 1863. Gift of the Exposition Foundation, 1971, and included in American Paintings in The High Museum of Art. CONTRIBUTING MEMBER (Continued)

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Holmes Dr. and Mrs. Ronald Lehman Dr. and Mrs. John C. Nelson Mr. and Mrs. Ellis C. Hooper Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand K. Levy Mrs. Joan C. Newton Mr. and Mrs. John D. Hopkins Dr. and Mrs. Ernest L. Lewis Mrs. Robert J. Noland Mr. and Mrs. Barry Hubbard Mr. and Mrs. P. Harvey Lewis Mr. and Mrs. Fred L. Nolting Miss Mamie Lowe Hubbard Mr. and Mrs. Robert G. Lingenfelser Mr. and Mrs. Albert G. Norman, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. G. Johnson Hubert Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Lipka Mr. and Mrs. Donald Oberdorfer Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Huckaby Mr. and Mrs. V. K. Little Dr. and Mrs. W. R. O'Connell Mrs. Annette Hightower Huffman Dr. and Mrs. O. M. Littlejohn Miss M. Winnifred O'Dell Mr. and Mrs. J. Dorman Huggins, Jr. Dr. Anna Beata Lobel Mrs. Carolyn Oettinger Mr. Troy Hughes Mr. and Mrs. Marvin H. Locey Mrs. Kevin F. O'Gara Miss Frances L. Hunt Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Lockwood Dr. and Mrs. Sidney Olansky Sara M. Hunt Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Lockey Mr. Earl L. Oliver Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Hunter, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Long, Jr. Mrs. Frank Q. O’Neill Mrs. Herschel Hurwitz Mary W. Long Mrs. Stanley H. Orowski, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. J. Patton Hyman, III Dr. and Mrs. Stewart M. Long Mr. Philip Osborne Dr. Eleanor M. Hynes Dr. and Mrs. W. Newton Long Drs. Ann and A. M. Oshlag Mr. Douglas Ikelman Mr. and Mrs. C. Linden Longino, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Otto Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Imig Mr. Charles S. Lord Mrs. James Bronson Overbey Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Inman Mrs. Herbert Loring Mr. Phillip M. Owens Paul E. and Linda Isringhauser Mrs. Charles A. Lotz Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Pace Mr. and Mrs. DeForrest Jackson Mr. and Mrs. John P. Lovell Mr. and Mrs. Douglas M\ Padgett Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Jackson Mr. Richard H. Lowe Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Padgett Mayor and Mrs. Maynard Jackson Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lower Mrs. J. D. Palmer Maj. and Mrs. Marvin Jacobs Mr. and Mrs. J. Luxembourger Syd Parham Mr. and Mrs. Ernest K. Jamison Mr. and Mrs. S. H. McCalla Mr. Terrill A. Parker Mr. and Mrs. C. Gail Jarvis Mrs. Harold F. McCart Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Parks Mr. and Mrs. Edwin B. Jelks, III Mrs. John O. McCarty Mrs. E. T Parramore Mr. Thomas L. Johns, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. John M. McCarter Ms. Beatrice A. Pask Mr. and Mrs. Aaron J. Johnson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Emory C. McClinton Wallace D. Pate Mrs. Ashley S. Johnson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. M. John McDougald, III Mr. and Mrs. William M. Pate Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin L. Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Nelson McGhee Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Patterson Mr. and Mrs. Ben F. Johnson, III Mr. and Mrs. Minuard McGuire Mrs. Ray Patterson Dr. and Mrs. Charles G. Johnson Mrs. Preston McIntosh Mr. and Mrs. A, E. Patton Mr. and Mrs. D. R. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Norman McKinney Mr. and Mrs. E. Earl Patton, Jr. Dr. Douglas Johnson Mr. David W. McLaughlin Mrs. Carl Paul Mrs. E. Raymond Johnson Dr. and Mrs. Wallace N. McLeod Mr. and Mrs. James R. Paulk, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Edward Johnson Mr. and Mrs. Earl McMillen Mrs. Joyce G. Payne Dr. James M. Johnson Mr. and Mrs. John E. McMullan Mr. and Mrs. A. Dwight Peck Miss Mary Anne Johnston Mrs. M. D. Machado Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Pendergrast Mr. and Mrs. W. Sidney Johnston Mr. and Mrs. R. Gregg Magruder Helen F. Penhale Dr. Amos Jones Mr. J. V. Manning A. Penninger Mr. and Mrs. E. Sam Jones Dr. and Mrs. Kamal Mansour Mrs. Mabel R. Perkins Dr. and Mrs. Forest D. Jones Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Manton, Jr. Ms. Mary Ellen Perkins Miss Frances E. Jones Rev. and Mrs. Meeler Markham Dr. Neil G. Perkinson Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jones Dr. and Mrs. Ronald L. Markette D'r. and Mrs. John H. Per-Lee Mr. R. O. Jones Mrs. Charles Marks Dr. and Mrs. David S. Perling Robert A. W. Jones Mr. Francis A. Marks Mr. and Mrs. J. Woodward Perry Mrs. Seaborn P. Jones Dr. and Mrs. Donald Marshall Pat Perry W. L. Jorden and Co., Inc. Mrs. Chester E. Martin Dr. and Mrs. Samuel W. Perry Mrs. Marjorie Judson Robert E. Martin Dr. and Mrs. John J. Pershing Mrs. Bess B. Kane Mr. D. Lurton Massee, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar N. Persons Edward R. Kane The Hon. and Mrs. Sam Massell Gus Peterson Mr. and Mrs. John Bell Keeble, III Mr. and Mrs. Kent B. Massie Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Pfiffner Mr. Fleming Keefe Mr. and Mrs. Kent E. Mast Miss Elise T. Phillips Dr. and Mrs. E. B. Keener Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Mayfield Mrs. Eugene L. Phillips Dr. and Mrs. John L. Keller Dr. and Mrs. Noah D. Meadows, Jr. Mrs. J. Carlisle Phillips Stiles A. Kellett Isla Mease Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Phillips Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Kennamer Dr. and Mrs. Donald E. Mees, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Barry E. Pickett Mrs. Norma Kennady Mr. George R. Mende, Jr. Mr. Gaines Pickett Mrs. Clyde M. Kennedy, III Mr. Lanier Merritt Mr. and Mrs. George A. Pindar Mr. and Mrs. John L. Kennedy John Hays Mershon Mrs. Little Pitts Marie R. Kennedy Dr. Michael Mescon Dr. and Mrs. William Plauth Mr. and Mrs. Melvin D. Kennedy Dr. and Mrs. Robert D. Milledge Mr. F. A. Player Mrs. L. F. Kent Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Miller, Jr. Mrs. William L. Plummer Ms. Ruth Margaret Kern Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Miller Dr. and Mrs. Booker Poe Mrs. Ann C. Kieffer Mr. and Mrs. Howard Miller Mrs. Claude H. Poindexter James H. Kiersky Mr. and Mrs. Jeff B. Miller Mr. and Mrs. George J. Polatty Mr. and Mrs. Edward W. Killorin Mr. and Mrs. Robert W. Miller Mr. and Mrs. Peter C. Pomeroy Mr. and Mrs. Edgar G. Kilpatrick, Jr. Ms. Ann L. Mills Mrs. Charles H. Ponder Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Kimble Mr. and Mrs. Gene W. Milner Miss Clarissa H. Poteat Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie King Sara E. Milner Dr. and Mrs. Edwin Pound, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Spencer B. King, III Mrs. John O. Mitchell J. William Powell Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Kirbo Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Moeling, IV Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Powell Dr. and Mrs. William H. Kiser Mrs. William E. Monroe Mr. W. Dean Power, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Richard M. Klaus Mr. and Mrs. William L. Monroe, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. A. Bates Pratt Mrs. C. B. Kline Ms. Sally A. Monsour Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Price Mrs. Thomas M. Knight Mr. and Mrs. William Mooradian Rev. and Mrs. Harold B. Prince Dr. and Mrs. Ronald H. Koenig Mr. and Mrs. Arthur R. Moore Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Probst Miss Florence Kopleff Mr. and Mrs. Arnold C. Moore RTM Enterprises Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Kraft Mrs. Georgia O. Moore Dr. and Mrs. Tom D. Raaen Frederick W. Kubelka Mr. and Mrs. O. Ray Moore Mr. Jose Ramirez Mr. and Mrs. John L. Kunzelmann Mr. and Mrs. Virlyn B. Moore, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Hal S. Raper, Jr. Mrs. Arthur W. LaGrone Dr. and Mrs. David Llewellyn Morgan Dr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Read Mrs. E. Cody Laird, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. James W. Morgan Dr. and Mrs. Gerald Reed Mr. and Mrs. Bert Lance Dr. and Mrs. Thad Morrison, Jr. Miss Lois Faye Reed Fred Landau & Co., Accountants Mrs. Elsie C. Moses Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Reed, !V Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Landers Mr. William H. Mosier Dr. and Mrs. Harrison Reeves James H. Landon Mr. and Mrs. Carl T. Mottek Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Reeves Mr. and Mrs. Ed G. Lane, III Mr. and Mrs. Simon Moughamian, Jr. Mrs. A. Warren Rhodes Dr. and Mrs. James T. Laney Miss Gretel Mueller Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Rhodes Mrs. Ray C. Lang Mrs. Frederick L. Mueller Dr. and Mrs. M. Hobson Rice Mr. T. P. Lang, Jr. Mrs. Dillard Munford Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Langford Mr. and Mrs. William W. Murphy Dr. and Mrs. Harry V. Richardson Dr. and Mrs. H. S. Lanier Miss Frances M. Muse Mr. and Mrs. Merlyn E. Richardson Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Larcom Mr. and Mrs. Clark E. Myers Mr. James W. Ricks, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. David S. Lashner Dr. and Mrs. Joseph B. Myers Dr. and Mrs. Charles C. Rife Mr. and Mrs. Richard A. Laub W. Robert Myers and Mary Ellen Myers Dr. and Mrs. Edward E. Riley, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. Howard B. Lee Mr. and Mrs. Richard W. Naylor Mr. and Mrs. Frank B. Roberts Mr. and Mrs. Robert Earl Lee Ella Cook Nease Col. and Mrs. Otis H. Rodgers Mr. and Mrs. Wallace L. Lee Mrs. Edward Rex Neely Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Rodgers Mr. Wylie Lee Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Neff, Jr. Mrs. A. C. Rogers Lecture by Architects Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown As the third in its series of Art World Speakers, the Museum’s Members Guild will present architects Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown in a free, public lecture entitled, “Thoughts and Work” on Monday evening, January 19, at 8:00 p.m. in the Alliance Theatre. Seating may be limited, and will be on a first-come, first serve basis. Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown believe that urban landscapes have developed into a mixed-media conglomerate of concrete and neon symbolism, and they see this as exciting potential and look for vitality and viability in architecture that is a working shelter with sculptural, graphic, and symbolic qualities in the form of a “decorated shed.” Receptive to the findings of sociologists and the needs of our technological urban life, these architects reject most modern architecture on the grounds that it does not deal with urban reality, and that isolated monuments lend no vitality to the total urban landscape. ... Their designs include a number of private homes, the Mathematics building at Yale University, and a proposed design for the National Football Hall of Fame, one side of which would be a 100-foot-high, electrically equipped billboard. Denise Scott Brown (Mrs. Venturi) was born in Zambia and educated in South Africa, London, and the University of Pennsylvania, and has taught at the

AND BEAUTIFUL FABRICS • ASK YOUR INTERIOR DESIGNER University of Pennsylvania, at Berkeley, and at Yale. Scott Brown is co-author of Learning from Las Vegas (1972) with CATHEDRAL Robert Venturi and Steven Izenour, and is a partner in the firm of Venturi and Rauch, ANTIQUES SHOW in charge of Planning and Urban Design. 8th Annual Robert Venturi attended Princeton Febuary 10, 11, 12 University and received the American Institute of Architects’ Student Medal in Cathedral of St. Philip 1949. He has worked as a designer for Eero Hall of Bishops Saarinen and Louis I. Kahn, and has 2744 Peachtree Road, N.W. taught at the University of Pennsylvania and at Yale. He is the author of Show hours: 11 to 9; Thursday, 11 to 6 Complexity and Contradiction in Luncheon available Donation $2.00 Architecture (1966) and in 1973 was CONTRIBUTING MEMBER (Continued)

Mr. David F. Rogers Dr. and Mrs. Warren A. Somerlot Mr. George Vilar Mrs. Elizabeth Roper Dr. G. J. Soracco Mr. and Mrs. Richard H. Vincent Mrs. Charles Rose Mr. and Mrs. William E. Speaks Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Voith Mr. and Mrs. F. Ward Rosebush Mrs. Matthew W. Spearman Dr. and Mrs. H. M. Wadsworth Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Ross Dr. and Mrs. W. M. Spicer Mr. and Mrs. Irwin Wagner Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Rothberg Mr. David M. Spitzer Charles A. and Patricia T. Waldron Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rubin Col. and Mrs. R. H. Sprayberry Miss Hester May Walker Mr. and Mrs. Monte F. Rubin Dr. and Mrs. William Hugh Spruell Mr. and Mrs. William R. Walker Mr. Isadore Ruden Mrs. Sarah Stallings Mr. Otis Walker Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Rudman Mr. and Mrs. James E. Stanford Mrs. Gladys B. Wallace Mrs. James M. Russell Mrs. S. H. Stapleford Dr. John W. Wallace Mr. R. L. Sacks Mr. Daniel D. Stanley Stephanie A. Walsh Mr. Charles D. Saggus Mr. and Mrs. John C. Staton, Jr. Mr. James M. Walters Mr. and Mrs. Robert P. Sakers Miss Chloe Steel Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ed Walthall Mr. Joseph Salem Mrs. Andrew Steiner Mrs. Robert Wardle, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hansford Sams, Jr. Dr. Thomas E. Stelson Mr. Henry Hall Ware, III Georgianne T. Sanders Mrs. C. P. Stephens Mr. and Mrs. Harold Warner Mr. and Mrs. Clinton L. Sanders Mrs. Charles R. Stephens Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur M. Warren Mr. Paul W. Sanger Mrs. C. P. Stephenson Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wasser Dr. and Mrs. I. E. Saporta Mr. and Mrs. Mason Stephenson Mr. and Mrs. Michael G. Wasserman Mr. and Mrs. T. Carlyle Scales Dr. and Mrs. Jeb Stewart Mrs. Allan Watkins Mrs. Robert H. Schellman Mrs. Parks C. Stewart Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Wattles Kurt Schlenz Mr. David Crawford Stills Mrs. John A. Wayt, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Schneider Mr. Fred Stillwell Mr. and Mrs. John Wesley Weekes Mrs. G. Lloyd Schoen, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Stoker Dr. Daniel Weiner Mrs. Robert F. Schorr Mr. Howell Stokes Mr. and Mrs. Morris Weiner Dr. and Mrs. Myron Schultz R. Adm and Mrs. Phillip G. Stokes Dr. and Mrs. Jerry Wiener Richard N. Schwab Dr. and Mrs. Charles F. Stone, Jr. Mr. Emil Weiss Mr. Michael Schwarz Dr. and Mrs. John H. Stone Dr. and Mrs. J. Herbert West Mr. Tom Schwartz Mrs. J. R. Street Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Owen West Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius A. Scott Mrs. C. W. Strickler, Jr. Mrs. Lloyd Tait Whitaker Mrs. David Scott Ms Sara Strong Dr. and Mrs. Perry M. White Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Scott Miss Carolyn Strozier Mr. and Mrs. W. Tate Whitman Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Scott Dr. and Mrs. William H. Stuart Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Whitmire Dr. John W. Scott Mrs. Roy M. Sullivan Mr. and Mrs. John F. Wieland Mrs. Thomas P. Scott, Jr. Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Swann Mr. Stewart Wight Ms. Jane Searcy Dr. and Mrs. Homer Swanson Dr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Wilber Mrs. H. R. Seibold Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Sykes Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Wilhelm Mrs. Donna W. Selby Mr. and Mrs. Earl F. Taber Mr. John B. Wilkerson Dr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Sellers, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. H. Eugene Talmadge Dr. and Mrs. Sam A. Wilkins, Jr. Mrs. Katie Green Settle Mrs. Robert S. Talmadge Mr. A. Mims Wilkinson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Severinghaus, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles T. Taylor Mr. and Mrs. James R. Wilkinson Mr. and Mrs. John R. Seydel Ms Suzanne R. Tebor Mr. and Mrs. Howard Williams Mr. W. Griggs Shaefer, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest S. Tharpe Miss Sue Williams Mrs. M. L. Shatzen Mr. and Mrs. Franklin W. Thomas Mrs. Thomas Williams Ms. Mary V. Shaw Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Thomas Mr. and Mrs. William A. Williams Thomas C. Shelton Robert F. Thomas, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Willingham Warren Sherer, A Division of Sherrilynn, Inc. Dr. and Mrs. W. Kevin Thomas Dr. and Mrs. Frank L. Wilson, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jack J. Shields Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Thompson Mrs. H. Grady Wilson, Jr. Mrs. C. A. Shillinglaw Mr. and Mrs. Harold B. Thompson Katherine T. Wilson Dr. Steven Shore Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Thompson, Jr. Mrs. Bolling S. Winborne Mrs. Philip Shulhafer Mrs. Linda Gale Thompson Mr. and Mrs. William L. Wingate, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley B. Siegel Mr. Robert D. Thompson Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Wingfield, Jr. Sigma Alpha lota Mr. and Mrs. Ross Thurman Mr. Walter H. Wingfield Mr. and Mrs. John M. Sikes Mr. and Mrs. R. Neal Timberlake Mr. and Mrs. John E. Witt Mrs. Leon F. Silver Mrs. Abner A. Towers Mr. Sheldon R. Wittner Mrs. Joseph B. Silvestein Mrs. Harrison Townsend Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wixson Dr. and Mrs. M. F. Simmons Mr. and Mrs. John K. Train Mrs. D. Lawrence Wollner Mrs. O. M. Sims Mr. and Mrs. George G. Trask Mrs. Ray G. Woodall, Jr. Dr. John Elias Skandalakis Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Travis Mrs. Owen R. Worley Mrs. J. N. Skeen Miss Mary F. Trembath Bettye Sue Wright Mrs. Arlene T. Slack Mrs. H. B. Trimble Mrs. J. L. Yaden Mrs. Marti Slife Dr. and Mrs. John F. Trotter Dr. and Mrs. Charles P. Yarn, Jr. Mr. Charles D. Slinkard Mr. and Mrs. Michael H. Trotter Mrs. Ella Gaines Yates Mr. and Mrs. Ray W. Smathers Mr. and Mrs. Rutledge Tufts Dr. and Mrs. John T. Yauger Dr. and Mrs. Carter Smith, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Jack P. Turner Mr. and Mrs. P. L. York Mrs. Doris Smith Mr. Raymond Turpin, Sr. Congressman and Mrs. Andrew Young Mr. and Mrs. Earl L. Smith Dr. and Mrs. Carl W. Tyler Mr. and Mrs. Earle B. Young Mrs. L. Walter Smith Mrs. Marion E. Tyler Mr. Hillyer McD. Young Mr. and Mrs. Moreland G. Smith Dr. E. R. Uehling Robert A. Young Ms. Pauline G. Smith Dr. Raymond Utterback Mr. and Mrs. Lawson S. Yow Dr. Richard A. Smith Dr. Sylvia Utterback Miss Lucy K. Yundt Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Smith Mr. A. G. Valentine Mr. and Mrs. William R. Ziegler Mr. and Mrs. Robert Milburn Smith Dr. and Mrs. Henry S. Valk Mr. and Mrs. John B. Zellars Mrs. Ruth N. Smith Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Van Houten, Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Joe I. Zimmerman Mr. and Mrs. Walter A. Smith Mr. and Mrs. Donald C. Vann Mr. Eli A. Zubay Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Snavely Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Vasso Mr. Samuel J. Zusmann, Jr. Mrs. Robert R. Snodgrass Dr. Ramon A. Vigil

Since 1910 conger printing has been producing top quality printing at very competitive prices. Check with Conger on your next printing order! Call Led Conger (404) 352-1916 1619 Chattahoochee Avenue, N.W. Atlanta, Georgia 30318 awarded the National Institute of Arts and Letters’ Arnold Brunner Memorial Prize in fleiir de li,i Architecture “for offering to architecture For Lunch creative and evocative works in word and six different entrees daily material.” Choice of salad and beverage $2.25 to $3.25 TRAVELOG 2470 Cheshire Bridge Rd., N.E. * 633-2633 Call Bob Bivens, Manager. for The Treasures of Italy, opener for Bill office and staff luncheon parties Herring’s Adventure Films’ 1976 Winter American. Express and Series of six travelogs, will be presented at olhei Major Credit Cards Honored 2:30 and 5:30 p.m. Sunday, January 25, in Symphony Hall of the Memorial Arts Center. Photographer Ken Richter will travelanes, inc. narrate his film tour of Italy in person. Dunwoody Village Second program will be Winter in Mexico at 2:30 and 5:30 p.m. Sunday, FortravelFor travel of February 15, in Symphony Hall, with Lisa necessity or N choicechoi Chickering and Jeanne Porterfield individually or narrating. in groups Subsequent programs will be The Hawaiian Adventure, with Doug Jones, . ■<,-> (404) 394-7300 February 29; Greek Island Odyssey, 5507 A Chamblee Dunwoody Road presented by Robin Williams, March 14; Dunwoody, Georgia 30338 Gene Wiancko’s The People of Japan, March 21; and the unique Mark Twain in Switzerland, as presented by Dick Reddy April 4. THE CRASS COURT In keeping with her status aS an TENNIS CENTER International City, Atlanta has supported in The Balconies the Symphony Hall armchair world tours for six seasons, and interest seems to grow Kathie Mohan each year. Repeat performances of all Travelogs are now being presented at (404) 256-2399 several locations throughout Atlanta. Season and single tickets, and brochures 290 Hilderbrand describing the entire season, are available Avenue at the Arts Center Box Office, or from Bill Herring, World Travel Adventure Films, Sandy Springs, Georgia P.O. Box 13377, Atlanta, Georgia 30324.

VAGABOND MARIONETTES The ultimate Vincent Anthony’s Vagabond Marionettes promises delights galore in driving machine. Unde Remus Tates, the second play of its 10th season. This production plays from CHARLES EVANS January 5th through March 6 daily for BMW —Volkswagen school groups, and on Saturdays at 11:00 a.m., 1:00 p.m., and 3:00 p.m. for the 1-20 EAST general public. All performances are in the WEST AVE. EXIT Studio Theatre. Reservations are advisable Phone 483-1171 and tickets may be obtained by calling 892-2414. learn french conversation courses at all levels ecole de I'alliance fran^aise, inc. spring semester—14 weeks—february through may registration by appointment 795 peachtree at 5th 875-1211 atlanta, georgia 30308

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ADDRESS CITY______STATE______ZIP J Vagabond’s production will feature all those characters that have made Uncle Remus so populat with youngsters. There will be that mischievous Brer Fox, Brer Bear, Brer Rabbit and others. Many of those famous stories such as “The Wonderful Tar-Baby,” “How the Bear Lost His Tail,” “The Story of the Flood,” A and “The Fox and the Turtle” will be 7 SERIES brought to life. Plus, this show will feature some Georgia history to relate the late SSldAL 1800’s to its young audience. Uncle Remus Tales will be a “multi­ LCASTS media” play. Vagabond Marionettes will use slides and an elaborate shadow puppet sequence with lots of vibrant colors and stylized movement to tell some of the story. day 1O:OOPM Hand crafted and rod puppets will be WABEFM m —ILI featured in the Briar Patch sequences. WETV5O .MADE POSSIBLE THROUGH A GRANT FROM EXXON CORP. Illi JANUARY 1976

The MEMORIAL ARTS CENTER

High Museum ACA: Atlanta College HMA: High Museum of of Art Art ACT: Atlanta Children’s MR: Member’s Room Theatre PR: Paneled Room AT: Alliance Theatre RH: Rehearsal Hall Art Shop ATC: Alliance Theatre SH: Symphony Hall Company ST: Studio Theatre ASO: Atlanta Symphony WHA: Walter Hill Orchestra Auditorium Sales and Renta! Gallery GAL: Galleria presents For ticket information, call the box office at 892-2414. For other information, call 892-3600. Juried Original Works of Art from the Southeast and Concerts Fine Art Books

______TUESDAY, JANUARY 6______The Gifts that you buy in Atlanta Music Club Salon Series, 8:00, WHA The Art Shop Frank Wiens, piano. Ticket information call Have been Juried for Quality 237-6995.______THURSDAY, JANUARY 8______Shop Hours: 10 A.M. - 4 P.M. Tuesday thru Saturday Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30, SH. Daniel 12 P.M. - 5 P.M. on Sundays Lewis conducting; Arkadii Sevidov, piano. Wagner: “Dawn" and "Rhine Journey" from The High Museum of Art Gotterdammerung; Ives: Symphony No. 2 1280 Peachtree St., N.E., Atlanta, Georgia Beethoven: Concerto No. 3 for Piano and Orchestra. JANUARY 9 CONTINUING EXHIBITIONS Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30, SH. Daniel The New Image, HMA, North Gallery, first floor. Lewis conducting; Arkadii Sevidov, piano. An exhibition presenting works by American artists that are representative of many of the more SATURDAY, JANUARY 10 difficult trends in art today. On view through June, Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 2:30, SH. Daniel 1976.______Lewis conducting; Arkadii Sevidov, piano. The City, HMA, Junior Gallery. Discover the city _____ SUNDAY, JANUARY 11______as a place made up of color, line, space, shapes Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 2:30, SH. Daniel and texture—the elements of design. Award­ Lewis conducting; Arkadii Sevidov, piano._____ winning exhibition designed by Heery & Heery, Architects and Engineers. Admission fee to non­ THURSDAY, JANUARY 15 Members. Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30, SH. Robert The William and Robert Arnett Collection of Shaw, conducting; Edith Kraft, piano. Haydn: Antique Chinese Jades, HMA, McBurney Symphony No. 44 (Trauer); Saint-Saens: Galleries, third floor. Continuing on extended Concerto No. 4 for Piano and Orchestra; Crumb: loan.______Echoes of Time and the River; Strauss: Don Jaun. SUNDAY, JANUARY 4 FRIDAY, JANUARY 16 Videotape screenings, 2 & 2:30, North Gallery. Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30, SH. Robert Featuring Wegman and Campus. Shaw conducting; Edith Kraft, piano. Christo Wraps; Decoy; and Claes Oldenburg, Free SATURDAY, JANUARY 17 Film Program, 3:00, WHA. Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30, SH. Robert FRIDAY & SATURDAY Shaw, conducting; Edith Kraft, piano. ______JANUARY 9 & 10______~ THURSDAY, JANUARY 29 The Maltese Falcon & The Treasure of Sierra Madre, John Huston Film Series, 8:00, WHA. $1.00 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30, SH. Daniel Members, $1.50 Students, $2.00 General.______Lewis conducting; Gary Graffman, piano. Barber: Music for a Scene from Shelley; Prokofiev: ______SUNDAY, JANUARY 11______Concerto No. 3 for Piano and Orchestra; Videotape screenings, 1 & 1:30, North Gallery, Mendelssohn: Concerto No. 1 for Piano and featuring Wegman and Campus. Orchestra; Debussy, La Mer. American Art in the Sixties & Smithson's Spiral ~ FRIDAY, JANUARY 30 Jetty, Free Film Program, 2:00, WHA. Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30, SH. Daniel Lewis conducting; Gary Graffman, piano. Gallery Games with Kelly's Seed & Feed Theatre. Informal seating. First-come, First served. SATURDAY, JANUARY 31 Atlanta Symphony Orchestra, 8:30, SH. Daniel WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14 Lewis conducting; Gary Graffman, piano. Re-Viewing the Masters Lecture Series, 10:00 a.m. and 8:00 p.m., WHA. Subject: “Durer: High Renaissance Developments in the Protestant North." Catherine Evans, lecturer. $1.50 Members, $1.75 Students, $2.00 General. High Museum Events FRIDAY & SATURDAY ______JANUARY 16 & 17______Key Largo & Beat the Devil, John Huston Film High Museum hours: 10:00 to 5:00 Mon. through Series, 8:00, WHA. $1.00 Members, $1.50 Sat., 12:00 to 5:00 Sun., closed evenings. Art Shop Students, $2.00 General. hours: 10:00 to 5:00 Tues, through Sat., 12:00 to 5:00 Sun., closed Mondays and evenings. THE SATURDAY, JANUARY 17 CITY and Jr. Art Shop hours: 3:00 to 5:00 Mon. Johnny Appleseed & Swiss Family Robinson. through Fri., 12:00 to 5:00 Sat. and Sun. Donation: Movies for Kids Series, 10:30 and 1:30, WHA. 50C 25

THEATLANTA MAGAZINE FOR PEOPLE WHO CARE1 1104 COMMERCE BUILDING •ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••a******* □ 12 Months $10 40 □ 24 Months $16.64 Above prices good only in U.S.A. (APO & FPO); $12.00 per year in Canada and Mexico, $16.00 elsewhere. □ Payment Enclosed □ BankAmericard □ C&S Charge Card □ Master Charge Inter Bank #------Card Number______Expiration Date------Name______

Address...... —------C i ty______State______Z i p------______SUNDAY, JANUARY 25 ______FRIDAY & SATURDAY JANUARY 9 & 10____ Videotape screenings, 2:00 and 2:30. North Gallery. Featuring Wegman and Campus. The Maltese Falcon & The Treasure of Sierra Madre, John Huston Film Series, 8:00 WHA. $1.00 Lecture, 3:00, WHA. Bruce W. Chamber, lecturer. Members, $1.50 Students, $2.00 General. “ 'One's-Self I Sing': The Second Century of American Painting, 1876-1976." Free._____ SUNDAY, JANUARY 11 ______WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28 Videotape screenings, 1:00 & 1:30, North Gallery. Featuring Wegman and Campus. Re-Viewing the Masters Lecture Series, 10:00a.m. and 8:00 p.m., WHA. Catherine Evans, lecturer. American Art in the Sixties & Smithson's Spiral "Titian-The Painterly: Classical Themes in Jetty, Free Film Program, 2:00, WHA. Venetian Color." $1.50 Members. $1.75 Students, FRIDAY & SATURDAY $2.00 General. __ JANUARY 16 & 17 _____ THURSDAY, JANUARY 29 Key Largo & Beat the Devil, John Huston Film Free Film Program: Andy Warhol, 8:00, WHA Series, 8:00, WHA. $1.00 Members, $1.50 Warhol discusses his views on art, money, and Students. $2.00 General.______society while visiting the Old Masters Room in the SATURDAYJANUARY 17 Brooklyn Museum. All of his major works are shown as well as clips from many of his most Johnny Appleseed & Swiss Family Robinson, important films. Movies for Kids Series, 10:30 and 1:30, WHA. 504 Children 16 and under, $1.00 Adult Members, $2.00 General. FRIDAY & SATURDAY Theatre ______JANUARY 23 & 24 The Asphalt Jungle & Fat City, John Huston Film Series, 8:00, WHA. $1.00 Members, $1.50 Students, $2.00 General. ______THURSDAY, JANUARY 15 SUNDAY, JANUARY 25 The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia, 8:00 p.m. AT. Alliance Theatre Videotape screenings, 2:00 and 2:30, North Company. A rollicking new work, characterized by Gallery. Featuring Wegman and Campus. humor and pathos, is scheduled to open on The Treasures of Italy, 2:30, SH. Travelog series. Broadway this spring. Fred Chappell, Director. Venice, Siena, Florence, Rome, Naples, and the For further information call 892-2797. Amalfi Drive—a brilliantly colorful travelog of a FRIDAY & SATUR D A Y glorious land. $3.50 and $3.00 General. $2.50 _____ JANUARY 16 & 17 Students. The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Magnolia, 8:00 pm, AT. SUNDAY, JANUARY 18 The Last Meeting of the Knights ot the White Lectures Magnolia, 2:30 p.m. AT. Many Happy Returns, following AT matinee, ST. 1976 Studio Theatre Company. A portrait of ___ WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14______American poetry, songs, portrait sketches, and Re-Viewing the Masters Lecture Series, 10:00 a.m. narratives from the works of Walt Whitman, Poe, and 8:00 p.m., WHA. “Durer: High Renaissance Twain, and Sandburg. Developments in the Protestant North.” Catherine TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY Evans, lecturer. $1.50 Members, $1.75 Students, FRIDAY & SATURDAY $2.00 General. JANUARY 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 SUNDAY, JANUARY 18 ~ The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Lecture, 3:00, WHA. Bruce W. Chambers, lecturer. Magnolia, 8:00 p.m., AT.______“Fresh Starts and Common Subjects: the First SUNDAY?JANUARY 25 Century of American Painting, 1776-1876." Free. MONDAY?JANUARY?9 The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White Art World Speaker Series Lecture, 8:00, AT. Magnolia, 2:30 p.m., AT. Denise Scott Brown and Robert Venturi, lecturers. Many Happy Returns, following AT matinee, ST. Sponsored by the High Museum’s Members Guild. TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY Free and open to the public. FRIDAY & SATURDAY WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 21 JANUARY 27, 28, 29, 30, 31______Re-Viewing the Masters Lecture Series, 10:00a.m. The Last Meeting of the Knights of the White and 8:00 p.m., WHA. Catherine Evans, lecturer. Magnolia, 8:00 p.m., AT. “Michelangelo: The Human Form and the Concept of Pathos.” $1.50 Members, $1.75 Students, $2.00 General. SUNDAY. JANUARY 25 Lecture, 3:00, WHA. Bruce W. Chambers, lecturer. Films 'One's-Self I Sing’: The Second Century of American Painting, 1876-1976." Free. __ WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28 SUNDAY, JANUARY 4 Re-Viewing the Master Lecture Series 10:00 a m Videotape screenings, 2:00 and 2:30, North and 8:00 p.m., WHA. Catherine Evans, lecturer. Gallery. Featuring Wegman and Campus. "Titian-The Painterly: Classical Themes in Christo Wraps; Decoy; and Claes Oldenburg, Free Venetian Color." $1.50 Members, $1.75 Students, Film Program, 3:00, WHA. $2.00 General. Children

THE CITY Exhitition-for Children and Adults-in the High Museum of Art. Open daily3:00-5:00p.m. and weekends 12:00-5:00 p.m. Admission: 25® I Atlanta Arts Children, 50

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 ATHOS MENABONI, ‘'American Bald Eagle" 22Y1" x 30" • 950 edition • S100.00 plus Ga. Sales Tax A LIMITED EDITION, SIGNED AND NUMBERED. Collectors of Menaboni paintings have the means to own what they like. That they choose to add another Menaboni bird bespeaks their admiration for a genius talent, not only for the ornithological correctness in rendition, but for that profound beauty that is painting mastery. There has never been a sufficient number of original Menaboni paintings for the public to buy. His paintings are generally commissioned. It is Mr. Menaboni's express wish that individual purchasers be given opportunity to have this quality signed and numbered reproduction. Please send_____ reproduction(s) of the “American Bald Eagle”. My check for $------is enclosed.

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