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SEIJI OZAWA, Music Director

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Barrel-Blending is the final process of blending selected whiskies as they are poured into oak barrels to marry prior to bottling. Imported in bottle by Hiram Walker Importers Inc., Detroit Ml © 1985. Seiji Ozawa, Music Director One Hundred and Fifth Season, 1985-86

Trustees of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc.

Leo L. Beranek, Chairman Nelson J. Darling, Jr., President

J.P. Barger, Vice-Chairman Mrs. John M. Bradley, Vice-Chairman

George H. Kidder, Vice-Chairman William J. Poorvu, Treasurer Mrs. George L. Sargent, Vice-Chairman

Vernon R. Alden Archie C. Epps Mrs. August R. Meyer David B. Arnold, Jr. Mrs. John H. Fitzpatrick E. James Morton Mrs. Norman L. Cahners Mrs. John L. Grandin David G. Mugar George H.A. Clowes, Jr. Frances W Hatch, Jr. Thomas D. Perry, Jr. William M. Crozier, Jr. Harvey Chet Krentzman Mrs. George R. Rowland Mrs. Lewis S. Dabney Roderick M. MacDougall Richard A. Smith Mrs. Michael H. Davis John Hoyt Stookey

Trustees Emeriti

Philip K. Allen E. Morton Jennings, Jr. John T. Noonan Allen G. Barry Edward M. Kennedy Irving W. Rabb

Richard P. Chapman Edward G. Murray Paul C. Reardon Abram T. Collier Albert L. Nickerson Sidney Stoneman Mrs. Harris Fahnestock John L. Thorndike '

Administration of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc.

Thomas W Morris, General Manager

Daniel R. Gustin, Assistant Manager Anne H. Parsons, Orchestra Manager Costa Pilavachi, Artistic Administrator Caroline Smedvig, Director of Promotion Josiah Stevenson, Director of Development Theodore A. Vlahos, Director of Business Affairs

Arlene Germain, Financial Analyst Marc Mandel, Publications Coordinator Charles Gilroy, Chief Accountant Richard Ortner, Administrator of Vera Gold, Assistant Director of Promotion Tanglewood Music Center Patricia Halligan, Personnel Administrator Robert A. Pihlcrantz, Properties Manager Nancy A. Kay, Director of Sales Charles Rawson, Manager of Box Office John M. Keenum, Director of Eric Sanders, Director of Corporate Foundation Support Development Nancy Knutsen, Production Manager Joyce M. Serwitz, Assistant Director Anita R. Kurland, Administrator of of Development Youth Activities Diane Greer Smart, Director of Volunteers Steven Ledbetter, Musicologist & Nancy E. Tanen, Media/Special Projects Program Annotator Administrator

Programs copyright ®1985 Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc. Cover photo by Christian Steiner Board of Overseers of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, Inc.

Harvey Chet Krentzman Chairman

Avram J. Goldberg Mrs. Carl Koch Vice-Chairman Vice-Chairman

Ray Stata Mrs. Gordon F. Kingsley Vice-Chairman Secretary

John Q. Adams Mrs. James G. Garivaltis Mrs. Hiroshi Nishino Mrs. Weston W. Adams Mrs. Ray A. Goldberg Vincent M. O'Reilly Martin Allen Jordan L. Golding Stephen Paine, Sr. Mrs. David Bakalar Joseph M. Henson John A. Perkins Bruce A. Beal Arnold Hiatt Peter C. Read Peter A. Brooke Mrs. Richard D. Hill Robert E. Remis Mary Louise Cabot Susan M. Hilles Mrs. Peter van S. Rice Mrs. C. Thomas Clagett, Jr. Glen H. Hiner David Rockefeller, Jr. James F. Cleary Mrs. Marilyn Brachman Hoffman John Ex Rodgers John F. Cogan, Jr. Mrs. Bela T. Kalman Mrs. Jerome Rosenfeld Mrs. Nat King Cole Mrs. S. Charles Kasdon Mrs. William C. Rousseau William H. Congleton Richard L. Kaye Mrs. William H. Ryan

Arthur P. Contas Robert D. King Gene Shalit Mrs. A. Werk Cook John Kittredge Mark L. Selkowitz Phyllis Curtin Robert K. Kraft Malcolm L. Sherman A.V. d'Arbeloff Mrs. E. Anthony Kutten W Davies Sohier, Jr. Mrs. Michael H. Davis John P. LaWare Ralph Z. Sorenson

Mrs. Eugene B. Doggett Mrs. James F. Lawrence Mrs. Arthur I. Strang Harriett Eckstein Laurence Lesser William F Thompson Mrs. Alexander Ellis R. Willis Leith, Jr. Luise Vosgerchian Katherine Fanning Mrs. Charles P. Lyman Mrs. An Wang John A. Fibiger Mrs. Harry L. Marks Roger D. Wellington Kenneth G. Fisher Hanae Mori Mrs. Thomas H.P. Whitney Gerhard M. Freche Richard P. Morse Mrs. Donald B. Wilson

Peter H.B. Frelinghuysen Mrs. Thomas S. Morse John J. Wilson

Mrs. Thomas J. Galligan Mrs. Robert B. Newman Brunetta Wolfman Mrs. Thomas Gardiner Nicholas T. Zervas

Overseers Emeriti

Mrs. Frank G. Allen Paul Fromm Mrs. Stephen V.C. Morris

Hazen H. Ayer Mrs. Louis I. Kane David R. Pokross David W Bernstein Leonard Kaplan Mrs. Richard H. Thompson Benjamin H. Lacy

Symphony Hall Operations

Cheryl Silvia Tribbett, Function Manager James E. Whitaker, House Manager

Earl G. Buker, Chief Engineer Cleveland Morrison, Stage Manager Franklin Smith, Supervisor of House Crew

WilmothA. Griffiths, Assistant Supervisor of House Crew William D. McDonnell, Chief Steward Officers of the Boston Symphony Association of Volunteers

Mrs. Michael H. Davis President Mrs. R. Douglas Hall III Mrs. Carl Koch Executive Vice-President Treasurer Mrs. Harry F. Sweitzer, Jr. Mrs. Gilman W. Conant Secretary Nominating Chairman

Vice-Presidents

Mrs. Eugene B. Doggett, Development Services Mrs. BelaT. Kalman, Youth Activities Ms. Phyllis Dohanian, Fundraising Projects Mrs. Hart D. Leavitt, Regions Mrs. Craig W. Fisher, Tanglewood Mrs. August R. Meyer, Membership Mrs. Mark Selkowitz, Tanglewood Ms. Ellen M. Massey, Public Relations

Chairmen of Regions

Mrs. Thomas M. Berger Ms. Prudence A. Law Mrs. F.L. Whitney Mrs. Charles A. Hubbard Mrs. Robert B. Newman Mrs. Thomas H.P. Whitney Mrs. Herbert S. Judd, Jr. John H. Stookey Mrs. Norman Wilson Mrs. Thomas Walker References furnished request

Aspen Music Festival Liberace Burt Bacharach Panayis Lyras David Bar-Man Marian McPartland Leonard Bernstein Zubin Mehta Bolcom and Morris Metropolitan Opera Jorge Bolet Mitchell-Ruff Duo Boston Pops Orchestra Seiji Ozawa Boston Symphony Orchestra Philadelphia Orchestra Brevard Music Center Andre Previn Dave Brubeck Ravinia Festival David Buechner Santiago Rodriguez Chicago Symphony Orchestra George Shearing Cincinnati May Festival Abbey Simon Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra Georg Solti Aaron Copland Tanglewood Music Center Denver Symphony Orchestra Michael Tilson Thomas Ferrante and Teicher Beveridge Webster Natalie Hinderas Earl Wild Interlochen Arts Academy and John Williams I National Music Camp Wolf Trap Foundation for Billy Joel the Performing Arts Gilbert Kalish Yehudi Wyner Ruth Laredo Over 200 others Baldwin BSO Business & Professional Leadership Program

Corporate support of the BSO has more than tripled in the past three years, with the result BSO that nearly 400 companies are contributing more than $1 million annually to the orches- tra. This has been accomplished through the ^H activities of the BSO Business & Professional Holiday Pops Information y» Leadership Program, which was founded in BSO Friends and subscribers will receive 1980 by area executives in recognition of the priority ticket information including dates BSO's significant contribution to the corpo- and prices for the 1985 Christmas Pops and rate community. The program is overseen by a New Year's Eve Gala concerts by mid- committee including business leaders from November. companies throughout New England, making it possible for businesses to participate in the life of the Boston Symphony Orchestra Attention, Subscription Sharers! through some of the most original and excit- ing programs of their kind in America: "Presi- If you share a subscription, you may not be dents at Pops," "A Company Christmas at receiving BSO news and information. To add Pops," the BSO Corporate Enrichment Pro- your name to the mailing list, please send your gram, leadership dinners held in Symphony name, address, and phone number, the series Hall, and special-event underwriting. Contri- the of the you attend, and name person with butions for membership begin at $1,000. For whom you share the subscription to: Subscrip- further information on how your company or tion Office, Hall, Boston, Symphony MA professional partnership can join this pro- 02115. gram, contact Eric Sanders or Sue Tomlin in the BSO Corporate Development Office, (617) 266-1492. Art Exhibits in the Cabot-Cahners Room

The Boston Symphony Orchestra is pleased to announce that, for the twelfth season, various A Company Christmas at Pops Boston-area galleries, museums, schools, and The second annual "A Company Christmas at non-profit artists' organizations will exhibit Pops" is scheduled for Wednesday evening, their work in the Cabot-Cahners Room on the December 17. This special holiday Pops con- first-balcony level of Symphony Hall. On dis- cert, a business benefit conducted by John play through 28 October are works from the Williams, will feature a program of festive Pucker Safrai Gallery. Other organizations to music and a few surprises. be represented during the coming months are "I am delighted to report that most of our the Harris Brown Gallery (28 October- sponsor packages have been sold," stated 25 November), Boston Society of Architects James F. Cleary, Managing Director of Paine (25 November-16 December), and Childs Webber, Inc., and Committee Chairman for Gallery (16 December-13 January). the event. "I urge businesses who wish to par- ticipate either as a sponsor or advertiser in this special program to act soon." BSO Guests on WGBH-FM-89.7 Sponsor packages including 16 tickets, din- The featured guests with Ron Delia Chiesa ner, and holiday drinks are $2,500. Program during the intermissions of upcoming live book advertising rates are $1,000 for a full Boston Symphony broadcasts will be violinist page, $600 for a half-page. For further infor- Uto Ughi (25 and 26 October), BSO Artistic mation, please contact Eric Sanders or Sue Administrator Costa Pilavachi (1 and 2 Tomlin in the BSO Corporate Development November), and BSO clarinetist Peter Had- Office, Symphony Hall, Boston, MA 02115, cock (15 and 16 November). or call (617) 266-1492. SUBSCRIBE NOW TO THE 1985-86 SEASON!

BOSTON SYMPHONY Chamber -u-

AT JORDAN

...THE HIGHESTINTERNATIONAL LEVEL OF . CHAMBER MUSIC PLAYING. . "- the boston globe THREE SUNDAYAFTERNOONS AT 3PM

GILBERT KALISH, PIANIST SUNDAY with SANFORD SYLVAN, baritone Copland Sextet for clarinet, piano, and strings NOVEMBER 10 Mahler 'Songs of a Wayfarer' 1985 (arranged for chamber ensemble by Arnold Schoenberg) Riegger Concerto for piano and wind quintet, Op. 53 Brahms Trio in C for piano, violin, and cello, Op. 87

SUNDAY Haydn Trio in G for flute, cello, and piano, Hob. XV:25 JANUARY 12 LoefflerTwo Rhapsodies for oboe, viola, and piano J-lfL Lieberson 'Accordance,' for eight players 1986 Mozart String Quintet in G minor, K.516

SUNDAY Mendelssohn Concert Piece in F for clarinet, bassoon, and piano, Op. 113 APRIL 6 Copland Quartet for piano and strings 1986 Boulez 'Derive,' for six players Schubert Quintet in A for piano and strings, D.667, Trout'

NEW SUBSCRIBER FORM: There are still good seats available for the 1985/86 season. You may become a subscriber by indicating your choice of location and price and by returning this form with a check payable to Boston Symphony to: New Subscriber, Symphony Hall, Boston, MA 02115.

SUBSCRIPTION PRICES: $33.00, $25.00, $18.00. For further information, call (617) 266-1492.

LOCATION PRICE NO.OFTICKETS TOTALS

Name .Address

City .State Zip Code

cr^- Day Phone Evening Phone. BSO Members in Concert Planned Giving Seminars

The Copley String Trio—BSO members The Boston Symphony Orchestra is pleased Sheila Fiekowsky, violin, Robert Barnes, once again to offer a series of Planned Giving viola, and Ronald Feldman, cello—perform Seminars conducted by John Brown, noted music of Beethoven, Francaix, and Dohnanyi authority in the area of deferred gifts. Semi- on Friday, 25 October at 8 p.m. at the First nars for the 1985-86 season will be held prior Parish of Watertown, 35 Church Street (cor- to the BSO concerts on 25 October, 1 Novem- ner of Church and Summer streets). Admis- ber, 12 December, 23 January, 4 February, *** sion is $6 ($4 for under 18 and senior 18 March, 11 April, and 18 April. For further citizens). For information and reservations, information please contact Joyce M. Serwitz, 9 please call 527-0225 or 484-3049. Assistant Director of Development, at I BSO assistant principal bass Lawrence 266-1492, ext. 132. I Wolfe will be joined by the Mystic Valley Orchestra under the direction of Ronald Feld- man for music of Koussevitzky, Bottesini, and Remember Someone Special 27 at 3 at Mozart on Sunday, October p.m. The Boston Symphony Orchestra has created Jordan Hall. Admission is free. a Remembrance Fund through which you may violinist Bracken will perform BSO Nancy recognize special occasions (such as birth- I music of Ives, Ravel, Beethoven with and days, anniversaries, and weddings) or memo- pianist Hsueh-Yung Shen on Sunday, 27 Octo- rialize friends and loved ones who cared about ber at 8 p.m. at the Lowell House Junior Com- our orchestra. To honor someone in this way, mon Room at Harvard University. The recital and have a remembrance card sent in your is being sponsored by the Lowell House Music name, please include with your contribution Society. the individual's name and address and the Cecylia Arzewski, violin, BSO members and occasion you wish remembered. Contributions Martha Babcock, cello, are soloists in the of $10 or more may be sent to the Develop- Brahms Double Concerto with Max Hobart ment Office, Symphony Hall, Boston, MA and the North Shore Philharmonic on Sunday, 02115 and will be applied to the Boston Sym- 3 November at 7:30 p.m. at the Salem High phony Annual Fund. School Auditorium. The program also includes Rossini's overture to Semiramide, Grieg's Peer Gynt Suite No. 2, and the world pre- For Distinctive Gifts miere, commissioned by the North Shore Phil- The Symphony Shop is ready for the new sea- harmonic, of Dennis Leclaire's Salem: 1692. son with tantalizing gift ideas with a BSO or For ticket information, call 1-631-6513. musical motif, as well as recordings by the The contemporary music ensemble Collage BSO and Pops. Calendars, appointment begins its 1985-86 season with music of Ste- * books, drinking glasses, holiday ornaments, phen Albert, Christopher Rouse, Robert Selig, and children's books are just part of the excit- and Edward Cohen on Monday, 4 November at ing array of all-new merchandise. The Sym- 8 p.m. at the Longy School of Music, 1 Follen phony Shop, located in the Huntington Street in Cambridge. For complete program Avenue stairwell near the Cohen Annex, is and ticket information, call 437-0231. open from one hour before each concert Ronald Knudsen leads the Newton Sym- through intermission. All proceeds benefit the phony Orchestra in the first concert of its 20th Boston Symphony Orchestra, so please stop Anniversary Season on Sunday, 10 November by and the volunteer sales staff will be happy at 8 p.m. at Aquinas Junior College in New- to help you select the perfect gift. For mer- ton. The opening piece will be led by former chandise information, please call 267-2692. Newton Symphony conductor and BSO violinist Michel Sasson. Ronald Knudsen will complete the program with the Mendelssohn With Thanks Reformation Symphony and the Schumann Piano Concerto featuring soloist Russell We wish to give special thanks to the National Sherman. Subscriptions for the orchestra's Endowment for the Arts and the Massachu- four-concert season are still available at $30; setts Council on the Arts and Humanities for single tickets are $8. For futher information, their continued support of the Boston Sym- call 965-2555. phony Orchestra. Seiji Ozawa

Symphony Orchestra, a post he relin- quished at the end of the 1968-69 season.

Seiji Ozawa first conducted the Boston Symphony in Symphony Hall in January 1968; he had previously appeared with the orchestra for four summers at Tanglewood, where he became an artistic director in 1970. In December 1970 he began his inau- gural season as conductor and music director of the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra. The music directorship of the Boston Symphony followed in 1973, and Mr. Ozawa resigned his San Francisco posi- tion in the spring of 1976, serving as music advisor there for the 1976-77 season.

As music director of the Boston Sym- phony Orchestra, Mr. Ozawa has strength- The 1985-86 season is Seiji Ozawa's thir- ened the orchestra's reputation inter- teenth as music director of the Boston Sym- nationally as well as at home, beginning phony Orchestra. In the fall of 1973 he with the BSO's 1976 European tour and, in became the orchestra's thirteenth music March 1978, a nine-city tour of Japan. At director since it was founded in 1881. the invitation of the Chinese government, Born in 1935 in Shenyang, China, to Mr. Ozawa then spent a week working with Japanese parents, Mr. Ozawa studied both the Peking Central Philharmonic Orches- Western and Oriental music as a child and tra; a year later, in March 1979, he returned later graduated from Tokyo's Toho School to China with the entire Boston Symphony of Music with first prizes in composition for a significant musical and cultural and conducting. In the fall of 1959 he won exchange entailing coaching, study, and first prize at the International Competition discussion sessions with Chinese musi- of Orchestra Conductors, Besancon, cians, as well as concert performances. Also France. Charles Munch, then music in 1979, Mr. Ozawa led the orchestra on its director of the Boston Symphony and a first tour devoted exclusively to appear- judge at the competition, invited him to ances at the major music festivals of Tanglewood, where in 1960 he won the Europe. Seiji Ozawa and the Boston Sym- Koussevitzky Prize for outstanding student phony celebrated the orchestra's one-hun- conductor, the highest honor awarded by dredth birthday with a fourteen-city the Berkshire Music Center (now the American tour in March 1981 and an inter- Tanglewood Music Center). national tour to Japan, France, Germany, Austria, and England in October/November While working with Herbert von Karajan that same year. In August/September 1984, in West Berlin, Mr. Ozawa came to the Mr. Ozawa led the orchestra in a two-and- attention of Leonard Bernstein, whom he one-half-week, eleven-concert tour which accompanied on the Philhar- included appearances at the music festivals monic's spring 1961 Japan tour, and he was of Edinburgh, London, Salzburg, Lucerne, made an assistant conductor of that orches- and Berlin, as well as performances in tra for the 1961-62 season. His first profes- Munich, Hamburg, and Amsterdam. This sional concert appearance in North February he returns with the orchestra to America came in January 1962 with the San Japan for a tour. Francisco Symphony Orchestra. He was three-week music director of the Ravinia Festival for Mr. Ozawa pursues an active interna- five summers beginning in 1964, and music tional career. He appears regularly with the director for four seasons of the Toronto Berlin Philharmonic, the Orchestre de

8 Paris, the French National Radio Orches- music of Ravel, Berlioz, and Debussy with tra, the Vienna Philharmonic, the Philhar- mezzo-soprano Frederica von Stade and monia of London, and the New Japan the Mendelssohn Violin Concerto with Philharmonic. His operatic credits include Isaac Stern; in addition, he has recorded Salzburg, London's Royal Opera at Covent the Schoenberg/Monn Cello Concerto and Garden, La Scala in Milan, and the Paris Strauss's Don Quixote with cellist Yo-Yo Ma Opera, where he conducted the world for future release. For Telarc, he has premiere of Olivier Messiaen's opera recorded the complete cycle of Beethoven St. Francis of Assist in November 1983. piano concertos and the Choral Fantasy Messiaen's opera was subsequently with Rudolf Serkin. Mr. Ozawa and the awarded the Grand Prix de la Critique 1984 orchestra have recorded five of the works in the category of French world premieres. commissioned by the BSO for its centen- Mr. Ozawa will lead the Boston Symphony nial: Roger Sessions's Pulitzer Prize-win- Orchestra in the American premiere of ning Concerto for Orchestra and Andrzej scenes from St. Francis of Assisi in April Panufnik's Sinfonia Votiva are available on 1986 in Boston and New York. Hyperion; Peter Lieberson's Piano Con- certo with soloist Peter Serkin, John Seiji Ozawa has won an Emmy for the Harbison's Symphony No. 1, and Oily Boston Symphony Orchestra's "Evening at Wilson's Sinfonia have been taped for New Symphony" television series. His award- World records. For Angel/EMI, he and the winning recordings include Berlioz's orchestra have recorded Stravinsky's Fire- Romeo et Juliette, Schoenberg's Gurrelieder, bird and, with soloist Itzhak Perlman, the and the Berg and Stravinsky violin concer- violin concertos of Earl Kim and Robert tos with Itzhak Perlman. Other recordings Starer. with the orchestra include, for Philips, Richard Strauss's Also sprach Zarathustra Mr. Ozawa holds honorary Doctor of and Ein Heldenleben, Stravinsky's he Sacre Music degrees from the University of Mas- s du printemps, Hoist's The Planets, and sachusetts, the New England Conservatory J Mahler's Symphony No. 8, the Symphony of of Music, and Wheaton College in Norton, a Thousand. For CBS, he has recorded . How to conduct yourself on Friday night.

Aficionados of classical music can enjoy the Boston Symphony Orchestra every Friday night at 9 o'clock on WCRB 102. 5 FM. Sponsored in part by Honeywell.

Honeywell

10

«m Violas Bass Clarinet Burton Fine Craig Nordstrom Charles S. Dana chair Patricia McCarty Bassoons Anne Stoneman chair Sherman Walt Ronald Wilkison Edward A. Taft chair Robert Barnes Roland Small Jerome Lipson Matthew Ruggiero Bernard Kadinoff Contrabassoon Joseph Pietropaolo Richard Plaster Michael Zaretsky Marc Jeanneret Music Directorship endowed by Horns John Moors Cabot Betty Benthin Charles Kavalovski Mark Ludwig Helen Sagoff Slosberg chair BOSTON SYMPHONY Richard Sebring Cellos Daniel Katzen ORCHESTRA Jules Eskin Jay Wadenpfuhl 1985-86 Philip R. Allen chair Richard Mackey Martha Babcock Jonathan Menkis Vernon and Marion Alden chair First Violins Mischa Nieland Trumpets Malcolm Lowe Esther S. and Joseph M. Shapiro chair Conc( rlmtisli r Charles Schlueter Charles Munch chair Jerome Patterson Roger Louis Voisin chair Max Hobart *Robert Ripley Andre Come Actum Atsociatt Conci rtmastt r Luis Leguia Ford H. Cooper chair Helm Horm r McIIItyre chair Carol Procter Charles Daval Cecylia Arzewski Ronald Feldman Peter Chapman Acting Assistant Concertmaster fJoel Moerschel Robert L. Beat, and Sandra and David Bakalar chair Trombones Enid and Bruct A. Htdl chair Bo Youp Hwang ""Jonathan Miller Ronald Barron J.P. and Mary B. Barger chair Edward ami Hi rtha ('. Host chair *Sato Knudsen Max Winder Norman Bolter and Dorothy Wilson chair John Basses Bass Trombone Harry Dickson Edwin Barker Douglas Yeo Forrest Foster Collier chair Harold D. Hodgkinson chair Gottfried Wilfinger Lawrence Wolfe Tuba Maria Stata chair Fredy Ostrovsky Chester Schmitz Leo Panasevich Joseph Hearne Margaret and William C. Carolyn and George Rowland clxur Bela Wurtzler Rousseau chair Sheldon Rotenberg Leslie Martin Mian I ('. Kasdoii and John Salkowski Timpani Marjorie C Paley chair John Barwicki Everett Firth Alfred Schneider Sylvia Shippen Wells chair *Robert Olson Raymond Sird *James Ikuko Mizuno Orleans Percussion Amnon Levy Charles Smith Flutes Peter and Anne Brooke chair Doriot Anthony Dwyer Arthur Press Second Violins Walter Piston chair Assistant Timpanist Marylou Speaker Churchill Fenwick Smith Thomas Gauger Fahnestock chair Myra and Robert Kraft chair Vyacheslav Uritsky Leone Buyse Frank Epstein Charlotte and Irving W. Rabb chair Ronald Knudsen Piccolo Harp Joseph McGauley Lois Schaefer Ann Hobson Pilot Willona Henderson Sinclair chair Leonard Moss Evelyn and C. Charles Marran chair *Michael Vitale Oboes *Harvey Seigel Ralph Gomberg *Jerome Rosen Mildred B. Remis chair *Sheila Fiekowsky Wayne Rapier Personnel Managers *Gerald Elias Alfred Genovese William Moyer Ronan Lefkowitz Harry Shapiro *Nancy Bracken English Horn *Joel Smirnoff Laurence Thorstenberg Librarians *Jennie Shames Phyllis Knight Beranek chair Marshall Burlingame *Nisanne Lowe William Shisler *Aza Raykhtsaum Clarinets James Harper Harold Wright * Lucia Lin Ann S.M. Banks chair Stage Manager * Participating in a system of rotated Thomas Martin Position endowed by seating within each string section. Peter Hadcock Angelica Lloyd Clagett t On sabbatical leave. E-flat Clarinet Alfred Robison

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A Brief History of the Boston Symphony Orchestra

For many years, philanthropist, Civil War personality proved so enduring that he veteran, and amateur musician Henry Lee served an unprecedented term of twenty- Higginson dreamed of founding a great and five years. permanent orchestra in his home town of In 1936, Koussevitzky led the orchestra's Boston. His vision approached reality in first concerts in the Berkshires, and a year the spring of 1881, and on 22 October that later he and the players took up annual year the Boston Symphony Orchestra's summer residence at Tanglewood. inaugural concert took place under the Koussevitzky passionately shared Major direction of conductor Georg Henschel. For Higginson's dream of "a good honest nearly twenty years, symphony concerts school for musicians," and in 1940 that were held in the old Boston Music Hall; dream was realized with the founding at Symphony Hall, the orchestra's present Tanglewood of the Berkshire Music Center home, and one of the world's most highly (now called the Tanglewood Music Center), regarded concert halls, was opened in 1900. a unique summer music academy for young Henschel was succeeded by a series of artists. German-born and -trained conductors Wilhelm Gericke, Arthur Nikisch, Emil Expansion continued in other areas as Paur, and Max Fiedler—culminating in the well. In 1929 the free Esplanade concerts appointment of the legendary Karl Muck, on the Charles River in Boston were inau- who served two tenures as music director, gurated by Arthur Fiedler, who had been a 1906-08 and 1912-18. Meanwhile, in July member of the orchestra since 1915 and 1885, the musicians of the Boston Sym- who in 1930 became the eighteenth conduc- phony had given their first "Promenade" tor of the Boston Pops, a post he would concert, offering both music and refresh- hold for half a century, to be succeeded by ments, and fulfilling Major Higginson's John Williams in 1980. The Boston Pops wish to give "concerts of a lighter kind of celebrated its hundredth birthday in 1985 music." These concerts, soon to be given in under Mr. Williams's baton. the springtime and renamed first "Popu- Charles Munch followed Koussevitzky as lar" and then "Pops," fast became a music director in 1949. Munch continued tradition. Koussevitzky's practice of supporting con-

During the orchestra's first decades, temporary composers and introduced much there were striking moves toward expan- music from the French repertory to this sion. In 1915, the orchestra made its first transcontinental trip, playing thirteen con- certs at the Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco. Recording, begun with RCA in the pioneering days of 1917, continued with increasing frequency, as did radio broadcasts of concerts. The character of the H Boston Symphony was greatly changed in 1918, when Henri Rabaud was engaged as conductor; he was succeeded the following season by Pierre Monteux. These appoint- ments marked the beginning of a French- oriented tradition which would be main- tained, even during the Russian-born Serge Koussevitzky's time, with the employment of many French-trained musicians.

The Koussevitzky era began in 1924. His extraordinary musicianship and electric Henry Lee Higginson

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Fine Jewelers Guild, Inc. /SR5 country. During his tenure, the orchestra abroad, and his program of centennial com- toured abroad for the first time, and its missions—from Sandor Balassa, Leonard continuing series of Youth Concerts was ini- Bernstein, John Corigliano, Peter Maxwell tiated. Erich Leinsdorf began his seven- Davies, John Harbison, Leon Kirchner, year term as music director in 1962. Peter Lieberson, Donald Martino, Andrzej Leinsdorf presented numerous premieres, Panufnik, Roger Sessions, Sir Michael restored many forgotten and neglected Tippett, and Oily Wilson—on the occasion works to the repertory, and, like his two of the orchestra's hundredth birthday has predecessors, made many recordings for reaffirmed the orchestra's commitment to RCA; in addition, many concerts were tele- new music. Under his direction, the orches- vised under his direction. Leinsdorf was tra has also expanded its recording activi- also an energetic director of the Tangle- ties to include releases on the Philips, wood Music Center, and under his lead- Telarc, CBS, Angel/EMI, Hyperion, and ership a full-tuition fellowship program was New World labels. established. Also during these years, the Boston Symphony Chamber Players were From its earliest days, the Boston Sym- founded, in 1964; they are the world's only phony Orchestra has stood for imagination, permanent chamber ensemble made up of a enterprise, and the highest attainable stan- major symphony orchestra's principal dards. Today, the Boston Symphony players. Orchestra, Inc., presents more than 250 concerts annually. Attended by a live audi- William Steinberg succeeded Leinsdorf ence of nearly 1.5 million, the orchestra's in 1969. He conducted several American performances are heard by a vast national and world premieres, made recordings for and international audience through the Deutsche Grammophon and RCA, media of radio, television, and recordings. appeared regularly on television, led the Its annual budget has grown from 1971 European tour, and directed concerts Higginson's projected $115,000 to more on the east coast, in the south, and in the than $20 million, and its preeminent posi- mid-west. tion in the world of music is due not only to Seiji Ozawa, an artistic director of the the support of its audiences but also to Tanglewood Festival since 1970, became grants from the federal and state govern- the orchestra's thirteenth music director in ments, and to the generosity of many foun- the fall of 1973, following a year as music dations, businesses, and individuals. It is adviser. Now in his twelfth year as music an ensemble that has richly fulfilled director, Mr. Ozawa has continued to solid- Higginson's vision of a great and perma- ify the orchestra's reputation at home and nent orchestra in Boston.

The first photograph, actually a collage, of the Boston Symphony Orchestra under Georg Henschel, taken 1882

15 Deutsche Grammophon is proud to welcome GIUSEPPE SINOPOLI to the Boston Symphony.

From his prestigious compact disc catalog...

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16 BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA

Seiji Ozawa, Music Director

One Hundred and Fifth Season, 1985-86

Thursday, 24 October at 8 Friday, 25 October at 2 Saturday, 26 October at 8 Tuesday, 29 October at 8

GIUSEPPE SINOPOLI conducting

ALL-BRAHMS PROGRAM

Violin Concerto in D, Opus 77 Allegro non troppo Adagio Allegro giocoso, ma non troppo vivace UTO UGHI

INTERMISSION

Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Opus 98 Allegro non troppo Andante moderato Allegro giocoso Allegro energico e passionato

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17 Week 3 Introduce Your Children To Boston Symphony Youth Concerts

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Wednesday Series- 10:15 AM Thursday Series -10: 15 AM November 20, 1985 November 2 1,1985 March 17, 1986* May 1,1986 April 30, 1986

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18 Johannes Brahms Violin Concerto in D, Opus 77

Johannes Brahms was born in Hamburg, Germany, on 7 May 1833 and died in

Vienna on 3 April 189 7. He wrote the Violin Concerto in the summer and early fall of 1878, but the published score incorporates a few revisions made after the premiere, which was given by Joseph Joachim in Leipzig on 1 January 1879, the composer conducting the Gewand-

haus Orchestra. The first American per- formances were given by the Boston Symphony Orchestra on 6 and 7 Decem- ber 1889, when it was played by Franz Kneisel, the orchestra's concertmaster, with Arthur Nikisch conducting. Kneisel played it in subsequent seasons with Emil Paur and Wilhelm Gericke. Since then, it has also been performed at BSO concerts by Adolph Brodsky (Nikisch), Maud MacCarthy (Gericke), Fritz Kreisler (Gericke, Max Fiedler, Karl Muck), Hugo Heermann (Gericke), Carl Wendling (Muck), Mischa Elman and Felix Berber (Fiedler), Anton Witek (Fiedler, Muck), Carl Flesch (Muck), Albert Stoessel (Pierre Monteux), Richard Burgin (Monteux, Serge Koussevitzky), Vladimir Resnikoff and Georges Enesco (Monteux), Jacques Thibaud (Michael Press), Albert Spalding (Burgin), Jascha Heifetz, Nathan Milstein, Adolf Busch, Bronislav Huberman, Paul Makovsky (Koussevitzky), Joseph Szigeti (Kousse- vitzky, Charles Munch), Efrem Zimbalist (Koussevitzky), Ginette Neveu (Burgin), Yehudi Menuhim, Patricia Travers, Arthur Grumiaux (Munch), Isaac Stern (Munch, -*y Monteux), Leonid Kogan (Monteux), Christian Ferras, Jacob Krachmalnick, Roger Shermont (Munch), Zino Francescatti (Burgin, Erich Leinsdorf, William Steinberg), Shmuel Ashkenasi and Joseph Silverstein (Leinsdorf), David Oistrakh (Steinberg), Miriam Fried (Silverstein, Klaus Tennstedt), Gidon Kremer (Colin Davis), Joseph Silverstein (Eugene Ormandy), Henryk Szeryng (Andrew Davis), and Salvatore Accardo (Leonard Slatkin). The most recent Tanglewood performance was Accardo's, in July 1983. Isaac Stern gave the most recent subscription performances in April 1984; Seiji Ozawa conducted. In addition to the soloist, the score calls for two each of flutes, oboes, clarinets, and bassoons, four horns, two trumpets, timpani, and strings. At these performances, Uto TJghi plays the cadenza by Joseph Joachim.

Faint phonograph recordings exist of Joseph Joachim playing Brahms Hungarian Dances, some unaccompanied Bach, and a Romance of his own: through the scratch and the distance, one can hear that even in his seventies the bow-arm was firm and the left hand sure. And though the records also convey a sense of the vitality of his playing, they are, in the end, too slight and too faint to tell us anything we want to know about the violinist whose debut at eight was hailed as the coming of "a second Vieuxtemps, Paganini, Ole Bull" or the musician whose name became, across the more than sixty years of his career, a byword for nobility and probity in art. Joachim was also leader of the most highly esteemed string quartet of his day, as well as an accomplished composer and an excellent conductor. His became a dominant voice in German musical anti-Wagnerian conservatism; his passionate identification with the musical past was productive, the range of his experience was prodigious. Europe's courts, universities, and learned academies vied to honor Joachim, but what speaks to us more eloquently than the doctorates and the Pour le merites is an accounting of

19 Week 3 There's no passion in the human soul. But finds its food in music."

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20 what composers dedicated to him (and sometimes wrote for him to play), a list that includes the second version of Schumann's Symphony No. 4 in D minor, Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2, Dvorak's Violin Concerto, and, by Brahms, the Opus 1 piano sonata in C, the scherzo of a violin sonata composed jointly with Schumann and Albert Dietrich, and the Violin Concerto.

Brahms and Joachim met in 1853 and they gave many concerts together, with Brahms at the piano or on the conductor's podium. Joachim was the elder by two years and, as a very young man, the more confident and the more technically accomplished composer of the two. Brahms quickly acquired the habit of submitting work in progress to Joachim for stern, specific, and carefully heeded criticism. In the 1880s the friendship was ruptured when Brahms too plainly took Amalie Joachim's side in the differences that brought the Joachims' marriage to an end in 1884. The Double Concerto for violin and cello was tendered and accepted as a peace offering in 1887 (Joachim and Robert Hausmann, cellist in the Joachim Quartet, were the first soloists). Their correspondence was resumed, almost as copiously as before, but intimacy was lost for good, and the prose is prickly with diplomatic formalities and flourishes.

The first mention of a concerto in the Brahms-Joachim correspondence occurs on 21 August 1878. Brahms was spending the summer at Portschach on Lake Worth in southern Austria, where a year previously he had begun his Second Symphony.* It was a region, he once said, where melodies were so abundant that one had to be careful not to step on them. Brahms and Joachim met at Portschach the end of that month. The correspondence continued, and plans were made for a tryout of the concerto with the orchestra of the Conservatory in Berlin, for Joachim to compose a cadenza, and for the premiere either with the Vienna Philharmonic or at the Leipzig Gewandhaus. Brahms's original plan for a four-movement work was scrapped. In November 1879 he wrote: "The middle movements have fallen by the wayside. Of course they were the two best. Meanwhile I am writing a feeble Adagio. "f

Joachim proposed a program to begin with Beethoven's Violin Concerto and closing with the Brahms, with songs, two movements from Bach's C major unaccompanied sonata, and an overture of his own in between. Brahms demurred: "Beethoven shouldn't come before mine—of course only because both are in D major. Perhaps the other way around—but it's a lot of D major—and not much else on the program." On New Year's Day of 1879, Joachim and Brahms introduced the work in that same hall in Leipzig where, just four weeks short of twenty years back, Brahms's First Piano Concerto had met with catastrophic, brutal rejection. Brahms had not written a concerto since, and curiosity was keen, the more so because there were few significant violin concertos: received opinion had it that there were in fact just two, Beethoven's and the Mendelssohn. The first movement rather puzzled the audience, the Adagio was greeted with some warmth, and the finale elicited real enthusiasm. About Joachim's playing there was no disagreement, and his cadenza was universally admired. Indeed, after the Vienna premiere two weeks later, Brahms reported to his friend Elisabet von Herzogenberg that Joachim had played the cadenza "so magnificently that people clapped right into my coda."

On 6 March, Joachim reported from London that he had dared play the concerto from memory for the first time, and he continued to champion it wherever he could. None of the early performances was so moving an occasion for Joachim and Brahms as the concert in celebration of the unveiling of the Schumann monument in Bonn on 2 May 1880: Brahms's concerto was the only work chosen that was not by Schumann.

* Fifty-seven years later, Alban Berg was delighted and proud to be writing his own Violin Concerto on the opposite shore of the same lake. fThe scherzo became the second movement of the Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat (1881).

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22 Meanwhile, composer and violinist continued to exchange questions, answers, and opinions about the concerto well into the summer of 1979, Brahms urging Joachim to propose ossias (easier alternatives), Joachim responding with suggestions for where and how the orchestral scoring might usefully be thinned out, with changes of violinistic figuration, and even with a considerable compositional emendation in the finale. Except for the last, Brahms accepted most of Joachim's proposals before he turned the material over to his publisher. In spite of Brahms's secure prestige by this point in his career, in spite of Joachim's ardent and effective sponsorship, the concerto did not easily make its way. It was thought a typical example of Brahmsian severity of manner; Hans von Billow's quip about the difference between Max Bruch who had written a concerto for the violin and Brahms who had written one against the violin was widely repeated; and as late as 1905, Brahms's devoted biographer, Florence May, was obliged to admit that "it would be too much to assert that it has as yet entirely conquered the heart of the great public." Fritz Kreisler, who took it into his repertory about 1900, had as much as anyone to do with changing that, and Brahms would be surprised to know that his concerto has surpassed Beethoven's in popularity (and that Mendelssohn's elegant essay is no longer thought of as being in that league at all).

To us it seems odd to think of playing the Beethoven and Brahms concertos on the same program. But then, the likeness that makes the idea an uncomfortable one for us was probably the very factor that made it attractive to Joachim, who was not, after all, presenting two established masterpieces but, rather, one classic, and a new and demanding work by a forty-five-year-old composer with a reputation for being "difficult." But Beethoven is present, in the choice of key, in the unhurried gait (though the tradition that turns Beethoven's and Brahms's "allegro, but not too much so" into an endlessly stretched out, energyless Andante does neither work any good), in the proportions of the three movements, in the fondness for filigree in the high register, in having the soloist enter in an accompanied cadenza, in leading the main cadenza not to a vigorous tutti but to a last unexpected and hushed reprise of a lyric theme (the second theme in Beethoven, the first in Brahms).

Brahms begins with a statement that is formal, almost neutral, and unharmonized except for the last two notes. But the sound itself is subtle—low strings and bas- soons, to which two horns are added, and then, with basses, two more. And the resumption, quietly and on a remote harmony, is altogether personal.* So striking a harmonic departure so early will take some justifying, and thus the surprising C major chord under the oboe's melody serves as signal that this movement aims to cover much space, that it must needs be expansive. A moment later, at the top of the brief crescendo, the rhythm broadens—that is, the beats are still grouped by threes, but it is three half-notes rather than three quarters, and this too establishes early a sense of immense breadth. On every level the music is rich in rhythmic surprise and subtlety: the aggressive theme for strings alone insists that the accents belong on the second beat, another idea dissolves order (and imposes a new order of its own) by moving in groups of five notes, the three-four/three-two ambiguity returns again and again. The musing and serene outcome of the cadenza is not so much a matter of the pianissimo and dolce and tranquillo that Brahms writes into the score as of the trance-like slow motion of the harmonies. (Things have changed in the last hundred years. The danger now is not that the audience will applaud as it did at the Vienna premiere, but that it will cough.)

When the great Pablo de Sarasate was asked whether he intended to learn the new Brahms concerto he replied, "I don't deny that it is very good music, but do you think I could fall so low as to stand, violin in hand, and listen to the oboe play the

* And, one might add, Beethovenian—inspired by the orchestra's first mysterious entrance in the Fourth Piano Concerto.

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24 only proper tune in the whole work?" What the oboe plays at the beginning of the Adagio is indeed one of the most wonderful melodies ever to come to Brahms. It is part of a long passage for winds alone, subtly voiced and anything other than a mere accompanied solo for the oboe, and a magical preparation for the return of the violin.* As the critic Jean-Jacques Normand charmingly puts it, "Le hautbois pro- pose, et le violin dispose. " It is strange that Sarasate should not have relished the opportunity to turn the oboe's chastely beautiful melody into ecstatic, super-violin- istic rhapsodies. A new and agitated music intervenes. Then the first ideas return, enriched, and with the wind sonorities and the high-flying violin beautifully com- bined. For the finale, Brahms returns to his old love of gypsy music, fascinatingly and inventively deployed, and the turn, just before the end, to a variant in 6/8 (heard, but not so notated) is a real Brahms signature. —Michael Steinberg

Now Artistic Adviser of the San Francisco Symphony, Michael Steinberg was the Boston Symphony Orchestra's Director of Publications from 1976 to 1979.

*A characteristic detail: the oboe melody is preceded by two bars of an F major chord for bassoons and horns. The entrance of the solo violin, which plays a variant of the oboe tune, is preceded by the same two measures, but given to the orchestral strings as they make their first appearance under the dissolving and receding wind-band music.

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26 Johannes Brahms Symphony No. 4 in E minor, Opus 98

Johannes Brahms was born in Hamburg, Germany, on 7 May 1833 and died in

Vienna on 3 April 1897. His first men- tion of his Fourth Symphony is in a letter of 19 August 1884 to his publisher, Fritz Simrock. The work must have been completed about a year later, and in October 1885 he gave a two-piano read- ing of it with Ignaz Br'ull in Vienna for a small group of friends including the critic Eduard Hanslick, the surgeon Theodor Billroth, the conductor Hans Richter, and the historian and Haydn biographer C.F Pohl. Brahms conducted

the first orchestral performance at Meiningen on 25 October 1885. The American premiere was to have taken place in Boston in November 1886.

Wilht I m Qericke in fart conducted the work at the public rehearsal on the 26th of that month, bid cancelled the scheduled performance after making highly critical remarks to th< audit nee about the new score. He did conduct it at the Boston Symphony concerts of 22 and 23 December 1886, but meanwhile Walter Damrosch had gotten ahead of him with a conct ri performance with the New York Symphony on 11 December. It has also been played by the Boston Symphony under Arthur Nikisch, Emit Paur, Carl Wendling, Max Fiedler, Karl Muck, Pierre Monteux, Serge Koussevitzky, Eugene Goossens, Stanley Chappie, George Szell, Charles Munch, Leonard Bernstein, Richard Burgin, Vladimir Oolschmann, Erich Leinsdorf, Rafael Kubelik, Carlo Maria Giulini, William Steinberg, Michael Tilson Thomas, Joseph Silverstein, Edo de Waart, Klaus Tennstedt,

Colin Davis, S( iji Ozawa, and Vaclav Neumann. Ozawa led the most recent Tangle- wood performance in August 1983 and the most recent subscription performances in September/October the same year. The score calls for two flutes and piccolo, two oboes, two clarint ts. two bassoons and contrabassoon, four horns, two trumpets, three trom- bones, timpani, triangle, and strings. Piccolo and triangle appear in the third move- ment only, contrabassoon in the third and fourth movements only, and the trombones in the fourth movement only.

Brahms sat on his First Symphony for close to twenty years. He was making sketches in the late '50s, friends like Clara Schumann and Albert Dietrich saw the first movement in more or less completed state in the early '60s, the C major horn call that now floods the introduction to the finale with sunlight served as a birthday greeting to Clara in 1868, but still, in 1872, Brahms wrote, "I shall never write a symphony! You can't have a notion what it's like always to hear such a giant marching behind you." It was late 1876 when he at last released the work for performance. The terror of Beethoven and the terror of the idea of symphony once overcome, three more such works followed in relatively quick succession. The Second came along almost right away, having been begun, finished, performed, and pub- lished, all in 1877. Then there was an interval filled with other work—the Violin Concerto and Second Piano Concerto, the Academic Festival and Tragic overtures, N'dnie and Gesang der Parzen, chamber music including the G major violin sonata, C major trio, and F major string quintet, solo piano pieces, songs, and a second book of Hungarian Dances. The Third Symphony, begun in 1882, was finished in the summer of 1883, and the Fourth seems to have been started during the summer of

27 Week 3 the following year. That year he chose Miirzzuschlag in Styria for his annual holiday*: "The cherries don't ever get to be sweet and edible in this part of the world," he wrote to several of his friends, adding that he feared his new music had taken on something of their flavor.

As always, he announced a work in progress with caution. To his publisher he made only some vague noise about a need for paper with more staves. To Hans von Biilow he reported in September 1885: "Unfortunately, nothing came of the piano concerto that I should have liked to write. I don't know, the two earlier ones are too good or maybe too bad, but at any rate they are obstructive to me. But I do have a couple of entractes; put together they make what is commonly called a symphony. On tour with the Meiningen orchestra, I have often imagined with pleasure how it would be to rehearse it with you, nicely and at leisure, and I'm still imagining that now, wondering by the way whether it would have much of an audience."

Meiningen, about 100 miles east and slightly north of Frankfurt, and now just over the border into the German Democratic Republic, was the capital of the tiny principality of Saxe-Meiningen.f In the eighteenth century, when Johann Sebastian

*During the year, in the city, Brahms sketched new works and read publishers' proofs. He also still gave occasional concerts. Summers, in the country, he did his most concentrated compos- ing. These were working holidays, then, and the choice of site—and no place, however lovely, served him more than three years in a row—was one of the principal preoccupations of each spring. t"Ah, good morning, Your Highness," said Brahms once to Prince George II. "I've just taken a quick pre-breakfast walk through the neighboring kingdoms."

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28 Bach's third cousin, Johann Ludwig Bach, was Capellmeister there, Meiningen's orchestra had an excellent reputation. The little town continued to have a vital theatrical and musical community, and during the last part of the nineteenth century, when first Hans von Bulow and then Fritz Steinbach were its conductors, the Meiningen Orchestra was one of Europe's elite musical organizations. Liszt,

Wagner, and Brahms were associated with it, as was Max Reger in later years; Richard Strauss learned his trade as conductor with von Bulow and the Meiningen players; Richard Muhlfeld, the great clarinetist for whom Brahms wrote his two sonatas, trio, and quintet, was in the orchestra; and Donald Tovey began his career as a writer about music when he supplied program notes for the orchestra's visit to London.

Von Biilow, fifty when he began his five-year stint at Meiningen in 1880, was one of the most imposing and brilliant musical personalities of the century. A remarkable pianist, conductor, and polemicist, he was one of the most prominent of the Wag- nerians and conducted the first performances of Tristan and Meistersinger. He was caught in a wretched personal situation when his wife, the daughter of Franz Liszt, left him for Wagner. He continued to conduct Wagner's music, but he became one of the most fervent admirers and effective champions of Brahms (and thus one of the few to bridge what seemed then a vast gulf between musical ideologies*). He was, in any event, delighted to have Brahms come to Meiningen with his new symphony and

*He was also the first to play the Tchaikovsky B-flat minor concerto—in Boston, 25 October 1875— a commitment that would have united the Brahmsians and the Wagnerians in their disapproval.

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30 cautiously explored the possibility of including composer and work on a tour of the Rhineland and Holland. In due course, Brahms arrived at Meiningen, and the new symphony went into rehearsal. "Difficult, very difficult," reported von Biilow, adding a few days later, "No. 4 gigantic, altogether a law unto itself, quite new, steely individuality. Exudes unparalleled energy from first note to last." The pre- miere went well, and the audience tried hard but unsuccessfully to get an encore of the scherzo. Von Biilow conducted a repeat performance a week later, after which the orchestra set off on its tour, with Brahms conducting the new symphony in Frank- furt, Essen, Elberfeld, Utrecht, Amsterdam, The Hague, Krefeld, Cologne, and Wiesbaden. It was liked and admired everywhere, though Vienna rather resisted the performance two months later by the Philharmonic under Richter, a performance unfortunately prepared nowhere near as well as the series in Meiningen.

It is curious that while the public took to the Fourth, Brahms's friends, including professionals and near-professionals like Eduard Hanslick and Elisabeth von

Herzogenberg, had some difficulty with it. Perhaps that can be explained. The public, except in Vienna, heard superbly realized performances, while Hanslick, for example, knew it first from a two-piano reading (he remarked it was like being beaten up by two tremendously intelligent and witty people), and Frau von Herzogenberg, cursing the difficult horn and trumpet transpositions, had to decipher it at the piano from the manuscript of Brahms's full score. Then, where the public would have chiefly perceived and been carried away by the sweep of the whole, the professionals, with their special kind of connoisseurship and perception of detail, would have been more struck by what was—and is—genuinely difficult in the score.

It is fascinating, for example, to learn that the opening was disconcerting to Joseph Joachim. Something preparatory, he suggests, even if it were only two measures of unison B, would help listeners find their way into the piece (in fact, reading his correspondence with Brahms, we learn that originally there were some preparatory measures which were struck out and destroyed). The second statement of the opening melody was difficult to unravel, the theme itself now given in broken octaves and in dialogue between second and first violins,* with elaborate decorative material in violas and woodwinds. Almost everyone was upset over what seems now one of the most wonderful strokes in the work, the place where Brahms seems to make the conventional, classical repeat of the exposition but changes one chord after eight measures, thereby opening undreamed-of harmonic horizons, and only then, after so leisurely a start, moves into the closely argued development. On the other hand, everyone admired the dreamily mysterious entry into the recapitulation—the long sequence of sighing one-measure phrases, subsiding, sinking into one of only four places marked ppp in all of Brahms's orchestral music, from which oboes, clarinets, and bassoons emerge in their severe yet gentle reediness to sound the first four notes of the opening melody, in immense magnification, strings weaving an enigmatic garland about the last note. The next four notes are treated the same way, and then the music's melancholy flow resumes in the expected way.

For Brahms to build a slow movement over the same keynote as the first move- ment is rare indeed; yet he does it here and finds an inspired way of celebrating simultaneously the continuity and the contrast of E minor (the first movement) and E major (the second). Horns play something beginning on E—a note we have well in our ears after the emphatic close of the Allegro—but which sounds like C major. It turns out to be something more like the old Phrygian mode, and it is in any case fresh enough and ambiguous enough to accommodate the clarinets' hushed sugges-

This place presents an excellent reason for reverting sometimes to the old seating of orchestras that had first and second violins on opposite sides of the stage.

31 Week 3 .

Batonpoised,

the expectant hush . . a rising crescendo signals the renewal ofaproud and cherished tradition. We salute Mr. SeijiOzawa and the Members ofthe Boston Symphony Orchestra with our best wishesfor a triumphant one hundred fifth season.

ioraan marsh Jordan Marsh M A Unit of Allied Stores.

32 tion that one might place a G-sharp over the E, thus inaugurating an idyllic E major. But the notion of a C major beginning is not forgotten and will be fully pursued in the massively rambunctious scherzo.

For the finale, Brahms goes back to the E minor from which he began, but with a theme whose first chord is A minor and thus very close to the world of the just finished scherzo. Brahms's knowledge of Baroque and Renaissance music was extensive and, above all, profound, and so, when he writes a passacaglia, which must have seemed like sheer madness to the up-to-date Wagnerians, he does it like a man composing living music, with no dust of antiquarianism about it. He had been impressed by a cantata, then believed to be by Bach (listed as No. 150, Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich), whose last movement is a set of variations over a repeated bass, and he had maintained that something could still be done with such a bass, though the harmonies would probably have to be made richer. And of course he knew well the great Chaconne for violin solo. The finale of the Haydn Variations of 1873 was a brilliantly achieved trial run, but the scope of the grand and tragic finale of the Fourth Symphony is on another level altogether. Woodwinds and brasses, joined at the last by rolling drums, proclaim a sequence of eight chords. The trombones have been saved for this moment, and even now it is characteristic that the statement is forte rather than fortissimo. The movement falls into four large sections. First, twelve statements of the eight-bar set, with bold variations of texture, harmonic detail, and rhetoric. This phase subsides, to inaugurate a contrasting section, first in minor still, but soon to move into major, in which the measures are twice as long, the movement thus twice as slow. (Brahms is explicit here about wishing the beats, though there are now twice as many of them per measure, to move at the same speed as before: in other words, the double length of the measures is enough to make this "the slow movement" of the finale, and the conductor should not impose a further slowing down of his own.) Four of these bigger variations make up this section. The original pace is resumed with what appears to be a recapitulation. But strings intervene passionately midway through the eight-chord sequence, and the ensuing sixteen variations bring music more urgently dramatic than any yet heard in the symphony. The passion and energy are released in an extensive, still developing, still experiencing coda at a faster speed. Thus the symphony drives to its conclusion, forward-thrusting yet measured, always new in detail yet organically unified, stern, noble, and with that sense of inevitability that marks the greatest music. —M.S.

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Florence May, an Englishwoman who knew Brahms and studied piano with him, produced a comprehensive two-volume biography of the composer which is available in an expensive reprint of the original 1905 edition (Scholarly). Karl Geiringer's Brahms: His Life and Work is a smaller but no less important biography (Oxford). Also useful are Peter Latham's Brahms in the Master Musicians series (Littlefield paperback); John Horton's Brahms Orchestral Music in the series of BBC Music Guides (U. of paperback); Julius Harrison's chapter on Brahms in The

Symphony: Vol. I, Haydn to Dvorak, edited by Robert Simpson (Penguin paperback); and Bernard Jacobson's The Music of Johannes Brahms (Fairleigh Dickinson). Donald Francis Tovey's program notes on the Brahms Violin Concerto and Brahms Fourth are in his Essays in Musical Analysis (Oxford paperback). Of special interest are Arnold Schoenberg's essay "Brahms the Progressive" in Style and Idea (St. Martin's), and an interview with "Carlo Maria Giulini on Brahms" in Bernard Jacobson's Conductors on Conducting (Columbia Publishing Co.). There is a beau- tiful facsimile of the holograph of the Brahms Violin Concerto, including Joachim's emendations, and with introductory essays by Jon Newsom and Yehudi Menuhin, issued by the Harvard University Press and the Library of Congress.

Uto Ughi has recorded the Brahms Violin Concerto with Wolfgang Sawallisch and the Philharmonia Orchestra (RCA). Of other currently available recordings, those of interest include Nathan Milstein's with Eugen Jochum and the Berlin Philharmonic (DG), Ulf Hoelscher with Klaus Tennstedt and the Northwest German Radio Orchestra (Angel), Itzhak Perlman with Carlo Maria Giulini and the Chicago Sym- phony (Angel), and David Oistrakh with Otto Klemperer and the Philharmonia (Angel). Of considerable historic interest are Joseph Szigeti's 1928 performance with Hamilton Harty and the Halle Orchestra (Columbia, monaural, in "The Art of Joseph Szigeti," a six-record set); Fritz Kreisler's 1929 recording with Leo Blech and the Berlin State Opera Orchestra (Japanese EMI, monaural); and Yehudi Menuhin's performance with Wilhelm Furtwangler and the Lucerne Festival Orchestra (Seraphim, monaural). Finally, there are two recordings by Ginette Neveu, who died tragically in a plane crash in 1949 when she was thirty. One is with Issay Dobrowen and the Philharmonia (EMI, monaural, in the four-record album "The Complete Recorded Legacy of Ginette Neveu"). The other is a live perform- ance from May 1948 with Hans Schmidt-Isserstedt and the Northwest German Radio Orchestra, offering a greater expressive range and clearer sound—including, unfortunately, noise from the audience (Educational Media Associates, album RR-550, a two-record set also including live performances by Neveu of the Beethoven Concerto, Chausson's Poeme, and the Ravel Tzigane).

The Brahms Fourth is a curious piece: I have loved it since I first heard it, but the severity of the ending often leaves me feeling unsatisfied. For this reason, I rarely listen to it on record, but look forward to live performances which draw me more purposefully into the music. There are a number of recordings which must be u recommended, however, and which offer a variety of approaches, among them Leonard Bernstein's new, live-concert recording with the Vienna Philharmonic (DG), Carlo Maria Giulini's with the Chicago Symphony (Angel), Herbert von Karajan's with the Berlin Philharmonic (DG), Wilhelm Furtwangler's with the Berlin Philharmonic (DG, mono), and, finally, Arturo Toscanini's with the NBC Symphony (RCA, mono), which got me into this whole business in the first place. —Marc Mandel

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36 Giuseppe Sinopoli

temporary and electronic music at the Ven- ice Conservatory. He moved to Vienna shortly afterwards to study conducting with Hans Swarowsky, and in 1977 he attracted worldwide attention with his con- ducting of Aida at Venice's Teatro La Fenice. Mr. Sinopoli is a noted composer as well as conductor; the world premiere of his opera Lou Salome was given in May 1981 by the Bavarian State Opera in Munich. He has conducted new productions oiAttila and Macbeth at the Vienna State Opera, where he opened the current season with Aida. He has conducted Macbeth and Luisa Miller at the Hamburg State Opera, and Manon Lescaut at the Royal Opera, Covent Garden. He made his Bayreuth debut this past summer with a new production of Tannh'auser. Conductor Giuseppe Sinopoli, who made his Metropolitan Opera debut conducting Mr. Sinopoli appears as guest conductor orches- the new Franco Zeffirelli production of with a number of the world's leading Philharmonic, Tosca last March, makes his Boston Sym- tras, among them the Berlin phony Orchestra debut with two programs the Chicago Symphony, the Israel Philhar- Philharmonic. this fall. Mr. Sinopoli is principal conductor monic, and the New York of the Philharmonia Orchestra of London His recordings for Deutsche Grammophon and of the Orchestra dell'Accademia Nazio- include Verdi's Nabucco and Puccini's nale di Santa Cecilia in Rome. Born in Ven- Manon Lescaut, and the Schumann Sym- ice in 1946, he began his musical studies at phony No. 2 with the Vienna Philharmonic. age twelve, continuing them with various For Philips, Mr. Sinopoli has recorded distinguished professors while also com- Verdi's Macbeth, an album of Verdi over- pleting the degree of Doctor of Medicine. tures with the Vienna Philharmonic, and In 1972 he was appointed professor of con- Rigoletto, which will be released this fall.

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38 Uto Ughi

Life in Music" Award to a classical per- forming artist, is to raise funds for the restoration of Venice's works of art.

Mr. Ughi's recordings for the RCA Red Seal and Musical Heritage Society labels include the Brahms and Beethoven violin concertos conducted by Wolfgang Sawallisch, the Bruch G minor and Men- delssohn violin concertos under the direction of Georges Pretre, and violin sonatas of Beethoven and Mozart. He plays the "Van Houten-Kreutzer" Stradivarius of 1701, which, according to reliable tradition, once belonged to Rudolf Kreutzer, the dedi- catee of Beethoven's famous sonata. These performances are Mr. Ughi's first with the Boston Symphony Orchestra.

Bom near Milan in 1944, violinist Uto Ughi made his solo debut at age seven at Milan's Teatro Lirico. Mr. Ughi studied with Georges Enescu, the teacher of Yehudi Menuhin, and with Corrado Romano, a pupil of Carl Plesch. In 1959 he made his first European concert appearances, per- forming in Paris, London, Vienna, Berlin, Oslo, Amsterdam, Madrid, and Barcelona. The Australian Broadcasting Commission invited him in 1963 to Australia and New Zealand, where, as part of the "Celebrities Series," he gave more than forty concerts.

Uto Ughi's active career as a concert art- ist has taken him all over the world, from the United States to the Soviet Union, from Rental apartments South America to Japan. He has appeared for people who'd with such important orchestras as the New rather hear French horns Philharmonia, the Royal Philharmonic, and than Car hornS* Enjoy easy living within the Amsterdam Concertgebouw, as well as easy reach of Symphony Hall. at the Teatro alia Scala and the Maggio New in-town apartments Musicale Fiorentino. Mr. Ughi has with doorman, harbor views, all luxuries, appeared under the direction of such pres- health tigious conductors as Sir John Barbirolli, club. Sergiu Celibidache, Andre Cluytens, Kiril land 2 bedrooms and Kondrashin, Carlo Maria Giulini, Bernard enthouse duplex Haitink, Georges Pretre, x^^»l^^^^wP^^ P Gennady apartments. Rozhdestvensky, Malcolm Sargent, and Wolfgang Sawallisch. Elected a member of THE DEVONSHIRE the Santa Cecilia Academy in 1978, Mr. ./^ One Devonshire Place. (Between Washington Ughi founded the "Homage to Venice" Fes- I = I and Devonshire Streets, off State Street) Boston. tival in the following year. The purpose of Renting Office Open 7 Days. Tel: (617) 720-3410. Park free in our indoor the festival, which presents its annual "A garage while inspecting models.

39 Classical, rock and all that jazz sound better on audio systems by ADS.

For proof see an ADS dealer. For information call (617) 658- 5100. Or write to Analog & Digital Systems, 425 Progress Way, Wilmington, MA 01887.

Audio Apart. The Boston Symphony Orchestra gratefully acknowledges the following corporations and professional organizations for their generous and valuable support during the past or current fiscal year. (* denotes support of at least $2,500; capitalization denotes support of at least $5,000; names which are both capitalized and underscored within the Business Leaders' listing comprise the Business Honor Roll.)

1985-86 Business Honor Roll ($10,000+)

ADD Inc Architects Kikkoman Corporation Philip M. Briggs Katsumi Mogi Advanced Management Liberty Mutual Insurance Companies Associates, Inc. Melvin B. Bradshaw Harvey Chet Krentzman Lotus Development Corporation Analog Devices, Inc. Mitchell D. Kapor RayStata Manufacturers Life Insurance Company Bank of Boston E. Sydney Jackson William L. Brown McKinsey & Company, Inc. Bank of New England Robert P. O'Block Peter H. McCormick Mobil Chemical Corporation BayBanks, Inc. Rawleigh Warner, Jr.

William M. Crozier, Jr. Morse Shoe, Inc. Boston Edison Company Manuel Rosenberg Stephen J. Sweeney New England Mutual Life The Boston Globe/ Insurance Company Affiliated Publications Edward E. Phillips William 0. Taylor New England Telephone Company Cahners Publishing Company, Inc. Gerhard M. Freche Norman L. Cahners Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Co. Country Curtains Robert D. Happ Jane P. Fitzpatrick Pneumo Corporation Creative Gourmets, Ltd. Gerard A. Fulham

Stephen E. Elmont The Prince Company, Inc.

Digital Equipment Corporation Joseph P. Pellegrino Kenneth H. Olsen Raytheon Company Dynatech Corporation Thomas L. Phillips J. P. Barger The Red Lion Inn Exxon Corporation John H. Fitzpatrick

Stephen Stamas The Signal Companies, Inc. GTE Electrical Products Paul M. Montrone Dean T. Langford State Street Bank & Trust Company General Cinema Corporation William S. Edgerly

Richard A. Smith Teradyne, Inc. General Electric Company Alexander V d'Arbeloff John F. Welch, Jr. WCRB/Charles River Broadcasting, Inc. The Gillette Company Richard L. Kaye Colman M. Mockler, Jr. WCVB-TV 5 John Hancock Mutual Life S. James Coppersmith Insurance Company Wang Laboratories, Inc. E. James Morton An Wang Honeywell Weston/Loblaw Companies Ltd. Warren G. Sprague Richard Currie Stanley H. Kaplan Educational Zayre Corporation Centers, Ltd. Maurice Segall Susan B. Kaplan

41 or before and after the Symphony, a casual suggestion.

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42 Business Leaders (S 1,000 + )

Accountants •LEA Group Electrical/HVAC Eugene R. Eisenberg ARTHUR ANDERSEN & CO. Guzovsky Electrical William F. Meagher Banking Corporation Edward Guzovsky COOPERS &LYBRAND BANK OF BOSTON *p.h. mechanical corporation Vincent M. O'Reilly William L. Brown Paul A. Hayes •Charles E. DiPesa& Co. BANK OF NEW ENGLAND R&D ELECTRICAL CO., INC. William F.DiPesa Peter H. McCormick Richard D. Pedone ERNST & WH INN EY BAYBANKS, INC. James G. Maguire William M. Crozier, Jr. Electronics KMG Main Hurdman Chase Manhattan Corporation Larrenaga Alden Electronics, Inc. William A. Robert M. Jorgensen John M. Alden PEAT, MARWICK, CITICORP/CITIBANK CO. C & K Components, Inc. MITCHELL & Clark Coggeshall Robert D. Happ Charles A. Coolidge, Jr. Framingham Trust Company The Mitre Corporation TOICHER0SS&C0. William A. Anastos James T McBride Robert R. Everett Mutual Bank for Savings •Parlex Corporation ARTHUR YOUNG ft COMPANY Keith G. Willoughby Thomas R McDcnnott Herbert W Pollack •Patriot Bancorporation •Signal Technology Corporation Public Adw rtiting Relations Thomas R. Heaslip William E. Cook Harold Cabot & Co., Inc. Rockland Trust Company

James I. Summers John F. Spence, Jr. Energy

•Berk and Company, Inc. SHAWMUT BANK OF BOSTON ATLANTIC RICHFIELD Kenneth A. Berk William F. Craig FOUNDATION •Hill, Hollidav. ( 'onnors, STATE STREET BANK & William F. Kieschnick Coemopulos, Inc. TRUST COMPANY CABOT CORPORATION .lack Connors, Jr. William S. Edgerly FOUNDATION Kenyonft Bcknardt, Inc. •USTCorp. Ruth C. Scheer Thomas J. Mahoney James V. Sidell EXXON CORPORATION N E WSOM E & COM PA N Y Stephen Stamas Building/Contracting Peter Farwell MOBIL CHEMICAL National Lumber Company Ybnng & Rubicain CORPORATION Louis L. Kaitz Alexander Kroll Rawleigh Warner, Jr. •Perini Corporation • Companies, Inc. rospact At David B. Perini Paul J. Montle •Northrop Corporation •J.F White Contracting Thomas V. Jones Company Engineering PNECMO CORPORATION Thomas J. White Analytical Systems Gerard A. Fulham Corporation Comm u n ication/Displays Engineering Apparel Michael B. Rukin *Giltspur Exhibits/Boston Webster Engineering *Knapp King-Size Corporation Thomas E. Knott, Jr. Stone & Corporation Winthrop A. Short •Harbor Greenery William F. Allen, Jr. William Carter Company Diane Valle Manson H. Carter Education Entertainment/Media Arch itrctu re/Design •Bentley College GENERAL CINEMA ADD INC ARCHITECTS Gregory H. Adamian CORPORATION Philip M. Briggs Richard A. Smith STANLEY H. KAPLAN Interalia Design Associates EDUCATIONAL CENTER National Amusements, Inc. Judith Brown Caro Susan B. Kaplan Sumner M. Redstone

43 Finance/Venture Capital MORSE SHOE, INC. THE RED LION INN Manuel Rosenberg John H. Fitzpatrick *Farrell, Healer & Company Richard Farrell THE SPENCER *Sheraton Boston THE FIRST BOSTON COMPANIES, INC. Hotel & Towers CORPORATION C. Charles Marran Gary Sieland George L. Shinn STRIDE RITE Sonesta International Hotels Kaufman & Company CORPORATION Corporation Paul Sonnabend Sumner Kaufman Arnold S. Hiatt THE WESTIN HOTEL *Narragansett Capital Bodo Lemke Corporation Furnishings/Housewares Arthur D. Little COUNTRY CURTAINS Insurance Pioneer Financial Jane P. Fitzpatrick Richard E. Bolton *A.I.M. Insurance Agency, Inc. Hitchcock Chair Company James A. Radley *TA Associates Thomas H. Glennon Peter A. Brooke Arkwright-Boston Insurance Jofran Sales, Inc. Frederick J. Bumpus Food Service/Industry Robert D. Roy *Cameron & Colby Co., Inc. ARCHER DANIELS Graves D. Hewitt MIDLAND COMPANY •Consolidated Group, Inc. Dwayne 0. Andreas High Technology Woolsey S. Conover Nut Allied Corporation Azar Company •Frank B. Hall & Company of Edward Azar Edward L. Hennessy, Jr. Massachusetts Boston Showcase Company 'Computer Partners, Inc. Colby Hewitt, Jr. Jason Starr Paul J. Crowley JOHN HANCOCK MUTUAL CREATIVE GOURMETS, LTD. *Data Packaging Corporation LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Stephen E. Elmont Otto Morningstar E. James Morton *Encore Computer Corporation Dunkin' Donuts, Inc. Johnson & Higgins Kenneth Robert M. Rosenberg G. Fisher Robert A. Cameron General Eastern Instruments *Johnson, O'Hare Co., Inc. LIBERTY MUTUAL Corporation Harry O'Hare INSURANCE COMPANIES Pieter R. Wiederhold KIKKOMAN CORPORATION Melvin B. Bradshaw Katsumi Mogi *Helix Technology Corporation MANUFACTURERS LIFE Frank Gabron *0'Donnell-Usen Fisheries INSURANCE COMPANY Interactive Data Corporation Corporation E. Sydney Jackson John Rutherfurd Arnold S. Wolf NEW ENGLAND MUTUAL THE PRINCE COMPANY, INC. POLAROID CORPORATION LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY William J. McCune, Jr. Joseph P. Pellegrino Edward E. Phillips

*Roberts and Associates RAYTHEON COMPANY Prudential Life Insurance Thomas L. Phillips Richard J. Kunzig Company of America Robert J. Scales Silenus Wines, Inc. THE SIGNAL COMPANIES, INC. James B. Hangstefer Paul M. Mont rone Sullivan Risk Management Group *The Taylor Wine Company, Inc. John Herbert Sullivan Michael J. Doyle Hotel/Restaurant WESTON/LOBLAW Sun Life Assurance Company COMPANIES LTD. Boston Park Plaza of Canada Richard Currie Hotel & Towers David D. Horn Roger A. Saunders •Charles H. Watkins & I Footwear *The Hampshire House Company, Inc.

Chelsea Industries, Inc. Thomas A. Kershaw Richard P. Nyquist Ronald G. Casty * Howard Johnson Company *Mercury International G. Michael Hostage Investments Trading Corporation Mildred's Chowder House *ABD Securities Corporation Irving A. Wiseman James E. Mulcahy Theodor Schmidt-Scheuber

44 Amoskeag Company Jason M. Cortell & Kenett Corporation Joseph B. Ely II Associates, Inc. Julius Kendall Jason M. Cortell Bear, Stearns & Company •Leach & Garner Company Stuart Zerner General Electric Consulting Philip F. Leach Services Corporation *E.F Hutton & Company, Inc. L.E. Mason Company James J. O'Brien, Jr. S. Paul Crabtree Harvey B. Berman Goldman, Sachs & Company Kazmaier Associates, Inc. Ludlow Corporation Stephen B. Kay Richard W Kazmaier, Jr. Arthur Cohen Associates, Inc. HCW, Inc. •Killingsworth Monsanto Company William Killingsworth John M. Plukas R. John P. Dushney COMPANY, INC. •Kensington Investment McKINSEY & NEW ENGLAND BUSINESS Company Robert P. O'Block SERVICE, INC. Alan E. Lewis Nelson Communications, Inc. Richard H. Rhoads Bruce D. Nelson LOOMISSAYLES& •Plymouth Rubber Company, Inc.

COMPANY Rath & Strong, Inc. Maurice J. Hamilburg Robert L. Kemp Arnold 0. Putnam •Rand-Whitney Corporation Moseley, Hallgarten, The Wyatt Company Robert Kraft Estabrook & Weeden, Inc. Michael H. Davis Superior Pet Products, Inc. Fred S. Moseley Richard J. Phelps

•Putnam Mutual Funds, Inc. Tech Pak, Inc. Lawrence J. Lasser William F. Rogers, Jr. •Tucker, Anthony & •Termiflex Corporation R.L.Day, Inc. Manufacturing/Industry William E. Fletcher Gerald Segel *Towle Manufacturing Company •Woodstock Corporation Acushnet Company Leonard Florence Frank B. Condon John T Ludes *Trina, Inc. Alles Corporation Legal Thomas L. Easton Stephen S. Berman Cargill, Masterman & Culbert H.K. Webster Company, Inc. Ames Safety Envelope Thomas E.Cargill, Jr. Dean K. Webster Company Dickerman Law Offices Robert H. Arnold Webster Spring Company, Inc. Lola Dickerman A.M. Levine Checon Corporation Gadsby & Hannah Donald E. Conaway •Wellman, Inc. Harry R. Hauser Arthur 0. Wellman, Jr. Dennison Manufacturing •Goldstein & Manello Company Richard J. Snyder Nelson S. Gifford

HERRICK& SMITH Econocorp, Inc. Shepard M. Remis Richard G. Lee •Nissenbaum Law Offices ERVING PAPER MILLS Media Gerald L. Nissenbaum Charles B. Housen THE BOSTON GLOBE/ Sherburne, Powers & Needham •Flexcon Company, Inc. AFFILIATED Daniel Needham, Jr. Mark R. Ungerer PUBLICATIONS Management/Financial GENERAL ELECTRIC William 0. Taylor Consulting COMPANY •The Boston Herald John F. Welch, Jr. ADVANCED MANAGEMENT Patrick J. Purcell ASSOCIATES, INC. GENERAL ELECTRIC WBZ-TV 4 Harvey Chet Krentzman COMPANY/LYNN Thomas L. Goodgame Frank E. Pickering BLP Associates WCIB-FM Bernard L. Plansky THE GILLETTE COMPANY Lawrence K. Justice *Bain & Company Colman M. Mockler, Jr. WCRB/CHARLES RIVER William W Bain, Jr. •Harvard Folding Box Co., Inc. BROADCASTING, INC. THE BOSTON Melvin A. Ross Richard L. Kaye CONSULTING GROUP Kendall Company WCVB-TV 5 Arthur P. Contas J. Dale Sherratt S. James Coppersmith

45 *WNEV-TV 7 Real Estate/Development 'Neiman-lftarcni William D. Roddy Seymour L. Yanoff •Boston Financial Technology Group, Inc. •Purity Supreme, Inc. Frank P. Giacomazzi Musical Instruments Fred N. Pratt, Jr. Saks Fifth Avenue •Baldwin Piano & Organ Combined Properties, Inc. Ronald J. Hoffman Company Stanton L. Black R.S. Harrison *John M. Corcoran & Co. Shaw's Supermarkets Stanton W. Davis Avedis Zildjian Company John M. Corcoran Armand Zildjian *Corcoran, M ullins, Jennison, Inc. THE STOP & SHOP Joseph E. Corcoran COMPANIES, INC. Avram J. Goldberg *The Flatley Company Personnel Thomas J. Flatley ZAYRE CORPORATION Dumont Kiradjieff& Moriarty •Fowler, Goedecke, Ellis & Maurice Segal 1 Edward J. Kiradjieff O'Connor no Inc. Sen Medical *Emerson Personnel, William J. O'Connor Rhoda Warren 'Charles River Breeding Historic Mill Properties Laboratories. Inc. *TAD Technical Services Bert Paley Corporation Henry L. Foster •Meredith & Grew, Incorporated David J. McGrath, Jr. 'Coiiipu-Chein Laboratories, Inc. George If. Lovejoy, .Jr. Claude L. Boiler Northland Investment Printing/Graphic Design Damon ( tarporation Corporation David I. Kosowsky *Bowne of Boston, Inc. Robert A. Danziger Albert G. Mather •HCA Foundation •Provident Financial Services, Lnc Hospital ( lorporation of *Bradford & Bigelow, Inc. Robert \V Brady America John D. Galligan Ryan, Elliott Conghlin & Donald E. Btrangc Customforms, Inc. John Ryan David A. Granoff 8i n Benjamin Schore Company DANIELS PRINTING Benjamin Schore •Victor Grillo & Associates COMPANY Victor N. Grillo •Winthrop Securities ( Jo., Inc. Lee S. Daniels David C. Hewitt •Ogden Services Corporation •Label Art, Inc. William F. Council

J. William Flynn Tranl Transportation •United Lithograph, Inc. 'Heritage Travel. Inc. Leonard A. Bernheimer Retail Donald R. Sohn •Weymouth Design, Inc. GROl'P Michael E. Weymouth Child World, Inc. THE TRANS-LEASE Dennis H. Barron John J McCarthy. Jr.

Publishing FILENE'S Utilitiei Michael J. Babcoek *ADCO Publishing Company, Inc. BOSTON EDISON Samuel D. Gorfinkle Herman, Inc. COMPANY Bernard A. Herman Addison-Wesley Publishing Stephen J. Sweeney Company Hills Department Stores EASTERN GAS & FUEL Donald R. Hammonds Stephen A. Goldberger ASSOCIATES CAHNERS PUBLISHING •Jordan Marsh Company William J. Pruyn COMPANY, INC. Elliot Stone New England Electric System Norman L. Cahners Karten's Jewelers Guy W Nichols ; i HOUGHTON MIFFLIN Joel Karten NEW ENGLAND COMPANY Marshall's, Inc. TELEPHONE COMPANY Marlowe G. Teig Frank H. Brenton Gerhard M. Freche

46 " The following Members of the Massachusetts High Technology * Council support the BSO through the BSO Business & Professional Leadership Program: •-;-... :

•AT&T DYNATECH LOTUS DEVELOPMENT — Peter ( 'assels CORPORATION CORPORATION ANALOG DEVICES, INC. J. P. Barge r Mitchell D. Kapor Ray Stata •EG&G,Inc. •M/A-COM, Inc. *The Analytic Sciences Dean W. Freed Vessarios G. Chigas Corporation •Epsilon Data Management, •Masscomp Arthur Gelb Inc. August P. Klein APOLLO COMPUTER, Thomas O. Jones Massachusetts High INC. The Foxboro Company Technology Council, Inc. Thomas A. Yanderslice EarleW. Pitt Howard P. Foley Corporation Aritech *GCA Corporation MILLIPORE .lames Synk A. Milton (Jreenberg CORPORATION 'An^at. Inc. GTE ELECTRICAL John G. Mulvany Roger I )• Wellington PRODUCTS •Orion Research Incorporated BMF ( 7orporation I )ean T. Langford Alexander Jenkins III Boruefa B. Fruastajer (JenRad Foundation Corporation PRIME COMPUTER, INC. •Barry Wright Linda B. Smoker Ralph Z. Sorenson Joe M. Henson •Haemoneties, Inc. BOLT AND •Printed Circuit Corporation BERANEK John F. White NK W.MAN INC. Peter Sarmanian Harbridge House, Inc. Stephen H. Lew SofTech, Inc. George Rabstejnek *Compugraphic Corporatioo Justus Lowe, Jr. Hewlett-Packard Company Carl K. Dantas •Sprague Electric Alexander R. Rankin Company Computer-vision Corporation John L. Sprague Martin Allen HONEYWELL Warren G. Sprague •Tech/Ops, Inc. Coming Class Works Marvin G. Schorr Foundation IBM CORPORATION TERADYNE, INC. Richard B. Bessey Paul J. Palmer Alexander V. d'Arbeloff •Cullinet Software, Inc. Impact Systems, Inc. John J Cullinane Melvin D. Platte Thermo Electron Corporation George •Dennison Computer Instron Corporation N. Hatsopoulos Supplies, Inc. Harold Hindman WANG LABORATORIES, Charles L. Reed, Jr. •Ionics, Incorporated INC. DIGITAL EQUIPMENT Arthur L. Goldstein An Wang CORPORATION •Arthur D. Little, Inc. *XRE Corporation Kenneth H. Olsen John F. Magee John K. Grady

47 /4-^ fyir'

Elegant suppers 5:30- 12:00, Mon.-Thurs .; 5:30-8:00, Fri and Sat.

Bostons classic 4-star restaurant at the I tave McKenna, resident pianist At the Copley Plaza Hotel. Valet parking. 267-5300. Copley Plaza Hotel Valet parking 267-5300. MORE MUSIC FORYOUR MONEY. Whether you're looking for an opera or an oratorio, a ballet or a baroque trumpet fanfare, you're sure to find what you want at the Classical Record Center at Barnes & Noble.

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Classical Record Center at Barnes & NoWe

395 Washington Street (at Downtown Crossing)

BARNES Mon.-Fri., 9:30-6:30 Sat., 9:30-6:00 &NOBLE 12:00-6:00 Sun.,

48 The Boston Symphony Orchestra gratefully acknowledges the generous support of the following foundations. Their grants have made possible a variety of programs and projects.

The Anthony Advocate Foundation The George F. and Sybil H. Thomas Anthony Pappas The Lassor and Fanny Agoos Fuller Foundation Charitable Foundation, Inc. Charity Fund Gardner Charitable Trust Parker Charitable Foundation The AKC Fund, Inc. General Service Foundation The Theodore Edson Parker Aronson Foundation, Inc. Ellen A. Gilman Trust Foundation The First National Bank of Charles and Sara Goldberg Trust Amelia Peabody Foundation Boston Charitable Trusts The Nehemias Gorin Foundation Richard and Carolyn Preston J.M.R. Barker Foundation The Elizabeth Grant Trust Fund The Frank M. Barnard The William and Mary Greve Olive Higgins Prouty Foundation Foundation, Inc. Foundation, Inc. A.C. Ratshesky Foundation The Barrington Foundation, Inc. Greylock Foundation The Frederick W. Richmond IdaS. Barter Trust Grosberg Family Charity Fund Foundation The Theodore H. Barth Harold K. Gross Family The Riley Foundation Foundation Charitable Trust Billy Rose Foundation, Inc. David W. and Irene E. Bernstein Haffenreffer Family Fund Rowland Foundation

Trust The Harvard Musical Association Lawrence J. and Anne Adelaide Breed Bayrd Gilbert H. Hood Family Fund Rubenstein Charitable Foundation The Hunt Foundation Foundation

Frank Stanley Beveridge Martin I. Isenberg Charitable Richard Saltonstall Charitable Foundation, Inc. Fund Foundation Bezalel Foundation, Inc. The Jaffee Foundation Sasco Foundation The Blanchard Foundation The Howard Johnson Foundation The William E. and Bertha E. Blythwood Charitable Trust Kalish Foundation, Inc. Schrafft Charitable Trust The Boston Foundation The Koussevitzky Music Miriam Shaw Fund Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Foundation George and Beatrice Sherman Charitable Trusts Lee Family Charitable Fund Family Trust A.H. Bright Charitable Trust Raymond E. Lee Foundation Richard & Sandra Silverman

J. Frederick Brown Foundation The Lichtenstein Foundation Fund Calvert Trust The John A. and Ruth E. Long Julian and Anita Smith Fund The Cambridge Foundation Foundation Seth Sprague Educational and Clark Charitable Trust The Lovett Foundation Charitable Foundation

Alice P. Chase Charity Edward E. MacCrone Charitable Anna B. Stearns Trust Foundation Trust Stearns Charitable Trust Clipper Ship Foundation, Inc. James A. Mac Donald Foundation Abbot and Dorothy H. Stevens The Clowes Fund, Inc. MacPherson Fund, Inc. Foundation

Compton Foundation, Inc. Edward H. Mank Foundation Nathaniel and Elizabeth P. Jessie B. Cox Charitable Trust Nancy Lurie Marks Charitable Stevens Foundation Charles E. Culpeper Foundation The Stone Charitable Foundation, Inc. Fannie Peabody Mason Music Foundation, Inc. Eleanor Naylor Dana Charitable Foundation Gertrude W. and Edward M. Trust Helen and Leo Mayer Charitable Swartz Charitable Trust Dennis Family Foundation Trust The Charles Irwin Travelli Fund Alice Willard Dorr Foundation William Inglis Morse Trust Webster Charitable Eastman Charitable Foundation The National Charitable Foundation, Inc. Eaton Foundation Foundation Edwin S. Webster Foundation Orville W. Forte Charitable Edward John Noble Foundation Carl A. Weyerhaeuser Trust Foundation Olivetti Foundation Albert 0. Wilson Foundation, Inc.

The Frelinghuysen Foundation Oxford Fund, Inc. Cornelius A. and Muriel P. Wood The Fromm Music Foundation Paine Charitable Trust Charity Fund

Fuller Foundation Pappas Family Foundation Anonymous (2)

49 DIRECTORS

JAMES BARR AMES Ropes & Gray

OLIVER F. AMES Trustee NANCY B. BEECHER Board Chair, United Community Planning Corporation JANE C. BRADLEY Manchester, Massachusetts JOHN W. BRYANT Treasurer, Perkins School for the Blind SAMUEL CABOT Director, Samuel Cabot, Inc. JOHN W. COBB Vice President and Trust Officer EDWARD L. EMERSON Scudder, Stevens & Clark JAMES M. FITZGIBBONS President, Howes Leather Co., Inc. FRANCES W. GARDINER Gardiner, FRANCIS HATCH, W Jr. EDMUND H KENDRICK Trustee BAYARD HENRY Vice President and Trust Officer JOHN M MEYER President, Transatlantic Capital Corp. GEORGE S.JOHNSTON Vice President and Trust Officer H.GILMAN NICHOLS Scudder, Stevens & Clark, New York President EDWARD H. OSGOOD Former Vice Chairman MALCOLM D. PERKINS © Herrick & Smith DANIEL A. PHILLIPS Vice President and Trust Officer DANIEL PIERCE Scudder, Stevens & Clark JOHN PLIMPTON M ! Sherborn, Massachusetts JOHN L. THORNDIKE Vice President and Trust Officer ALEXANDER W WATSON Vice President and Trust Officer

FIDUCIARY BOSTON TRUSTEES

Fiduciary Company Incorporated 175 Federal Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110 Telephone (617) 482-5270

50 The Boston Symphony Orchestra is grateful to those individuals who generously responded to the BSO's fundraising programs during our fiscal year which ended August 31, 1985. Your gifts are critical to the financial security of the orchestra.

Boston Symphony Orchestra Donors ($1,000 and over)

Mrs. Gordon Abbott Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Burroughs Mrs. Dimitri d'Arbeloff Miss Barbara Adams Dr. & Mrs. Edmund B. Cabot Mr. & Mrs. Nelson J. Darling, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John Q. Adams Mrs. Mary Louise Cabot Dr. & Mrs. Chester C. D'Autremont Mrs. Weston W. Adams Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. Cabot Mr. & Mrs. Michael H. Davis Ms. Victoria Albert Mr. & Mrs. Norman L. Cahners Miss Amy Davol Mr. & Mrs. Vernon R. Alden Mrs. Thomas B. Card Mrs. Robert C. Dean Mrs. Frank G. Allen Mr. & Mrs. Harold Caro Mr. & Mrs. Eugene B. Doggett Mr. Martin Allen Mr. Arthur Carr Mrs. Malcolm Donald Mr. & Mrs. Philip K. Allen Ms. Lee Carroll Rev. Richard J. Drabik, M.I.C. Mrs. Charles Ahny Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Carver Dr. Richard W. Dwight Mr. & Mrs. James B. Ames Mr. & Mrs. William B. Chace Mr. & Mrs. Charles Freedom Eaton, J

Mr. & Mrs. David L. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Chapman Mrs. Otto Eckstein Mr. & Mrs. Harlan E. Anderson Mrs. Florence Chesterton-Norris Mr. & Mrs. William Elfers

Prof. & Mrs. Rae I). Anderson Mr. & Mrs. Paul C. Child Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Ellis Mr. & Mrs. Richard T. Applebaugh Mr. Charles Christenson Mr. & Mrs. William V. Ellis Mr. & Mrs. David B. Arnold, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Clagett Mr. Stephen E. Elmont Mr. & Mrs. Harry Axelrod Mr. & Mrs. Eugene H. Clapp II Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Emmett Mr. & Mrs. Hazen H. Aver Mrs. William 0. Clark Mrs. A. Bradlee Emmons

Mr. & Mrs. Donald P. Babson Dr. & Mrs. Robert B. Clarke Mr. & Mrs. Bradford M. Endicott Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Bailey Dr. & Mrs. Stewart H. Clifford Ms. Charlene B. Engelhard Mrs. PaulT. Babson Mr. Stewart Clifford, Jr. Mrs. Henri A. Erkelens Dr. & Mrs. William H. Baker Dr. & Mrs. George H.A. Clowes, Jr. Mrs. Harris Fahnestock Mr. & Mrs. David Bakalar Mr. H. Todd Cobey Mr. & Mrs. Frank L. Farwell

Mrs. Norman V. Ballou Mr. & Mrs. John F. Cogan, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Norman S. Feinberg

Mr. & Mrs. J. P. Barger Mr. & Mrs. Bertram Cohen Mrs. Sewall H. Fessenden Mr. & Mrs. B. Devereux Barker, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Julian Cohen Mrs. John G. Fifield

Mr. & Mrs. John Barnard, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Aaron H. Cole Mr. & Mrs. Weston P. Figgins

Mrs. Clifford B. Barms, Jr. Mrs. Nat King Cole Miss Anna E. Finnerty Mr. & Mrs. Brnce Anthony Beal Mr. & Mrs. Abram T. Collier Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth G. Fisher Mr. & Mrs. John E. Beard Mr. & Mrs. Marvin A. Collier Hon. & Mrs. John H. Fitzpatrick Mrs. Richard E. Bennink Mr. & Mrs. Gilman W. Conant Mrs. Beverly Brooks Floe Dr. & Mrs. Leo L. Beranek Mr. Johns H. Congdon Dr. C. Stephen Foster Mr. James Beranek Mr. & Mrs. William H. Congleton Dr. & Mrs. Gerard Foster

Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Berger Mr. Arthur P. Contas Dr. & Mrs. Henry L. Foster Mr. & Mrs. Harvey B. Berman Mrs. A. Werk Cook Mr. & Mrs. Richard M. Fraser Mr. & Mrs. David W. Bernstein Dr. Mark H. Cooley Mr. & Mrs. Gerhard M. Freche Mrs. Arthur W. Bingham Mr. Charles A. Coolidge, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Dean W. Freed Mr. Peter M. Black Mr. & Mrs. John L. Cooper Mr. Kenneth L. Freed

Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Blank Mr. & Mrs. E. Raymond Corey Mrs. Maurice T. Freeman Mr. & Mrs. John M. Bradley Mr. & Mrs. Charles E. Cotting Hon. & Mrs. Peter H.B. Frelinghuysen Mrs. Ralph Bradley Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Coven Dr. & Mrs. Orrie M. Friedman

Mrs. W. Walter Boyd Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Crane, Jr. Mrs. Carlton P. Fuller Mr. & Mrs. Herbert Bremner Mr. & Mrs. Bigelow Crocker Mrs. Robert G. Fuller

Mrs. Alexander H. Bright Mrs. Mary H. Crocker Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Gal

Mr. & Mrs. Peter A. Brooke Mr. & Mrs. William M. Crozier, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Galligan, Jr. Mrs. Donald L. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Eric Cutler Mr. & Mrs. David Ganz Mr. & Mrs. Ronald Brown Mr. & Mrs. Lewis S. Dabney Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Gardiner

Hon. William M. Bulger Mr. & Mrs. Thomas N. Dabney Mr. & Mrs. George P. Gardner, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Allan T. Buros Mr. & Mrs. Alex d'Arbeloff Mrs. Cora Alice Gebhardt

51 Dr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Germeshausen Mr. John W. Johnson, Jr. Mrs. John McAndrew Mr. & Mrs. John R. Ghublikian Mr. & Mrs. Howland B. Jones, Jr. Mr. John J. McCarthy, Jr. Mrs. Vera Cravath Gibbs Mr. & Mrs. Bela T. Kalman Mrs. August R. Meyer Mrs. Lee D. Gillespie Mr. & Mrs. Stanley H. Kaplan Hon. J. William Middendorf II Mrs. Fernand Gillet Ms. Susan B. Kaplan Mr. & Mrs. Sumner N. Milender Mr. Harvey Goldberg Dr. & Mrs. S. Charles Kasdon Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Millar

Mr. & Mrs. Avram J. Goldberg Mr. & Mrs. Richard L. Kaye Mr. & Mrs. Alan G. Miller Dr. & Mrs. Ray A. Goldberg Mrs. Louise Shonk Kelly Mr. & Mrs. Nathan R. Miller Mr. & Mrs. Jordan L. Golding Mr. & Mrs. F. Corning Kenly, Jr. Mrs. Dudley L. Milikin Mrs. Joel A. Goldthwait Joan Bennett Kennedy Mr. & Mrs. Adolf F. Monosson Mr. & Mrs. Mark R. Goldweitz Mr. & Mrs. George H. Kidder Mr. Paul M. Montrone Mr. & Mrs. Saul Goldweitz Mr. & Mrs. Gordon F. Kingsley Mrs. Olney S. Morrill Mrs. Sylvan Goodman Mr. Walter Kissinger Mrs. Garlan Morse Mr. & Mrs. Haskell R. Gordon Mr. & Mrs. Mason Klinck Mrs. Lester Morse

Mrs. Harry N. Gorin Mr. & Mrs. Carl Koch Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Morse Mr. & Mrs. John L. Grandin Mr. & Mrs. William Kopans Mr. Robert M. Morse Mrs. Helen Grossman Mr. & Mrs. Robert K. Kraft Mr. & Mrs. William B. Moses, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James H. Grew Dr. & Mrs. Arthur R. Kravitz Mr. David G. Mugar Mr. & Mrs. Henry R. Guild, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Harvey Chet Krentzman Mr. & Mrs. Raymond F. Murphy, Jr. Mrs. S. Elliot Guild Mr. & Mrs. George Krupp Dr. & Mrs. Gordon S. Myers Mr. & Mrs. Carl W. Haffenreffer Mr. & Mrs. Selwyn A. Kudisch Mr. & Mrs. Melvin B. Nessel

Mr. & Mrs. Henry S. Hall, Jr. Mr. Edward J. Kutlowski Mrs. Robert B. Newman Mr. & Mrs. R. Douglas Hall III Mrs. E. Anthony Kutten Mr. Richard M. Nichols

Mrs. N. Penrose Hallowell, Jr. Mrs. F. Danby Lackey Mr. & Mrs. Albert L. Nickerson Mr. & Mrs. Henry M. Halvorson Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin H. Lacy Mrs. Louville Niles Mr. & Mrs. Paul F. Hannah Mrs. Robert W Ladd Mrs. Hiroshi H. Nishino

Mrs. Lawrence H. Hansel Ms. Barbara Lamont Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Nyquist Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Hargrove Mr. & Mrs. Roger Landay Miss Grace M. Otis

Mr. & Mrs. Francis W. Hatch, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Allen Latham, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Paine, Sr.

Mr. & Mrs. Ira Haupt Mr. & Mrs. John P. LaWare Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Davies Paine

Mr. & Mrs. Harry R. Hauser Mr. & Mrs. James F. Lawrence Mr. & Mrs. Andrew J. Palmer Mrs. Richard C. Hayes Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Lawrence Mr. Christopher A. Pantaleoni Mr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Haynes Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Lazarus Ms. Man' B. Parent Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Heffernan Mrs. Halfdan Lee Miss Katharine E. Peirce Mr. Paul F. Hellmuth Mr. & Mrs. Herbert C. Lee Mrs. James H. Perkins

Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Henderson Mr. & Mrs. R. Willis Leith, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Phillips Mr. & Mrs. Russell Hergesheimer Dr. & Mrs. Clinton N. Levin Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Phippen Mrs. John R. Hertzler Mr. A.M. Levine Mr. & Mrs. William LaCroix Phippen

Mr. & Mrs. E.W. Hiam Mr. & Mrs. Irving Levy Mr. C. Marvin Pickett, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Higgins Mr. & Mrs. Victor Levy Mrs. Paul Pigors Mr. & Mrs. Richard D. Hill Mrs. Cornelia R. Lewis Mr. & Mrs. John R. Pingree Ms. Susan Morse Hilles Mrs. George Lewis, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. David R. Pokross Mrs. Marilyn Brachman Hoffman Mrs. Ellis Little Mr. & Mrs. Alvar W Polk, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Herbert S. Hoffman Mr. Richard 0. Lodewick Mr. & Mrs. William J. Poorvu

Mr. & Mrs. D. Brainerd Holmes Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Lombard Mr. & Mrs. Richard Preston Mr. Carleton A. Holstrom Mr. & Mrs. Caleb Loring Mr. & Mrs. William M. Preston Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert H. Hood Mrs. Frederick H. Lovejoy, Sr. Mrs. Brooks Prout Mrs. Louise P. Hook Dr. & Mrs. Frederick H. Lovejoy Mrs. Augustus L. Putnam Mr. Harrison Horblit Mr. Joseph E. Lovejoy Mr. & Mrs. George Putnam, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. William White Howells Mr. & Mrs. Charles P. Lyman Ms. Sally Quinn Mr. Ray Howland, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Henry Lyman, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Irving W Rabb Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Hubbard Mr. & Mrs. Roderick M. MacDougall Mrs. Harry Remis Mrs. Hollis Hunnewell Mr. & Mrs. John F. Magee Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Remis Mr. & Mrs. James F. Hunnewell Mr. & Mrs. Gael Mahony Mrs. Vladimir Resnikoff Mr. & Mrs. James Jackson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William D. Maniee Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Rheault Mr. & Mrs. Pliny Jewell, Jr. Mrs. Irma Fisher Mann Mr. & Mrs. Eugene J. Ribakoff Mr. & Mrs. Howard W Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Harry L. Marks Mr. & Mrs. Peter van S. Rice

52 Mr. & Mrs. Peter M. Richards Dr. Marion L. Slemons Mr. & Mrs. John H. Valentine Dr. Paul A. Richer Dr. Frances H. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Jack H. Vernon Mr. & Mrs. David Rockefeller, Jr. Ms. Mary Hunting Smith Mr. & Mrs. Roger L. Voisin Dr. & Mrs. Horatio Rogers Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Smith Mr. Christoph von Dohnanyi Mr. & Mrs. Warren M. Rohsenow Mrs. Lawrence Snell Mrs. Harold Wald Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Rosenfeld Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Snider Mrs. Howland Walter Mr. & Mrs. Thomas A. Rosse Mrs. William B. Snow Mr. Lloyd B. Waring Mr. & Mrs. William C. Rousseau Dr. & Mrs. William Davies Sohier, Jr. Miss Sylvia H. Watson

Mrs. George R. Rowland Mr. & Mrs. Jeffrey P. Somers Mr. & Mrs. Stephen R. Weber Mrs. Anne Cable Rubenstein Dr. & Mrs. Lamar Soutter Mrs. F Carrington Weems Mr. & Mrs. Howard Rubin Mr. & Mrs. John K. Spring Mr. & Mrs. Matthew C. Weisman

Dr. Jordan S. Ruboy Dr. & Mrs. Fredrick J. Stare Mrs. James 0. Welch

Mr. & Mrs. Michael B. Salke Mr. & Mrs. Raymond S. Stata Mr. & Mrs. Arthur 0. Wellman, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert Saltonstall Mrs. Thornton Stearns Mr. John M. Wells

Mr. & Mrs. Albert J. Sandler Mr. & Mrs. Burton S. Stern Mrs. Barrett Wendell, Jr. Mr. A. Herbert Sandwen Mr. & Mrs. Ezra F. Stevens Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Werly Mr. & Mrs. Wilbert R. Sanger Mrs. Edward S. Stimpson Miss Barbara West

Mrs. George Lee Sargent Ivey St. John Mrs. Henry Wheeler Jr. Mr. Jack Satter Mr. & Mrs. Harris E. Stone Mr. & Mrs. Mark C. Wheeler

Mr. Donald L. Saunders Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Stoneman Dr. & Mrs. Harold J. White Mr. & Mrs. Roger A. Saunders Mr. & Mrs. John Hoyt Stookey Mr. & Mrs. John W White Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Saxe Miss Elizabeth B. Storer Mr. Robert W White Mr. & Mrs. John G. Schmid Mr. & Mrs. James W Storey Mr. Richard T. Whitney Mr. & Mrs. Paul A. Schmid Mrs. Patricia Hansen Strang Mr. & Mrs. Thomas H.P. Whitney Dr. & Mrs. Raymond H. Schneider Mrs. John Sylvester Mr. & Mrs. Ralph B. Williams Mr. Benjamin Schore Dr. & Mrs. Nathan B. Talbot Mr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Williams Mr. Guy R. Scott Mrs. Rudolf L. Talbot Mr. & Mrs. Dudley Willis

Mr. Alan H. Scovell Mrs. Thomas Taylor Mr. & Mrs. John J. Wilson Mr. & Mrs. Campbell L. Searle Mr. & Mrs. William 0. Taylor Ms. Peggy Winnett

Mr. & Mrs. Francis P. Sears, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Theodore H. Teplow Mr. & Mrs. David J. Winstanley Mr. Joseph M. Shapiro Mr. & Mrs. David Terwilliger Mr. & Mrs. Irving Wiseman Mr. Paul Sheiber Dr. & Mrs. Richard H. Thompson Mr. Sherman Wolf Mrs. Henry K. Sherrill Mr. & Mrs. William F Thompson Miss Elizabeth Woolley

Ms. Jane Sibley Mr. & Mrs. John L. Thorndike Mrs. Frederic P. Worthen Mr. & Mrs. James V. Sidell Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. Thorndike Mrs. H. Melvin Young Dr. A. Martin Simensen Mr. Stephen Tilton Dr. & Mrs. Richard W Young Mrs. Donald B. Sinclair Mrs. Richard F Treadway Dr. & Mrs. Nicholas T. Zervas Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Sinclair Dr. & Mrs. Howard Ulfelder Mrs. Vincent C. Ziegler Mr. & Mrs. S. Donald Slater Mrs. Abbott Payson Usher Mr. & Mrs. Erwin N. Ziner

Boston Symphony Orchestra Donors ($500-$999)

Mrs. Herbert Abrams Mr. Bartol Brinkler Ms. Mildred Craft Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Aldrich Mr. & Mrs. George R. Brown Mrs. Douglas Crocker Mr. & Mrs. James B. Ames Mrs. Lester A. Browne Mr. & Mrs. David C. Crockett Mr. & Mrs. Walter Amory Mr. & Mrs. Paul C. Cabot Mr. & Mrs. Robert Cushman Ms. Sarah Webb Armstrong Mr. James R. Cherry Mrs. Ernest B. Dane, Jr.

Mrs. Richard H. Baer Mr. & Mrs. Paul C. Child Dr. & Mrs. Albert I. Defriez Mr. & Mrs. John T. Bennett, Jr. Mrs. Edward D. Churchill Mr. & Mrs. Allen F Dickerman Mr. & Mrs. W Bentinck-Smith Mrs. William Claflin III Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Eastman Mrs. Charles S. Bird III Mr. F Douglas Cochrane Mr. & Mrs. John A. Fibiger Mrs. Marshall G. Bolster Mr. & Mrs. Loring W Coleman Mr. F. Murray Forbes, Jr. Mrs. Edward L. Bond Mr. Victor Constantiner Mr. & Mrs. Robert L.V. French Mr. & Mrs. John D. Brewer, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Nathan P. Couch Mrs. Charles Mack Ganson

53 Miss Eleanor Garfield Miss Mildred A. Leinbach Mr. J. Hampden Robb Mr. & Mrs. Peter T. Gargas Mrs. Royal W Leith, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Dwight P. Robinson, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Gerry Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Ley Mr. & Mrs. John Ex Rodgers Mrs. Sumner M. Gerstein Mr. Graham Atwell Long Dr. & Mrs. L.R. Schroeder

Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Gilbert Vice Admiral John L. McCrea Mrs. Francis G. Shaw Ms. Margaretta M. Godley Miss Grace S. McCreary Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Siegfried Mrs. Charles D. Gowing Mr. Paul McGonigle Mrs. Gordon Smith Mrs. Stephen W. Grant Mrs. David S. McLellan Ms. Pam Smith Mr. & Mrs. E. Brainard Graves Mrs. Roy R. Merchant, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Joseph J. Snyder Mr. & Mrs. Harold K. Gross Mrs. Houghton P. Metcalf Mr. & Mrs. Samuel R. Spiker Mrs. Murray C. Harvey Mr. and Mrs. George H. Milton Mr. & Mrs. Henry S. Stone Ms. Anne M. Hatcher Mrs. Lovett Morse Mrs. Charles H. Taylor

Mrs. Richard C. Hayes Mr. & Mrs. James T. Mountz Mrs. John I. Taylor Mr. & Mrs. Bayard Henry Dr. & Mrs. Gordon S. Myers Mr. Everett Tenbrook

Mr. & Mrs. Milton P. Higgins Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm C. Newell Mr. & Mrs. Irving Usen

Mr. James G. Hinkle, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William J. O'Connor Mr. & Mrs. Heinz K. Vaterlaus Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Horowitz Mrs. George Olmsted Mrs. Charles F. Walcott Mrs. David H. Howie Miss Mary-Catherine O'Neill Mr. & Mrs. George R. Walker Mr. & Mrs. Henry B. Jackson Mr. & Mrs. George A. Ott Mrs Victoria D. Wang Mr. Frederick Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Paresky Mr. Alexander W Watson Mr. & Mrs. C. Peter Jorgensen Dr. & Mrs. Jack S. Parker Mrs. Elvira Weisman

Mrs. Herbert S. Judd, Jr. Marion L. Peirson Mr. & Mrs. John P. Weitzel Mr. & Mrs. John H. Kallis Mrs. John A. Perkins Mr. & Mrs. Richard Wengren

Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Kaplan Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm D. Perkins Dr. Conrad Wesselhoeft, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Robert W. Kistner Mr. & Mrs. Philip H. Peters Mrs. Lyon Weyburn Mr. & Mrs. Warren Kohn Mr. & Mrs. Leo M. Pistorino Mrs. Dorothy Oswald Willhoite Mr. & Mrs. James N. Krebs Mr. Russell E. Planitzer Mr. Robert Windsor Mr. Emmanuel Kurland Mr. & Mrs. Richard Prouty Mrs. Margaret Winslow Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Ladd Mr. & Mrs. Fairfield E. Raymond Dr. & Mrs. Edward F Woods Mrs. William D. Lane Mr. & Mrs. Peter C. Read Mr. & Mrs. John M. Woolsey, Jr.

Boston Symphony Orchestra Donors ($250-3499)

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Abeles Dr. & Mrs. Martin D. Becker Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Burley Mr. & Mrs. Richard B. Miller Abrams Mr. & Mrs. Marcus G. Beebe Dr. & Mrs. Paul A. Buttenwieser Mr. Richard L. Ackerman, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. F Gregg Bemis Mr. & Mrs. Charles C. Cabot, Jr. Mrs. B. Abigail Adams Mr. & Mrs. Paul Bernat Mrs. John Moors Cabot

Mrs. Seth M. Agnew Mr. William I. Bernell Dr. Charlotte C. Campbell Dr. & Mrs. Henry F Allen Mr. Bernard Berstein Rev. George A. Carrigg Mr. & Mrs. Stephen G. Allen Penny Binswanger Mr. & Mrs. James W Carter Mrs. L. Hathaway Amsbary Mr. & Mrs. Jordan Birger Mr. and Mrs. Hugh M. Chapin Miss Marion A. Anderson Mr. & Mrs. George Blagden Mr. and Mrs. Irving H. Chase Mr. & Mrs. John E. Andrews Mrs. Molly Bleasdale Mr. & Mrs. Daniel S. Cheever Dr. & Mrs. Norman L. Avnet Hon. Charles S. Bolster Mrs. Joseph Choate Mr. & Mrs. Fred C. Bailey Mrs. James C. Boyd Ms. Marylou S. Churchill Miss Anahid Barmakian Mr. & Mrs. Herbert L. Bradley Mr. & Mrs. Putnam Cilley Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Barnes Mr. & Mrs. Henry K. Bramhall, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Clark Mr. Mrs. & Frederick E. Barstow Mr. Donald Breed Dr. & Mrs. Richard J. Cleveland Mrs. Charles W Bartlett Mrs. K. Peabody Brewster Miss Mary M. Cochrane Mr. & Mrs. John H. Beale Mr. & Mrs. Robert Vance Brown Mrs. John W Coffey Mrs. Emily Morison Beck Rev. Thomas W Buckley Mr. & Mrs. I.W. Colburn

54 Mr. & Mrs. Charles C. Colby III Mr. M.C. Haviland Mr. Robert Mansfield Mrs. Arthur L. Collier Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Hayden Mr. George Martirossian

Mrs. Kenneth J. Conant Mrs. Harold L. Hazen Mr. & Mrs. Satoru Masamune Mr. Henry G. Corey Mr. & Mrs. Noah T. Herndon Mr. Paul A. McGilvray Mr. & Mrs. John C. Coughlin, Jr. Mr. Herbert Hirsch Dr. & Mrs. John S. McGovern Mr. & Mrs. Julian Crocker Mr. & Mrs. Edwin W. Hiam Miss Ada V Mcintosh Miss Lianne M. Cronin Mr. John Hitchcock, Jr. Mr. Jon McKee Mr. & Mrs. Harry Crowther Mr. & Mrs. Harold C. Hodge Mr. & Mrs. Raymond W. McKittrick

Mrs. Philip J. Darlington, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Waldo H. Holcombe Mr. James McWilliams Dr. & Mrs. Roman W. DeSanctis Mr. Gordon Holmes, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James Messing Mr. & Mrs. Charles Devens Mr. Ross G. Honig Mr. & Mrs. Bernard F. Meyer Mrs. Franklin Dexter Mrs. John D. Houghton Mr. & Mrs. Henry H. Meyer, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John H. Dickison Mrs. John N.M. Howells Mr. & Mrs. John Morello

Mrs. Katherine J. Doak Mrs. Kenneth Howes, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Elting E. Morison Mr. & Mrs. Richard R Dober Dr. Richard F. Hoyt, Jr. Mrs. Stephen V.C. Morris Miss Sally Dodge Hon. & Mrs. George N. Hurd, Jr. Mrs. Alan R. Morse, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. Philip Mason Dubois Dr. & Mrs. Roger L. Hybels Mrs. John S. Nesbit Mrs. Panos S. Dukakis Mr. & Mrs. David 0. Ives Mr. & Mrs. Andrew L. Nichols Mr. & Mrs. William S. Edgerly Mr. Martin L. Jack Mr. & Mrs. Roger P. Nordblom

Mr. & Mrs. George P. Edmonds, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles Jackson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Odence Mr. & Mrs. Walter D. Edmonds Mrs. Paul M. Jacobs Miss Esther E. Osgood Mrs. Philip Eiseman Mr. & Mrs. Paul Jameson Mr. H.L. Osier Mr. & Mrs. Steven S. Feinberg Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Jenkins Mr. & Mrs. Michael Ossoff

Dr. Harvey V. Fineberg Mrs. H. Alden Johnson, Jr. Mrs. Eleanor Jones Panesevich

Janet P. Fitch Mr. & Mrs. Thomas 0. Jones Mr. & Mrs. Allan D. Parker Miss Elaine Foster Ms. Ellen Kaimowitz Miss Harriet F. Parker

Mrs. Joseph C. Foster Mr. & Mrs. Albert J. Kaneb Mr. & Mrs. W James Parker Mr. Walter S. Fox, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Gerald M. Katz Dr. & Mrs. Oglesby Paul Mrs. Stanley G. French Mrs. Stanley W Katz Mr. & Mrs. Francis W. Peabody

Dr. Stefan M. Freudenberger Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Kaufmann Mr. David B. Perini Mr. & Mrs. Elmer Funkhouser Mrs. Robert M. Kennard Dr. Beverly Philip Mrs. Amey G. Garber Mr. Peter R. Kermani Mr. Anthony Piatt Mr. & Mrs. Sterling Garrard Mrs. Prescott L. Kettell Ms. Wendy Prest Mr. Larry Gelbart Mr. & Mrs. James E. Kimball Dr. Michael C.J. Putnam Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Gelin Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Kittredge Mr. & Mrs. Norman S. Rabb Dr. & Mrs. Donald B. Giddon Mrs. Emil Kornsand Mr. Jean-Pierre Radley

Mr. Malcolm H. Goodman Mr. Charles H. Kuist Mr. William J. Reilly, Jr. Mrs. John D. Gordan, Jr. Mr. Harold Kuskin Ms. Carol Ann Rennie Mr. & Mrs. Hubert F. Gordon Miss Rosamond Lamb Mr. & Mrs. William M. Riegel Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Gore Mrs. William L. Langer Mr. & Mrs. Elie Rivollier, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William H. Gorham Mr. & Mrs. Robert W. Langlois Mr. & Mrs. Norman Rosenberg Dr. & Mrs. Paul E. Gray Miss Elizabeth Lathrop Dr. & Mrs. Ralph A. Ross Mrs. M. Thompson Greene Dr. & Mrs. William B. Latta Arthur & Natalie Rudin Mr. & Mrs. George L. Greenfield Mrs. Edward W Lawrence Mr. & Mrs. Lee Scheinbart Mr. & Mrs. Howard R. Grimes Mr. & Mrs. Michael Leavitt Mr. & Mrs. Philip H. Seaver Mrs. Julius Grossman Mr. Robert F. Leavitt Mr. & Mrs. Edward W. Sexton Mr. & Mrs. Morton S. Grossman Dr. & Mrs. Thomas Leavitt, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Jerome H. Shapiro Mr. & Mrs. Ralph L. Gustin, Jr. Mrs. Paul B. LeBaron Mr. & Mrs. John E. Sheldon Dr. & Mrs. Edgar Haber Mr. & Mrs. David S. Lee Ms. Mira W. Shelvey Mr. William E. Haible Dr. & Mrs. Elia Lipton Mr. Ronald E. Sherman Mr. & Mrs. George A. Hall Mrs. M.A. Harris Livens Dr. Clement A. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Robert T. Hamlin Mr. & Mrs. Francis V. Lloyd, Jr. Mrs. Eliot Snider

Ms. Virginia Harris Mr. Leonard Lynch Mr. & Mrs. Joseph P. Solomon Mr. & Mrs. Richard Ely Hartwell Mrs. David D. Mackintosh Dr. Edward F. Spencer Miss Margret Hathaway Mr. Douglas N. MacPherson Mrs. Hester D. Sperduto

55 wtnitmefii

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Gifts may be sent to the Development Offi< Symphony Hall Boston, MA 021 15 Mr. James 0. Spinney Mr. & Mrs. James Truesdall Mrs. Morrill Wiggin Mr. & Mrs. David Squire Mrs. Francis R. Van Buren Mrs. Shepard F. Williams Mr. & Mrs. James R. Squire Mr. David Vandermeid Mr. & Mrs. Keith G. Willoughby Mr. & Mrs. Maximilian Steinmann Mr. & Mrs. Gordon F. Vawter Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin L. Wilson Dr. & Mrs. Walter St. Goar Mrs. Roland von Weber Mr. & Mrs. Leslie J. Wilson Mrs. David G. Stone Mrs. Guy W Walker, Sr. Mrs. Henry D. Winslow Dr. & Mrs. Somers H. Sturgis Mrs. Phyllis Waite Watkins Ms. Katherine Winthrop Mr. & Mrs. Elliot M. Surkin Mr. & Mrs. Walter Watson II Mary Wolfson

Ms. Barbara P. Swaebe Mr. & Mrs. David Zach Webster Mr. & Mrs. Paul I. Wren

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Swiniarski Ms. Lueretia J. Weed Mr. Ho Sung Yang Mrs. Laura Tegstam Mr. & Mrs. Roger U. Wellington Dr. & Mrs. Harvey Zarren Mr. Lambros Theodosopoulos Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. West Mr. & Mrs. Robert G. Zeller Mr. & Mrs. Mark Tishler, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stephen Wheatland Mr. & Mrs. John H. Zorek Aubrey & Cynthia Tobey Mr. Stetson Whitcher

Boston Symphony Orchestra Donors ($100-$249)

Mr. Wilder K. Abbott Mr. & Mrs. Varoujan Azablar Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth J. Bate Miss Marjorie Abel Dr. & Mrs. Henry H. Babcock Prof. & Mrs. George E. Bates Mr. & Mrs. John Abele Mr. & Mrs. W Benjamin Bacon Dr. & Mrs. George E. Battit Mrs. Alfred A. Adams Mrs. Theodore L. Badger Mr. Boyden C. Batty

Mr. Frank Adams Mr. Aaron M. Bagg Rev. and Mrs. Frank J. Bauer Mrs. Thomas H. Adams, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Bruce M. Bailey Mr. & Mrs. William Baumrucker, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. Thomas W Adams Mr. & Mrs. Leon Bailey Mrs. Philip C. Beals Mr. & Mrs. Jack Adelson Mrs. Elizabeth A. Baker Mr. Robert C. Bean

Dr. & Mrs. Barry J. Agranat Dr. & Mrs. George P. Baker, Jr. Mrs. John Beardsley

Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Alberty Mr. and Mrs. James J. Baker Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Beatley Ms. Elizabeth Alden Mr. & Mrs. Spencer H. Baker Miss Anne Beauchemin Mrs. John M. Alden Mr. Donald Ball Mr. David W Beaulieu Howard D. and Jeanette A. Allen Mrs. H. Starr Ballou Mr. & Mrs. Sherman Bedford Dr. & Mrs. Charles Roger Allison Dr. & Mrs. Henry H. Banks Dr. & Mrs. Glenn Behringer

Dr. George and Harriet Altman Mr. & Mrs. J. A. Davis Banks Mr. & Mrs. Nelson Bell Mr. & Mrs. Oliver F Ames Mrs. Joseph S. Banks Mr. & Mrs. Alan C. Bemis Mr. & Mrs. Theodore Anastos Mrs. Nancy Banus Mr. and Mrs. John Bemis Mr. & Mrs. Jay Anderson Mrs. Bishop Bargate Mr. & Mrs. Richard Benka Mr. & Mrs. John A. Anderson, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. A. Clifford Barger Drs. Doris and Warren Bennett Mr. & Mrs. Sam Ange Dr. & Mrs. WB. Barker Mr. & Mrs. Harrison Bennett Ms. Jill Angel Mr. Steven G. Barkus Mr. & Mrs. Martin Bennett

Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Anthony II Mr. & Mrs. John M. Barnaby Lawrence I. Berenson Ms. Sheelagh Anzuoni Mrs. Charles B. Barnes Mr. Max Berger

Ms. Elsie J. Apthorp Mr. & Mrs. Curtis Barnes Mr. & Mrs. Robert Berger Mrs. Horace L. Arnold Dr. & Mrs. James Barrett Mr. & Mrs. Thomas M. Berger Mr. & Mrs. John Arnold Dr. & Mrs. Joseph R. Barrie Mr. & Mrs. Bernard D. Bergman Mrs. Myrna Aronson Mr. Clarence R. Barrington Mr. Gerald A. Berlin Mrs. James D. Asher Mr. & Mrs. Allen G. Barry Mr. & Mrs. Herbert L. Berman

Mr. Norman Asher Mr. Edward Barry Ms. Shirley P. Bernuth Mr. & Mrs. Raymond P. Atwood Dr. & Mrs. Marshall K. Bartlett Mr. George Berry

Mr. & Mrs. David Auerbach Mr. & Mrs. Michael E. Barton Mr. & Mrs. Donald J. Bertrand

Mr. & Mrs. L. Axelrod Mrs. Randolph P. Barton Mr. Ben Beyea Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Axelrod Mrs. K. Basbanes Mr. & Mrs. Philip W. Bianchi

Dr. Lloyd Axelrod Mr. & Mrs. Harris I. Baseman Dr. & Mrs. Benjamin E. Bierbaum Mr. & Mrs. Richard P. Axten Mr. & Mrs. Robert A. Bastille Mrs. V. Stoddard Bigelow Mr. James C. Ayer Mr. E. Jackson Batchelar Mrs. D. Scott Birney

57 John B. and Evelyn N. Bishop Mr. & Mrs. David W. Brown Mrs. F Sargent Cheever Mrs. Eva E Bitsberger Ms. Deborah B. Brown Richard and Mary Jane Cheever Mr. & Mrs. Angus C. Black, Jr. Mr. Dwight Brown Dr. & Mrs. Levon Chertavian Mr. & Mrs. Arthur B. Blackett Mr. E. Burton Brown Mrs. Aaron P. Cheskis Ms. Nina M. Blackwell Mr. & Mrs. Edward C. Brown Mr. & Mrs. Charles Y. Chittick Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin S. Blake Mrs. Fletcher Brown Prof. & Mrs. Vincent Cioffari Mrs. George B. Blake Mr. Kenneth W Brown Dr. Antonio Ciucci-Elmer Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Blakelock Hon. & Mrs. Matthew Brown Ms. Cecily Clark Mr. John A. Blanehard Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Brown Dr. M.B. Clark Mr. & Mrs. Timothy B. Blancke Mrs. William J. Brown, Jr. Margaret Clark Michael and Dianne Blau Mr. & Mrs. William R. Brush Mrs. Ronald C. Clark Miss Margaret Blethen Mrs. Marcus K. Bryan Mr. James Russell Clarke, Jr.

Dr. Pengwynne P. Blevins Mrs. George P. Buell Mr. James J. Clifford Mrs. Henry M. Bliss Mrs. Nathan Bugbee Mr. & Mrs. Roger L. Clifton Mr. & Mrs. John C. Bloom Mr. & Mrs. Harvey H. Bundy, Jr. Ms. Marie E. Clinch Dr. & Mrs. Wilfred Bloomberg Mrs. Sylvia K. Burack Mrs. S.H.M. Clinton Mr. & Mrs. Maxwell V. Blum Mr. George W Burgess Mrs. C. Baker Clotworthy, Jr. Mrs. Foster Boardman Mr. & Mrs. Arthur B. Burnes Mr. Robert C. Cobb, Sr. Ms. Arlene L. Bodge Mr. & Mrs. Carleton Burr W Gerald Cochran, M.D. Mr. Raymond A. Boffa Mr. Rod Burr Mrs. Winthrop B. Coffin, Jr.

Col. Ernestine H. Bolduc Mrs. Walter Swan Burrage Ms. Deborah J. Cohen Mr. Kenyon Bolton Mrs. F. Wadsworth Busk Mr. & Mrs. Paul Cohen Mr. & Mrs. Eugene L. Bondy, Jr. Ms. Martha Eliot Buttenheim Mr. Daniel C. Cohn

Mrs. Leonce Bonnecaze Mrs. Joan J. Byrd William Colaiace, M.D. Mr. Allen Boorstein Mr. & Mrs. Milton Cades Dr. & Mrs. Edwin M. Cole Mrs. Nancy Boote Mr. & Mrs. Gordon E. Cadwgan Ms. Dorothy Collier

Mr. & Mrs. I. Macallister Booth Mrs. Ida Brown Cahan Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Collis Mr. & Mrs. Vincent V.R. Booth Dr. & Mrs. George F Cahill, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David G. Colt

Mr. Jeffrey Borenstein Dr. & Mrs. J. Lincoln Cain Ms. Janet Mowry Comey Mrs. D.T.B. Born Mrs. Robert H. Cain Ms. Elizabeth B. Conant Mr. Morris B. Bornstein Mr. Ralph Campagna Ms. Nancy Concannon Dr. & Mrs. Edward L. Bowles Miss Mary L. Campagnolo Mrs. Harrison F Condon, Jr. Mrs. John W. Boyd Miss Hannah C. Campbell Mrs. William T. Conlan

Dr. & Mrs. Robert J. Boyd Mr. & Mrs. Philip E. Campbell Mr. Brian L. Connell Mr. & Mrs. Lincoln Boyden Mr. Leon M. Cangiano, Jr. Mr. Woolsey Conover Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Boyt, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. James H. Cannon Mr. George L. Considine Mr. & Mrs. Robert B. Brack Bob and Emilie Capone Dr. & Mrs. John Constable Mrs. Robert Fiske Bradford Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Caredis Mr. & Mrs. James Cooke

Mr. & Mrs. Henry G. Bradlee, Jr. Mr. Joseph P. Carey Mr. William Coolidge Mrs. Barbara G. Bradley Meg Carey Mrs. Janet R. Cooper Mr. Lee C. Bradley III Mr. & Mrs. W Peter Carey Mr. & Mrs. Warren S. Cooper

i ! Mr. Morton Bradley Mr. & Mrs. David H. Carls Mr. & Mrs. Saul J. Copellman Mrs. Lawrence D. Bragg, Jr. Mr. John F. Carroll, Jr. Mrs. William Corbett Mr. Robert Braitman Mr. & Mrs. Edward F. Carye Mr. Chester A. Corney, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Ake Brandin Mr. & Mrs. John J. Casey Mr. & Mrs. John G. Cornish Miss Charlotte Brayton Dr. Aldo R. Castaneda Harold and Phyllis Cotton Mrs. J. Dante Brebbia Mr. John A. Cataldo Mr. & Mrs. Eugene Covert Mr. John J. Bresnahan Mr. & Mrs. Henry F. Cate, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Cowden III

Mrs. Francis A. Brewer, Jr. Dr. Mary C. Cavallaro Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Coyne Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Brewster Ms. Alda G. Cesarini Mr. Frank W Crabill Mr. & Mrs. Karl L. Briel Mrs. Elizabeth H. Chamberlain Dr. & Mrs. John M. Craig Mr. Alan J. Brody Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Chamberlain Mrs. Stephen H. Crandall

Mr. & Mrs. A.J. Broggini Mrs. Doris P. Chandler Mr. & Mrs. Albert M. Creighton, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William B. Bromell Mrs. Maureen D. Chapman Mr. & Mrs. Robert Crocker

Dr. & Mrs. David C. Brooks Mr. & Mrs. Howard J. Charles, Jr. Mrs. U. Haskell Crocker Mr. & Mrs. Harvey Brooks Mr. & Mrs. Charles W Chatfield Dr. & Mrs. Robert Crone Dr. Samuel M. Brooks Mr. David Cheever III Dr. Mary Jean Crooks

58 Mr. Paul M. Crowe Mr. & Mrs. John Dwinell Alden M. Foster

Dr. & Mrs. Perry J. Culver Ms. Marjorie C. Dyer Mrs. Raymond C. Foster, Jr. Mrs. Donald B. Cummings Mr. & Mrs. Earl H. Eacker Mr. Alvan B. Fox Mrs. Alan Cunningham Mrs. Charles C. Eaton Miss Fernella Fox Mr. & Mrs. Ronald C. Curhan Mr. & Mrs. Louis F. Eaton, Jr. Miss Ida Fox Mrs. James H. Currens Rev. & Mrs. William S. Eaton Mrs. Marie H. Fox John W. Curtis Dr. & Mrs. John T. Edsall Mr. Charles T. Francis Mr. & Mrs. Francis W. Cusack Mrs. Eleanor B. Edwards Mrs. Edward L. Francis Mr. & Mrs. Frank M. Cushman Dr. & Mrs. Richard H. Egdahl Mrs. Irving Frankel Mr. & Mrs. Gardner Cushman Dr. & Mrs. Leon Eisenberg Mr. Benjamin Franklin

Mr. & Mrs. Arnold Cutler Paul & Lisa Eisenberg Mr. J. Thomas Franklin Mrs. Louisa R. Cutler Ms. Barbara Eisinger William & Beverly Franklin Mr. Roger W. Cutler, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. John P. Eliopoulos Dr. & Mrs. A. Stone Freedberg Mr. & Mrs. Tarrant Cutler Charles H. Ellis, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Harry Freedman

Mr. John M. Dacey Mr. & Mrs. William P. Ellison Mr. & Mrs. Jerome Freedman Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Daly Mrs. Ray A. Ely Mr. & Mrs. Maynard Freedman Mr. & Mrs. Richard M. Dana Mrs. H. Bigelow Emerson Mr. & Mrs. H. Crowell Freeman, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Bruce G. Daniels Mrs. Alan S. Emmet Mr. & Mrs. Howard G. Freeman Mrs. Douglas Danner Mrs. G.H.H. Emory Mr. & Mrs. Joseph S. Freeman Mrs. George H. Darrell Mr. Joel Englander Mr. & Mrs. William Freeman Mr. Edward L. Dashefsky Edward Eskandarian Miss Betty French Mrs. Clarence A. Dauber Dr. & Mrs. Eli Etscovitz Mr. Fred R. French, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Charles H. Davis II Mr. John P. Eustis II Miss Helen C. French Ms. Frances M. Davis Mr. & Mrs. Lucius W Evans Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. French Mrs. Holbrook R. Davis Mrs. Sidney Fagelman Mrs. George R. Frick Mr. & Mrs. Stanton W. Davis Dr. & Mrs. Charles A. Fager Mr. Barry L. Friedman

Mrs. Freeman I. Davison, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Clifford W Falby Dr. & Mrs. Emanuel A. Friedman Mrs. George Davol Mr. Edward Fallon Mrs. F. Kidder Fuller Mr. Jeffrey Dawson Mr. & Mrs. Peter G. Fallon, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. George C. Fuller Mrs. John E. Dawson Mr. & Mrs. John S. Farlow, Jr. Mrs. John Furman Dr. James Bond Dealy, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Geoffrey C. Farnum Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Gable Mrs. Frances R. De Lacvivier Paul H. Farris Mr. Walter Gabriel Mr. & Mrs. Michael R. Deland Miss Ruth M. Farrisey Mr. & Mrs. Edward A. Gaensler Duchess Anna De Leuchtenberg Mr. Francis Faulkner Mr. & Mrs. William Galanes Dr. & Mrs. G. Robert Delong Mr. & Mrs. Martin Feldman Mrs. Charles T. Gallagher Mrs. William T. Demmler Dr. & Mrs. Robert G. Feldman Mr. Richard Gallant Mr. & Mrs. James T. Dennison Charlotte Fellman Mr. & Mrs. Clarence E. Galston Mr. & Mrs. Casimir de Rham Mr. Frank E. Ferguson Mr. & Mrs. John T. Galvin Mr. & Mrs. Francis Devlin Mr. & Mrs. George H. Fernald, Jr. Mr. Werner Gamby Ms. Ethel Dewey Dr. & Mrs. Benjamin G. Ferris, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Stanley S. Ganz

Ms. Elizabeth Dohanian Mr. & Mrs. Gaffney J. Feskoe Mr. & Mrs. James J. Gapstur

Mrs. Donald P. Donaldson Mr. & Mrs. Richard R. Fidler Mr. & Mrs. Frank Hale Gardner Mr. and Mrs. Gordon A. Donaldson Mrs. Douglas W Fields Mr. & Mrs. Frederic Gardner Mr. Philip Donham Mr. & Mrs. William G. Finard Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Gardner Miss Catharine-Mary Donovan Mr. Alan R. Finberg Mr. & Mrs. John L. Gardner Mrs. Arthur C. Doran Miss Elio Ruth Fine Mr. William E. Garfield Mr. & Mrs. Julius Dorfman Mr. & Mrs. William B. Fine Dr. & Mrs. Donald M. Garland Dr. & Mrs. David Dougherty Dr. & Mrs. James E. Fitzgerald Mr. & Mrs. Maxwell M. Geffen Mr. G. Lincoln Dow, Jr. Marcia G. Fleishman Rabbi Everett Gendler Elizabeth M. Drake Mrs. Richard T. Flood Irwin C. Gerson Mrs. Emerson H. Drake Mr. James T. Flynn Henry & Bess Gesmer Mr. & Mrs. George Drowne Mr. Joseph M. Flynn Ms. Ann K. Ghublikian Mr. Edward Dubilo Mrs. Henry E. Foley Miss Alice F. Gibbons

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas C. Duffly Dr. & Mrs. Judah Folkman Mr. Robert P. Giddings Mr. & Mrs. Michael Duffy Mr. & Mrs. Elliot Forbes Mrs. John A. Gifford Mr. & Mrs. F.C. Dumaine Mrs. Jody Forkner Miss Rosamond Gifford

Miss Florence Dunn Mr. & Mrs. Orville W Forte, Jr. Mrs. Carl J. Gilbert

59 B '

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Mrs. Howard F. Gillette Mrs. Samuel W Hale, Jr. Mr. H. Brian Holland Mr. Leonard Gilman Ms. Frances S. Hall Dr. Barbara E. Hollerorth Rabbi Albert Ginsburgh Mr. John Hall Mrs. Lowell M. Hollingsworth Mr. & Mrs. Ernest A. Giroux Mrs. Robert H. Hallowell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Alex Holman Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Glasser Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Hamann Ms. Elizabeth P. Holmes Prof. & Mrs. Robert R. Glauber Mr. & Mrs. Roy A. Hammer Mr. John Holmes Mr. & Mrs. Robert Goeke Ms. Ann Louise Handy Mr. & Mrs. Stanley A. Holmes George W. Gold Mr. & Mrs. John B. Harriman Ms. Barbara Holtz Mr. & Mrs. Charles M. Goldman Mrs. Patricia Lyons Harrington Mrs. Harry P. Hood, Jr. Mr. Macey Goldman Miss Caroline Harrison Mrs. Harvey P. Hood

Judge Morris Goldman Mrs. J. Hartwell Harrison Ms. Priscilla Hook Dr. Philip L. Goldsmith Mr. & Mrs. Baron M. Hartley Mr. Stanwood C. Hooper Mr. Fred Goldstein Mrs. Paul T. Haskell Alfred Hoose Mr. Frederick Goldstein Mr. Warren Hassmer Mrs. John D. Hopkins

Ms. Mary T. Goldthwaite Mr. & Mrs. John B. Hawes Mr. Mark Hopkins Mr. William A. Goodwin Mrs. Patricia F. Hawkins Mrs. Robert H. Hopkins Dr. & Mrs. Arthur Gorbach Mr. & Mrs. Sherman S. Hayden Dr. & Mrs. Robert P. Hopkins Mr. & Mrs. Milton Gordon Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Hays Mr. & Mrs. James B. Hoppe Mrs. Joel T. Gormley Mrs. Martha L. Hazen Mrs. Carol Horowitz

Mr. & Mrs. C. Lane Goss Mrs. Frank J. Healy Miss Elizabeth B. Hough

Mr. & Mrs. David F. Gould Mrs. Stephen Heartt Ms. Louise D. Houghteling Dr. Kenneth M. Graham Mrs. Donald C. Heath Mrs. John Hall Howard Mrs. Frederick B. Grant Mr. William F Heavey, Jr. Miss Katharine Howard Mrs. Harriet L. Gratwick Mrs. Robert M. Heberton Nancy G. Howe Mr. & Mrs. John B. Gray Dr. & Mrs. Sam Hedrick Ms. Patricia C. Howe Mr. & Mrs. David H. Green Mrs. Carl R. Hellstrom Mr. & Mrs. Franklin K. Hoyt Mr. & Mrs. Malcolm Green Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Helman Mrs. Henry S. Huber

Mr. Milton G. Green Mrs. Booth Hemingway Mr. & Mrs. Peter J. Huber Dr. & Mrs. Mortimer S. Greenberg Mr. & Mrs. Raymond E. Hender Ligia Bonilla Hugger Chandler Gregg Dr. & Mrs. Milton E. Henderson Mr. & Mrs. Keith Hughes Mr. Arthur W. Gregory III Mr. Hertz N. Henkoff Mr. Walter C. Humstone

Mr. & Mrs. Daniel S. Gregory Mr. William W Hennig Mr. Robert I. Hunneman Mr. John H. Griffin Dr. & Mrs. Louis Hermanson Mr. Albert B. Hunt Mr. Mike Grossman Mr. & Mrs. Dudley Herschbach Mr. & Mrs. Roger B. Hunt Mr. & Mrs. M.F Groves Dr. & Mrs. Arthur T. Hertig Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Huntington Dr. & Mrs. John Growdon Miss Elizabeth Hewins Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Hurd Dr. & Mrs. Alan Gruber Mrs. Frederick C. Hewlett Mr. & Mrs. Christopher W Hurd Dr. & Mrs. Seymour Gruber Mr. & Mrs. George C. Hibben Mrs. Norman Hutton

Mrs. Ellsworth Grumman Mr. & Mrs. Paul J. Hickey Mr. & Mrs. Mark Hyman, Jr. Mrs. Paul K. Guillow Miss Karen A. Hicks Mrs. Winifred R. Idell Dr. & Mrs. John Gunderson Mr. Richard A. Hicks Mrs. Jerome M. Ingalls I Mr. Ian Gunn Mrs. Adams S. Hill Mr. & Mrs. R. Blake Ireland Mrs. Barbara F. Guzovsky Mr. & Mrs. Howard Hillman Mr. & Mrs. Thomas B. Irwin Mr. & Mrs. John C. Haas Mr. & Mrs. Edwin A. Hills Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan Isaacs Mr. Seiji Haba Mrs. Emmy D. Hilsinger Mr. & Mrs. George S. Isenberg Mr. Ernest M. Haddad Dr. & Mrs. Stephen Hilzenrath Mr. & Mrs. Howard Israel Mrs. Joseph R. Haddock Dr. Jur Hans G. Hinderling Mr. & Mrs. Charles W Jack Mr. A.A. Haemmerle Mr. & Mrs. Winston R. Hindle, Jr. Dr. & Mrs. David M. Jackson Mrs. Fredrick W. Haffenreffer Mr. & Mrs. Harold Hindman Dr. & Mrs. James H. Jackson Mrs. John M. Haffenreffer Mr. & Mrs. Glen Hiner Mrs. David D. Jacobus

Mr. & Mrs. Wesley M. Hague Mr. & Mrs. Joseph D. Hinkle Mrs. Thomas E. Jansen, Jr. Mr. Eric H. Haight Mr. Raymond Hirschkop Mr. & Mrs. Richard F. Jarrell

Edith & Albert Haimes Mrs. Karl J. Hirshman Mr. & Mrs. David Jeffries Dr. Barbara Anne Hajjar Mr. & Mrs. Sturtevant Hobbs Rev. John G. Jetty Hon. & Mrs. Allan M. Hale Mr. & Mrs. Sidney R. Hodes Mr. Luis Jimenez

61 Dr. & Mrs. Pierre Johannet Mrs. Howard T. Kingsbury Mrs. Harry Levine Mr. & Mrs. Dewitt John Mr. & Mrs. Charles Kingsley, Jr. Mr. Lawrence A. Levine

Mr. Bradford J. Johnson Rev. & Mrs. Robert Kirven Mrs. Samuel A. Levine Mr. John W. Johnson, Jr. Miss Jane Kissling Dr. Harry Levinson Julie Johnson Eleanor and Gary Klauminzer Mr. & Mrs. George D. Levy Mr. & Mrs. L. Robert Johnson Mrs. Louis H. Klebenov Dr. Audrey Lewis Mr. & Mrs. Robert S. Johnson Mr. & Mrs. Daniel Klein Mrs. David W. Lewis Mrs. Michael JA.H. Jolliffe Mr. & Mrs. Henry E. Kloss Mr. & Mrs. Leonard P. Lewis Mr. Randolph Jones Mrs. Carleton Knight, Jr. Miss Sophie Page Lewis Mrs. Dorothy-Lee Jones-Ward Mr. Norman Knight Mrs. Susan B. Ley Mr. Dannesboe Jorgen Mr. & Mrs. Clarence F. Knudson Mr. & Mrs. Jacob Lichman Betty & Dana Jost Dr. & Mrs. William Kornfeld Mr. JR. Lifsitz Mrs. Elizabeth M. Julier Mr. & Mrs. Alexander Korosi Mrs. Robert W Liming Mrs. Albert S. Kahn Mr. & Mrs. Norman Koss Miss Margaret A. Linton Mrs. Liesel Kaim Mr. & Mrs. George S. Kouri Mrs. Daniel S. Lisberger Mr. & Mrs. Jerome M. Kaitz Mr. David E. Kozodoy Mr. & Mrs. W Torrey Little Mr. & Mrs. George Kane Dr. & Mrs. Leo P. Krall Mrs. T. Ferguson Locke Mr. James L. Kane, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Richard Krieger Mr. & Mrs. James Loehlin Mr. & Mrs. P. Kann Ms. Lynn Krinsky Ms. Janet Lombard

Ms. Sarah Kantor Mrs. Hans J. Kroto Miss Mary A. Long

Mrs. Edward Kaplan Dr. & Mrs. Edward Krukonis Mr. & Mrs. John P. Longwell Mr. & Mrs. Arthur Karas Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Krulewich Mrs. Atherton Loring

Dr. & Mrs. Jonathan Karas Mr. & Mrs. George W Kuehn Mrs. Robert P. Loring Mr. & Mrs. Leo Karas Dr. Ruth B. Kundsin Mr. & Mrs. Richard H. Lovell Kenneth and Margery Karger Miss Helen G. Kurtz Mr. & Mrs. John Lowell Mr. & Mrs. H. Peter Karoff Mr. & Mrs. Melvin Kutchin Mrs. Milton Lowenthal

Mrs. Charles Kassel Mr. & Mrs. Arno Lamm Mr. & Mrs. Robert I. Lurie Mrs. Abraham A. Katz Mr. Thomas W. Lampi Mr. Christopher Lydon Mr. Christopher P. Kauders Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Landau Mr. & Mrs. Richard W Lyman Mr. Erick Kauders Mr. David Landay Mr. & Mrs. Christopher W Lynch Mr. & Mrs. Frederick Kauders Mrs. Sophia S. Lander Mr. & Mrs. Ernest Lynton Ms. Jane Kaufman Ms. Claire Landesman Mrs. Carlton R. Mabley Dr. & Mrs. Gustav G. Kaufmann Mr. & Mrs. Norman Landstrom Mr. William H. MacCrellish

Mr. & Mrs. Kevin J. Kearney Mr. George Lane Miss Ann E. Macdonald Drs. John and Katherine Keenum Mr. & Mrs. Richard E. Lang Rev. John A. MacDougall Miss Janet Kelsay Mr. & Mrs. Sidney A. Lang Peter Macdougall

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Mr. Alexander S. Kelso, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. John W Laverack Mrs. Francis P. Magoun, Jr. Mrs. R.C. Kemp Mr. & Mrs. Edward L. Lavine Mrs. Calvert Magruder Mrs. Edmund H. Kendrick Mr. Christos Lazos Mr. & Mrs. William S. Malcom Mr. & Mrs. Edward H. Kenerson II Mrs. Hart Leavitt Mr. & Mrs. Edwin A. Malloy Ms. Barbara A. Kennedy Mrs. George C. Lee Ms. Therese A. Maloney Mr. John C. Kennedy Mrs. William T. Lee Mrs. Edward Maltzman Mr. & Mrs. Lowell D. Kennedy Dr. & Mrs. Brian WA. Leeming Mr. Seymour H. Mandell Mr. & Mrs. Terrence G. Kennedy Mr. Alan L. Lefkowitz Mr. Joseph Mannes Mr. & Mrs. Robert Keohane Dr. & Mrs. Merle A. Legg Mrs. A.D. Manuelian Mr. Herman Kiaer Mrs. Edmund F. Leland III Mr. & Mrs. Donald M. Manzelli Ms. Priscilla C. Kidder Mrs. Tudor Leland Mr. Alan Marasco Ann Feeley and William Kieffer Mr. John Lepper Mr. Theodore Marier Mrs. John C. Kiley Mr. George C. Leslie Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel Marks Mr. Richard C. Killin Mr. & Mrs. Laurence Lesser Mr. & Mrs. Paul Marks Mr. & Mrs. Richard W Kimball Mr. & Mrs. Charles Letson Ms. Gloria Marron

Mr. & Mrs. David C. King Miss Elizabeth M. Letson Mr. & Mrs. Franklin J. Marryott Mr. & Mrs. Harold C. King Mr. & Mrs. Alan M. Leventhal Mr. & Mrs. Alan C. Marshall Mr. John G. King Mrs. Robert Leventhal Mrs. Andrew C. Marsters Mr. & Mrs. Thomas P. King Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin Levin Mrs. S. Forrest Martin

Mr. & Mrs. Thomas E. King Mr. & Mrs. Robert J. Levin John and Nancy Martilla Mrs. William F. King Mr. & Mrs. Allan L. Levine Miss Tomiko Masui 62 Mr. & Mrs. Donald M. Matheson Mrs. Everett Morss Mr. & Mrs. Richard J. Parker Mr. & Mrs. John H. Matsinger Mr. & Mrs. John M. Morss Mr. & Mrs. W James Parker Mrs. W.P. Mauldin Ms. Patricia A. Morten Mrs. Charles C. Parlin, Sr. Esther E.M. Mauran Mrs. Hardwick Moseley Mr. Kenneth E. Parr Mrs. Frederic B. Mayo Mrs. Francis S. Moulton, Jr. Mrs. Brackett Parsons Mr. Richmond Mayo-Smith Mr. Robert W Mullaney Mrs. Helen W. Parsons Mr. William H. McCabe, Jr. Henry F. Mulloy III Miss Barbara S. Partridge

Dorothy E. McCarthy Mr. John J. Murphy Miss Elizabeth H. Partridge Mrs. Joyce G. McCarthy Mr. & Mrs. Martin Murphy Dr. & Mrs. Robert C. Pascucci Dr. Kathryn A. McCarthy Dr. & Mrs. Henry A. Murray Mrs. Martha Patrick Mr. Louis McClennen Mrs. Robert M. Mustard Dr. & Mrs. G. Richard Paul

Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. McCormack, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Sterling Myrick Mr. & Mrs. Leonard M. Pauplis

Mrs. Gail F. McCoy Mr. & Mrs. Harold Natt Mr. & Mrs. Samuel R. Payson

Dr. & Mrs. William V. McDermott, Jr. Mrs. Daniel Needham, Jr. Miss Priscilla J. Peabody Mr. Philip McDonald Dr. & Mrs. Richard S. Neiman Ms. Dorothy S. Pearlstein Dr. & Mrs. A. Louis McGarry Mr. & Mrs. Richard Nemrow Mr. Norman A. Pearson Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth Mcllraith Dr. & Mrs. Paul Nesbeda Mrs. Edward L. Peirson

Mr. & Mrs. Gordon P. McKinnon Mr. & Mrs. Richard 0. Neville Mr. & Mrs. John B. Pepper Mrs. Donald H. McLean, Jr. Mrs. Henry H. Newell Amelia Perelli

Ms. Alexandra P. McLennan Mr. & Mrs. H. Gilman Nichols Mr. Michael Perfit Dr. & Mrs. Wallace McMeel Mr. & Mrs. Horace S. Nichols Mrs. Paul F. Perkins, Jr.

Mr. Robert McMillan Mrs. John T. Nightingale Miss Sylvia Perkins Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. McNamara, Jr. Dr. Anthony Nigro Johanna F. Perlmutter, M.D. James R. McWilliams Mr. Yoshiaki Nitta Mr. & Mrs. E. Lee Perry Dr. Peter Mencher and Mary-Jo Adams Mr. John H. Noble Rev. John A. Perry Mr. & Mrs. Stanley Menhard Mrs. Elizabeth Norris Miss Theodora Perry Mr. Nathaniel S. Merrill Samuel Nun, M.D. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas D. Perry, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert W Meserve Mrs. Justin O'Brien Ms. Laura Persily Mrs. Albion E. Metcalf Mr. & Mrs. Fred O'Connor Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Peters

Miss Karen Metcalf Mrs. Peggy P. O'Connor Mrs. Lovett C. Peters Mr. & Mrs. Thomas N. Metcalf, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Eric Oddleifson Dr. & Mrs. Robert Petersen Mr. & Mrs. Charles R. Metchear III Mr. Warren Odom Miss Nancy Peterson Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Meurer Mr. & Mrs. Herbert W Oedel Ms. Joyce M..V. Petkovich Carolyn Meyer Mrs. John D. Ogilby Mr. & Mrs. Frederick L. Phelps Mrs. Henry Hixon Meyer, Sr. Mr. & Mrs. John L. Ogle Mr. & Mrs. George T. Phillips Ms. Fern King Meyers Rev. Joseph James O'Hare III Dr. & Mrs. Philip Phillips Mr. & Mrs. Leon D. Michelove Dr. & Mrs. Peter Oliver Pedro and Barbara Pick Ms. Judith Ann Miller Ms. Rosamond C. Olivetti Mr. & Mrs. Elisha G. Pierce III Dr. & Mrs. Michael B. Millis Ann & Eileen O'Meara Mr. & Mrs. Harlan T. Pierpont, Jr.

Mr. A. Milo Ms. Eleanor T. Orloff Dr. Ely E. Pilchik Mr. Robert B. Minturn, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Jason S. Orlov Mr. & Mrs. Albert R. Pitcoff

Mr. & Mrs. Allen Mintz Mrs. Josef Orosz Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Pitts Mr. William P. Mitchell Mr. Robert C. Orr Dr. Edward Platner Mr. Colman M. Mockler, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Hamilton Osgood Mr. Harold H. Plough Frances Y. Modi Mrs. Herman A. Osgood Mrs. William B. Plumer Mr. & Mrs. Robert P. Moncreiff Mr. Joseph A. Ossoff Mr. & Mrs. Howard D. Ponty Mr. Leonard A. Moniz Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan Ostman Dr. & Mrs. Alfred Pope Mr. David Mooney Mrs. Terry Overton Mrs. Janet Pope Mr. & Mrs. John Morello Mrs. Albert Pagliarulo Ms. Margaret Poreca Mr. & Mrs. Charles L. Morgan Mrs. Richard C. Paine Dr. & Mrs. Richard Porter

Mrs. D.P. Morgan Mrs. Franklin H. Palmer Mr. John J. Posner

Mr. Peter A. Morgan Mr. Rudolph A. Palmer Ms. Lois P. Poster Mr. & Mrs. Frederic R. Morgenthaler Miss Katherine F. Pantzer Mrs. Cary Potter Mr. & Mrs. William H. Morris Gerard & Dorothy Paquette Gerald Powers

Beulah D. Morrison Mrs. Frank Pardee, Jr. Mrs. H. Burton Powers Mr. & Mrs. John Morse, Sr. Mr. Richard Parent Mr. James Powers

Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Morse Mr. & Mrs. Stephen J. Paris Mr. & Mrs. Melvin M. Prague Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Morse Mr. Charles G. Parker Mrs. Albert Pratley 63 Mr. & Mrs. James D. Pratt Mr. & Mrs. B. Allen Rowland Mr. & Mrs. Michael Sharpe Mrs. Roger Preston Mr. & Mrs. Harold Rubenstein Mr. Timothy W Sheen Mrs. John H. Privitera Mr. Saul Rubenstein Mr. & Mrs. Daniel H. Sheingold Dr. & Mrs. Munro H. Proctor Mr. & Mrs. Eugene S. Rubin Mrs. Alfred J. Shepherd Mrs. Samuel H. Proger Florence & Larry Rubin Mr. & Mrs. James E. Shepherd Mr. & Mrs. David F. Putnam Mrs. Manuel Rubin Ms. Frances Shifman Miss Kathleen Quill Mr. Alford Paul Rudnick Dr. & Mrs. Robert L. Shirley Ms. Elisabeth Quinn Mrs. Ralph Rudnick Dr. & Mrs. Gerald Shklar Mr. & Mrs. John C. Quinn Mr. & Mrs. William W Rudolph Mr. Stanley Shmishkiss Mrs. Hannah A. Quint Mr. & Mrs. H.S. Russell, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Murray Shocket Dr. & Mrs. James M. Rabb Mr. & Mrs. Stephen T. Russian Mr. & Mrs. Norman H. Shohet

Dr. Peter C. Rachwall Dr. & Mrs. David D. Rutstein Mr. & Mrs. Joel P. Shriberg Dr. & Mrs. Robert C. Rainie Mr. Stanley H. Rutstein Mr. & Mrs. Kent Shubert Dr. & Mrs. Herbert Rakatansky Mr. Joseph M. Saba Mr. & Mrs. Paul D. Shuwall

Mr. Morris Raker Mr. & Mrs. James A. Saltonstall Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Sibelian Mrs. Paul Rasmussen Mr. & Mrs. William L. Saltonstall Mrs. Clifton Abbott Sibley Mrs. JC. Rauscher Miss Esther E. Salzman Mrs. Lawrence M. Sibley John & Lorraine Re Miss Idah L. Salzman Mr. & Mrs. Alex Silberstein Mr. Bradford C. Read Mr. & Mrs. James M. Sampson Mrs. Maurice Simon

Dr. Edward J. Reardon Mr. Erven A. Samsel Mrs. George Henry Simonds, Jr. Mrs. Paul C. Reardon Mr. & Mrs. Nichol M. Sandoe Mr. & Mrs. Russell G. Simpson Mrs. Eugene E. Record Mrs. Adele W Sanger Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Sinclair Mr. John R. Regier Mr. William C. Sano Dr. & Mrs. John H. Sisson Miss Florence M. Reid Mr. Stephen Santis Mr. Walker M. Sloan

Mrs. Peter Remis Mr. & Mrs. Ernest J. Sargeant Mrs. Mary-Leigh C. Smart

Mr. John C. Rennie Mr. & Mrs. Robert F. Saunders Ms. Adrienne Smith

Mr. & Mrs. Lindsay Renouf Mr. & Mrs. Maurice H. Saval Mr. & Mrs. Edward J. Smith

Mr. Raymond J. Revers Mr. Chester M. Sawtelle Mrs. Ernest Smith III Mr. Joseph Michael Rich Mr. John H. Saxe Mr. Garrett K. Smith

Mrs. Aaron Richmond Dr. & Mrs. Moselio Schaechter Mr. & Mrs. Howard P. Smith Mrs. Barbara T. Ridgely Mrs. Frances W Schaefer Miss Kathleen E. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Bernard A. Riemer Dr. Susan Schaeffer Ms. Loretta Smith Mr. & Mrs. Harold Righter Mr. & Mrs. Richard G. Scheide Dr. Sidney B. Smith Mr. & Mrs. Christopher M. Riley Mr. & Mrs. Allan C. Schell Mr. & Mrs. Walter A. Smith Miss Ethel M. Riley Mr. & Mrs. Richard Schmitz Mr. Zimri L. Smith

Mr. Walter J. Riley III Miss Frieda A.M. Schmutzler Mrs. Constance A. Smithwood Mr. Donald Rimmer Dr. & Mrs. Arthur Schneider Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Snider Captain Marcia A. Rizzotto Mr. & Mrs. W Alexander Schocken Mr. & Mrs. Arthur F. Synder Mr. & Mrs. Charles Roazen Mrs. Janos Scholz Dr. Norman Solomon

Mr. Douglas M. Robbe Mr. & Mrs. Marvin G. Schorr Mr. & Mrs. J. Deane Somerville Mr. & Mrs. Joseph C. Robbins Dr. & Mrs. Milford D. Schulz Mrs. Elsa G. Sonnabend Dr. & Mrs. P.G. Robbins Mr. & Mrs. William Schwann Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Z. Sorenson Mr. & Mrs. G. Elliott Robinson Mr. & Mrs. George G. Schwenk Dr. & Mrs. Karl Sorger

Dr. & Mrs. John C. Robinson Mr. & Mrs. David C. Scott, Jr. Cecily and Allen Sostek Mr. Timothy C. Robinson Mrs. Linwood D. Scriven Mr. & Mrs. Horace H. Soule Ms. Louise A. Roche Mrs. Harriet B. Seager Miss Anna W Soutter Dr. & Mrs. Malcolm P. Rogers Mr. & Mrs. Douglas H. Sears Dr. & Mrs. William Soybel

I Mrs. William P. Rogers, Jr. Miss Helen C. Secrist Mrs. Archibald H. Spaulding Mr. & Mrs. Allan Romanow Mr. & Mrs. Richard S. Seeley Mrs. Josiah A. Spaulding Mr. Myron Romanul Priscilla Sellman, M.D. Mr. & Mrs. Nathaniel H. Sperber Mr. Mark Rosen Mr. Gordon H. Sellon Mrs. Louis Speyer Mr. & Mrs. M.P Rosencranz Bert & Joyce Serwitz Mrs. Richard Spindler Dr. & Mrs. David S. Rosenthal Mr. Ihor Sevcenko Mr. & Mrs. Joseph D. Spound

Mrs. Marilyn H. Ross Mr. Frank A. Sewell, Jr. Mrs. James C. Sprague Mr. Ronald L. Rossetti Mr. & Mrs. Charles N. Shane Captain Roy M. Springer, Jr.

Ms. Ruth H. Rothermel Dr. Howard Shapiro Mrs. Howard J. Stagg III Mr. & Mrs. Terry Rothermel Mr. and Mrs. Enid and Mel Shapiro Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin R. Stahl Mr. & Mrs. Thomas L. Rourke Mrs. Ryna Shapiro Dr. & Mrs. David G. Stahl 64 Mr. Harold Stahler Mr. & Mrs. Charles Trieble Mr. Lewis H. Weinstein Ms. Brenda Staley Mr. & Mrs. D. Thomas Trigg Mr. Stephen Weisberg Mr. & Mrs. Charles W. Stampler Mr. & Mrs. Philip W. Trumbull Mrs. Manuel Weisbuch Dr. & Mrs. John B. Stanbury Mr. John T. Tucker Mr. Edward H. Weiss Mr. & Mrs. James F. Stanton Miss Ruth Tucker Dr. & Mrs. Claude E. Welch Dr. & Mrs. Oscar E. Starobin Miss Alice Tully Mrs. Francis C. Welch Miss Anna B. Stearns Mrs. C.E. Turner Mr. John J. Weldon

Mr. Jonathan P. Steer Mr. & Mrs. H.W. Turner Miss Harriet V Wellman Mrs. Elinor Stetson Mr. & Mrs. H. Dixon Turner Mrs. A. Turner Wells Mrs. Brooks Stevens, Jr. Mr. Norman E. Turner Miss Patricia Wells Mr. & Mrs. Edward B. Stevens Mr. & Mrs. R. Brough Turner David and Bobby Welsh Mr. & Mrs. Josiah Stevenson IV Mr. & Mrs. Bruce Tuthill Karen Wenc Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Steward Mr. & Mrs. Renwick S. Tweedy Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Werman Mr. & Mrs. Gilbert L. Steward, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frank Tyman Mr. Julien Vose Weston Mrs. George Stewart Miss Gene Ulmann Mrs. Winthrop Wetherbee Dr. & Mrs. Goodwill M. Stewart Mrs. FR. Van Buren Mr. & Mrs. Jerrold A. Wexler Mr. Herbert R. Stewart Mr. Allan Van Gestel Mr. Irving Wharton Dr. & Mrs. Samuel Stewart Mrs. John H. Van Vleck Atty. & Mrs. John Clark Wheatley

Rev. & Mrs. Anson P. Stokes, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Frank B. Varga Mrs. George Macy Wheeler Mr. & Mrs. James F. Stone Mr. Tom Vasey Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Wheeler Mrs. Robert G. Stone Mrs. Lillian Vash Mrs. Maurice Wheeler Mr. & Mrs. John R. Stopfel Ms. Diane Vaughan Mrs. Richard P. Wheeler Linda A. Larson Stover Mr. & Mrs. Daniel R. Vershbow Mrs. John S. Whipple

Col. Rilda M. Stuart Mr. Jonathan Vershbow Mrs. Robert J. Whipple

Ms. Carol M. Sullivan Mr. Normand P. Viens Miss Christine White

Mr. Edward T. Sullivan Mr. Sueksagan Visith Mrs. Henry K. White Mr. Timothy B. Sullivan Ms. Bernadette F Vitti Ms. Patricia W White Mrs. Richard Swain Prof. & Mrs. Evon Z. Vogt Mr. Richardson White Mrs. H.S. Swartz Mr. Robert A. Vogt Mrs. Robert E. White

Mrs. Allen N. Sweeny Hon. John A. Volpe Mrs. Robert J. Whitehead W.A. Swift Mr. & Mrs. Jeptha H. Wade Mrs. Elisabeth S. Whiteside Mr. & Mrs. K.W. Switzer Mr. & Mrs. William N. Walker Mrs. Florence Whitney Mrs. Lawrence A. Sykes Mrs. B. Gring Wallace Miss Ruth H. Whitney Mr. & Mrs. Ganson Taggart Mr. & Mrs. E. Denis Walsh Dr. & Mrs. Robert T. Whittaker Mr. Steven A. Tague Mr. William K. Walters Mr. & Mrs. Chester E. Whittle

Ms. Amy J. Tananbaum Dr. & Mrs. Stephen L. Wanger Dr. & Mrs. Earle W Wilkins, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Merton Tarlow Mr. & Mrs. Phillip Warbasse Hon. & Mrs. Herbert P. Wilkins

Mrs. Charles L. Taylor Miss M. Beatrice Ward Mr. & Mrs. J. Burke Wilkinson Mr. John A. Taylor Misses Helen & Elizabeth Ware Mrs. D. Forbes Will

Mr. Timothy A. Taylor Mrs. John Ware, Jr. Ms. Sandra L. Willett Mr. & Mrs. Robert Terry, Jr. Mrs. Alexander Warga L.I. Williams Mr. & Mrs. John C. Thalheimer Mr. & Mrs. L.M. Warlick Mr. & Mrs. Robert W Williamson Mrs. Lucius E. Thayer Mrs. Caleb W Warner Mr. & Mrs. Arthur H. Willis Mrs. Alfred Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Howland S. Warren Mrs. Alfred W Willmann Carolyn Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Samuel D. Warren Roy & Nancy R. Wilsker Mr. & Mrs. George B. Thomas, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Milton C. Wasby Mr. & Mrs. Alexander M. Wilson Miss Anne C. Thompson Mr. Kenneth E. Washburne Mrs. David H. Wilson

Mrs. Rupert C. Thompson, Jr. Mr. Robert P. Wasson, Jr. Mr. & Mrs. David R. Wilson Mr. W. Nicholas Thorndike Mr. & Mrs. Frederic W Watriss Dr. & Mrs. Norman L. Wilson Miss E. Katharine Tilton Mr. & Mrs. Paul R. Weaver Mr. & Mrs. Richard Winneg Mrs. Catherine Timmons Mrs. Mina M. Webster Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Winship Mrs. Stirling Tomkins Mrs. Priscilla L. Webster Katherine and Harry H. Wise

Mr. William R. Tower Mrs. Albert H. Wechsler Mrs. John Wise, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Richard A. Towns Mrs. Arnold N. Weeks Mr. Robert Withers, Jr.

Mrs. Foster M. Trainer Mrs. Sinclair Weeks, Jr. Ms. Sara G. Withington Mr. Robert Travis Mr. & Mrs. William D. Weeks Mrs. Roger Wolcott Mr. & Mrs. Robert Traylor Mr. Richard L. Weil, Jr. Mr. Daniel H. Wolf Mr. & Mrs. John F Trefethen, Jr. Philip and Arlene Weiner Mr. Stephen W. Wolfe 65 j

Brunetta R. Wolfman, M.D. Mrs. Norman L. Wray Mrs. Jane S. Young Mr. & Mrs. Peter Clark Wolle Mr. & Mrs. Kenneth A. Wright Ms. Ruth Young Allen & Susanne Wolozin Ms. Suzanne Wright Mr. Jerrold R. Zacharias Dr. Elaine Woo Mrs. Whitney Wright Mr. & Mrs. Arnold M. Zack Mr. & Mrs. Rawson Lyman Wood Mr. & Mrs. Walter Wrigley Dr. & Mrs. Marvin Zelen Mr. Anthony G. Wooleott Dr. Richard J. Wurtman Mr. William Zellen Mr. Robert W Worley, Jr. Mr. Edward Yaneo Mr. & Mrs. Charles A. Ziering, Jr. Mr. Robert W Wormstead, Jr. Mr. Joseph A. Yanikoski Dr. & Mrs. Maurice L. Zigmond Mrs. Merrill Worthen Mrs. Eleanor W Young Ms. A.T. Zimany

Weknow a good investment whenwe hear one.

*' Let's all support the BSO. Tucker, Anthony & R.L.Day, Inc. Serving investors in 34 offices in the U.S. and* abroad. Since 1892. One Beacon Street, Boston (617) 725-2000. Tucker Anthony a ArtnJ//anfccfrCOMVANY

66 Contributions were made to the Boston Symphony Orchestra during the 1984-85 fiscal year in honor of the following individuals:

Dr. Isador Alpher Mr. Joseph Hearne Dr. Karl Riemer Mrs. Marion Anderson Mrs. William Henry Mr. and Mrs. David Rogovin

Dr. and Mrs. Leo Beranek Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Hootstein Mr. I. Jerome Rosenberg Mr. and Mrs. Dieter Bergs Mr. Richard L. Kaye Mr. and Mrs William Ryan

Mr. Julian Cohen Mr. Kevin J. Kearney Dr. and Mrs. Raymond Schneider Mrs. Susan Cooper Mrs. Carl Koch Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Schroeder Mrs. Dawson Mr. Harvey Chet Krentzman Mr. Edward G. Shufro

Mrs. Helen Freeman Mr. Richard Levine Mr. and Mrs. Stanley J. Siegel Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Germeshausen Mr. and Mrs. Karl Lipsky Mr. William Siegel Mr. and Mrs. Haskell Gordon Mrs. Gae Noe McLendon Mr. Bernard Siff Mr. and Mrs. Saul Greenberg Mr. and Mrs. Melvin B. Nessel Joanne Umans

Mrs. Helen Grossman Mr. William J. Poorvu Mr. Henryc Woicik

Memorial Contributions were made to the Boston Symphony Orchestra during the 1984-85 fiscal year in remembrance of the following individuals:

Hannah G. Ayer Mr. Isador I. Janowsky Mr. Arthur Shapiro JoAnn Baron Dr. Honayoun Kazemi Mrs. Jack Shapiro Anna Belinsky Gail Kubik Mr. Leon Shapiro Harriet B. Bennett Mr. Kevin Lizzo Miss Holly Shiffman

Mrs. Cecil (Miriam) Blair Ms. F. MacKenzie Mr. Donald B. Sinclair

Mrs. Sylvia Broude Mrs. Stephen P. Mallett, Jr. Mr. Stephen J. Siner Mrs. Allison (Lucille) Catheron Nancy Margolin Mrs. Helen S. Slosberg Master Samuel N. Darling Molly Marlowe Mr. S. Abbot Smith

Mrs. Richard (Louise) Ely Mr. James Mcintosh Mrs. Preston T. Stephenson Mrs. Esther Eustis Mr. John S. Mechem Mrs. Ruth L. Stevenson

Mr. Irving Frankel Mr. Norman Michaelson Mr. Edward S. Stimpson, Sr. Mrs. W Latimer Gray Mr. Leo Muszkat Mr. John Summersby

Mrs. Francis B. (Dorothy) Gummere Mr. Anthony P. Ostar Mr. Stanley Alexander Swaebe Mrs. Irene Elizabeth Haemmerle Mr. Katsumi Ozawa Miss Emma Treadway Lt. Col. and Mrs. William L. Hamilton Mr. Bud Samson Katie Vallon Mr. Donald C. Heath Mr. Sydney Segel Mr. Philip Winter Mrs. Helen Warren Hoar Mr. Mothe Serman Mr. Bernard Zighera Mr. Frederick Q. Hurley

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

Ernestine R. Birnbaum Marjorie K. Hatch Fritz Oppenheimer Ford Cooper Margaret A. Hood Leona Riskin Frances Dwight Harold Horvitz Harry Shulman Janet P. Elliott Emma Hutchins Eleanor Frothingham Smith Philip Eiseman Dorothy Kerstein Persis Toppan

Joan Irvin Gale Germaine Laurent Catherine T. Vickery Walter Henry Gale Charles E. Mead Katherine Woodberry Eleanor Gould Marian Graves Mugar

67 —

«———

COPLEY PIACE Shopping, dining, entertainment and other fantasies.

*» —

Coming Concerts . . .

'10'— '10' Thursday 31 October, 8-10:15 Thursday Wednesday , Friday 'B'—1 November, 2-4:15 27 November, 8-9:50 Saturday 'B'—2 November, 8-10:15 Friday 'A'—29 November, 2-3:50 GIUSEPPE SINOPOLI conducting Saturday 'B'—30 November, 8-9:50 Schumann Das Paradies und die Peri SEIJI OZAWA conducting MARI ANNE HAGGANDER, soprano Kojiba Hiroshima Requiem MARJANA LIPOVSEK, mezzo-soprano Chopin Piano Concerto No. 2 VINSON COLE, tenor MAURIZIO POLLINI WALTON GRONROOS, bass-baritone Dvorak Symphony No. 7 TANGLEWOOD FESTIVAL CHORUS, JOHN OLIVER, conductor

Programs subject to change.

Thursday 'A'—7 November, 8-9:30 Friday 'A'—8 November, 2-3:30 Saturday 'A'—9 November, 8-9:30 Tuesday 'B'—12 November, 8-9:30 BERNARD HAITINK conducting Mahler Symphony No. 7

Wednesday, 13 November at 7:30 Open Rehearsal Steven Ledbetter will discuss the program at 6:45 in the Cohen Annex. Thursday '10'—14 November, 8-10:05 Friday 'B'—15 November, 2-4:05 Saturday 'B'—16 November, 8-10:05 BERNARD HAITINK conducting Mozart Piano Concerto No. 22 in E-flat, K.482 ALICIA DE LARROCHA Shostakovich Symphony No. 8

Tuesday 'C—19 November, 8-9:50 JAHJA LING conducting Respighi Ancient Airs and Dances, Suite No. 1 Schubert Symphony No. 5 Dvorak Symphony No. 8

Tuesday 'B'—26 November, 8-9:55 SEIJI OZAWA conducting Prokofiev Excerpts from Romeo and Juliet Brahms Symphony No. 1 Available at Harvard Square, M.I.T. Student Center, Children's Medical Center and One Federal St., Boston. Coop Charge, Mastercard, Visa and American Express welcome.

69

Symphony Hall Information . . .

FOR SYMPHONY HALL CONCERT AND make your ticket available for resale by call- TICKET INFORMATION, call (617) ing the switchboard. This helps bring 266-1492. For Boston Symphony concert needed revenue to the orchestra and makes program information, call "C-O-N-C-E-R-T." your seat available to someone who wants to attend the concert. A mailed receipt will THE BOSTON SYMPHONY performs ten acknowledge your tax-deductible months a year, in Symphony Hall and at contribution. Tanglewood. For information about any of the orchestra's activities, please call Sym- RUSH SEATS: There are a limited number phony Hall, or write the Boston Symphony of Rush Tickets available for the Friday- Orchestra, Symphony Hall, Boston, MA afternoon and Saturday-evening Boston 02115. Symphony concerts (subscription concerts only). The continued low price of the Satur- THE EUNICE S. AND JULIAN COHEN day tickets is assured through the gener- ANNEX, adjacent to Symphony Hall on osity of two anonymous donors. The Rush Huntington Avenue, may be entered by the Tickets are sold at $5.00 each, one to a Symphony Hall West Entrance on Hunt- customer, at the Symphony Hall West ington Avenue. Entrance on Fridays beginning 9 a.m. and FOR SYMPHONY HALL RENTAL Saturdays beginning 5 p.m. INFORMATION, call (617) 266-1492, or LATECOMERS will be seated by the write the Function Manager, Symphony ushers during the first convenient pause in Hall, Boston, MA 02115. the program. Those who wish to leave THE BOX OFFICE is open from 10 a.m. before the end of the concert are asked to until 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday; on do so between program pieces in order not concert evenings, it remains open through to disturb other patrons. intermission for BSO events or just past SMOKING IS NOT PERMITTED in any starting-time for other events. In addition, part of the Symphony Hall auditorium or in the box office opens Sunday at 1 p.m. when the surrounding corridors. It is permitted there is a concert that afternoon or evening. only in the Cabot-Cahners and Hatch Single tickets for all Boston Symphony rooms, and in the main lobby on Massachu- concerts go on sale twenty-eight days setts Avenue. before a given concert once a series has begun, and phone reservations will be accepted. For outside events at Symphony Hall, tickets will be available three weeks before the concert. No phone orders will be accepted for these events.

THE SYMPHONY SHOP is located in the Successful business trips Huntington Avenue stairwell near the are music to ears. Cohen Annex and is open from one hour my before each concert through intermission. Garber Travel has been orchestrating travel plans for some of the The shop carries all-new BSO and musical- finest companies in motif merchandise and gift items such as New England and calendars, appointment books, drinking we've never glasses, holiday ornaments, children's missed a beat. books, and BSO and Pops recordings. All Call me at 734-2100.

I know we can work proceeds benefit the Boston Symphony in perfect harmony. Orchestra. For merchandise information, please call 267-2692. Main Office: TICKET If for RESALE: some reason you 1406 Beacon St., are unable to attend a Boston Symphony Brookline. concert for which you hold a ticket, you may

71 CAMERA AND RECORDING EQUIP- tra are heard by delayed broadcast in many MENT may not be brought into Symphony parts of the United States and Canada, as Hall during concerts. well as internationally, through the Boston Symphony Transcription Trust. In addi- FACILITIES for both men FIRST AID tion, Friday-afternoon concerts are broad- and women are available in the Cohen cast live by WGBH-FM (Boston 89.7); Hall West Annex near the Symphony Saturday-evening concerts are broadcast Entrance on Huntington Avenue. On-call live by both WGBH-FM and WCRB-FM physicians attending concerts should leave (Boston 102.5). Live broadcasts may also be their and seat locations at the names heard on several other public radio stations switchboard near the Massachusetts Ave- throughout New England and New York. If nue entrance. Boston Symphony concerts are not heard WHEELCHAIR ACCESS to Symphony regularly in your home area and you would Hall is available at the West Entrance to like them to be, please call WCRB Produc- the Cohen Annex. tions at (617) 893-7080. WCRB will be glad to work with you and try to get the BSO on AN ELEVATOR is located outside the the air in your area. Hatch and Cabot-Cahners rooms on the Massachusetts Avenue side of the building. BSO FRIENDS: The Friends are annual donors to the Boston Symphony Orchestra. LADIES' ROOMS are located on the Friends receive BSO, the orchestra's news- orchestra level, audience-left, at the stage letter, as well as priority ticket information end of the hall, and on the first-balcony and other benefits depending on their level level, audience-right, outside the Cabot- of giving. For information, please call the Cahners Room near the elevator. Development Office at Symphony Hall MEN'S ROOMS are located on the orches- weekdays between 9 and 5. If you are tra level, audience-right, outside the Hatch already a Friend and you have changed Room near the elevator, and on the first- your address, please send your new address balcony level, audience-left, outside the with your newsletter label to the Develop- Cabot-Cahners Room near the coatroom. ment Office, Symphony Hall, Boston, MA 02115. Including the mailing label will COATROOMS are located on the orchestra assure a quick and accurate change of and first-balcony levels, audience-left, out- address in our files. side the Hatch and Cabot-Cahners rooms. The BSO is not responsible for personal BUSINESS FOR BSO: The BSO's Busi- apparel or other property of patrons. ness & Professional Leadership program

makes it possible for businesses to partici- LOUNGES AND BAR SERVICE: There pate in the life of the Boston Symphony are two lounges in Symphony Hall. The Orchestra through a variety of original and Hatch Room on the orchestra level and the exciting programs, among them "Presi- Cabot-Cahners Room on the first-balcony dents at Pops," "A Company Christmas at level serve drinks starting one hour before Pops," and special-event underwriting. each performance. For the Friday-after- Benefits include corporate recognition in noon concerts, both rooms open at 12:15, the BSO program book, access to the with sandwiches available until concert Higginson Room reception lounge, and time. priority ticket service. For further informa- BOSTON SYMPHONY BROADCASTS: tion, please call the BSO Corporate Concerts of the Boston Symphony Orches- Development Office at (617) 266-1492.

72 © 1985 BENEDICTINE SA.. 80 PROOF IMPORTED FROM FRANCE. JULIUS WILE SONS & CO.. LAKE SUCCESS, NY

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