Word: salzburger
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Those men who were reached were presented with a rather unappealing list of recommended charities to which to give. Having already given roughly $2100 to the World University Service during the Hungarian relief drive, many students were faced with a choice between WUS, PBH, the Salzburg Seminar, the American Field Service, and the Red Feather campaign. Without previous publicity about the aims of these various organizations, most donors were reluctant to give and seldom had any alternative charities in mind. As a result of lack of information on the recipients advocated by the Council, students felt little or no interest...
Unspecified contributions will go toward the American Field Service, Phillips Brooks House, World University Service, the Red Feather campaign, and the Salzburg Seminar, the only center in Europe for advanced U.S. study. Solicitors will visit students' rooms between...
Toscanini left the mark of his honesty and passion on the conscience of his musical generation, particularly on every artist who ever worked with him-at La Scala, the Metropolitan (1908-15), in the New York Philharmonic-Symphony (1928-36), at Salzburg, at Bayreuth and the NBC Symphony Orchestra (1937-54). Few could define exactly how the little tyrant worked his magic with them. As he hoarsely, ardently sang along with the orchestra, or exhorted, bullied and implored, he could make performers redden with shame, burn with rage, or soften with sympathy for him. And with uncanny and unerring instinct...
Voting on the form of the Combined Charities pledge cards, the Council ratified the proposal submitted by co-chairmen Michael N. Butler '57 and Gregory B. Stone '58, which put PBH, the Salzburg Seminar, American Field Service, and World University Service on the suggested list...
...impressive as his musical domain is his travel schedule. Last month he visited the Salzburg Festival, darted over to Lucerne for another festival (he conducted a Mozart program), then flew on to the island of Ischia in the bay of Naples, where he rested for a few days. From there he sailed his 50-ton yacht (crew of three) to Portofino, motored to Genoa, hopped a plane to Zurich, got into his waiting silver-grey Mercedes 300 SL and soloed at a breakneck 90 m.p.h. back to Lucerne for rehearsals and a concert, then caught a plane for West Berlin...