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Wed-nt photo By Herb Bercovitz
see also by Herbert and Miriam Bercovitz







Wed-nt photo  click for pan of over 120 guests | if no show






"What is the WEDNESDAY Night Salon?"



Diana T. Nicholson chief editor DTN photo Diana T. Nicholson Editor

Thank You

Dear Nonymous and A-nonymous Members
of the Self-appointed Committee for the Millennium Wednesday Night
and Honourable Guests - both present and absent

The horse designed by this committee was most certainly not a camel, but a pure Arabian steed of noble appearance and spirit.

Wed-nt photo 2203b David Nicholson
What a MAGICAL evening you gave us all! Every detail was perfect. You even arranged for unseasonably warm weather so that all of Rosemount Avenue could enjoy the good cheer. And good cheer there most certainly was. Aside from the eloquence of the Mistress of Ceremonies, Harry's presentation of the PROCLAMATION, Herb's lovely Tale of Fiona's Dad and the Thousand and One Nights, Peter's toast, Marie's rendering of Sam Stein's salute from Kyrgyzstan, and the magnificent recital by Susan and Donald, including the aptly chosen "People", what we noted with the greatest pleasure - and pride - was that good conversation prevailed over cocktail party chatter. In the tradition of the 999 previous Wednesday Nights, you maintained courteous, entertaining discourse and debate amidst the constant flow of Hans' and Janet's glorious champagne.

We are immensely touched by your affection and generosity. You are all busy people and, yet, you made the time to prepare this wonderful surprise for us, not simply the Nicholson "us" but the collective Wednesday Night "us" - or should we say, the Wednesday Night Collective?


Marie Hélène Sarrazin Apr 30 2002
Marie Hélène Sarrazin
A special thank you to Brian Morel, the glue that held the committee together. And another to Marie-Hélène and Marie for all their meticulous efforts in coordinating guests, food and details. And to Chil Heward for ensuring that on this Wednesday Night, the menu was not limited to peanuts and pretzels. It was a bounteous feast! To the highly overqualified barmen, John, Allan and Gerald who applied their talents to the elegant delivery of champagne, to Dame Margaret, the Mistress of Ceremonies, His Worship, Mayor Peter F. Trent and all the presenters for their kind words, to Hans and Janet for the champagne, to Eli for the South African wine cellar, to the "Glass Fairy", to Guy Lalonde for ensuring that our memories are confirmed and renewed on videotape and to all of those who chose to make their contribution without a signature. Above all, to Herb and his family for their incredible gift of his exquisite sculpture which now holds the place of honour in the entrance hall.

Finally, we would like to quote Stephen Kinsman who has said for us what we try to iterate on all occasions.

"The achievement of 1000 Wednesday Nights is something of which we are all proud - not just you two. The sometimes amusing, always exciting, scintillating and informative Wednesday Nights are essential to knowledge for us all. I can remember when there have been crowds, I can remember when snowstorms have reduced participation to 6 people. But we all wanted to ensure the momentum never stopped -a matter of pride. Congratulations to you both, but congratulations to us, too!"

It was a WONDERFUL evening - a Night To Remember -. Now, on to 1001 "Tales and Veils".

With our heartfelt thanks to each and every one.

David and Mouse


Wednesdays bring
the world to Westmount

Nicholsons celebrate their 1000th weekly Salon

By Diana T. Nicholson

Curious residents of Rosemount Avenue probably noticed more parked cars on their street than usual on June 2, 1999 & May 2, 2001.

There was no cause for alarm, however, because this has happened every Wednesday night without fail for more than 20 years.

Wednesday Night Salon Millennium
May 2, 2001 #1000
The Survivors

A search of the Internet for "Survivors" brings a range of applicable titles including:

  • Alicia Can't Survive Wednesday
  • Surviving & Thriving
  • Survivor(s) vs Friends
  • Breaking the Commandments

Alicia Can't Survive Wednesday

Maybe Alicia has problems, but with the exception of some Thursdays, most of us have survived Wednesday and enjoyed the experience!

We of the Wednesday Night Salon have our own tales of Survivors, - 20 years' worth, - from the earliest days in 1981 when a half dozen individuals gathered around the dining room table for late dinner with Carl Beigie.. The dinner concept did not survive.

Soon, we progressed to the living room for a restrained gathering, a glass or two of wine and some fine discussions of the Market in the company of brokers and economists - and always Carl Beigie.

As we chatted, it became apparent that the Market was not the be-all and end-all. The Dismal Science could only survive a few minutes without references to politics, international business, socio-cultural concerns and even more esoteric fields. Furthermore, the participants would not survive two hours of the Economy. Louis Rukeyser was replaced as our guru by the likes of Jane Jacobs, Noam Chomsky, Norman Davies and (bless him!) Rex Murphy.

Surviving & Thriving

Thus the Wednesday Night Salon grew from a handful of (mostly) Canadian specialists in one or two fields, summoned by The Voice of Lady Hamilton, to the vast array of polyglot experts in virtually every field now summoned from around the world by e-mail, admittedly a less intriguing messenger than that wonderful Voice!

There have been other changes. We used to start at 9 and sit down for discussion at 10 until a handful of rebels changed the hour while Diana was away. Those same rebels now rarely arrive before 9.

Thanks to Sam Totah's initiative, after many years of being strictly off the record, Wednesday Night is now ably chronicled for publication on the Wednesday-night.com site by Herb Bercovitz with occasional help from Gerald Ratzer, Reverend David Oliver and others, but the chronicles are generally without attribution to individual speakers.

Several years after the Salon began, we realized that "the best part of Wednesday Night is Thursday morning" and consequently began to encourage guests to bring business associates and significant others with whom they might marvel the next day at who said what… "did s/he really say that?"

And the topics - who'd uv thunk 20 years ago that we would have survived the Free Trade Debate (NAFTA) when opinions were so sharply divided, to arrive at the consensus during a recent debate on FTAA that there is more to our survival than freer trade. Or that Wednesday Night would have developed a social conscience? (Thank you, Margaret Lefebvre and cohorts!). Even our most conservative guests have been tainted with liberal views (thank you, Julius Grey ). And it's a long time since the Wednesday Night Town Hall meeting when Ron Walker confounded the "facilitator" by saying that Water would be the principal issue of the 21st century!

Breaking the Commandments

There are few "shalt not's" on Wednesday Night -everyone knows them and the few transgressors are reminded quite sharply. Very few have ever been asked to leave, but it has happened that someone was voted off.

Sometimes, the one topic one conversation is honoured in the breach, but that usually happens when there is a small group of Wednesday Night Irregulars - should we say Survivors?

It is the topic, not the individual, which is the focus of the discussion.
One conversation at a time.
Everything is off the record.

Wednesday Night is designed to send you home saying
"I never thought about it (the topic) that way before"- it is NOT a networking group for the furthering of one's business UNLESS it is a new project or literary/artistic endeavor.

Survivors and Friends

In the globalized world, people move away, notably our children, Marc and Fiona Nicholson , Karin and Nils Ahrland, Terry and David Jones (all of whom materialized in 2000, to our joy), Gloria Bishop, Robert and GAP Aarse, Jon Baggaley, Alberto Candillo, Knut Hammarskjold, Donna Logan, Shalom Shirman, Rick Sindelar, Sonia Saumier (now de Bueno), Matthew Smith, John Riley, Harriet Solloway, Nicole Stellos, Don and Heather Johnston, Richard French, Chris Wentlandt, Colin Tisshaw, Anna Chen, Sonia Singh, David Lukalo, Neil Sternthal, Antony Besso, Eliane Lebendz … to name a few.

We remember and sadly note the passing of some valued Wednesday Nighters and friends - Mimi Audet, Hugo Facci, Stu MacEvoy, Peter Glasheen, Kendal Windeyer, Frank Moore, Pierre Denniger, Boris Reford, Vlad Slivitzky, Richard Kaiser and most recently, our beloved Bob Shaw.

Surviving & Thriving (reprise)

Susan Eyton-Jones DTN photo 3307b
Susan Eyton-Jones 
Wednesday Night is self-renewing. Friends bring friends. Very occasionally (and usually far-away) friends send friends.
Thanks to the core of Survivors and the ever-expanding, ever-changing new resources, the dynamic of Wednesday Night is never the same and always fascinating. We wouldn't vote any one of you off our island!

We invite you, a Wednesday Night Survivor (WNS) to join us for the Wednesday Night Millennium on May 2nd. Purists may wait until the 1001st on May 9th.

With our affectionate thanks for the Wonderful World of Wednesdays with which you have provided us,

David and Diana Thébaud Nicholson

-30-

Webshots will make copies for you
WebShots.com where you can get & see all our photos
or just page II | page III | page IV

QUOTE OF THE EVENING:

"Education is the process through which a person moves from cohesive ignorance to thoughtful uncertainty."

For comments and your letters click here

click for the www.Wednesday-Night.com/Anna_Chen.htm article which appeard in a China news paper

Me Marie Cormier read this from Sam Stein

Every week on Wednesday night,
We come from the left and from the right,
From far and near and in between,
From high and low, to see and be seen,
To discourse with eloquence,
And expound with elegance.
We preach and argue and even squabble,
Yet never does the conversation wobble.
With David at the helm the course is true,
Even though the subject may be blue.
And when the pilot must be guided,
Diana makes sure he's not one-sided.
After one thousand nights the magic has just begun,
Like Sheherezade's Prince, we need a thousand and one.








Please Phone 934-0023 for info



Wed-nt photo 19.7kb
click for pan looking at speakers
        small scn 2210x300         or no show         Sandra & Colin at the 1000th

Wed-nt photo 800x216
click for center panel of pan of some of over 120 guests

click for big pan of basement
pan of Basement


Westmount Examiner photo 101kb Diana & David T. Nicholson

A thousand Wednesday nights

By Martin C. Barry

David and Diana Nicholson were was exhausted exhilarated, although he admitted that . "We are very weary," he said. Three days after a big bash marking the 1,000th Wednesday Night Salon, over an almost 20-year period, the Rosemount Avenue residents were was still recovering. Back in 1982, David and Diana Nicholson decided that what Montreal Westmount needed was a current events 'salon' where intelligent conversation about the latest issues all over the world could take place discreetly once a week, with a special featured guest tying it all together. Ideally, the results would be beneficial to policy development, or at least contribute to greater understanding among people of divergent views.

Now, 1,000 weeks later, the Wednesday salon has become a cherished institution among regular and occasional guests alike. Once described as the Algonquin Round Table updated and transplanted to Westmount, over the years the weekly session has attracted most of Canada¹s brightest political stars, not to mention a long litany of prominent economists, scientists, artists and international diplomats.

To mark the Nicholsons¹ 1,000th Wednesday Night Salon last week, a special committee was formed to organize what David believes was probably one of the biggest bashes Westmount has seen in a long while. Its success was measured by the number of wine glasses, 240 in all.

Among the many guests (over 120) who dropped by to help the Nicholsons celebrate their Wednesday millennium were Mayor Peter Trent, Margaret Lefebvre, Cynthia Lulham, John Ciaccia, Reverend David Oliver, Bill and Magda Weintraub, Jean Doré, Brian Morel, Michel Prescott, Herb Bercovitz, Marie Hélène Sarrazin, Allan Mass, Superior Court Judge Israel Mass, Helen Fotopoulos, David Berger, Harry Mayerovitch, Marie Cormier, Kimon Valaskakis, Ron Meisels, Jacques Clément, Cléement, Reed Scowen, Martin Barnes, Tobi Klein , Carmen Robinson, Sam Totah, Margaret Cuddihy, Roger Warren and Ron Walker and, from Washington, D.C., U.S. diplomats formerly posted to Canada, David and Terry Jones.

Stanley Baker, who was one of the guests, commented that it was a great night and a fitting tribute to the Nicholsons, by the Wednesday Nighters, who had organized and sponsored the event. A combination of last Wednesday¹s heat and the sheer number of guests prompted many to carry the party outdoors. The heat also forced Trent to abandon his original idea of arriving in a full suit of armour as the '1,000th Wednesday Knight¹.

In the years since it started, Wednesday Night has come to be seen as the place to be for anyone in Westmount interested in world affairs and the effect they have on investment markets. One of the rules established at the beginning would be that nothing said during a Wednesday Night session would be reported or quoted outside the room without specific after-the-evening permission. was ever to be repeated publicly.

Officials of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, while on stopovers in Montreal, would often be huddled around the Nicholsons¹ dining room table. "My objective at the outset," said David, an investment broker, "was that I¹d get them arguing back and forth, and I¹d just sit back taking notes, and tomorrow I¹d just walk out and make a fortune."

And did he? "No!" he exclaimed without hesitation. "They didn¹t know the answers, either."

Economists don¹t know any more than the rest of us what will happen, agreed Diana, “they can only suggest the outcome given a specific set of circumstances”. Economics, she concluded, can¹t stand on its own apart from everything else that is occurring in the world. "Economics is based on a whole lot of other things," she said. "So pretty soon, it became quite obvious that for any of us to learn something, we needed to bring in experts in other fields, fields that influence the economy. Thus, the evolution to agendas that run from Astronomy and Bio-technology to zoology and zen.” the knowledge of economists was much more of other things and how they affected the economy, so pretty soon we began bringing in people who were experts in other fields."

According to David, many investors looking for the inside scoop have come to Wednesday Night including politicians, even though politicians are obliged by law to place their investments in a blind trust. But, said David, "the managers of blind trusts wouldmight also be present on come to Wednesday Night."

Two events, both related to the economy, convinced the Nicholsons of their Wednesday Night Salon¹s influence. The week of the 1987 market crash, 48 well-placed people spontaneously turned up for the Wednesday Night meeting.

The Asian economic meltdown of three years ago caused a similar, though more subdued reaction. "A lot of people came here because this was the place to be," said David.

"And partly to lick their wounds," added Diana.

-30-

see also "What is the WEDNESDAY Night Salon?"



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© 1996 David T. Nicholsonby Harry Mayerovitch Please phone (514)934-0023
e-mail your thoughts.Please e-mail us your thoughts.

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