From: President To: Jeffrey Epstein Subject: Re: asked my guys to follow the suggestion of lynne and ask peter davis, hence Date: Tue, 26 Mar 2013 11:00:11 +0000 If I had thought the research and decisions were to be based on music journalism I would never have asked and could have spared you the effort. You would not fund science based on journalists. Sent from my iPhone On Mar 26, 2013, at 5:52 AM, Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]> wrote: i have great affection for both you and your quotes. my people are well intentioned, i promise. they feel embarassed for us both.. \We have been asked to save a 6 toed lemur, for its unique yet undiscovered value in the ecoloigcal chain. i was told that if i didn't fund it i would be slaughtereing a harmelss animal that never did me harm. I was asked to fund a kidney operation of a child i have never met nor knew their family, I did not and have receved threats for killing their kid, On Tue, Mar 26, 2013 at 7:29 AM, President < > wrote: I suggested talking to Davis now precisely because he had an animus years ago. So let your guys send you the Times review of the opera from which at that concert I did an excerpt. By Steve Smith. This is truly a hatchet job by your people. Sent from my iPhone On Mar 25, 2013, at 6:26 PM, Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]> wrote: To anyone weary of standard concert fare, the American Symphony Orchestra programs always look enticing. Ever since he became the orchestra's conductor and music director in 1992, Leon Botstein has been uncovering a buried repertory that our more timid musical organizations avoid, and he is not above stretching a point to put his discoveries into provocative thematic contexts. The latest concert in Avery Fisher Hall was typical: Robert Fuchs's Symphony No. 3, Alexander Zemlinsky's Symphonische Gesiinge, Mahler's Riickert Lieder, and Franz Schreker's "Nachtstiick" interlude from his opera Der Ferne Kiang -- rare works, the Mahler songs e