Word: doges
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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There are some 300 authenticated Titians in the world. Venice, which discovered him and made him rich, has only 28 and not one of them remains in private hands. Six are in the Academy or the Doge's Palace, the rest in parish churches and monasteries. Florence, Venice's ancient rival, has 31. So has Vienna, and there are 34 in Madrid. Chief distribution of remaining Titians...
...assisting Saltonstall are: Malcolm Bancroft '33; N. P. Doge '33, A. B. Gardiner, III, '33, W. A. Schroeder '33, W. S. Sims, Jr. '33, and Peregrine White '33. Last year's Student Council, headed by W. B. Wood, Jr. '32, reported on the employment of studetns, student waiting, room prices, food prices, and the cost of the House Plan. The report, submitted confidentially to the President and the Corporation, was influential in bringing about the creation of jobs for students and a reduction of room rents. The Council's greatest report was in 1926 when it advocated changes which resulted...
From his chair in the wings this week Mr. Gatti watched Baritone Lawrence Tibbett impersonate Simone Boccanegra, a 14th Century doge whose life was thoroughly cluttered with political intrigues, kidnappings, poisonings. The audience, Mr. Gatti knew, would make little effort to follow the complicated plot. The few powerful, cumulative moments in the music would not make up for the lack of familiar, fetching tunes. But Simone Boccanegra suited Mr. Gatti for the season's opening opera. His hero Verdi wrote it. It is spectacular. The first act might be slow but at least the scene in the big council...
Daughter Giulia was the old Doge's pet. Beautiful, wild and wilful, she was a magnificent horsewoman and used to spend $200,000 a year on her clothes. At one horse show she wore 17 different costumes. Newspapers once published her dress budget. It included 365 pairs of gloves. She would never wear a pair twice...
...Giulia Morosini went all the old Doge's treasures. In her last years she became a recluse, kept Elmhurst locked to all but a few intimates though she was always extremely generous to charities. Last February she died, leaving ample bequests to her brothers & sisters and a dozen institutions, and the pick of her father's armor collection to the Metropolitan Museum. To settle the residue of the estate, one auction of furniture and household effects was held at Elmhurst last spring. There was still enough left to keep auctioneers busy for six days last week. All Miss...