Word: ferrara
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...selections of the prize winners were as follows: W. G. Beach '11, "The Sword of Ferrara," McLennan; F. Stern '11, "Speech of Sergeant Buzfuz," Dickens; E. A. Bemis '11, "The Courtship of Miles Standish," Longfellow; G. L. Harding '10, "Roberts's Speech to the Strikers in Strife," Galsworthy; C. J. Cudahy '10, "Speech of Mark Anthony," Shakespeare...
...place of transient rather than of permanent abode, yet its interest in the classics was exemplified in 1413 by the sensation created there over the alleged discovery of the bones of Livy. From here we turn southward to Mantua with its undying memories of Virgil, and thence to Ferrara, celebrated for the massive towers of its moated castle. Dr. Sandys then touched upon Naples, where we may see the lofty arch of the Castello Nuovo. Here the centre of classic interest lies in the tomb of Virgil, over which Petrarch is said to have planted a laured tree. At Naples...
...Feltre and Guarino of Verona. Both founded schools in Italy and both, by advocating a liberal education--bodily as well as mental exercise, Greek as well as the Latin culture--together taught the many scholars who for centuries kept alive their fame. From these two men and their successors, Ferrara and Vittoria Colona, proceed the greater number of those scholars who afterwards carried the new learning out into the world, not only throughout Italy but into the countries of the west, far beyond her borders...
...artistic finish the finest coins of the ancients. The chief Italian and the chief French master in works of this class, Vittore Pisano, and Dupre, are represented in this collection. Among the portraits by these and other medalists are those of Alfonzo V of Aragon, Lionello D'Este of Ferrara, Filippe Maria, Visconti of Milan, Leon Battista Alberti, Cosimo de Medici and Lorenzo de Medici. The medals are, for the most part, of considerable size, ranging from 40 or 50 to nearly 200 millimetres in diameter...
Orchestration of the Tufts numbers by N. Ingalls 1900, and W. A. Willis 1901. 1. Pomp and Circumstance, Elgar 2. Overture, "Zampa," Herold 3. Espana, Chabrier 4. a. "For Tufts Hurrah," Class Song b. "Sword of Ferrara," F. F. Bullard 5. Songs of Tufts, a. "Brown and Blue," E. W. Newton '90 b. "The Barnum Song," c. "Charlie Tufts--His College," From "Tufts Songs" 6. Overture, "Rienzi," Wagner 7. Hymn to St. Cecilia, Gounod Solo Violin, Mr. Karl Ondricek. Organ, Mr. Snow. 8. Old Favorites at Tufts. a. Campus Song (Stein Song), F. F. Bullard b. "Dear Alma Mater...