Word: gallos
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...Cutts '28; Sidney Darlington '28; E. P. Dean '29; D. L. Dickson '27; H. J. Donahue '27; H. B. Elkins '28; L. P. Feinberg '27; Robert Fienberg '28; William Finkelstein '29; G. A. Flagg '28; J. C. T. Flexner '29; H. F. Folland '29; J. S. Gallo '27; Samuel Gilman '27; Abraham Ginsburg '27; R. J. Goldwater '29; W. F. Green '28; J. L. Greenstein '29; D. S. Gruber '29; A. J. Harris '28; H. F. Hart '28; C. H. Hartwig '28; L. H. Heimerdinger Jr. '28; L. R. Henrich Jr. '29; P. M. Herzog Jr. '27; Louis Horvitz...
Bramante was the architect who persuaded the Pope to raze the old Church of St Peter, planning another which should be the greatest of the world, and it was according to his plans that the new foundations were laid. Raphael, Peruzzi, Michael Angelo and Juleano San Gallo, his successors, however, altered his plans so that little of the present edifice may be attributed...
...their space to witticisms at the expense of operatic absurdities, commented too on the few yawning seats, wondered if the cry for opera at popular prices is as genuine as it has appeared to be, if next season, when the San Carlo has its permanent Manhattan home, Fortune Gallo will be able to hold his record of making opera...
...Fortune Gallo, manager of the San Carlo Opera Company in the U. S., postponed the opening of his Manhattan season for a week so that Pietro Mascagni could attend...
...names were pregnant as the curtain of an opera house with musical memories. One. thought of Puccini dying alone in a Brussels hotel while Bohéme was being played in Manhattan and a critic there was writing, "Wherever a fiddle scrapes, his songs are heard. . . ." Of Maestro Fortune Gallo shouting, "I tell you my name is Fortune. . . . I tell you opera will pay. . . ." Of Signer Serafin imposing his electricity on the wavering scores of Metropolitan experiments. ... Of Toscanini throwing down his cello in the Opera House in Rio de Janeiro one night in 1886 to conduct Aida by heart...