Word: mario
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Passing through Rome on a business safari to Africa, Democrat Adlai Stevenson taxied up to Premier Mario Scelba's villa to lunch with U.S. Ambassador Clare Boothe Luce and the Italian Premier, then flew for a three-week trip through Kenya, the Sudan, Uganda and Southern Rhodesia...
...dance." Still, it might be advisable to have a look at the picture before showing a print to the kiddies. Giovanna (Silvana Mangano) is a Venetian shopgirl. In the daytime she displays her glamorous glass for the customers; at night she is ready for broader interests. But Mario (Vittorio Gassman), her boy friend, is primarily interested in a phony buck, any way he can get it. When Silvana meets a no-count count (Michael Rennie), Vittorio sees his chance to do some three-cushion pimping. In the upshot Silvana gets drunk at a costume ball, has an experience with...
Edward P. Almy '55, James A. Bailey H '57, Edward P. Bliss '55; Mario J. Celi '56; William J. Cleary '56; Walter S. Cooledge '55 (captain); Joseph F. Crehore '56; Charles B. Flynn '56; Dennis G. Little '56, Charles B. Flynn '56; Francis X. Mahoney '55; Douglas C. Manchester '55; Frederick S. Nicholas, Jr., '57; Arthur F. Noyes '56; Terrence J. O'Malley '57, Peter Summers '56; Albert B. Wells '56; Thomas B. Worthen '57; Joseph W. Barlett '55 (manager); Thomas E. Ingram '56 (associate manager...
...week-long whirl through New York, Philadelphia. Detroit and Chicago (Foreign Minister Gaetano Martino was going to San Francisco and Los Angeles). In Manhattan, where Scelba was welcomed by a cheering crowd, eager greeters pumped his hands and bussed his glowing pink cheeks. Some excavation workers called out: "Hi Mario! Paesan!" In two garment factories Italian-American seamstresses welcomed him with kisses, songs, dances and sentimental weeping. Amidst all the emotion Scelba shed a happy tear or two himself...
...Premier Mario Scelba, who was visiting the U.S., rejoiced when he got the news in Washington. Said Turin's Fiat-owned La Stampa: "For some time we have felt that something new was brewing in the union labor pattern in Italy. These election results give glamorous evidence of what that something...