Word: rome
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...formed, was rewarded by being made Party Secretary in 1925 but mysteriously lost his job next year. Farinacci joined up during the Ethiopian War, fought courageously, lost his right hand when a hand-grenade he was carrying exploded. He has had no official status for eleven years, but lately Rome has under stood he was due for important recognition...
First prize, $500, to Theodor H. Rome ocC, of Worcester; second prize, $200, to Arthur Szathmary '38, of Quincy; third prize, $100, to Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr. '38, of Cambridge; and graduate students' prize, $300, to Donald W. Meiklejohn, of Berkeley, California...
Excuse for the state visit of Vittorio Emanuele to Regent Nicholas Horthy of Hungary was to return a similar visit paid by the Regent to Rome six months ago, but Kings seldom make state visits out of pure politeness. What caused this visit with its special train was the knowledge spreading through all the chancelleries of the Balkans that French and British rearmament was reaching a point where minor Balkan nations might soon turn to them against the encroachments of Fascism. In Venice five weeks ago Benito...
...students have any money, the $4,000 signs on the annual Prix de Rome shine like a rainbow. There are four such prizes-in painting, sculpture, architecture, landscaping. Each means two years at the American Academy in Rome. Competitors must be bachelors under 30, winners must promise not to marry until their two years are up. Since 1926 Yale's School of Fine Arts has had something of a corner on the Rome prizes, especially in painting and sculpture...
...Painting: Clifford Edgar Jones of Kokomo, Ind., a student at the John Herron Art School in Indianapolis. He brought his school its first Prix de Rome for Carnival, a lively, crowded circus scene...