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  • Life & People

    Venice Pigeon War Could be Heading for a Solution


    Venice's long 'pigeon war' could be heading for a solution, local officials say.


    The city has for years been trying to rid its historic squares of sellers of pigeon feed, seeing the birds as a health and heritage hazard.


    The battle now appears to be heading for an out-of-court settlement.


    The last stand-off is taking place in Piazza San Marco, where many tourists see the flocking birds as part of the famed location's appeal.


    The vendors have appealed to the courts which have upheld their rights to their traditional turf. The traders have also insisted that, if they be forced to move on, they should be handed concessions to sell toys and souvenirs in other parts of the lagoon city.


    But officials are optimistic that a deal can be made. ''We're prepared to pay what it takes to get the vendors out of the piazza,'' said Green Councillor Beppe Caccia, who is pressing for a solution by an April 30 deadline.


    ''Compensation will be calculated on the basis of how long the vendor, or vendor's family, has been there and how much their business is worth,'' he said.


    ''Offers will be full and fair, and I'm confident that the vendors will take them''.


    Caccia was speaking after a recent report by local health inspector Sergio Lafisca which highlighted the risks of contracting lung diseases and salmonella from the birds - a risk that is higher for children and the elderly.


    ''In Piazza San Marco you see people, especially kids. literally covered by pigeons. They also fly right over the piazza's tables, showering germs on the food,'' Lafisca said.


    Vendors in St Mark's Square expressed renewed anguish on Monday. ''It's absurd to take away our jobs like this. We have to live,'' said Sergio, one of the 20 or so Venetians who run the small stands selling bird seed and corn.


    Like several other European cities, Venice has already banned people from feeding pigeons in all other parts of town, saying they are a public health menace and a nuisance, eroding monuments with their excrement.


    The initiative has the backing of heritage experts who say pigeon droppings are eating away at historic facades and statues.


    Some even claim the excrement, by eroding flagstones, has increased the risk of the 'acqua alta' that puts the square under water for much of the winter.


    Local people also became more sympathetic to the cause after a report by the Nomisma research group found that the presence of pigeons in Venice costs each resident some 275 euros a year to clean up the mess and damage.

    (ANSA NEWS)

  • Facts & Stories

    Italian and American Crackdown on Mafia


    Code-named 'Old Bridge', the operation focused on revived relations between organized crime families in the United States and Sicily.


    About 60 of the arrests were carried out by the FBI in the US and regard members of the New York-based Gambino family, including its reputed rising star Francesco (Frank) Cali', also known as 'Frankie Boy'.


    'Old Bridge' is the lastest in a series of anti-Mafia offensives which began in 2005 and in 2006 allowed for the arrest of Cosa Nostra superboss Bernardo Provenzano, after over 40 years on the run, and last November of his heir in Palermo, Salvatore Lo Piccolo.


    ''Today's operation is the natural development of the investigations carried out by police in Palermo in recent years and which resulted in the arrests of Provenzano and Lo Piccolo,'' Italy's chief anti-Mafia prosecutor Pietro Grasso said.


    ''The evidence gathered in these investigations has shed light on the growing importance of renewed relations between Cosa Nostra families in Sicily and America, especially the Gambino family in New York,'' he added. Lo Piccolo had been instrumental in re-establishing ties with those Cosa Nostra families which were forced to flee Sicily in the early 1980s after they lost a bloody gang war for control of Cosa Nostra to the Corleone clan headed by Salvatore (Toto') Riina and Provenzano.


    Provenzano took over as the boss of bosses after Riina was arrested in 1993 and in recent years gave his blessing to re-pacification with those families which had fled Sicily.


    Among these was the Inzerillo family which in the US allied itself with the powerful Gambino family.


    Thanks to Provenzano, several members of the Inzerillo family returned to Sicily and were allowed back into the business, also because the original Corleone clan had been depleted by arrests and defections.


    The business primarily involved drug trafficking and money laundering, which the American 'cousins' carried out through the Gambino-Inzerillo family's various legal activities including construction and food imports.


    Cali', who is married to a member of the Inzerillo family, is believed to have been responsible for relations with the families in Sicily and laundering their drug money in the US.


    The FBI's investigation led to the discovery of a number of front companies operated under Cali's supervision including a law firm in Brooklyn which handled financial transactions as well as real estate investments for the family.

     

    (Ansa News)

  • Facts & Stories

    Italy, Elections Scheduled for April 13 and 14


    The initial concern of parties on both the center left and center right appeared to be to present coalitions or electoral slates which did not appear to be a political potpourri of sometimes conflicting political priorities.


    This had been the greatest handicap for outgoing Premier Romano Prodi in his 21-month government which included hardline communists and devout Catholics, as well as seesaw centrists who in the end were responsible for bringing the government down.


    The most radical approach so far has come from Rome mayor Walter Veltroni who wants his newly formed Democratic Party (DP), born from the merger of the Democratic Left and centrists Daisy parties, to stand alone in the elections without its former allies on the far left.


    This has been viewed as political suicide by his critics on the left because Italy's current electoral law awards a 'majority prize' to the winning coalition which guarantees it 55% of the seats in the House.


    However, Veltroni on Wednesday stuck to his guns and said that ''Italy has the right to have something new in order to emerge from a period of political conflict, division and inertia''.


    ''We have 65 days before the elections to turn the page and that is precisely what the PD intends to do,'' he added.


    ''What we intend to do has never been done in Italy. When a citizen votes for the PD, they will clearly know what its positions are and this will eliminate the need to mediate between 18 parties,'' the Rome mayor said.


    However,Veltroni has opened the door to other parties to join the DP in an explicit alliance based on the DP's platform. Veltroni has challenged the biggest party in the center right, ex-premier Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia, to follow the DP's example but there appears little likelihood it will.


    It also appears highly unlikely that Berlusconi, 71, will follow the example of 69-year-old Prodi, who announced Wednesday that he would not stand for re-election in order to make room for a younger generation of leaders. The center right also has problems with its minor parties, some of which are splinter groups from the original House of Liberties coalition: Forza Italia, the National Alliance, the Union of Christian Democrats (UDC) and the devolutionist Northern League.


    The National Alliance has already made it clear that it does not want to be on the same ticket as tiny parties like The Right of his former lieutenant Francesco Storace or the centrist Udeur of ex-justice minister Clemente Mastella, whose defection from the center left last month brought down brought down Prodi's government.


    Similar views have been expressed by UDC leader Pier Ferdinando Casini and the Northern League.


    In order to overcome this obstacle, some pundits believe Berlusconi will push for a slate with the original House of Liberties members, while he will incorporate the smaller party leaders under the Forza Italia banner.


    He will be facilitated in doing this by the current election law, pushed through by the Berlusconi government in the previous legislature, which has parties presenting fixed lists of candidates chosen by the party. Voters thus cast ballots for the party and not the candidate.


    All efforts to change the law before parliament was dissolved failed because of Berlusconi's insistence on voting with his law.


    The first real political skirmish of the election campaign has been over the possibility of staging general elections and partial local administrative elections at the same time.


    Prodi and the center left are in favor of this while the center right is opposed.


    Observers noted that the reason for this may be the fact that the center left generally does better in local elections and may want a much needed boost.


    However, for the center left the official reason for an 'election day' is to save the taxpayers' money and the voters' time, with fewer trips to the ballot box.


    A decision on grouping the votes together will be made this week or next.

    (ANSA News)

  • Facts & Stories

    Italy. Lower Salaries Keep Young People in the Family Nest


    The socio-economic think-tank Isae said that the number of young adults staying home had climbed by 6% in 13 years and today about 75% still lived with their parents.


    According to Isae, 68.4% of young adults lived with their parents in 1991 while in 2004 this percentage rose to 74.1%.


    In 1991, the think-tank pointed out, first job salaries were 83% of the average national salary, while in 2004 they were only 74%. Last October Economy Minister Tommaso Padoa-Schioppa sparked polemics when he referred to the young adult Italians living at home as ''big babies''.


    ''Let's get these big babies out of the home,'' the minister told a parliamentary committee in regard to a budget measure to set aside funds to help young adults pay the rent on a place of their own.


    ''We need to encourage young people to leave home. If they don't, they just stay with their parents, they don't get married and they don't become independent,'' he said.


    Bank of Italy Governor Mario Draghi recently has spoke on the need to improve prospects for young people in regards to both salaries and job security.


    ''If they expect to have a salary which is lower than in the past and have to battle continually with job insecurity, they will lower their spending permanently,'' he said.


    Low salaries and precarious working conditions also prevent young people from leading independent ''adult lives'', Draghi added.


    The economic reality of why young adults stay at home is in contrast with the stereotype of young Italians living at home for the comfort and security.


    This stereotype was the basis of a successful 2001 French film, Tanguy, about a 28-year-old college graduate who fights his parent's efforts, even in court, to get him out of the family nest.


    The film was inspired by a real Italian court case won by a son whose parents tried to force him out of their home.


    In Italian marriage vows couples promise to maintain their children until they fulfill their aspirations. This concept is recognised by the country's constitution which does not set a time limit on this obligation.

     

    (ANSA NEWS)

  • Facts & Stories

    Remembering Italian Shoah


    (For information about Giorno della Memoria in Italy see www.ucei.it/giornodellamemoria  and  www.cdec.it )

    ----

    Sunday, January 27

    Center for Jewish History

    15 West 16 Street, NYC

    5:00 pm

    Admission: free


    Reservations: [email protected]

    (subject line: memoria)


    Film Screening. L'Isola delle Rose. La Tragedia di un Paradiso by Rebecca Samonà (59’ in Italian with English subtitles). Through the memories of women including her mother, the author reconstructs the life and annihilation of the Jews of Rhodes from the beginning of the Italian colonization in 1912, to the deportation to Auschwitz in 1944. Combining era footage with a delicate personal commentary L'Isola delle Rose offers a glimpse into a centuries-old culture which a handful of survivors infused it into a younger generation that is today scattered around the world. Andrea Fiano (journalist) will interview Stella Levi (Board member of Centro Primo Levi), a survivor from Rhodes, on her own experience of the anti-semitic persecutions and the extermination camps.  

    Monday, January 28

    8:30 am - 4:30 pm

    Consulate General of Italy and Italian Cultural Institute,

    Park Avenue/68 St. Reading of the names of the Italian victims of the Shoah.

    “There are no tombstones for the victims of the Shoah but only our good will to make time to remember them and let the wind carry the sound of their names. ” We need thirty-six people to read for five minutes at any given time.

    Please join and let us know if you are able to read by sending a message to:    

    [email protected]

    (indicate time and contact info)

    Tuesday, January 29

    5:30 pm - 8:30 pm

    Italian Academy at Columbia University, 1161 Amsterdam Avenue at 116 St.

    Italian Fascist Race Laws and the Manifesto della Razza: How Law and Science Can be Racist . David Freedberg (Italian Academy), Ruth Ben-Ghiat (NYU), Lidia Santarelli (NYU) and Alexander Stille (Columbia University).

    Wednesday, January 30, 6:00 pm

    Italian Cultural Institute, 686 Park Avenue  

    Women Remember - Marianne Hirsch (Columbia University) and Millicent Marcus (Yale University) and Stella Levi (Centro Primo Levi) discuss women’s memory and the recollections of Giuliana Tedeschi and Rosetta Loy, two Italians who experienced the anti-semitic persecution from opposite perspectives: that of a Jewish woman in an extermination camp and that of a non-Jewish child who observes. Actress Maria Tucci will read excerpts from the memoirs of Giuliana Tedeschi, Rosetta Loy, Piera Sonnino.

    RSVP: 212-879-4242 ext. 376.

  • Art & Culture

    Italian Women in Jazz


    Cross-cultural events, jazz music, female creativity, Italian culture, the city of New York: these were the mixed basic ideas that created the first edition of the “Italian Women in Jazz” Festival, back in 2005. Enzo Capua, a PR pioneer and dmusic promoter known for his repeated successful work as the US representative for the “Umbria Jazz Festival”, a reporter for SBS Radio, a correspondent for “Musica Jazz” magazine to name a fiew credentials, produced the concert at Symphony Space Theater with the support of the Italian Cultural Institute. It was the first time in the history of the New York Jazz scene to have an event that grouped Jazz bands with Italian women as leaders in one night.



    For this third edition the Festival will be held at the world famous Blue Note Jazz club, during the first week-end of February: 1st , 2nd  and 3rd . This represents a big step ahead for “Italian Women in Jazz”. After two successful editions in a single day, the forthcoming Festival will be displayed during three nights in the most important jazz venue of New York City.



    The Italian Cultural Institute of New York is the official supporter of “Italian Women in Jazz” since the first edition. For this Third Edition there will be the attendance of Regione Sardegna (Italy’s Sardinia Region), along with the sponsorship of Alitalia (Italy’s flag Airlines) and the promotional support of Italian Tourist Board.

     

    FESTIVAL LINE-UP:



    Friday February 1st , Blue Note, 131 W 3rd st, 8pm and 10,30pm shows:



    MARIA PIA DE VITO QUARTET: Maria Pia De Vito is considered the most outstanding jazz singer in Italy. Her career spans for over twenty years and includes dozens of important recordings. Her latest project, “So Right”, dedicated to the music of Joni Mitchell, will be released in US just before her performance at the Festival: This will be her first concert ever as band leader in New York.

     

     

    Band line-up:  Maria Pia De Vito – vocals

                               Edward Simon - piano

                               Scott Colley - bass

                              C larence Penn - drums





     

     

     

      

     

    Saturday February 2nd, Blue Note, 8pm and 10.30pm shows:



    ROBERTA GAMBARINI BAND (with special guest Ada Rovatti on saxophone): Roberta Gambarini was born in Turin, Italy. She moved to US only eight years ago, where she started an amazing career. Today she is one the brightest stars among the jazz singers. She received a Grammy Nomination in 2007 for her first album “So in Love”. She performs everywhere in the world and the jazz critics of DownBeat magazine voted her in the 2007 poll as n° 1 Rising Star among the female jazz vocalists.

     



     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Sunday  February 3rd, Blue Note, 8pm and 10.30pm shows:

    THE BIG O ORCHESTRA: This all-stars female Big Band has been created by producer Enzo Capua for the 2nd edition of the Festival (2006). Due to the amazing success of this special italian-american band, the Big O Orchestra will perform at Blue Note with a brand new repertoire of original compositions. The Big Band is the core of the “Italian Women in Jazz”: It is the ultimate musical expression of an ideal connection between the two continents. That’s why it is an Orchestra with a big O in the name. All musicians have been selected among the best Italian and American instrumentalists living in New York. The Big Band conductor and arranger is the Maestro Tommaso Vittorini .

     

     

    BIG O ORCHESTRA LINE-UP:



    Saxophones:

    ADA ROVATTI     (tenor-soprano)     

    LAURA DREYER  (tenor, flute, clarinet)

    SHAREL CASSITY (alto, flute, clarinet)  

    LAUREN SEVIAN   (Baritone, flute)

    Trumpets:

    PAMELA FLEMING  

    LAURA KAHLE         

    Trombones:

    DEBORAH WEISZ                                                                                   

    REUT REGEV                                                                                                   

    Rhythmic section:

    AMANDA MONACO  (guitar)      

    DANIELA SCHAECHTER  (piano)   

    NORIKO UEDA   (bass)                                                          

    SYLVIA CUENCA  (drums)

                                                          

    TOMMASO VITTORINI  (conductor – arranger)



    CONTACTS:


    Enzo Capua – Artistic Director and Producer     

    Office: (212) 265 7223

    Cell: (646) 331 7223                  

    Email:  [email protected]

     

    Music charge per person: $ 30 table + $ 5 min. / $ 20 at the bar

    131 W.3rd st. New York City . 212.475.8592 . www.bluenotejazz.com

  • Life & People

    'La Befana' Arrives on Her Broomstick


    According to the tradition, a white-haired witch known as the 'Befana' arrives on her broomstick during the night of January 5 and fills the stockings of good children with toys and sweets.


    The naughty ones, on the other hand, find a lump of coal.



    Before the Santa Claus tradition of the English-speaking world became the dominant force in the Italian Christmas, January 6 was the customary day to receive presents, not December 25th.


    The Christian feast of the Epiphany, which falls on the twelfth day of Christmas, recalls the Bible story of the Three Magi arriving in Bethlehem with their gifts for the newborn Christ.




    Although the good witch of the Epiphany has now been partially sidelined, a recent survey by the Milan chamber of commerce found that one in two Italians still ''feels'' the importance of the Epiphany. The tradition is strongest in Rome and southern cities, such as Naples.


    Many Italians young and old still look forward to January 6 as a chance to get the presents they wanted but did not receive at Christmas.




    Parents who find Christmas something of a challenge greet the Epiphany festivities with relief as it means children will soon return to school and there are no more expenses for the time being.


    Celebrations may be a little muted in any case this year because Epiphany falls on a Sunday. This means Italians won't be able to use the public holiday to extend the weekend and go off on a short break somewhere.




    Hundreds of events have been scheduled up and down the country on Sunday to the Befana's arrival. In one novel initiative, the world's longest Epiphany stocking, measuring 52 metres and packed with sweets, will be paraded through Viterbo, a city north of Rome.


    In Camerino, in the eastern Marche region, there will be another record attempt. A local confectioner is trying to get into the Guinness book of records by making a 400-metre bar of 'torrone', a nougat-type sweet eaten by Italians at Christmas.




    Back in Rome, Pope Benedict is scheduled to mark the Epiphany with a morning mass in St Peter's Basilica.


    In line with another Epiphany tradition, a procession of hundreds of people in medieval costumes will walk along the wide avenue leading up to the Vatican, carrying symbolic gifts for the pope.

     

  • Facts & Stories

    Foreign Minister D'Alema. Bhutto Assassination ''An Act of Barbaric Violence''


    Rome. Italy on Thursday condemned the assassination of Pakistan opposition leader Benazir Bhutto.


    In a message issued shortly after the former Pakistani premier was killed by a suicide attack in Rawalpindi, Foreign Minister Massimo D'Alema called the attack ''an act of barbaric violence''. Premier Romano Prodi said ''the sacrifice of ex-premier Bhutto must be the strongest example for those who won't give in to terrorism''.


    Both officials pledged Italy's support for Pakistan in its fight against terrorism and determination to press ahead with upcoming elections, which have already been postponed once. The Vatican said Bhutto's death was ''terrible news''.

    (ANSA NEWS)

     

  • Decision handed down to Genoa G8 rioters


    In 2001, tens of thousands of anti-globalization demonstrators attended the G8 summit held in the port city of Genoa, Italy. On December 14, 2007, a Genoa court deemed 24 Italians protestors to have engaged in various acts of rioting and sentenced them to a total of 102 years. Prison sentences range from five months to 11 year. The most extreme sentence was given to a 41-year old woman who is believed to be a member of the “Black Block” activist movement, a loose affiliation of alleged anarchist and radical groups trademarked by their black clothing.

     

    The protests were plagued with controversy following the clash between police and a small number of “Black Block” protestors, which resulted in the shooting death of a young male by a policeman. Anti-globalization protestors were again visible during the last days of the Genoa trial, in which only one defendant was acquitted. There were no reported incidents of violence at the trial, which was closely monitored by police.

     

    Francesco Caruso, a Member of Parliament who was elected on the communist ticket, and who was also among the protestors in 2001 disavowed the court’s decision, stating "It's a worrying repressive attack on all those who filled the streets of Genoa six years ago." On the contrary, Roberto Castelli, a Northern League senator, who was justice minister at the time of the riots, feels that ''Justice has been done.” However, Castelli, remains eager to discover the identities of the rest of the Black Block members

     

    (From Ansa and BBC, by Tara Mancini)

  • Facts & Stories

    Conferenza Mondiale dei Giovani 2008. Riunione Preparatoria per Paese (USA)


     Oggetto:
    Definizione dei punti principali di discussione in vista della conferenza mondiale dei giovani italiani nel mondo.

    Obiettivi:

    1. Redazione di un documento propositivo in relazione alla Conferenza Mondiale dei Giovani 2008 (Paese USA)

    2. Costituzione di un Associazione di Giovani Italiani e Italo-Americani negli USA

    Ordine del giorno:

    1. Saluto ai Partecipanti e presentazioni

    2. Breve relazione VII Commissione(Nuove Generazioni)

    3. Saluto del Viceconsole di Newark Dott. Paolo Toschi

    4. Breve Descrizione del CGIE e Comites e dei loro obiettivi

      1. Rapporti dei giovani con i Comites e le comunità locali

      2. esperienze personali dei partecipanti


    5. Scopo conferenza

      1. Tematiche conferenza

      2. Conferenze regionali dei giovani, (spunti e riflessioni DVD “Conferenza Mondiale dei giovani toscani”)

      3. Argomenti trattati in altre riunioni Paese 

    1. Tappe Evolutive per Paese in vista della Conferenza Mondiale dei Giovani

      1. Obiettivi

      2. Scadenze

      3. Prossimi Incontri preparatori

    1. Processo di selezione dei giovani per la conferenza

      1. Requisiti e Metodologie:

        1. Giovani ricercatori, scienziati e professionisti (cervelli in fuga)

        2. Giovani di seconda e terza generazione (figli di emigrati)

        3. Giovani studenti

        4. Giovani imprenditori e lavoratori

        5. Giovani disoccupati

    1. Coinvolgimento dei giovani in loco

      1. Organizzare dei comitati di giovani in grado da poter delegare alcuni compiti e gestire in modo adeguato i diversi aspetti organizzativi, le problematiche che possono sorgere alla preparazione della conferenza.

      2. Creare un sistema di comunicazione valido fra i giovani e porsi degli obiettivi da raggiungere a scadenza. Una rete di comunicazione dove saranno possibili scambi di idee, schemi e proposte (Forum web CGIE?)

    1. Creazione di un associazione di Giovani Italo-Americani o Italiani negli USA 

      1. Obiettivi

      2. Modelli esempio

        1. GINQ model

        2. AGIM model

        3. Altri modelli

    1. Processo evolutivo del documento propositivo elaborato in conferenza plenaria del CGIE

    1. Argomenti proposti dai giovani delegati (da riceversi entro il10 dicembre)

    1. Varie ed eventuali

      1. (quote di partecipazione per paese)

      2. Prossimo incontro

     

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