Showing newest 17 of 24 posts from November 2008. Show older posts
Showing newest 17 of 24 posts from November 2008. Show older posts

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Antonio Cassano Writes of His Tempestuous Fabio Capello Relationship

Trying to explain the relationship between Star Player Antonio Cassano and Coach Fabio Capello is unusually complicated, maybe even bizarre


Mimic Who fell Foul of Capello

Antonio Cassano reveals all in his autobiography

The Sunday Times
Ian Hawkey
November 23, 2008

FABIO CAPELLO threw one of his angry fits in Berlin last Tuesday, arms waving, a picture of studied intolerance. His England players had messed up a practice exercise and even those unused to this manager would recognise gestures Capello has developed over 20 years to the point of a trademark. Some footballers who have worked with him know them so well they can do a vivid impersonation, players such as Antonio Cassano, whom Spanish television cameras once caught mimicking his manager’s sergeant-major style.

Just as English football rolls out a red carpet for Capello after a successful year in charge of the national team, Cassano, the enfant terrible of Italian football, has been raking over the cinders of perhaps the most tempestuous relationship Capello the coach has had with a player. Cassano and Capello were together twice, at Roma and at Real Madrid, and in that time, Cassano estimates, they told one another to “f*** off” at least 20 times. At Roma, whom Cassano joined as a teenager from a poor, sometimes dangerous background in the southern Italian city of Bari, the striker would play the best football of his career. At Madrid, he would be marginalised by Capello.

For all this, Cassano describes the manager as “like a father to me. I miss him. If it’s a fact that he pushed me out at Madrid and left me out of the team from time to time at Roma, he was true to me in that when I was playing well he picked me and he was almost always right. Sometimes he was brave, selecting me ahead of great strikers like Gabriel Batistuta. He’s always said too that the best players he has coached in his career were me and [Brazil’s] Ronaldo, another one who he fought with a lot. I’ve had a million problems with him, and he’s hard. But he’s fair. He’ll stand his ground and he’s usually right. That’s his strength.”

Cassano’s autobiography hit the bookshops in Italy this weekend and in between the tales of fast cars and faster women – Cassano claims to have known “600 to 700” intimately, which is quite something for a squat young man with bad skin and a tendency to plumpness around the midriff – is yarn after yarn about his spats and rapprochements with Capello. If the absence of a father figure is a feature of his rough childhood, his relationship with Don Fabio is described again and again as “like father and son”. Of their first acquaintance, when Capello rang Cassano in anticipation of their working together in Rome, the player swoons: “I perfectly remember the deep voice, just like that square jaw, with the certainty and charisma of a great man.”

Soon enough, they would be falling out. “I loved him like a father and I hated the bastard,” recalls Cassano. “I looked on him as the source of all truth, and then thought [he] was about as genuine as a €3 coin. We couldn’t agree on anything. He would stress the importance of order and discipline, I’d tell him the reasons for disorder and indiscipline. I started doing the opposite of what he said.” In time, others at Roma would think Capello too indulgent of his talented, incorrigible protégé. Some of Cassano’s stories support the idea.

In one run of good form, Cassano decided he wanted to break a corner flag while celebrating a goal. He told Capello of his plan. “If we win, you can do it,” said the coach. “If you score two and we win, then you can break all four as far as I’m concerned.” Capello once told this reporter he felt it a privilege to work with a footballer so gifted.

At Madrid, the relationship deteriorated. Cassano arrived there before Capello and, after a confusing six months in Spain for the player, he was pleased to see his compatriot. They even conspired. “You must help me,” said Capello to Cassano, “and give me reports from the dressing room. I’ll help you.”

The alliance lasted less than a month. Dropped by the manager, then ignored by him after Spanish television broadcast Cassano’s vivid impression of his boss, performed in front of other, giggling players before a match in Barcelona, Cassano felt he had become, to Capello, “a malignant cancer, so that anybody with me would be considered an enemy to him. Like David Beckham, for example. When we were in front of the coach I pretended to hardly know Beckham, in case that made his life more difficult.”

Cassano still feels wronged by Capello “for not having given me an explanation” of why he was frozen out at Madrid. Italian football may not think it needs one. A few years ago, a new phrase entered Serie A vocabulary: “the Cassanata”, to describe an act of hot-headed wilfulness, a la Cassano. Telling the president of Real Madrid he was “second-rate” would count as a Cassanata.

Last summer Madrid ushered Cassano back to Italy after 18 months. There, he has played well enough with Sampdoria to return to the national squad. The Cassanatas seem to occur less often or with a little more decorum. Italy’s Gazza may have a few more chapters in him.

THE ITALIAN GAZZA

Public tears, a brittle temper and a reckless sense of mischief; you can see why Antonio Cassano is seen as the Paul Gascoigne of modern Italian football. Some of his appetites, though, surpass even those of the weeping Geordie. Cassano claims in his autobiography to have slept with more than 600 women – and he’s still only 26

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/football/article5213279.ece

Paradise in This Life: Exquisite Estates and Gardens around Rome

Villa Lante, created in the 16th century, unites flawless geometry and fantastical water features and landscaping to tell the tale of mankind’s taming of nature.

Aah, Italy

Estates and gardens around Rome are exquisite escapes

Winston-Salem Journal - Winston-Salem,NC,USA By Susan Spano November 23, 2008

AGNAIA, Italy - I know how to get to paradise in this life.

It lies atop a hill about 60 miles north of Rome where a gentleman-cardinal built a garden in the 16th century. His architects created it from water and stone, green leaves and vine. But the result is more than the sum of its parts. Villa Lante embodies the humanist ideals of the Italian Renaissance.

Soon after I moved to Rome last spring, I began seeking out area gardens.

I took a Vatican Gardens tour to see the pope's beautiful backyard, and I saw the ingenious fountains at the Villa d'Este, about 20 miles east of Rome. I found secret havens in the city -- the rose garden on the Aventine Hill, for one -- and tagged along with a group of architecture students from Yale University to visit Villa Madama, in the hills northwest of the city.

When summer's heat settled in, I fled the city almost every weekend, navigating a rental car to the Grande Raccordo Annulare, the ring road that encircles Rome. From there it was easy to find cool, green, consummately beautiful pieces of paradise.

In 1578, Cardinal Giovanni Francesco Gambara was suffering an attack of gout when Pope Gregory XIII arrived at the Villa Lante. When the pope saw Gambara's exquisite and obviously costly estate above the hamlet of Bagnaia, he canceled the cardinal's allowance.

It couldn't have been a good day for Gambara.

When I visited Villa Lante, I was blessed in every way. On the drive from Rome, I followed the path of the Tiber River, lined by fields of golden, just-reaped summer hay.

I turned off the highway near Orte into a landscape of volcanic hills, crater lakes and strange, eroded canyons. A winding country road took me to L'Ombricolo -- which means "the little shady spot" -- a bed-and-

breakfast that occupies a tile-roofed farmhouse surrounded by sunflowers.

Once I settled in, inn proprietor Dawne Alstrom gave me directions to Bomarzo, a garden as remarkable as Villa Lante in its own weird way.

I found Bomarzo, a privately owned "garden of monsters," as it's called, in a narrow, wooded valley about a 20-minute drive from L'Ombricolo. From the parking lot it looked like a cheesy tourist attraction featuring monumental statues of dragons and sphinxes set among the trees.

But once I ventured in, I realized something profoundly strange goes on in the woods at Bomarzo.

Stone colossi wrestle to the death in the dell.

An elephant pinions a Roman legionnaire in its trunk, and a precariously tilted house seems to totter at the edge of a terrace.

Around the bend, an ogre's head rears up, its wide-open maw revealing a tongue in the shape of a stone table, where visitors can picnic while being devoured.

Art historians attribute the bizarre stone gallery, created circa 1570 by Vicino Orsini, to the rise of the Mannerist style of art that evolved after the High Renaissance. But psychology might also explain it.

Orsini was a papal soldier who retired, disillusioned, from the wars that wracked the Italian peninsula in the 16th century. At Bomarzo, I like to think he used his still-intact prankish sense of humor to vanquish his demons.

Villa Lante is comparatively demure, intent on perfection, not astonishment -- without the distraction of flowers -- and unchangingly green through the seasons.

When I passed through the gate, I caught a strong whiff of freshly clipped boxwood from the parterres around the Fountain of the Moors on the lower level, the interlocking hedges shaped in spirals, squares and circles with little lemon trees peeking out.

Then I turned around and saw the chain of fountains that decorates the hill. Drawn from springs in the nearby San Valentino hills, the watercourse emerges from the highest grotto, known as the Fountain of the Flood, then vanishes and reappears in pools and channels that flow between the two palazetti, or "little palaces."

There's the Fountain of the Dolphins, richly emblazoned with the Gambara crayfish crest; the scalloping Chain Fountain, as ramblingly beautiful as any mountain stream; the long Cardinal's Table, with troughs of running water that served as finger bowls for Gambara's dinner guests; and the classic Renaissance garden on the lowest terrace.

I read in Helena Attlee's Italian Gardens that, from top to bottom, Villa Lante tells the story of human evolution, beginning with the rustic Eden created by God at the Fountain of the Flood and climaxing in the perfect geometry of the lower parterres.

To understand the garden's symbolism isn't to take any less sensual delight in it. I couldn't keep from dipping my toes in the cold, flowing water of the Chain Fountain. I ran my palms across the moss that clothes Villa Lante's stone nymphs and goddesses. I sat at the Cardinal's Table, half waiting for Gambara's liveried servants to serve lunch.

On another summer getaway, I stopped to see a garden in the medieval town of Ninfa, owned along with its hilltop neighbor Sermoneta by the noble Caetani family, which still has a palazzo in the historic center of Rome.

Ninfa, open to visitors on selected summer weekends, is a garden for wandering with a book and a dog, for lying in fresh-cut grass and dreaming, especially in April and May when the ornamental cherries blossom.

As it was, I saw Ninfa with a Caetani Foundation tour during the stultifying height of summer, when only a few pink roses lingered to suggest the garden's spring quintessence.

We entered near a spring-water lake that feeds the Ninfa River, saw fine old Holm oaks and white maples, then stopped at the ruined Church of Santa Maria Maggiore, where Pope Alexander III was crowned in 1159 after having been forced to leave Rome by supporters of Emperor Frederick I (known as Barbarossa).

Protected from extreme weather by the Lepini Mountains to the east and the ever-chilly Ninfa River, the 20-acre garden has myriad microclimates in which the Caetanis experimented with nonnative plants such as banana, bamboo and magnolias. In damp spots near the river, lilies thrive, and everywhere there are roses, climbing medieval ruins or preening in the walled garden.

La Landriana is an estate a few miles north and inland from Anzio, on 25 acres of land left bare and mine-pocked after World War II. The Marquis Gallarati-Scotti and his wife, Lavinia Taverna, bought it at auction in 1956, and it remains the family's country home, receiving visitors by appointment only.

To see it, I booked a tour with Sue Webster, an English-speaking guide and avid gardener who lives nearby.

La Landriana's story starts with a bag of seeds given to the marquise by a friend, which she planted and watched spring up. After that, she ordered more plants native to the Mediterranean, Australia or California, according to her interest of the moment. A garden took shape, but without coherent form.

In 1967, she summoned an English garden architect, Russell Page, to La Landriana.

Page was a devotee of Renaissance formal gardens, which were then out of style.

The relationship between Page and Taverna, who died in 1997, proved especially fruitful as the master brought order and subtlety to the passionate experimenter's diverse plant collection.

Page divided the hillside garden into 32 themed "rooms," as he called them, using Taverna's nurslings to create subtle artistic ensembles of texture, scent, shape and color. As a result, La Landriana is a gardener's garden, known among connoisseurs for its subtle design and unusual variety of plants.

Friday, November 28, 2008

Italy to be European Hub of Dubai's Emirates Airline

In a Great Coup, and Economic Boost Dubai's Emirates Airlines has chosen Italy as its European hub and has asked for more than 50 weekly landing slots in Milan, Rome and Venice.
Italy will more easily become a tourist destination for the newly rich Gulf, and from southeast Asia, on a well financed and growth airline.

Emirates to Make Italy a 'Hub' in Europe

AFP November 24, 2008

ROME (AFP) — Dubai's Emirates airline has chosen Italy as its European hub and has asked for more than 50 weekly landing slots in Milan, Rome and Venice, the Italian government said Monday.

"Emirates ... has chosen Italy as a hub to access Europe," said Italian Under Secretary for Economic Development Adolfo Urso in a statement.

"Thanks to this agreement, Italy will more easily become a tourist destination for the newly rich from the Gulf and from southeast Asia."

Urso issued the statement after meeting United Arab Emirates Economy Minister Sultan Ben Said Al-Mansouri for talks in Abu Dhabi.

Government-owned Emirates, which currently has less than 10 landing slots per week in Italy, has asked for 21 slots in Rome, 21 in Milan and 14 in Venice, the statement said.

The group will also launch 28 cargo flights per week.

The deal also covers Abu Dhabi's Etihad Airways, which is in line for seven landing slots in Rome and the same number in Milan.

Emirates reported earlier this month that its net profit for the first half of the financial year had plummeted 88 percent to 77 million dollars (60 million euros) because of high oil prices.

Italy Seeks Nazi "Captain Corelli's Mandolin" Firing Squad Commander

During WWII, 5,000 of the Italian Acqui division stationed on the Greek island of Cephalonia in 1943, were massacred by Germans after Italy surrendered to the Allies, and became Allies co combatants.
The macabre event was immortalized in the novel and film "Captain Corelli's Mandolin"

Italy seeks German ex-soldier over 'Captain Corelli' massacre:

ABC News Thursday Nov 27, 2008

Italian military prosecutors are seeking to try a former German soldier in connection with a massacre of Italian troops on the island made famous in the novel and film "Captain Corelli's Mandolin", a report said.

La Republica daily said their target was Otmar Muelhauser, 88, who as a junior officer commanded the firing squad which shot General Antonio Gandin, head of the Italian Acqui division, on the island of Cephalonia in 1943.

German troops massacred the division which was occupying the Greek island after Italy surrendered in World War II and went over to the allies.

La Repubblica said Muelhauser, who now lives at Dillingen, near Munich, had said several times he was only doing his duty as the Germans considered the Italians as traitors.

Italian prosecutors opened an inquiry into Muelhauser in March 2004 at the request of the sons of two victims of the massacre.

German prosecutors shelved their own investigations in 2007.

According to Italian historians, some 5,000 members of the Acqui division were shot by the Germans after surrendering at the end of a week-long battle in September 1943.

They had voted to resist after being called on to lay down their arms when Italy changed sides.

Gandin, who refused to be blindfolded, died crying, "Long live Italy, long live the king," according to Muelhauser's own account.

The incident was the climax of Louis de Bernieres prize-winning best-seller Captain Corelli's Mandolin, which was also made into a film.

The only German officer to be tried for the massacre was General Hubert Lanz, commander of the unit responsible, the XXII Corps, was sentenced to 12 years in jail by the Nuremberg war crimes court in 1948.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Sicilians are Different than Us

While it would take volumes to pen all the wonderful characteristics of the Sicilians, some of the most generous, industrious, innovative, sincere people in all the world.
However, with a long history of occupation and exploitation, while they may be kind, they are very secretive.
Furthermore the Taxes are so overwhelming, that it has been estimated that if an Italian paid all of their taxes they would pay just more than 110 percent of their income, therefore the necessity of "creative" avoidance.
What struck me as being so familiar and amusing was the statement that: " Sicilians do not converse. Each one of them simultaneously engages in a monologue and does not listen to the other.An uninformed onlooker at this charade would have been convinced that they were mad at each other and ready to fight."
The Sicilian view of Americans: " “The Americans can walk on the moon but they do not know how to walk on the earth.”


Italians are a Bit Different from Us
The Courier
Houma, LA
Chef Nino Columnist
Sunday, November 23, 2008

Many times and on numerous occasions I have been asked “What are the people like in Italy; how are they different?”

These observations are from an American who lived in Italy for 13 years, mostly in Sicily in southern Italy. These are just a few interesting peculiarities — some good, some not so great.

This is by no means exhaustive but just a few notes. It would take volumes to pen all the wonderful characteristics of some of the most generous, industrious, innovative, sincere people in all the world, the Sicilians.

All outsiders are suspect. It has been estimated that if an Italian paid all of their taxes they would pay just more than 110 percent of their income. If you have a radio in your car you have to pay taxes — tax for a TV, tax for your driver’s license. Italy has one of the highest income taxes in Europe. Tax evasion is prevalent and therefore when a foreigner, or a “stranger” comes to them, they are very stand-offish.

Suspicion is a very real part of Sicilian culture. Foreigners mean exploitation, religion means disillusionment and even friends and relations are not to be relied upon. Sicilians are secretive. They do not readily impart information for fear that in doing so they’ll somehow incriminate themselves or others who would in turn seek revenge for having been incriminated.

“In this part of the world we have our own way of doing things,” Don Calogero Vizzini said. It took me more than two years of living in Sicily before I really gained one friend.

Everyone was very kind but very superficial.

“A group of seven men speaking at the top of their lungs with hands raised in the air, touching each other occasionally, trying to convince each other of their argument, each one of them red in the face, neither of them convinced nor listening at all to the others side of the story, but at the same time enjoying this form of normal communication,” I wrote in one of my journals. “An uninformed onlooker at this charade would have been convinced that they were mad at each other and ready to fight. Montanelli says that Sicilians do not converse. Each one of them engages in a monologue and does not listen to the other.

“The Sicilian, like most other people, is the product of his environment and, if one can say the victim of his circumstances. His character has evolved in the history of conquest and domination through which his island home has for the most part been that of a certain defeat. His mentality is the product of oppression and exploitation and only in the past few decades has made an effort to come to terms with the modern Europe.”

Another description of the people in Sicily is the predominant “Bella Figura,” which is the insidious constant obsession of every waking moment and even permeated in most of every unconscious thought and night time dream about being concerned what others think about you.

They try to project an image to others so that they think more highly of them that what they really are. This attitude is evidenced by a man whose income is $800 per month and dresses in public and behaves as though his income was $8,000 per month.

Image is more important than reality. Most Sicilians have two kitchens, one for show which is costly and has never been cooked in and the other for daily use which is very humble and is located outside. The other is “La Superbia!” Most of them are an expert on any topic known to man, not admitting faults or weaknesses, quickness to offer advice and recommendation even when not solicited.

With all of this said, once that seemingly impenetrable barrier is overcome, a lifelong friendship is forged that cannot be erased by time nor distance. Lest we Americans get the big head for being for balanced let us not forget their view of the Americans,

“Gli Americani possono camminare sulla luna ma non si possone camminare sulla terra,” which means “The Americans can walk on the moon but they do not know how to walk on the earth.”

Ouch! Fortunate is he or she who can take to best mentalities of both worlds and make one super-culture.

Italy Baseball Team with High Expectations for 2009 World Cup Baseball Classic

The Italian National Baseball Team is considered to be one of the strongest in Europe. In fact, the Italians were the only team to beat Team USA during the Americans' run to the gold medal in the 2007 World Cup.
However, in 2008, the Italians did not make it out of the first round of play. As a result Marco Mazzieri, who was manager of the Italian national team in 2007, will replace Matt Galante, the manager in 2008.
The Italian team may include several US Major Leaguers, including Angels catcher Mike Napoli, Angels reliever Justin Speier, Astros first baseman Mark Saccomanno, free-agent catcher Paul Lo Duca and free-agent lefty reliever Mike Gallo. Rays outfielder Justin Ruggiano, who played for the U.S. in the 2007 World Cup, said he would play for Italy if asked. Rangers utilityman Frank Catalanotto, also wants in again.
Italy will be missing the recently retired Mike Piazza, and Rangers catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia, who said he would probably be fighting for a job in Spring Training.


Italy Out to Make Mark on World Stage

Italy looks to carry success in Europe to 2009 Classic

MLB.com By Anthony Castrovince November 24, 2008

The Italian national baseball team is considered to be one of the strongest in Europe. In fact, the Italians were the only team to beat Team USA during the Americans' run to the gold medal in the 2007 World Cup.

World Baseball Classic success, however, eluded Italy in 2008. The Italians did not make it out of the first round of play in Pool D, going 1-2, with the lone victory coming against Australia.

In 2009, Italy will have a new manager -- Marco Mazzieri, who became manager of the Italian national team in 2007, will replace Matt Galante -- and a new chance to make a name for itself on the international stage.

Though Italy likely loses some star power with the recent retirement of Mike Piazza, the team has current Major Leaguers who are willing to participate.

Rangers utilityman Frank Catalanotto, for one, wants in again.

"I thought it was great," said Catalanotto, who went 4-for-11 with a team-high three RBIs in 2006. "Most of the guys I played with didn't speak much English, and it was great getting to know them."

Angels catcher Mike Napoli, Angels reliever Justin Speier, Astros first baseman Mark Saccomanno, free-agent catcher Paul Lo Duca and free-agent lefty reliever Mike Gallo are also among those being considered by Mazzieri for the Classic club.

Rays outfielder Justin Ruggiano, who played for the U.S. in the 2007 World Cup, said he would play for Italy if asked.

"If they wanted me on the USA team, I'd play there," Ruggiano said. "If USA doesn't want me, I'd play for Italy. And if they don't want me, I'll watch from the couch."

One player who has already turned down the opportunity to compete is Rangers catcher Jarrod Saltalamacchia.

"I'll probably be fighting for a job in Spring Training," Saltalamacchia said. "Getting a job is a little more important."

The sport of baseball has only gained importance in Italy since World War II, when it was taught to the Italians by American troops.

But though Italy has a history of performing well in the biennial European Baseball Championship, which it has won eight times since 1954, the country has struggled against the likes of the U.S., Japan, the Dominican Republic and Venezuela in international play.

In the 2009 Classic, Italy will be in a new pool, joining the U.S., Canada and Venezuela in Pool D. The games begin on March 5 at Rogers Centre in Toronto.

Look for quite a few members of the 2007 Italian World Cup team to participate in the Classic, including first baseman and designated hitter Maximiliano De Biase, who recently drove in 10 runs in seven games to help San Marino win its first title in the 2008 Italian Series.

Italy will have a roster of 45 players put together by mid-January, with the official 28-man roster secured by Feb. 20.

Possible Team Italy Roster
Position
Name
C
Luis De Camargo
C
Paul Lo Duca
INF
Davide Dallospedale
INF
Maximiliano De Biase
INF
Alex Liddi
INF
Giuseppe Mazzanti
INF
Mark Saccomanno
INF
Jack Santora
OF
Frank Catalanotto
OF
Mario Chiarini
OF
Justin Ruggiano
OF
Leonardo Zileri
P
Phil Barzilla
P
Cody Cillo
P
Chris Cooper
P
Anthony Fiore
P
Jason Grilli
P
Alessandro Maestri
P
Sandy Patrone
P
Justin Speier

Anthony Castrovince is a reporter for MLB.com. This story was not subject to the approval of Major League Baseball or its clubs.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Italy Now Takes Aim at Cleveland Museum For Looted Antiquities

Francesco Rutelli, Italy's minister of culture, after "rescuing" artifacts looted from Italy, from The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, The Getty Museum of Los Angeles, Princeton University Art Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art, now has the Cleveland Museum of Art in his sights.

Report says Italy may Press Art Museum for Antiquities
Plain Dealer
Steven Litt, Art Critic
November 19, 2008

Italian cultural authorities have said publicly for several years that the Cleveland Museum of Art owns looted antiquities that should be returned to Italy. But so far, the Italians haven't communicated directly with the museum.

An article in Friday's edition of The New York Times quotes Francesco Rutelli, Italy's minister of culture, as saying that negotiations with the Cleveland museum over allegedly looted artworks would "accelerate."

But Timothy Rub, director of the Cleveland museum, said: "to date, no official of the Italian government has contacted the Cleveland Museum of Art about this issue or specifically identified any works in our collection in which they might be interested."

Rub added that should such a contact occur, "we would of course be perfectly willing to enter into conversations with Italy."

Rutelli's statement was part of an article about the decision of the Museum of Fine Arts Boston to return 13 archaeological treasures Italians say were looted from Italian soil.

Some of the objects were purchased by the Boston museum through American art dealer Robert Hecht, who is on trial in Rome along with former Getty Museum curator Marion True on charges of dealing in illegally excavated art.

Last year, Paolo Ferri, the prosecutor in the case against True and Hecht, said that court documents mention the Cleveland Museum of Art in connection with the charges against the dealer. But Ferri said he knew of no plans by the Italian government to bring formal charges against the museum.

The Cleveland museum bought eight works from Hecht between 1951 and 1990 including a lekythos, or olive oil jar, purchased in 1985, which falls within the period under investigation by Italian authorities.

In 1995, Italian police uncovered evidence in a raid on a warehouse in Switzerland that they say proves the links between tomb raiders, known as tombarolli, and Hecht and True. Their trial began last November

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Cheeky Catanians "Drop Your Shorts" Tactic Beats Torino

Catania soccer team perfected a free-kick routine which requires three of their players to stand midway between the free-kick taker and the goalkeeper and lower their shorts to their knees, preventing the keeper from seeing the ball get kicked. It proved vital as Catania won the game 3-2.

Cheeky Italians Drop Their Shorts
Metro. UK
Tuesday, November 18, 2008

There was fun as well as games in Serie A last weekend where Catania have perfected a free-kick routine which requires their players to drop their shorts.

The theory is, three players stand midway between the free-kick taker and the goalkeeper and lower their shorts to their knees, preventing the keeper from seeing the ball get kicked.

It sounds daft, and it is daft - but it also works, as Torino goalie Matteo Sereni (remember him Ipswich fans?) found to his cost when Giuseppe Mascara thumped one past him on Sunday.

It proved vital as Catania won the game 3-2, but the routine could also prove shortlived.

'It's a trick that should not be tolerated anymore by referees,' moaned former referees' chief Paolo Casarin, who branded the move 'unsportsmanlike and in bad taste'.

Hopeful Catania chief executive Pietro Lo Monaco responded 'Good taste is relative.'

Israel Organized Crime Rivals Italy

Although Organized Crime is well documented in Italy , and each incident seems to drive international journalists into a frenzy, Organized Crime in other countries seems to be given little attention.
However in todays Newspapers the Pervasive Organized Crime in Israel was spotlighted because of the car bombing and death of Yaakov Alperon, Don of the Alperon Clan, that is in a turf war with Abutbul, Abergil, Mulner, and Ohana families over the multimillion-dollar bottle recycling operation. Police say criminals sell restaurants protection in exchange for empties, giving crime families a source of income that appears legitimate. Crime gangs in Israel are also fighting for control of gambling clubs and illegal drugs.

Israeli Organized crime, long overshadowed by the Arab-Israeli conflict, has become such a part of everyday life that Israel has its own Sopranos -style TV series, The Arbitrator, in which even synagogues are no refuge from hit men.The mob wars have killed dozens of gangsters and at least eight bystanders in the last three years, and exposed law enforcement officers in scandalous complicity.

Rival underworld gangs are waging bloody battles for control of gambling and protection rackets, targeting each other with bullets, bombs and anti-tank missiles. http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2008-11-17-israel-explosion_N.htm?csp=34

Israel struggles to keep lid on crime - 6/7/2004. In the last four years the Israeli police, struggling to stem the wave of Palestinian suicide bombings, have lost control of the country's organised criminals, who are making millions from gambling, prostitution and drugs. Organised crime has become a booming industry in Israel in the last decade. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/middle_east/3723895.stm

In researching this article what was more shocking to me was that it has been reported that the "Settlers' are not merely "fanatic biblical fundamentalists" , or those enjoying "subsidized housing", but that the Hebron settlers are part of an organized crime network, with Rabbi-Godfathers, aided and abetted by the Israeli army and government...http://israelblog.com/1137995954/


Israeli Crime Boss Killed in Car Bombing
Tel Aviv police suspect a rival crime family is behind Yaakov Alperon's death. The Alperons have been locked in a dispute over a lucrative recycling business and have a laundry list of enemies.
Los Angeles Times By Richard Boudreaux Reporting from Jerusalem
November 18, 2008
One of Israel's best-known mobsters, a crime family boss with a long list of enemies in the country's increasingly brazen underworld, was killed Monday when a bomb exploded under his rental car near a busy Tel Aviv intersection.

The midday slaying of Ya- akov Alperon was described by Israeli media as the boldest hit yet in a string of turf battles that have killed dozens of gangsters and at least eight bystanders in the last three years. A 13-year-old boy and two other pedestrians were slightly injured.
Israelis, who are far more accustomed to violence between them and their Palestinian neighbors, were transfixed by the slaying. It dominated the airwaves and overshadowed news of ongoing rocket fire from the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip.

Television stations interrupted regular programming to show Alperon's bloodied body slumped out of a door of the burning car, clad in the polo shirt he had worn during an appearance that morning in court.

Tel Aviv Police Chief Ilan Franco called the killing "an extremely serious event" that "likely happened because of an internal conflict within the Tel Aviv crime world."

Yossi Sedbon, a former police chief in the city, said: "The meaning of this is simple: The battles between these criminal gangs will continue and the families will be even more driven to avenge his death. I fear the bloody red line will be crossed forever."

Suspicion initially fell on three rival crime families -- two of them are battling the Alperon family for control of a lucrative bottle recycling racket.

Crime gangs in Israel are also fighting for control of gambling clubs and illegal drugs. Despite shootings and bombings that have prompted many of his rivals to travel in armored vehicles with bodyguards, Alperon had refused to do so, often telling reporters that he was not afraid.

He was alone in the car when it blew up near a bus stop at the intersection of Namir and Yehuda Maccabi streets, not far from Tel Aviv's courthouse, police said. Witnesses described a huge explosion that shook the ground.

Army Radio said police suspected the bomb had been placed under the car while it was parked at the courthouse.

The 51-year-old mobster was popularly known as Don Alperon. He and his brothers gave frequent television interviews and were parodied on comedy shows. His immediate family even took part in a reality TV show.

The son of Jewish immigrants from Egypt, Alperon and his older brother, Nissim, dropped out of school to support the family after their eldest brother, in the Israeli army, was killed in combat. The two brothers drifted into crime and, according to the newspaper Maariv, were among the first in Israel to open a pirate television station.

Over the years, police have focused numerous investigations on the brothers, who headed the family's growing crime ventures but never expanded outside Israel and had relatively modest lifestyles. They have been in and out of jail and in and out of hiding.

Army Radio said police believed that Alperon might have been killed because of a dispute between him and the Abutbul and Abergil families over the multimillion-dollar bottle recycling operation. Police say criminals sell restaurants protection in exchange for empties, giving crime families a source of income that appears legitimate.

Franco, the Tel Aviv police chief, said suspicion also fell on a family led by Amir Mulner. The newspaper Haaretz reported that the Alperon and Mulner families battled with knives and guns during a 2006 meeting that had been called to arbitrate a turf dispute and during which Mulner was stabbed in the neck.

Alperon and his son Dror, now 21, went into hiding for two months after the fight and then turned themselves in to police. They were not charged.

Father and son had appeared in court Monday morning in a more recent case: the son's indictment on charges of trying to extort about $400 from a Tel Aviv nightclub owner for "protection services" and of assaulting a police officer.

The family's list of enemies goes on. Earlier this year, the same Tel Aviv court convicted two alleged hit men with the Ohana family of trying to kill Yaakov Alperon in a dispute over gambling cafes.

In its ruling, the court alluded to the various blood feuds among Israel's gangs.

"The spirit of many other crime families hovered in the air of the police interrogation rooms and especially in the courtroom," it said.

Boudreaux is a Times staff writer.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Minister Renato Brunetta has Become a Folk Hero, with his Anti-Slacker Campaign

Minister of Public Functions Renato Brunetta has become a folk hero in Italy for his vow to modernize government offices and expel idlers among the 3.6 million public workers.
Brunetta's campaign with helping to wean the country away from a long-standing cynical view that the undeserving go unpunished and hard workers never finish first.
Oh Please, Brunetta come to America next. We have an indolent bureaucracy that needs a kick in the behind, They act like the public is an interruption of their "country club" living, rather than recognizing that their "sole" existence is to SERVE the Public !!!!!!!

Italy Takes on Public Sector Slackers

London Guardian. UK By Alessandro Rizzo
From Associated Press -Foreign
Sunday November 16 2008

ROME (AP) - As the stereotype goes, Americans toil away hour after hour, while over here in Italy, workers are more prone to lunching than laboring.

Italians tend to bristle at such easy categorization but on one thing there's little dispute: the nation's government employees are a lazy bunch.

Now, a government minister has launched an anti-slacker campaign to slay sloth in the bureaucracy.

"Ferraris, we can make. Designer clothes, we can produce. Sun, pizza and love, we can provide a lot of," said minister of public functions Renato Brunetta. "It's the public administration that is below par."

Brunetta has become a folk hero in Italy for his vow to modernize government offices and expel idlers among the 3.6 million public workers.

Low productivity, he acknowledges, is not exclusively a problem of the public sector, and the minister is counting on his efforts to nudge private companies into action, too.

"The public has woken up," he said, "it has had an epiphany."

But numbers point to some persistent dozing among Italy's workforce.

Labor productivity in Italy lags far behind other industrialized nations, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

OECD figures show labor productivity in Italy grew less than 0.5 percent between 2001-06, while in the United States, for example, the rate over 2 percent in the same period, and in fellow EU country France it was about 1.5 percent.

Italians take about six weeks of vacation a year, compared to a little over three weeks for workers in the United States and two for those in Japan.

With competition from Asia intensifying, Italy will dawdle at its peril.

The country is at zero growth and the prospect of a global recession only makes the outlook gloomier.

"Italy has a very difficult time ahead, so it can't afford to waste resources anymore," said Michel Martone, a labor law professor at Teramo University and Luiss in Rome. "Public spending must go toward efficiency and effectiveness."

Martone credited Brunetta's campaign with helping to wean the country away from a long-standing cynical view that the undeserving go unpunished and hard workers never finish first.

Brunetta insisted that laziness was a mere bad habit, not a fixed national trait.

"I don't believe Italians are anthropologically slackers," Brunetta said in a recent interview. "Italy is a country of small- and mid-sized companies, of self-employment. It is the country of people who take bold risks every day."

In the state bureaucracy, he said, "bad politics and bad unions have created a monster, a monster of inefficiency."

The laziness debate has burst from the corridors of power and into newspaper headlines, with tales that are half-tragic, half-comic.

The Turin newspaper La Stampa reported that a public employee in a small town on the northwestern coast, Mallare, punched his timecard, then went boar hunting. But, bad luck for him, he got shot in his leg and was found out.

A postal employee on disability leave reportedly spent part of her recovery vacationing in Kenya, saying the sun would help heal her sore back.

And the mayor of a village in southern Italy, Banzi, didn't come in for work on 166 days ALL more than five months ALL over an 18-month period, published reports said.

Public employees here took an average of 20 days off in 2006 for health or other reasons, according to government estimates. That is in addition to some 30 days of vacation for many public employees.

Brunetta, a 58-year-old economy professor and former adviser to Premier Silvio Berlusconi, is no slacker himself: he says he works about 13 hours a day.

"There is enormous potential, just waiting to be woken up and brought to light," he said of his country. "The public administration is the greatest reservoir for development that Italy has at this moment."

To reduce absenteeism, the ministry is cutting the bonuses of those who take sick leave. In certain cases of repeated absences, rigorous doctors' notes will be required. Brunetta has also started a survey to reward public workers who do a good job.

Already, the campaign is showing signs of success, having brought absenteeism down by about 44 percent in both August and September this year, compared with the same months in 2007, according to figures provided by his ministry.

Martone, the labor law professor, approved of the government's efforts, but expected a long fight to change Italian habits.

"Italy is full of people who want to rise to the top but don't know how. You need something like a social elevator: those who excel go up, but those who idle around, fake sickness, need to go down and get off," Martone said.

"This is a cultural battle that will require time and must be waged on many fronts," he said. "Italians, it seems, are starting to understand that."

Associated Press Writer Ella Ide contributed to this report

Saturday, November 15, 2008

Fast Social Networking Slow to be Adopted by Italians


Fast Social Networking is not making any Faster progress than the Fast Food Movement in Italy.


This is Social Networking, Italian Style

Contrary to the rest of the west, 'il bel paese' is spurning the net to retain its 'slow' culture - but at what cost to its economy?

London Guardian
Michael Fitzpatrick
Thursday November 6, 2008

Where in the world does the average citizen spend just two hours a week online? An isolated backwater, perhaps? Or maybe netizen figures from a far-off land trapped in a time bubble of its own desiring? Well, close. This bastion of digital indifference is Italy, one of our closest neighbours, a super-rich G7 nation and homeland to the inventors of the telephone and radio.

Some think this technophobia is a good thing, preserving the Italy of laid-back "click with friends and family, not a mouse" yore. Tourists for one find the low-tech lifestyle enchanting.

Turning off the net

Others feel it has put the country at a huge disadvantage, flinging it far over the wrong side of the digital divide where Italy will, in economic terms at least, continue to languish as the ageing, increasingly impoverished sick man of Europe.

And if moribund economies are measured by a lack of IT skills, high-speed connections and e-commerce, then Italy is very sick indeed.

The median amount of time Italian internet users spend online has actually decreased between 2007 and 2008, according to one survey by tech trend specialists JupiterResearch.

Interestingly, what that survey suggests is that although there is more internet connectivity than ever in Italy, residents are actually spurning the net.

Could it be that Italians have better things to do? Face-to-face networking, old-fashioned chat and time to share news and gossip over a game of cards in the shade of a village piazza, perhaps - the same things that draw thousands weary of net-driven modern life to Italy every year?

Information technology definitely presents a dilemma for many Italians, says Paolo Di Croce, the secretary of Slow Food International, who advocates a little less rush in all our busy lives. He believes technology has its place but should not overshadow, for example, the emphasis placed on real-time relationships or physical communities.

"The personal element in Italian life is something that will not be exorcised. So we have to find the right balance. Just as with the Slow Food movement and its globalisation, the web and email have become our major tools. Without internet we are not possible, but we must use them wisely," he says. "If you can't survive without sending 50 mails a day, without becoming a slave to the BlackBerry - this goes against our philosophy."

That Italy produced the Slow movement in the first place indicates that there was always going to be some resistance to demands for instant results, efficiency, 24/7 and convenience. And it's not as though Italy doesn't have form in its resistance to modern-day technology concerns and pressures: it spent the least of all the developed countries on fixing the millennium bug. In the event, no problems worth reporting were experienced.

Seeing how the use of IT has often actually increased our workload and complicated daily life, some on the side of the more demanding, tech-reliant digital divide are eyeing enviously Italy's less digitised, less demanding work practices. Such practices may, in the long run, even be good for business.

Just as financial globalisation allowed a few to hijack our banking systems, Italy claims its banks are now in better shape because their less tech-savvy institutions do things the old way.

"America and the UK used to say the Italian banks were backwards, but it turns out we now have the soundest banks in Europe," said Italy's finance minister, Giulio Tremonti, following the global financial crisis.

Italy may suffer in other ways - creaking bureaucracy, protectionism, inefficiency and low growth - but shows less of the malaise that comes with overexposure to digital lifestyles or unregulated internet that the rest of the west is suffering.

Meanwhile, as the internet savvy suffer info overload, Italy continues with older IT practices that many of the digital generation would find puzzling - Flash-infested websites that are less-than-functional shop windows, a sometimes poor response to emails and a bureaucracy that has made it painfully slow and expensive to bring email to the masses.

Domenico Condello, the technical consultant to a company that is attempting to bring the internet to unconnected hills 30 miles east of Rome, Comunita Montana dell'Aniene, says it has been a huge struggle to cut red tape holding back Italy's answer to feeding broadband to its hilly regions - a fast WiMax service.

"There is pent-up demand here," he says. "Fast WiMax services such as ours should revolutionise the internet in Italy." But he admits the start has been slow and that probably only the young will be interested in using the service as it rolls out this autumn.

Italy's half-hearted adoption of the internet and the older generation's failure to grasp the importance of IT to a future economy has frustrated many youngsters so much that they simply give up and go abroad, says Bernhard Warner, who runs a tech consultancy in Rome.

Art and history

"But," adds the American expatriate, who swears by his high-speed web connection: "There are certainly things to be learnt from the Italian way of doing things.

"I can't see myself living anywhere else. Here, you can walk beyond your desk and realise there is more to life than tech things. Being surrounded by such art and history keeps your perspective fresh. I'm pleased by the Italian sensibility."

But even in the cities, he points out, where there may be broadband, the cost makes it a luxury for most Italians with their lower disposable incomes than the UK. "The preferred way to contact is the mobile for most. So far the net has been a tool for better-paid young professionals," says Warner. It's a far cry from internet being as available as "air and water", which is how the EU recently referred to its policy on broadband adoption.

Italy's new government under Berlusconi is probably not helping. The last election was about halting globalisation, protecting an inward-looking Italy, largely arguing against free trade and the opening of international markets - the internet being a large part of that.
Many who disagree with those policies have abandoned the country, leaving il bel paese - the beautiful country - to decide if it really does prefer life in the past - unhurried, and happily unwired.

The Great Earthquake of Messina 1908, and US Assistance

On the early morning of December 28, 1908, the Italian city of Messina awoke to the deadliest earthquake in European history. Striking just days after Christmas in the Straits of Messina, the 7.2 (USGS) magnitude quake shook for nearly 30 seconds, toppling several story buildings and burying alive it's occupants. Minutes later, the tsunami came, measuring somewhere between 20 to 40 feet high. The waves were gradually followed by smaller ones, until the water finally subsided.
When it was over, the city of Messina, which only had a population of 150,000, had been entirely destroyed, along with the nearby city of Reggio di Calabria, and other outlying areas. It is estimated that the combined earthquake and tsunami killed almost 200,000 people.Because of the advent of World War I, just 6 years later, much of the area never had a chance to fully recover.

Since the quake had hit so close to land, the tsunami had little else to go but land, making it #4 on the "Biggest Tsunami Countdown"
#3. The Great Lisbon Earthquake of 1755, over 100,000 people perished
#2. The 1883 Krakatau, Indonesia, 36,000 victims
#1:The 2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake, 310,000 victims
Remember, The San Francisco earthquake of 1906 was a major earthquake that struck San Francisco, California at 5:12 A.M. on Wednesday, April 18, 1906. The magnitude of the earthquake is a 7.8; or as high as 8.25.The epicenter occurred offshore about 2 miles from the city, It ruptured along the San Andreas Fault, and is remembered as one of the worst natural disasters in the history of the United States. From the earthquake and resulting fire, the death toll is estimated to be above 3,000, represents the greatest loss of life from a natural disaster in California's history.


Work Inspires Exhibit at Grand Central Station

Massapequan Observer - Massapequa,NY,USA
Joe Scotchie
November 14, 2008

Last year, Massapequa resident Salvatore J. LaGumina, a professor of history at Nassau Community College, published "The Humble and The Heroic", a history of Italian-Americans during World War II.

Now, he has followed up that book with "The Great Earthquake: America Comes to Messina's Rescue", a book that tells the story behind, as he calls it, "one of the biggest natural calamities in history."

This year marks the anniversary of the heroic efforts of American servicemen who came together to assist victims of that earthquake. In recognition of that, LaGumina's work on the earthquake influenced the United States Navy and the Columbus Citizens Foundation to make it a centerpiece of the "Great White Fleet Exhibit" at Grand Central Terminal, one that ran from Oct. 7-17 of this year.

The exhibition, LaGumina added, was part of the annual Columbus Celebration, the largest celebration of Italian and Italian-American culture in the world, which culminated this year in the annual Columbus Day parade.

The tragedy took place on the morning of Dec. 28, 1908, when, at 5:21 a.m., Messina Strait, a tremor passed between Scylla and Charybdis. In a few seconds, an earthquake and a seaquake of unprecedented violence destroyed the Strait's shores of two regions, Calabria and Sicily, and the two opposite cities, Reggio Calabria and Messina.

Earlier, in 1907, President Theodore Roosevelt sent 16 battleships to circumnavigate the globe on a goodwill mission. While returning from the Far East as it approached the Suez Canal it learned of the devastating earthquake followed by a tidal wave that hit Sicily and southern Italy in late 1908, the fleet's mission changed dramatically. Ships from America's Great White Fleet rushed to the Mediterranean to provide essential humanitarian aid and services to Italy, where an estimated 200,000 people had perished.

In all, the Great White Fleet documented the heroic efforts of Italians and American servicemen who came together in one of the greatest humanitarian efforts in European history.

The Great Earthquake documents the role that nations other than the United States played in the rescue missions. It also highlights the humanitarian efforts of Italian-Americans in the United States and the Roman Catholic Church.

As the book jacket states, "The humanitarian role played by the United States...deserves to be better known...The United States navy provided large quantities of food, medical personnel, cots, and blankets. It was soon realized that recovery from the horrific devastation would require much more assistance, and thus began a little-known but important chapter in Italian-American relations in the form of extensive house-building projects that were critically needed. American naval personnel became engaged in erecting the homes that became known as 'the American village.' The operation that lasted for weeks elicited genuine appreciation from Italian officials. It also required a delicate temporary relinquishment of national sovereignty by the Italian government to an American camp within Italy."

A prolific author, Salvatore LaGumina is also Director of the Center for Italian American Studies at Nassau Community College. He has written and edited 18 books and dozens of articles, most of which deal with the Italian-American experience.

The Great Earthquake is published by Teneo Press, Youngstown, NY.

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Italy Calls US- E. Europe Missiles Plan "Provocative"

Just as the US thought Russia's establishing Missile sites in Cuba as Not only "Provocative" but TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE, and brought the world to the brink of nuclear war until Russia agreed to remove them.
The US plan of establishing Missile Sites in Poland and Czech Republic on Russia's border is Equally as unacceptable, and stupid if as stated their concern is Iran. Why not closer sites in Turkey or Iraq, etc .in addition to those we have just installed in Israel.
Curiously, JFK invoked the "Monroe Doctrine" on August 30, 1962 saying that it means today what it meant to President Monroe that is, that the US opposes all foreign intervention in the Western Hemisphere. If so, is the reverse also true, Non Intervention of US in European Affairs of even Eastern Hemisphere ?
Someone also explain to me why the US fought a CIVIL war to prevent Succession, and yet we are attempting to intervene in Ukraine and Georgia, that are "breakaway" former Russian states?

Italy Criticizes US over E. Europe Missiles Plan
Russia Today
November 13, 2008
Senior Italian politicians have called on Russia and the U.S. to end a row over planned missile deployments. Italy's Foreign Minister, Franco Frattini, has appealed to Washington to shelve proposals for an anti-missile system in Eastern Europe.
Meanwhile, PM Silvio Berlusconi has likened the proposed missiles tthe recognition of Kosovo:, and the possibility of Georgian and Ukrainian membership in NATO, ; acts of "provocation against Russia."

In an interview with Italy?s Repubblica newspaper, Frattini said Russia should also show restraint and resist putting missiles in Kaliningrad.

"There is a need to advance the perspective of creating a new world order jointly with Europe, Russia and America," he said.

Frattini says the incoming American administration will be more focused on Asia than the current one, and it will not want a new Cold War with the Russian Federation. That is why, Frattini says, there should be no deployment of the ABM system in Poland and the Czech Republic.

He suggested that Washington should "change the approach" to relations with Russia.

And it wasn?t just the Italian Foreign Minister joining the debate. Speaking during a visit to Turkey, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said he believed Russia had a number of reasons to be unhappy.

"Let's speak frankly, Russia was provoked by America's plans to deploy missile defence elements in the Czech Republic and Poland, the recognition of Kosovo and the possibility of Georgian and Ukrainian membership in NATO, " Berlusconi said.

He also called on U.S. president-elect Barack Obama to avoid stepping up confrontation with Russia.

Berlusconi also said confrontations like this could lead to nuclear war.

http://www.russiatoday.com/news/news/33232

Italy's Role in WWI by Arthur Conan Doyle

The British and French BEGGED Italy to break their Treaty with Austria and Fight with them in WWI. Italy would have been wise to remain Neutral, since Italy was NOT Militarily, Politically, or Economically prepared for War. None the Less Italy joined the Allies.
It was therefore unforgivable for the French and British who were stymied in their Trench warfare over level ground, to launch severe unforgivable criticism at the Italians, for not being able to make advances up sheer cliffs in arctic weather against heavily fortified Austrian positions.
Some motivation of the British and French might have been to excuse territorial promises that they reneged on at the Versailles Treaty. Those broken promises led directly to the anger felt by Italian War Veterans, who saw their sacrifices demeaned, and led to the rise of Mussolini.
Arthur Conan Doyle in his book in 1916 "A Visit To Three Fronts" documented the unfairness of the derogatory reports after visiting all three fronts

Conan Doyle's Analysis of the Italian Campaign Against Austria

By Arthur Conan Doyle, May 1916

London Guardian. UK
Wednesday November 12 2008

• Extract from A Visit To Three Fronts, by Arthur Conan Doyle. In May 1916, the Italian authorities requested that an independent observer visit their lines and report his impressions. Conan Doyle also visited the British and French lines "for comparison".

I leave Italy with a deep feeling of gratitude for the kindness shown to me, and of admiration for the way in which they are playing their part in the world's fight for freedom. They have every possible disadvantage, economic and political. But in spite of it they have done splendidly. Three thousand square kilometres of the enemy's country are already in their possession. They relieve to a very great extent the pressure upon the Russians, who, in spite of all their bravery, might have been overwhelmed last summer during the "durchbruch" had it not been for the diversion of so many Austrian troops.

The time has come now when Russia by her advance on the Pripet is repaying her debt. But the debt is common to all the Allies. Let them bear it in mind. There has been mischief done by slighting criticism and by inconsiderate words. A warm sympathetic hand-grasp of congratulation is what Italy has deserved, and it is both justice and policy to give it.

From first to last the Alpini have had the ascendency in the hill fighting. The spirit in the ranks is something marvellous. There have been occasions when every officer has fallen and yet the men have pushed on, have taken a position and then waited for official directions.

But if that is so, you will ask, why is it that they have not made more impression upon the enemy's position? The answer lies in the strategical position of Italy . The Alps form such a bar across the north that there are only two points where serious operations are possible. One is the Trentino Salient, where Austria can always threaten and invade Italy. She lies in the mountains with the plains beneath her. Austria can always invade the plain, but the Italians cannot seriously invade the mountains, since the passes would only lead to other mountains beyond.

Therefore, the only possible policy is to hold the Austrians back. This they have successfully done, and though the Austrians with the aid of shattering heavy artillery have recently made some advance, they can never really carry out any serious invasion. The Italians, then, have done all that could be done in this quarter.

There remains the other front, the opening by the sea. Here the Italians had a chance to advance over a front of plain ... They cleared the plain, they crossed the river, they fought a battle upon the slopes of the hills (taking 20,000 Austrian prisoners), and now they are faced by barbed wire, machine guns, cemented trenches and every other device which has held them as it has held everyone else.

But remember what they have done for the common cause and be grateful for it. They have in a year occupied 40 Austrian divisions, and relieved our Russian allies to that very appreciable extent. They have killed or wounded a quarter of a million, taken 40,000, and drawn to themselves a large portion of the artillery.

As to the future, it is very easy to prophesy. The Italians will continue to absorb large enemy armies. Neither side can advance far as matters stand, but if the Russians advance and Austria has to draw men east, there will be a tiger spring for Trieste. If manhood can break the line, then I believe the Durandos will do it. "Trieste o morte!" I saw chalked on the walls all over north Italy. That is the Italian objective.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Swiss to Return 4,400 Stolen Antiquities to Italy After 7 year Battle

Switzerland is returning 4,400 ancient artifacts stolen from archaeological sites in Italy, including ceramics, figurines and bronze daggers dating as far back as 2,000 B.C. , and originating from Apulia, Etruscan Villanova and Sardinia.

Swiss to Return Stolen Antiquities to Italy

Assocated Press Frank Jordans November 6, 2008

GENEVA (AP) — Switzerland is returning 4,400 ancient artifacts stolen from archaeological sites in Italy, including ceramics, figurines and bronze daggers dating as far back as 2,000 B.C., prosecutors said Thursday.

The transfer will require three tractor-trailers and all but end a seven-year legal battle over the antiquities.

They were seized in 2001 in storage rooms belonging to two Basel-based art dealers after a tip-off from Italy, said Markus Melzl, a spokesman for city prosecutors. The couple have since lost several court battles to prevent the antiquities from being returned to Italy, Melzl said.

More than half the objects were from the eastern Italian region of Apulia, an area that was heavily influenced by ancient Greek culture, said Guido Lassau, a Swiss archaeologist who worked on the case.

They include richly decorated vases and so-called kraters, large vessels that were used for mixing wine with water. The objects were stolen from upper-class tombs dating from the fifth to third centuries B.C., according to Lassau.

One item that looks like a ceramic mask modeled on a woman's face retains the original water-soluble painting from about 300 B.C.

"They're very well preserved because they spent the last 2,000 years in a virtual time capsule until they were plundered by grave robbers," Lassau told The Associated Press. "But the tragic thing is that a lot of the archaeological information was lost when they were removed."

Other items belong to the pre-Etruscan Villanova culture of northern Italy, and some of the bronze figures appear to have originated on the island of Sardinia.

The oldest are bronze daggers thought to be about 4,000 years old, said Lassau.

"This is a vast haul on a dramatic scale that would have saturated the market if they had been sold," he said, adding that very few such items are available through legal channels.

Melzl said it was almost impossible to put a value on the haul.

"The only way you can sell these things is on the black market," he said. "It's like asking how expensive the Mona Lisa is. These are goods of important historical value. They're priceless."

But if the couple had managed to sell all the items, and there is evidence they sold at least a few, "you'd make millions," said Melzl.

The couple, who have not been identified because of Swiss privacy laws, are under investigation in Italy and Switzerland, he said.

The woman could face prosecution in Switzerland for handling stolen goods, and her husband is the subject of criminal proceedings in Italy for allegedly exporting cultural antiquities illegally, handling stolen goods and belonging to a criminal organization, Melzl said.

Swiss authorities are still trying to determine the exact origin of some 1,400 further antiquities also confiscated in 2001.

Switzerland was until recently a major hub for the trade in stolen antiquities, but new laws introduced in 2005 have largely shut down the illegal market there, said Lassau.

"The market has moved on to Germany, which has far looser laws," he said. "They really need to close the loopholes in their legislation, if they want to stop the global trade in these goods."

Six Brothers Serve US in WWII, While US Raids Father's House...He was from Italy !!!

Tony Savella joined the Navy after Pearl Harbor, and encouraged his 5 other brothers to join up. Carmine, Razzie and Ray joined Tony in the Navy, but Pete and Patsy ended up in the Army.

One day while the brothers were serving their country, five of them overseas, government officials raided Antonio Santella's house. Tony Santella said the officials were suspicious of his father because he was from Italy. They took a shotgun away from him that the brothers retrieved after the war.

After Pearl Harbor, 6 Brothers Heard the Call

Roxbury siblings took up arms to fight in WWII

Daily Record
By Abbott Koloff
November 11, 2008

Growing up during the Depression, the six Santella brothers from Roxbury were always together.

They picked blueberries and sold them to vacationers at Lake Hopatcong. They retrieved scraps of coal that fell off trains at the Port Morris rail yard and used them to heat their house.

And after the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, one by one, they went to war.

Tony Santella, 87, the one surviving brother who now resides in Florida, said he was at a girlfriend's house when he heard a radio report about Pearl Harbor.

"I didn't know what that was at the time," Tony said.

Three months later, he joined the Navy, and told his other brothers to do the same if they wanted to live through World War II. Carmine, Razzie and Ray joined Tony in the Navy, but Pete and Patsy ended up in the Army. They all came home, all got married, and had a total of 17 children.

Of eight siblings, Tony and a sister, Louise, are the only ones still alive.

Leading up to Veterans Day today, Tony Santella and several families members talked about the family's service during World War II.

Antonio Santella, the boys' father, had come from Italy and spoke only a little English, never learning to read or write, working as a laborer in the Port Morris rail yard. Mary, his wife, died when her youngest son Ray was eight years old. Ray's nickname growing up had been "Rags," said his wife, Lee Santella of Roxbury, because he always wore hand-me-down clothes.

One day while the brothers were serving their country, five of them overseas, government officials raided Antonio Santella's house. Tony Santella said the officials were suspicious of his father because he was from Italy. They took a shotgun away from him that the brothers retrieved after the war.

"My father was mad," Tony Santella said. "He said, 'I have six boys in this war and this is what you do to me?'"

The family had sacrificed more than its share. While the six brothers all survived the war, not all were unscathed.

Pete Santella participated in the Normandy invasion with the Army. Part of an artillery unit, he later was wounded in the ankle during the Battle of the Bugle.

Tony Santella served on the USS Healy, a destroyer in the Pacific, participating in a number of battles. He was at Iwo Jima at the same time as his brother Ray. Once, standing at a gunnery station during a typhoon, he remembers the ship rolling so much that he prepared to jump overboard.

"I'm glad I didn't, so I'm here," he said.

Razzie Santella and others survived their ship being sunk by a torpedo in the Pacific. He told his children that he expected to die when a Japanese submarine surfaced nearby. For some reason, the Japanese gave them food and cigarettes and left them to be rescued.

"He said he was amazed they didn't kill them," said Lee Godfrey, one of his daughters.

Ray Santella, the youngest brother, was on a ship in the Pacific preparing for the invasion of Japan when a another ship pulled alongside to share provisions. His brother Carmine was on board.

"They spent the night together," Lee Santella said.

When they parted, Lee Santella said, they hugged and kissed, both expecting to die during the coming invasion. Then the U.S. dropped two atomic bombs on Japan, ending the war and making the invasion unnecessary.

Ray Santella stayed in the Navy after the war and was part of a shore patrol unit in North Africa that protected a movie crew, his wife said. All that time, he carried with him a crystal dog that his father had given him as a keepsake from home.

After he left the Navy, he walked into a restaurant where his wife worked as a waitress.

"He was irresistible," Lee Santella said. "You had to love him."

He was an ironworker for 25 years but his wife said the war left him with recurring nightmares.

The other brothers also came home and found jobs -- Patsy, the oldest, became a construction contractor; Pete worked with the Morris County road crew and had his own blasting company; Tony was an ironworker in Chicago; Carmine was an electrician and Razzie a machinist, both working at Picatinny Arsenal.

Razzie Santella met his wife, Jean, at a dance at Bertram's Island at Lake Hopatcong. He was a volunteer firefighter in Roxbury and headed a Picatinny machine shop. His children said he participated in secret projects during the Vietnam War, one involving cluster bombs.

He became known for his patriotism, decorating his house in Roxbury with American flags. He once attached a flag to a helium balloon that he controlled with a string, but it apparently flew a little too high. Law enforcement officials asked him to take it down.

"It might have interfered with small aircraft," said Carol Jean Waldron, one of his daughters.

And after he died last year, his coffin was decorated with images of an aircraft carrier and planes.

Tony Santella said he didn't talk much about his war experiences. Then one day his granddaughter, now 22, told him she was studying history in school and had been shown a documentary about Japanese planes crashing into U.S. ships during World War II.

"Were you there?" she asked.

Tony Santella told her that he was, along with some of his brothers. He said his granddaughter recently got a tattoo of an anchor on her arm. When he asked her why, she told him she wanted to look at it for the rest of her life, and to think about him.

Other European "Gaffesters" Outdo Berlusconi re Obama Election

"Africa Conquers the White House," read a headline of the National Democratic Party of Germany, a political party that sympathizes with neo-Nazi groups.Jürgen Gansel, party leader and a lawmaker in the German state of Saxony, blamed Obama's victory on "the American alliance of Jews and Negroes."

In Poland, Artur Górski, a legislator from the Law and Justice party. Górski called Obama "the black messiah of the new Left" and a "crypto-communist" who would undoubtedly prove a "disaster." He added: "Al-Qaeda is rubbing their hands with glee that the new president wants peace, not war." "This marks the end of the white man's civilization."

In Austria, well-known journalist, Klaus Emmerich.on TV ORF "I think the Americans are still racists and they must be very badly off to so spectacularly -- send a black man to the White House," He "wouldn't want the Western world to be directed by a black man," : "If you say that is a racist comment, you're right."

. In a later interview with the Austrian newspaper Der Standard, he said that "blacks are not as politically civilized." He also called Obama dangerous and implicitly compared him to Hitler, citing his "rhetorical brilliance" and his ability to "appeal charismatically to people."

One of the milder gaffes came from Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.praised Obama for being "young, handsome and even suntanned." Berlusconi's remark caused a stir in Italy, as critics chided him for sounding like a fool. But the prime minister was unrepentant. "What's the problem? It was a compliment," . Anyone who did not get the joke, he added, was an "imbecile."

Racism Rears Its Head in European Remarks on Obama

Some Public Figures Display Open Scorn

Washington Post By Craig Whitlock Washington Post Foreign Service
Tuesday, November 11, 2008;

BERLIN, Nov. 10 -- Europe erupted in cheers to celebrate Barack Obama's election as president, but the continent is seeing its share of insensitive racial blunders, too.

Over the past week, a number of European lawmakers and journalists have made foot-in-mouth comments regarding America's black president-elect, suggesting that some otherwise respected public figures in Europe are far from enlightened on racial matters.

The day after Obama's victory, a leading Austrian television journalist said on camera that he "wouldn't want the Western world to be directed by a black man." A Polish lawmaker stood up in Parliament and called the election result "the end of the white man's civilization."

One of the milder gaffes came from Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. On Thursday, during a visit to Moscow, he praised Obama for being "young, handsome and even suntanned."

Berlusconi's remark caused a stir in Italy, as critics chided him for sounding like a fool. But the prime minister was unrepentant. "What's the problem? It was a compliment," he told journalists the next day. Anyone who did not get the joke, he added, was an "imbecile."

Some racist comments have come from people who have expressed such views before. "Africa Conquers the White House," read a headline on the Web site of the National Democratic Party of Germany, a political party that sympathizes with neo-Nazi groups. In an accompanying article, Jürgen Gansel, a party leader and an elected lawmaker in the German state of Saxony, blamed Obama's victory on "the American alliance of Jews and Negroes."

Offensive opinions have also originated from the other end of the political spectrum. Die Tageszeitung, a Berlin newspaper that supports socialist and leftist causes, predicted Obama's election in June when it published a large front-page photo of the White House under the headline, "Uncle Barack's Cabin."

The reference was to "Uncle Tom's Cabin," an anti-slavery book written by 19th-century author Harriet Beecher Stowe. But editors of the paper insisted they did not mean to imply that Obama would be an Uncle Tom, or a submissive slave. Rainer Metzger, a deputy editor, said the headline was satirical.

"I'm sure 99 percent of our readers would understand it correctly," he told the German magazine Der Spiegel. "As for the rest, well, tough luck. You can't please everybody."

Yonis Ayeh, a board member with the Initiative of Black People in Germany, a group that criticized the Die Tageszeitung article when it was published, said racial prejudices are common, if not always blatantly expressed.

"Sometimes you have people or groups who say, 'We are the left wing, we are the good ones, we are not racist,' " he said. "But it doesn't matter if you are right wing or left wing. It's not just the neo-Nazis and the skinheads."

In Austria, Obama's win prompted a harsh, on-air reaction from a well-known journalist, Klaus Emmerich. "I think the Americans are still racists and they must be very badly off to so spectacularly -- and that has to be said, no doubt -- send a black man with a black, very good-looking and clever woman to the White House," he said Wednesday during a show on public television network ORF. After saying that he "wouldn't want the Western world to be directed by a black man," he added: "If you say that is a racist comment, you're right. Without a doubt."

Emmerich, 80, was once based in Washington and has also reported for German television and newspapers over a long career. Given a chance to retract his remarks, he declined. In a later interview with the Austrian newspaper Der Standard, he said that "blacks are not as politically civilized." He also called Obama dangerous and implicitly compared him to Hitler, citing his "rhetorical brilliance" and his ability to "appeal charismatically to people."

Emmerich did not return a phone call seeking comment. Rainer Scheuer, a spokesman for ORF, said that the comments were "not acceptable" and that Emmerich was unlikely to be invited back to appear on the network anytime soon.

In Poland, the lower house of Parliament heard a similar interpretation of Obama's election from Artur Górski, a legislator from the Law and Justice party.

In a speech Wednesday, Górski called Obama "the black messiah of the new Left" and a "crypto-communist" who would undoubtedly prove a "disaster." He added: "Al-Qaeda is rubbing their hands with glee that the new president wants peace, not war."

"This marks the end of the white man's civilization," he said. "America will soon pay a high price for this quirk of democracy." The Polish government and Górski's party later apologized for the outburst. Górski did, too, but said his remarks were not racist, just "political."