Monday, March 22, 2010

'Just realized that it's been almost two months since the last FSHSGRAM..

Ciao, Tutti!

'Just realized that it's been almost two months since the last FSHSGRAM...got a couple of emails from Wildcats during the weekend, asking if I were "still around."  Not quite sure what that meant.

Yep...just very busy at Gryphon Technologies –– among other projects, my group supports two annual publications for the Chief of Naval Operations and Commandant USMC that come due in February/March –– and I had deadlines for several "outside" publications and lectures at the Bettis Atomic Power Lab...the days just got away from me.

And, then there were the Great Snows of February Ought-10: record-setting 45 inches of snow in two back-to-back storms that pummeled the Annapolis area and closed down federal, state and local governments...


But, I appreciate the concern:  Yep, "still around!"
Andiamo!

Speaking of Italian Pizza...

A friend sent this YouTube URL of a 
Canadian video clip from 1957 about popular "new" Italian dish called "pizza pie":
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZlhU8-nAw2k

For those of us who do remember the 1950s...who 
can't forget the Chef Boy-Ar-Dee canned pizza...with its cardboard-like crust!

YUM...MIE!!!

And, Speaking of Oldies...

I'm not sure if I forwarded the attached file -- "Pepsi, Italian Style" -- but, even if so, it's worth seeing again.

New in FSHSWACD

'Found several wayward Wildcats since January, who are new to the FSHSWACD:

-  
Kate Caughery Mack, FSHS70, katecmack@comcast.net 

-  
Deanne Monique Hoppmeyer Hingle “Hoppy”, FSHS82, curly_d@verizon.net

-  
April Lynn Francis Barnett, FSHS84, pooh82286@aol.com

-  
Edmond Scott Pittman "Scottie" "Tiziano" "Pepino", FSHS80, espe@bonsai-finearts.com

-  
Susan Panzer Jackson, FSHS81, susanmj2004@yahoo.com

-  
Michele Marie Martin, FSHS84, mmmartin99@hotmail.com

-  
Frank Stewart, FSHS72, sappleseed@hotmail.com

My FSHSWACD co-editor, 
Pat Carter Bryant FSHS68, and I will send out an updated FSHSWACD next month.  So, if you're in the database but your record needs revising, please send changes to me.  If you're not in the FSHSWACD but want to be included, please complete as much or as little information as you want...

FSHS Wildcats Alumni Contacts Database Notional Record/Data Fields

Name: (First, Middle, Last or Last/Maiden and Last/Married, or Last/Divorced, "Nickname")
Title:  (JD, PhD, Miss, MD, II, Jr., etc...FSHS Teacher/Administrator/Parent...)
Napoli:  (the actual years you lived in Napoli)
Where in Napoli:  (where you lived...Via Manzoni, Via Petrarca, Parco Azurro, Arco Felice...)
FSHS Class:  (graduation year, whether you graduated from FSHS or not)
High School Graduated:  (FSHS or other HS)
Email Address 1:
Email Address 2:
Company:
Snailmail Street/POB Address:
Snailmail Street/POB Address:
Phone(s):  (Home / Work / Cell)
Comments: (brief mention of anything particularly important to you about your Napoli/FSHS experience...)


...and return to me.  I'll get all the changes and new information into the Word file, and Pat will update the Excel file.  I'll send out both to all on distro (1,250 email addresses!!) in mid-April.

Reunions and Such

A few of us -- 
Vonna Brode Thomas FSHS67Debbie King Dunn FSHS68Staff Dunn FSHS68 and I (accompanied by spouses Mark Thomas and Annmarie Truver) -- spent a long weekend 12-17 February eating and drinking our way through central/Gulf Coast Florida –– a mini-reunion of sorts.  (Yes, Steve Rann FSHS67 and Fred Cannon FSHS68, we did talk about you....)  Had a great time!

I recall seeing some info on an of an upcoming Overseas Brats reunion in Reston, VA, 5-8 August.  
Theresa Dickie Branscome FSHS78 (dickiemt@aol.com) is interested in pulling together a Napoli cohort for the festivities.  The URL for the event is:  

http://www.overseasbrats.com/Homecoming2010Order1.asp

More to come, I'm sure!


That's about it for today.  
Napoli News attached below.  Don't forget to send your FSHSWACD info for the April 2010 update.  Grazie!
Saluti!

Scott T FSHS68

Napoli News
Italy private schools pound DODDS teams Stars and Stripes
European edition, Sunday, March 21, 2010
The Italian private schools boys' teams that usually dominate Region IV got right to the point Saturday by pinning an aggregate 19-3 defeat on their three DODDS-Europe opponents on opening day of the high school soccer season.

Marymount International School of Rome blanked Aviano 8-0, the American Overseas School of Rome thumped visiting 2009 European small-schools runner-up Sigonella 7-2, and Milan turned back visiting Naples 4-1 as a handful of teams got the 2010 season under way. Just 12 games, six each for boys and girls, were on the schedule, with eight of those scheduled for Italy.
Marymount boys 8, Aviano 0: At Aviano, Alessandro Ramacciato scored two of his three goals to go with a fourth-minute strike by Alessio Cangi and a 12th-minute tally by Paolo Muir to gave the Royals a 4-0 halftime lead.  The onslaught came, according to coach Mark Fix, despite heroic efforts by Aviano keeper Sean Wilson, who left the game with an injury just after intermission. The scoring avalanche continued in the second half with goals by Ramacciato, Mario Checi Gori, Nirosa Liayantha and Nicolo Manci.
Milan boys 4, Naples 1: At Milan, Alessandro Guarnieri scored twice to pace the Panthers. Justin Biery's first-half strike was the only scoring Naples could manage.

Naples girls 1, Milan 0: At Milan, the Wildcats' defense made All-European Hayley Witz's first-half goal stand up. [Bravo Zulu Hayley!]

AOSR boys 7, Sigonella 2: At Rome, Giacomo Castelli and Pietro Dinmor each put two shots past All-Europe goalkeeper Conor Quinn. Castelli and Dinmor also each added an assist for AOSR.  Tyler Reed scored Sigonella's goals, both in the second half. Reed's first goal, two minutes after intermission, was unassisted; his second, in the 79th minute, came off a feed from his brother, Patrick. Quinn stopped 11 of AOSR's 18 shots on goal.
Marymount girls 2, Aviano 1: At Aviano, All-European Elena Carrarini had a hand in Marymount's two second-half goals, setting up Caroline Wiley for a 52nd-minute strike that tied the game 1-1, then scoring unassisted 17 minutes later for the decisive goal.
Junior Cheryl Craver gave Aviano a 1-0 lead with a 12th-minute tally.
AFNORTH girls 3, Lakenheath 1: At Lakenheath, Kaylee Harless, Stephanie Seitz and all-European Kaylee Wilstead provided the goals for the Lady Lions in the day's lone Region I game.
Lakenheath boys 3, AFNORTH 0: Host Lakenheath pinned a shutout on its two-time defending European champion guests. No details were available at press time Saturday.

Alberto Gilardino scores twice as
Fiorentina rallies to beat Napoli 3-1
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (CP) - Mar 13, 2010
NAPLES, Italy - Alberto Gilardino's two goals gave Fiorentina a come-from-behind 3-1 win over Napoli in Saturday's only Serie A game.

Fiorentina was eliminated from the Champions League despite beating Bayern Munich on Tuesday and hadn't won an away game in more than two months.
Ezequiel Lavezzi gave Napoli the lead in the 48th minute and Gilardino hit back in the 60th and 87th. Stevan Jovetic added a third score for Fiorentina into an empty net when Napoli goalkeeper Morgan De Sanctis rushed forward in a last-ditch attempt to equalize in added time.
Napoli remained seventh with 41 points and Fiorentina is 10th with 38 points.

Napoli threatened more in the first half but Fiorentina goalkeeper Sebastien Frey stretched out to save a header from German Denis in the 32nd.

Lavezzi found the target with a header from the edge of the area following a cross from Cristian Maggio and the hosts had two more chances in the next 10 minutes before Gilardino headed in the equalizer from a Jovetic cross.

The Italy centre forward scored again three minutes from time following a corner, redirecting Jovetic's header slightly with his own head, as Napoli appealed for an offside call that never came.

Back in business:
Pompeii snack bar re-opens... nearly 2000 years after
it was destroyed by the eruption of Mt Vesuvius 
By Rhianna King
Last updatedfs at 4:42 PM on 20th March 2010
In AD79 it was Pompeii's most popular hang out, where locals would stop off to meet friends and partake in a snack of baked cheese smothered in honey.

Now, nearly 2000 years after the Italian city was buried under ash and rubble by the devastating eruption of Mount Vesuvius, its favourite snack bar has re-opened.

For the first time the thermopolium, as it is called in Italy, will be open to tourists after having undergone and excavation and restoration process over the past few months.

Tomorrow 300 VIPs selected at random will attend an advance opening of the snack bar where they will enjoy a taste of Roman cafe society, including the sweet, calorific treats enjoyed by the all sections of Pompeii society before the city was destroyed.

Pompeii, which is near Naples in the Italian region of Campania, was destroyed, and completely buried, during a catastrophic two-day eruption of the volcano Mount Vesuvius on August 24, 79AD.

The volcano collapsed higher roof-lines and buried Pompeii under many meters of ash and pumice, and it was lost for nearly 1700 years before its accidental rediscovery in 1748.

Since then, its excavation has provided an extraordinarily detailed insight into life during the Roman Empire.

Visitors to the thermopolium will be taken on a guided tour of Vetutius Placidus's snack bar which features an L-shaped counter and a painting on its back wall depicting Mercury, the god of commerce and Bacchus, the god of wine.

The thermopolium features a cellar, garden and dining area - or triclinium, which was decorated with a painting showing the rape of Europa with Jupiter disgused as a bull.

Excavations suggest the internal garden once featured a pergola, herb garden and grapevines.

The snack bar has been closed for years in order to protect if from further damage. But soon all visitors will be able to venture inside to get a taste of an ancient Roman cafe.

The bar used to face onto a main street, the Via dell'Abbondanza, and all sections of society would call in for a Mediterranean lunch or the famous snack of ricotta cheese and sticky honey.

Archaeologists working at the site also found a jar full of coins, amounting to about two days' income. They believe the owner may have left them as he fled the doomed city.


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1259384/Back-business-Pompeiis-popular-snack-bar-opens--nearly-2000-years-destroyed-Mt-Vesuvius.html#ixzz0iu6Imi6z

Finding the best pizza in NaplesBy Marie Maguire
Contra Costa Times
Forget the pepperoni and mushrooms. And don't even think about sausage. In Naples, you start with the basics.

If the sauce isn't rich and gooey, if the cheese isn't oozing and if the crust isn't paper thin and smelling like it just came out of a wood-fire oven, then you are not eating a genuine Neapolitan pizza. And heaven help the person who made it for you.

Naples jealously guards its reputation as the city that invented pizza, and its pizza police are sticklers about the rules. Tomatoes must be grown in the rich, volcanic soil surrounding the city. Mozzarella must come from buffalo milk. And then there are the baking instructions -- the pizza must have an irregular shape to prove it's been made by hand and it can only spend a short time in that wood-burning oven.

On our first night, we went for a classic. The most authentic, by pizza police standards, are the margherita -- with tomato, mozzarella and basil -- and the marinara -- with tomato, oregano and garlic.

Because authenticity was our goal, we decided to try Da Michele. Although not the oldest pizzeria in Italy, Da Michele has been in business since the 1870s and is known for its adherence to tradition. It is a no-nonsense restaurant that serves only the marinara and the margherita.

Our pizza was an example of simplicity at its finest. The thin crust sizzled, and the tomato sauce and mozzarella blended beautifully. It was so delicate, we couldn't eat it with our hands. We had to use a knife and fork.

On our second night, we tried one of Da Michele's competitors, Trianon, just across the street. Trianon started in the 1930s and has been popular with the young crowd for several years. Its menu has wider selection than Da Michele, but those selections are still based on the important margherita pizza, just with the addition of one or two toppings. We ordered ours with prosciutto and mushrooms. The Italian ham mixed well with the mozzarella, and we left well satisfied.

On the third evening, our hotel clerk asked, ``Do you want to taste the best pizza in Naples?'' Of course, we did. So, he directed us to Il Pizzaiolo del Presidente.

In 1997, while in town for the G7 summit, President Bill Clinton stopped at Di Matteo, owned by pizza maker Ernesto Cacialli's brother. Accounts of what happened next vary. Some say Clinton had a slice of Cacialli's pizza while he stood in the street and chatted with passersby. Others say he ate two pizzas by himself.

No matter what version you believe, Cacialli started his own restaurant shortly after Clinton's visit and secured his reputation in pizza lore.

On this, our final night, we reverted to American tastes. We ordered a pizza with the works -- ham, artichoke hearts, eggplant and mushrooms on the traditional margherita. It was outstanding, but again tradition prevailed. The pizza, called the quattro, was divided into sections. No section had more than two toppings.

Red-Coral Rescue Plans Endanger Italy's Coastal Jewelry MakersMarch 10, 2010, 7:22 PM EST
Businessweek
Flavia Krause-Jackson and Alex Morales
With assistance from Flavia Rotondi in Rome. Editors: Jennifer Freedman, Andrew Davis
March 11 (Bloomberg) -- The people of Torre del Greco, 10 miles south of Naples, have lived off the red corals found in the Mediterranean Sea for more than two millennia. A proposal to list the species as endangered may push the seaside town's $217 million-a-year coral industry into extinction.
The U.S., the largest consumer of corals for use in decoration and jewelry, is proposing that all 31 species of red and pink coral be added to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, or CITES, treaty at a meeting in Doha, Qatar, starting March 13. The European Union, of which Italy is a member, backed the plan yesterday while asking for an 18-month delay in implementation.

“We've survived world wars, economic crises and anything God and Mount Vesuvius have thrown at us, but this will kill us,” said Antonino de Simone, whose family has been fashioning brooches, rings and necklaces out of coral since 1830. He fears he'll have to let go of his 25 employees and close shop.

The added paperwork and damage to Torre del Greco's image resulting from a CITES listing will cost $135 million in three years, says industry group Assocoral.

Former high-end clients such as Tiffany & Co. and Bulgari SpA no longer want the town's coral jewelry, and a campaign to end the use of the sea animal in fashion goods led by the environmental group Seaweb has gained support of designers Paloma Picasso and Kimberly McDonald.

Torre del Greco was once a favored beach destination of Italian movie stars. Now tourists gravitate further down the Amalfi coast, leaving coral as the mainstay of the economy. The industry employs 5,000 people in a region suffering from chronic unemployment.

Risk of Collapse

The U.S. proposal would allow trade in the corals only if nations issue an export certificate showing they were sustainably harvested, said Andy Bruckner, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ecologist who drafted the plan.

“If we let them keep going the way that they are, the industry is going to collapse,” Bruckner said. “If we can come up with a sustainable way to harvest it, we can have this industry continue into the future forever. That's what the whole goal is. It's really not to shut them down.”

Producers in Torre del Greco pride themselves on protecting their local reefs, though about two-thirds of the coral used to make their jewelry is imported from Pacific stocks. A destructive form of trawling that involves dragging weighted nets along the seabed is still in use there even though it's been banned in the Mediterranean since 1994.

'It's Crazy'

Michele Palomba, a coral fisherman for 30 years like his father before him, is today one of the 100 licensed locals who between May and September dive 80 meters (262 feet) with scuba gear to collect the coral. At such depths, one can stay under for no more than four minutes.

“It's crazy to me how they can say we have decimated our supplies, it's simply not true,” Palomba said. “No one knows and loves and respects our sea more than us. This is our livelihood; why would we destroy it?”

Unlike the Pacific variety, the coral in the Mediterranean is small and doesn't grow in shallow waters, Palomba says. He and his colleagues handpick branches from healthy colonies, he said.

Not everyone agrees the methods are sustainable.

Waters shallower than 90 meters in the Mediterranean used to contain older corals that stood 50 centimeters (20 inches) tall, said Georgios Tsounis, a marine biologist at the Institute of Marine Sciences in Barcelona, whose research is cited by Seaweb.

Now “they've basically gone” and those found in unprotected waters average about 4 centimeters and rarely exceed 10 centimeters, he said.

Transformation

“Once the fishery grew to industrial levels, it transformed virtually all known coral communities from a forest- like structure into a grassland-type structure,” Tsounis said. “Although harvesting does not seem to threaten the corals with extinction, it does impact their ecological function of serving as fish nurseries and helping preserve biodiversity.”

It's a fight the locals feel they cannot win.

“We are up against the might of the U.S., misinformed environmentalists and big companies: We are doomed,” said Mauro Ascione, 45, one of eight siblings running the oldest coral- jewelry maker in Torre del Greco. “Our father wanted a big family to grow our business. Instead, we'll attend its funeral.”

EU rules against Italy over Naples waste
The EU's top court says Italy breached an EU directive
on waste disposal by allowing piles of rubbish to litter the
streets of Naples in 2007-2008.
BBC News, 4 Mar 2010
The directive became law in Italy in 2006, but the European Court of Justice says the waste disposal sites in the Naples area were inadequate.

The European Commission brought the case against Italy, which must now comply with the court's judgment.

The court says the piles of rubbish endangered health and the environment.

Failure to comply with the judgment could lead to a hefty fine for Italy.

The Italian authorities and Naples residents have long accused the local version of the Mafia, the Camorra, of dumping huge amounts of industrial waste from the north not only in the Campania region's landfill sites but also in the countryside.

The Camorra is accused of infiltrating the waste disposal business and profiteering from it.

To deal with the Naples crisis the Italian government opened up several new waste incinerators in Campania.

Troops were also brought in to help clear the rubbish and there were sporadic clashes with locals enraged at the mess plaguing their streets for months.
But the court ruling on Thursday says Italy has failed to set up an adequate network of waste disposal installations as close as possible to the areas where waste is produced.

"By failing to adopt all the measures necessary to prevent danger to human health and damage to the environment in the region of Campania, Italy has failed to fulfil its obligations under the Waste Directive," the judges said.

Naples, Sigonella bases to cut 150 jobs By Sandra Jontz, Stars and Stripes
Online Edition, Friday, February 26, 2010
NAPLES, Italy - Roughly 150 civilian jobs - a majority of them held by Italians - will be eliminated this year at two U.S. Navy bases in Italy, the Navy announced Thursday.

The job cuts will affect employees at the Navy bases in Naples and Sigonella, mostly in Public Works departments and Fleet and Family Support, and Morale, Welfare and Recreation programs, said Cmdr. Chris Harris, director of Manpower for Navy Region Europe, Africa, Southwest Asia.

The number of employees is greater than the needs of the Navy, and a reduction of the civilian force had not kept pace with the scaling back of military operations over the past several years, according to Rear Adm. David Mercer, commander of U.S. Navy Region Europe, Africa, Southwest Asia.
“Over the past five years, our organization has become smaller and more efficient but our personnel structure has not,” Mercer said in a statement announcing the cuts. “These difficult actions must occur to meet the long-term needs of the U.S. Navy in Italy.”

For Italians, the issue of layoffs is a volatile and explosive one. They already wrestle with a limited job market, where, typically, older employees face increased difficulty in finding employment because of their age.

As the Navy met with labor union representatives in Rome on Thursday, officials in Naples activated the emergency operations command in the event of “labor unrest,” said Navy spokesman Lt. Brian Badura, a measure illustrative of the unpredictable and sometimes fiery reaction that news of layoffs can spark.

All was calm late Thursday and into Friday. However, local labor union representatives spent Friday in meetings with local employees who found out about the pending cuts through local newspaper reports, said Gennaro Di Micco, head of the local chapter of the employee union CISL.

“We found that to be very disappointing,” he said. “Yes, they told official representatives in Rome, but they (Navy leaders) did not tell us locally before sending out press releases.”

That said, local union representatives are not calling for strikes, he said. “We need solutions, not strikes.” [Now, that's amazing!]

Italian town commemorates World War II tragedyBy Victor L. Simpson
The Associated Press, Washington Post
Friday, March 19, 2010; 2:44 PM
CISTERNA di LATINA, Italy -- For American forces fighting their way north to Rome, it was the site of a heroic but hopeless stand, where only eight men out of two Ranger battalions escaped German troops.

For the Italians caught in the fighting, it was the place where they lived underground for months before being sent on a forced march north by the Germans.
On Friday, the anniversary of the roundup in 1944, this town between Anzio and Rome held its annual commemoration of the bloody events of World War II with ceremonies held beside a monument to victims of all wars and school children visiting the grottoes where their grandparents took shelter from the bombing.

This town of 32,000 people, once a manufacturing center but now the heart of kiwi production in Italy, has not forgotten the elite U.S. Army Rangers, who fought to liberate them from the Nazi occupiers. There is a Via dei Rangers, a school named after the Rangers' commander William O. Darby and signs noting Cisterna is twinned with Darby's hometown, Fort Smith, Arkansas.

The site of the Cisterna battle, alongside a canal on the road to Nettuno, is recorded by a plaque in English, German and Italy recalling those who "fought and died."

"It is an ugly memory but we can't forget it because it is part of the history of our country," Mayor Antonello Merolla said at the ceremony
By all accounts, the Cisterna battle was a disaster for the Americans.

The Rangers were used as a spearhead after the landing at Anzio, but because of poor intelligence met unexpected, fierce resistance at Cisterna and by authoritative accounts did not have the support weapons to overcome it as they battled through mud and drainage ditches.

Rick Atkinson, in the book "Day of Battle" said 250-300 Rangers died and eight escaped, leaving hundreds of others captured.

According to Marsha Henry Goff, an unofficial historian for the Rangers whose father served in the elite corps, "Col. Darby, who had protested the use of his Rangers as conventional troops - contending they were trained for a different type of fighting - had gone into a room alone and sobbed" after learning of the casualties.

She said the first word of the disaster came in an Associated Press war dispatch from Naples on March 8 - five weeks after the battle.

"A grim secret kept locked in the hearts of allied troops in Italy for over a month now has been placed in the record of heroic but hopeless `last stands,'" it began.

The breakout from the beaches of Anzio had been stalled and the liberation of Rome, the first Axis capital to fall, would have to wait until June.
This was also grim news for Italian civilians.

"We lived for months underground," Bruno Fieramonte, 75, a retired school teacher, told school children taken down to the dark and dank grottoes of a 16th-century palace on the main square, recalling the fighting and bombing that destroyed 90 percent of the town's buildings - with only few scarred and blackened homes from that era still standing.

Then, on March 19, the Germans, increasingly worried about resistance, rounded up the entire town and marched them north. Many ended in labor camps and farms as far north as Tuscany.

Felice Paliani, who was 13 at the time, said he was taken in as a mascot by the Americans when Cisterna was finally liberated. "We survived because we were united," he said.

Surviving Rangers, mostly in their 80s, generally visit around American Memorial Day, combining it with a stop at the military cemetery in Anzio-Nettuno.

The mayor was asked by this reporter whether German survivors were ever invited. "Actually no," he replied. "But you've given me an idea for next year.”

Italy, U.S. Make 26 Mafia ArrestWall Street Journal, Mar 10, 2010
ROME-Police in Italy and the U.S. arrested 26 people Wednesday in a sweeping series of raids that dismantled an international Mafia drug network, according to Italian police.

Twenty people were arrested in Palermo for alleged drug-trafficking, extortion and usury, according to a statement by Italian police on Wednesday. Three members of the Gambino crime family were arrested in New York and North Carolina and charged with extortion, obstruction of justice and concealment of assets in bankruptcy, according to a separate statement by the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. Three more people were arrested in Miami on charges of money laundering and obstruction of justice, said Special Agent Judy Orihuela, an FBI spokeswoman in Miami.

Prosecutors say the link between U.S. and Italian groups was Italian national Roberto Settineri, who they allege acted as an intermediary between a Palermo-based clan and the New York-based Gambino and Colombo families. Mr. Settineri was arrested hours before he was scheduled to fly from Miami to Italy and charged with money laundering and obstruction of justice, the U.S. district attorney's statement said.

Italian prosecutors haven't yet charged those arrested in Italy. They say they haven't requested the extradition of Mr. Settineri. Efforts to reach a lawyer representing Mr. Settineri were unsuccessful.

The arrests mark the latest chapter in a joint campaign by the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and Italian authorities to crack down on one of Italy's most powerful organized crime syndicates. Since the 2005 launch of the joint investigation, known as Project Pantheon, Italian and U.S. investigators have made deep inroads into the Sicilian Mafia, disrupting the mob's command structure with arrests of top bosses.

Although the Mafia remains a powerful force in Italy, the Sicilian mob has lately been overshadowed by syndicates with less-centralized command structures, such as the Camorra, a Naples-based syndicate, and the 'Ndrangheta, which is based in the toe of the Italian peninsula.

Wednesday's arrests in Palermo targeted members of the Santa Maria di Gesu, a Palermo-based crime family that has allegedly filled the Mafia's power vacuum, according to police. Anti-mafia prosecutors in Palermo allege that members of Santa Maria di Gesu operate citywide extortion network, requiring shopkeepers to pay protection money or face violent reprisals.

Shopkeepers who have refused to pay have seen their stores burned down or sealed shut with super glue, Italian police said. One shopkeeper who refused to protection money was shot five times in August 2009 and survived the attack, Italian police said in their Wednesday statement.

Mr. Settineri regularly traveled between the U.S. and Palermo to meet with top members of the Santa Maria di Gesu family, Italian police alleged. As part of the investigation, police also seized "significant quantities" of cocaine and hashish in the Southern Italian region Calabria, according to the statement.

Neapolitan crime-busterBy Alvise Armellini
European Voice
18.03.2010 / 05:10 CET
Luigi die Magistri's Mafia-hunting takes him to Brussels.

Luigi de Magistris is a popular man. He takes pride in the fact that more people voted for him - more than 415,000 - than for any other member of the European Parliament. Only Silvio Berlusconi won more votes (2.7 million), as head of the list of his Freedom People party (PDL) - but the Italian prime minister never intended to give up his job to take a seat in Brussels or Strasbourg.

A 42-year-old native of Naples, de Magistris cuts a dashing figure and, though married with two children, was not afraid to tell a gossip magazine last year that he is “quite successful with women”. But he owes his popularity to the fame he attracted as a crusading prosecutor in Italy's crime-infested south, keeping up a family tradition that saw three previous generations of de Magistris serve as magistrates.

His grandfather was twice the target of assassination attempts, while his father tried a corrupt former health minister, Francesco De Lorenzo. De Magistris himself, working in Catanzaro and in Naples for more than a decade, focused on how the Mafia, with the complicity of local leaders, siphoned off millions of euros of EU funds meant for regional development. Over the years, he levelled accusations against centre-right and centre-left politicians, including Agazio Loiero, the head of Calabria's regional government (who is running for re-election in two weeks' time), and Mario Pirillo, his former deputy, who is a member of the European Parliament's Socialists and Democrats group.

But de Magistris became a national figure only in late 2007, when it was disclosed that Romano Prodi, then Italy's prime minister and formerly president of the European Commission, and Clemente Mastella, Prodi's justice minister, were implicated in his 'Why Not' enquiry. The probe - named after a company owned by the person who tipped de Magistris off - focused on an alleged semi-Masonic pact to share out public contracts and EU funds between Calabrian politicians and entrepreneurs with ties to the Catholic Church.

In the resulting furore, de Magistris was portrayed as a publicity-seeker who had bent the rules in pursuing his investigations, while he defended himself saying his Catanzaro colleagues had deliberately obstructed his work. But his superiors were not convinced, deciding to strip him of the 'Why Not' dossier and move him to Naples. He was later cleared of any wrongdoing.

That humiliation convinced de Magistris to shed his magistrate's robes and, in March 2009, enter politics under the banner of the Italy of Values (Italia dei Valori, IdV) party, the brainchild of another high-profile former prosecutor, Antonio Di Pietro, who made his name as a leader of the 'Clean Hands' (Mani Pulite) investigations of the early 1990s, which saw much of Italy's old ruling class collapse under charges of corruption.

In June, he was swept to Brussels on the crest of a wave, after a successful web campaign waged on his behalf by a comedian turned politician-basher, Beppe Grillo, a man sometimes described as Italy's Michael Moore. “I didn't need to put up a single election poster,” de Magistris chuckles.

In the Parliament, where the IdV has joined the the liberal ALDE group, he was awkwardly reunited with Mastella and Pirillo, and met with some suspicion from other Italian MEPs. Nevertheless, de Magistris has eagerly taken up the chairmanship of the budgetary control committee, a position from which he says he can continue his battle against Mafia-infiltration of EU funding. He says that, in his pursuit, he has already established a good working relationship with another anti-corruption crusader in his committee, Monica Macovei, Romania's former justice minister.

“With his experience, he is the right man in the right place,” says a Parliamentary official who has seen him at work. But de Magistris's credentials as a crime-buster are not exempt from criticism. Many point out that his landmark investigations often do not withstand scrutiny in the court room, as in the 'Why Not' case. Prodi and Mastella were cleared even before investigations were concluded, and 34 of the 42 indictees who appeared before a court in early March were acquitted, Loiero included. The remaining eight escaped with much lighter sentences than the prosecution had asked for.

“It was all a whitewash,” de Magistris retorts, claiming that the prosecutors who took on his case faced political pressure to quash the scandal. He also says that he feels vindicated by fresh investigations launched by magistrates in Florence, who suspect foul play in the way reconstruction money is being spent in quake-stricken Abruzzo. “Some of the entrepreneurs involved are the same I investigated in Calabria,” he says.

Others question his commitment to his new job, and the Italian media regularly speculate that he intends to challenge Di Pietro for the leadership of the IdV. But he recently declined the opportunity of standing for governor of Campania, a position some said he should have run for, because the IdV chose to back a controversial candidate from the mainstream opposition Democratic Party. “I am not afraid to admit that I have a national profile to defend. Mine is the second voice that counts in the IdV party after Di Pietro's. But I don't see myself as in exile here. I want to stay in Brussels and make a difference,” he says.

Still, a quick search on Italian news agency ANSA's archive reveals where his attention has been so far: over the past month he has been quoted 51 times, only twice in connection to EU affairs. But the committee official who has seen him at work advises against assuming he will not have an impact in Brussels: he has yet to learn the ropes of his new job, he says. Watch this space for more headlines.

Silvio Berlusconi to push for change to
Italian constitution for greater powers
Richard Owen, Rome
The Times March 22, 2010
The Italian Prime Minister, Silvio Berlusconi, is proposing to change the constitution by referendum to give him greater powers as a “directly elected president”.
Addressing supporters of his People of Liberty (PdL) party at a rally in Rome, Mr Berlusconi said that he planned a “great, great, great reform” in the remaining three years of his term.
This would include changes to the judiciary, which he claims is biased against him, a cut in the number of MPs and senators and direct elections for a head of state with expanded powers.
The president is currently elected by Parliament, and has limited powers. Mr Berlusconi did not say whether he would be a candidate but the Italian press said that the announcement was consistent with his populist belief that “the people” supported him despite the “lies” spread by “magistrates and the press”.

PdL officials said that more than a million people attended the rally in Rome, staged under the slogan “Love always wins over envy and hatred” to the soundtrack from 
Star Wars.

However, police put the turnout at 150,000 - fewer than the crowds that attended a centre-left, anti-Berlusconi rally a week previously.
New opinion polls show that Mr Berlusconi's approval rating has slipped to 44 per cent from 62 per cent when he was elected to his third term a year and a half ago.

Last week the Prime Minister addressed a half-empty hall at an election rally in Naples.

Mr Berlusconi's standing could suffer another blow if centre-right voters abstain in elections in 13 regions next weekend after the PdL bungled the registration of its candidates in Lazio, the region around Rome. It missed the deadline because a party official went out for a sandwich.

Questions were also raised over the validity of signatures accompanying the PdL list in Mr Berlusconi's native Lombardy region.
At first the Prime Minister turned on “idiots” in his party but later blamed the Left for “dirty tricks”.

Pier Luigi Bersani, leader of the opposition Democratic Party, said that Mr Berlusconi was increasingly “nervous” because “he knows the tide is turning against him”.

Renato Mannheimer, Italy's top pollster, said: “The centre-right electorate is disoriented and has lost confidence in its leaders, whom they see as disorganised.”

Magistrates are investigating Mr Berlusconi for abuse of office after tapped phone conversations indicated that he had interfered to try to block his critics from appearing on talk shows and news bulletins not only on his Mediaset television network but also on programmes of RAI, the public broadcaster.

At the Rome rally, outside the Basilica of St John Lateran, Mr Berlusconi said that “leftist” judges and politicians had concocted “a laughable investigation based on the tapping of my calls.

“Do you want phone taps on everyone and everything? Do you want to be spied on in your own homes?” he asked the crowd - which roared back, “No”.

“We don't often take to the streets but it was absolutely necessary to defend ourselves from the attacks of the Left and its magistrates,” Mr Berlusconi told his supporters.

“We are here to have our right to vote guaranteed. With you, love and freedom will win.”

Ministers and PdL regional candidates attended the Rome rally. However, Gianfranco Fini, the Speaker of the Lower House and co-founder of the party - who has distanced himself from the Prime Minister and is seen as his most likely challenger - did not take part, saying that his institutional position prevented him from doing so. He is to launch a new movement in May called Generation Italy.

Italy's African HeroesBy Roberto Saviano
Op-Ed Contributor
New York Times, January 24, 2010
Naples, Italy

WHEN I was a teenager here, kids used to shoot dogs in the head. It was a way of gaining confidence with a gun, of venting your rage on another living creature. Now it seems human beings are used for target practice.

This month, rioting by African immigrants broke out in Rosarno, in southern Italy, after at least one immigrant was shot with an air rifle. The riots were widely portrayed as clashes between immigrants and native Italians, but they were really a revolt against the 'Ndrangheta, the powerful Calabrian mafia. Anyone who seeks to negate or to minimize this motive is not familiar with these places where everything - jobs, wages, housing - is controlled by criminal organizations.

The episode in Rosarno was the second such uprising against organized crime in Italy in the last few years. The first took place in 2008 in Castel Volturno, a town near Naples, where hit men from the local mob, the Camorra, killed six Africans. The massacre was intended to intimidate, but it set off the immigrants' anger instead.

In Castel Volturno, the immigrants work in construction. In Rosarno, they pick oranges. But in both places the mafias control all economic activity. And the only ones who've had the courage to rebel against them are the Africans.

An immigrant who lands in France or Britain knows he'll have to abide by the law, but he also knows he'll have real and tangible rights. That's not how it is in Italy, where bureaucracy and corruption make it seem as if the only guarantees are prohibitions and mafia rule, under which rights are nonexistent. The mafias let the African immigrants live and work in their territories because they make a profit off them. The mafias exploit them, but also grant them living space in abandoned areas outside of town, and they keep the police from running too many checks or repatriating them.

The immigrants are temporarily willing to accept peanut wages, slave hours and poor living conditions. They've already handed over all they owned, risked all they had, just to get to Italy. But they came to make a better life for themselves - and they're not about to let anyone take the possibility of that life away.

There are native Italians who reject mafia rule as well, but they have the means and the freedom to leave places like Rosarno, becoming migrants themselves. The Africans can't. They have to stand up to the clans. They know they have to act collectively, for it's their only way of protecting themselves. Otherwise they end up getting killed, which happens sometimes even to the European immigrant workers.

It's a mistake to view the Rosarno rioters as criminals. The Rosarno riots were not about attacking the law, but about gaining access to the law.

There are African criminals of course, African mafiosi, who do business with the Italian mafias. An increasing amount of the cocaine that arrives here from South America comes via West Africa. African criminal organizations are amassing enormous power, but the poor African workers in Italy are not their men.

The Italian state should condemn the violence of the riots, but if it treats the immigrants as criminals, it will drive them to the mafias. After the Rosarno riots, the government moved more than a thousand immigrants to detention centers, allegedly for their own safety, and destroyed the rudimentary camp where many of them had lived. This is the kind of reaction that will encourage those immigrants to see the African criminal organizations as necessary protection.

For now, the majority resist; they came to Italy to better themselves, not to be mobsters. But if the Africans in Rosarno had been organized at a criminal level, they would have had a way to negotiate with the Calabrian Mafia. They would have been able to obtain better working and living conditions. They wouldn't have had to riot.

Italy is a country that's forgotten how its emigrants were treated in the United States, how the discrimination they suffered was precisely what allowed the Mafia to take root there. It was extremely difficult for many Italian immigrants, who did not feel protected or represented by anyone else, to avoid the clutches of the mob. It's enough to remember Joe Petrosino, the Italian-born New York City police officer who was murdered in 1909 for taking on the Mafia, to recognize the price honest Italians paid.

Immigrants come to Italy to do jobs Italians don't want to do, but they have also begun defending the rights that Italians are too afraid, indifferent or jaded to defend. To those African immigrants I say: don't go - don't leave us alone with the mafias.
Roberto Saviano is the author of “Gomorrah: A Personal Journey Into the Violent International Empire of Naples' Organized Crime System.” This essay was translated by Virginia Jewiss from the Italian.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

FSHSGRAM 24JAN10

Ciao, Tutti!

Felice Anno Nuovo!

I trust the
Anno Nuovo's going well.

Seems like a long time ago that a few Wildcats got together at
Cucina Vivace in Arlington (Crystal City), VA on 2 Janary
We had a great time...and absolutely squisto food.  Chef and owner Gordon Vivace outdid himself!  And, we more or less
had the entire ristorante to ourselves.  Here's the motley crew:


Left to right:  Scott Truver 68, Patsy Schultz 69, Gordon,
John Jaffe 66, Deb Sigman 69, Steve Rann 67 (behind
Deb), Jim McGhee 68, Susan De Palma Ulfelder 67,
Buddy Heiman 65, and Tim Hendrickson 66.

(We missed you, Eric "Haircut" Christenson 66, Cindi
Christenson, and Suzan Harjo 62!)

And, a delightful irony: we learned that Gordon was born in
Napoli on 1 Gennaio 1967.
So, we celebrated his birthday, too, and made him an honorary FSHS Wildcat.

If you're in the DC/Northern Virginia area and want great Italian fare, give Gordon a call:

703-979-7676  ///  www.cucinavivace.com

And don't forget to mention the
Napoli/FSHS connection!  He's one of us...sorta.


Speaking of the Anno Nuovo Celebration in Napoli...

Ugo Skubikowski (FSHS 67 / uskubikow@middlebury.edu) sends this:

Good news from Naples New Year: no deaths, only 114 injured from illegal fireworks, including a man with
"ustioni ai genitali, al pene e allo scroto".  What
was he trying to light?


News of a Demolition is Premature...

Last FSHSGRAM I included a note that the FSHS building on Via Manzoni had been condemned.  Not so, according to Ugo:

One correction:  old FSHS is not condemned (they don't do that in Italy).  It was bought by the nearby Fatebenefratelli Hospital--where
if we had class on that side of the building, we could watch the hearse pick up the body--and it will become part of the hospital after renovation.


Reston Reunion Plans...

Theresa Dickie Branscome (FSHS 78 / dickiemt@aol.com) alerts us of an upcoming Overseas Brats reunion in Reston, VA, 5-8 August.
"I'm trying to see if there's any interest in having a Naples group."  The URL for the event is:  

http://www.overseasbrats.com/Homecoming2010Order1.asp

More to come, I'm sure!


FSHSWACD Updates Attached...

I've attached the Word file of the January 2010 "edition" of the FSHS Wildcats Alumni Database.  I'll follow up with the Excel file, which
Pat Carter Bryant (FSHS 68 / pat0804@gmail.com) maintains; this allows you to sort the information according to the various fields,
e.g., by class year.  The Word file has the information in chronological order in which I receive it.  We update both variants of the FSHSWACD
on a quarterly basis.

We have 457 Wildcats represented in the FSHSWACD (starting with retired USN Admiral Stewart Ring, the FIRST FSHS Graduate, 1952),
but my FSHSGRAM distro list has about 1,200 email addresses.  So, there's a ton of  FSHS/NAHS people out there who aren't on the
FSHSWACD.  The "notional record" is at the end of the Word file, and we'd welcome getting you in the database.

Also, if there any changes needed to existing records, please send to me.  We'll get to them in time for the next update in April.

James Dillon (FSHS 73 / mrlinuxhead@gmail.com) has suggested posting both variants of the FSHSWACD on his FSHS Blog:

http://fshs-alumni.blogspot.com/

Instead of my sending out updates as attachments in separate emails, I'd post them to the blog
and will let you all know that the new updates have been posted.  You can then go online to the blog and download.

Let me know what you think.  I'll do it one way or t'other.

So, thanks from the FSHSWACD/FSHSGRAM Editorial Staff!




That's about it for 24 January.  If you have FSHS/NAHS-related news, please send.  I'll work into next FSHSGRAM,

FSHSWACD Word file attached; Excel file to come.  And,
Napoli News appended below.

Be well...

Saluti!

Scott T 68



Napoli News!

Buffalo Mozzarella Discovered to Have Cow's Milk
Scandal in Italy: Cheese, Made From Water Buffalo's Milk,
Was Watered Down
By ANN WISE
ROME, Jan. 20, 2010

Scandaloso!" Italians were upset to discover that their favorite mozzarella cheese -- Mozzarella di Bufala, made from buffalo's milk -- was being watered down with cow's milk.

Traces of a toxic chemical were found in the milk used for the cheese.

Widely recognized as the best, buffalo mozzarella is made only in central Italy, in the area between Naples and Rome, and only using the rich milk of the Asian water buffalo. A government sampling of cheeses across Italy revealed, however, that 25 percent of the cheeses tested also included milk from dairy cows -- less expensive, but also less rich.

On Tuesday, the Italian Minister for Agriculture, Luca Zaia, suspended the president of the consortium of buffalo mozzarella producers and replaced him temporarily with a commission to guarantee the quality of the cheese. Even he had watered down his cheese.

"I placed the consortium under the appointed administration after inspections found that even the consortium's president was watering down his buffalo milk with cow's milk," Zaia said.

"In November, controls made in leading supermarkets found that 25 percent of the cheese sold as buffalo mozzarella was fake because it contained 30 percent cow milk."

Zaia said the cheese is perfectly safe and good to eat, but it does not live up to the rigid standards for the product.

The head of the consortium, Luigi Chianese, vigorously denied diluting his buffalo milk, and said that the results of the tests had to be confirmed. He said it was "inconceivable" that 25 percent of buffalo mozzarella was found to contain cow's milk.

"What consumers are putting on their tables is real buffalo mozzarella," Chianese told the ANSA news agency. "This is just an administrative matter that has no repercussions for people's health."

But Zaia said that he wanted "to apply zero tolerance for those who are fraudulent in commerce, or who, in any case, deceive consumers."
"Over the past two years my zero tolerance policy has led to the discovery of many causes of food fraud," he said.

"The news of the discovery of buffalo mozzarella watered down with cow's milk is "gravissima" - very serious, "because it concerns a traditional product of our country," Silvia Basotto, the head of nutrition safety for a citizens' rights group told ANSA. "It is inadmissible."

Cherished by cheese connoisseurs, the Mozzarella di Bufala, like many other traditional Italian products, is protected with a special Protected Designation of Origin label, which is meant to guarantee its quality. Buffalo milk is much richer than the milk of dairy cows, and the mozzarella made from it is distinctly different from cow's milk mozzarella. The typical big ball of buffalo mozzarella has a thin rind and a delicate, slightly sour taste, and produces a milky liquid when cut.

How the Asian water buffalo came to Italy is still a matter of debate, but the most credible theory is that they were introduced to the area around the year 1000 by Norman kings who brought them from Sicily. They may have been introduced there by Arab traders.

The sight of these black-horned buffalo in the lowlands of central Italy often surprises modern visitors, who associate them with India or Thailand. But in the 12th century, the Italian coastal plains were swamplands, perfect for raising buffalo. They were used to pull plows through the waterlogged soil before they were used for their milk.

Zaia's move to protect the Mozzarella di Bufala is just the latest blow to this traditional cheese, which is also a prime ingredient in Neapolitan pizza (also protected - with a Guaranteed Traditional Specialty label.

In 2008, tests at hundreds of mozzarella plants showed that the cheese was being produced with milk that contained dangerous levels of dioxin, and mozzarella sales plunged. Last year, police found that some farmers in the area had given the buffalo a human growth hormone, somatropine, which is legal in the U.S. but not in Europe.

Authorities continue to keep a close eye on the Mozzarella di Bufala -- which is why Italy is going through the latest culinary scandal.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/mozzarella-cheese-buffalo-milk-italy-found-watered-cows/story?id=9612528

http://www.canada.com/health/Italy+uncovers+buffalo+mozzarella+fraud/2468962/story.html

http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9DBHE980.htm

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/italy/7035942/Buffalo-mozzarella-watchdog-closed-after-chiefs-own-cheese-fails-purity-test.html


After Hours: Champs Elysees, Licola, Italy
By Sandra Jontz, Stars and Stripes
Stars and Stripes Scene, Sunday, January 10, 2010

There's nothing Parisian about the Champs Elysees.

Well, not when we're talking about the pastry shop and coffee bar by that name in the
Naples, Italy, suburb of Licola, that is. Neither the name nor the lighted Eiffel Tower sign that serves as a beacon have anything to do with the famed street in Paris, the owner maintains.

The Champs Elysees prides itself on traditional and authentic tastes of Neapolitan confections - from its in-house-made pastries and cakes, to its ice cream, coffees and Happy Hour finger foods.

“We pay special attention to detail and tradition,” said owner Pasquale Piazza. “We strive to maintain the Neapolitan tradition.”

Started in 1991, the locale touts itself as a pastry shop, grill, ice cream shop and coffee bar.

The pastries and cakes are made on site daily by bakers with years of experience in the art of creating flaky sfogliatelle and rum-filled baba that beckon diners from behind the glass-encased rows and rows of desserts, Piazza said. During the recent Christmas holidays, Champs Elysees bakers also capitalized on two of Naples' holiday traditions: They created the famed presepe, or nativity scene, using traditional Italian Christmas sweet sponge cake called pandoro.

“While we are very traditional, we also do try to be creative,” Piazza said, laughing.

This is a place that locals frequent frequently, evident by the cars packed into the parking lot and the throng of parched patrons bellying up to the bar at peak hours for either an aperitif or a shot of the liquid drug Italians call espresso.

The clientele - including the stray dog or two that wander in - come to hang out, relax and have a good time. The gamblers can try their hands at slot machines or the occasional poker game - provided you speak some Italian.

The bar/pastry shop/ice cream parlor hosts a Happy Hour from 6:30 p.m. to about 9:30 p.m. daily except Sundays, during which the parade of finger foods such as bite-sized pizza, fried mozzarella sticks and breaded potato balls are free with the purchase of alcoholic drinks.

During the holidays, the seating area is filled with gift boxes for sale. Many include a smattering of items that capture the period in time, Piazza said, when poor Neapolitans, still wanting to exchange gifts with friends and family, did so with baskets filled with salamis, dried hams and dried beans like lentils.

Location: Via San Nullo 92, Licola, suburb of Naples.
Directions: From the Naples Tangenziale (bypass), take the Licola exit. Follow road signs toward Licola. You can't miss the yellow sign. Parking is paid to an attendant, about 1 euro.
Hours: 6:30 a.m. to 2, 3, 4 a.m., whenever the last customer leaves.

http://www.stripes.com/article.asp?section=140&article=67105


Constitution Center to present Roman exhibit
By Stephan Salisbury
Inquirer Culture Writer

The ancient Rome of gladiators and senators, conquering armies and slaves, togas and helmets will be the focus of the next exhibition at the National Constitution Center, Philadelphia.

"Ancient Rome & America," which will run Feb. 19 through Aug. 1, will consist of more than 300 artifacts and artworks from lending institutions in Florence, Rome,
Naples, and 40 U.S. institutions, said David Eisner, the center's new president.
The center is curating it with Contemporanea Progetti of Florence and the Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities in Rome.

The exhibit, which will be shown only in Philadelphia, may mark a shift in the way the Constitution Center mounts exhibitions, Eisner said at a news conference yesterday.

Up to now, the special exhibitions were produced largely by others and were often part of a tour. "Ancient Rome" and the next exhibit in the fall (the subject of which Eisner declined to disclose) will serve as progenitors of what is hoped to be a new era of in-house curatorial creations.

In the long run, Eisner said, "this business model will require us to recoup the cost of exhibitions through sponsorships and other kinds of partnerships."
"Ancient Rome," which Eisner said cost less than $1 million thanks to the largesse and goodwill of lenders, will focus on the parallels and portents embodied by the Roman Republic, the empire, and the Roman decline and fall.

Roman orators and ideas had a profound effect on Washington, Adams, Madison, Jefferson, and their comrades. Artists liked to depict the founders in Roman dress - togas were a favorite - and the founders modeled their oratory on the work of Cicero, the literary stylist and statesman who lived in the first century B.C.
At the news conference at the center, at Sixth and Arch Streets, William Rush's 1817 marble bust of Washington in a greatcoat and draped with a toga was unveiled to demonstrate the exhibition's themes and quality. The bust is on loan from the American Revolution Center.

A wide array of art and artifacts will explore possible parallels between American and Roman culture. Two eagles, one depicting the American symbol of state carved in 1804, the other a bronze Roman rendering probably broken off a military standard, will be shown side by side.

The football helmet of 1970s Eagles great Harold Carmichael will be shown next to a gladiator helmet and four original pieces from the gladiator barracks of a pavilion in Pompeii.

There also will be artifacts excavated from Pompeii, as well as the cast of a man who could not escape the volcanic eruption of Mount Vesuvius.

Slave collars from both societies and Roman works owned and studied by those who crafted the U.S. Constitution will all be on view.

"Our goal," Eisner said, is to lead visitors "to ponder the lessons that ancient Rome can impart to America today."

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/local/82341727.html


14 quizzed after anti-Mafia arrests
(UKPA) - Jan 5, 2010

Italian police said that they have arrested 14 alleged members of Mafia clans fighting to control areas near Naples.

Police in Naples said that 11 of the arrests were carried out in pre-dawn raids in the southern Italian city.

Two other men were picked up in nearby towns and one in Bologna, in northern Italy.

The Naples area is home to the Camorra crime syndicate.

The clans are fighting to take control of drug trafficking and extortion rackets in some of Naples's northern suburbs, said Captain Gianluca Migliozzi of the local Carabinieri police. They are charged with Mafia association, illegal possession of weapons and drug trafficking.

Separately, Interior Minister Roberto Maroni confirmed that a bomb blast that damaged a courthouse in another southern Italian city, Reggio Calabria, was the work of the powerful local crime syndicate, the 'ndrangheta.

Maroni said in an interview with financial daily Il Sole 24Ore that he will increase the number of police and improve ties with the judiciary as part of measures to fight the 'ndrangheta.

The blast early on Sunday damaged the entrance of the courthouse.


Italy claims finally defeating the mafia
The Italian government says it is winning the war on organised crime. But can the mafia ever be defeated?
By Nick Squires in Rome
Published: 8:15PM GMT 09 Jan 2010

Of all the meticulously planned police stings, it was one of the most unexpected. When suspected mafia mobster Giuseppe Bastone was arrested by Italian paramilitary Carabinieri, he had been living for six months in a tiny underground bunker.

The subterranean cell was equipped with all mod cons - a refrigerator, a television and a DVD player - as well as the means of escape: a trapdoor hidden beneath a stairway, and a 200 yard long tunnel leading to a concealed exit.

But the 28-year-old fugitive had no time to use either when police burst in his hideout during a lightning raid in August.

His arrest was one of the most high profile of a string of successful actions by Italian police and prosecutors in recent months.

In a mass bust in May, detectives arrested nearly 70 suspected members of the Naples-based Camorra mafia, including one of the country's most dangerous fugitives, Franco Letizia, 31, who had been on the run for more than a year.
In November it was the turn of three brothers - Pasquale, Carmine and Salvatore Russo - to be captured after they were found hiding in anonymous properties near Naples.

All in all, a rogue's gallery of 21 out of Italy's 30 most wanted gangsters have been detained, among them convicted multiple murderers who had been on the run for years.

Now the authorities' success has emboldened the prime minister, Silvio Berlusconi, to boast that it is scoring unprecedented blows against organised crime.

"If there is a government that, more than any other, has made fighting the mafia one of its clearest and coherent goals, it is my government," he said recently.
His interior minister, Roberto Maroni, has gone further, declaring that the government has declared "total war" against the mafia.

"We have shown that the state is present in Italy and that it has unleashed a total war against the mafia to regain control of national territory.

"The government has worked with Italy's security forces to create a climate in which the fight against the mafia has found new vigour."

In a country where an estimated 130 billion euros a year - nine per cent of GDP - is earned by the mafia from arms and drug trafficking, extortion, prostitution, embezzled EU funds and illegal waste dumping, it is small wonder that the government would want to clamp down. Apart from the notoriety that organised crime brings to Italy, it also costs billions of euros in lost revenue to the state.
But many Italians are wondering why their leaders are risking such extravagant, headline-grabbing claims when most believe that the likelihood of delivering a mortal blow to the mafia's organisation power is so slim.

Police, prosecutors and organised crime experts say the government can have delivered only a temporary setback. Arresting a few godfathers is like cutting the head off a Hydra, they say - others will simply take their place.

"Just because you arrest some top people doesn't mean the mafia goes away," said Felia Allum, a mafia expert and political scientist at Bath University. "They still maintain social and political control of territory in places like Naples and Palermo and Calabria."

In fact, the global economic crisis may even have helped Italy's four distinct mafia groups - Sicily's Cosa Nostra, the Camorra from Campania, the 'Ndragheta of Calabria and the lesser known Sacra Corona Unita in Puglia - to grow in strength, according to some mafia-watchers.

They have taken advantage of the credit crisis to expand their loan-sharking operations and buy legitimate businesses cheaply from owners who have gone broke.

Flush with revenue from drugs, prostitution and extortion, they have ploughed money into everything from supermarkets to car dealerships, offering liquidity at a time when many enterprises are cash-strapped - and apparently making new inroads into cities such as Milan which had been thought relatively free of their influence.

The answer may be that presenting himself as a fearless anti-mafia crusader is a natural vote winner among those who want to believe it, having grown tired of the mafia's apparent invincibility.

It may distract attention from the sex scandals in which he has been caught up during the last year, including claims that he slept with a prostitute at his residence in Rome and that call girls were paid to attend his private parties.

But Mr Berlusconi's government may also want to distract attention from recent allegations that the prime minister himself colluded with the mob.

Last month a jailed mafia hitman claimed in a Turin court that Mr Berlusconi struck a deal with Cosa Nostra just before winning his first term as prime minister in 1994. Gaspare Spatuzza, a mafia pentito or turncoat, said that a clan boss had boasted to him that Mr Berlusconi and his business partner, Marcello Dell'Utri, had "practically placed the country in our hands".

Mr Dell'Utri, one of the prime minister's closest collaborators and a senator in his People of Freedom party, was sentenced in 2004 to nine years in prison for his mafia connections, but is appealing against the verdict. Mr Berlusconi dismissed the claims made by the supergrass as "vile" nonsense.

But allegations that he is closer to the mafia than he would ever like to admit will not go away.

One of his political favourites, Nicola Cosentino, a junior finance minister and a senior official in Mr Berlusconi's People of Freedom movement, has been forced to deny claims that he received money from the feared Casalese clan of the Camorra.
Investigating magistrates demanded the MP's arrest on charges of mafia collusion, but last month the application was voted down by parliament, where Mr Berlusconi's governing bloc has a majority.

The greatest risk, however, is that the much-trumpeted clampdown will provoke a high-profile mafia backlash that makes the government of Italy appear even less competent at controlling organised crime than it is. The mafia cannot afford for those who pay it protection money to begin to doubt its grip.

Last weekend came a clear sign that the mafia was beginning to strike back when a powerful home-made bomb, consisting of dynamite lashed to a gas canister, exploded outside a court in the city of Reggio Calabria, on the tip of the "toe" of Italy's boot-shaped peninsula, causing damage to the building but no injuries.

The audacious attack was interpreted as a warning by the 'Ndrangheta to police and prosecutors to scale back their recently stepped-up campaign against the organised crime syndicate, arresting mobsters and seizing cash, cars and property. It was a violent means of "reasserting their supremacy in the area," said a senior prosecutor, Giuseppe Pignatone.

In response to the bombing, Mr Maroni ordered an extra 120 paramilitary Carabinieri and other police to Reggio Calabria to protect judges and safeguard against more attacks.

But it will take more than that to rein in the 'Ndragheta, which in recent years is thought to have overtaken its better-known counterparts in Sicily and Naples. Now regarded as the strongest and most impenetrable of Italy's mafia groups, it is believed to control a billion-pound trade in smuggling cocaine from cartels in Colombia into Europe.

The bombing was a sign of the 'Ndrangheta flexing its muscles, said mafia expert and investigative journalist Roberto Saviano, whose book on the Camorra so enraged Neapolitan godfathers that he now needs 24 hour police protection.
"If they had wanted to, the clans could have blown up all of Reggio Calabria," Mr Saviano told
La Repubblica newspaper. "The 'Ndrangheta possesses C3 and C4 (plastic) explosives and dozens of bazookas."

The reality, for all Mr Berlusconi's boastfulness, is that no government is likely to make headway in the fight against organised crime with mere arrests and court cases unless it first tackles the social conditions which are the mafia's recruiting sergeants across Italy's poorer south - unemployment, poverty and lack of economic growth.

That, at least, is the view of academics like Miss Allum. "There needs to be a concerted effort to improve levels of education and remedy the lack of job opportunities in the South, but that's not happening," she said. "The mafia is a virus in society and in the body politic. The question is, how do you get it out?"
Not, it would seem, by making quite such extravagant claims about it.


Vatican confirms existence of possible miracle attributed to Pius XII
Vatican City, Jan 18, 2010 / 02:40 pm (CNA).

The Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martins, confirmed over the telephone to CNA today that a "presumed miracle" attributed to Pope Pius XII is under investigation.  The case involves a patient cured of cancer in southern Italy.

Cardinal Saraiva was quick to caution, however, that there is a big difference between a "presumed" miracle and a "confirmed" miracle.

The case came to the attention of the Congregation for Saints' Causes from the town of
Castellammare di Stabia near Naples, Italy.  "Some months ago," the local Sorrento & Dintorni online publication reported on Sunday, a person was discovered to be cured of a form of cancer previously declared incurable after praying for the intercession of Pope Pius XII.

The doctors of the person, of whom no details are public, were unable to give a scientific explanation for the occurrence, according to the article.

According to the same news source, the story was confirmed by Fr. Carmine Giudici, Vicar General of the Diocese of Sorrento, who said, "It's all true."  Fr. Carmine said that the Holy See was in contact with the diocese after having been contacted by a local church-goer who says that he or she received a miracle "by the intercession of Pius XII."

"The archbishop then decided to institute within days the appropriate diocesan tribunal."

The existence of the possible miracle was confirmed to CNA by Cardinal Saraiva Martins on Monday afternoon.

The prefect emeritus also said that it is impossible to estimate the amount of time it might take for the process of confirmation to be carried out.

http://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/vatican_investigating_miracle_attributed_to_pius_xii/


[Speaking of Miracles…]
Woman gives birth to sextuplets in Italy; mother and babies all reported fine
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (CP) - Jan 10, 2010

A southern Italian woman has given birth to sextuplets in the first such case in Italy since 1997.

The ANSA news agency says the babies - boys Paolo and Maurizio, and girls Francesca Pia, Angelica, Annachiara and Serena - are in good condition. The babies each weighed between 610-800 grams (21.5-28.2 ounces, or 1.34-1.76 pounds)

They were born Sunday in the 27th week of pregnancy to 32-year-old Carmela Oliva in
Benevento, near Naples.

Father Pino Mele told state-run RAI television he hopes the sextuplets' grandparents help out, saying they're the first grandchildren in the family.
ANSA says it's the first case of sextuplets in Italy since 1997.


Defender Andrea Dossena leaves Liverpool and returns to Serie A with Napoli
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (CP) - Jan 8, 2010

NAPLES, Italy - Defender Andrea Dossena has left Liverpool and signed a four-year contract with Napoli, the Italian club said Friday.

Napoli said it has reached a deal with Dossena through to the end of the 2013-14 season.

Since joining Liverpool in 2008, Dossena scored one goal in 18 Premier League games, also appearing in eight Champions League matches.

Dossena has also played 10 times for Italy and wants to secure a spot in the Azzurri squad for this year's World Cup in South Africa.

Napoli is currently fourth in Serie A.

Dossena previously played in Italy with Verona, Treviso and Udinese.

http://www.tribalfootball.com/ex-liverpool-fullback-dossena-happy-finally-make-napoli-move-567081

http://www.uknetguide.co.uk/Latest-News/Dossena-leaves-Anfield-for-Napoli-19547841.html

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Forrest Sherman High School, Naples, Italy Facebook Group

Caio Tutti wild things. I was asked to point  all you former Forrest Sherman Alumni  to a Facebook group.

The link is here:

That's http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=48771648692

Saturday, December 26, 2009

FSHSGRAM 26Dec09 - Felice Anno Nuovo!

Greetings Wildcats!

Felice Anno Nuovo, Tutti!

As the old year passes away, my best wishes for the best that 2010 will hold for us all...our families and friends...and indeed the nation.  Far too many loved ones left us this past year, but they will forever be in our hearts....

And, I greatly appreciate the several Christmas cards and emails regarding these occasional FSHSGRAMs and the quarterly FSHSWACD (more on FSHSWACD, below...) efforts. 
Prego!


Last Call for Cucina Vivace:
Wildcats Wring in the Anno Nuovo, 2 January

To remind:  we're getting together on the first Saturday after New Years at the
Cucina Vivace Trattoria e Enoteca in Arlington/Crystal City, VA:  www.cucinavivace.comFixed-price menu for $65/person (food, non-alcoholic beverages, tips and taxes).  We have 17 Wildcats, spouses and friends signed up, and about three or four more sitting on the fence...but even more can be accommodated.  I'll need to get a final count to the ristorante by 30 December.  Please let me know if you and yours can attend.  I need checks by 31 December; send to:  Scott Truver, 281 Wilderness Road, Severna Park, MD 21146-2124.

Grazie!


A "Walking Tour" of Napoli Memories

This time of year is all about looking back as we look forward.  So, it's great that
Charlie Ross (FSHS 68 / cross14@nc.rr.com) sent this note and pics...

Scott - Dave Aders, FSHS 68 or 69 (not sure), lead guitar and Jimi Hendrix wannabe in one of the school bands but now a "respectable" AA airline captain, went back to Napoli this past summer and took some great pictures of our old 1965-68 hangouts.  He sent them to me in a Christmas card on a CD.  I thought you might to share with the other Napolitani.  The pictures show things and places that aren't on the average tour guide's itinerary, but they definitely have a special place in many FSHS hearts:

Pizzeria hangout on Via Manzoni owned by Raphael




Luigi's pinball and foosball joint (next door to the Pizzeria)



The park across Via Manzoni from the Pizzeria



FSHS building on Via Manzoni, now closed and condemned





The Bussola nightclub (wow, many good memories there)



The Chalet Bar on Via Petrarca (ahh...memories of Birra Peroni and sweet summer breezes)



The "cove" where we used to go swimming, just down the cliff from Parco Remembrance



And, finally, an old Fiat Cinquecento



Tante Grazie, Charlie...Dave...yep...many fond memories...especially the low wall opposite La Bussola....


More on Piper Club

Last FSHSGRAM I included a pic of the famed Piper club in Roma (I have many memories...er...that I think I can recall...) that Ugo Skubikowski FSHS 67 sent.  Bob Clack (FSHS 67 / bobnmitzi@mac.com) sends this augmentation from Google Earth:



To which Ugo noted that they had changed the original sign from when he visited in September.


Speaking of the FSHSWACD...

Pat Carter Bryant (FSHS 68 / pat0804@gmail.com) and I are gearing up for the January 2010 update of the FSHS Wildcats Alumni Contacts Database.  If you're in the FSHSWACD but want to make changes to your file, please send to me.  If you're not in but wannabe, please fill out as much or as little info as you'd like...

FSHS Wildcats Alumni Contacts Database Notional Record/Data Fields

Name: (First, Middle, Last or Last/Maiden and Last/Married, or Last/Divorced, "Nickname")
Title:  (JD, PhD, Miss, MD, II, Jr., etc...FSHS Teacher/Administrator/Parent...)
Napoli:  (the actual years you lived in Napoli)
Where in Napoli:  (where you lived...Via Manzoni, Via Petracca, Parco Azurro, Arco Felice...)
FSHS Class:  (graduation year, whether you graduated from FSHS or not)
High School Graduated:  (FSHS or other HS)
Email Address 1:
Email Address 2:
Company:
Snailmail Street/POB Address:
Snailmail City/State/Zip Address:
Phone(s):  (Home / Work / Cell)
Comments: (brief mention of anything particularly important to you about your Napoli/FSHS experience...)


...and send to me.  I'll make sure it gets in.

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Our Military Rules And Guidelines

Our Military Rules And Guidelines

Marine Corps Rules:

1. Be courteous to everyone, friendly to no one.
2. Decide to be aggressive enough, quickly enough.
3. Have a plan.
4. Have a back-up plan, because the first one probably won't work.
5. Be polite. Be professional. But, have a plan to kill everyone you meet.
6. Do not attend a gunfight with a handgun whose caliber does not start with a .4 or .5.
7. Anything worth shooting is worth shooting twice. Ammo is cheap. Life is expensive.
8. Move away from your attacker. Distance is your friend. (Lateral & diagon al preferred.)
9. Use cover or concealment as much as possible.
10.Flank your adversary when possible. Protect yours
11.Always cheat; always win. The only unfair fight is the one you lose.
12.In ten years nobody will remember the details of caliber, stance, or tactics. They will only remember who lived.
13.If you are not shooting, you should be communicating your intention to shoot.


Navy SEAL's Rules

1. Look very cool in sunglasses
2. Kill every living thing within view
3. Adjust Speedo
4. Check hair in mirror

US Army Rangers Rules
1. Walk in 50 miles wearing 75 pound rucksack while starving
2. Locate individuals requiring killing
3. Request permission via radio from 'Higher' to perform killing
4. Curse bitterly when mission is aborted
5. Walk out 50 miles wearing a 75 pound rucksack while starving

US Army Rules

1. Curse bitterly when receiving operational order
2. Make sure there is extra ammo and extra coffee
3. Curse bitterly
4. Curse bitterly
5. Do not listen to 2nd LTs; it can get you killed
6. Curse bitterly


US Air Force Rules
1. Have a cocktail
2. Adjust temperature on air-conditioner
3. See what's on HBO=
4. Ask What is a gunfight?'
5. Request more funding from Congress with a 'killer' Power Point presentation
6. Wine & dine ''key' Congressmen, invite DOD & defense industry executives.
7. Receive funding, set up new command and assemble assets
8. Declare the assets 'strategic' and never deploy them operationally.
9. Hurry to make 13:45 tee-time
10. Make sure the base is as far as possible from the conflict but close enough to have tax exemption

(And I Love This Next One)

US Navy Rules

1. Go to Sea
2. Drink Coffee
3. Deploy Marines

Go Navy !

And the next...  (You've got to love the military, and God bless them
all: U.S. Navy Directive 16134 (Inappropriate T-Shirts)

The following directive was issued by the commanding officer of all naval installations in the Middle East. (It was obviously directed at the Marines.)



To: All Commands Subject:
Inappropriate T-Shirts Ref: ComMidEast For Inst 16134//24 K
All commanders promulgate upon receipt. The following T-shirts are no longer to be worn on or off base by any military or civilian personnel serving in the Middle East:


1. 'Eat Pork or Die'[both English and Arabic versions]
2. 'Shrine Busters'[Various. Show burning minarets or bomb/artillery shells impacting Islamic shrines. Some with unit logos.]
3. 'Napalm, Sticks Like Crazy' [Both English and Arabic versions]
4. 'Goat - it isn't just for breakfast any more.'  [Both English and Arabic versions]
5. 'The road to Paradise begins with me.' [Mostly Arabic versions, but some in English. Some show sniper scope cross-hairs.]
6.'Guns don't kill people. I kill people.' [Both Arabic and English versions]
7.'Pork. The other white meat.' [Arabic version]
8.'Infidel' [English, Arabic and other coalition force languages.]

The above T-shirts are to be removed from Post Exchanges upon receipt of this directive.

In addition, the following signs are to be removed upon receipt of this message:

1. 'Islamic Religious Services Will Be Held at the Firing Range at 0800 Daily.'
2. 'Do we really need 'smart bombs' to drop on these dumb bastards?'

All commands are instructed to implement sensitivity training upon receipt.
 

Fwd: FSHSGRAM 28Nov09 Felice Grazie Edition

Felice Grazie, FSHS/NAHS Wildcatti!


I do hope everyone's Thanksgiving 2009 festivities were wonderful.  We had about 44 people milling through our house throughout the day...most of whom I knew...several I didn't...and only a few from MY side of the
famiglia Truverii.  Still...a good time!



Wildcats Wring in the Anno Nuovo 2010 Update!

As noted in the previous FSHSGRAM, for the last eight or nine or ten years, we've been getting together on the first Saturday after New Years at a
ristorante italiano in the Washington/Baltimore area.  We've had as few as 14 and as many as 76 Wildcats and Wildcats Wannabes attend -- most local but a few from as far away as California and Washinton state.

For
2 January 2010, 7PM to closing, we've made arrangements at the Cucina Vivace trattoria e enoteca in Arlington/Crystal City, VA:

www.cucinavivace.com

Cindi Christenson (married to Eric Christenson FSHS 66) and I have worked with the owner and chef, Gordon Vivace, to come up with a family-style, fixed-price menu for $65 per person (food, tips, taxes included) that features:

Prima del Pasto/Cocktail Hour
 
Bruschetta
Toasted bread rounds served with white bean and anchovy spread
 
Antipasti
 
Granchi Con Aioli
Lightly seasoned lump crab meat served with a lemon and garlic aioli
 
Funghi Marinati                                          
Fresh button mushrooms marinated in red wine, balsamic pimento and fresh herbs
 
Caponata
A savory, baked mix of eggplant, red bell peppers, garlic, capers and herbs
 
Insalate
 
Insalata Digiuna                                   
Boston bib lettuce and cherry tomatoes with gorgonzola cheese dressing
 
Insalata Autunno                                       
Mixed field greens, walnuts, dried cranberries and balsamic vinaigrette

Paste
 
Tortelloni Con Funghi                                 
Fresh three cheese tortelloni in a sauce of mixed wild mushrooms, garlic and olive oil
 
Rigatoni Marinara                                 
Fresh rigatoni in marinara
 
Secondi
 
Trota Infornata                                     
Broiled trout fillet with an almond/lemon cream sauce
 
Arista Marinata                                  
A thick cut pork chop lightly coated with olive oil and herbs; grilled to medium
 
Vitello                               
Free-range, pan-seared veal medallions in a cognac and green peppercorn sauce.
 
Dolci
 
Strata Di Bacche
A rustic variant of bread pudding with a layer of tart mixed alpine berries
 
Torta Con Nutella
Nutella, an Italian favorite, used as a glaze to coat fudge brownies.

Also included in the $65 cost are regular coffee, ice tea, and water.

All specialty coffees, wine, beer and liquor will be separate from the "family-style" account and the responsibility of individuals placing the orders.

So...we have ten Wildcats signed up already, and
Cucina Vivace can easily handle 34.  If we get commitments of about 25 Wildcats and Wildcat consorti, Gordon will close the ristorante for us.  I'll need to get a final count to him by 18 December.  Please let me know if you and yours can attend.  I'll also need checks by 31 December; send to:  Scott Truver, 281 Wilderness Road, Severna Park, MD 21146-2124.  If you'd like to talk it over with me, here's my cell:  703-268-0634.

There are several hotels/motels within walking distance of the
cucina, for out-of-towners.



Sad News

In a message dated 11/21/09
Napolitani@aol.com (who's not in the FSHSWACD...) writes:

We recently lost Mike Eddy and Jim "Red" Worthington -- both FSHS 58 -- to cancer.  Mike graduated from the US Naval Academy and flew 299 missions over 'Nam in A4 Skyhawks and A6 Intruders.  He is survived by wife Charlotte Dankworth Eddy FSHS 60.  Condolences can be sent to Charlotte at 2430 North Moss Lane, Oak Harbor, WA 98277.  More on "Red" can be had from his sister, and to whom condolences can be sent, "Teenie" Western FSHS 57 at Aworthington@verizon.net.

Napolitani, himself, is recovering from surgery earlier this month: "They believe they got all of the cancer, but my 70-year old body is slow to heal," he wrote on 24 November.  Our best wishes for a complete recovery!


Sorrento (and Napoli) on My Mind...

Curt Hingson FSHS 65 (hing430@aol.com) writes of an October mini-reunion in the old country:

I was in Sorrento while the Vegas get-together was happening.  Several of us FSHS old timers (Page Holbrook, Zilla Webb Hillin, John Lopez and wife Marjorie, Roscoe and Jackie Toles) were guests in a ocean view villa, thanks to Page and her local connections, and enjoyed life on the 'skirts of Napoli for 12 beautiful days and more, for some.  Some pictures are on Facebook in our FaceBook group for FSHS (1965 or so).  Attaching a couple for the next newsletter...


     


Mille Grazie, Curt...these are wonderful!  If they don't generate an upwhelming of nostalgia and homesickness, I don't know what will!

(OBTW, Curt sent these in very high res, 2MB+ files, and I reduced for the FSHSGRAM.  If you'd like original, high-res files, let Curt or me know.  FSHSGRAM ed.)


More on Karen Fahy O'Neill FSHS 69 in Acquila:

I've attached a Word file of the
IRISH DAILY MIRROR story about Karen's efforts to help the earthquake-damaged area.


That's about it for today... 

Please let me know soonest if you can party with us on 2 January.  It will be a great time!


Meanwhile,
Napoli News below.

Ciao, Tutti!

Scott T FSHS 68


Napoli News

Will Drilling Into a Volcano Trigger an Eruption That Destroys Naples?
By Clay Dillow Posted 11.09.2009 at 2:30 pm

Pompeii Geologist will drill seven boreholes in the caldera at Campi Flegrie in around Naples, Italy, in an attempt to better predict volcanic disasters like the one that destroyed Pompeii in A.D. 79. Critics say the drilling could trigger that very volcanic disaster.

Scientific research has helped humankind avoid or mitigate many of nature's best attempts to send us to a violent end, but what do researchers do when the pursuit of research could trigger the very disaster from which science is trying to protect us? That's the question facing geologists in Naples, Italy that will begin sinking seven four-kilometer bore holes into the Campi Flegrei caldera, the site of a "supercolossal" volcanic eruption 39,000 years ago.

Those doing the drilling hope to learn more about the geological activity beneath the giant collapsed crater so they might better predict future volcanic disasters. Critics say the drilling could precipitate that very cataclysmic eruption the researchers are trying to avoid.

Previous studies show that Campi Flegrei is one of Earth's most volcanically high-risk places; just 4,000 years ago series of violent eruptions cut the landscape into what it is today. Prior to those eruptions the Earth's crust rose by several meters across the entire caldera. The crust has been rising again since the 1960s, causing concern among scientists that it might be ready to blow its top once again. An eruption now would be devastating: In a New Orleans-esque display of engineering foresight, the majority of the metropolitan area of Naples is situated within the caldera.

Predicting the next big eruption from Campi Flegrei, then, is of utmost importance not only from a scientific standpoint, but to avoid the kind of disaster that befell nearby Pompeii two millennia ago. The boreholes could reveal exactly where magma might surface and collect prior to eruptions, as well as reveal locations of fracture zones and pockets of magma underneath the caldera. Rock samples could also be collected and tested to help researchers model ground deformation in the area.

But drilling so deep into the earth is fraught with risks, critics say, not least of which could be eruptions of varying magnitudes triggered by the drilling. Explosions caused by super-hot magma flooding into the borehole and vaporizing the drilling fluid are common in such projects. The Iceland Deep Drilling Project, a geothermal energy play, was recently halted 2,014 meters down for exactly that reason. The difference, critics say, is that an explosion is worst case scenario for most drilling projects like the IDDP; hitting a main vein of pressurized silica-rich magma in Campi Flegrei could theoretically cause a complete disaster, sending the volcano into full eruption (and Naples to its demise).

The boreholes at Campi Flegrei won't likely hit magma, researchers say, as the holes will reach only half as deep as any known reservoir, and even if it does, the result will not necessarily be a disaster. It could, rather, provide researchers with important new information about the inner-workings of volcanoes in general, and Campi Flegrei in particular. Meanwhile, Naples will simply have to hold its breath.



6th Fleet gets new skipper
Stars and Stripes
European edition, Saturday, November 21, 2009

NAPLES, Italy - Vice Adm. Harry B. Harris Jr. assumed command of the U.S. Navy 6th Fleet, headquartered in Naples, from Vice Adm. Bruce W. Clingan on Wednesday, according to a Navy news release.

Harris also becomes deputy commander of Naval Forces Europe/Naval Forces Africa, Joint Forces Maritime Component Commander Europe, and commander of Striking and Support Forces NATO.
He comes to Naples after serving as deputy chief of Naval Operations for Communications Networks and as Department of the Navy deputy chief information officer.

Clingan's next assignment will be as deputy chief of naval operations for Operations, Plans, and Strategy in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations at the Pentagon.


Mussolini's 'brain and blood' removed from eBay auction after his granddaughter complains
By Nick Pisa
Last updated at 8:12 PM on 20th November 2009

Police were tonight investigating claims from the granddaughter of Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini that part of his brains had been offered for sale on eBay.

Alessandra Mussolini called police after being tipped off that three glass phials holding his brains and blood in a wooden box, and a photocopy of autopsy documents were posted on the auction site with a 15,000 Euro price tag.

Mussolini led Italy for more than 20 years. At the end of the Second World War he was shot with his mistress Claretta Petacci and their bodies hung upside down from a petrol station in Milan.

Following his execution his body was taken to a hospital in the city and his brain was removed on orders of the Americans and sent to a top secret military base for examination - and never returned.

Alessandra, who is a right wing MP, was tipped off about the sale during a conference and immediately went to a police station in Naples and reported the offer as well as telling officials at the Ministry of Communications.

Tonight the mother-of-three said: 'This is outrageous and I am furious that such a sacrilege should be carried out on the remains of my grand father.

'I am sure that these items were either stolen from the hospital in Milan and put up for sale by someone who had kept them or they could be part of the remains that were sent to the United States.

'I did not see the advert as it was taken down by the time I got to a computer but the police are investigating and they will be able to travel down who put the items on eBay.

Alessandra added: 'My grandfather's remains were kept in a box in Milan and when they were returned to my grandmother Rachele they were just a few bones. There was no brain or blood.

'This box of bones is what is buried in the family crypt. I am taking this matter very seriously and the police are investigating. I am outraged - it is disgusting and offensive.'

A spokesman for Italian eBay tonight said the offer was removed 'immediately' earlier today, but Alessandra claimed she had been told it had been on the site for two hours.

The eBay spokesman said that no-one had a chance to bid and stressed its regulations prohibited the sale of human parts.

Alessandra said that along with the three phials there was a photocopy of a document recording the handover of Benito Mussolini's body to his family for burial.

The document registered the Italian State's consignment of the body to his widow Rachele at his birthplace Predappio where it was re-interred in the family crypt which has now become a shrine to Neo Fascists.

Mussolini's remains have had a troubled past when he was first buried in 1945 in an unmarked grave. Fascists supporters discovered it, dug it up and kept it secret for ten years before handing it to his family.

Alessandra added: 'I am not sure if it was my grandfather's brains or if it wasn't - anything is possible and that's why I have made an official complaint and asked police to investigate.'



Nativity figures of 'Silvio Berlusconi's girls' sculpted
Italians will be able to add a whiff of political scandal to their Christmas nativity scenes this year -
carved wooden figurines of Patrizia D'Addario, the call girl who claims to have slept with Silvio Berlusconi.
By Nick Squires in Rome
Published: 12:50PM GMT 25 Nov 2009

Figurines of Noemi Letizia, the teenage lingerie mode who calls the Italian prime minister 'Papi' or Daddy, will also be on sale next to more traditional nativity figures such as Joseph, Mary and baby Jesus.

The nativity figures are produced by traditional craftsmen in Naples, who each festive season turn their hand to producing likenesses of politicians, actors and celebrities who have been in the public eye over the preceding year.

The craftsmen congregate in workshops around Via San Gregorio Armeno, in the heart of the southern port, Italy's third largest city.

Along with more conventional figurines such as the Three Wise Men, donkeys and cattle, the artisans are this year carving miniature figures of George Clooney, who is going out with an Italian actress; Michael Jackson, who died this year; and Mr Berlusconi's wife, Veronica Lario, 53, who is suing him for divorce over his alleged womanising.

Miss D'Addario, 42, is depicted with long blonde hair, knee-length boots and a short black dress with a plunging neckline.

A book written by the professional escort about the night she claims to have spent with Mr Berlusconi after a party at his mansion in Rome was published this week.

In it she describes in graphic detail how the 73-year-old prime minister, dressed in white silk pyjamas, kept her up until 8am with his vigorous love making and then offered her breakfast in between his official engagements.

Mr Berlusconi has said he cannot recall the prostitute but has not explicitly denied having sexual relations with her.

Miss Letizia, 18, is depicted smiling and wearing a blue miniskirt and a white Dolce and Gabbana top.
The prime minister's decision to drop in on her 18th birthday party at a discotheque near Naples earlier this year outraged his wife and set off months of lurid revelations about his private life.


The loves of 'Papi' Berlusconi celebrated with a musical
Times Online
November 26, 2009

A theatre in Sicily is planning to stage a musical on the turbulent love life of Silvio Berlusconi, the Italian Prime Minister, called My Fair Papi.
Pietrangelo Buttafuoco, head of the Teatro Stabile in Catania, said the title was a play on My Fair Lady, Alan Jay Lerner's 1956 hit, itself based on Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw. "Papi" is the nickname given to Mr Berlusconi by showgirls and models who attended parties at his villa in Sardinia and his palazzo in Rome.

It first came to public notice at the end of April when Noemi Letizia, the aspiring lingerie model whose 18th birthday the Italian leader unexpectedly attended in Naples, said she always called him "Papi", meaning "Daddy". It later emerged that some of the women who attended the parties were escorts who had been paid to do so.

Mr Buttafuoco said he was looking for an actor "like Danny De Vito" to play the flamboyant and controversial Italian leader and media tycoon. He told the newspaper La Sicilia: "We need someone with presence and versatility who knows how to sing, dance and dominate the stage. In fact De Vito would be our first choice".

He said the musical, which was in the early stages but was "more than just an idea", would not be left wing or a "hatchet job" but "light and amusing. It will take you into another dimension."
This week the Italian edition of Rolling Stone magazine put Mr Berlusconi on its cover as "Rock Star of the Year" because of his "rock'n'roll lifestyle", saying that Mr Berlusconi's "daily behaviour, his furious vitality, his inimitable lifestyle have given him, especially this year, incredible international popularity."


NAPLES, Italy
Police arrested one of the country's most wanted mob bosses on Sunday,
a day after detaining his brother, dealing a blow to one of the most powerful
criminal clans in the region around Naples.

Pasquale Russo, 62 years old, had been on the run since 1993. He was arrested at dawn on Sunday in a remote farmhouse near Sperone, some 50 miles north of Naples. Italian authorities considered him one of Italy's top 10 mob fugitives.

In a statement, police said he was the chief of the Russo clan and described him as "extremely dangerous."

Mr. Russo was convicted in absentia more than a decade ago and sentenced to life in prison for 13 homicides and criminal association with the mob.

His brother Salvatore Russo, 51, was arrested Saturday after 14 years on the run. A third brother, Carmine, was also arrested Sunday.

Police described the Russo clan, based near the town of Nola, as a leading player in the Camorra organized-crime syndicate that operates in and around Naples.

The Camorra's grip on Naples, one of Italy's biggest port cities, has allowed it to become one of the country's top traffickers of counterfeit goods, narcotics and other contraband.

The syndicate also runs a vast trash-collection business, hauling waste from Italy's wealthier north to illegal landfills around Naples.

Unlike the better-known Sicilian mob, the Mafia, the Camorra doesn't have a highly centralized command, police say.

Instead, Camorra clans operate in shifting alliances that have produced bloody internal wars.

Over the years, scenes of brutal reprisals have made the Camorra one of Italy's most feared mobs, and a growing concern for the conservative government of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi.

Residents of Naples have become increasingly inured to the almost daily violence on the city's streets.

On Thursday, Italian prosecutors released a video of a murder in Naples that was met with indifference by bystanders. The prosecutors hope that releasing the video will help break a wall of silence over the killer's identity.

The video, shot by closed-circuit cameras, shows a man in a baseball cap shooting Mariano Bacio Tarracino, a 53-year-old man with an organized-crime record, in broad daylight on May 11 this year.

Mr. Tarracino is seen smoking a cigarette outside a bar in the Sanità neighborhood in central Naples.

The killer enters the bar, where there are at least six people, then emerges and shoots Mr. Tarracino at point-blank range.

When Mr. Tarracino falls to the ground, the killer finishes him off with a bullet to the head.

None of the bystanders move a finger, though it is hard to say whether that is from genuine indifference or from fear of retaliation.  A woman is seen rubbing off her scratch-and-win lottery card as Mr. Tarracino is killed in front of her. A cigarette-seller moves his stall a few yards down the road, while a man holding a toddler in his arms looks at the victim and walks away.

The video prompted outrage from politicians. A member of the Green party in the Campania region around Naples offered €2,000 ($3,000) for information leading to the killer's arrest.



Alleged hitman arrested in Naples, Italy
Published: Nov. 19, 2009 at 4:07 PM

NAPLES, Italy, Nov. 19 (UPI) -- Authorities said a suspected mafia hitman allegedly caught on video killing a man in Naples, Italy, has been caught.

The Italian news agency, ANSA, reported Thursday that Costanzo Apice, 28, was arrested for allegedly killing convicted bank robber Mario Bacioterracino in a broad daylight shooting this year.

Video released last month of the May 11 fatal shooting allegedly shows Apice shooting Bacioterracino in the side three times before administering a final gunshot to the man's head.

Apice disappeared into the crowd following the shooting and fled to the town of Caserta, police said.

Investigators would not offer specific details how they eventually located Apice in Caserta.

The release of the video on television and the Internet sparked concern from Italian officials like Interior Minister Roberto Maroni, ANSA reported.

''This video gives an impression of Naples very different from what it's really like," said Maroni, saying the video reinforces the theory that Naples is home to the Camorra crime syndicate.



Camorra boss arrested in Naples

Italian police say they have arrested an influential mafia boss in the southern city of Naples.

They say Luigi Esposito - who is on the list of Italy's 30 most wanted men - was held at a luxury villa in the city.

He is believed to be one of the heads of the Nuvoletta clan of the Camorra, which operates in the Naples region.

He had been on the run since 2003. He was sentenced to nine years is prison for drug trafficking and associating with mafia in 2006.

Mr Esposito, aged 49, is the latest in a string of senior mafia bosses held recently in southern Italy.
Last week, three brothers of the Camorra's Russo clan were arrested near Naples.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni described their arrest as "a heavy blow for the Camorra".
The Camorra is believed to have about 5,000 members.


Juan Camilo Zuniga Settled At Napoli
The full-back has quashed rumours of a January exit after yesterday's outstanding display in the 1-0 win over Cittadella...
Vince Masiello, Goal.com
Nov 27, 2009 9:02:44 AM

Napoli defender Juan Camilo Zuniga insists he is happy at the San Paolo and is hoping to build on last night's performance against Cittadella to force his way into the first XI.

The ex-Siena man has been linked with Serie A giants Juventus in recent weeks, after failing to make an impact in Campania following his summer move from Siena.

But the 23-year-old got a rare start yesterday as the Vesuviani progressed to the last 16 of the Coppa Italia and he shined in his natural role at right-back, even providing the assist for Mariano Bogliacino's winner.

"I have played on the right flank last night, but I can also do well on the left," Zuniga told the club's website.

"I like it in Naples, there is a wonderful atmosphere in the dressing room and I will work to be ready when the coach needs me.

"I am happy, because the goal came after one of my moves. I am satisfied with my display, but I am particularly pleased to have contributed to help Napoli go through."

The Colombian has mustered only six appearances in the league so far this term and coach Walter Mazzarri has often employed him out of position on the left side of a five-man midfield line, since Italy international Christian Maggio  regularly patrols the right channel.


Fiat plans for Italy aim for more output, lower costs
11.27.09, 03:14 PM EST
Reporting by Gianni Montani and Jo Winterbottom
Copyright Thomson Reuters 2009.

MILAN, Nov 27 (Reuters) - Sergio Marchionne, chief executive of carmakers Fiat and Chrysler, will outline a restructuring of production in Italy to the government next week as he hopes to secure a commitment for continuing tax breaks on new cars.

The proposals will include halting car production at its vulnerable Sicilian plant and possibly job cuts, increasing tensions with politicians and trade unions.

Fiat (has five auto plants producing solely its marques -- Fiat, Lancia and Alfa Romeo -- in Italy, employing around 26,000 workers, and a joint venture site with France's Pugeot).

Fiat said in June its Termini Imerese plant in Sicily would halt its car production -- the Lancia Ypsilon -- by 2011, to be replaced by some other output which has not yet been specified.

Marchionne has said many times that Europe's car industry needs to cut production to face the slump in demand triggered by a global credit crunch that has crimped consumer spending.

Sales this year in Europe and Italy have found support in incentives to buy less-polluting cars from governments desperate to maintain jobs in the industry, but these are coming to an end and in Italy will cease after Dec. 31.

Car sales in Italy contained falls to just 3.87 percent in the first 10 months of the year, according to figures from the Transport Ministry. November figures are due on Dec. 1.

Marchionne thinks a gradual phase-out of the tax breaks over two years -- a 'foam on the runway' scenario -- would be preferable to a sudden halt that would slash sales.

Unions have already said the government should not extend the incentive scheme if Fiat completely closes Termini Imerese and Industry Minister Claudio Scajola, who is meeting Marchionne on Tuesday, has said it would be 'folly' to shut the plant.

That triggered a sharp retort from Marchionne on Thursday.

'In my personal experience, before you use an extreme word like folly, you should know the figures. Once you know the figures, maybe you will come to a different conclusion,' he told journalists in Turin.

Scajola admitted in a letter to Il Giornale newspaper on Friday that it cost up to 1,000 euros more per car to produce vehicles in Sicily. The island's poor infrastructure and weak links to markets hamper the plant's economics.

'Termini Imerese is too small, there are no scale economies, it's inconvenient for suppliers and it's inconvenient for Fiat,' said Pierluigi Bellini, a director at IHS Global Insight.

Rival General Motors has said it could cut up to 10,000 jobs as part of its European restructuring as it moves to reduce production across Europe by up to 25 percent.

Fiat's plans are expected to include shifting production of the new version of the Lancia Ypsilon to its plant in Poland, analysts say.

But to do that, Fiat will need to take some pressure off the Tychy, Silesia, plant -- which is currently running six days a week and producing around 2,300 cars a day.

Media reports and analysts suggest that Fiat could shift about half its production of Panda models from Poland -- around 270,000 vehicles annually -- to its Pomigliano d'Arco plant near Naples in southern Italy.

That plant has a workforce of 5,000 and currently produces Fiat's up-market and sporty Alfa Romeo models, which have higher margins than the Panda. In June, Fiat said the plant would stop producing the Alfa 147 and the GT in 2010.

'It wouldn't make sense to move all the Panda production to Italy. Aside from political or social reasons, I don't see a commercial reason,' Bellini said.

But Marchionne may be planning to get more out of his Italian workers -- and job cuts have not been ruled out although they are unlikely to be drastic. He hinted last week that workers in Italy would have to increase productivity.

'We have six sites in Italy which produce the equivalent of one factory in Brazil. What kind of industrial logic is that?' he said.

Fiat does not give details of production at individual plants. Its main Brazil plant, which produces Fiat models, employs 8,700 workers. Fiat produced nearly 624,000 cars in Brazil in the first 10 months of this year.

Earlier this month, La Repubblica newspaper said Fiat planned to boost Italian output about 40 percent to 900,000 units a year.



Be a Contributing Writer
About.com
Thursday November 26, 2009

About.com is looking for part-time Contributing Writers to write articles on selected subtopics for current web sites. One of the subtopics is Italian Cities for this Italy Travel site. Here's part of the description:

About.com seeks a passionate, qualified writer to help cover Italy's most-visited cities (Florence, Milan, Naples, Rome, and Venice). While working alongside our Guide to Italy Travel, you will be providing first-time and repeat visitors a top-to bottom look at all these popular tourist destinations have to offer, without overlapping or duplicating existing content. Topics include in-depth city coverage of tourist information including reviews, profiles, and recommendations for accommodations, dining, things to do, attractions, nightlife, shopping, etc. The ideal candidate is a published writer who either lives or has lived in Italy, or who visits regularly enough to be considered an expert.






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