Focus::Daily News

NEWSLINE

After three months of renovations, Salvatore Ferragamo's Fifth Avenue flagship store reopened on Thursday.The expanded store stretches across 2,000 square meters and two floors, making it Ferragamo's biggest worldwide. Interior designers revamped the space with walnut wood, dark oak, polished steel and minimalist display shelves. Ferragamo is available in 36 stores throughout the US and recently opened a mono-brand boutique in San Diego, California.

Dripping with chocolate, covered with strawberries or laden with cream, there is a gelato to tease the tastebuds of every ice-cream lover. It's no surprise to learn that thousands of foreign tourists who come to Rome take time out to scour the cobbled streets of the Italian capital in search of the perfect gelato.

Bari, April 13 - Further investigations have been opened against Italian left-wing politician and Puglia Governor Nichi Vendola, along with six others, for alleged irregularities in the transfer of regional funding to a local hospital between 2002-2009. On Wednesday, Vendola called an emergency press conference to announce that he was being probed for alleged abuse of office regarding the appointment of a local chief of surgeons, Paolo Sardelli, at Bari's San Paolo hospital in 2010.

“There are two phone calls parents don’t ever want to get from their children,” the writer Adriana Trigiani once said. “No. 1 is: ‘I’m in prison. Come fetch me.’ And No. 2 is, ‘I’ve written a novel . . . and it’s set in your hometown.’ ” As far as I can tell Trigiani has never done time, unless you count writing for TV (she worked on “The Cosby Show” and other sitcoms), but she did set her first three novels in the Blue Ridge Mountain town of Big Stone Gap, Va., where she grew up. Since then she has frequently turned to her Italian-American heritage for material; her 12th novel, “The Shoemaker’s Wife,” which slides onto the hardcover fiction list at No. 5, is based on the lives of her immigrant grandparents.

ROME — After London, Barcelona and Paris,Woody Allen's newest tribute to a European capital, “To Rome With Love,” had its premiere here on Friday. But the amorous sentiment may not be requited judging by the grumblings of some Italian journalists and film critics at a crowded post-screening news conference.

ROME — Woody Allen brought “To Rome with Love” to the city that inspired his latest film, but some homegrown critics are grumbling that the American director’s new work is loaded with old-fashioned Italian stereotypes. At a news conference Friday in Rome following a screening for Italian journalists, Allen exuded a fuzzy, love-struck view of the country.

The salvage operation to move the capsized Costa Concordia away from the island of Giglio, where it ran aground three months ago, will begin next month, an official said on Thursday.

Civil Protection official Fabrizio Curcio told reporters at a conference on the island that he expected contracts to be signed by the end of April and the operation to begin in mid-May.

On a day in late winter in a valley in the Italian Alps, about a hundred people set off on a walk. Their path took them by steeply terraced vineyards, through a small village, and over the crest of a hill to where the riot police were waiting for them. The officers stood in small knots, behind a fence topped with razor wire, spread out across a patch of cleared land where the government plans to break ground on an €8.2 billion ($10.8 billion) project to connect Italy and France by high-speed rail. Soldiers clustered nearby. A camouflage-painted Lince—Italy’s answer to a Humvee—moved in a lazy patrol. A medic’s jeep squatted under a concrete overpass.

"Godfather" director Francis Ford Coppola is a big shot - and not just in the film world. As a vintner and restaurateur, Coppola apparently sees himself as the capo di tutti capi - the boss of all bosses - who owns the Italian dictionary. Last year, Coppola won a U.S. trademark for the phrase, a tavola - Italian for "to the table" (or, in American English, "come and get it"). It seems the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office also thinks Coppola owns a piece of the Italian language.
 

San Rafael residents played baseball and picnicked at Albert Park for years, but by the early 1990s, the field donated to the city in 1937 by Jacob Albert had become run down. Transients and druggies called unkempt corners home. Albert Park no longer felt safe. Aiming to revive Jacob Albert's dream of a park that all residents could enjoy, the city of San Rafael formed the Albert Park Renovation Committee, a team of diverse community members dedicated to renovating the area. The Gruppo Lonatese, a local organization that celebrates San Rafael's rich Italian-American heritage, joined that team and provided significant funds and energy to the park's renovation.

Pages