Monday, November 29, 2010

Sample Contract With The Devil

Sarzana (Sp), Theatre Fearsome 10 to 11 December 2010: "Jacobs"

Company of processed
announces the debut of
JACOBS
the first theater built on the human story
of the partisan German Rudolf Jacobs Theatre
Unafraid - Sarzana
10 and 11 December 2010 - 21:30


More information about the theater "Jacobs"

Friday, November 26, 2010

What Do The Coloured Bands Mean

European project eTwinning: cartoon "How Wojtek the bear has become soldiers"


receive from Dorota Kulawiak of "Ideas in Action - Center di Lingue Cultura e Spettacolo" (Imola, Bologna) l'interesante notizia della pubblicazione online del fumetto "Come l'orso Wojtek è diventato soldato" disegnato da Ania, la studentessa polacca della scuola di Zagan, partner del progetto eTwinning con il Paolini-Cassiano di Imola (le insegnanti: Wioletta Sosnowska e Angela Riccomi).

Questo il link al fumetto online
"Come l'orso Wojtek è diventato soldato"




Wednesday, November 24, 2010

What Can I See With 8 Dobsonian

Castelnuovo Magra (Sp): 66th anniversary of the raid nazifascista del 29 novembre 1944


Archivi della Resistenza partecipa al 66° anniversario del rastrellamento nazifascista del 29 novembre 1944. Anche quest'anno è previsto un programma denso events with educational meetings and screenings in the municipalities involved in the raid. Our association is present with the film-interview on the event "A people on the run. November 29, 1944 "and the replica of the radio show" A people on the run. Stories on the radio, which helps to those who are away or unable to attend, to hear the story from the voice of the witnesses. The appointment to "inaugurate" the new season is at Circolo Arci Castelnuovo Magra Old Town (Sunday 28, at 17) for a screening and a cocktail-debate "in the company of partisans Vanda Bianchi, Luigi Fiori and Turiddo Tusini.

GENERAL PROGRAMME


Saturday, November 27
10.00 Social Centre Castelnuovo Magra, meeting with students of the school "Dante Alighieri" and the partisans, with video projections by the Archives of Resistance - Edward Circle Bassignani

Sunday, November 28
17.00 Circolo Arci Castelnuovo Magra Old Town, film screening interview "A people on the run. November 29, 1944 "from an idea of \u200b\u200bLido Galletto, directed by Andrea Castagna and Archives of the Resistance. Vanda spoke the partisan and partisan Luigi Bianchi Flowers and Turiddo Tusini

Lunedì 29 Novembre
ore 9.00 Commemorazioni ufficiali presso i luoghi coinvolti nel rastrellamento
ore 16.00 / www.contattoradio.it / 89.750 – 89.500 Mhz
“Un popolo alla macchia. Storie alla radio”. La storia del grande rastrellamento nazifascista del 29 novembre 1944 attraverso le parole di 25 testimoni.

Organizza : ANPI Castelnuovo Magra, Archivi della Resistenza – Circolo Edoardo Bassignani, ARCI Castelnuovo Magra Centro Storico, Comune di Castelnuovo Magra, Comitato Sentieri della Resistenza, Contatto Radio Popolare Network

Info: 3403935105, info@archividellaresistenza.it

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Venison Steak Recipes

Finding Uncle Eugene


Tratto da "Pine Journal" (Minnesota) del 10 Novembre 2010 by Jana Peterson

Finding Uncle Eugene … and more


Over the last 14 years, Bob Anttila has been to Italy five times and made numerous friends while searching for the places his uncle Eugene Anttila spent the last days of his life, fighting the Germans in World War II.
By: Jana Peterson , Pine Journal


Bob Anttila always wanted to know more about his Uncle Eugene, who died fighting for the United States in the mountains of northern Italy during World War II. He's holding the photo of Eugene that appeared in a Life magazine feature on "The Forgotten Front" in the April 16, 1945 issue.
It all started with a photograph. For decades, an April 16, 1945 copy of Life magazine was one of the Anttila family’s most cherished items, as it contained the last photo ever taken of Pfc. Eugene W. Anttila.
Cloquet’s Bob Anttila never knew his Uncle Eugene. Although his middle name was taken from his uncle, Bob was only nine months old when Eugene died, fighting the Germans along the “Gothic Line” in the mountains of northern Italy as a part of the 88th Division, 349th Infantry Regiment.
The photograph in Life magazine showed Eugene, the lower half of his face blackened, leaning against the wall of one building while another soldier crouches nearby. A sign on another wall a few feet away and perpendicular to Eugene’s wall reads “Halt, About Face,” warning soldiers that the open area between the buildings is under enemy observation. Anyone who crossed could be picked off by the German machine gunners.
Growing up in Deer River, Bob Anttila was fascinated by his uncle’s story. At the same time, he was very aware of how much sorrow his death had brought to the family, especially his Grandma Hillina, who sat with the other Gold Star Mothers – whose sons had also paid the ultimate price in the war – each Memorial Day.
They didn’t know much about how or where Eugene had died. What little they did know (date and location), the Anttila family later discovered, was wrong.
It would be nearly 50 years before Eugene’s nephews began filling in the gaps in his story.
In 1994, Bob’s brother Gary Anttila wrote a letter to the newsletter for the 88th Division, asking if anyone had known Eugene.
Two weeks later he got a reply from Trego, Wis.
“All these years, Eugene’s platoon sergeant had been living 50 miles south of Superior,” Bob said. “He told us, ‘Yeah, I knew him. He was my machine gunner. And he died in my arms.’”
Clifford Nelson explained how, after a terrible bombardment of a ridge called Furcoli and the adjacent mountain knob called Monterumici, the men of the 4th Platoon, Company A, 1st Battalion, 349th Infantry Regiment, 88th Division and the rest of the battalion had stormed the ridge and mountain, where the Germans remained behind their defenses of minefields, mortars, caves and machine gun nests. The attack began at 10 p.m. April 15, 1945. Sometime during the next day Eugene was hit by machine-gun fire and pulled to the relative safety of the entrance to a hillside cave, where he died shortly thereafter, with Sgt. Nelson holding him.
Between them, the two brothers visited Nelson (now deceased) several times. On one visit, Nelson showed Bob a video he’d taken in Italy, when he’d gone, as Bob puts it, to settle “the ghosts of war” a couple years before.
“He said, ‘That’s where [Eugene] died, right there,’ and showed me the cave. Then he told me about these Italian people he’d met, and gave me their address,” Bob said.
Bob wrote a letter to those Italians, Erminio and Rita Lora of Bologna, and soon got an invitation to come visit. He traveled there in 1996, determined to walk the same ground his uncle had strode, climb the same hillsides he’d fought for and visit the cave where his life had ended, 51 years before.
Little did he know that this quest to learn more about the place his uncle died would not only answer all those questions, but ultimately find Bob an honorary citizen of the county where Eugene’s life ended in war.
Between 1996 and now, Bob has made five trips to Italy and has made even more friends. His story of his uncle has been published in an Italian book, and the story of his search for Eugene made the paper in Bologna, a city of more than 370,000 people.
Still, each of his stories starts with someone he met in Italy, who introduced him to other people, who introduced him to even more. Happily, they were all eager to help this American who wanted to know more about this shared history.
Meeting Erminio and Rita Lora led to an introduction to Marinella Caianiello, who was writing a book about the villagers in the mountains during the war and their experiences. (Caianiello ended her book with Bob’s chapter about his uncle, and with this quote from Bob, which she loved: “As a young child I remember my grandmother’s sorrow. As I grew up, I realized how many mothers suffered as she did after their sons on both sides died during that war.”)
Caianiello next introduced him to engineer/amateur historian Giancarlo Rivelli, who has been Bob’s best “sleuth-friend.” Rivelli has introduced him to others whose avocation is wartime history, and more who simply lived through it.
Still, even with local contacts, the task of “finding Uncle Eugene” wasn’t as simple as one might imagine. Lots had changed in 50 years, and memories aren’t always correct.
For example, while Eugene’s best wartime buddy, Dan Cornett of Florida, did vividly remember the events of that long-ago day, he was calling the mountain ridge by the name of the village where the attack had begun.
As well, when Bob first went to Italy, the cave itself was inaccessible, the land fenced off by the current landowner. He could see the cave from one angle, and stand 100 feet above it on a mountainside, but it wasn’t until six years later, in 2002, that Bob actually got to stand there.
Again, it happened with the help of his friends in Italy. Rivelli talked to the landowner, who met Bob and Caianiello at the gate and let them in.
However, the biggest challenge of all was finding the place where the cherished last photo was snapped. In the end, it took seven years to figure it out.
“Giancarlo found some photos that didn’t get in the magazine,” Anttila explained. “And the mountains don’t change. So he went in April [the same time of year the photos were originally taken] and looked at the mountains and the ridges. That was one way he narrowed down where the house was.”
It was April 16 of this year that Bob got the e-mail from Rivelli, telling him he’d found the wall.
“Eugene is not forgotten,” was the subject line, written on the anniversary of the veteran’s death.
The wall where Eugene was leaning in that Life magazine photo is now the inside wall of a bathroom. The building itself still stands in the village of Ca’ di Giulietta – about a mile from the cave as the crow flies – but the family who bought it had added a bathroom onto the back.
“That inner wall is 18 inches thick,” Bob said, chuckling as he hands over a photo of himself and Rivelli, standing in a modern-looking, white-tiled bathroom, holding a copy of the magazine photograph.
That moment was not the icing on the cake, however. That came later in the trip, when the residents of the small village held a reception for their American friend, attended by the current and former mayors, county commissioners and even the big city newspaper. A number of dignitaries, including Bob, gave speeches. Then they made him an honorary citizen of Monzuno, the county where his uncle spent the last months of his life and that his nephew has now gotten to know so well.
“These guys, now they’re friends,” Bob said, gesturing to the photos spread out across the table. “Maybe that’s a better thing out of all this than finding where he died. Maybe the best thing is finding all these wonderful people I met.”

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Splinter Type Pain In Big Toe

Una lezione di storia «dal vivo»


Dalla Gazzetta di Reggio Emilia del 14 novembre 2010

Una lezione di storia «dal vivo»
Villa Minozzo: studenti dello Iodi al processo per la strage di Cervarolo


VILLA MINOZZO. Una lezione di storia contemporanea "dal vivo". E' questa l'esperienza degli alunni della 5ª classe dell'istituto Don Zeffirino Iodi che mercoledì e venerdì participated in the hearings process that is taking place in Verona against 11 German army officers accused of war crimes for killing civilians and Cervarolo Civago, March 20, 1944. Jessica Leto, Federica Zurlini, Natalia Bandalac, LOUKILI Sabrina, Stefania Nulchis, Alex and Christina Fornaciari Colosimo, accompanied by teachers of law values \u200b\u200band history, have followed the process starts, and so tell their impressions. 'It was an important experience - they say - because it allowed us to understand historical events, as reconstructed by experts, Carabinieri General Roberto Delia, explained the German army was structured as two researchers and historians, the Professor And Professor Massimo Storchi Paola Rovati, who reconstructed the historical context, namely the German occupation and the Resistance. I had the feeling of a discount to the history and events that compose it, too often described only in the abstract and little studied at school. " You already know the facts of which we discussed in court? "I knew them only briefly and I must say that today I think I know them much better and I could make my opinion more solid and constructive. I had only heard about. Now I am convinced that history, especially recently, should be better known and in-depth, because it is part of our past. I think that recent history should be studied as part of our present life, as at present. " What impressed you most? "I was struck by the description of the facts, in particular, I was impressed to be told how they were planned military operations and plans to involve hitting civilians. The thing that struck me most was the story about the treatment of civilians, women and children driven from their homes, men used as "carriers" of ammunition and then killed. I was very impressed when they talked of killing a pregnant woman and her three children, five and six years. Equally important was the story on all'uccisone men gathered in the yard of Cervarolo, massacred with machine guns that fired from a few meters, not more than two, away. "
Do you have any consideration to do? "What was said made me think about war and its horrors, too many wars going on. I thought that perhaps things are similar to those narrated episodes such as the massacres of Monchio, Cervarolo, Civago still occur today. It 'was an important lesson, as well as the history of life also. I understand that there are just wars. In addition, there is a right and perhaps the duty to defend its own freedom. How did the Partisans, guys who were our age. We must learn to know our past to know how to live the present and to appreciate and defend those for which they died for our freedom and our young age. "

Monday, November 15, 2010

Graduation Saree Blouse Patterns 2010

Le foto della due giorni "Le stragi di guerra come fratture"

November 13 to 14 Calderino Monzuno "The carnage of war as fractures

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Difference Between Upper Deck Black Diamond Cards

Processo strage Cervarolo: "Ines è morta «ma sarà in aula» La sua testimonianza in un dvd"

From Gazzetta di Reggio of November 13, 2010
Ines is dead," but will be in the classroom "His testimony in a DVD

Villa Minozzo. His last wish was to see the end of the process. See the epilogue, hear the sentence. Twelve days ago, however, is dead. And the thoughts of many immediately went to the witness that she wanted to make in the classroom in Verona to ensure that the slaughter of Cervarolo not remain unpunished. But in the classroom Ines Rossi in Verona, who died at 96 years on 1 November, there will come the same. It will cross that threshold, thanks to a video. A video record of the woman - the last of the widows of the massacre - the most important phases of that terrible March 20, 1944, the day when the husband and father were torn by cruelty, killed by the Nazis' complicity with the Fascists. " It will be his daughter Anna Maria to "accompany" in that the military court, where, from December onwards, witnessed Cervarolo begin to withdraw before the courts. For the occasion, Anna Maria will produce a DVD containing the movie with the story of Ines. "It is as if she had never died," says Italo Royal, who along with Massimo Storchi (Istoreco researcher) wrote "The first day of winter," dedicated to the facts and the scene of the tragedy: 24 civilians killed, including parish priest. Twelve of the dock officers graduated and German soldiers who belonged to Hermann Goering division that operated in those years in the areas close to the Gothic Line (Andrea Speranzoni, Ernesto D'Andrea Burani Vainer and bar association for the plaintiffs ). Just Storchi, however, always in Verona yesterday was a prominent figure in a hearing that somehow represented the real start of the process. "We have entered into the merits of the facts," says the same Storchi after a hearing lasting four hours. Lasted many hours to Toni Rovan, who, like Storch is the technical adviser for the massacre of Monchio. The report Storchi - forty pages - this was before the Court. Three main points of its broad narrative: the figure of the priest, "martyr in the truest sense of the word, since he could have saved at the expense of his parishioners, but he did not," the peculiarities of the people captured, "the elders, handicapped and paralyzed, further evidence of a ferocity really meaningless, "and the role of the fascists," that the information provided the Nazis have resulted in the massacre took place. Contributors, in short, death, and not the salvation of their fellow countrymen. " Entered the technical report in the file Storchi hearing, next week - Tuesday 16 - will begin to remove the witnesses. Before those Monchio. Then - December 17, 26 and 27 January - will be the turn of Reggio Emilia. (Mi.sc.)