Podcasts about Pozzuoli

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  • 121EPISODES
  • 23mAVG DURATION
  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • May 14, 2025LATEST
Pozzuoli

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Best podcasts about Pozzuoli

Latest podcast episodes about Pozzuoli

Effetto giorno le notizie in 60 minuti
Garlasco, nuovo colpo di scena

Effetto giorno le notizie in 60 minuti

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025


Trump in Arabia Saudita senza passare da Israele, mentre continuano gli attacchi su Gaza. Ci colleghiamo con Nello Del Gatto, analista e giornalista da Gerusalemme. I Campi Flegrei, il piano per la convivenza con il bradisismo e le abitazioni abusive. Sentiamo Luigi Manzoni, sindaco di Pozzuoli. Caso Garlasco: blitz dei carabinieri a casa di Andrea Sempio e dei genitori. Con noi Giada Bocellari, legale di Andrea Stasi. Asili nido e PNRR, anche il nuovo bando si ferma a 400 milioni su 800. Sentiamo Federica Ortalli, presidente di Assonidi.

Ecovicentino.it - AudioNotizie
Terremoto ai Campi Flegrei di magnitudo 4.4. Musumeci convoca a Roma vertice con la Protezione civile

Ecovicentino.it - AudioNotizie

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2025 1:51


La terra trema in Campania: una ventina i terremoti di magnitudo maggiore di 1 si sono registrati a partire dalle 12,07 quando ha avuto inizio uno sciame sismico seguito pochi istanti più tardi da una scossa di magnitudo 4,4.  È il dato diffuso dall'Istituto di Geofisica e Vulcanologia alle 15.

Saint of the Day
Hieromartyr Januarius and those with him (305) - April 21

Saint of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025


These martyrs gave glorious witness to Christ during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Januarius, Bishop of Benevento in Italy, was arrested and cast into a burning furnace, but he stood in the midst of the flames, singing praises to God, and emerged unharmed. After other cruel tortures, he was bound and cast in prison in Pozzuoli, along with his deacon Faustus and his reader Desiderius. With them in prison were two deacons from Pozzuoli, Proclus and Sossus, and two laymen, Eutychius and Acutius. All seven were cast to wild beasts; but when the animals came near the Saints, they fell affectionately at their feet and refused to harm them. Finally, all seven Christians were beheaded. Some Christians from Naples secretly took the body of Januarius and buried it in their church. Countless wonders have been worked at his grave, including the restoration of a dead man to life.

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane
10.111 - Catello di Maio (Cesto Bakery) e Cooperativa Sociale Lazzarelle insieme per una Colomba Solidale

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2025 3:06


Si avvicina la Pasqua, tempo per far spazio sulle nostre tavole a prodotti golosi della tradizione che quando portano con sé il valore della solidarietà sanno ancora più di buono. Ne sono convinti Cesto Bakery e la Cooperativa Sociale Lazzarelle che hanno unito forze e abilità per dar vita ad una colomba speciale dove le doti di lievitista e panificatore di Catello di Maio incontrano il gusto del caffè prodotto dalle detenute del carcere femminile di Pozzuoli. 

Effetto giorno le notizie in 60 minuti
I Campi Flegrei tremano ancora

Effetto giorno le notizie in 60 minuti

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025


I Campi Flegrei tornano a tremare nella notte: scossa di magnitudo 4.4 con epicentro nel lungomare di Pozzuoli, a Napoli gente in strada. Ci colleghiamo con Luigi Manzoni, sindaco di Pozzuoli. Ieri sono scattati i dazi americani nei confronti dell’Europa, che ha risposto. Quali sono le merci più a rischio in Italia? Lo chiediamo a Denis Pantini, responsabile agrindustria di Nomisma. Leonardo lavora al lancio di una costellazione di satelliti civili e militari a bassa quota tra il 2027 e 2028. Al via oggi formalmente il progetto europeo Dare per la fabbricazione di microchip per super-computer e IA. Ne parliamo con il nostro Enrico Pagliarini.

Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts
20250313_IRISH__damaiste_deanta_ag_crith_talun_i_ndeisceart_na_hiodaile

Learn Irish & other languages with daily podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 6:23


jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/24yz5g4c Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com Earthquake damage in southern Italy. Damáiste déanta ag crith talún i ndeisceart na hIodáile. An earthquake struck the Naples area in southern Italy overnight, damaging several buildings and causing power outages. Tharla crith talún i gceantar Napoli i ndeisceart na hIodáile i gcaitheamh na hoíche agus rinneadh damáiste do roinnt foirgneamh agus gearradh an chumhacht ann dá bharr. Many locals spent the night sleeping outside – on the street or in cars – for fear that their houses would collapse on them. Chaith go leor de mhuintir na háite an oíche ag codladh amuigh – ar an tsráid nó i ngluaisteáin – ar fhaitíos go dtitfeadh a dtithe i mullach orthu. According to experts in Italy, the quake had a seismic magnitude of 4.4 three kilometers underground, but geological surveyors in the United States say it was 4.2 ten kilometers underground. Dar le saineolaithe san Iodáil gur méid sheismeach de 4.4 a bhí sa chrith trí chiliméadar faoi thalamh ach deir suirbhéirí geolaíochta sna Stáit Aontaithe gur 4.2 a bhí ann deich gciliméadar faoi thalamh. In any case, the earthquake was reportedly felt throughout the Campania region and is also said to be the strongest earthquake in the area in forty years. Pé scéal é, tuairiscítear gur airíodh an crith ar fud réigiún Campania agus deirtear freisin gurbh é an crith ba láidre sa limistéar é le daichead bliain. Pozzuoli, west of the city of Naples, was the town closest to the epicenter of the quake and one man was reportedly injured there when a wall of his house collapsed. Pozzuoli, siar ó chathair Napoli, an baile ba ghaire do chroílár an chreatha agus tuairiscitear gur gortaíodh fear amháin ansin nuair a thug balla a thí uaidh. Naples is located on a caldera, or volcanic crater, which is quite volatile and earthquakes occur from time to time. Tá Napoli suite ar chaildéara, nó cráitéar bolcánach, atá luaineach go maith agus tarlaíonn creathanna talún ann ó am go chéile. RTÉ News and Current Affairs Nuacht agus Cúrsaí Reatha RTÉ

Radiogiornali di Radio Vaticana
Radiogiornale Italiano ore 14.00 13.03.2025

Radiogiornali di Radio Vaticana

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 10:00


I titoli: Notte tranquilla per il Papa al Gemelli. Francesco celebra oggi il 12.mo anniversario del suo Pontificato Le condizioni di Mosca per la tregua in Ucraina. Quattro regioni sono nostre. Putin chiede ampie garanzie Terremoto a Napoli. Danni limitati, molta paura. Il vescovo di Pozzuoli ai nostri microfoni: “Vicini alla gente” Luca Collodi

Non Stop News
Non Stop News: il terremoto a Napoli, i papà single, Pordenone capitale italiana della cultura 2027

Non Stop News

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 128:21


Il sindaco di Pozzuoli, Luigi Manzoni, è intervenuto in diretta per fare il punto sulla situazione attuale, dopo la scossa di terremoto di magnitudo 4.4 che questa notte ha colpito i Campi Flegrei. Le prime pagine dei principali quotidiani nazionali commentate in rassegna stampa da Davide Giacalone. Il terremoto a Napoli, il si al riarmo UE, Europa e dazi, atenei italiani ai vertici. Spazio Donna Moderna. "I papà single sono ancora vittime di pregiudizi?" è l'approfondimento di oggi. Ne abbiamo parlato con Donatella Gianforma, di Donna Moderna. Il sindaco di Pordenone, Alberto Parigi, è intervenuto in diretta per parlarci di Pordenone che diventerà capitale italiana della cultura 2027. Don Antonio Mazzi, fondatore della comunità Exodus, regala ogni giorno un pensiero, un suggerimento, una frase agli ascoltatori di RTL 102.5. Ieri il voto all'Eurocamera sul piano di riarmo proposto dalla commissione europea.  Il punto con Francesca Basso, corrispondente del Corriere della Sera. Il tema del No Show è sempre molto sentito in Italia. Nei giorni scorsi un agriturismo in Liguria ha deciso di rivolgersi ai carabinieri dopo che 21 dei 40 prenotati non si sono presentati. Ne abbiamo parlato in diretta con Lino Stoppani, Presidente Nazionale di Fipe-Confcommercio. L'attualità, commentata dal direttore del giornale Libero, Daniele Capezzone. All'interno di Non Stop News, con Enrico Galletti, Massimo Lo Nigro e Giusi Legrenzi.

Radio Vaticana con voi
Radio Vaticana con Voi 28.02.2025

Radio Vaticana con voi

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2025 49:00


Intrattenimento e informazione, musica e cultura: tutto questo è Radio Vaticana con Voi! Anche oggi 4 ore insieme per iniziare la giornata con numerosi ospiti! Protagonisti gli ascoltatori, come ogni giorno! Intervieni in diretta tramite WhatsApp al numero 335 1243 722 Gli ospiti di oggi in ordine di presenza: Roberto Gualtieri, sindaco di Roma; monsignor Carlo Villano, vescovo di Pozzuoli e di Ischia; Andrea Iacomini , portavoce Unicef ​​Italia; fra Gianfranco Pinto Ostuni, della Custodia di Terra SantaM Michele Santantonio, membro del Mitocon; Tommaso Caputo , arcivescovo prelato e delegato pontificio del Santuario di Pompei; Daniele De Gregori, cantautore; Conducono Andrea De Angelis e Silvia Giovanrosa A cura di Andrea De Angelis e Silvia Giovanrosa Hanno collaborato le colleghe ed i colleghi Marco Guerra, Benedetta Capelli, Tiziana Campisi, Fabio Colagrande, Jean-Charle Putzolu, Eugenio Murrali e Amedeo Lomonaco Tecnici del suono Daniele Giorgi e Bruno Orti

Geopop - Le Scienze nella vita di tutti i giorni
217 - Tanti terremoti ai Campi Flegrei, cosa succede e perché la scossa di M3.9 si è sentita così forte

Geopop - Le Scienze nella vita di tutti i giorni

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2025 10:52


Una serie di scosse di terremoto causate dal bradisismo hanno colpito i Campi Flegrei nelle ultime ore, avvertite a Pozzuoli e in diversi quartieri di Napoli. Le due più forti dello sciame sismico, di magnitudo 3.9, sono state avvertite sia nel pomeriggio del 16 febbraio alle 15:30 che nella notte alle 00:19, ma con un'intensità percepita molto diversa. Molti si chiedono cosa stia succedendo, se ci sia motivo di preoccupazione e soprattutto perché una delle due scosse sia stata percepita più forte dell'altra. In questo episodio, Andrea Moccia ci spiega come la percezione di un terremoto possa variare in base alla profondità del sisma e alle caratteristiche geologiche dell'area. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Il #Buongiorno di Giulio Cavalli
Giornata contro la corruzione: un requiem per la legalità in Italia

Il #Buongiorno di Giulio Cavalli

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2024 1:37


Ieri, 9 dicembre, si celebrava la Giornata internazionale contro la corruzione. Pochi festeggiamenti e pochi articoli. C'è da capirlo, per l'associazione Libera “da Torino ad Avellino, da Bari a Pozzuoli, da Palermo e Catania, da Milano a Roma, il 2024 è un continuo bollettino di “mazzette” con il coinvolgimento di amministratori, politici, funzionari, manager, imprenditori, professionisti e mafiosi coinvolti in una vasta gamma di reati di corruzione“. 
“Ci sono “mazzette” per finte vaccinazioni covid o per ottenere falsi titoli di studio, in altri casi le “mazzette” hanno facilitato l'aggiudicazione di appalti per la gestione dei rifiuti piuttosto che per la realizzazione di opere pubbliche o la concessione di licenze edilizie. E poi ci sono le inchieste per scambio politico elettorale e quelle relative alle grandi opere“, sottolinea una nota dell'associazione di don Ciotti.
Complessivamente 588 sono state le persone indagate per reati che spaziano dalla corruzione per atto contrario ai doveri d'ufficio al voto di scambio politico-mafioso, dalla turbativa d'asta all'estorsione aggravata dal metodo mafioso, dall'abuso di ufficio (fin quando era in vigore) al traffico di influenze illecite.
A questo aggiungeteci la liberalizzazione delle procedure d'appalto, l'abrogazione dell'abuso d'ufficio e la progressiva delegittimazione della magistratura, tutta farina del sacco di questo governo.
Di questo passo l'anno prossimo la giornata internazionale qui in Italia potrà essere tranquillamente cancellata. Non esisteranno più colpevoli in mancanza di reati. E finalmente potremmo dormire sonni tranquilli. #LaSveglia per La NotiziaDiventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/la-sveglia-di-giulio-cavalli--3269492/support.

Discover Daily by Perplexity
EU's Gorilla Glass Investigation, Algebra's Representation Theory Breakthrough, and a Supervolcano is Waking Up

Discover Daily by Perplexity

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2024 8:14 Transcription Available


What would you like to see more of? Let us know!In this episode of Discover Daily, we explore the European Commission's groundbreaking antitrust investigation into Corning's Gorilla Glass business practices. The probe examines potential anticompetitive behavior, including exclusive agreements that require manufacturers to source nearly all their specialized glass from Corning. With Apple's significant investment in Corning's technology at stake, the investigation could reshape the smartphone component industry.We then delve into Rutgers mathematician Pham Tiep's remarkable solutions to two long-standing problems in representation theory. Using character theory, which studies how abstract groups can be represented by matrices, Tiep solved the Height Zero Conjecture and made key advances in Deligne-Lusztig theory. These solutions have practical applications in quantum mechanics, cryptography, and error-correcting codes.The episode concludes with an alarming update from Naples, Italy, where the Phlegraean Fields supervolcano shows increased activity. In May 2024, the area experienced its most intense seismic event in four decades, with 150 earthquakes in five hours. The ground in Pozzuoli has risen 1.3 meters since 2007, and the Solfatara crater now emits 4,000-5,000 tons of CO2 daily. Naples authorities have implemented a comprehensive evacuation plan covering 286,000 residents in response to these developments.From Perplexity's Discover Feed:https://www.perplexity.ai/page/the-eu-s-gorilla-glass-investi-jdEQIg7ZTIKvNbKGnOeznQhttps://www.perplexity.ai/page/algebra-s-representation-theor-yQRBYjutTnuF8APUhIdXEQhttps://www.perplexity.ai/page/a-supervolcano-is-waking-up-wW5nLkUjQcSihu.lYffgMgPerplexity is the fastest and most powerful way to search the web. Perplexity crawls the web and curates the most relevant and up-to-date sources (from academic papers to Reddit threads) to create the perfect response to any question or topic you're interested in. Take the world's knowledge with you anywhere. Available on iOS and Android Join our growing Discord community for the latest updates and exclusive content. Follow us on: Instagram Threads X (Twitter) YouTube Linkedin

Ultim'ora
Autonomia, Musumeci “Sicurezza territorio rimane in mani Stato”

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 0:53


NAPOLI (ITALPRESS) - “I presidenti di Regioni hanno già per il 50% competenza sulla Protezione civile. Non è vero che chiedono più poteri, proprio ieri abbiamo avuto un bellissimo incontro a Roma con i presidenti di Regione e con le autonomie locali per rendere concreto il principio dell'autonomia differenziata a cominciare dalla Protezione civile”. Lo dice il ministro per la Protezione Civile e le Politiche del mare, Nello Musumeci, che parla anche di autonomia differenziata con i giornalisti a Pozzuoli a margine dell'incontro organizzato dal commissario straordinario dei Campi Flegrei per presentare il programma di interventi per la riqualificazione sismica degli edifici pubblici. “Per Roma - sostiene Musumeci - sarebbe un grande risultato se si potesse collaborare con maggiore capacità di assorbire nuove competenze e questo credo che sia l'obiettivo finale. È chiaro che la sicurezza del territorio, la sicurezza delle persone in maniera assoluta, rimane nelle mani dello Stato”.xc9/pc/gsl

Ultim'ora
Autonomia, Musumeci “Sicurezza territorio rimane in mani Stato”

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 12, 2024 0:53


NAPOLI (ITALPRESS) - “I presidenti di Regioni hanno già per il 50% competenza sulla Protezione civile. Non è vero che chiedono più poteri, proprio ieri abbiamo avuto un bellissimo incontro a Roma con i presidenti di Regione e con le autonomie locali per rendere concreto il principio dell'autonomia differenziata a cominciare dalla Protezione civile”. Lo dice il ministro per la Protezione Civile e le Politiche del mare, Nello Musumeci, che parla anche di autonomia differenziata con i giornalisti a Pozzuoli a margine dell'incontro organizzato dal commissario straordinario dei Campi Flegrei per presentare il programma di interventi per la riqualificazione sismica degli edifici pubblici. “Per Roma - sostiene Musumeci - sarebbe un grande risultato se si potesse collaborare con maggiore capacità di assorbire nuove competenze e questo credo che sia l'obiettivo finale. È chiaro che la sicurezza del territorio, la sicurezza delle persone in maniera assoluta, rimane nelle mani dello Stato”.xc9/pc/gsl

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane
9779 - White Chill Out Lungomare a Pozzuoli: dieci anni di gusto, tradizione e identità

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2024 5:48


Ci sono luoghi la cui essenza è un invito a godere della bellezza, del tempo e di ciò che di più rigenerante possa offrire, un rifugio per l'anima e per i sensi. Il lungomare di Pozzuoli è uno di questi, spazio che ha ispirato l'otium fin dai tempi antichi, finestra incantata e dalle magnetiche atmosfere su cui oggi si affaccia White Chill Out, oasi del gusto che porta la firma dell'intraprendente Nicola Scamardella

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane
9852 - Intervista a Raffaele Bonetta: il percorso già ricco di successi di un pizzaiolo emergente

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 26, 2024 10:50


Raffaele Bonetta, classe 1986, è tra le figure emergenti del mondo del disco lievitato. Inizia sin da piccolo a lavorare come garzone nel locale di famiglia, la pizzeria Ciarly a Napoli. L'interesse per la scienza alimentare e lo sport, nato durante il percorso scolastico presso l'Istituto Alberghiero, lo portano ad approfondire gli studi su nutrienti e composizioni alimentari, approdando poi all'Alma, Scuola Internazionale di Cucina. La biologia gli ha fornito tutti gli strumenti per portare avanti la sua ricerca sulla materia. Cinque mesi fa ha aperto la sua pizzeria sul lungomare di Pozzuoli, in provincia di Napoli. Lo abbiamo incontrato in occasione della cerimonia di premiazione di 50 Top Pizza World 2024 dove si è classificato 48 esimo dopo essere entrato a luglio scorso direttamente al 22esimo posto della classifica nazionale e aver ottenuto l'ambito premio di Solania “Novità dell'Anno 2024”. Di poche ore fa anche il riconoscimento dei Tre Spicchi Gambero Rosso 2025

Obiettivo Salute
Primo intervento al mondo di terapia genica per una rara malattia della retina

Obiettivo Salute

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2024


Somministrata per la prima volta al mondo presso la Clinica Oculistica dell’Università degli Studi della Campania “Luigi Vanvitelli” di Napoli una terapia genica sperimentale per una rara malattia ereditaria dell’occhio associata a sordità, la sindrome di Usher di tipo 1B: l’innovativa tecnologia utilizzata, messa a punto nei laboratori dell’Istituto Telethon di genetica e medicina (Tigem) di Pozzuoli, ha la potenzialità di allargare il campo di applicazione di questo approccio terapeutico a centinaia di altre malattie genetiche ad oggi senza cura. A Obiettivo Salute il commento del prof. Alberto Auricchio, Direttore dell’Istituto Tigem di Pozzuoli e professore ordinario di Genetica medica all’Università “Federico II di Napoli”

Ultim'ora
Cellule modificate per comportarsi come microlenti ottiche

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2024 3:20


ROMA (ITALPRESS) - Una ricerca condotta dall'Istituto di scienze applicate e sistemi intelligenti del Consiglio Nazionale delle ricerche di Pozzuoli, in collaborazione con l'Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica e l'Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II, dimostra che le cellule biologiche possono essere modificate per comportarsi come microlenti ottiche. Lo studio, pubblicato sulla rivista Advanced Optical Materials, potrebbe rivoluzionare il campo della diagnostica medica, come spiega Pietro Ferraro, ricercatore dell'Istituto di scienze applicate e sistemi intelligenti del Cnr di Pozzuoli.sat/col/gtr

UndeRadio - La voce ai ragazzi
UndeRadio - La libertà delle passioni - IA - I.S.I.S. "Tassinari"

UndeRadio - La voce ai ragazzi

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2024 3:34


Un podcast della classe 1A dell' I.S.I.S. "Tassinari" di Pozzuoli

UndeRadio - La voce ai ragazzi
UndeRadio - Le diverse facce della città - IE - I.S.I.S. "Tassinari"

UndeRadio - La voce ai ragazzi

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2024 4:32


Un podcast della classe 1E dell' I.S.I.S. "Tassinari" di Pozzuoli

Ultim'ora
Campi Flegrei, Curcio “Coinvolgere le comunità sulle esercitazioni"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 2:03


POZZUOLI (NAPOLI) (ITALPRESS) - “Dobbiamo capire come migliorare il coinvolgimento perché tutto ciò che facciamo come istituzioni a livello comunale, regionale, a livello provinciale e nazionale ha necessità del riscontro della popolazione. Quindi, sicuramente, dobbiamo trovare il modo per sensibilizzare ancora di più le comunità. Devo dire che non è un tema solo di questo territorio, le esercitazioni sono sempre un test anche delle relazioni tra le comunità e le istituzioni”. Così il capo del Dipartimento della Protezione civile, Fabrizio Curcio, parlando con i giornalisti a Pozzuoli a margine dell'esercitazione anti bradisismo in corso di svolgimento nei Campi Flegrei. Alla simulazione ha partecipato una fetta assai esigua di cittadini e Curcio commenta: “Le esercitazioni hanno un senso comunque perché il rapporto con le istituzioni diventa più forte. Noi abbiamo testato il comitato operativo ieri, vengono testati i Coc, vengono testate le procedure tra le amministrazioni, tra le istituzioni. Dobbiamo lavorare perché, soprattutto in questo territorio, abbiamo ancora bisogno di capire bene come impostare alcune risposte e vogliamo farlo con la comunità. Sfiducia dei cittadini? No, questo non lo vedo. Quando abbiamo fatto gli incontri con la popolazione, con i sindaci, abbiamo avuto una buona adesione".xc9/pc/gtr

Ultim'ora
Campi Flegrei, Curcio “Coinvolgere le comunità sulle esercitazioni"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 2:03


POZZUOLI (NAPOLI) (ITALPRESS) - “Dobbiamo capire come migliorare il coinvolgimento perché tutto ciò che facciamo come istituzioni a livello comunale, regionale, a livello provinciale e nazionale ha necessità del riscontro della popolazione. Quindi, sicuramente, dobbiamo trovare il modo per sensibilizzare ancora di più le comunità. Devo dire che non è un tema solo di questo territorio, le esercitazioni sono sempre un test anche delle relazioni tra le comunità e le istituzioni”. Così il capo del Dipartimento della Protezione civile, Fabrizio Curcio, parlando con i giornalisti a Pozzuoli a margine dell'esercitazione anti bradisismo in corso di svolgimento nei Campi Flegrei. Alla simulazione ha partecipato una fetta assai esigua di cittadini e Curcio commenta: “Le esercitazioni hanno un senso comunque perché il rapporto con le istituzioni diventa più forte. Noi abbiamo testato il comitato operativo ieri, vengono testati i Coc, vengono testate le procedure tra le amministrazioni, tra le istituzioni. Dobbiamo lavorare perché, soprattutto in questo territorio, abbiamo ancora bisogno di capire bene come impostare alcune risposte e vogliamo farlo con la comunità. Sfiducia dei cittadini? No, questo non lo vedo. Quando abbiamo fatto gli incontri con la popolazione, con i sindaci, abbiamo avuto una buona adesione".xc9/pc/gtr

Along the Way Life's Journey
Edward J. Pozzuoli: Exploring American Justice and Civil Liberties

Along the Way Life's Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2024 41:06


In this episode of Along The Way Life's Journey Carl engages in a deep discussion with Edward J. Pozzuoli, CEO of Tripp Scott and host of the Politics & Sunshine podcast. The conversation covers a variety of pressing issues including the state of American justice, civil liberties, and the country's foundational values. Ed and Carl reflect on the sacrifices made during D-Day, challenge recent judicial actions against Donald Trump, and express concerns about current political dynamics, foreign policy, and ideological shifts in education and civil society. They also highlight the importance of individual freedoms, active civic participation, and the integrity of the U.S. Constitution. In addition to Ed's legal and political contributions, he is a regular contributor to Fox News and Forbes and has received numerous awards for his community service and professional achievements. He holds degrees from the University of Miami and has been recognized in several prestigious publications and associations.   Connect with Ed: Website: https://www.trippscott.com/edward-pozzuoli Politics & Sunshine: https://open.spotify.com/show/1luJFh9kq6AKNAEEJkDlM3?si=f73757330fb244d4 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ed-pozzuoli-28a89b14/   Connect with Carl: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/toeverypageaturning/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CarlBuccellatoAuthor LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/carl-buccellato-60234139 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVB3YH1iQxK4IL4ya5j4-Jg Website: https://toeverypageaturning.com   Produced by: https://socialchameleon.us

BIBLE IN TEN
Acts 28:13

BIBLE IN TEN

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2024 7:53


Thursday, 13 June 2024   From there we circled round and reached Rhegium. And after one day the south wind blew; and the next day we came to Puteoli, Acts 28:13   A more literal translation is, “From where, having gone around, we arrived at Rhegium. And after one day, having come upon an Auster, the second day we came to Puteoli” (CG).   Luke just noted that they had landed at Syracuse and stayed three days. Now, the journey to Rome continues with, “From where, having gone around.”   The words “from where” refer to Syracuse which is on the southeast corner of Sicily. Leaving that port, they had to make a bit of a sweeping motion. Of the words, “having gone around,” the KJV says, “And from thence we fetched a compass.” The Berean Study Bible says, “From there we weighed anchor.”   It is generally accepted that the Greek term is speaking of making a circuitous route around Sicily. As Syracuse is on the southeast corner of the island, and they need to head northward to the Italian peninsula, they set sail and worked off the coast of Sicily to reach their destination.   It was probably a west or a northwest wind at this time and this caused them to head out to sea in order to catch the winds while traveling north. Thus, one gets the idea of circling around, or going around, instead of traveling straight to their destination. From there, it next says, “we arrived at Rhegium.”   Rhegium, now known as Reggio, is on the southwest extremity of the toe of Italy. According to Wikipedia, Reggio “commonly and officially referred to as Reggio Calabria, or simply Reggio by its inhabitants, is the largest city in Calabria as well as the seat of the Regional Council of Calabria. It has an estimated population between 150,000 and 200,000 and is the twenty-first most populous city in Italy, after Modena and other Italian cities, and the 100th most populated city in Europe. Reggio Calabria is located near the center of the Mediterranean and is known for its climate, ethnic and cultural diversity. It is the third economic centre of mainland Southern Italy. About 560,000 people live in the metropolitan area, recognised in 2015 by Italy as a metropolitan city.”   The city is right at the southern opening of the Straits of Messina. These straits pass between Sicily and Italy. They connect the Tyrrhenian Sea to the north with the Ionian Sea to the south. At its narrowest point, it measures 1.9 miles in width. However, near the town of Messina the width is some 3.2 miles. It has a maximum depth of 830 feet.   Certainly because of the narrowness of the straits and the contrary wind, they stopped at Rhegium. However, Luke next records, “And after one day, having come upon an Auster.”   The words “having come upon” are from a word found only here in Scripture, epiginomai. It is derived from two words signifying “upon” and “to come about.” The word translated as Auster is the same word as in Acts 27:13, notos. It signifies the South and thus a south wind. A single English word which corresponds to this is Auster, a south wind. Once this favorable wind came upon them, it next says, “the second day we came to Puteoli.”   Here is another word unique to Scripture, deuteraios. It is derived from deuteros, second, and signifies the second day. With the favorable wind that came from the south, it allowed them to pass through the straits. Once through the straits, they were able to sail all the way to Puteoli.   This is the modern city known as Pozzuoli. It is located very near Naples and was once a port city. Today, however, it is too shallow for large ships to arrive at. Its name means “The wells.” Being known for its warm baths, it is supposed that is how it got its name. Some relevant information from the era that these men arrived there is found in Wikipedia –   “Puteoli became the great emporium for the Alexandrian grain ships and other ships from all over the Roman world. It also was the main hub for goods exported from Campania, including blown glass, mosaics, wrought iron, and marble. Lucilius wrote in about 125 BC that it was second only to Delos in importance, then the greatest harbour of the ancient world. Many inscriptions show that a polyglot population established companies (stationes) for trade and transport and formed professional guilds for arts, crafts and religious associations for foreign cults; they included Greeks from the islands and the coast of Asia, Jews and later Christians. Under the Roman Empire, it was the greatest emporium of foreign trade in all of Italy. Trade with Tyre was so important that the Tyrians established a factory there in 174.”   Life application: In one verse, travel has gone from Syracuse to Rhegium to Puteoli. The population of these three cities totals about four hundred thousand people. Think of how many of them may have never heard of Jesus. Now imagine that you encounter people just like them throughout the week or even every day. They may never have heard of Jesus. Who is going to tell them? If not you, then who?   If you are saved, hooray for Jesus in your life. But be sure to now tell others about what He has done for you, and indeed for all the people of the world. Without hearing about Him, people cannot be saved. Hopefully, you will be affected enough about their plight to at least try to share what you know.   Lord God, help us to be responsible in sharing our faith in Jesus. We have family, friends, and acquaintances that need to hear the good news. We go to restaurants and are served by people that may have never been told the simple message of Your goodness to us in sending Jesus. Help us, O God, to faithfully proclaim what we know. Amen.  

Only A Bag - An Italian Travel Podcast
Naples: Not Just Pompeii

Only A Bag - An Italian Travel Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2024 55:58


While many people go to Pompeii while visiting Naples (and for good reason) there's so much more! In this episode we briefly look at Pompeii, Herculaneum, Pozzuoli (the Campi Flegrei), and lead into our next episode where we will talk about the islands around Naples and where to swim among Roman ruins. Thank you all so much for listening! If you have any comments or feedback, you can find us at onlyabag.com.

Easy Italian: Learn Italian with real conversations | Imparare l'italiano con conversazioni reali

Dove sono andati questa settimana Matteo e Raffaele? Oggi chiacchieriamo a proposito di viaggi, amici e incontri imprevisti. Con un finale abbastanza "mosso". Trascrizione interattiva e Vocab Helper Support Easy Italian and get interactive transcripts, live vocabulary and bonus content: easyitalian.fm/membership Note dell'episodio 11 Minute Conversation in Slow Italian: Vacations https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LaculyEdxA Questa settimana tutti in giro! Dove è andato Matteo? Inghilterra, Leeds e Alnmouth. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alnmouth E invece Raffaele? https://www.polyglotgathering.com/2024/en/ Praga! E poi siamo tornati a parlare, questa volta con un po' più di preoccupazione, a proposito di terremoti e Italia. Questa settimana infatti c'è stato un "sciame sismico" ovvero una serie di scosse, medio piccole, che hanno smosso la cittadina di Pozzuoli e dintorni. Questa volta la scossa più grande dello "sciame" era la più alta degli ultimi 40 anni. Dov'è Pozzuoli? https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pozzuoli E i campi flegrei? https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Campi_Flegrei Lo sciame sismico è una delle espressioni del "bradisismo". https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradisismo Trascrizione Raffaele: [0:23] Ma dove sei stato, Matteo? Matteo: [0:25] Ma dove sei stato, Raffaele? Raffaele: [0:28] Io ti ho provato a chiamare e sentivo un rumore strano dall'altro lato del telefono. Matteo: [0:35] Era un tu-tu non familiare. Raffaele: [0:39] Non era il tu-tu italiano, e quindi mi è venuto il dubbio che tu non fossi in Italia. ... Support Easy Italian and get interactive transcripts, live vocabulary and bonus content: easyitalian.fm/membership

ANSA Voice Daily
FOCUS | Musumeci, 'aiuti a chi lascerà i Campi Flegrei'

ANSA Voice Daily

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 3:19


ANSA - Massimo Nesticò.'Chi viveva lì sapeva rischi, oltre 500 milioni per la sicurezza'

Corriere Daily
Paura ai Campi Flegrei. Rivolte in Nuova Caledonia. Scarlett Johansson e OpenAI

Corriere Daily

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 19:32


(00:45) Fulvio Bufi spiega come il bradisismo sta rendendo la vita degli abitanti di Pozzuoli e dintorni, colpiti da continue scosse di terremoto, sempre più difficile, in un'emergenza a bassa intensità che può durare decenni.(07:33) Clara Valenzani ci aggiorna sul caos scatenato nel territorio francese d'Oltremare da una riforma del sistema elettorale. (13:22) E Chiara Barison racconta il caso aperto dall'attrice contro l'azienda di intelligenza artificiale, che avrebbe usato la sua voce (per uno scopo preciso).I link di corriere.it:Tutto quello che c'è da sapere sul terremoto nei Campi Flegrei: dal bradisismo alla magnitudo 5 e alla risalita del magmaIn Nuova Caledonia rivolta contro ParigiScarlett Johansson contro Open AI: «Sam Altman ha rubato la mia voce per ChatGpt»

ANSA Voice Daily
FOCUS | A Pozzuoli tra rabbia e paura, 'stanotte è scoppiato il caos'

ANSA Voice Daily

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 3:13


ANSA - di Patrizia Sessa.'Ci stavano i cantieri sulle vie di fuga'.

Saint of the Day
Hieromartyr Januarius and those with him (305) - April 21st

Saint of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2024


These martyrs gave glorious witness to Christ during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Januarius, Bishop of Benevento in Italy, was arrested and cast into a burning furnace, but he stood in the midst of the flames, singing praises to God, and emerged unharmed. After other cruel tortures, he was bound and cast in prison in Pozzuoli, along with his deacon Faustus and his reader Desiderius. With them in prison were two deacons from Pozzuoli, Proclus and Sossus, and two laymen, Eutychius and Acutius. All seven were cast to wild beasts; but when the animals came near the Saints, they fell affectionately at their feet and refused to harm them. Finally, all seven Christians were beheaded. Some Christians from Naples secretly took the body of Januarius and buried it in their church. Countless wonders have been worked at his grave, including the restoration of a dead man to life.

Saint of the Day
Hieromartyr Januarius and those with him (305)

Saint of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2024 1:18


These martyrs gave glorious witness to Christ during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Januarius, Bishop of Benevento in Italy, was arrested and cast into a burning furnace, but he stood in the midst of the flames, singing praises to God, and emerged unharmed. After other cruel tortures, he was bound and cast in prison in Pozzuoli, along with his deacon Faustus and his reader Desiderius. With them in prison were two deacons from Pozzuoli, Proclus and Sossus, and two laymen, Eutychius and Acutius. All seven were cast to wild beasts; but when the animals came near the Saints, they fell affectionately at their feet and refused to harm them. Finally, all seven Christians were beheaded. Some Christians from Naples secretly took the body of Januarius and buried it in their church. Countless wonders have been worked at his grave, including the restoration of a dead man to life.

24 Mattino
La giornata in 24 minuti del 16 aprile

24 Mattino

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2024


L'apertura dei giornali, con le notizie e le voci dei protagonisti, tutto in meno di 30 minuti.Nella mattinata di domenica nella zona dei Campi Flegrei si sono rilevate scosse di magnitudo 3.7. Non solo la Solfatara e l’area dei Campi Flegrei, nel pomeriggio si sono verificate scosse anche nell’area del Vesuvio, con epicentro Portici. A Pozzuoli, il 22 Aprile ci sarà una prima esercitazione riservata ai posti di comando della Protezione Civile nell'area flegrea e poi il 30 e 31 maggio verrà simulata un'esercitazione che coinvolgerà i cittadini. Ne parliamo col Sindaco di Pozzuoli, Luigi Manzoni.

Il Fatto di domani
La questione morale del PD

Il Fatto di domani

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2024 5:54


Il Fatto di domani 16 gennaio. Appalti e corruzione, l'inchiesta di Pozzuoli fa emergere la questione morale nel Pd. La destra cavalca la morte di Giovanna Pedretti

Desert Island Discs
Classic Desert Island Discs - Sophia Loren

Desert Island Discs

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2023 35:41


Sophia Loren is the first performer to win the Best Actress Academy Award for a role in a foreign language film. She won in 1962 for her performance in Vittorio De Sica's film Two Women in which she played a mother trying to protect her 12-year-old daughter in war-torn Italy. In 1991, she picked up a second Oscar when the Academy presented her with an Honorary Award for her contribution to world cinema. Born Sofia Villani Scicolone in a hospital ward for unmarried mothers, she was brought up by a single mother in Pozzuoli near Naples during the war years. After success in her first beauty pageant at the age of 15 and starring in photo romance stories for popular magazines, she first came to wider attention in 1953 when she played the title role in the Italian film Aida. She played a pizza seller in De Sica's The Gold of Naples which is regarded as her breakthrough performance and led to her working on Hollywood movies with a who's who of co-stars including Cary Grant, Frank Sinatra, Gregory Peck and Paul Newman. Her most enduring on-screen partnership was with the Italian actor Marcello Mastroianni. In 1966 she married the film producer Carlo Ponti and went on to have two children. In her most recent film The Life Ahead, directed by her son Edoardo Ponti, she plays a holocaust survivor and ex-prostitute who cares for the children of local sex workers. DISC ONE: I've Got You Under My Skin by Ella Fitzgerald DISC TWO: Debussy: Suite bergamasque, L.75 - 3. Clair de lune composed by Claude Debussy, performed by Tamás Vásáry DISC THREE: Lara Says Goodbye to Yuri by Maurice Jarre DISC FOUR: Fly Me To The Moon (In Other Words) by Frank Sinatra with The Count Basie Orchestra, directed by Quincy Jones DISC FIVE: Oggi Sono Io by Mina DISC SIX: The Marketplace at Limoges composed by Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky, performed by Russian National Orchestra, conducted by Carlo Ponti DISC SEVEN: Io Sì by Laura Pausini DISC EIGHT: Caruso by Lucio Dalla BOOK CHOICE: Letters from a Young Father by Edoardo Ponti LUXURY ITEM: A pizza oven CASTAWAY'S FAVOURITE: Caruso by Lucio Dalla Presenter Lauren Laverne Producer Paula McGinley

Effetto giorno le notizie in 60 minuti
Il governo tra migranti e manovra

Effetto giorno le notizie in 60 minuti

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2023


Oggi consiglio dei ministri tra Nadef e stretta sui migranti. Ieri vertice Meloni-Macron. Ne parliamo con Barbara Fiammeri, commentatrice politica del Sole 24 Ore.Nella notte forte scossa di terremoto nei Campi Flegrei. Ci colleghiamo con Luigi Manzoni, sindaco di Pozzuoli.Il settore della ceramica alla prova della crisi energetica e della transizione ecologica. Con noi in studio a Cersaie 2023 Franco Manfredini, vice presidente di Confindustria Ceramica con delega all'energia.

Dive & Dig
Traces of Trade and Temples: The Nabateans in the Bay of Naples

Dive & Dig

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2023 20:45


Professor Lucy Blue is captivated by the Nabataeans – the ancient Arab traders best known for their rock-cut capital of Petra. Here she speaks to Michele Stefanile from the University of Naples Federico II about two recently located submerged Nebataean temples in the Bay of Naples. Prodigious traders, the Nebataeans traded in luxury goods from the Arabian Peninsula such as frankincense and shipped grain and bitumen from Egypt via Alexandria to Rome through the ancient harbour of Puteoli (now known as Pozzuoli).  Hear how these discoveries reveal the role of the Nabataeans at this Republican period port and why these wealthy merchants built temples with Italian marble clad altars inscribed with Latin dedications to their Gods. 

Today's Catholic Mass Readings
Today's Catholic Mass Readings Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Today's Catholic Mass Readings

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2023 Transcription Available


Full Text of ReadingsTuesday of the Twenty-fourth Week in Ordinary Time Lectionary: 444The Saint of the day is Saint JanuariusSaint Januarius’ Story Little is known about the life of Januarius. He is believed to have been martyred in the Emperor Diocletian's persecution of 305. Legend has it that Januarius and his companions were thrown to the bears in the amphitheater of Pozzuoli, but the animals failed to attack them. They were then beheaded, and Januarius’ blood ultimately brought to Naples. “A dark mass that half fills a hermetically sealed four-inch glass container, and is preserved in a double reliquary in the Naples cathedral as the blood of St. Januarius, liquefies 18 times during the year…Various experiments have been applied, but the phenomenon eludes natural explanation….” [From the Catholic Encyclopedia] Reflection It is defined Catholic doctrine that miracles can happen and are recognizable. Problems arise, however, when we must decide whether an occurrence is unexplainable in natural terms, or merely unexplained. We do well to avoid an excessive credulity but, on the other hand, when even scientists speak about “probabilities” rather than “laws” of nature, it is something less than imaginative for Christians to think that God is too “scientific” to work extraordinary miracles to wake us up to the everyday miracles of sparrows and dandelions, raindrops and snowflakes. Saint Januarius is the Patron Saint of: Blood Banks/Blood DonorsNaples Saint of the Day, Copyright Franciscan Media

77 WABC MiniCasts
Ed Pozzuoli on the legal nuances of Charter Schools

77 WABC MiniCasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 6, 2023 10:35


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Saint of the Day
Hieromartyr Januarius and those with him (305) - April 21st

Saint of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2023


These martyrs gave glorious witness to Christ during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Januarius, Bishop of Benevento in Italy, was arrested and cast into a burning furnace, but he stood in the midst of the flames, singing praises to God, and emerged unharmed. After other cruel tortures, he was bound and cast in prison in Pozzuoli, along with his deacon Faustus and his reader Desiderius. With them in prison were two deacons from Pozzuoli, Proclus and Sossus, and two laymen, Eutychius and Acutius. All seven were cast to wild beasts; but when the animals came near the Saints, they fell affectionately at their feet and refused to harm them. Finally, all seven Christians were beheaded. Some Christians from Naples secretly took the body of Januarius and buried it in their church. Countless wonders have been worked at his grave, including the restoration of a dead man to life.

Saint of the Day
Hieromartyr Januarius and those with him (305)

Saint of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2023 1:18


These martyrs gave glorious witness to Christ during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Januarius, Bishop of Benevento in Italy, was arrested and cast into a burning furnace, but he stood in the midst of the flames, singing praises to God, and emerged unharmed. After other cruel tortures, he was bound and cast in prison in Pozzuoli, along with his deacon Faustus and his reader Desiderius. With them in prison were two deacons from Pozzuoli, Proclus and Sossus, and two laymen, Eutychius and Acutius. All seven were cast to wild beasts; but when the animals came near the Saints, they fell affectionately at their feet and refused to harm them. Finally, all seven Christians were beheaded. Some Christians from Naples secretly took the body of Januarius and buried it in their church. Countless wonders have been worked at his grave, including the restoration of a dead man to life.

Along the Way Life's Journey
Edward Pozzuoli & Jerome Huyler, PhD: Contemporary Wisdom

Along the Way Life's Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 58:28


Edward Pozzuoli is a successful businessman, mortgage broker, banker, and the Previous Owner of my favorite Italian restaurant, Tavolino Della Notte. He's also a musician, music promoter, and a real estate developer. Edward has traveled far and wide through a very diversified journey. Born and raised in Brooklyn, NY, Ed is a graduate of Brooklyn College. He's happily married to his lovely wife, Pat. They have three beautiful children together.  Connect with Edward: Email: xmasking@aol.com  ____________________ Jerome Huyler, PhD is a former Assistant Professor at Seton Hall University. He earned his PhD in political science from the New School University and his BA from Brooklyn College, where he majored in philosophy.  He is the highly acclaimed author of “Locke in America: The Moral Philosophy of the Founding Era” and “Everything You Have: The Case Against Welfare”. Dr. Jerome discusses his strong musical history and shares how my good friend and prior guest Ed Pozzuoli introduced us. Two old friends from Brooklyn introducing yet another Brooklyn boy…me! Follow Dr. Jerome: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jerome-huyler-phd-95b5b62b/ Website: https://www.jeromehuyler.com   ____________________   Follow Carl: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/toeverypageaturning/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CarlBuccellatoAuthor LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/carl-buccellato-60234139/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVB3YH1iQxK4IL4ya5j4-Jg Website: https://toeverypageaturning.com/

Simply Sabbath
Ep 44: Self-care and Sabbath with Katie Pozzuoli

Simply Sabbath

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2022 40:05


Moms have such a love-hate relationship with the idea of self-care. They know they need it but feel guilty about taking it. Today, my guest Katie Pozzuoli is talk with us about how self-care practices fit in nicely into the framework of Sabbath. About My Guest: Katie Pozzuoli is a writer helping women adopt sustainable practices of self-care to thrive. It's real self-care for real life. Katie makes her home in Southeastern Ohio with her husband, three children, and their rescue pup. Connect with Katie: https://katiepozzuoli.com/  Connect with Rachel https://rachelfahrenbach.com  http://facebook.com/rachelfahrenbach http://instagram.com/rachelfahrenbach   Next Steps Download Katie's Free Self-care Guide: https://katiepozzuoli.com/free-gift-5-minute-self-care-habits-to-build/  Want to start practicing Sabbath but don't know exactly where to begin? Start here: https://simplysabbath.com/sabbathguide/ 

Today's Catholic Mass Readings
Today's Catholic Mass Readings Monday, September 19, 2022

Today's Catholic Mass Readings

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2022 Transcription Available


Full Text of ReadingsMonday of the Twenty-fifth Week in Ordinary Time Lectionary: 449All podcast readings are produced by the USCCB and are from the Catholic Lectionary, based on the New American Bible and approved for use in the United States _______________________________________The Saint of the day is Saint JanuariusLittle is known about the life of Januarius. He is believed to have been martyred in the Emperor Diocletian's persecution of 305. Legend has it that Januarius and his companions were thrown to the bears in the amphitheater of Pozzuoli, but the animals failed to attack them. They were then beheaded, and Januarius' blood ultimately brought to Naples. "A dark mass that half fills a hermetically sealed four-inch glass container, and is preserved in a double reliquary in the Naples cathedral as the blood of St. Januarius, liquefies 18 times during the year...Various experiments have been applied, but the phenomenon eludes natural explanation...." [From the Catholic Encyclopedia] Reflection It is defined Catholic doctrine that miracles can happen and are recognizable. Problems arise, however, when we must decide whether an occurrence is unexplainable in natural terms, or merely unexplained. We do well to avoid an excessive credulity but, on the other hand, when even scientists speak about “probabilities” rather than “laws” of nature, it is something less than imaginative for Christians to think that God is too “scientific” to work extraordinary miracles to wake us up to the everyday miracles of sparrows and dandelions, raindrops and snowflakes. Saint Januarius is the Patron Saint of: Blood Banks/Blood Donors Naples Saint of the Day, Copyright Franciscan Media

Saint of the Day
Hieromartyr Januarius and those with him

Saint of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 1:18


These martyrs gave glorious witness to Christ during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Januarius, Bishop of Benevento in Italy, was arrested and cast into a burning furnace, but he stood in the midst of the flames, singing praises to God, and emerged unharmed. After other cruel tortures, he was bound and cast in prison in Pozzuoli, along with his deacon Faustus and his reader Desiderius. With them in prison were two deacons from Pozzuoli, Proclus and Sossus, and two laymen, Eutychius and Acutius. All seven were cast to wild beasts; but when the animals came near the Saints, they fell affectionately at their feet and refused to harm them. Finally, all seven Christians were beheaded. Some Christians from Naples secretly took the body of Januarius and buried it in their church. Countless wonders have been worked at his grave, including the restoration of a dead man to life.

Saint of the Day
Hieromartyr Januarius and those with him (305)

Saint of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 1:18


These martyrs gave glorious witness to Christ during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Januarius, Bishop of Benevento in Italy, was arrested and cast into a burning furnace, but he stood in the midst of the flames, singing praises to God, and emerged unharmed. After other cruel tortures, he was bound and cast in prison in Pozzuoli, along with his deacon Faustus and his reader Desiderius. With them in prison were two deacons from Pozzuoli, Proclus and Sossus, and two laymen, Eutychius and Acutius. All seven were cast to wild beasts; but when the animals came near the Saints, they fell affectionately at their feet and refused to harm them. Finally, all seven Christians were beheaded. Some Christians from Naples secretly took the body of Januarius and buried it in their church. Countless wonders have been worked at his grave, including the restoration of a dead man to life.

Saint of the Day
Hieromartyr Januarius and those with him (305)

Saint of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022


These martyrs gave glorious witness to Christ during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Januarius, Bishop of Benevento in Italy, was arrested and cast into a burning furnace, but he stood in the midst of the flames, singing praises to God, and emerged unharmed. After other cruel tortures, he was bound and cast in prison in Pozzuoli, along with his deacon Faustus and his reader Desiderius. With them in prison were two deacons from Pozzuoli, Proclus and Sossus, and two laymen, Eutychius and Acutius. All seven were cast to wild beasts; but when the animals came near the Saints, they fell affectionately at their feet and refused to harm them. Finally, all seven Christians were beheaded. Some Christians from Naples secretly took the body of Januarius and buried it in their church. Countless wonders have been worked at his grave, including the restoration of a dead man to life.

Saint of the Day
Hieromartyr Januarius and those with him

Saint of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2022


These martyrs gave glorious witness to Christ during the persecutions of Diocletian. St Januarius, Bishop of Benevento in Italy, was arrested and cast into a burning furnace, but he stood in the midst of the flames, singing praises to God, and emerged unharmed. After other cruel tortures, he was bound and cast in prison in Pozzuoli, along with his deacon Faustus and his reader Desiderius. With them in prison were two deacons from Pozzuoli, Proclus and Sossus, and two laymen, Eutychius and Acutius. All seven were cast to wild beasts; but when the animals came near the Saints, they fell affectionately at their feet and refused to harm them. Finally, all seven Christians were beheaded. Some Christians from Naples secretly took the body of Januarius and buried it in their church. Countless wonders have been worked at his grave, including the restoration of a dead man to life.

Composers Datebook
Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco

Composers Datebook

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2022 2:00


Synopsis On today's date in 1968, a 72-year-old Italian-born American composer named Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco died in Beverley Hills. As a young man, Castelnuovo-Tedesco was already known as a rising composer, concert pianist, music critic and essayist. In 1939 he left Mussolini's Italy and came to America, and like a lot of European musicians of the time, he found work writing film scores for major Hollywood studios. Castelnuovo-Tedesco became an American citizen, and eventually taught at the Los Angeles Conservatory, where his pupils included many famous names from the next generation of film composers, including Jerry Goldsmith, Henry Mancini, Andre Previn, Nelson Riddle and John Williams. In addition to film scores, Castelnuovo-Tedesco composed a signifigant body of concert music, including concertos for the likes of Heifetz and Segovia. A number of Castelnuovo-Tedesco's works are directly related to his Jewish faith, including a choral work from 1947, entitled “Naomi and Ruth.”  The composer's mother was named Naomi, and he claimed the faithful Ruth in the Biblical story reminded him of his own wife, Clara. “In a certain sense,” he wrote, “it was really my symbolic autobiography, existing before I decided to write – to open my heart – in these pages.” Music Played in Today's Program Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco (1895 - 1968) — Naomi and Ruth (St.Martin's Academy and Chorus; Sir Neville Marriner, cond.) Naxos 8.559404 On This Day Births 1937 - American composer David Del Tredici, in Cloverdale, Calif.; Deaths 1736 - Italian composer Giovanni Battista Pergolesi, age 26 (of consumption), in Pozzuoli; 1881 - Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky (Gregorian date: Mar. 28) 1968 - Italian-born American composer Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco, age 62, in Los Angeles; 1985 - American composer Roger Sessions, age 88, in Princeton, N.J.; Premieres 1735 - Handel: Organ Concertos Op. 4, nos. 2-3 (Julian date: March 5); 1750 - Handel: oratorio "Theodora," in London at the Covent Garden Theater; At the same event, the possible premiere of Handel's Organ Concerto Op. 7, no. 5, as well (Gregorian date: March 27); 1751 - Handel: oratorio "The Choice of Hercules" in London at the Covent Garden Theater; At the same event, Handel's Organ Concerto Op. 7, no. 3 premieres following Act II of a revival performance of Handel's cantata "Alexander's Feast" on the same program (Gregorian date: March 27); 1833 - Bellini: opera "Beatrice di Tenda" in Venice at the Teatro la Fenice; 1870 - Tchaikovsky: fantasy-overture "Romeo and Juliet," in Moscow, with Nicolas Rubinstien conducting (Julian date: Mar. 4); 1871 - Tchaikovsky: String Quartet in D, Op. 11, in Moscow, by members of the Russian Musical Society (Gregorian date: Mar. 28); 1879 - Dvorák: choral setting of Psalm No. 149, Op. 79, in Prague; 1888 - American premiere of the revised version of Bruckner: Symphony No. 4 ("Romantic"), with New York Philharmonic-Society conducted by Anton Seidl; In the preface to a book on Bruckner, the elderly conductor Walter Damrosch claimed he conducted the American premiere of this symphony (His memory played him false: Damrosch led the first American performance of Bruckner's THIRD Symphony; 1894 - Massenet: opera "Thaïs," at the Paris Opéra; 1938 - Martinu: opera "Julietta," in Prague at the National Theater; 1942 - Martinu: "Sinfonietta giocosa," for piano and chamber orchestra, in New York City; 2002 - Paul Schoenfield: "Nocturne" for solo cello, oboe and strings, by cellist Peter Howard, with oboist Kathryn Greenbank and the Saint Paul Chamber Orchestra, Gilbert Varga conducting. Links and Resources On Mario Castelnuovo-Tedesco

Bannon's War Room
Ep 393- Pandemic: The Plot to Steal 2020 (w/ Ed Pozzuoli and Jason Trennert)

Bannon's War Room

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2020 48:57


Steve Bannon, Raheem Kassam, Jack Maxey, and Vish Burra discuss the latest on the coronavirus pandemic as Steve announces a national speaking tour called "The Plot to Steal 2020". Calling in is Ed Pozzuoli to discuss the lawfare aspect of this plot. Jason Trennert calls in to discuss the economy.

Bannon's War Room
Ep 375- Pandemic: Safeguard (w/ Ed Pozzuoli and Matthew Taylor)

Bannon's War Room

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2020 49:10


Raheem Kassam and Jack Maxey are joined by Steve Bannon to discuss the latest on the coronavirus pandemic as many forces, external and internal, look to interfere in the 2020 US Presidential Election. Calling in is Ed Pozzuoli to discuss the Trump campaign's lawfare program. Also calling in is Matthew Taylor to discuss his latest movie Safeguard: An Electoral College Story.