October 2013 Newsletter
October 2013 Newsletter
October 2013 Newsletter
www.littleitalytroy.org
troylittleitaly@gmail.com
South Central
Little Italy News
Albany Times Union:
September 27, 2013. Renovation keeps 1840 spirit, by
Kenneth Crowe II. Major
renovation on Washington
Place residence completes
the historic row house complex on Troys Washington
Park.
The Record:
September 22, 2013. Second
annual conference focuses
on building sustaining communities, by Francine Grinnell. New York Statewide
Neighborhood Revitalization
Conference attracts
neighborhood advocates,
government officials, business people and others to
discuss ways to keep our upstate communities vital.
September 25, 2013. Workshops, awards ceremony
mark Youth Court Month,
by Francine Grinnell. Youth
courts have been in existence
for more than 35 years. The
courts use positive peer pressure to insure that young
people who commit even
minor offenses give back to
the community and avoid
further engagement with the
justice system.
August 12 & 13, 2013. Troy
group works to solve vacant
buildings problems, by Andrew Beam. A two part series reporting on the Vacant
Properties Workgroup
formed identify vacant properties and come up with concrete solutions to the problem.
911
270-4411
270-1935
270-4404
588-1617
270-4579
270-5004
neighborhoodwatchsc2@gmail.com
September Meeting
10/16
Neighborhood Watch
6 p.m.
Troy Little Italy
6:30 p.m.
233 Fourth Street Corner of Washington and
Fourth
For Rent:
South Central Troy at Ida Street.
Family owned and maintained, 3
BR, full bath, eat-in kitchen,
stove, refrigerator, washer, new
heating stove, hardwood floors.
Close to Russell Sage College.
$550 per month plus utilities (rent
does include water).
For more information contact
acheerier@nycap.rr.com
For Rent
Little Italy 3 bedroom with walk in closet,
2nd floor, hardwood and carpeting, hook up
for washer, pets allowed on owners
approval., small yard $650.00 tenant pays for
utilities, security deposit required. Recently
remodeled and will be ready by 11/1.
For more information contact 518 225-0380.
Here is Frank
the author of
these great
articles at the
city limits of
his familys
home town in
Italy.
The Amleto Hotels amenities were outstanding what they term a rich breakfast was spread
out every morning rolls and breads for toasting, yogurt, cereals, fresh fruit, juices and filled
pastries, all self-service, and a tended coffee bar included in the reasonable off-season room
rates. The first night, we shared a room with separate beds, but my snoring proved intolerable,
and so for the next two nights, the clerks graciously offered us two individual rooms for not
much more than the price of the double and even at that lowered rate, one of us got to stay in
the original room, which, by the way, had a refrigerator, mini-bar and heated towel rack.
In the lobby was a computer and printer with free access to the internet, which came in handy
for keeping in touch with friends and family back home, as well as printing out maps for our
foray into the Apennines to the east to visit Frosolone on our last vacation day. Our desk clerks
even arranged for a car rental company to deliver our car to the hotel, and the company accepted a facsimile of Richs drivers license, since his had been stolen within minutes of our
arrival in Rome. Hes normally a very cautious traveler all he did was lose that necessary focus on security for a brief time on the Roma metrebus, but thats all it takes.
So, we left the hotel at nine a.m. on Friday for what was supposed to be a two and a half hour
drive out of Pompei and up into the mountains to Frosolone. It took us just about twice that
long. Im tempted to claim that our getting lost was the fault of the maps, but I have to take the
blame and admit that Im a terrible navigator. Rich generously offered to do all the driving, and
when we got lost on the wrong mountain with some of the most breathtaking and heart-stopping
turns, I was as glad he was driving as I was sorry I was riding in that little Fiat on those wet
roads.
Incidentally, as small as the car was, it took 40 euros (about $52 US) to fill the tank, which was
practically bone dry when it was delivered. But gas mileage in European cars averages 43 miles
per gallon, and even with our extra couple of hours of driving, we returned the car with about a
half a tankful of diesel fuel and asked for and received credit for it, making the actual rental
fee for one day 65 instead of 85 euros. (The 2013 exchange rate is about the same now as it was
during our trip.)
After stopping several times and trying to tell people it was Frosolone and not Frosinone we
were looking for, we finally arrived at a sign that pointed the way to our destination. When we
first spotted the town in the distance, we were coming up around a bend through some somber
clouds so the sight of the sun shining on the stone houses with red roofs surrounded by rolling
fields and rutted farm roads was a welcome medieval landscape.
Next: So this is Frosolone. So where is everybody?