venerdì 23 ottobre 2009

Weekly Newsletter

Announcements / CET Events
Oct. 24-Nov.1 Fall Break. Buone vacanze a tutti!!



Oct. 25 Florence Piazza del Duomo becomes vehicle-free! See new bus ruotes at http://www.muoversiafirenze.it/export/sites/muoversi/materiali/depliant_duomo_a3.pdf (also on bulletin board)



Wednesday, Nov. 4 Film and Pizza night. 6 pm. Viale Belfiore.



Sunday, Nov. 8 CET Brunch at the Florence Diner. After 3 months of cucina italiana, it’s time to show your Italian roommates how to eat breakfast, American-style!!


Nov. 13-15: Traveling Seminar-Venezia!

This week in Florence

Sunday, Nov. 1 Aperitivo/Buffet/DJ set
Casa della Creativita’. 7 pm. Vicolo Santa Maria Maggiore, 1.


Nov. 1-7 Film Festival “dei Popoli”
Full schedule available in English at www.festivaldeipopoli.org/en/festival/calendario/2009


On-Going Thursday-Saturday Karaoke Night 10:30 pm
Michael Collins Pub, Piazza della Signoria. www.michaelcollinspub.com

On-Going Nov-December: “50 Days of International Film”
Cinema Odeon. See program at www.mediatecatoscana.it (and posted on bulletin board in CET Center).

Feature Locale of the Week:
The Florence Jazz Club: http://www.jazzclubfirenze.com/en/index.php
You must become a member to enter (it costs 8 euros and lasts all year. Download the
application at: http://www.jazzclubfirenze.com/en/membership.php)


Who knew GREEN could taste so GOOD?!
International Day of Climate Action 10.24.2009


CET Students took some time off from studying to prepare a 100% organic,
local dinner in honor of Oct. 24th's Internataional Day of Climate Action.

On the menu: polpette fatte in casa (homemade meatballs)
and pasta with ragu' ...


The Grass CAN be Greener
on the Florentine side of the fence!
Resources for Sustainable Living in Florence




The Green Passport program is a way for you to action towards sustainability abroad (and you thought only foreigners wanted a Green Card!). Find out to take part and check out these other links as well:
www.greenpassport.us/page/partipating-in-the-green 
http://www.footprintnetwork.org/

http://www.transitionsabroad.com/publications/studyabroadmagazine/2006Fall/sustainable_travel_and_study_abroad.shtml






Be-Have Urban Atelier
Via Ghibellina 86/r. www.be-have.it All pieces in the store are are vintage, second-hand, or handmade.



La Raccolta
Via Leopardi 2. Organic restaurant/grocery store  90 % vegan menu

Insoliti Tessuti
clothes made from organically produced fabrics. (next door to La Raccolta)



Full directory of environmentally friendly hotspots in Florence: www.firenzetica.it




giovedì 15 ottobre 2009

CET Student Correspondent News: Costantino is all over Rome




By Claire Costantino, Student Correspondent

Vanderbilt-in-Florence relocated to Roma for a few days this week, and it was soooo cool! Italians talk about Rome the way people in Small Town, USA talk about New York city: this magical place where everything is cool and stylish and perfect. They weren’t far off. We went with a school trip, so we just about toured ourselves to death, but we were still able to rally and have a good time. Funny fact: the hip cool neighborhood in Rome, Trastevere, reminded me a lot of Florence. So basically I get to spend my semester in an entire city that’s like the best Rome has to offer! I won’t bother telling you how cool the Colosseum was, how much I wish I could spend all my time in Villa Borghese, or that the Sistine Chapel blew my mind — that's obvious.


5 unexpected things that made Rome awesome:

1. Although their wine wasn’t as good as Tuscany’s Chianti, the food was SO GOOD. The further south you go, the more you wish you could just eat all the time and be Jabba the Hut-style fat. Roman specialties include spaghetti alla carbonara, spaghetti all’amatriciana, and fried goodness. I knew about the pasta, but the Roman habit of breading and frying just about anything they can think of was a delicious surprise that made an otherwise chic and cool city seem eerily like the Texas State Fair.

fried fiori di zucca. the 8th wonder of the Roman world...



2. Green space! Florentines seem to think grass is lethal, so they just cobblestone over any earth they find. Romans, however, embrace greenery. Villa Borghese is basically what Le Cascine wishes it could be, and most streets have trees and ivy instead of just graffitti.





3. Tourists dumber than me! This is probably more because I’ve been here for a while now and I’m getting my bearings and less because Rome attracts more idiots than Florence, but I felt so smart there! I could muddle through some Italian-only interactions and I knew facts about the places we visited! Some of these video camera-toting tourists were so hopeless that I almost felt bad for them, especially the man that walked by the “School of Athens” in the Vatican and then shouted “WE ARE NOW ENTERING THE SISTINE CHAPEL” into his video camera. An embarrassing mistake made worse by the fact that he will always hear a tour guide’s judgmental cackle on that video.



4. Fountains!



Everywhere you look there’s a cool fountain! One to commemorate a sunken ship by the Spanish steps, the Trevi, and my favorite: one by Bernini in Piazza Navona where the figures all look disgusted and shield their eyes because they don’t want to look at the “ugly” building in front of them because Bernini was mad he wasn’t commissioned to do the building as well.



5. My favorite thing about Rome: I’m everywhere! Costantino is all over that city! I’ve got a triumphal arch, a salon, like 2 columns in the phone book (yes, I looked), and some cute restaurants.



Claire and the Arco di Costantino

Claire Costantino,
CET Florence Fall 2009 Student Correspondent

domenica 11 ottobre 2009

Roman Holiday: Traveling Seminar Oct. 7-10

We spent four days in Rome on a Traveling Seminar for capstone courses "Imagery and Public Space" and "Italian Cultural History". Our trip included site visits to the Colosseum, Forum, Capitoline Hill, Pantheon, Borghese Gallery, Vatican, St. Peter's, and walking tours to several Baroque churches (Santa Maria della Vittoria, San Luigi dei Francesi, San Carlino alle quattro fontane), piazzas , fountains and political monuments and buildings.

At the Colosseum








Taking in the sites at the Forum






We spent all of Friday at the Vatican and St. Peter's Basilica.




After four full days of Roman food, art, architecture and history...
it's time to head back to Florence!



here:

domenica 4 ottobre 2009

Tuscany Bike Tour




Taking a break on our 26 km bike ride
to admire the Colli Fiorentini ...

http://www.tuscany-biketours.com/


Lauren, Pip, Drew and Alex
at the top of the Poppiano Castle.

Kelsey, Claire and Lydia



Emily sorride sotto il sole toscano.